Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 28, 1913, Image 9
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TILE AT LAN I A (-JKOI{(! 1 AN AND NEWS.
i f 1 11 1
MLJW
!’o jjocial date of the near future
promises more pleasure than an even
ing with the Players’ Club, which ap
pears at the Grand Opera House on
Tuesday in a brilliant farce comedy
by Oscar Wilde, "The Importance of
1 Being in Earnest.” The circle of boxes
"’ill be filled with handsomely gowned
m omen and men in evening dress, and
many theater parti.es will be scattered
through the audience. There will be
supper parties after the show at the
Piedmont Driving Club.
Among those who will entertain box
parties are Governor-elect and Mrs.
Slaton. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Speer, Mr.
f a °d Mrs. Hugh Richardson, Judge and
Mrs. Arthur Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Cooney. Mr. and Mrs. Thos.
B. Felder. Mrs. William D. Grant and
others.
There is brisk demand for tickets.
The play will be given by a talented
cast, which includes Mrs. Slaton. Miss
Hildreth Burton-Smith, Mrs-. William
Owens, Mrs. H B. Scott: Messrs.
Lamar Hill. Marshall Adair. Hamilton
Douglas. Jr., and Frank Taylor
Miss Dean Hostess.
S' Miss Marian Dean entertained at a
hearts dice party Wednesday morn
ing at her home in Peachtree Circle
for her guest. Miss Louise Blood -
worth, of Forsyth. Sweet peas in va
rious shades decorated the house. A
fan. white silk hose and a basket of
^weetpeas were given to winners of
the highest scores.
Miss Dean wore a white embroid
ered mull. Her guest alfco was in
white, a lacey frock with ribbons of
blue satin.
Guests were Mispes Martha Hall,
Mary Burr Lake, Hallie Crawford,
Emily West. Marie Stoddard, Lucile
Young. Lucile Thomas. Helen Tucker.
Ladle Speer, Phoebe Harman, Lorine
Connally, Nedra and Katherine Tur
ner, Carriiou Born and Nancy Cole
man.
Miss Hanson to Judge Babies.
Beautiful Druid Hills will be visited
Saturday by thousands whd never
have been there before. Ample ar-
f rangementf will be made for street
« ars to handle the crowds.
A baby show will be held on the
lawn of Dr. Charles Campbell's home
from 3 to 4 o'clock. Handsome prizes
will be awarded to children from three
months to four years old. Twins wiii
receive special attention.
Prizes will be presented by Miss
Gladys Hanson.
At 4 o’clock, the pageant, having
formed on the lawn of Mrs. S. C.
Dobb?, will begin the grand march,
preceded by the band and led by
Mother Goose. Three hundred chairs
will be placed on Mrs. Clyde King’s
lawn.
After the parade tableaux will be
formed with Mother Goose and her
family in the more important events.
Then fancy dances will be given by
pupils of Miss Moseley’s school. This
will be followed by the dance of the
fairies and the crowning of the queen.
After this there will be general danc
ing. which will continue into the early
evening.
Ice cream cones, candy and other
things dear to the heart of childhood
will be on hand a?* well as a fat and
mysterious grab bag.
A cake sale will be one of the fea
tures. Many elegant home-made cakes
have been donated.
W. C. T. U. Meeting.
The Atlanta Frances Willard Wom
an’s Christian Temperance Union
hold its regular session Thursday aft
ernoon at 3 o’clock in the Sunday
school room of Trinity Church.
For Mrs. Keenan.
Mrs. Walter Keenan, of Columbia.
S. C., is being entertained as the guest
of Mrs. J. T. Daniel in Ansley Park.
Wednesday evening Mrs. W. C. War-
field will give a box party at the
graduating exercises of the Hannah
School in her honor. Mrs. Roy Gwin
Jones will entertain at bridge for
Mrs. Keenan Thursday afternoon at
her home in Hapeville. On Friday
afternoon Mrs. Joseph Camp will give
a bridge party in her honor. .Mrs.
r
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J. G. Malsby will entertain at lunch
eon, followed by a matinee Saturday.
