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TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
A lari?© attendance is anticipated
Saturday evening at the Piedmont
Club and at the East Lake Country’
Club, when ttfe week-end dinner
dances will be driven.
At the Piedmont Club, dinner will
be followed by dancing.
Dr. and Mrs. Willis Westmoreland
and Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Peters
will form a congenial party. Mrs.
Westmoreland has just returned, aft-
ej- a month's stay at Toxaway, where
Dr. Westmoreland Joined her for the
week-end. Mrs. Peters has just re
turned from Toxaway, her sister, Mrs.
!.*overett Walker, remaining there
until later.
One hundred guests are expected
to attend the dinner, and others will
motor out later for the dance.
A large number of reservations
have been made for the dinner dance
at the East Lake Country Club, and
during the afternoon the golf links,
tennis courts and the lake were filled
with club members and their friends.
Informal Luncheon.
Mr. Thomas Whipple Connally gnve
n luncheon Friday at the Capital City
Club In honor of Mrs. D. C. Heyward,
Miss May Heyward, of Charleston.
S. C., and Mr. Irvine Belser, formerly
of Columbia, S. C., now' a Rhoden
scholar at Oxford, England.
Mrs. Heyward is the wife - f form'-'’
Governor D. C. Heyw’ard, of ftouth
Carolina, and Mr. Belser entertained
Mr. Connally when the latter was «n
England last year.
For Mrs. Daniel.
Mrs. J. T. Daniel, who will leave
Atlanta next week to Join Mr. Daniel
in their new home in Columbia, S. C.,
is being given a series of farewell
parties.
Mrs. Harbert Choate will give a
matinee party Monday, and Mrs. Paul
Baker will entertain for her Wednes
day morning. Mrs. Frank Wilkerson
will give a large tea next week
Friday she was the honor guest at a
bridge party given by Mrs. Roy Jones
in Decatur. Other parties are being
arranged.
Party at New Canaan.
Mr. Walter Brown was host at a
delightful party this week when ho
entertained 25 of his neighbors at his
country home, New Canaan. His sis
ter. Mrs. Chase, assisted. Supper whs
served.
Labor Day at Country Club.
The members of the Capital City
Country dub will observe Labor Day
Monday when the golf links and ten
nis courts will he open for the mem
bers. There will also be boating and
swimming, and informal dancing will
be a feature of the evening.
For Miss Jenkins.
Mrs. Gordon Massengale will give
a series of parties next week for
Miss Annie Jenkins, of Birmingham,
who is Mrs. Massengale’s guest tit
her home in Vedado Way. A number
of Mrs. Massengale’s friends will en
tertain for her.
Cole- Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Childers, of
Decatur, announce the mjtrriage of
their sister. Lu Cole, to Mr. Glenn
Ernest Thompson, of Atlanta, the
wedding having taken place on the
evening of August 24. the Rev. Dr
Holderby, of the Moore Memorial
Church, officiating. Mr. and Mrs.
Thompson are at home to their friends
at No. 14 East Lake drive, Decatur.
D. A. R. Board Meeting.
The Executive Board of Joseph
Habersham Chapter, D. A R., will
meet with Mrs. Joseph T Holleman.
No. 283 Peachtree street, Wednesday
morning, September 3, at 10 o’clock.
Dr. Landrum at Y. W. C. A.
The new* rooms of the Y. W. C A.
will be opened with a vesper service
Sunday at 4 o’clock, when T>r. W. V .
Landrum will make an address.
Golden Wedding Celebration.
Mr and Mrs. Maurice Teitlebaum
will celebrate their golden wedding
anniversary Monday, September 1.
They will be at home informally Mon
day afternoon from 4 to fi at their
home. No. 626 Washington street.
Missionary Classes.
Miss Rosa Wood berry, chairman of
the Mission Study, ho* issued the
following call to the Mission Study
Committee, and the vice presidents
of the Jubilee Union:
“Mr. R. C. Millikin. sent out by
the missionary movement of New
York, has accepted the invitation to
lead a class of proposed leaders
September 15-20. inclusive. Subject.
‘The Why and How of Foreign Mis
sions.’ Each member will be pro
vided with a textbook. There will
be two sections of 25 members each
daily at 10:30 a. m. and 3 p. m. of
two hours each. Each missionary so
ciety is invited to send one repre-
, resentative, and the fee will be $2
Vfor each member.
