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Society
News of
Atlanta
HE Cotillion chib will entertain
I ight with a theater party at the
* vianta, to be followed by a dance
piedmont Driving club. This is
the chief social events of the
mong the grown-ups, the Nine
mask ball on Friday evening
’ second large ball of the week.
\ : g the members of the younger
,itles are galore, and prospective
, find difficulty in setting dates
t , nuary which do not conflict with
x • . rous affairs were given today,
: ■ ing for the mosit part informal.
■ endered more than especially
•ul by the Christmas spirit.
f the handsomest parties of the
Mrs. J. Edgar Hunnicutt’s
,n of 20 covers, given at the Cap
>\ elub in honor of Mrs. William
and Miss Virginia Donnell, of
\ > rk. popular holiday vsiitors.
Hunnicutt’s decorations were
0 , and, of course, typical of the
.■ season. A Santa Claus, rising
J,.,,.,, a mound of red roses, formed the
, piece for the table, the Christmas
~ , being further carried out in pjinia
,,.r,, Christmas trees at each place, and
„. (lie place cards, which were hand
. um- il m " intry Christmas scenes.
Mrs Hunnicutt wore a three-piece
.jit f black cloth, with hat of black
x .,;. t. Miss Aitnee Hunnicutt was
■n. in brown charmeuse satin.
ji • in green, and worn with a hat
, i k velvet, adorned with a blown
nine shading into green.
Foote-Troutman.
i . Maggie Foote and Mr. Henry
■ uiwan were married Saturday’ even
,2 : t ■ home of the bride's parents.
,\li. .nd Mrs. W. O. Foote, on West
Inr< '■ street. Miss Hildreth Bur
,n Smith was bridesmaid, and Colonel
E. V. Carter was best man.
The bridal party stood before an altar
~f goenery, starred with white roses
and vall'-y lilies. The bride wore white
i harnwu.se satin veiled in duchess lace,
the long tulle veil edged with duchess
lace.
An informal reception followed the
ceremony.
Wicker ■ Buchanan.
I marriage of Mrs. Fannie Sue
Hew aril Wicker and Mr. Edward R.
laichanan was solemnized yesterday
. fternoon at 1 o'clock at the residence
of t bride's sister, Mrs. T. J. Ripley,
on West Peachtree street. Rev. W. R.
Hendrix, of the Wesley Memorial
< iiun-ii, officiated. Only members of
t'.w immediate family were present.
Mrs. Buchanan is the youngest
■ ".m ter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
iP-.rge J Howard and is a sister of
M. Am Candler, Mrs. T. J. Ripley and
.Mrs. William S. Ansley.
Mr. and Mrs. Buchanan will be at
ham., (fter January 1 at 290 Houston
street.
Miss Butler Honoree.
M Mary Butler, of Savannah, who
- just returned from an extended
b o’ abroad and who will make her
i I'lit in Savannah early in January,
i tendered a buffet luncheon Satur
' :■ by .Miss Virginia Lipscomb.
' >■ , r vases of brilliant poinsettia
b'o-soms formed the decorations in the
<r ring room. T1 e table in the dining
’ was elaborately decorated in
•uistnias suggestions. On a field of
sii.iw Santa Claus stood with his sleigh
full of appropriate favors for each
E a - . Miniature Christmas trees fur
ther adorned the table, every appoi:A
ment being in red and green.
■I js Lipscomb wore white net em
m roses. .Mrs. Lipscomb, who
'tec her daughter in entertaining,
’ gowned in black and white char-
I satin. Miss Butler wore a French
- ’ ■■ » of gray satin, with hat to match.
1 ' guests included a limited num
■l I lie debutante set.
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li" only private school in the South for Deaf Children. Only school
teaching SPEECH exclusively. .Most advanced methods; home life
1 nsurpassed results.
Miss Arbaugh’s School for Deaf Children
”0 Rogers Ave. MACON, GA.
Give An Umbrella
A Sensible and Serviceable Gift for
Him and for “Her”
An umbrella affords you one of tin 1 nicest kinds of re
membrances for Christmas.
Over thirty styles for ladies are carried in stock al
i' r 'cs ranging from $5.00 to $30.00.
Canes with silver or gold heads are carried in a wide
"ange of styles and prices.
Practically all of our umbrellas have detachable handies.
Jhe best, quality of silk is used. Most every style has space
"r engraving monograms.
M ail Orders:
Mail orders are shipped prepaitj. Sale deliver' and sat
'faetion guaranteed. Our 160-pag'e illustrated catalogue
'"i\e S a ]l gift problems. It brings your shopping to you.
*ave.s time, m mey and trouble.
Write for a copy today.
Maier & Berkele, Inc.
Gold and Silversmiths
Established 1887 31-33 Whitehall St. Atlanta, Ga.
