Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 16, 1913, Image 9

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and white. Miss Meador wore shell pink satin for the afternoon, and Miss Wall’s Kown was of blue eharmou- Yesterday afternoon Miss Dotti«* Cowles Rave a box party at the Gran' 3 , tor Miss Wall, her guests includinv Misses Hortense Herrman, of Kast man; Ruth Corrigan, Janie Coope. and Mrs. Walter Smith. To-morrow morning Miss Ruth Cor rigan will entertain at an informil bridge party for Miss Wall and h?r house guest, Miss Hortense Herr man, and to-morrow afternoon Mrs. Walter Smith will give a matin* e party. Mr. and Mrs. William K. Jenkins will entertain informally nt dinner t >■ morrow evening for Miss Wall and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith, and M i - Susie Parks also has dated her lunch eon for Thursday. Miss Parks’ guests will include Misses Bess Wall and Hortense Herrman, Janie Cooper. Dottle Cowles. Mrs. Samuel C. Prim and .Mrs. Walter Smith Miss Janie Cooper, who will be bridesmaid at the wedding, will give an informal bridge party Friday aft ernoon. and Friday evening an in formal buffet supper, given by the bride’s brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Prim, will follow the re hearsal. On Thursday evening: tk young men of the bridal party will give a supper party at Roswell for Miss Wall and Mr. Winecoff. Maddox's sister. Mrs. Robert Jack-on, i Nath\lib, who vi 111 be Mi . M id* dox.’s guest for grand opera, will be special guest, and a numl-r of grard opera visitors also will be included among the guests at the reception which will be one of the brilliant Af fairs given during opera week. Gentry. Mrs. J. R. Hooks, of Ameri- <us; Mr. and Mrs. John DuPree, Messrs. Fred Patterson and Philip I/Engle. niversary of hr sister, Mrs. E. L. Con- naliy, and Dr. Oonnally, and also the birthday anniversary of Miss Brown’s father, the late Governor Joseph E. Brown. The guests included the fam ilies of Dr. and Mrs. Oonnally, Gov ernor and Mrs. Joseph M. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Brown anti Mr. and Mrs. Elijah A. Brown, and was one of tlie happiest events of the day. home in Inman Park this afternoon in compliment to Miss Alma Overby, a bride-elect. Mrs. Paul Felder Vose is being ten dered a series of parties in Columbus as the guest of Mrs. John Illges. Among them was the elaborate bridge party given by Mrs. George Waddell. Miss Edith BoWron. of Birmingham, arrives Saturday morning to visit Mrs. Frank Pearson during the week of grand opera. Miss Bowron will at tend the East Lake dance Saturday evening. A series of social affairs are being arranged for her next week. Mr. and Airs. Blackman Dunn, who have been traveling in Florida and Cuba, have returned for a hurried visit to Atlanta. They will leave Thursday to spend some time with Mr. Dunn’s family. Mr. and Mrs. Dunn have been absent from Atlanta for a year. Miss Frances Oonnally will return home to-morrow morning from Brunswick, where she will he brides maid nt the wedding of Miss Ara bella Wright and Mr. Edgar Wilson. Jr., cf Macon, this evening, and will he one of the guests at the wedding of her cousin. Miss Nora Bell Ros ser. and Mr. Charles Shelton to-mor* rov/ evening. Mrs .1. M. VanHarltngep has re»j turned from a delightful visit to A tin napolls, where she was the ffUMU hr her daughter. Mrs. Royal Ingersoil, and Lieutenant Commander Ingersoil, ■ ■ the United States Navy. Mrs, VJ-fw Harlingen was tendered a reception by Mrs. Ingersoil and several other affairs were given for her. She spent a week in New Cork and made fre* quent trips to Washington. Mr. Van Profit From Cooking School. The board of managers of the Home lor Incurables announces a profit of S 1.200 derived from the cooking school and pure food show held recently in the Auditorium. The hoard of man agers also expresses thanks to all those contributing to the success of the show. Embroidery Club to Meet. The North Side Embroidery Club will meet with Mrs. A. H. Parham, $9 Candler Street. lnVian Park, to-mor row afternoon at « o’clock. PERSONALS Mrs. Martin Hostess. Mrs. Macon Martin entertained at her home on Eleventh Street to-duy in compliment to her guest. Mrs. George Claytor. of Baltimore. Mrs. Clay tor has many friends in Atlanta, made when she spent the winter be fore last at the Majestic. Ten of those Mrs. Martin invited to