Newspaper Page Text
Society
News of
Atlanta
Brookhaven club is a popular
endezvous for many Atlanta
A people, tjie lake being a favorite
for summer recreation. Boating
:',‘i .... immlng are ideal there, and wa
" 1 diversions much enjoyed The golf
offer interest to Brookhaven vis
.. ‘ also> while the informal dinner
and supper parties at the. cool club
House are largely attended.
M .. s f. w. McKee and the Misses
M<Kee entertained at luncheon yes
;ay t he guests being Misses Clara
Hatris’on, Celeste Janes, Mary Bowen
a! i Helen Douglas, nnd Messrs. James
t . npson, Franklin McKee and Thorn
ton W. Clarke.
mother luncheon party included Mrs.
p [. Mclntyre, Mrs. H. R. Berry,
M ..os Constance Berry, Louise Ripley,
jla'-ie Mclntyre, Julia Mclntyre and
Louise Barnes, and Messrs. John
Svott. William McCullough, John Bell
a nf l d. 1. Mclntyre, Jr.
Mrs. J- W. Harlan entertained Miss
Murray, Miss Beck and Miss Marian
Harlan.
Mr. Charles Meador was host at a
little party, his guests being Miss
Ware. Miss Meador and Mr. Thomas
Donaldson.
.Mrs. Charles Love entertained Mrs.
j H. Hand, of Blakely, Ga., and Miss
Annie McComb, Judge Allen and Mr.
Lem Callaway, all of Milledgeville. Ga.
A dinner dance at the Brookhaven
club takes place Thursday evening.
Mrs. Breitenbucher Hostess.
Mrs George Breitenbucher was host
ess at a pretty bridge party this aft
ernoon. the first of a series she will
give In honor of Miss Dorothy Breit
enbucher, whose marriage to Mr. Per
ry Blackshear- takes place this month.
The card tables were placed on the
piazza, where there were many grow
ing plants with vases of goldenglow.
and in the drawing room, where the
olor scheme of yellow and white was
carried out in detail. There were vases
,>f yellow- cannas and goldenglow
throughout the apartments, and the
wore cards were hand-painted in yel
low and gold, and tied with yellow
ribbons.
A handkerchief slur. >' r the bride,
elect was a feature .he afternoon.
The prize was a m w book, and the
consolation and guest prize were hand
embroidered handkerchiefs.
Mrs. Breitenbucher was gowned in
white embroidered voile. Miss Breit
enbucher wore white lingerie.
Mrs Breitenbucher’s guests were
Mrs. G. R. Glenn, Jr., Mrs. J. M. Daniel,
Mrs. Clifford Near, Mrs. A. O. Marbut,
Mrs. Clifford Banks, Mrs. Ellis Lock
hart, Mrs! Annie Langford Hall, Mrs. T.
1 Mell, Mrs. Dan Sage, Mrs. Jack
Lockhart, Mrs. Coleman Hodge, Mrs. A.
H. Baskin, Mrs. William Owens, Mrs.
Thomas Weaver, Mrs. Robert Warwick,
Mrs. Alfred Harbour. Mrs. Emil Breit
< nbucher, Mrs. Keith Bassett Muse,
Mrs. Julius Malsby, Mrs. Ivan Allen,
Mrs. Leßoy Wynne, Mrs. Harry Mals
by, Mrs. Messeling, Miss Irene Silvey,
Miss Louise Massey, Miss William
Harper, Miss Elizabeth Silvey, Miss
Henrietta Masseling, Miss Georgiana
Still, Miss Ruby Askew, Miss Lamar
Jeter, Miss Mabel Carlyon and Miss
Irene Bischoff, of Charleston.
Tomorrow afternoon Mrs. Breiten
bucher will give another bridge party
so Miss Breitenbucher, the guests to be
Mrs. G. G. Bradt, Mrs. C. B. Walker,
Mrs. Andrew Anderson, Mrs. Annie
' ulberson Perry, Mrs. R. Culberson Ab
bott. Mrs. J. R. Gresham, Mrs. Jeff
Dobbs, Mrs. J. P. D. Allen. Mrs. William
B. Healey, Mrs. L. J. Magill, Mrs.
Stephen Barnett, Mrs. M. W. Whitner,
Mrs. F. H. Wingfield, Mrs. John Cooper.
Mrs. Charles Elyea, Mrs. Stonewall Ja
-1 "bs, Mrs. James Wikle, Mrs. T. B. Gay,
Mrs. Blanche Caldwell, Mrs. D. B.
Glinn, Mrs. Emil Breitenbucher. Miss
Irene Bischoff, Miss Cora Brown and
Miss Kate Massey.
