Newspaper Page Text
Little Palmer Phelan Dallis Entertains at Jolly Old-Time Games Party
HOSTESS TO 80 ON FOURTH BIRTHDAY
Good Things to Eat, Four-Can
dle Cake and Other Treats
for Guests.
jf! 8 ? Palmer Phelan Dallis, the llt
tl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Dalils. played hostess yesterday after
noon to about SO little friends. And the
time they had In the big back yard of
. (fie Dallis home in West Fourteenth
gtreet was something to make them re
member little Palmer’s fourth birthday
for many Hummers to come.
They played drop the handkerchief
and all the old-fashioned games, and
a lot they Invented themselves. Mrs.
Dallis and her sister. Mrs. Ulric Atkin
son, were mistresses of the games and
kept the fun going. Then there were
good things to eat, a birthday cake with
four candles on it, and candy souvenirs
in the shape of telephones, norns and
other things the children love.
[PERSONALS 1
Mr and Mrs. George S. Lowndes, Jr., '
and baby will return tomorrow after '
spending several weeks at Toxaway.
■
Mr. and Mrs. John Ellis have re- I
turned from their wedding trip.
Miss Nancy Hill Hopkins will leave
Mondaj for Southampton, L. 1., to be l
the guest of Mrs, Willoughby Sharpe
for the marriage of Miss Flournoy Hop
kins to Mr. Gilbert Elliott on Octo
ber lb.
Mr and Mrs. Wilbur G. Kurtz an- j
nounce the birth of a son, who will
be I'alh’d Wilbur, Jr.
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•Some of the little guests at Palmer Phelan Dallis’ party. At the top—Francis Arnold, on left, and Robert Wood. Jr., trying out
one of the candy telephones given as souvenirs. Below, on left, Al aster S. A. \ isanska, and on right. Logan Williamson, "tooting
their own horns.”
Fo' Miss Bobb.
Last evening Mr. Edward Alfriend
A Diamond Bought
Now Is An Especially
Fine Investment
Diamonds in the best grade
ha>’e advanced at the rate of
1-2 per cent yearly for more
'han a decade.
Since we purchased our pres
ent stock four advances have oc
curred in the primary market,
hese advances make a total of
! tHy $25 per carat over our pres
ent prices.
It win be necessary for us to
• ■How this advance bv the last of
October.
You have just about four weeks
which to take advantage of
tiie Dp] prices.
Selections sent prepaid on ap
t'toval. Liberal contract pay
outs allowed.
Call or write for our booklet.
I acts About Diamonds." It
-tjves you net prices and all par
ticulars about our plans.
Maier & Berkele. Inc.
Diamond Merchants.
31-33 Whitehall Street
Established 1887
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entertained in honor of Miss Bobb, of
New Orleans, the guest of Miss Jennie
A Shampoo for Blondes
RiHretblef acd Tb« only •barnooo
on the market that will actually bee/ the
ehi’drt of blende hair from frowns darker—
an • iHve to unattractive drah nr fadediooMnf
hair a 'uttrrm fide* them that K antvnraally
admired, without dyeing or blear hinf— A six
weeks* for J).00
MME. ELIZABETH GILLE
No. 1 Hamilton Grange New York City
Ao* salf by
COURSEY <&. MUNN
"hid-
Prevents Unpleasant
Perspiration Odor
Does Not Clog
Restrain
or Injure
Large Porcelain Jar 25c
FOR SALE BY
All Jacobs’ Stores
And Druggists Generally. |
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1912.
D. Harris, at a dinner party at the
Piedmont Driving club, followed by a
theater party at the Atlanta Mr. Al
friend’s guests included Miss Bobb,
Miss Jennie I). Harris, Miss Harriet
Calhoun, Mr. Stuart Witham and Dr
Joseph D. Osborne.
