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Society
News of
*
Atlanta
L «
younger set danced at East
I Lake Saturday evening in large
■* numbers. The week-end dance
a . -ne Country club has been one of
■ . most popular features of social life
summer, the attendance having
boon arger anad more interesting than
ever before. Many dinner parties pre
ff,r> the dance at the club Saturday
evening.
An mg the representatives of the
c,..: mg contingent present were Misses
, d West, Helen Thorn, Mignon
;>l. 'arty. Julia Meador, Sarah Coates,’
H, >n Dykes, Lyda Nash. Callie Hoke
Smith. Isabel Kuhrt. Emma Kate
A r.mius. Caroline Muse, Margaret
H. ■ ty, Cobbie Vaughan, Mary Tray-
Lula Dean Jones, Mary' Helen
Moocij, Ruth Stallings. Katie Sturdi
vant. Adeline Thomas. Lillian Logan.
A.'ln- Fielder, Elise Hansell, Lucy Hoke
Smith, Leone Ladson, Bessie W00d
... ar.l. Elizabeth Rawson, Sarah Raw
a. n. May O'Brien. Alice May Freeman,
Aurelia Speer.
A group of charming visitors were
i" sent, among these Miss Sarah Gib
s.m Chenault, of Louisville, Ky.; Miss
Ethel Ray, of Philadelphia; Miss Ellz
nie-th Harris, of Sandersville, and Miss
Regina Rambo, of Marietta.
ethers in attendance were Messrs,
iltiest Ottley, George Plant, Frank
spratling, Hal Hentz, James Callaway,
I'.iiumee Haverty, Clarence Knowles,
c >v. Syms, Walter Marshburn, W. E.
Roberts. Eugene Kelley, Bockover
Toy, William Brantley, Palmer John-
- James Callaway, Winter Alfrlend,
Tern Lyons. Lieutenant Burdett. Dr.
Hodges, Dr. Persons, Messrs. Julian
■ .■ rubers. Charles Meador, Rudolf
er. Rob Ryan, Frank Martin,
Rem-on King. William Morgan. Archie
Li Dr .lore Moore. Messrs. Clarence
H.ivt-rty. Arthur Winn. Charles Sciple,
Jr Marion Smith, Edward Alfriend.
Dr and Mrs. Joseph Eby, Mr. and Mrs.
i i Veazy Rainwater, Mr. and
M ■. Bin Sims, Mr. and Mrs. A. N.
Bentley. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B.
Paine Mr. and Mrs. Lowry Arnold and
Mi and Mrs. Valdemar Gude.
Driving Club Guests.
The dinner-dance at the Piedmont
D ning club proved an enjoyable week
end event. Among those present were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Sciple, Mr.
and Mrs R. c. Congdon. Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Calhoun, Mr. and Mrs. George
Ca'lmun Walters, Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Cosgrove, Judge Pottle, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Raiiie. Jr.. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas
Ph: ip Hinman. Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Mir y. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Reynolds,
. H A. Lorick Stuart Witham.
Hu; Richardson, Charles M. Sciple.
Jam > .1 Goodrum. B. M Hood. David
Ki: -land, James Ragan, Julian Magill
nd Ernest < ittley.
At the club last evening many mem
r- of the younger set were among
taimi- having supper on the terrace.
\inong those present were Misses Lula
Dean Jones. Martha Francis. Aurelia
Spur, Emily Winship. Caroline Muse.
Ali. . May Fheeman, Leone Ladson.
Katherine Gordon. Mary Helen Moody.
Ruth Stallings, Sarah Rawson, Sarah
'.ii .-on Chenault of Lexington, Ky.. Xs.
.1". Kuhrt. Elizabeth Harris of 'San
mrsville, Messrs. James Harris, Clar-
■ nee Knowles, Dozier Lowndes. Hub
"ai<i Allen, Stuart Witham. Claude
Douthii. Rob Ryan, Lauren Foreman,
Lynn Werner,* Tom Lyons. Dugas Mc
-1 e.-ky. Charles Ryan, M. S. Harper.