V'Those so appointed, it is under
stood. agree to lead a class in their
church. If there is room in the class
a limited number of others may be
admitted. Please send nami-s and fee
early in the first week in September
to Mrs. H. N. Hurt, No. 548 Spring
street, president of the Union of Mis
sion Workers, and have the announce
ment made Sunday, August 31 in
the churches or missionary societies.
Our workers are earnestly reminded
CHEAP EXCURSION TO
FLORIDA
Via G. S. & F. Railway.
Fare from Macon to
Jacksonville $4.00, Palatka
$4.50, St. Augustine $4.50,
and Tampa $6.00. Propor
tionately low rates from in
termediate stations. Spe
cial trains leave Macon
10:30 a. m. and 11:30 a. m.
September 9. Tickets lim
ited five days.
’C. B. RHODES, G. P. A.
Macon, Ga.
to prepare by prayer and plans for
this course of training that we trust
will deepen our zeal for the Master’s
Kingdom, and direct more intelli
gent service.
“Mr. Millikin will meet on the two
Sunday afternoons he is here Sunday
school officers and teachers for con
ference on missionary education. All
meetings will be at the Central Con
gregational Church."
Hyperion Club Dance.
One of the most enjoyable events
of the past week was the dance given
by the Hyperion Flub in West End.
The occasion was made specially hap
py by the presence of a number of
charming visitors, who were the
guests of honor. Those present were
Misses Irma Irwin, of Montgomery,
Ala.; Lucy Hammond, of San Anto
nio, Texas; Annie Will Pierce and
Irene Berry, of Columbus; Ruth
Small, of Macon; Sarah Garland, of
Griffin, Charlsle McClain, Mamie
Morris, Gerrene Tyler. Bennett Pow
ell, Nell Pace, Carrie Parian, Lucile
Bean. Clam Sullivan, Eddie Lee Ter
rell, Clodie Sands, Lucy Hinman, Ru
by Rogers. Annalu Jenkins, Charlotte
Memmell, Elizabeth Hays, Messrs. W.
JO. Close, L. P. Dal ho use, W. K. Frank
lin, Pope Franklin, G. T. Freeman, L.
B. Hardy. Paul Turner, Arnold Binns,
W. <\ Andrews. Henry Collingsworth,
J. R. Jordan, Alvin I^ovinggootl, E. W.
Lively, C. A. Trussed, John Baldwin,
Julian Jackson, J. R. White, L. L.
St rubble. W. E. Arnold, Jr., Roy Ezell,
M. M. Morris, Mercer Lee, L. T. Law,
R A. Garner, I)r. Ben Todd, Joe
Teague. Louis Pearson, O. A. Free
man. Herbert Snider, C W. Chapman.
Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. W, J.
Whaley and Mr. and Mrs. W. A
Northlngton.
Mr. and Mrs. A. MeD. Wilson, who
have been spending some time at
Atlantic City, will return home in
October.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Strong will
move into their new home in ihe
Eleventh street apartment next week.
Mrs. James S. Hamilton and her
daughter, Miss Louisa Hamilton, have
returned to the city, after spending
the summer at Sewanee with rela
tives and friends They will he for
the present with the Misses Williams
on Spring street.
Mr. and Mrs. J Calhoun Clarke
have returned to the Georgian Ter
race after an absence of seven weeks
sr>ent in Watkins Glenn, N. Y.. Atlan
tic City and Rockbridge Alum
Springs, Va.
Dr. and Mrs Homer Davis have re
turned from the mountains of North
Georgia.
Miss Marian Woolley will attend
school at Lucy Cobh this winter.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Blair Durham
have gone to housekeeping at No. 22
West Tenth street.
Dr. and Mrs. E. C. Cartledge will
reside in the Robert Apartments, cor
ner West Peachtree ana Peachtree
place, after September 1.
Mrs. Jam* s L. Dickey, Jr., and Miss
Katherine Dickey return home Sun
day night after a . month’s stav at
the Kanuga Club, Kanuga, N. C. "
Mrs. John Morris. Jr., who Is the
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John F. Conroy, at their summer cot
tage on the roust of New Jersey,
will remain with them two or three
weeks longer. Mr. and Mrs Morris
met Mr. and Mrs. Conroy in New
York on their return from Europe.
Mr. Morris returned to Atlanta last
week.
Dr. J. M. Crawford, who has been
in Vienna and London several months,
has returned to Atlanta.
Miss Lucile Quinn, who has been
a pupil of Miss Louise Lewis at
Agnes* Scott, leaves in a short time
for New Orleans, where she will en
ter a convent to continue her study.
Miss Margaret Wingfield left Sat
urday for a two weeks’ visit in Bir
mingham.