lunch eon to meet Mrs. Claytor again. Mrs. Barrett Cothran will give a bridge party Thursday in honor of Mrs. Claytor. Mrs. Jesse (Touch also will entertain fo her during her short sta,.v here. She leaves in a few days to visit n New Orleans. JEALOUS HUSBAND SHOOTS WIFE, RIVAL AND HIMSEL Mrs. A. A. Craig has been ill for the past few days at her home. Miss Martha Ryder is in Columbus, the guest of Mrs. Stewart Fleming. Mrs. W. J. Field, of Cartersville, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. J*. B McCraiy, on Juniper Street, for the week. Mrs. Emily C. McDougnld will have as her guest for grand opera her daughter, Mrs. Frank Hardeman, «»f Athens. Mrs. W. S. Bell entertained at her James Jackson. Mrs. McGovern, Mrs. Arthur Powell, Mrs. Hamilton, of De catur; Mrs. D. B. Gray, Mrs. Bolling Jones and Mrs. J. K. Ottley. The meeting was devoted to the perfecting of plans for the Ella White endowment fund, and was largelv at tended. CROWN POINT, IND., April 15.-4* Thinking his wife was eloping witi another man, Hugh Burns, a farmeif, followed her to Schneider, Ind., shojt her and Frank Parsons, and thefi turned the weapon upon himself and tired. The three are in the hospital hero to-day and, it is said, all will Family Dinner Party. Miss Sally Eugenia Brown f tained at a family dinner part day at “Cherokee." her home Peachtree Road, the occasion brating the thirty-ninth weddin; .\h>. James osgood Wynn, regent of e Atlanta Chapter, D. A. R., in honor of the chapter members. The guests included only the chapter members. , -id the hostess was assisted in re ceiving by the ex-regents, while as sisting in entertaining were the mem bers of the executive hoard. In the long living room of Airs. Wynn's Ansley Park residence there were great boughs of crabapple blos soms. reaching to the ceiling, inter mingled with Killarney roses. Punch was served in the breakfast room, where the walls are a soft blue and where vases of white spirea and blue iris were tied with red, white and blue gibbons. Misses Sarah Lee Evans. Louise Massey and Mary Hughes served punch. The central decoration for the tea table was an immense birthday cake, bearing 22 lighted candles and in closed within a border of red roses, voiles and'white roses, tied with pa triotic ribbons. The colonial candle stick^- held red candles tied with red, white and blue ribbons, and the birth- ray cake* was cut by Miss Janet bit- tle, the voting daughter of Rev., and Mrs. A. A. Little, with the sword which had belonged to an ancestor during the Revolution. A number of congratulatory tele grams and letters from absent D. A. R. members were read during the afternoon, among them a charming b-tter from Mrs. William Lawson Peel, vice president general from Georgia, who is attending the national conven tion in Washington. Mrs. Wynn was handsomely gown ed in black chiffon embroidered in Altar Society Rummage Sale. The Ladies’ Aid Society of the Sa cred Heart Church will conduct a rummage sale, beginning about April 23. the exact date and place to he an nounced later. Those members hav ing rummage will kindly hold same until further arrangements are made. Miss Smith’s Tea. Miss Hildreth Burton-Smith was hostess at a beautiful tea this after noon at her home on Fifteenth Street, in compliment to her guest. Miss Jo sephine AlcClellnnd; Miss Passic May Ottley’s guest, Miss Mildred Borden, of Goldsboro, N. (’., and Mrs. Robert. Woodruff, a bride of the past winter. The house was decorated in dog wood blossoms. At the tea table Mrs. Jack Thiesen and Airs. P. D. Yates presided. In the' dining room pink roses and white were used in great quantities. Miss Smith was assisted in enter taining b> her mother, Mrs. Burton- Smith. and a number of her girl friends. party Friday afternoon for Airs. J ohnson. Mrs. W. H. Allen will have a few friends for bridge Thursday after noon in her honor. Airs. Johnson will remain with Mrs. Hill through opera week. Parties for Miss Be»s Wall. Miss Boss Wall, whose marriage to Mr. Frark Winecoff takes place Sat urday evening, is being tendered a se lies of parties. Last evening Mr. Rob ert Spires gave a box party at the Grand, the guests being Misses Bess M ali and her house guest. Hortente Herrman. of Eastman; Dottle Cowles and Messrs. Frank Winecoff and Cliff Ragsdale. This afternoon Miss Julia Meador entertained a dozen of Miss Wall’3 friends informally at tea at her home. The