WEDDINGS
Vardaman -Hobbie.
Os interest to Atlanta friends was
the brilliant wedding of Miss Nonie
Hobbie. of Montgomery, Ala., to Mr.
John \\ esley Vardaman, which took
place on Friday at the Court Street
Methodist church. Montgomery . In the
large bridal party was Mrs. W. C.
Coles, ot Atlanta, who was matron of
honor. Miss Nell Brock who is well
known her. , was maid of honor. The
bridesmaids were Miss Geraldine Ecker,
of JacKsonville, Fla., and Mary
Boy d \\ illiams, of Montgomery. An
equal number of men completed the
party.
The church was elaborately deco
rated in white chrysanthemums and
Southern smilax, with a background of
palms. The bridal party stood unde ■
a canopy of white roses, from which
garlands of smilax and white roses
were looped to the organ chancel. The
bridal toilet was of white charmeuse
combined with white velvet and panels
of real lace. She wore a tulle veil
which fell from a lace cap over the long
train, and her flowers were white or
chids'and valley lilies.
The maid of honor wore a Paris
gown of white charmeuse and shadow
lace. Mrs. Coles. * matron of honor,
wore white charmeuse and princess
lace. The two bridesmaids were in
white also. The group of young women
carried a shepherd’s crook adorned with
a bunch of Killarney roses. Misis Kath
eritye Hobbie. as flower girl, wore white
with pink ribbons ami carried a basket
of roses.
A beautiful reception followed the
wedding at the home of the bride’s
mother. Mrs. Henry Hobbie.
FUTURE EVENTS
Mr. and Mgp. Frank Gilreath will
give a dance Friday evening for their
daughter. Miss Annie May Gilreath.
The invited guests are Misses Bessie
Hollowell. Margaret Duncan, Mildred
Dunean. Marie Vaughn, Annie Lora
Davis, Lillie May Sutton, Martha Ro
per. Caroline Larendon, Helen Jones,
Mary King, Louise King and John Dun
can and. Messrs. William Logan, Wil
liam Coleman, Joseph Hollowell, Ce
cil Sale, Arthur Bass, Cobb Benning,
Louis LeConte, Nelson Niall, Lawrence
Jones, Claude Daley, P. R. Benning,
O. W. Hagan, Granville Baldwin, Reid
Wedell, Jack Stoy, Archibald Gann and
T. C. Fuller.
Miss Jeannette Johnson will give a
theater party for twenty guests at the
Grand on the afternoon of December 28,
her guests to be Misses Louise King,
Grace Bloodworth, Dorothy Dillon. Dor
othy Arkwright, Madelyn McCullough,
Isabel Amorous. Anne Patterson, Jane
Young and Martha Ingram and Messrs.
William McKenzie, Orme Campbell,
William Ingram, Martin Amorous, Jr..
Aquilla Orme, Edgar Hunnicutt. Eu
gene Black. Jr., Fitzhugh Knox, Jr.,
George Howard, Jr., and Milton Cole
man.
Mr. Frank Earl Markle, whose mar
riage to Miss Mary Jim Dunlap takes
place Saturday evening, will be ten
dered a bachelor dinner by his grooms
men on Friday evening.
Miss Martha Holland will give an
eggnog party Christmas afternoon at 5
o'clock, in honor of Miss Mary Jim
Dunlap, a bride-elect.
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Murphy will
entertain with a small dance for their
married friends, on the evening of De
cember 30, the affair, which was set for
this evening, having been postponed on
account of the Cotillion club dance.
Miss Cora McCord Brown and her
guest, Miss Harriet Benedict, of Ath
ens, will be the honor guests at a
luncheon given next Monday by Miss
Sally Eugenia Brown at her residence.
“Cherokee,” ou Peachtree street.
Mr. and Airs. Archibald Davis will
entertain at a dancing party on the
evening of January 2 at their home in
honor of their son. Air. TopiitT Davis,
the guests to include members of the
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 23. 1912.
Dance To Be Chief
Function for
Sigma Nus
A large and brilliant affair of the sea
son will be the Sigma Nu dance which
will be given as the chief social event
of the national convention of the Sigma
Nu fraternity and has been set for
New Year’s eve at the Capital City
elub.
The ball tvill be under the auspices
of the local Sigma Nus, and the guests
will include the delegates from 31
states, a large number of Atlanta peo
ple and groups of visitors from Savan-
I nail, Montgomery. Augusta, New Or
leans, Birmingham. Nashville and Ma
con. who will come especially for the
affair.
The fraternity’ colors of white, gold
and black will be used to decorate the
ballvroom. The chaperons will be Mr.
and Mrs. Preston S. Arkwirght, Mr. and
Mrs. E. Lee Worsham, Mu and Mrs.
Russell Bridges. Mr. and Mrs. Qsear
Palmour, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Weather
holt, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Alston and
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Rhodes.