Dr. De Los Hill, who has been ill
of typhoid fever at his home in
Ponce DeLeon avenue, is convalescent
and able to see his friends.
Mrs. Earl E. Watson and family
are spending the week-end at Car
rollton.
Mr. and Mrs. George Holliday will
move next week into an apartment in
the Virginian. Their little son. Cald
well, who has been ill, is better.
Miss May Hall has returned from
attending a house party given in Con
cord, N. C., by Miss Esther Hatchett
and Miss Margaret Lentz.
Mrs Charles Adler, her two daugh
ters, Misses Claire and Evelyn, and
Miss Hetty Black have gone to In
dian Springs to spend a few weeks.
Miss Sallie T. Callaway leaves Sun
day for a two weeks’ trip to New
York and Atlantic City.
Miss Mildred Sault returns home
Monday.
Mrs. R. H. McOaw will leave Sun
day for a visit in Kansas City and
Nebraska, accompanying home her
guest. Mis* Amy Yale, of Lincoln,
Nebr.
Mrs. J. Moody and Miss Mary Wood
will leave Atlanta Monday for a two
weeks’ stay in New York.
Miss Helen Green has returned to
Atlanta after visiting Mrs. R. G.
Hodgkin at Wrightsville Beach.
Mr and Mrs William R. Mearns
left Saturday to spend several days
in Savannah.
Miss Sarah Converse has returned
from New York.
Mrs George M. Niles and little son,
George, have returned from Indian
| Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wooten
Townsend have returned from East
l^ake and are at Home at the Pied
mont Park apartments in East Elev
enth street.
Mrs. James H. Nunnally will re
main at “Leisure Lodge,” the camp
Former Louisville, Ky., Belle to
Sue Titled Italian for Divorce,
Alleging Infidelity.
G R IFF IN GIRL FINIS HE S
COLLEGE COURSE HERE;
Miss Loitha Cobb, a'recent, graduate of Cox College and Con-
j servatory of .Music. Miss Cobb lives in Griffin.
NEW YORK, Aug. 31.—Arriving In
New York from Italy aboard the Iver-
r.la, the Marchesa Hoge-Sun Girma-
no. who formerly was Miss Virginia
Hoge, of Louisville, Ky., to-day an
nounced her intention of seeking legal
separation from her Italian husband,
her ground being his alleged lack of
morals, according to the American
standpoint.
The Marchesa traveled alone, save
for her maid, and will go to her old
home in Louisville at 6nce, where her
action is to be taken. She freely dis
cussed the situation, saying that
American girls who married Euro
pean noblemen took long chances in
the matrimonial lottery, and generally
lost.
“American girls,” she said, “come
to a sudden realization when they be
come the wives of foreign noblemen
that such a thing as fidelity to their
wives is not a part of the code of
honor of their set. They have no con
ception, according to American
standards, of the obligations of mat
rimony, and an American girl finds it
! hard, if not impossible, to understand
how a man can love his wife and at
the same time keep another establish
ment. "■
“The American girl marrying at
home is often the victim of a drink
ing husband. Drunkenness she may
understand, even though she does not
approve, but infidelity never. The
American man drinks to excess fre
quently; the fpreigners seldom or
never. But the vices of the foreign
ers are, to my mind, at least, worse
than drinking. The European hus
band fails completely to understand
why his wife should seek to upset all
the traditions- of his kind, and the
American girl falls to understand how
he can profess to love her and spend
half his time in the society of an
other woman, or women.
“Women and gambling are the two
principal vices of the noble Euro
pean, and no American girl can stand
either and retain her self-respect. I,
for one, am tired of it and refuse
to longer share my husband with an
other woman.”
MUD Bf
DIXIE GIRL
‘SWEET TOOTH' I
HEALTH SIGN,
WRITER SAYS
Scientist Proves Sugar Good Body
Builder Consumed Most in
Richest Countries.
Children’s craving for sweets and
the liking of almost everybody else
for thorn are accounted for by Mary
Hinman Abel in a bulletin for the
United States Department of Agri
culture. All sweets are simply sugar
In one form or another, and sugar
she shows to be an essential article
of food, one of the very best articles.
One of the curious facts in her
findings is that the consumption of
sugar in different countries is in gen
eral proportion to their wealth. “It
may almost be said,” she observes,
“that people eat as much sugar as
they can get.”
It seems that the english-speaking
people are the largest consumers of
sugar. In 1910 England consumed
86.3 pounds per capita and the United
States 81.6 pound?, although still
larger amounts are said to be con
sumed In sugar-growing districts,
largely in the form of ripe cane.
