Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 24, 1912, HOME, Page 9, Image 9

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43 PRESBYTERIAN PASTORS MEET IN FALL PRESBYTERY The Atlanta presbytery will open its fall session tonight at the College Park Presbyterian church, with Rev Fritz Rauschenburg as host to the visit ors. Twenty-two counties and sixty-four churches, with about 7,000 members, are included in the presbytery. Fortv-three ministers will be in attendance. The meeting will open by a sermon by Rev. J. E. Hanah. of Newnan, and wel come addresses by Elder J. C. Woodward Rev. H. C. Christian and Barnard Wil lingham. mayor pro tern of College Park I I | “Now we Can Afford a Piano’’ M will be on the lips of many peo- J '4 file today when they read this S 5 advertisement. ’ ■ A piano for $195 is perhaps $ M not entirely unusual, but when '/. J the instrument represents the M S quality of those we are now ■ offering, it becomes one of ■ those rarities—a real bargain. We searched tirelessly the ■ s factories of reputable piano makers to find the very piano B ■ we wanted. Then we sacrificed ■ a part of our profit to keep S S the price where we wanted it. ■ 8 And our established reputation || ■ for square dealing protects you H H in buying one of these I BRAND NEW I I PIANOS r A limited number in i J handsome mahogany x. Illi* j G Colonial eases. Terms, anl ~ if desired ! ' U $lO NOW $6 PER MONTH if Such bargains as these will a be snapped up quickly. There- E sere, call and examine these g high grade instruments today. Eg I Haliet & Davis Piano Co | IWM. CARDER. Mgr., E 1226-27-28 Candler Bldg. healers wanted in unoccuph jag t< rritory. B i \ M. Rich & Bros. Co. , I | AMERICAN IffiAUTV CORSET | 1 1010 1 r n s as illustrated A • wJ kJ I / An excellent model for full figures, 5 !■ quiring long hip but medium height above waist line, it has an extreme skirt s_ : Wf'V length, and gives the much sought after ? ’■S 1 straight line effect over hips and back. s Im r 1 Material excellent qualify’ durable con- £ t^ l til. daintily lace and ribbon trimmed, f IM I- 1 three pair hose supporters attached. i tkA SPECIAL VALUE $1.50 I : 2d Floor- | f 5 ( M. RICH & BROS. = : » J/iff \ S Iz $9.95 Hatter’s Plush || 5 Untrimmed Bats S£ i WMWfr $7.95 I tssortment of these most gg"" 8» wanted of all the Untrimmed ZW Th. tricorne Hat styles—made of Silk "Hatter’s" Plush in beautiful large shapes, including the beautiful Tricorne Brims with the smart, it */!• new. Fra ”f h who W i«hes to plan her own hat this sale of very high-class Untrimmed Shapes ~>B , Lund d onnortunitv and in conjunction with our gorgeous assortment of trimmings she jS can'select here andl plan the ideal of her mind’s eye, in Milllnery-and enjoy the extreme satlsfac- JC -2J 1 *!? P riced ,o *« at * 9 ’ 95: Bpecial * ale pr,c *’ 1 $7.95 | S FANCY OSTRICH FRILL EFFECTS. FANCY, GENUINE OSTRICH PIECES. hnnnh—an Fancy, genuine ostrich pieces. 3 large single *5 Fancy ostrich frill effects 8 to the bunc pieces branched prettily, and very stylish $6.95 - > inexpensive yet especially effective trimming. PARADISE. ■ $2.48. Handsome, large Paradise, prettily branched, OSTRICH STICK-UP EFFECTS. $16.50 to $37.50. 5* very showy pleces-white and colors $4.95 WILLOW PLUMES. Zfc ■ A ,-octtcc Beautifully shaded Willow Plumes—the biggest *n|g GENUINE AIGHtI 1 to. values ever offered in Atlanta: just received and gS v-spray Aigrettes—very specially priced. .$3.98 very specially pricedsll.9s 5 I______GREATER MILLINERY SECTION 2d FLOOR | Society | News of Atlanta MISS MARJORIE 8088, of New Orleans, the guest of Miss Jen nie D. Harris, was tendered an informal tea this afternoon by Miss i Sarah Rawson, at the Piedmont Driving I club. The tea table was placed in the New York room and decorated in pink roses and ferns. Miss Rawson’s guests Included Misses Nell Hodgson, of Athens: Flora Be wick, Lucy Hoke Smith and Elizabeth Rawson. Miss Bobb wore a smart toilet of blue charmeuse satin embroidered in green and gold. Her large black hat was adorned with a shaded plume of green and black. ; Miss Harris wore green olga crepe, showing a touch of pink on the corsage. A large black hat adorned with a black aigrette completed the costume. For Miss Westmoreland. Miss Elvira Westmoreland, whose marriage to Mr. Julian Prade takes place October 10, will be tendered a series of parties before her marriage. The first of these will be a bridge party at which Mrs. Thomas P. Westmore land will entertain the latter part of next week. Misses Adeline Thomas and Miss An nie Lou Pagett will give bridge parties for the bride-elect, and Mrs. Charlton Ogburn has planned a luncheon at the Capital City club. Mrs. Thomas G. 11 Daniel and others