Dr Williams, Dr. Persons, Mr. and
M:.- Keats Speed, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
'.m Schroder.
Mrs. Wilcox Entertains.
Mrs. Ella Wright Wilcox entertained
1 i members of a new bridge club this
-1 "rnoon at her home. 300 West Peach-
■"*' street The members include a
ari>up of friends who are #t home with
>1 s Wilcox for the winter, the ment
is being Mrs. Charles Stirling Price.
ii- Calvin Holmes. Mrs. William K.
Liddle Miss Elise Holmes of New York,
'I s Samuel Blanc, Miss Elizabeth
‘ an . Mrs. William White. Mrs. Ben-,
miin Simpson. Mi-. AV. D. Hughs and
H’s. Easily, Mrs. Ransom Wright com
s-ting the party.
I i" club will meet every Monday aft
noon during the winter.
Miss Jeter Gives Party.
Miss Mary Jeter was hostess at a
■ ridge party of four tables this after-
on at her home in West Peachtree
- reet. given in honor of her guest. Miss
Marie Brock, of Lafayette. Ala., and for
Miss Dorothy Fielder, a bride-elect of
| season. The decorations were of
garden flowers, and the prizes included
1 new book for top score, a deck of
aids for consolation and boxes of cor
sp'»ndence cards sot the honor guests.
• ♦
Drives Sallowness
from the Skin
Ladies, imperfect complexion is caused by
8 liver. A few days treatment with
CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
do more to clean up
the >k m than all t he beauty
creams creation.
Cures constipation, aay CffiC *
un'v>,« the liver, ’ E
"'<!• ndigertion, W' TI E
t,,; ouvnearand jSsHStgr 8!*,,"
z1 ine ■■. AZlriß
Purely
•able—never (ail.
Small Pill, Small Doae. Small Price.
The GENUINE must bear signature
Titled Suitors Besiege Southern Girls Abroad
SMILES FOR THEIR SIGHS
Miss Marie Pappenheimer. of
Atlanta. One of Fair Tourists
Home for School.
Miss Marie Pappenheimer. of Atlan
ta. was one of seven Southern college 1
girls who were so beset by titled suit
ors in Italy that their tour of cathe
drals and picture galleries was made
really uncomfortable, according to a
story in The New York Telegram. The
party of seven girls from Belmont col
lege, Nashville, had just arrived in New
York on the Mauretania. < hapemned
bv two teachers, and told newspaper
men of their experiences in Floren, e.
To understand the situation proper
ly. says the paper, it must be explained
that the girls are all blonds, and all ex
tremely good looking. Every kind of
blond hair is represented in the group.
There are blonds with fluffy yellow
tresses and blonds with hair that would
be called dark red if it were not the
custom to call it Titian.
When the girls, whose names are Bri
ta Dent. Margaret <’oe, Katherine Hol
liday, Marie Pappenheimer. Corinne
White, Hazel Wilson and Ethel Woo
ten. arrived at Florence and began to
visit the scenes of Romola's love af
fairs. a few languid youths with titles
were in evidence. The young men be
came Interested at once and would not
be driven away.
They constituted'an uninvited escort
through the palaces and picture galler
ies, and they had to be snubbed every
ten minutes. They forgot that they
were of the noblest blood of Florence,
and acted like plain “mashers.”
If the chaperons had permitted them
to accept, the girls would have had six
guides each in Florerfce. The deputa
tion of titled ones trailed behind the
party to the station and gazed sadly at
Hie departing train.
PERSONALS!
Mrs. L. Davenport has returned from
New York.
Mr. and Mis, Frank O. Foster have
returned from the East. -
Mrs. J. M. Williams is very ill at
St. Josephs infirmary.
Mrs. George M. Niles and little son
are making a brief stay at Cornelia.