Denmark that year consumed 77.7
pounds per capita, Switzerland 64.3,
and Germany. France and Holland
each about 40 pounds, while in Italy,
Greece and Servia the rate was only
about 7 pbunds per-capita. The con
sumption of sugar Is everywhere in
creasing.
Use of Saccharin Forbidden.
Sugar belongs to the important
group of food constituents, carbo
hydrates, so named because, as a
whole, they contain the element car
bon in chemical combination with
oxygen and hydrogen, these two ele
ments being in the same proportion
as in water. Other carbo-hydrates
closely related to sugar are starch and
crude fiber, or cellulose. Sugars and
starches are important foodstuffs,
since with fat they supply the bulk
of the energy of aiet.
Saccharin, an extremely sweet ma
terial. is not a sugar, but is of an en
tirely different chemical structure,
being a benzine compound. Its use
in food products was forbidden under
OPEN MR RALLIES
Mrs. Mary McLendon, at Meeting
in Senate Chamber, Predicts
Votes for Georgia Women.
Open air meetings to boost the
cause of votes for women were
planned Saturday following a big
rally in the Senate chamber at the
Capitol, at which the prophecy was
made that Georgia women would be
enfranchised within the next few
years.
A big crowd ttended the Tally an3
heard Mrs. Mary McLendon declare
that she believed the Legislature
would give the women of the* State
the right to vote at the next session.
Men Joined with women in suffrage
plans, the Rev. A. M. Hughlett, Leon
ard J. Grossman, Dr. M. C. Hardin
and Charles McDaniel all speaking
vigorously in favor of women voters
The pastor of St. Mark Church at
tacked the opponents of equal rights
and declared that logic upheld wom
en in their demand for a voice in the
making of the laws that governed
them. Dr. Hardin spoke along the
same lines and declared that women
were paying thousands of dollars in
taxes without representation. *
Miss S. A. Gresham, first vice presi
dent of the Georgia Woman Suf
frage Association, congratulated her
hearers on the growth of the move
ment, of which :he has been an ad
vocate for 50 years.
The next meeting will be at the Ho
tel Ansley.
Revival Adds 50 to
Grace Church Rolls
The second week of the revival at
Grace Methodist Church has, in attend
ance, interest and results, gone beyond
the expectations of the congregation.
There have been seventy-five conver
sions and fifty applications for church
membership.
A male quartet—O. W. Stapleton, J
Gordon Moore, H. C. ^Montgomery and
Dr. W. C. Conway accompanied by a
string band, will sing
of Mr. and Mrs. NunnaUy, at Toxa
way, pntil November 7.
Mrs. Robert Cotton Alston is expet-
ed home from Toxaway early next
week.
Mrs. Leila O. Daley and Miss Lilian
Daley have returned from Wrights
ville, Ga., and Duncan, Ga.
Mrs. Mary Craft Ward has returned
from South Carolina, Alabama and
Northeast Georgia. f
Mrs. W. H. Adkins, after an ab
sence of two months in Highlands,
X. C., is now spending two or three
weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Dwight
Lowell, in Birmingham.
Mrs. Allen Whittaker has returned
from Waynesville, N. C. Her young
sons, Allen and Robert, have returned
from a camping trip at the Green
brier White Sulphur Springs.
Mrs. Samuel T. Weyman will re
main several weeks longer at Toxa-
i way.
RECORD SESSION
Delegates From Fifteen States
Will Gather in Auditorium-
Armory September 12,
The program for the eighth annual
convention of the United Sacred
Harp Musical Association, which will
he held at the Auditorium-Armory
September 12 to 14, inclusive, has
been completed according to an
nouncement Saturday.
Unless the plans miscarry, the con
vention will be the largest in the his
tory of the organization. Noted mu
sicians and delegates from fifteen
States, it is said, will he present.
The delegates will be cared for by
a committee composed of J. S. James,
president; C. J. Criggs. vice presi
dent; T. B. Newton, general mana
ger, and S. W. Everett, secretary of
the association.
It is because of the overflow at
tendance which is expected that that
the Auditorium has been selected as
the place of meeting instead of the
Baptist Tabernacle, used heretofore.
The opening session will be held Fri
day morning at 9 o’clock. There will
be afternoon and night sessions.
Lid Goes on Dancing
In Chicago’s Cafes
CHICAGO, Aug. 31,—Chicago tan-
goists early to-day danced and wrig
gled, dipped and kicked for the last
time in the restaurants of the city.