will entertain, datei to be arranged later. Informal Bridge. Mrs. Edwin A. Pierce entertained at ! bridge this afternoon for her guest, Mrs. i C. H. Pierce, of Columbus, and for Mrs IG. W. Jeter, of Macon, t|ie guest of I Mrs. T. J. Butler. Goldenrod and au i tutnn leaves formed the decorations. I The prizes included a nut bowl for top \ score, a hand-painted vase for conso ■ lation and hanging porch vases for the honor guests. Mrs. Pierce was assisted in entertain ing by Mrs. C. A. Murphy and Miss I Susie May Park. Miss Lucy Harrison leaves Thursday for New York, where she will be joined by Miss Kelsey, of Brooklyn, for a two I months trip abroad. Miss Harrison and Miss Kelsey sail October 2 on the Ber i lin, of the North German Lloyd line, i for Naples, and will spend the time in Italy. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN 'VXD NEWS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1912. | PERSONALS f Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur Hynds have returned from a trip to Canada. Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Adams announce the birth of a daughter, \vho has been named Fay. Dr. Dean F. Winn has moved from his cottage in East Lake to 786 Pied mont avenue. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Brown have returned from a visit to Mrs. Latimer in Belton, S. C. Miss Lucy Stockard is spending sev eral days with Miss Rosabel Chapman in Inman Park. Miss Lois Crosby, of California, re mains some time in Atlanta with Miss Margaret Nutting. Dr. Thomas Hart Raines, of Savan nah. is the guest of his aunt, Miss Eliz abeth Hart, in Inman Park. Mr. and Mrs. James S. Wright, of Brunswick, are guests of Judge and Mrs. Spencer R. Atkinson. Mrs. Berta M. Swift, who is spend ing several days in New’ York, will re turn home the first of next week. Miss Laura Cole Hutchins, of Ath ens, arrives tomorrow to spend a week or so in the city with Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb. Mrs. E. G. Gray and Mrs. Anna Kel log, of New York, have returned home, after spending several days with Mrs. Henry Peeples. Mrs. R. Wayne Wilson will return home tomorrow, after spending the past several months abroad, studying music with Leschitesky. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy, Misses Julia and Katherine Murphy and Miss Mamie Gatins have returned home, aft er an extended stay abroad. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Oelsner and daughter, Elise Mayer, of Quitman. Ga.. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. D. Steinhei mer, at 452 Washington street. Mr F. L. Seely passed through the city yesterday en route to Asheville from Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Seely will be in Asheville for some time longer. Mrs. M. W. Nathan, of New Orleans, formerly of Atlanta, is the guest of Mrs. C. G. Lippold. A series of infor mal parties have been planned in hon or of Mrs. Nathan. Mrs. C. W. Rowbotham. of New Or leans, and little daughter, Ruth, have returned home, after a visit to Mrs. Rowbotham’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Chapman. Dr. and Mrs. M. A. Davis, Miss Pearl Davis and Dr. Homer Davis will be at home after October 1 at 865 Peachtree street, the former residence of Mrs. Orme Campbell. Miss Gladys Calvin, who has spent the past few days with her aunt, Mrs. Edw'ard Hafer, in her apartment in the Mendenhall, has returned to her home ar Experiment Station. Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb spent the past week-end in Athens as the guest of Mrs. M. A. Lipscomb, who has been ill, but is now much improved, to the pleasure of her many friends. Mrs. J. J. McGrath is at home at “Old Orchard,” after a few months in Europe. A trip on the Rhine, the ex cavations at Pompeii and the run ashore at Gibraltar were particularly interest ing features of her stay abroad. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. West, who ■ have been spending the season at their summer home on Great Chebeague Is : land, Maine, will return home October 1. Mrs. West visited relatives and friends in New York and Massachu setts during July. Mrs. J. J. McGrath has returned to Old Orchard from a most enjoyable trip .o British Isles and the continent em bracing a tour through France. Ger many. Switzerland and Italy, also tak ing in the Catacombs and a visit to Pompeii. Dinner Party for Home-Coming Tourists The return of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy from an extended stay abroad, is the occasion for a delightful welcome to these popular members of Atlanta society. Mr. and Mrs. Murphy will be tendered a dinner party tonight at Ihe Piedmont Driving club by Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Lowry, covers