I| ANNOUNCEMEN isl
An entertainment will be given on
the lawn of the new Kirkwood High
school Friday at 3 p. in. for the benefit
of the school building fund. The Wom
en's Civic league of Kirkwood sponsors
the affair. No admission tvill be
charged, but refreshments will be sold.
Amusements will be provided for chil
dren and grownups.
Mr. W. S. Gunsalus. a farmer living
la ar Fleming, Pa., says he has used
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy in his family for four-
'll years, and that lie has found it to
be an excellent remedy. and takes
pleasure in recommending it. For sale
by all dealers. fAdvt, >
t KO DAKS-™-
WW.X-O- w. ».'^ Hawkeyes
first Class finishing and En
larging A complete stock films,
plates, papers, chemicals etc.
Special Mail order Department for
| out-of-town customers.
I Send for Catalog and Price List.
4. K CO. - Kod,k Drmr!m-r
14 Whitehall St. ATLANTA. Ga.
I :
| WEDDINGS
Fielder- Ewing.
Miss Dorothy fielder and Mr. Mor
ris Miles Ewing will be married this
evening at 9 o’clock at the residence
of the bride’s parents. Mr. and Mrs.
James Walton Fielder, 763 West Peach
tree street. A reception for the inti
mate friends of the young couple will
follow the ceremony.
Clemmer-Whisenhunt.
Miss Lenore Clemmer, of Greene
ville, Tenn., and Mr W. G. Whisen
hunt, of East Point, Ga„ were married
in Greeneville at the home of the bride
Tuesday morning. September 24, at 10
o’clock. Immediately thereafter they
left for a wedding trip to New York,
Philadelphia, Atlantic City, Baltimore,
Washington and other points in the
East.
The couple will be at home to friends
at their residence on East Cleveland
avenue. East Point, aft' i October 15.
The bride is the youngest daughter
of Judge Clemmer, of Greeneville, and
comes of a family which has been
prominent in the affairs of Greene
county and of the city of Greeneville
for more, than a quarter of a century.
The bridegioom is a popular and prom
inent young man of Ea-t Point.
Society
I News of
Atlanta
I
Mr. AND MRS JOHN E. MUR
PHY. who have just returned
home, after an extended stay
abroad, were tendered a dinner party
last evening by Colonel and Mrs. Rob
ert J. Lowry. The dinner was given at
the Piedmont Driving club. Covers
were laid for twelve at a table having
as a decoration several small vases
filled with Killarney ropes, which were
later presented to the guests as souve
nirs. A feature of the evening was the
reacting of a number of clever “letter
grams" addressed to the honor guests
Mrs. Lowry received her guests wear
ing white lace over white satin, witli a
touch of coral on the corsage. Mrs.
Murphy wore a Paris gown of white
satin draped in black accordion pleated
net. with a garniture of rhinestones on
the corsage and a girdle of raspberry
velvet.
The Bal Travestie Tonight.
Much interest centers in the bal tra
vestli', to be an event of tills evening,
at the old Capital City club. The af
fair is under the auspices of the Jo
seph Habersham chapter, D. ,A. R
The chaperons will be Al . and Mrs.
\V. L. Peel. Mr. and Mrs. William Kiser
Judge and Mrs. Spencer Atkinson. Mr.
and Mrs. John A. Perdue. .Mr. and Mrs
George Yundt and Mr. and Airs T. J.
Ripley.
The committee includes Mrs. W. S.
Yeate-. chairman; Mrs. W. H. Chipley.
Mrs. Belle Whit.- Stallings, Mrs John
E. Smith and Mis. Johnson
Tea For Miss Hunter.
Miss Effie Boykin entertained at tea
at tie- Georgian Terrace this afterno >n
in honor of Miss Jule Hunter, a bride
elect.
Invited to meet Miss Hunter were
Misses Eddie Hunter, Maury Lee
Cowles. Rebecca Candler. Ethel Coffee
Eva Towers, Mrs Henry Earthman of
Clearwater, Fla., and Mrs. Emory Pa’-
tillo.