tea table, at which Miss Lilli in Jones, of Waynesboro, presided, was decorated with a large basket of pink carnations tied with pink and blue tulle, the minor details being in pink Silver Tea in Inman Park. The Missionary Society of the In man Park Afethodist Church will give a silver tea at the residence of Mrs. C. A. Rausenberg, 83 McLendon Street, on Thursday afternoon. Each member is requested to bring some gift for the Wesley Memorial Hos pital at this meeting. Beginning at 8:30 ©’Clock To-morrow Dinner at Erookhaven. Air. Graham Phelan was host at an enjoyable dinner party in compliment to Miss Ailene Gentry and Mr. John J. Woodside. Jr. Pink roses were used in decorating the table in the ’urge dining room where the guests were seated during dinner. Mr. Phelan’s party included Misses Ailene Gentry, Alice Vandiver. Nina A meeting of the Atlanta Equal Suf frage League will be held in the lee ture room of the Ca.rnegie Library to morrow afternoon, at 3 o’clock. Reception at Woodhaven, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Foster Mad dox have issued invitations to a re ception at Woodhaven the afternoon on April 25 at 4:30 o’clock. Mrs. Representing Values Up To $25.00. First Really Great Big Sale of the Season 'arums Tea for Mrs. Miller. Mr*. Stacy Thornton gave a tea tliis afternoon in honor of Airs. Carl Miller, of Cincinnati. Dogwood blos- v »nv and wild azaleas with palms and ferns formed the decorations. Mis?"- Annie Thornton and Airs. Lowndes Connally poured tea, and Misses Harriet Trammell and Frank- u* McCrory served punch Misses Frances $tovaJl and Alary Thornton ;r. riy^d- the cards of the callers, others assisting were Mesdames Eva Thornton. Walter Marshall, Fred Shaeffor. Frank O’Kelly. V. C. Mason. Bernard Willingham, C. K. Weller, Howard Blakely and Misses Thomp son and Jessie PlunkeL. Friskly Little Suits Thai Have Frolicked Their Way Into Fame W. C. T- U. 'The Atlanta Frances Willard Wom an's Christian Temperance Union will hold its regular session Wednes day afternoon at 3 o’clock in the Sun- da.' school room of Trinity Church. Visitors will be cordially welcomed and all the members are urged to be present. . IV. 7 V'- r ’1, V Miss Prince Entertains. Miss Nancy Prince was hostess at an informal tea at the Piedmont Driving Club yesterday afternoon in honor of Miss Nora Belle Rosser, a bride-elect, and for Alius Josephine McClellan, the guest of Miss Hildreth Burton Smith. Federation Day at Club. Federation day was celebrated yes terday afternoon at the Woman’s Club with an interesting program, which included speeches from Mrs. Charles J. Haden, Mrs. A. P. Coles. Airs. .T. Lindsay Johnson, of Rome; Airs. Ladies, these are positively the gre: have ever had the opportunity to buy. You’ll have to be here early—you’ll 1 lions—and you’ll get the peachiest suits seen in Atlanta at such a price. Every suit and dress in the collection is new, this season’s choicest model and fabric, and in every size for mis es and ladies. Suits of Imperial Serges, Vicunas, Sebastopol Cloth and fancy dedfords in the newest cutaway, “trimmed-back” styles D .-esses of lovely Charmeuse, Messaline, Chiffon, Taffeta, Eoliennes, in black and colors, for street or even ing wear. Smart Street Dresses in the new b’ues, navy, cafe au lait, Shepherd s checks, etc. Every garment oriced $12.50, $14.75, $19.75 and $23.00 .... A bona, fide sacrifice without reserve. None taken back, exchanged or sent C O. D. in this sale For Quick and Accurate Service Use an Atlanta Telephone ■> Vie 7 *•>»'«:]J ’ r»iirrrK YOUR CHOICE ' iitifsst: i Here s economy m it. too, for we place a phone in your home at 8 1-3 cents a day. But the thing we stress is our good service. The economy is an incidental fea ture. Practically every business house in At lanta is using the At lanta t e 1 e p h o n e. Many have installed our intercommunicat ing systems. We Charge Less for Altera tions At $25 A most opportune extraordinary purchase by our New York connection brings these stunningly attractive little Suits—-Shepherd Checks, Eponge, Bedford Cords, etc.- —with all the irresistible charm of originality end graceful lines— for which the average store would charge $29.50 to $35.00— here to-morrow and Thursday at ike fascinating little g* price of ATLANTA TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH CO. Southern Suit & Sk “Atlanta’s' Exclusive Women’s Apparel Store