Mr. and Mrs Richard Reynolds have
returned from a visit to Augusta
friends.
Mrs. Robert Griggs and little daugh
ter. Virginia, are visiting relatives in
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Howell and fam
ily have returned from the East, mak
ing the trip by water.
Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Elkin returned
home this morning from a stay of sev
eral weeks in Europe.
Dr. C. Edward Buchanan has gone to
Washington. D. C.. and will later visit
Baltimore and Philadelphia.
Mr. Wellborn Colquitt. Jr, has ar
rived in Atlanta to spend the winter
Mr. Colquitt will attend Tech.
Mrs. Alex Bonneyman and Mis. Bu
low Campbell are visiting their mother,
Mrs. Thomas Berry, in Rome.
Miss Virgie Figgatt, of Roanoke. Va.,
is the guest of Mrs. W. A. Hancock, in
North avenue. She will later visit Miss
Annie Maude Adams.
Miss Marie Pappenheimer returned
home this morning after spending the
past several months abroad with a
party of friends from Nashville.
Miss Miriam Cauble has as her guest
Miss Corglye Richardson, of Montgom
ery, who will spend a week, after which
she goes to Brenau for the winter.
Mr and Mrs. John Arthur Hvnds
are in Toronto. Canada, where they
will spend several days, going later to
Winnipeg and for a tour of the Great
Lakes.
Mrs. Roland Alston returned home
this morning, after a short visit to her
uncle. Mr. Hutchinson, in Chattanooga
She was accompanied by her young
son. Master Whitman Morris, who has
been the guest of Mr. Hutchinson for
several weeks.
WEDDINGS
Perry - Ellis.
The marriage of Miss Joyce Perry to
Mr. John Ellis, of Macon, will take
place this week in Atlanta at the homo
of the bride’s kinswoman, Mrs. Caro
line Robinson Stewart, on West Peach
tree street.
The bride-elect is a lovely young girl,
formerly of Cut ington. Go. For the
past several winters she has made her
home in Florida, spending the summer
nt various mountain resorts, clmpt -
tuned by her sister. Mrs. Thomas Bry
an. who comes to Atlanta for the wed
ding and will be matron of honor and
the only attendant of the bride. Mr.
Fort Ellis will be his brother's best
man. and the bride will be given away
by her brother, Mr. Thomas Bryan, of
Florida..
Tiie ceremony takes place at 10
o'clock Wednesday morning and the
young couple, leave soon thereafter for
a two weeks bridal trip.
ELOPERS’ PLANS FAIL:
GIRL MANAGES FLIGHT
HI’NTINGTON. W. VA . Sept. 9
Aftei Goff Yates had failed in his
elopement plans. Ethel Byrd, his fian
ni, took his mothers automobile,
called for him and whirled him to
Ohio, where they were married.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANT) NEWS. 'MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 9. 1912.
MISS MARIE PAPPENHEIMER
David B. Foster
Takes Bride in
Connecticut
Mrs. D. E tv. Spratt announces the
marriage of her daughter. Caro! Fran
ces, to Mr. David Blair Foster, of At
lanta. on Friday, Septemebr 6. at 11
o'clock in the morning at Chester,
I
Conn.
The announcement win be received
with pleasant interest by the many At
lanta friends of the groom, who is a
son of Mr. Frank O. Foster, and one of
the city's well known young men.
The wedding was quietly observed at
the ancestral home of the Fosters, in
. Chester, which is now the home of the
bride's mother. Only members of the
family connection and a few friends
were present. Among these were Mr.
and Mrs. Fiank o. Foster and Misses
Maridn and Elizabeth Foster, of Atlan
ta.
After a brief wedding Journey to
Boston and other Eastern points, Mr.
Foster and'his bride will arrive in At
lanta, and will be at home with Mr. and
Mrs. F. 0. Foster, at 3o West Eleventh
street.
____
ENGAGEMENTS
- * - - ——■'
Dugas- Battey.