Informal Dinner.
Miss Dorothy Arkwright was hostess
at an informal dinner yesterday at a
table laid for ten guests at the resi
dence of her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Preston S. Arkwright, on Juniper
street.
Box Party at Grand.
Mrs. Morris Ewing was hostess at a
box party at the Grand this afternoon,
in honor of Miss Elizabeth Robinson, of
Dallas. Texas. Miss Aline Fielder's
guest. The party included Mrs./Ewing
and Misses Robinson, Fielder. Van
Spalding. Lucile Kuhrt and Martha
Drake, of Griffin.
Miss Fielder Entertains.
Thirty members of the school girl
set were guests of Miss Marlon Fielder
at a bridge party’ today at the home of
her parents on West Peachtree street.
Holly, mistletoe and Christmas wreaths
formed the decorations. The prizes
were bouejoir caps.
The table in the dining room was
decorated in Easter lilies, red-shaded
tapers and red bonbons.
Miss Fielder wore gray silk and lace.
Miss Robinson was gowned in tan pon
gee with red trimmings, and Miss Aline
Fielder wore white serge.
The guests were Misses Virginia
Lipscomb and her guest, Dorothy Carr,
of Mississippi; Adgate Ellis and her
guests, Natalie Campbell of California,
Elizabeth Thompson of Philadelphia
and Adaline Thomas of the University
of Pennsylvania; Cora McCord Brown
and her guest, Harriet Benedict, of
[Athens; Bertha Moore, Helen McCul
lough. Katie Cooper, Helen Dykes,
Mary King, Elizabeth Smith. Amelia
Smith, Ferol Humphries, Margaret
Traylor, Lucile Kuhrt, Van Spalding.
Gladys Dunson, Bess Wall, Mary Carl
Hurst Isolene Campbell. Lawson Hines,
Rosalie Davis, Virginia Bowman, Lyda
Nash, Eula Jackson and Fay Dobbs.
Dance For Miss Grossman.
Mrs. Victor Kriegshaber entertained
Saturday evening at an informal dance
for Miss Madge Grossman, the guests
including 50 of Miss Grossman's young
friends.
Mrs. William Kriegshaber and Mrs.
R. A. Sonn assisted the hostess in en
tertaining, and Mrs. A. G. Grossman
and Mrs. Marion Kriegshaber served
punch.
The apartments open to guests were
decorated in Christmas green, and pink
roses. The honoi guest was gowned
for the evening in pale blue charmeuse
with pearl garniture, and Mrs. Krieg
shaber wore white embroidered crepe
meteor.
Miss Zahner’s Tea.
Richmond roses and red carnations
formed the decorations at the tea given
this afternoon by Miss Cleveland Zah
ner for Misses Marguerite Beck and
Grace Callaway. In the drawing room
the roses were used. <in the tea table
a basket of red carnations, the handle
tied with white tulle, was surrounded
by’ silver candlesticks bearing red un
shaded tapers, with decorative details
in red and white.
Punch was served by Misses Eliza
beth Morgan and Jennie Knox.’ Miss
Ana Bourke, of < >maha, Nebr. the
house guest of Miss Beck, and Misses
Marion Woodward, .May Haverty,
Katherine Lovett and Helen Muse and
Airs. Roger Dewar assisted in enter
taining.
Miss Zahner wore pink charmeuse
satin draped in pink chiffon. Mrs. Rob
ert Zahner was gowned in gray char
meuse satin with crystal garniture.
Inexpensive
Jewelry
Gifts
At Crankshaw’s you'll find
numerous dainty little gift arti
cles in new and original designs,
in inexpensive its well as the
higher gradbs.
Shirtwaist rings, collar pins,
bar pins, scarf pins, tie elips,
fobs.
Lockets, crosses, beads, card
cases and all the latest vanities.
Charles W. Crankshaw
Jeweler.
Atlanta National Bank Bldg.
Hlwkeyes
First Class Finishing and En
larging. A complete stock film*,
plates, papers, chemicals, etc.
Special Mall Order Department for
eut-of-town customers. z
Send for Catalog and Price LIM.
». K HtWKLS CO. --Kodik Orpjneinl
M y»h St, ATLANTA, *A.
ANNOUNCEMENT S
Mrs. Gordon Kiser, who is tn charge
of a < hrlstmas tree to be held tomor
row afternoon,at 3 o’clock at the Grady
hospital lor the children occupying the
children's ward, requests that any do
nations t>f money for the tree be sent
to her at apartment 524, the Georgian
Teri.ice, before 1 o'clock tomorrow aft
ernoon. and that any toys for the tr<*
be sent to Dr. Sommerau at the hospital
before 3 o’clock. The'inmates of the
children s ward are entirely dependent
upon gifts from the public, and any do
nations will be greatly appreciated.