Mrs. Paul Baker has invited a few
friends to meet Mrs. Keenan at bridge
Monday afternoon. Tuesday Miss
•Edna Blackmon will give an after
noon bridge and Mr. and Mrs. J. T.
Daniel will entertain a party at the
Players’ Flub performance Tuesday
evening.
Program for Recital.
The following program has been
arranged for an organ recital at St.
Mark Church, Peachtree and Fifth
Streets. Friday evening at 8:30
o'clock: #
Miss Eda E. Bartholomew, organist,
assisted by Mr. Edward A. Werner,
baritone; Mr. Oscar Pappenheimer,
cellist.
lOrgan. Bartlett, Toccata, E major.
Cello, Henry Eccles, Sonata, G
minor: Largo, Corrente.
Organ. Wagner, prelude. “Lohen
grin.” ,
Baritone. Gounod, aria, "Pjilemon
et Baucis.”
Cello, Durante, aria. D minor. Von
Fielitz, ecstasy; Wagner, “The An
gel.”
Organ. Federlein. Canzonetta; Cal-
laerts, intermezzo. (by request);
Wolstenholme, LeCarillou; Debussy,
ballet.
Baritone. Liza Lehman, “Myself
When Young;” “Persian Garden:”
Franz. Dedication; Foote, ‘T.«ove Me
If I Live.” _
Cello, Destenav. "Visions d'An
trefois:” Boukinik. "Melodie;” Para
dise, “Canzonetta.”
Organ, Floton. overture. “Martha.”
For Miss Irene Hartzog.
Mrs. J. H. Watson entertained at
bridge Wednesday morning for Miss
Irene Hartzog. a bride-elect. Daisies
and sweetpeas formed the decora
tions. Prizes included s*ilk hose, a
lemon dish and correspondence cards.
Guests were Mrs. Charles N. Dennis,
Mrs. Porter Bearden, Mrs. Pink Cher
ry, Mrs. J. J. Murphy, Mrs. A. W.
Falkinburg, Mrs. Claude Sims, Mrs.
R. D. Ison. Mrs. Frank Foster, Mrs.
W. B. Cook, Mrs. Gershon, Mrs. R. A.
Williams. Mrs. S. L. Rhorer, Mrs. S
G. Bagwell, Mrs. Jeff Greene, Mrs. E.
A. Woody. Mrs. W. H. Turner. Misses
Lucille McLaughlin and Westbrook.
Mrs. Daniel Hostess.
Mr« Walter Keenan, of Columbia,
S. ('., who is visiting Mrs. J. T. Dan
iel, was given a bridge party by her
hostess at East Lake Wednesday aft
ernoon. The game was played on the
porch. Prizes were white silk hose, a
box of embroidered handkerchiefs
and a bridge set.
Mrs. Keenan wore a white lace
dress with a coat of blue brocaded
charmeus'e and a milan hat faced with
blue crepe and trimmed in pink roses
and blue velvet ribbon.
Mrs. Daniel was gowned in white
embroidered crepe, a leghorn hat w r ith
a band of pink ostrich feathers and
bunches of French roses.
Guests were Misses Edna Black
mon. Frances Ansley, Ruby Askew,
Helen Taylor. Emma Mason, Violet
Swanson, Mrs. Walter Keenan, Mrs.
Roy Gwin Jones, Mrs. William Hoyt
Peck, Mrs. Joseph G. Camp, Mrs. J.
G. Malsby. Mrs. William Dunn, Mrs.
Claude Sims. Mrs. Herbert Choate,
Mrs. Albert Collier, Mrs. Ida Colbert.
Mrs. S. M. Whitner. Mrs. Thomas
Patton. Mrs. Edgar Chambers, Mrs.
Paul Baker, Mr*--. C. J. Christensen.
Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. W. C. Warfield.
For Miss Boyd.
Miss Emily Winshlp will entertain
at bridge Tuesday afternoon for Miss
Carolyn King’s guest, Miss Elizabeth |
Boyd, of Clearwater, Fla.
For Mr. and Mrs. Sisson.
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave B. Sisson,
who recently returned from their
wedding journey, will be entertained
informally at dinner Tuesday even
ing by Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Sis
son. Other guests will be Mr. and
Mrs. Carleton Smith.
At Uncle Remus Home.
There will be a public reception at
the Uncle Remus Home Friday aft
ernoon to be given by ‘Brer Rabbit,’
‘Brer Fox,’ ‘Brer Bar’ and all the other
“creatures.” The "Honey Bee Tree”
will be laden with sweets.
Miss Meadows and de gals” have
prepared good eating for a great
throng. The “Thimble Finger Well”
is filled to overflowing. The tales of
Uncle Remus will be given in pic
ture and story.
There also will be the annual event
of crowning the May Queen and the
May pole dances will be unusually
pretty this year with hundreds of
children dancing and singing under
the direction of Mrs. Brevard Moni-
gomery.
Mrs. Bussey Hostess.
Mrs. E. H. Bussey was hostess at
an informal bridge party Wednesday
morning at her home in Inman Park.
The bungalow was decorated in
I daisies. Appropriate souvenirs were
J give n for top score ana consolati >n.
The guests were Misses Josephine j !
j Stoney. Eloise Stewart. Frances I 'on-
nally, Xellii Kiser Stewart. Mrs. R.
X. R. Bard well. Mrs. L. S. Crane,
Mrs. C. C. McGehee. Jr., Mrs. PE H.
Ginn. Mrs. T. K. Starr. Mrs. D. S
Moore. Mrs. H. PE YV. Palmer and
Mrs. W. C. Coles.
For Miss Frances.
Mrs. Charles Shelton entertained |
at a luncheon "Wednesday at her horn
in Gordon Street for Miss Martha !
P'rancis, whose marriage to Mr. j
Claude Douthit will be celebrated ini
June. Covers were laid for sixteen.
For Mrs. Estes. *
Mrs. Morris Swing entertained the 11
members of her bridge club Wednes
day afternoon in honor of Mrs. Grady
Estes, recent bride. The decora-I:
IS UNABLE TO ATTEND
CONFEDERATE REUNION
Mrs. Walter D.
Lamar,
of Macon,
who was
appointed
chaperon for
the maids
of honor
for the
South
at the reunion,
•but who was
unable to
attend.
being recently
injured
in a
runaway
accident.
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IKK LOUDON'S
La/es/jttJ (zra/fer/ Sties///vc/
The SCARLET PLAGUE
DccjlMS S/I
FRIE MAGAZINE
GIVEN WITH NEXT
SIMMH
at the home of the bride’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William Bawling, on
Oakdale Road. Druid Hills. The only
attendant will be the groom’s broth
er. Mr. Sidney Wilcox, of South
.America, as Dest man.
Among the out-of-town guests here
for the wedding are Dr. and Mrs.
Sidney Wilcox, the groom’s parents;
Messrs. Sidney and Appleton Wilcox,
of New York, his brothers; Dr. George
S. Kunz and Miss Elizabeth Kunz, of
New York; Mr . Ful ford. of Canada
and Mrs. J. T. Wheeler, of New York.
An informal reception will follow
the ceremony.
For Miss Bloodworth.
In honor of Miss Louise Blood -
worth, of Forsyth, w ho is visiting Miss
Marion Dean. Miss Hallie Crawford
will entertain PTiday afternoon. Miss
Helen Tucker will give a matinee
party for her Saturday afternoon.
For Visitors.
Mrs. L. W. Gray entertained at
luncheon at the Georgian Terrace
Wednesday for Miss Mary Andrews’
guests, Miss Grace Pruett, of Clayton,
Ala., and Miss Mary Trippe Ellison,
of Mississippi.