' The engagement of Miss Virginia
Dugas to Dr. Whatley Battey, of Au
gusta, has been announced. The wed
ding will be a brilliant .event of the
. autumn, in that city, taking the form of
a morning ceremony at St. Patricks
, church, followed by a wedding break
! fast at the home of the bride's aunt.
Miss Emmie Dugas.
Ragsdale -Upshaw.
Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Ragsdale an
nounce the engagement of their daugh
ter. Redona, to Mr. Benjamin Calhoun
L'psha'a. the marridge to take place on
the evening of November 6. at the Oak
land <’iiy. Baptist church.
SEA ISLAND COTTON
GROWERS WILL MEET
VALDOSTA. GA.. Sept. 9.—Tile sea
island cotton growers of southern
Georgia will hold a cotton congress in
tills cit.v on Friday, September 13, tu
wlileh all farmers and busim men are
■ invited. Among the objects of Hie
meeting is the discussion of marketing
method.- as they now exist, which are
very unprofitable to the grower, and the
consideration of the national wafehouse
system. charDs s Barrett, president
of the National Farmers union; T. W.
Carter, of Jackson Miss., president of
the National Warelmuse association
and Lawson E. Brown, president of the
Georgia Farmers union, will b< among
the speakers at the meeting
AGNES SCOTT ACADEMY.
The session will open Wednesday,
Septeinbet ISth.
The Academy will continue to do
■ College Preparatory work of the name
high grwde as heretofore. It has a
full faculty of experienced and suc
cessful teachers it is accredited to
• Agnes Scott College, to Vassar. Welles
ley Mount Holyoke- and Smith
Miss Young the Principal, has ar
i riceci and may he consulted at the
Academy building any morning'. •••
COUNTESS' BODY
TO BE EXHUMED
Officials Believe She Was Slain
With Hat Pin While Boating
With Lawyer.
NEW YORK, feept. 9. L’pon the re
sult of an autopsy over the body of the
Countess Rosa Menschik Szabofi who
was drowned in Greenwood lake while
boating with Attorney Burton W. Gib
son, representatives of the government
of Austria-Hungary, today admit
ted. will depend the future devel
opments of the strange case.
It is expected that the body will be
exhumed late today from the cemetery
in Jersey City-and the examination w ill
include a careful search for a minute
wound believed to have been made by
a hatpin.
Without explaining why they c lung
to the theory that the countess had been
rendered helpless by a wound from a
hatpin, both the legal representatives of
the foreign government and District
Attorney Thomas C. Rogers, of Orange
county, gave unusual attention to this
detail.
Gibson Welcomes Autopsy.
Burton W. Gibson, the attorney who
is now the chief figure in the case, to
day insisted that he welcomed the au
topsy and would aid the searchers in
every way. He scouted the idea that
the autopsy would reveal any cause
of death except drowning, and that he
thought the officials, in view of the
public interest, ought to make a thor
ough investigation.
The attaches of the Austro-Hunga
rian embassy, who are making a fight
to recover the estate of the countess
for brothers and sisters who reside in
Vienna, attached considerable impor
tance to statements made by Mrs.
Louise Maret. of 46 West Sixty-fourth
street. Mrs. Maret declared that the
countess was in fear of her attorney,
a statement that the lawyer says is
hardly compatible with her willingness
to accompany him on pleasure (rips.
PEACE SOCIETY AGENT
HAS OFFICE IN ATLANTA
Dr. J. J. Hall, formerly of Virginia
and North Carolina, has opened offices
in the Empire building as Southern
headquarters of the American Peace
society, and will engage in field work
for that organization.
Dr. W. W. Landrum, who has been
acting as pastor of the Ponce DeLeon
Baptist church through the summer,
paid a high compliment from his pulpit
to Dr. Hall, whom he knew while in thJ
ministry in Virginia.
