Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 18, 1913, Image 9

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— •i-iiji *.\. j LAa iA (»iuoui-< lAx\ A~vls Nil vv’o, i' h1i).l i, ,u nib \ BEAUTIFUL, luncheon of twelve AA covers was given to-day by x Mrs. John Little at her home cn Peachtree Street. The guests included iwelve of her married friends, and they were seated for luncheon at a handsomely appointed table, decorated A-lth purple and pink gilly flowers. A large silver loving cup, filled ;o overflowing with the flowers, was sur rounded by twelve small sliver vases of the same flowers, arranged down the length of the table. In every detail the color scheme of pink and lavender was observed, and ihe affair was one of the happiest events of the week. Perry-Taylor. The marriage of Miss Lucy Perry and Dr. Emmett O’Brien Taylor, of Greeleyville, S. C., was an event of Wednesday afternoon, April 16. The reremony took place at St. John’s Methodist Church, Rev. G. M. Eakes officiating. Mendelssohn’s wedding march was 1 played by Mrs. J. N. Mc Donald. The bride wore a blue travel ing suit, with hat to match, and car ried bride rosea. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Taylor eft for Greeleyville. S. C. The bride Is one of the G. H. S. graduates of 1912. Dr. Taylor is a graduate of Maryland University, of Baltimore, class of 1911. Among the on* 1 -of-tow n guests were Miss Marie DuBose, of Macon, Ga.; Mr. Walter Stead, of Macon, Ga.; Mr. Vincent Taylor, brother of the bride groom, of Greeleyville, S. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Boyd, of Gainesville, Ga.; Mies Maude McCalla and Mr. M. F. McCalla, of Conyers. Ga., and Mrs. W. (5 Sharpe, of Maysville, Ga. On Tuesday evening an informal re ception was given at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Susan M. Perry. «4 Bass Street. Miss Katherine Ellis Entertains. Miss Katherine Ellis is being cor dially welcomed on her return, after a month’s absence in New' York and Baltimore. Miss Ellis visited her aunt. Mrs. Kenneth Murcheson. in New York, and was tendered a brilliant se ries of parties. In Baltimore she was the guest of Mrs. Shirley Carter and her visdt was the occasion for a round of parties at the Count V Club and other brilliant affairs. Miss Ellis will be a debutante next winter and probably will spend the summer abroad This evening Miss Ellis will enter tain a number of young people at a dinner-dance in honor of Miss? Mar garet Hawkins, who has recently re turned home, after an extended ab- ence. Dinner will be followed by dancing. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thorn ton will be chaperons. Luncheon at Terrace. Mr. and Mrs. Jaimes O. Riley, of Wilmington. N. C., entertained at an elaborate luncheon yesterday at the (Georgian Terrace. Luncheon was served in the rose dining room. The table had a plateau of Killarney roses and valley lilies. All the details were carried out in the same rose shades. The guests were Misses Emma Wil liams, of Portsmouth; Alice Vandi ver, Nina Gentry, Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Gentry, of Chattanooga; Mr. and Mrs. .V. C. Watts, of Staunton, Vo.; Mr and Mrs. M. F. Carlin and Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Gentrv. Last evening Mr. and Mrs. X. C. Watts gave a box party at the Grand for Mr. and Mrs. Riley, inviting the same people to be their guests. Tor Miss Kinq. Mrs. Norman Sharpe will give a bridge party for Miss Ruth King, who will be married next Tuesday, at the Fast Lake Country Club to-morrow morning. Her guests will be Misses Ruth King, Mary King. Louise Riley. Jean nette Low ndes, Leonra Maddox. Eva I