FUTURE EVENTS
The Brenau colony of Atlanta will
be entertained by Mrs. William Owens
'"i Friday afternoon at her home, 10
Howard street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Edgar Hunnicutt will
entertain at an informal dancing party
'"morrow evening in honor of their
guest, Miss Eugenia Hardeman, of Wil
mington, N. C.
Mrs. Frank Gilreath will entertain
' 'e members of her bridge club Frl
afternoon in honor of Mrs. B E.
’ " eman, of Louisville, Ky., the guest
her sister. Mrs. Joseph Baldwin.
‘er guests will be Mrs. W. A. Gos-
1 Mrs. W. C. Coles. Mrs. T. E.
! 1 h, Mrs. Dudley Glass, Mrs. Hugh
lk >ns, Mrs. J. H. Tutwiler, Mrs. C.
Maddox, Mrs. William Akers, Mrs.
•n Akers, Mrs. William Percy. Mrs
Ham Seabrook. Mrs. Charles B.
■ rnshaw. Jr., Mrs. William Bennett.
s W s. Larendon, Mrs. Dennis,
Schultz, Mrs. Smith, Miss Martha
.‘ ’■••ath, Miss Nell Wimblsh. Miss
and Miss Dozier. Miss BMSitt
1 "well and Miss Annie Mae Gil
‘•ath will serve punch.‘
Perspiring?
Embarrassing?
Use HID
Instantly Destroys and
Prevents All Odor
I Joes Not Clog or Restra i n
und Can’t Injure
FOR SALE BY
l arge Porcelain Jar 25c
All Jacobs’ Stores
and DRUGGISTS generally.
LA GRANGE BRIDE IS TO
LIVE IN SOUTH CAROLINA
A e IF /
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Lr-Y-u
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Mrs. William A. Briggs, Jr., of Greenville. S. C., formerly
Miss Maidelle Cleaveland, of LaGrange. Ga. Mr. and Mrs.
Briggs were quietly married last Thursday night at the bride’s
home. They are now spending their honeymoon in the moun
tains of South Carolina, before going to Greenville. Mrs. Briggs
is the’daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Cleaveland, her father
being the clerk of the superior court of Troup county.
PERSONALS
Miss Gladys LeVin, who has been ill
with tonsilitis, is better.
Misses Laura and Ida Booth have re
turned from a visit to Athens.
Miss Helen Bellingrath is convales
cent from a recent illness.
Miss Olive Shropshire, who has spent
the summer in Vancouver and Los An
geles, has returned home.
Mrs. Emma Neal Douglas, who has
been traveling in the East and West
since June, is now in Sitka, Alaska.
Mrs. Frank P. Rice and her grand
daughter. Miss Georgia Rice, have re
turned from Tallulah Falls.
Mrs. O. S. Johnston is visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. I. McDaniel,
near Stone Mountain.
Miss Ruth Park has returned to Eat
onton after a visit with Mrs. Carrie
Park in Atlanta.
Mr. Joe Brown Connally has returned
from a two weeks stay at Toxaway and
Asheville.
Mrs. Spencer R. Stone entertained
informally at tea at the Brookhaven
club this afternoon in honor of her
guest, Mrs. Spencer Udell, of Chic'ago.
Miss Edith Hodgson, of Athens, will
spend the winter studying music in
Berlin, Germany. She sails on Septem
ber 18.
Lieutenant Lindsley D. Beach, of the
Fourteenth cavalry, U. S. A., is ex
pected soon to visit his sister, Mrs.
Barrett Calhoun Cothran.
Miss Hattie Brumby is the guest of
Mrs. T. P. Vincent In Athens, and was
tendered an afternoon tea by her host
ess yesterday.
Mrs. T. N. Hirsch, with her son and
daughter, has arrived in Savannah
from New York, and is the guest of
Mrs. Aaron Ferst for a few days before
returning to Atlanta.
Mrs. Percy' H. Whiting and Master
Percy Whiting. Jr., have gone to Nash
ville to visit Mrs. Whiting's father. Mr.
John H. Polk. They were accompanied
bv Miss Margaret Polk, who has been
the guest of Mrs. Whiting at East Lake
for the summer.
A number of Atlantans who have
been spending August at Toxaway re
turn home tomorrow • Among these
will be Miss Sarah Rawson. Miss Jennie
D. Harris, Miss Lucy Hoke Smith and
Mrs. Clem Harris.
Mr. C. E. Sergeant and Miss Lule
Sergeant have returned home, after a
two weeks’ stay with Mrs. Fountain
Rice, Jr., in Chattanooga. Mr. and
Mrs. Claud Buchanan have been the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rice for the
past few days.
Dr and Mrs. E, L Connally and Mr
Thomas Connally leave tomorrow for
Chicago, where they will be joined by
Miss Frances Connally, who has been
the guest of Mias Emma Hemingway m
Chicago for two weeks. The family
party will enjoy a trip into Canada, the
Great Lakes and down the St. Law
rence. returning to Atlanta about Oc
tober 1.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 1912.