HE HEARS GIRL’S VOICE
ON RECORD: THEY ELOPE
BOSTON, Sept. 9.—Rel’a Reed's fa
ther. proud of her voice, had a phono
graph record of it made and sent to
his friend, Arthur Erisman. Erisman
eloped with,the girl in a month.
MARTHA WASHINGTON’S
BRANDIED FRUIT IMPURE
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9. —Dr. Harvey
W. Wiley, the pure food expert, says
that Martha Washington’s old recipe
for brandfed peaches was contrary to
the pure food law.
TO NAME GORDON LEE.
ROME, GA.. Sept. 9.—The Seventh
congressional convention will be held
in Rome on September 14 at the Floyd
county court bouse. Congressman
Gordon Le.e was unopposed in the re
cent primary and he will be unani
mously renominated.
The highest point of woman’* hap
piness is reached only through moth
erhood, in the clasping of her child
within her arms. Yet the mother-to
be is often fearful of nature's ordeal
and shrinks from the suffering inci
dent to its consummation. Dot for
nature’s ills and discomforts nature
provides remedies, and In Mother's
Friend is to be found medicine of
great value to every expectant mother.
It is an emulsion for external
application, composed of ingredients
which act with beneficial and sooth
ing effect on those portions of the
system involved. It is intended to
prepare the system for the crisis, and
thus relieve, in great part, the suffer
ing through which the mother usually
passes. The regular use of Mother's
Friend will repay any mother in the
comfort it affords before, and the help
ful restoration to health and strength
it brings about after baby comes.
i Mother’s Friend
;Is for sale at . YT’ \
drug stores ififflfiWrk iriHlll
Write for our ll||y|||tl J [llv'iv
free book for |ggE
! expectant moth
ers which contains much valuable
information, and many suggestions of
a helpful nature.
BRADFIELD REGULATOK CO.. Atlaata. Ga.
*
READ FOR PROFIT
GEORGIAN WANT ADS
USE FOR RESULTS
WORKERS BACK AT
LOOMS; BIG MILL
STRIKE CALLED OFF
NEW BEDFORD, MASS., Sept. 9.—The
great textile strike which threw 13.000
persons out of work for eight weeks in
twelve of the biggest mills In New Bed
ford ended today when the greater part
of the strikers returned to work and the
mills reopened. The loom fixers and warp
twisters returned to work as the result of
a vote; the weavers have not as yet
voted to return, but returned on their
own initiative
It is estimated that the strike and
lockout have cost about 43,000.000.
I was cured of diarrhoea bv one
dose of < Colic. Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy." Writes M E
Gebhardt. Oriole. Pa. ' There is noth
ing better. For sale by all dealers.
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE.
The session will open Sepfembet 18th.
A large attendance is expected.
1 here are still a few vacancies in the
Dormitories.
Day students should reglstei
The President uill be in his office
daily until the opening.
The Committe of Faculty on Admis
sion will meet daily at 9 a. m. at the
College, beginning Monday. Septem
ber 16th.
UNFAIR TO
THE DRUGGIST
The Old Joke About “Something Just
as Good,” Doesn't Apply to
These Drug Stores.
You have probably heard dozens of
times the old story that a drug store
was a place to "get something just as
good.” There is at least one druggist
in the world that you can't say this
about.
It is certain that an inferior article
will never be substituted for a guaran
teed one by any Atlanta drug store.
Take, for instance, a safe, reliable
remedy for constipation and liver trou
ble like Dodsons Liver Tone. This
harmless vegetable liquid has proved so
satisfactory a liver stimulant and re
liever of biliousness, and to entirely
take the place of calomel without any
danger or restriction of habits or diet,
that there are dozens of preparations
springing up witli imitations of Its
claims.
feat Dodson's Liver Tone is guaran
teed to do all that is claimed for it. and
if you are not satisfied with it any At
lanta druggist will hand your money
back with a smile Any person going
to this store for a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will he sure of getting a
large bottle of this genuine remedy in
exchange for his half dollar. ,
Ajl t 99 fV W 99999999 99 99999999 ft 991 f 9 WWf ££
* 2’
IMS • 1
S I
| Economy Prices on School Supplies |
Buy Them Here at a Saving of From 30 to 40 Per Cent £■
•-—■ —-'-■-—------ Bring This List With You •“••■-• -•■ t
■ 1 ,
J?
