Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 02, 1912, EXTRA, Image 13

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1 fz&A ( mw JawX vMiXZ Wjw m Jf IJrB jk &-s J l The Atlanta Georgian t - .^. JW Season in Full Swing Crowds Calendar to Surfeit JUST now the social world is vastly interested in the many thick white envelopes that the postman deposits in one’s special box each morning. Invitations are flying thick and'fast, and cards to afternoon teas, luncheons, dinners, balls and weddings increase the bulk of the leathei- waliet carried on the sturdy shoulders of Uncle Sam’s messenger bearer. Hundreds of invitations have been issued. Many hostesses are getting out cards several weeks in advance in order to notify their friend? who may be thinking of entertaining that a certain date is "spoken for.” The invitations to the Nunnally- Wheatley wedding were issued this week, as well as cards to a series of parties for this popular bride to-be. Miss Maty Hines and Miss Helen I.‘argan are among the debutantes whose cards also wont out to their friends. Mrs. Frank Hawkins and Mies Margaret Haw- j kins have sent out invitations to ieii tea on the titli. and | Mrs. Georg. (,'. W alt rs ,ia.« i.- ,n u carets to a reception. >. hieli » ill b< an event of next Friday al the I ‘riving club, and a cu:nplimi-nt to Mrs. Hubei ( \\ ins tip Woo. tuft, a bi ide. This will be a brilliant affair, and Mrs. Walters will be a.vistcd in en tertaining by .Mrs. Erftcrr Wood ruff, Geo gc McKenzie, Mrs. Asa G. < unuler, .Mrs. Elizabeth Winship Mates. Mrs. Janies H. Nunnally. Mis. Cha’les R. Winship, Mrs. Wil a,n D. Ow ns. Mrs. Adam W. Jones, Mrs. Geo ge At inship. Mrs. Frederick G. Hodgson, Mrs. Augus tus Wilkerson. Mrs. Clyde Lanier King. Mrs. .Times Pritchett. -Mrs. Irving S. Thomas, Mrs. E. R. Hodg son, of Athens; Mis. Morton Hodg son, of Athens: Mrs. Harry Hodg son, of Athens; Mrs. E. R. Hodgson, Jr. of Athens; Mrs. M. A. Lips comb, of Athens; Mrs. Hugh Gor don, of Athens: Mrs. George F. Hurt, Mrs. William Lawson Peel, Mfs. Paul Vose, Mrs. William L. Cosgrove, and Misses Annie Lee McKenzie, Sarah Rawson, Elizabeth Rawson. Laura Ansley, Frances Nunnally, Emily Winship, Helen Jones and Mignon McCarty. □olden Wedding Anniversary. Tite two thousand or molt cards for the golden wedding anniversary of Colonel and Mrs. Robert J. Low i y went out early this week to all parts of the country. The func tion will be held at the Capital Citv I club Monday evening, the iltn. and will be one of the most brilliant events in the annuls o" Atlanta’s social history The be itifully en graved cards, done in gold, were ’ accepted with eager anticipation bj the many friends of Colonel and | Mrs. Lowry, who have long been 1 among the social leaders of the city and the South. Miss Hildteth Smith will be next week’s debutante, two large events I to be occasioned by her formal en trance Into society. Mrs. Burton Smith gives an afternoon tea on | Thursday, and on Friday evening at the Capital City club a cotillion will be given by Mrs. Orton Bishop Brown. Many other parties have been sandwiched in between the wed dings and the debut events for the week. Numerous small affairs for the brides-to-be and for the debu tantes and the visitors are on the calendar. Several young women from other cities arrive for the No vember festivities during the week, and a number are already in the city. Among the hostesses of the week who have already invited guests are Miss Helen Prior and Mrs. Prior. Miss Passie May Ott ley. Mies Annie Lee McKenzie. Mrs. Winship Nunnally. Miss Car oline Muse, Miss Mildred Harman, 1 Miss Ruth Northern. Miss Marjorie Brown, Miss Leone Ladson. [BEAUTIFUL WOMEN OF ATLANTA! (wy’\\ I .m \ V 4 \ \ ; -' K lOp* .<«>>> ...• I'l , i / ‘ « MB - v/A- S .< v *■ i'/Owo .CBM Il I: Hr '’wfiSP // // i V /*\ - —— - —~—x vt /' /V i \\ // //.'.fX/ ‘ z \\ // ■ / •*' • ' \\ // // s w ' i\\ // // -W - "''TSrfBB \i / / • S W? M 4 A.jr I s WJ B v *■>’-•< < A A ' ! W . A- TA . i v fr~\ C ' >=- uisi il \ i \ I \ \ MF* \ \ \ \ h \\ \\ "'wwiOTwr- //JU \\ \\ \\ \ \ \ ’ \ \ ■V ’X .£ / / \\ \ \\ | r —s. \\ \\ \ \ -•es^.wms, >~.■., \x\\ / ! \ \ \ \ \ \ ML \\ 1 \ / 11 i a\ —M Mrs. Julian Field, and Miss Aimee Hunnicutt. Among the visitors for whom parties are being planned are Mrs. Calvin Morgan McClung, of Knox ville, and Mrs. Carj Spence, of Knoxville, who arrive Tuesday to visit Mrs. Julian Field; Miss Helen Meade, of New York, who conies Wednesday to be the guest of Mise Mildred Harman: MBs Katherine Cramer, of Charlotte, N. <’., who is the guest of Miss Hildreth Burton Smith; Miss Hallie Morton, of Ten nessee, who comes to visit Miss Mary Hines. Miss Louise Hunt, of Knoxville, who will be with Miss Miner Hunnicutt: and Miss Ruth Watson, who Comes Sunday to visit Miiss Helen Prior The we,-k ha- been ver t guj. the • largest affair of the week being the Halloween ball, Thursday evining, when