WEDDINGS
Reynolds- Baker.
Mrs. Annie W. Reynolds announces
the marriage of her daughter. Alice
Hazen, to Mr. Burton S. Baker, on
Tuesday, September 3, at the residence
of Dr. G. F. Fraser.
Mrs. May Clarke and little son. Sam
uel Edward, will spend the month of
September at Gainesville, where they
have gone after a month’s stay at Dah
lonega. .
Children's Lawn Party.
Masters Armine and Francis Maier,
the young sons of Mr. and Mrs. H. A.
Maier, entertained one hundred of their
friends at a lawn party this afternoon
at the home of their parents on West
Peachtree street.
There was a game of Foxy Grandpa,
in which the successful boy was award
ed a knife, and the successful girl was
given a fancy jumping rope, while for
each guest there was a pretty souve
nir. ,
Refreshments were served on the
lawn, and the affair was one of much
pleasure tn the little guests.
LgSw Faculty of Artists
ISIjBMI Offers superior advantages in aE
branches of Music, Oratory and Lan-
K’ ia ff eß * For full information address,
J. O. STAKELY, Sec’y.
PiicttrM lai InU tlx ITUNU. U
TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS IN PRIZES
FOR FREE SHORTHAND COURSE
Bagwell Business College Will
Celebrate Fall Opening By Giv
ing Week's Free Course to All
Who Apply.
All Will Have Equal Chance to
Secure Prize Scholarships.
Are you interested in the study of
shorthand?
Do you contemplate taking up the
course this fall?
If so. be sure to make your arrange
ments to take the week's free course
given by Bagwell's Business College,
beginning Monday, September 16.
3200 in scholarship* will be awarded
as prizes to those making the best rec
ords during the week's free course.
All have an equal chance to secure
one of these free scholarships.
After One Week's Instruction, the
average pupil will understand every
principle of the Chartier system of
shorthand and will be able to write
ordinary business letters at a moder
ate speed and read his notes easily and
accurately.
Those who enroll for this course do
so absolutely free and are under no
obligation to continue.
The day class will be formed Mon
day morning at 9 o’clock, September
16: the evening class, Monday evening
I at 7:30 o’clock. September 16.
Positions Secured.
I The college secures positions for its
Fall Weddings
Interesting
Society
Several out-of-town weddings of
special interest to Atlanta friends have
been announced recently The engage
ment of Miss Louise Phinizy. of Au
gusta. to Mr. Robert Caldwell Neely.
Jr, also of that city, has been formally
announced by Mr. and Mrs. Stewart
Phinizy, the marriage to take place
early in November. The bride-elect is
a memhe- of one of the state's best
known families, and is a belle and
beauty. She has often been entertain
ed in Atlanta by friends and relatives.
Many people of Atlanta and Georgia
are interested in a prominent wedding
of October 9. which takes place in Bur
lington. Vt . when Miss Madeline Bur
gess becomes the bride of Lieutenant
Archie Toombs Colley, of the United
States army. Lieutenant Colley is a
former resident of Washington. Ga. He
Is a great-grandson of Robert Toombs,
and lias a number of i-elatives here.
Lieutenant Colley met bls future bride
while he was stationed at Fort Ethan
Allen, near Burlington, the home of
Miss Burgess. The young couple will
come South on their bridal trip and
will probably"be entertained In Atlanta.
The marriage of Miss Agnes Mc-
Evoy, of Baltimore, and Mr. Brutus
Clay, of Atlanta, will be an important
social event of November. A number
of Atlanta friends will attend the wed
ing. among whom will be Mr. and Mrs.
Willii in Schroeder, the latter being one
of the bride's most intimate friends.
Miss Kate Wheatley, of Americus, is
to be a bride of the fall who has nu
merous friends here. Miss Wheatley
is a former Agnes Scott girl, and dur
ing her college days’ as well as since,
when she has often visited In Atlanta,
she has been identified with the younger
social set of the city. She marries Mr.
James Draper Hooks on November 6
Among those going to Americus for
the wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. .1. O
DuPree.
Miss Nell Hodgson's marriage to Mr.
Robert Woodruff of Atlanta, will be one
of the brilliant weddings of the win
ter. attended by a large delegation of
Atlanta guests who will go to Athens
In a private car for the affair. The
charming bride, as well known here as
at her home, will be extensively enter
tained when she comes to Atlanta to
reside. The date of the wedding has
been set for October 17.
Miss Margaret Disosway, one of the
most popular young girls of the city,
who is to be an autumn bride, has
elected to marry out of town, her wed
ding to Captain McKinley, of Fort
Oglethorpe, to take place on September
18, at the “Treetops,” the summer home
of Mr. and Mrs. Disosway, at Black
Mountain, N. C.