Her guests included Misses Mary
Andrews. Mary Trippe Ellison. Grace
Pruett. Mabel Hurt. Blanche Devine,
Kate Cone and Annie Maud Schuess-
ler.
After luncheon Miss Schuessler
gave a box party for Misses Pruett
and PI)Iison.
Tea for Visitors.
Mrs. John Means Daniel entertained
informally at tea Wednesday after
noon for Mrs. Willis B. Parks’ guest,
Mrs. J. F. John, of North Carolina,
and for Miss Louise Dow mer, of Hop
kinsville. Ky.. Miss Aline Parks’
guests. Tw enty-five w ere present.
Hanna School Banquet.
The Alumnae Association of the
Hanna School, of which Mrs. Frank
Massenbuig is president, will give an
annual banquet Thursday evening at
the Piedmont Hotel. P’ifty members
are expected. •
PERSONALS
and now
Miss Hazel Muter, of Charleston,
W. Va., is spending a few days with I
Mrs. Frank Massenburg on her way
to New Orleans, where she \w|ll Join I
a party of friends for an extended I
trip West.
Mr and Mrs. Luther Z. Rosser, Mr. |
and Mrs. Charles Shelton and Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Z Rosser. Jr., will
leave Thursday for Warm Springs to
attend the Bar Association meeting.
Mrs. Jos eph Eby will join them Sat
urday.
Miss Lucy Hinmari will leave I
Thursday morning for Auburn to at
tend commencement, after which she
will go to Birmingham for a short
stay.
Mrs. Maxwell Thebaut is slowly im- |
proving at St. Joseph’s, after an op
eration for appendicitis.
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Sison are
keeping house In an apartment in
the Sissonia.
Mrs. Harry English has returned
home, after an absence of six weeks
in Terre Haute. French Lick Springs
and New' York.
Mr. and Mrs. Brutus Clay left •Tues
day for Baltimore, called there by th*»
death of Mrs. Clay's brother, Mr.
Joseph McEvoy. Mrs. Clay will re
main some time with her parents.
Mr and Mrs. Hugh Foreman. of
New York, will visit Toxaway in July.
Miss Harrle Stoekdell, of Athens,
will be a guest of Mrs. Harry Eng
lish after Wednesday, following a vis
it to Mrs. C. A. Wood at the Geor
gian Terrace.
STODDARDIZE!
J F YOU are having your Dry
Cleaning done at STODDARD’S,
then you are geltlng absolute SATISFACTION! But if
you’ve been trying other methods—and are dissatisfied—then
get wise to the GREATEST Dry Cleaning process—STOD
DARDIZE—and you'll get ONE HUNDRED PER CENT of Sat
isfaction!
A Wagon for a Phone Ca'l |H
We pay Charges (one way) on Out-of-Town Orders of *2 or more. H
l 2 ?, £* achtr f <! Str eet Dixie's Greatest Dry
Bell Phone. Ivy 43
Atlanta Phone 43 Cleaner and Dyer
Stoddard
$$$$$$$
Riggs
sease
tions were daisies and the prizes were
a crepe de chine collar and jabot, a
bridge set, and boudoir slippers.
Sixteen guests were present.
Art Association Elects Officers.
At a meeting of the Atlanta Art
Association Wednesday morning at
the Carnegie Library Mrs. Samuel
Inman was re-elected president. For
number of years Mrs. Inman has
served the association and her re-
election is a source of pleasure to
art lovers in Atlanta.
Other officers were elected, as fol-
—
lows: First vice president, Mr. C. B.
Bid well; second vice president. Mr. 1
W. L. Cosgrove; third vice president, j
Mrs. Richard Johnston; recording sec
retary, Mrs. Clarence Blosser; cor
responding secretary, Mrs. Henry
Bernard Scott, and treasurer, Mrs.