Reed-Irwin.
I he marriage of Mrs. Mamie Martin
Reed, of .Mulberry, Fla., anil Dr. B. E.
Irwin, of West Point. Ind, is an
nounced, Hie ceremony having been
performed yesterday afternoon.
Mrs. Reed has been visiting Mrs.
Rees Marshall and has many friends in
Atlanta who will be interested in her
marriage. Dr. and Mrs. Irwin will be
at home after January 1 in West Point,
Ind.
FOR CHRISTMAS DINNER
ZAKAS' FRUIT CAKE
FILLS THE BILL
No Christmas dinner is complete
uitliout fruit cake, and there is no bet
ter fruit eake made than that at Zakas’
Bread and Cake Store, 30 Peachtree
Points. Good fruit cake
at 30 cents a pound; a little better al
40 cents and till cents, and the best at
<i> cents. Pound cake, coffee eake, an
gel food, cookies of every description,
and pie—you know what Zakas’ pie la
the very best, and all cheaper than you
can bake in your own kitehen. "The
proof of the pudding is in the eating."
_______ \ (AdvtA
IF YOU ENJOY GOOD
SINGING, GO TO THE
MONTGOMERY
Montgomery, always looking for the
best, has a bill for Christmas week that
is a hummer. The Church City Four,
one Os the greatest quartets on the
Southern platform, is the special fea
ture for the week, and is a bill that
would be a headliner in any circuit.
I lie pictures are Montgomery pic
tures. and that is as' much as could De
said, for this beautiful theater pro
duces only the best.
Professor Kneisel’s orchestra Is grow
ing in popularity, as its merit .-peaks
for it. (Advt.l
J 2 Days jv
To Buy Your
ZX Xmas Gifts fcXoW
'; X?S>t 1L Wit
Beautiful Gifts Jg|W
wfeS Are at Crankshaw’s ifa W
~ 4® paor
ir ti GTanksliaw s is sure of appreciation.
v dne CPU 3 ,On ° f the cstabl ’ shment guarantees its
• Cboose hcre from a wonderful display of jewels ‘’"Wti/T
,ewe ry » g S^ver ’ art ass and sm all novelties’
Mfe beW>inX y ° U ‘° pay ,his slore ° ffers ' MW
YwCPlvjl tc/C)
*TIJ Gold Gifts Silvcr Gifts Wtol'Af
WATCHES TEA SETS • TSMkdH
P ATMXI COEFEE SETS
tWV«V? LNDANTs IAM POTS
iKv* VEGETABLE DISHES
BAR PINS PITCHERS V a /F>*X
Zsl JK|& HANDY PINS GOBLETS 1K
fmlllxL. MESH BAGS SANDWICH TRAYS /vl
CARD CASES COMPOTES 4wL_
t MPr L vi ß 4?4e S SERVICE PLATES ) SfefiKrf
FOBS LAtES “eS AND BUTTER
SIGNET RINGS MFSJI ~
W£gk DIAMOND-RINGS
CLUSTER RINGS CARD CASES
Uffijr CIGARETTE CASES VANITY CASES ~ 1
07’ ' i MATCH BOXES CIGARETT E CASES
FM BELT PINS MANICURE SETS
iw A thimbles toh ..-| <rT( . jr'nfwfia „
SCARF PINS 2 ( ! pieL?) E S (Pr,,ni 3to / jj.
The Beautiful Bracelet Watches]
Are Among the New Gift Things Xw .<
Charles W. ,Crankshaw r z
16 Wh,tChall- ’ Atlanta National Bank
* <al Store Open
W|r Evenings XH/C* wJSHudf
AY r * WhX
i Why Not I
5 Give Slippers?
I p.'.,>™t.: or useful. JU Juli ;
1 is :
Ae can show you the Sfcajr SI.OO
■J largest varietv in town. \ 5*
£ Oui’ sales force is large | 5*
and efficient, insuring I 3*
S prompt service. ’ J £
If the size is wrong, we SE
£ will gladly exchange them £ —— —
<£ after Christmas.
S Traveling Slippers S .00 J
/ ' |®|
e lind ourselves overstocked
5 these goods, and we are’going H
a, to sell them below cost. In red. H
black and tan. Eor men ami
i? women. $2 slippers for
;« ■ 5:
5 For Men K For Women *
C" - k «
Tan Kid Faust. $2.50 value... .$1.95 I Pullman Slipper De Lu.xe 53.00
Black Felt Opera $1.50 I Felt <’omf\S $1.50 S"
and $2.00 | Comfy De Luxe $2.00
5 Black Kid Opera $1.50 ! Crochet Slippers SI.OO S'
Felt Conifys $1.50 | Foot Warmers 50c *»
M. Rich & Bros. Co. s
“A Department of Famous Shoes”
9