Belle Gregg, Caro Sharpe. Ethel Lov ing of Americus, Elizabeth Baker of Macon, Mrs. Robert How’ard Lyon of Baltimore, Mrs. M. William Akers and | Mrs. J. N. LeConte. Cantata at First Baptist. "The Triumph of David," a church < antata by Dudley Buck, for solo voices, chorus and organ, will be sung at the First Baptist Church on the evening of April 27, under the direc tion of J. P. O’Donnelly. The soloists will be Mrs. Peyton H. Todd, Mrs. lames H. Whitten, Solon Druken- miller and H. R. Bates. A chorus of 25 voices will assist. The public is invited. Miss Helen Tucker to Entertain. Miss Helen Tucker will entertain twelve of her young friends among Ler classmates at Washington Sem inary at a box party at the Grand to morrow afternoon. After the matinee f hey will be entertained at tea at’the ! ome of the hostess. Hoover - Morrison. The marriage of Miss Caroline Hoover, one of the leaders of the "nnger social set In Fitzgerald, Ga . M:\ Paul Morrison, of Atlanta, was -"lemnized yesterday at the home of bride’s parents in Fitzgerald. Mr. y<i Mrs. Morrison will live at 690 Y ■ :h Boulevard. A reception for m will be given this evening by Dr. mcl Mrs. Thaddeus Morrison, 590 Yorf.i Jackson Street. ^ op Mrs. C’aiborne. Mrs. Wilbam Claiborne, of Knox ! who will be the gue st of her sis- Mrs. Ernest E. Norris, for grand opera, will be tendered a tea of a dozen guests on Monday afternoon i>> Mrs. Norris. A number of informal parties will bo tendered Mrs. Clai borne, who has many friends here, made on her former visits to her sis ter. Miss Muse Hostese. Miss Caroline Muse will entertain <t few friends informally at bridge to morrow morning at her home on Fif teenth Street. The honor guests will be Miss Flora Bewick, Miss Passle May Ottley’s guest; Miss Mildred Borden, and Miss Hildreth Burton Smith’s guest. Miss Josephine McClel lan. To Hold Rummage Sale. Atlanta Chapter. No. 57, O. E. S., will hold a rummage sale to-morrow at 246 Peters Street. All members are requested to send rummage early to-narrow morning or to call West 558-L so It can be collected. Informal Bridge Party. The informal bridge party at which Mrs. Richard C. Congdon entertained this afternoon was a compliment to Miss Nita Black and Miss Mabel Drake, who recently returned home after a stay of six months in Paris. Eight young women were included in the list of guests. Mrs. Inman to Entertain. Mrs. Samuel Inman will entertain at an informal tea to-morrow r after noon in honor of her guests. Miss Margaret McPheeters. of Raleigh X C., and Mrs. W. C. Reid, of Keswick, Va. For Miss King. Misses Jeanette I.owndes and Louise Riley will give a beautiful luncheon at the Piedmont Driving Club next Monday for Miss Ruth King, who will be married Tuesday evening. Their guests will Include Misses Ruth King. Mary King. Lucy Gilbert of Marietta, Ethel Loring of Ameri cus, Lenora Maddox, Mrs. Howard Lyons and Mrs. William Akers. Church Society Holds Sale. The Young Ladies’ Missionary So ciety, Circle Xo. 1. of the First Meth odist Church will hold a candy and cake sale Saturday, April 19, at 109 Peachtree Street, opposite the Pied mont Hotel, in Rogers* grocery store. The public is cordially invited. Dance at East Lake. There will be the regular week-end dance at the Country Club at East Lake to-morrow night. A number of dinner parties are being planned for visiting girls and a large attendance is expected. Mississippi Levees Reported Weakening Break Appears Certain at Greenville Youth Drowned as He Goes to See Sweetheart. Palmist Reveals Bigamous Life of Husband to Wives Dublin Man Arrested When Spouse at Cornelia Follows Advice of Seeress. DUBLIN, GA., April 18. —C. P. Nix, of