E. W. More.
The next meeting will be held in
September, when a program will be
arranged for the year.
Rawling - Wilcox.
The marriage of Miss Katherine
Rawling and Mr. Philip W. Wilcox
will take place Wednesday evening
If your teeth are loose and sensitive,
| and the gums receding and bleeding,
i vou have Riggs Disease, and are in
' danger of losing all your teeth.
' Use Call's Anti-Riggs, and it will
give quick relief and a complete
cure. It is a pleasant and econom
ical treatment, used and recom
mended by leading ministers, law
yers and theatrical people who ap-
‘ preciate the need of perfect teeth.
, Get a 50c bottle of Call’s Anti-Riggs
■ from Jacobs Pharmacy, with their
guarantee to refund the money if it
fails to do all that is claimed for it.
It is Invaluable in relieving sore
mouth due to plate pressure Cir-
! cular free. CALL’S ANTI-RIGGS CO.,
L3 Williams Street. Elmira, N. Y.
Smelly
toilet
bowls
nade
sweet
and safe
with CN.
A FEW drops ot CN in
•“p the toilet bowl de
stroys every danger from
infection. CN is a power
ful cleanser and five times
as effective as carbolic
acid, yet safer to use.
CN is better than
soap and powder,
because it leaves no
icsidue to accumu
late dirt and diseaa>>
germs. It overcomes
odors.
-4II G nicer* Dr iizi*. s
and Department Storts
10c, 25c, 50c, $1
I'kr yelloto package
with the gable-top.
West Disinfecting Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
Coo0 ra
S end
flapW .
Et>9? 9
S«sa«S c .
A
Sunday
/ymen can
ea^
a.bpW^Vo! ' lYie
Secwon
Go«rt c
_ Vottf ?apCr n°8^ 0
*5 '
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
There’s a world of satisfac
tion in buying Uneeda Biscuit
because you know you will
get what you want—soda
crackers that are oven-fresh,
crisp, clean, appetizing and
nourishing.
Uneeda Biscuit are always uniform
in quality—they are always alike
in crispness, in flavor—they are
soda crackers you can depend
upon. And all because Uneeda
Biscuit are uncommon soda crack
ers packed in an uncommon way.
Five cents everywhere in the
moisture-proof package.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
Jf
\
White City Park Now Open
Coast - Wise Ships
for Pleasant Trips
- CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RY.
1*0
Savannah, Ga.
Thence a cool ocean voyage on
palatial steamships.
Round-trip Faros from Atlanta
* including meals and berth while at sea
New York.. . . $38.25
, Boston 42.25
/Q Baltimore. . 29.25
Philadelphia. 34.05
Correspondingly low fares from
and to other places.
Ask nearest Ticket Agent.
W. H. Fooa,
^ District Passenger Agent,
Central of Georgia Railway,
Atlanta, Ga.
Forecast for Thursday---
A Shower of
Remnants
Of White and Colored
Cotton and Mixed Fabrics
At Half-Price
Quite impossible to tell you on paper all it means to women to be able to se
lect from such an assortment of desirable fabrics as these—the season’s most pop
ular materials, reduced bv active selling, to short lengths—at half-price.
Wonderful assemblage—larger in its scope, more varied in its kinds than any
previous sale of Remnants. You can hardly think of a practical or desirable fabric
that is not among them—-from the least expensive gingham to silk-aud-eottou mix
ed novelties, and each piece means the saving of exactly half.
The collects t is made up about equally of white and colored goods, includ
ing such as ratine . voiles, Swisses, poplins, seco silks, chiffon lisse, silk-and-cotton
mixed goods, crepes, piques, luna lawns, Persian lawns, dimities, nainsooks, mad
ras, ginghams, percales, and various others.
Lengths varying from two yards to dress patterns, of which there is a goodly
supply.
Find the remnants on special tables in the Wash Goods Section, second
floor, opposite the elevators.
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