Mrs. Henry Johnson’s Luncheon.
Miss Marjorie Robb, of New Or
leans, who is being delightfully enter
tained during her visit to Miss Jennie
1). Harris, was the complimented guest
at a luncheon given today by Mrs.
Henry Johnson.
Mrs. Johnson's home on Fourteenth
■ -street was decorated in garden flowers,
and the guests were seated for lunch
eon at a handsomely appointed table,
with covers laid for ten. A eenterpiece,
formed of pink and white cosmos, ar
ranged in a plateau, was surrounded
j by pink shaded tapers in silver candle.
| sticks. The place cards were hand
| painted in pink roses.
j Mrs. Johnson, the cordial hostess.
gtftWJ >yHWH—WM—
I Certainly! |
e| The proper thing for every woman to do, when she S
|| feels that she needs a tonic/ is to take Cardui, the $
■ •! woman's tonic. •
;gl ""When you do this, you will get the benefit of the •
1| sP ecia j value that Cardui must have, (being a successful J
|| female tonic), for all cases of womanly weakness. •
•I Another important thing to remember, about •
| Cardui, is, that it is a mild extract of simple, vegetable §
* ingredients—an herb tea —with only sufficient preser- f
* X2IiXL a ddcd, to prevent souring. i
« S
* If You Wish to be Well |
I bb CARDUI I
| The Woman’s Tonic S
« I
* ' cannot say enough for Cardui, •
© iPZ7Z y '% ; ?X the woman’s tonic,” writes Mrs. S
* Mary B. Fowlkes, of Keysville, Va. J
* TZ -> 'w ‘Before I commenced using Cardui, •
* J ' would have fainting spells, sick 8
8 headache and backache. I can’t tell 9
® ''T\T'' all °^ the s >’ m Pf° n ’s. But now, since •
e 3\ \ ' us ’ ng on '- v t wo bottles of Cardui, I 8
8| \ do not suffer pain, and lam glad to J
•I say that 1 am in better health than in many years.” •
|| Sold by all Druggists LHB B
FUTURE EVENTS
A subscription dance will be given
tomorrow evening at the Biookhaven
club, to which club members and their
friends who hold courtesy cards are in
vited.
wore black a.nd white striped chiffon
with a touch of green on the corsage.
Miss Bobb's gown was of blue olga
crepe combined with cream lace, and
her hat was of blue. Miss Harris wore
a suit of white serge with a hat of white
felt trimmed in blue.
Invited to meet Miss Bobb were
Misses Eula Jackson, Jennie D. Har
ris, Sarah Coates, Sarah Rawson. Har
riot Calhoun. Annie Lee McKenzie, Van
Spalding. Helen Dargan. Margaret
Hawkins, Mary Helen Moody and Flora
Bewick.
Mrs. Stallings Chairman.
The restaurant being conducted by
the Joseph Habersham chapter, D. A.
R.. at tile old Capital City club will be
in charge of Mrs. Belle White Stallings
tomorrow. Mrs. Stallings will be as
sisted by Mrs E. Aldine Pound. Mrs.
B. D. Carson. Mrs. J. B. Hockaday, Mrs.
Owen Phelan, Mrs. Ira E. Fort, Mrs
William Worth Martin, Misses Nina
and Annie Hornady, Sa.llie Cobb John
son. .Mary Allgood Jones. Nina Gentry
and Regina Rambo. *
The menu will include fried chicken
and corn fritters, baked Smithfield
ham, potatoes au gratin, lettuce a la
Beechnut, hot rolls, iced tea and coffee.
Winter in Washington.
Mrs. Hoke Smith and daughters,
Misses Lucy and Callie Hoke Smith
will leave the middle of October for
New York, where they will remain un
til November 1 They will meet Sena
tor Smith there, after Ills return from
an extended Western trip.