Ruled Tablets 4c 25c and 35c School Bags . 23c JJ-
Composition Books 4c 50c and 75c School Bags ...45c
Composition Books 9c Leather School Straps 5c
25c Pencil Assortment 19c Leather School Straps 9c
35c Pencil Assortment 25c Aluminum Drinking Cups., 5c
50c Pencil Assortment 39c Aluminum Drinking Cups . . 9c
75c Pencil Assortment 59c 5c Bottle Paste .....' 4c
15c Eagle Compass 9c 5c Rubber Eraser 4c
□5 5c 1-Bth Rulers 4c 5c Drawing Pencils 4c Jr’
5c Mikado Pencils 4c 5c Diagraph Pencils 4c gj-
S 1 Two Brilliant Specials for Tuesday 5
5-
■5 Gun Metal Mesh Bags i Jeweled LaValliers :.
g New Fashionable Shapes, Bought Exquisite Effects in Dainty
3 at a Big Advantage, Sold to Pendant Designs=«Very 2
Z You in a Like Manner Specially Priced 2/
We have bought the entire line of a We are glad to call vour atten- •U
large importers “odd numbers - per- tion to these new Platinum fin-
£ feetly new styles, genuine gun metal ish LaValliers which we have 2"
ba Mesh Bags. They are the beautiful. • , • , . .
. .I ,,s t received, embracing a va- 3-’
tine, elose Mesh Bags -just the quality
3 ... , . . ' rietv of piquantlv pretax por-
you will admire b and i-ni-h 1 • '
frames. The sort that you have seen | tiaxals <d the j< \\(‘|cr s ait. Jfe
priced at $5.00. $6.00 and $7.50 each. I Pendants set in imitation stones,
Quantity not large. Quick response j direct and perfect, copies of Sp»
necessary to'secure riQ expensive designs.
>2® one at the special VA UA Tomorrow onlv,
7J <|W.7U r|iiiiii . avu «.
*JK ■ «
e SJ’BIB nuiMl'J-'I S J
STODDARDIZED Rugs
Are Good as New Ones
I J I*' YOI'R Rugs—or Carpets—are stained and dirty,
yon can have them made Io look like new again—
by having 'em Dry Cleaned by the famous STOD
DARD way. which revives the colors and disinfects!
A Wagon for a Phone Call. ?|S
We pay Express (one way) on out-of-town orders of 12 or over Sa
S toddard
DIAMONDS
PROPERLY GRADED
The great cure given to the selection of our Diamonds
makes this the one house where an\ one. however unfami'iar
tvith . diamond values, may purchase without any possible ele
ment of risk.
Before we presume t > show our gems they are siib.ln«t,->(T
to the closest ex amination by out diamond expert, and the
weight, grade and price is marked on each individual tag in
plain figures
See us with reference to our partial payment plan It
will enable yon to possess a property that is paving mire
than 10 per cent yearly, and jjay i‘or it without in< (inv>-nience.
Zuqepe
WIIITFJHAUir .ST.
LJI- LJ. .. .LULU. . X±L 1 1 -.1U"1_1... .J L . . !■! . wbrii. »■■■■. i ir ■■■!■■ j ■j■ .
PENCHLS FREE
Take your choice of any pencil in our stores when you buy a tablet —whether
it is a five or ten cent tablet—pencil tablet or ink tablet.
ALL. THIS WELK
■ II6CAPTTOL AVE 129 ANGIER AVE i 56 MORELAND AVfL
aL BOTH.PHONES'U4S IVY-646 WLAJfTA-2477..1VY 186 ATLANTA 413
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