to be laid for twelve guests. The affair will be a happy welcoming party to the honor guests, and in the company will be the special friends of Mr. and Mrs. Murphy and of Colonel and Mrs. Lowry. Mr. and Mrs. Murphy and their party have had a pleasant summer traveling in the Old World. They spent some time at Carlsbad, and were in London, Paris and Berlin for extended visits. They were accompanied on their trip by Miss Gatins and their young daugh ters. Miss Manley's Birthday Party. The birthday party given by little Mies Fanny Manley was a happy affair of yesterday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Manley. A color scheme of pink and white was carried out in detail. The table had for a center piece a vase of pink roses, which was surrounded by candlesticks holding pink shaded tapers. The birthday cake was embossed in pink and bore eight pink candles. The little hostess wore a white lin gerie frock with pink ribbons. The guests were Misses Louise Inman, Net tie Witherspoon, Frances Brown, Mana Brown, Martha Boynton. Emily Hlll yer, Betty Pou, Jeannette Collins, Mas ters George Weyman, Sam Weyman, Spencer Callaway, Cabell Hopkins and David Collins. FUTURE EVENTS Mrs. Don A. Pardee will entertain twelve young women at a luncheon on Friday, complimenting Miss Marjorie Bobb, of New Orleans, and Miss Marion Van Dyke, of Tennessee, two attractive visitors now in the city. Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Lowry will entertain at a dinner party of twelve covers this evening at the Pied mont Driving club in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy, who have re cently returned after an extended stay abroad. Mrs. Harry Hasson, of Jacksonville, is being pleasantly entertained as the guest of Mrs. Valdemar Gude. Among the informal affairs planned for her this week are Mrs. Gude's bridge to morrow. a small tea on Thursday, to be given by Mrs. Louis Moeckel, at her home, and a luncheon at the Capital City club, when Mrs. Barrv Cothran will be hostess, also on Thursday. Mrs. R. H. Powell, who has spent the summer with her son. Judge Ar thur Powell, and Mrs. Powell, is now with her son, Mr. H. T. Powell, before leaving for Bainbridge, where she will remain during the winter with her daughter, Mrs. J. D. James. PROFESSIONAL MEN’S SOULS HARDEST TO SAVE, MINISTER SAYS CHICAGO, Sept. 24—There was much discussion here today of the ad dress delivered before a congress of 50 evangelists in the Moody church by Rev. Melvin Trotter, of Grand Rapids. Mich., who declared that the souls of professional men are hardest to save. "The professional man is too inter ested In his business to go to church, and too full of Intellectual objections when he getst here," said Trotter. "His soul is hardest to save. It doesn’t do any good to argue questions of dogma with him. You must get him inside the mission and show him results." Trotter declared that the drug fiend ranked next to the professional man because of his untrustworthiness. The scarlet woman, he said, was third. "Women of that sort are so sure then is no hope for them that they are hard to reach." he said. "Another obstack between them and salvation is the fac' that no one will give them honest em ployment." 300 PUPILS EARN $10,500 DURING THEIR VACATION ROCKFORD, ILL., Sept. 24.—Three | hundred Rockford high school girls and l boys earned a total of $10,500 in the vacation months. The pupils made an accounting yesterday to Principal Briggs of the manner in which they had spent the summer months, the re port showing that they had by no means idled their time away. Captain John Doyle, of the football team, led all the others as an individ ual earner. He reported having been paid $l2B for his work as a member of a cement gang. Most of the girls earned their money by applying their knowledge of domestic science. EXPERTS TO AID FARMERS ALONG SOUTHERN RAILWAY The department of farm improve ment work recently organized by the lines of the Southern railway system will have three field agents in Geor gia—George Reese, at Atlanta; B. E. Wolff, at Macon, and T. E. Waldrup, at Valdosta. The work in Georgia will in clude the Georgia Southern and Flor ida railway, the Augusta Southern road and the Tallulah Falls line, and farmers on them as well aa along the various lines of the Southern railway will have the services of this, depart ment at their disposal without charge. The work of the field agents will be under the direct supervision of T. O. Plunkett, manager of the department, with headquarters in Atlanta. WEDDINGS Hopkins- Elliott. The wedding of Miss Flournoy Adams Hopkins, daughter of Mrs. Willoughby Sharpy, of New York, to Mr, Gilbert El liott, only son of Sir Arthur and Lady