nearly 300 guests were enter tained at the Piedmont Driving club. A beautiful affair of today was Mrs. Floyd Mcßae’s luncheon for Miss Elizabeth Rawson at her home on Peachtree road. Mrs Henry Johnson's luncheon ’’or Mis* Raw- son was one of the notably beauti ful affairs of the week. Tonight Miss Mary Traylor will be tendered a dinner party at the Driving club by Mrs. W. A. Speer, and still an other interesting affair of today was Mrs. Irving Thomas’ reception to a number of brides and visitors. Miss Esther Smith’s party for Miss Frames Nunnally - a* one of the week's delightful affairs, and Miss Lillian Logan’s tea was another. Miss Marie Pappenhelmer, one of the season's debutantes, gave a din ner party at the Driving club Thursday night. Among the re cently added debut parties to the season's announcements is that for Miss Emily <’assin. the daughter of Mrs. J. D. Cromer. Personal Touch Gives Original Air to Social Events T "I THILE it is not common with I V y Atlanta hostesses to use a thousand orchids as a novel party decoration, in order to have the much desired "something un usual," there Is a lavish use of good taste and ingenuity and an extrav agant expenditure of personal ef fort and thought on the part of many hostesses, which achieves the desired aim of originality and ar tistic beauty in a more pleasing manner than the mere spending of much money might bring about. Several of the prominent events of this week have expressed artistic and original ideas on the part of the hostess. Notable in this series was the luncheon given by Mrs. J. K. Orl and Miss Hariiet Orr on Thurs day. when the harvest time and tne Halloween season formed a motif for the unique decorations, carried out in sheaves of golden wheat, bilght-hued autumn fruits, fes toons and garlands of autumn leaves, marigolds ami chiysanthe mums the color of the autumn sun shine. and all the ghostly .parapher- * nalia of Halloween. Tjte luncheon was a complimentary affair to Misses Passle May Ottley and Mar jorie Brown, two of last season's debutantes, whose impularltj has not only survived, but has increased since their debut season. Effective Decorations. The guests, upon their entrance. wer>‘ greeted with a view of yellow and red autumn leaf festoons, drap ing the softly tinted walls of the reception hall. Garlands of the au tumn leaves decorated the chande liers. and nestled in the green of swinging baskets in the sun par lor *and drawing room. The rabies were adorned with rustic baskets of autumn fruits, the curved han dles tied rwith small sheaves of wheat. The golden grain appeared in banked effect on the mantels, in terspersed with ears of ripened corn and dusters of marigold. Jack o' Lanterns leered above the yellow silk shades of the candlesticks, and. with Impudent eyes, peeped from I the gr. en hanging baskets Witches j pots were bonbon holders, and tall | yellow chrysanthemums lifted shag gy heads above the palms grouped in the corners of the apartments. For the buffet supper which i ’ap tain and Mrs. Grayson Heidt gave for the Richardson-Yates bridal party and friends, the cavalry col- ■ or-- of yellow blended haupl'y with the Halloween idea, and, Hie flpw ers of autumn in effective ' ora tion. j The Richardson-Yates wedding | | achieved the original and. what i* mole to be dei i-ed. a pi r-onul and distinctive note in it- originality. The scene of the wedding Was tile < beautiful long music room of the bride's home, w ith its handsome pipe organ and grand piano, and its spacious attractiveness was . set ting out of the ordinary for a mar riage. The elaborate musical pro gram was a. pleasing feature and most appropriate for the marriage —a wedding ceremony in a home which has long been identified with the musical and artis ic life of so cial Atlanta. The fact that a re cent bride ami another bride-to-be were in the wedding i crty struck a note of sentiment, while a stronger appeal yet was made by the par ticipation, in one way or another, of each member of the household in the wedding of tlie eldest daughter. Two sisters of the bride were in the wedding party -one a debu tante of last winter and the other to be out next season. A young sister, still in her early teens, sang as the bridal pair knelt immediate ly after the marriage, and the small son of the household bore the white satin cushion for the bride, who entered with her father. The ex quisite handiwork of embroideries on the bridal toilet bore testimony to the personal efforts of the bride'sl charming mother, who acted as . hostess to the hundreds of guest# present. Next Week’s Bride. Miss Man Traylor will be th# next bride in this interesting se ries of autumn weddings, her mar riage to Mr Rudolph John Thiesen being dated for next Saturday, the ninth of November. This will be a home wedding, characterised by a charming group of bridesmaid* and many pleasing details of decora tion and hospitality.