One of the most common ailments
that hard working people are afflicted
with is lame back. Apply Chamber
lain's Liniment twice a day and mas
sage the parts thoroughly at each ap
plication, and you will get quick relief.
For sale bv all dealers.
Invest in a Diamond
Before Prices Advance
Four advances have occurred
in the wholesale diamond market
during the past twelve months.
Our present stock of solitaires
were purchased more than a year
ago. but we shall soon have to
replenish them and will be com
pelled to follow the advance.
The advance will average $25
per karat on stones of fair
weight and grades. We know
that we can not maintain the old
prices longer than the last of Oc
tober.
Buy now and get the benefit of
this saving.
Liberal terms allowed. Selec
tions sent on approval prepaid.
Net prices and full particulars
given in our booklet, “Facts
About Diamonds.” Fall or write
for a copy.
Maier Berkele, Inc.
Diamond Merchants,
31-33 Whitehall Street
Established 1887
mH Hr g|
HHF
’ I WMP
J. O. BAGWELL,
President Bagwell Business College.
students, and no one who finishes the
course need have any fears about se
curing a good position.
Send in your name at oner. Call,
write nr telephone Bagwell Business
College. 34 buckle street, Atlanta, Ga.,
Bell phone Ivy 1078.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The regular monthly meeting of the
Southern Christian Home will be held
at the orphanage, 299 Lee street. West
End. tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock.
The new officers for the coming year
will be installed.
The board of management of the
Atlanta chapter. D. A. R., will hold an
important meeting tomorrow morning
at lo o'clock at the chapter house on
Piedmont avenue.
The Sheltering Arms association will
hold a regular monthly meeting to
morrow morning at 10:30 o’clock at
the home. 61 Walton street.
Are You Corseted Correctly?
Wjgkj, \/F ANY poor figures result from improper corseting,
A P oor corset will spoil a good figure. A good
corset-will improve a poor figure. If your mirror
shows undue development or lack of proper develop-
m cnt, improper corseting may be the unsuspecting
v cause.
sL Investigate a little, try on a well-known, reliable corset —have a
/nllni| | ,C fitting of a New Fall Model
MB 111 ‘No-DH'R.r < gd’RS'ET§
a corset t * iat can P ro£ luce effects which will delight you.
The trial will cost you nothing and your figure
beauty will be improved, for very few women look as
I—S as t^iey m ightlook if they gave proper attention
As iw to t^le and style of their corsets.
Eront-Laced Modart gives you the qualities
of comfort, grace and beauty to an extent you’ve
never thought possible.
Look for Style
Look for Comfort
Look for Quality
in a Modart Corset.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
Wiley ■
Ibod and Drink Qftotion
A /' At last there is a National Bureau of
/ Pure Food and Health that is absolutely
Independent of all political or effective influ-
- ences. Its purpose is to close the
Legal Gntes Opened to Fraud
r through carelessly and purposely drawn loose Food and ‘
Drug Laws, made for the benefit of the manufacturers and against the in
terests of the people. Through the vast personal experience arid knowledge
° f j r ‘ slar5 lar . Vey W ‘ Wi,e y ’ate Chief Chemist of the U. S. Government
and under his personal guidance and the auspices of this magazine. .jObW
great stndes are being made to better tablefoodsand the family health.
In the September number of X
Good HouseWSnri
v
' ou wi ” find a complete ex*
j *i . . .j _.. posure of certain foods, and a
Contributors to the Biff constructive article on the great
achievements made by the Pure Food
-L A 1 • propagandists to advance the interests of
September Achieve- the people against the ill-used strength of
unprincipled manufacturers, backed by money
merit Number ‘' nd “ pu "’’
Dr. Harvey W. Wile, "'‘P t 0 H<Mne Maker
E F Bendon r d,t,on ’ Good Housekeeping Magazine is the
m v j ir W friend, y assistant and adviser of every home mana-
Mrs. Un de Water ger and future housewife. It’s filled every month
A. B, Wenzel with cooking recipes, new and better ways of keep-
Elsie de Wolfe * n g house. There is fiction, too. by such notables
Dr. Woods Hutchinson as Owen Johnson, Wallace Irwin and Dorothy Dix,
C. Coles Phillips M illustrations and cartoons by Howard Chand-
u >r. ler Christy.
Howard Lhand'er Chnaty ffi®
September is the big achieve-
Ask ment number. It’s just out.
Newsdealer " Good Housekeeping
lor a Copy asi Founh A, e . MctgclZirie x cwlorkCj(J
Have You Bought
That College Friend Yet?
LIEBERMAN’S
The House of Guaranteed Baggage,
92 Whitehall.
GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS.
9