Elliott, of Stobs. Roxburgshire, Scot land, has been set for October 10. The ceremony will be performed at the Church of St. Andrew on the Dunes, at Southampton, Long Island, the cere mony to be followed by a reception at the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Sharpe. Lady Elliott is due to arrive this week, to attend the wedding of Miss Hopkins and her son, who is the heir presumptive to the baronetcy of which his father is the present and ninth in cumbent, Breitenbucher- Blackshear. Miss Dorothy Breitenbucher and Mr. Perry Blackshear will be married this evening at 8:30 o'clock at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Breitenbucher, 142 Sunset avenue. A reception will follow the ceremony, at which a large number of guests will be entertained. MUSIC NOTES Miss Eda Bartholomew and Miss Car rie Porter, assisted by Mr. Oscar Pap penhelmer, will give a concert at the Harris Street Presbyterian church on Thursday evening. October 10. Mr. Raoul S. Bonanno has returned to the city and will spend the winter in Atlanta. Mr. Bonanno is a musician of note, and is well known here, hav ing spent a part of the spring in this city, when he was heard at several musical entertainments. Among these was a reception for the members of the Atlanta Musical association given by the president. Mrs. John M. Slaton. Mr. Bonanno will be an acquisition to the professional music circles of the city. |ANNOUNCEMENTS The par Ant-teacher neighborhood club of Ira Street school will meet at the school tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. All mothers In the Ira street district are requested to be present. FillUaft Hawkeya» First Class Finishing and En larging. A complete stock films, plates, papers, chemicals, etc. Special Mail Order Department for out-of-town customers. Send for Catalog and Price Liat. 4. K. HAWKES CO. ■ -Kodak Dtpirtmtnl 14 Whitehall St.ATLANTA, GA. L Southern Suit & Skirt Co. Southern Suit & Skirt Co. p Our Suit Room Full to Overflowing J 3 With Beautiful New | t* Fall Suits djlL | / The wonderful range of models. I 1 The stunning styles, masterful tailor- L <? J ing. The wealth of beautiful materials 5? to select from—all so moderately priced 41 —without a doubt make this the logi- \ j j cal suit store of Atlanta. ISh We Feature For Tomorrow ( A Great Suit Display | \ 68 Distinctive Models To Select From / ® <7 Priced at I M j / jj39.50, $37.50. $35, $29.50, $25 » I Isl I F | Remarkable S homing of p 'lll / 1 The New Charmeuse Dresses I /// / tWhat a model of beautiful, rich colorings to select from in these lovely I// B / W. charmeuse street and afternoon frocks—the Robespierre and Directoire col- I f/fl ff f . lars—the pannier and draped skirts are shown in various ways. The colors I QT fl f are taupe, navy, black, brown, king's blue and Copenhagen. Many of the t ~ I W styles shown exclusively at this store; priced at J' -yl-. / , 4 $22.50, $19.50, $17.50, $16.50, $14.75, $11.75 f ‘ f fM I ; It 1— ll — ll I * Writs i / The l\ew Whipcords and Serge Dresses I j \ 4 « Fashion 1 y _ 11 ■ ■ Catalogue. (H /tdft These charming frocks are prettier than ever Sturdy serges - an <J whipcords, navies, Copenhagen, taupe, brown and black. trimmed In various ways, some w ith torchon of a bright color /""L /A CIQ Q C vL here and there, adding much to the attractiveness of the garment V /IGfniCL/SC UreSSCS tpO.VJ Models of unusual styles. Priced at \\e offer tomorrow 38 Chartneuse dresses fg “a . * z* < /- zv zex-. zv zk In navy blue. Copenhagen, brown, taupe 1 i $17.50, $14.75, $12.50, $9.95, $7.95, \ $6.95, $5.85 and $4.85 W. 95 / u Southern Suit and Skirt Co. S “Atlanta’s Exclusive Woman’s Apparel Store’’ 43-45 Whitehall St. | GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his persona) supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good ” are but Experiments, and endanger th* health of Children—Experience against Experiment* What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNYAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. FLATWARE Superior in Quality and Design During the last few years a number of patterns have 4 been produced which were inspired by different, yet I characteristic phases of the “Old Colonial” style. Each < pattern has, to a degree, successfully embodied the more 1 elaborate aspects. It is the Paul Revere, however, prices on which are j' given below, which fully exemplifies the elegant sim- f plicity distinguishing the taste of our forefathers. g Twelve Table Knives \ Twelve Dessert Knives I Twelve Dessert Forks rK 1 f \ /" £* Twelve Table Forks I jI I j Twelve Tea Spoons ( Twelve Soup Spoons | Twelve Table Spoons / With mahogany chest complete $174.65 %ugepe iXytaqpeyfs. JEWEUEiy O7 ST. 9