Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 15, 1912, HOME, Image 19

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-- _ ..iV- _—, ________ - 1 1 11 ” r ' ' A C-p Z/j" r^ 1 .7\ff H 1 \ uVi -7 /r - »-t\ // // \» >1 $3 I XZZ/7 \ •• ■ v .. ' .• ■ . ~~ cqetx b « MB J VjiiiimMiim min Still the Bride Is the Center of Society’s Interest MID-JUNE is here, and still the bride is the cynosure of inter est. Many of the city’s young women have departed in their natty "going-away costumes,” amid a shower of rice and old slippers, but there still remain a number of bride-elects to act as the raison d'etre for numerous parties. The week closes with the mar riage of Miss Jennie Lowry to Mr. Robert Warwick tonight at 7 o'clock, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Lowry, on North Jack son street. Miss Lowry will have as her attendants Mrs. Ivan Allen, matron of honor; Miss Lillian Atkins, of Knox ville. maid of honor; Misses Lamar Je ter, Dorothy Breitenbucher. Wilhelmina Drummond and Lottie Bloodworth, as bridesmaids. A reception follows the wedding. Miss Eliza Candler and Mr. Henry B. Earthman, of Clearwater. Fla., will be married Tuesday evening at the Deca k tur Presbyterian church. Miss Candler will have a number of attendants. Miss Nell Candler will be maid of honor. Mrs. Jack Reeves, of Charleston, and Mrs, Clarence Requarth. of Charlotte, matrons of honor; Misses Rebecca Candler and Maury Lee Cowles, brides maids. Little Miss Caroline McKinney will be the flower girl, and Misses Re becca Harman and Mary Lucia Pope, of Macon, will stretch the ribbons. Mr. William Earthman, of Florida, will be best man. The bride’s uncle, Mr. G. B. gcott, will give her away. Another marriage of the same date is that of Miss Sarah Parks and Mr. Fred Gherkin, Jr., of Augusta, at the First Methodist church. Bishop Warren A. Candler will perform the ceremony. Miss Georgia Watts will be married Tuesday evening at All Saints to Mr. Louis Charles Moeckel. This will be a beautiful ceremony, with the choral service sung by the vested choirs of All Saints and of St. Lukes. The charm ing bride is one of the most gifted sing ers in the city, and is identified with musical circles. A reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Richard Watts will follow the ceremony. A pretty wedding during the latter days of June wil be that of Miss Mil dred Fort to Mr. T. Bertram Norris, which has been set for June 26. and Will be a quiet home ceremony. The marriage of Miss Katherine Ruth erford and Mr. George Pardee Cady, of Chicago, will he of interest to a wide circle of friends. Owing to illness In the bride’s family, the wedding will be quietly observed in the presence of the immediate family only. Monday. June 24. Is the date selected, the cere mony to take'place, at 11 o’clock in the morning, at the residence .of the bride’s brother and sister. Dr. and Mrs. Vassar Woolley, on Spring street. Dr. A. M. Hughlett will be the officiating minis ter. and after the ceremony a wedding breakfast will be served. There will be rm attendants. At 12 o’clock Mr. Cady and his bride will lea/e to spend their honeymoon In the Blue Ridge moun tains. at ' Jacquelih Lodge,” a charm ing bungalow owned by the bride's sis ter Mrs. Lamar Rutherford. After two weeks there, the bridal couple will take possession of Mr. Cady's apart ment in Chicago, where a series of en tertainments will be tendered them. The parties arranged for the bride elect by her Atlanta friends have been cancelled on account of the illness of members of her family. Among the out of-town guests at the wedding be her relatives. Mrs. M. A. Lipscomb, of Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lips comb. of Athens, and Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hutchins, of Athens. In the meantime, the June bride and bridegroom of the past fortnight are sc tiding their honeymoons in various parts of the country. Most of Atlanta’s bridal couples ’'go East” on their wed dng trips, but some elect to spend the balcyon days in the North. South or West. Mr. Arthur Kitchings and his bride, formerly Miss Ethel Wickersham, have e ., n . to Canada on a bridal tour. Mr. ntrl Mrs. Edward Richardson, the lat - fo.merly Miss Manelie Brewster, are spending their honeymoon at Atlantic p,..,, I, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. William Otis Ham spent their honeymoon in the mountains North Carolina, and on tlv !r return to Jackson, Ga., the home ~f >|v gtoom, they will be honor guests , < house party at which Miss Clio (■.. nichiod will entertain at her home, ••l.lpucr Longer." As Miss Margaret Weld Mrs. Ham frequently visited T-oksen, and she will be cordially wel com'd in the hospitable town. Mi and Mrs. Francis Knauff went to Siminnah after their wedding, and fcdlf d from there for New York for a two weeks st*"- ... _ —-■ BEAUTIFUL WOMEN OF ATLANTA o o O Miss Frances Hightower, a Charming o Member of the Younger Set n fi Willi 1 V JHHNH JHHII 'SsSs a ■ 4... - z. • z f o Ki mi t ’-‘ZJ o / zvZi \/i' H A/ aVTVA 1 v* wWy<Owr t /lL bV-I Vr //< JF FWjh IsZi IQI 1 Q 1 <>7 YCdF mw & w!w’ liM - _ J <4AA ZvWzz IZJJ I J7\ I 'tLZjMbI ZMA aZoC? -Z-•- Wr W?J rWin.i .