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POPULAR MEMBERS OF THE YOUNGER SOCIETY SET
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Atlanta Society Folk Plan to Dance
Out the Old Year at Capital City Club
F. AREWELL will be said to the
old year by-a large assem
blage of Atlanta society at
!ll, ‘ annual New Year’s ball on the
vening of the 31st, at the Capital
t’lty club. Last year's ball was at
tended by a thousand or more call
•rs. the club apartments resem
'ding a great crush affair of some
notable London hostess; an un
gual aspect for Atlanta social af
fairs which are usually limited to
'he ample accommodation of all
quests. However, the unusual crush
has the charm of novelty and adds
o the gayety of these brilliant New
Year balls at the Capital City club.
On the first evening of the New
'“ar there will be another large
lance at the Capital City club.
' hen the local Sigma Nus enter
tain several hundred guests, includ
ing the many visitors and dele
gates to be here for the national
convention of this fraternity. The
frat"' colors of black and gold and
white will be used for the decora
tions of the ball room.
An event which brings up recoi
eetions of college days is the Cor
nell Glee club concert, and buffet
supper afterward at the Driving
club for tonight. The concert will
be largely attended by many of the
prominent people of the city. Mr.
W. H. Conklin will entertain 60
guests at the Driving club after the
concert, in honor of the Cornell
Glee club.
The week, which has been bril
liantly gay, closes with three or
fdur weddings tonight. Miss Mary
Jim Dunlap and Mr. Prank Earl
Markle will be married this even
ing at 8:30 o’clock at. the home of
the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Taylor Dunlap. In Inman
Park, the wedding to be followed
by a reception. Mr. Turner Fltten,
of Atlanta, and Miss Medora Dun
can, of Union, S. C., will be mar
ried at the bride’s home this even
ing at 8:30 o'clock and the cere
mony will be attended by a num
ber of Atlanta relatives and friends.
Miss Edith L’Engle and Mr. Francis
Robin Graham will be married this
evening at. the home of the bride’s
mother oft Ponce DeLeon avenue,
tile wed.ling to be quietly observed.
Miss Elizabeth Dull and Mr. Wal
lace Pemberton, of Scott, Ark.,
were married this afternoon at the
First Methodist church, the young
couple leaving later for their home
in Arkansas.
Among the interesting brides
to-be of January is Miss Elizabeth
Adair, whose engagement to Mr.
Robert Gregg was announced last
week. Miss Adair and Mr. Gregg
will be married on Wednesday
evening, January 22, at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Adair, in In
man Park, a large reception to fol
low the ceremony. The bride will
be attended by her cousin, Miss
Frances Rowland,, of New York, as
maid of honor, the other attend
ants to be Miss Eva Beil Gregg,
Miss M. A. Phelan, Miss Jean El
lenwood of DeKalb, Ill.; Mrs. Con
rad Spens of Chicago, Mrs. Frank
Adair and Mrs Forrest Adair. Jr.,
Mr. Lewis Gregg will be his broth
er's best man.
The first of the January brides
will be Miss Marguerite Beck,
whose marriage to Mr, Hamilton
Block will take place Saturday
evening, January 18. The church
cetrmnny will be followed by a re
ception at the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Frank
Beck. The young couple will be
attended by a group of friends.
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\ Home-Like I
j Hospitality ■
AT "Woodhaven," the beautiful
country residence of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Maddox, the
•'doors will be thrown wide open to
all their friends on New Year’s day.
One of the novel and delightful
Christmas parties of this week took
place at "Wilsonia," the country
home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B.
Felder. The guests were limited in
number, as the affair was compli
mentary to a visitor and was not a
general party. Guests were Invited
for “early candle light,” and, in re
sponse to the old-time invitation,
they motored out to find the gaily
decorated apartments of the Felder
residence alight with numerous un
shaded candles, no other lights be
ing used.
Miniature bay trees stood at each
guest’s plate, and the place cards
bore original and clever verses, ex
plaining and extolling the virtue of
the viands, the reading of which
furnished much amusement to the
guests. Atlantans are becoming
more and more inclined to suburb
an and country homes, and a dis
tinctive and delightful hospitality is
in the reach of the chatelaine of one
of these beautiful places,
College Boys and Girls Are to the Fore
With Parties at 'Phis Season o f the Year
r’j'sHE bright particular star of
I the Christmas holiday sea
son Is the college girl and
her younger sister, even as the
debutante reigns in the early part
of the autumn, and the June and
November bride is queen of the
social world during those months.
The school girls and boys comb Into
their own when the summer vaca
tion days begin, though there are
many Informal Christmas tree and
New Year parties for even the
youngsters at this time of the year.
However, many more of these af
fairs are attended by the girls who
are anticipating a debut next year
or the next, and the boys who are
beginning to take an Interest in
presidential elections with a view
to casting a vote four years hence.
Parties galore are on for this mer
ry set of pretty college girls and
gallant college youths, so that next
week bids fair to be as busy for
this contingent of the social world
as was Christmas week.
The Initial event of the series will
be Miss Isabel Robinson’s buffet
supper and dancing party on Mon
day evening, given at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roby
Robinson.
Miss Cora McCord Brown, the
young daughter of Governor and
Mrs. Joseph M. Brown, wilt have
as her guest for the week Mias
Harriet Benedict, of Athens, and
about the two young girls will cen
ter several of the week’s parties,
the first to be a luncheon which
Miss Sally Eugenia Brown gives
at her residence, "Cherokee,” on
Peachtree road, Monday shortly
after noon. Miss Harriet Broyles’
tea on Tuesday will assemble a
hundred girls, Miss Louise Parker
being the guest of honor, and Miss
Helen Dykes gives a tea on Tues
day also. Miss Virginia Lipscomb
and her guest, Miss Dorothy Carr,
of Mississippi, will be the honor
guests at Tuesday evening’s largest
affair, given by Miss Lipscomb's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford
Lipscomb.
Miss Annie Winshlp Bated and
Miss Dorothy Dillon will each en
tertain on Tuesday,, their guests to
be members of a still younger set
than the previously mentioned par
ties. Miss Josephine Smith enter
tains 4u school girl friends at her
home in I>ruld Hills Tuesday.
New Year's day carries several
affairs. Miss Mary King to give a
tea at her home on Peachtree for
Misses Louise Parker and Grace
LeCraw, and Mies Gladys Glover to
give a buffet supper, complimenting
several of her friends who are at ’
home from Eastern colleges for Hie
'holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Davis
give a dance on the evening of New-
Year's day for the friends of their
young son, Mr. Topliff Davis.
Miss Margaret Traylor's after
noon bridge was a pleasant affair
of today, given for Misses Eula
Jackson and Margaret Grant, two
of the most popular college girls,
and Miss Laura Cole wag ong of to
day's young hostesses.