this city, is under arrest on a charge of bigamy, through the instru- mentally of a palmist, who told the fortune of his first wife In Cornelia the other day. Nix married Mrs. Freeman Keen, a Dublin widow, last November. Later, it is alleged, he went to At lanta and spent some time with his wife from Cornelia, returning to Dub lin a few days ago. The Cornelia wife was told by a palmist that her husband was in trou ble In Dublin and she should write to Dr. C. C. Jordan. He is a brother of the Dublin wife. The Cornelia wife wrote and the re sult of the letter was that Nix w r as arrested at Dr. Jordan’s Instance and jailed at Wrightsville, where the sec ond marriage took place. . He has acknowledged that he has two wives. SOUTHERN AGAIN LOSES SUIT AGAINST ROME CAR CO, The Southern Railway lost a suit against the Rome Railway and Light Company through the affirmation to day by the State Supreme Court of the judgment of tlu* Floyd County Superior Court. The Southern Railway sought to enjoin the street railway from laying j its tracks across those of the rail- | load, but both courts held that if a commercial railroad company, own ing land in fee on which its tracks are laid, dedicates to the city a street crossing, and if later the electric street * «r company proceeds to lay tracks along the street, the railroad compa ny is not entitled to an injunction against the construction of the tracks. 11A WKINSVl LLE. -('ommissionere Hillyer and Trammell. of the Georgia Railroad Commission, who came here to investigate a com plaint of the Chamber of Commerce on the Gulf Line’s depot facilities, suggested that the citizens ’ hold a conference with officials of the Gulf Line, Wrightsv iHe and Tennllle and Southern roads looking to the erection of a union depot. 1913. VAUGHN POSTMASTER IS FREED OF THEFT CHARGE Joseph E. Reeves, once postmaster at Vaughn* Spalding County, was ac* quitted to-day In Federal Court of a charge of embezzling several hun dred dollars* from the money fund at his office. The trial was in progress two half days. Reaves’ defense was he had nothing to' do with r orders, an assistant having charge. order and a s that nonoy Zcbulon to Have Waterworks. ZEBULON—-Zebulon has voted $10,000 waterworks bonds. The vote ftood 6.2 to 18. Last fall a few en terprising citizen** subscribed the money with which to have a deep well bored. Water was struek at a depth of 242 feet. The well flows 20 gallons per minute. This will be piped through the town. If you have anything to sell adver tise in The Sunday American. Lar gest circulation of any Sunday news paper in the South. ACTOR FROM NORFOLK HELD AS FORGER HERE Accused of attempting to pass a forged check on the Lowry National Bank, a man who gave his name as George L. Madre, an actor, but who later admitted that his right name is Paul P. Mosley, of Norfolk, Va., is held In the police station to-day while Detectives John Black and \V. F. Bullard are investigating his career. The detectives say they have found letters that indicate that he had been in trouble in Norfolk. Plllllltlllllllllllil!lllllllllllllllll!llllljl||||||||||!lllll||||||||||||||||lll!llll||||l||||||||||!ll!l||!ll|l|||l!||||i!ll!lll!l!!!l!llll|||||!