From New York the family goes to
Washington for the winter. They will
<>ecup\ their handsome residence on
California avenue, purchased a few
months ago by the senator. Miss Cal
lie Hoke Smith, the younger daughter
of Senator and Mrs. Smith, will be one
of the mason’s debutantes.
For Miss Bewick.
Miss Flora Bewick, who has recently
returned to Atlanta after an absence
of two years in the Philippines, where
iter mother, Mrs. Donnelly, and Captain
Donnelly have been stationed, is being
pleasantly entertained since her return
to her former home.
This afternoon Miss Bewick was ten
dered an informal tea by Miss Lucy
Hoke Smith at the Piedmont Driving
elub. The guests, who included only a
group of the former schoolmates of
Miss Bewick, were entertained on the
terrace, lea being served from a table
decorated in summer flowers.
INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE RUNS.
BUCHANAN, GA., Sept. 25.- I. N.
Cheney, a lawyer, of Bremen, has an
nounced as an independent candidate
for representative from Haralson
county against G. L. Suggs, the regular
nominee. Mr. Cheney made the race
for i epresentative two years ago
against W. W. Summerlin, the nominee,
but was defeated by a small majority.
7 ——a
Prominent Couple/
Wed on Lawn
m Moonlight
An al fresco wedding for Miss Doro-J
thy Breitenbucher and Mr. Perry 1
Biackshear was a pretty ceremony off
last evening at the residence of Mr. and I
Mrs. Philip Breitenbucher. the bride'si
parents. The spacious grounds sur- j
rounding the residence on Sunset ave
nue glowed with festoons of fairy j
lights, and through the branches of the
trees the moon looked down upon the
scene. The bridal party came out
through an aisle formed of palms and
ferns on tall pedestals, the greenery
festooned with fairy lights. A circular
platform was arranged for the group of
wedding attendants under a large tree,
and above the party was an arch of
greenery starred with clusters of white
hydrangeas.
Six young married friends of the
bride attended her, wearing their own '
wedding gowns. They were Mrs. !
George Breitenbucher, Mrs. Robert 1
Slone of Hawkinsville, Mrs. Wilson
Wallace of Chattanooga. Mrs. Emil
Breitenbucher, Mrs. Keith Bassett
Aluse, Mrs. G. R. Glenn, Jr.
Miss Louise Breitenbucher, as maid
of honor, wore pink crepe meteor and
carried a bouquet of pink asters. The
bridesmaids, Misses Lamar Jeter, Irene
Bischoff, of Charleston, and Elise Bax
ter, of Baltimore, wore gowns of pink
crepe meteor trimmed in silver lace and
also carried pink asters.
Mr. Byron Huie was best man, and
the groomsmen weie Messrs. Frank
Butler. Janies Alexander and George
Powell. Two little flowers girls, Vir
ginia and Dorothy Louise Breiten
oucher. of Chattanooga, nieces ot the
bride, wearing dainty white frocks with
pink ribbons, preceded the bride, scat
tering rose petals in her pathway.
The bride, who is a young woman of
unusual beauty, wore a gown of white
charmeuse satin, the skirt and corsage
elaborately embroidered in a design of
orchids—her own handiwork. The coat
was of princess lace and the long veil,
which was thrown back from the face,
was point lace, caught with orange
blossoms. The bridal bouquet was of
valley lilies The only ornament was a
diamond la vallier, the gift of the bride
groom.
An orchestra played the w-edding
music Following the ceremony a re
ception was held, when several hundred
guests were entertained.
Throughout the house there were
decorations of palms and vases of pink
asters. Punch was served from two
tables, one placed on the. lawn and one
on the porch, each being arranged un
der an arch of pink asters, starred with
tiny electric lights.
Mrs. Breitenbucher, the bride’s moth
er. wore black charmeuse satin with
yoke and sleeves of lace. She wore
valley lilies. .Mrs. Bridges, of Blakely,
the bridegroom's sister, wore cham
pagne-colored chiffon over satin, with
| a corsage bouquet of valley lilies.
-
7