& VX; <* . ?¥'nW •Sl47aZ’ J i /AyZP /AtkSn FjpAT/eic Jfiarroirj>j& Cj - . ' ’ ll . I '..' ' .-. mmmimmi ■aM'?W .- .. _ L . '/ .. ■ _ ... .. Bridge Clubs May Not Adjourn for the Summer Season TO play bridge or not to play bridge— That is the question which ag itates the minds of the many members of the many bridge clubs of the city, with the coming of summer. It has been the custom to close out the “bridge club year" with the adjourn ment of the clubs of more serious pur pose, but several of the card clubs have decided to inaugurate a new rule this summer. "We had the question up at our last meeting.” said a member of the Wed nesday Morning Bridge club, which numbers seventeen Inman Park devo tees of the game. "Our decision was that the club is of more interest in the summer than In the winter, when we have diversions of many kinds and a call on our social activities at every turn. In the summer we have noth ing much except bridge and the auto mobile parties with little stop-over vis, its to the country chibs. So we decided to keep up our meetings every Wed nesday morning through the summer. When a member fa out of town the hostess can ask another friend or two, and so we get up the required number at each meeting.” The exam ple of this club Is sure to he followed by many others, and the porch party, followed by an Informal al fresco lunch eon. will be a favored diversion for Atlanta’s summer stay-at-homes. This roll of the people who spend their summers In Atlanta grows larger every year. Os course, almost every body goes on for short stays to the mountains, the seashore or springs but the majority of Atlanta’s fashionables practically spend the. summer In the city or thereabout, and social life though different from the formal af fairs of the season, is by no means de void of interest or pleasure. Porch parties. lawn parties, garden parties and picnics— anything which has an outdoor feature*— is the favored form of summer entertaining. At the country clubs the porches are the scene of most of the Informal dinner and supper parties. At the charming coun try homes of Atlantans the beautiful lawns are brought into requisition for the entertainment of the summer guest A delightful affair of this kind, in pros, pect sot a number of the younger set, will be Miss Eula Jackson’s garden par. ty Tuesday at "Oak Ridge.” the coun try home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jackson. The young daughter of the house is entertaining a group of her college friends, .Misses Glenne Dick, ey. of Augusta; Ella Vaughan Patter son. of Montgomery, and Corinne Coop er, of Memphis. Miss Jackson's garden party will be one of a series of notably delightful affairs for these young girls, who will be belles in Southern society upon their debut a year or so hence. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy's hand somely appointed dinner party at the Driving club last night was arranged in honor of Miss Jackson and her house party, and others to entertain them next week are Miss Margaret Hawkins and Miss Mignon McCarty. Another house party which is the cause of much gayety among the younger set Is that which Miss Ferol Humphries Is entertaining at the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Humphries. The young women are college friends attending a Virginia In stitution and include Misses Henrietta Yeager, of Jackson, Miss.; Margaret Boswell, of Chase City, Va.; Frances Dorris, of Nashville, and Louise What, ley, of Alabama. The afternoon tea which Mfss Hum phries gave yesterday was an enjoy able event for her house party guests. About 85 young women were Invited for the tea, and the hostess was as sisted in entertaining by her house guests, her mother, Mrs. W. ~C. Hum phries, and a group of her young friends—Misses Celeste Shadburn, of Buford; Helen Estes, of Gainesville; Essie Roberts, of Fairburn; Isolene Campbell, Adgate Ellis, Helen McCul lough, Alice Parks, Rosalie Davis and Estelle Fort. A number of young girls have been In the city this week, their presence adding to the pleasure of the Tech dances and so forth. Among these vis itors were Miss Susie Winburn, of Sa vannah, who has frequently visited Miss Corrie Hoyt Brown; Miss Edith McKenzie, of Montezuma, the guest of Miss Bertha Moore; Miss Fairlie Cub bage, of Macon; Miss India Barnett, of Athens; Miss Drummond and Miss Coburn, of Savannah. Miss Callie Hoke Smith, the younger daughter of Senator and Mrs. Hoke Smith, spent yesterday in the city with Miss Janie Cooper before going to Athens to at tend the commencement of the Univer sity of Georgia. Among the Atlanta girls who go to the university com mencement will be Misses Cora McCord and Elise Hansell.