^ PERSONALS Miss Clara Hooper, of Athens, will visit Miss Helen McCarty next week. Dr. and Mrs. Michael Hoke an nounce the birth of a daughter Thurs day, April 17. Mrs. F. L. Parks, of the Werner apartments, is very ill at Piedmont Sanitarium. Mrs. Nellie Peters Black lias gone, to her farm in Gordon County for a few days. Messrs. Edwin McCarty. Edwin Broyles, Clark Howell III and Theo dore Smith will come over from Ath ens next "Wednesday to attend opera. Mrs. Frank Cole and Mrs. Mike Powell, of Newnan, will arrive Mon day to be the guests of Mrs. Arnold Broyles for the week. Mrs. Alice Staley Logan left Sun day for Savannah, where she will be the guest for a month of her sister. Mrs. James V* Hineley. Mr. W. Howard Smith, of the American Can Company, who has been critically ill at his home, 484 Spring Street, is slowly improving. Mrs. Edward In^ii? Smith, Jr., with her little daughter, Laura Isabel, will arrive in Atlanta Monday to be the guest of her sister, Mrs. Charles P. King. o£)era week. Misses Jessie Thompson, Janie Cooper, MessTs. Douglas Mangum and James Roane went to Athens to-day to attend the dance to-night to be given by the Freshman Club at Du pree’s Hall. ‘'High’s Restau rant” open 3 a. m. to 6 p. m. A big menu of delicious dishes at mo:t pop ular prices. Read About the Geat Sale of Dresses SATURDAY CHILDREN'S DAY In the Children’s Store, Second Floor Muscogee Gets Heard’3 Convicts. COLUMBUS.—The Muscogee Coun ty Commissioners have closed a trade with Heard County whereby fourteen convicts are secured for work on the Muscogee County roads for the next two years. The contract provides that Muscogee County also take oyer Heard’s mules and wagons. MEMPHIS, TENN., April 18.— Flood conditions in Arkansas oppo site Memphis to-day were improved. Hundreds of refugees were returning to their homes. Ika Carter was drowned at Manilla, Ark., when he attempted to visit the home of his sweetheart in a skiff. Discouraging reports were received at Memphis from points south. Beu lah, Miss,, was considered in dan ger of being flooded, and a report from Greenville, Miss., said that a break in the main levee there ap peared certain. Weakened places in the levee were reported at Vidalia, La.. Modoc, Ark. Ferrlda, La., and Lake Village, Ark. Orphan Boy Badly Hurt. MACON.—Wallace Stokes, a 12- year-old boy from Pelham, Ga., an inmate of the Georgia Industrial Home, is at the hospital ip a critical condition as the result of having been kicked in the face by a mule, break ing the nose and fracturing the skull at the forehead. ►KODAKS^-- f|U mm First Class Finishing and En- larging. A complete stock Aims, plates, papers, chemicals, etc Special Mail Order Department for out-of-town customers. Send for Catalogue and Price List. 4. K. HAWKESC3. Kodak Departin»n 14 Whitehall St. ATLANTA, GA. • Open a Charge Account Ladies, You’ll Be Delighted With Our HATS! — We’ll Charge It! Your Spring Hat prob lem will solve itself quickly, easily, satisfac torily here to-morrow— WE’RE S II OWIN' G HUNDREDS OF THE VERY LATEST an.) LOVELIEST NEW MOD ELS in large, medium and small hats—iiats will charm and dignity attained i in THE VERY HIGHEST TY of materials and workmunsh WE LEAD THE TOW> fashionable Millinery. S Dresses. Skirts and Waist* “LOWER” PRICES. May we expect you to-morrow Cnl Price Sacrifice Children’s and Juniors’ Wash Suits Mothers will find them absolutely the biggest of bargains for their girls. Highest grade French Percales and Chambrays—new, fresh, Springs goods, and smart 2-piece styles. Sizes 13,15,17 Years $3.00 Norfolk Wash Suits $1.88 $4.00 Norfolk Wash Suits ..' $2.50 $4.98 Norfolk Wash Suits $2.93 Norfolk Wash Suits Ages 8 Through 14 Years $1.50 Norfolk Wash Suits $1.00 $2.00 and $2.50 Wash Suits $1.50 $3.00 Norfolk Wash Suits j. .$1.98 Rep Dresses Priced $2.50 to $4.00 Just to close all we have left in 4 A ft this line of splendid dresses, sizes V ” 8 to 14 years, we cut the price Saturday ALL INFANTS’ LONG WHITE COATS BELOW COST To close at once we offer every Coat at a sacrifice Saturday. $3.00 Coats $1.75 One Price Sale Dainty White Dresses From 8 to 14 years. Just at the right time we offer a sale of new, fresh, white Lingerie dresses for girls of all ages. Sunday will be a bright, warm day, and your girl will need a dress. Four lovely styles lor selection, with em broidered, tucked or lace inserted skirts/ and daintily trimmed French Waists. Extra special values. Your choice while ( they last • A Little‘Lot ol MEP COATS For ages 2, 3 and 4 years—slightly soiled from handling; $2.00 £*•« Atffc Coats; special at JjSJL.vW New Gowns, Special, For ages 2 to 14 years, we have a love ly line of round, V, or high-neck cam bric night gowns—to sell /■ a** special Saturday, choice tJvC Two-Price Sale ©f Children’s Fine Mats $4 aesl $5 Mats The most charming styles in Hats for ages 2 to 10 years. Regular $4.00 and $5.00 Hats—choice both small and large girls; $9.00 and $10.00 Hats, for [some suitable for juniors— choice i • M | •f&cm- -Mm t $4.00 Coats $2.50 $6.00 Coats $3.50 $ 7.50 Coats $ 4.50 $10.00 Coats $ 5.50 $12.00 Coats $ 6.50 $15.00 Coats $ 9.75 $25.00 Coats $16.50 1 Something New A Weak Stomach? Let Us Charge It! d. Have you indigestion or dys pepsia, a torpid liver or any other of the many ills coin ing from a weak stomach ? DR. PIERCE’S yolden Medical Discovery for forty yearn has done a “lion’s share" in eliminating these distressing ailments. Order a Bottle from Your today We feature desirable charge accounts. Open one with us to morrow. «yi i ■jp * the ran* 93 Whitehall St. "The Accommodating 42 Jt)r lO Cents. Made of a soft, white cm/ wrv absorbent paper aspect ally treated to prevent chafing or irritation ofthe tender shin. To ha us or/ inside the regular r.loth or ruhher rheper. one or more as desired Destroyed when soiledcl nun atiny all oh/ectional. disagreeable laundry troubles Infants’ Dept., U Floor Rubens Infant Shirts All weights in Rubens Shirts for all sizes. Lisle and cotton 25c up. Wool and cotton 35c up. All wool 50c up. Silk and wool $1.00 up. Add 5c for each larger size. Boys’ Department, Second Floor SOME EXTRAORDINARY VALUES FOR SATURDAY $5.00 . $6.50 $1.00 50c 50c Sale Junior BALKAN (MTS - I ill Made of imported Wool- i\>\ en Shepherd checks and finest serges in the new red. Cut for Saturday to S9.S8 Beys’ Poro-sknit Union Suits Every active boy needs these elastic and durable Union Suits. Get a full supply Saturday; suit. 25c This Balkan Middy “ $1.58 Lots of 'girls want the Balkan Middy—a real blouse wtb the belt about the hips. Sizes 10 to 16 years in this style. , Made of extra g-rade Galatea, white, red or blue col lars and cuffs. &-B a Price Waist Union Suits • For Boys and Girls Mighty convenient, sensible and fine quality garments for all ages, 2 ta 14 years. Special price; suit. ,50c Beys’ A.ll-Wool Norfolk Suits for Bovs’ All-Wool Norfolk Suits— —2 PANTS—for 50 Bozen Boys’ Blouse Waists, 35c, 3 for Plenty Rah Rah Hats, in colors, v/hite and white trimmed, at .... A good line Boys’ Odd Pants A splendid line Rompers and Overalls. We are agents for the Mother’s Friend Wash Suits, Waists and Shirts. Ncne better on the market. All the leading shapes in Straw Hats, ty EE priced from 50c to | Bargains for Women $3.50 Jap Kimonos Made of Jap Cloth, in Jap style, and Jap patterns. $3.50 has always been the price—to close Saturday. .. Blou Aprons for Everybody 50c and 59c Kinds j §9c| Each = Because we have a lot of Maids’, Misses’ and Tea Aprons that are slightly soiled—50c and 59c quali ties—are yours Saturday, } tjf —- ^1!!i!i!l!!i!!!!!!!!!l!SHI!ll!!l!l!!!i!!!llil!!lili!lllllllllll!l!PIIIIII!llll!llll!lllllil!ll!!!!!l!!l!lll!!!!ll!!l!llllill!!!!!l!illili!ll!!!l!!ll!!!!!!illl!ll!l!!!ni!l!||||||!!!i|||i|||||||l!!!!!||!||!i{|{!|{!||||;i!!;!;|||;|{|||;|||||{!||i||||||p