To-day the ordinance prohibiting
dancing in restaurants and cafes, ex
cept by professional entertainers, be
came effective.
Every restaurant in the city in
which dancing has been permitted
among the patrons celebrated th<
banishment of the dance. Patrons
danced from 6 o’clock last evening
until closing time this morning.
Georgia ‘Buckeyes’
Hold Picnic Sept 5
Sons and daughters of the “Buck
eye state” plan another of the annual
picnics of the Ohio Society of Georgia
at the Water Works Park, Friday,
Sept. 5.
All Ohioans now residents of
Georgia, and all Ohioans who find
themselves in Atlanta on the day of
the picnic, are invited to attend,
whether members of the society or
not. A basket luncheon will be served
at 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon.
THREE A CROWD? !
Not when the third party is an S
Eastman Kodak. Brings as. many j
heads'together as Cupid. Jno. L. j
Moore 4 Sons are Kodak head- J
quarters, at 42 North Broad street. J
j Expert film finishing.
Vagrants’ Overall
‘Blind’ Is Doomed
In a renewed war on vagrants
started Saturday, the police set about
to break up a shrewd scheme adopted
by thousands of idling negroes to fool
the authorities and give the impres
sion that they are hard worker*.
This plan of the loafing negroes »s
to purchase a pair of overalls, which
they wear continually and soon get
soiled. All suspicious negroes, over
all attired, will be questioned, and if
they fail to make a satisfactory show
ing, will be sent to the police station.
Recorder Pro Tern Preston from the
bench in Police Court gave the po
lice to understand that he would back
them to the full power of the court in
this crusade against the vagrants.
Carnegie Given
A Dutch Medal
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
THE HAGUE, Aug. 31.—Grand
Cross of the Order of Orange-Nassau
was conferred on Andrew Carnegie
by Queen Wilhelminia of The Nether
lands in commemoration of the in
auguration of the Palace of Peace.
Resinol for
skin health
R ESINOL Ointment and Res
inol Soap stop itching in
stantly and soon restore
the skin to perfect health, in
even the worst cases of eczema,
rash, ringworm, tetter or other
tormenting, unsightly eruptions.
Prescribed by physicians for
over eighteen years.
Resinol Ointment is also a most
effective antiseptic, healing
dressing for cuts, bums, scalds,
bruises, bites, stings,chafings,&c.
The nearest druggist sells Resiaol Oint
ment (bOe and $1.00/and Resinol Soap (26c)
or you can try them free by writinr to
Dept. 3S-S, Resinol. Baltimore. Md.. for
liberal sample of each.
the Federal Pure Food law. It is
quite commonly prescribed in cases
of diabetes to satisfy the craving of
sweets, as it is believed to be lea?
harmful in such cases than the sugar,
the flavor of which it replaces. There
are other chemical substances which
are not sugars, but which have a
marked sweet flavor. They, like sac
charin, it is explained, are in no sense
foodstuffs.
Sugar Never Adulterated.
Of 500 samples of sugar examined
several years ago by the Bureau of
Chemistry, not one was found to be
adulterated. The low price of cane
sugar, in comparison with the price of
substances that might be used for
adulteration, protects it from 9uch
attempts.
A more recent publication of the
Bureau of Chemistry says that sugars
as a class, both the high and low
grades, as now found on the market,
are practically free from adulteration.
This is particularly true since the
Federal pure food law of 1906 went
into effect.
NOTICE TO
PARENTS
Are your children ready for
school? After you have bought
new books and secured entry
blanks—then be sure their eyes
are all right. Children may have
serious eye defects that you have
never suspected and which will
greatly handicap them in their
studies. Bring them in and we
will make a careful examination,
and if glasses are needed we will
make them at a very moderate
charge.
NOTE.—We are specially
equipped for the examination of
children’s eyes and they will be
given most thorough and careful
attention.
A. K. HAWKES CO.
OPTICIANS
14 WHITEHALL
O
THE SCENIC WAY
WITH DINING CARS
t
Life 5 Worth
Living in Georgia
If you prefer city life, there
are no better cities in the
world than those in Georgia.
If you prefer village life, the
smaller towns in Georgia
offer every inducement.
If you prefer country or farm
life, Georgia offers greater
inducements than any State
in the Union. Georgia lands
work the year round, from
two to five crops being gath
ered off of the same land
each year—crops that are
profitable.
Climate and Soil
f —T"
The climate is such that far
mers do not have to house
stock during the winter, there
being good grazingtheentire
year. For raising cattle and
stock Georgia offers greater
inducements than can be
found elsewhere.
The soil is suited for almost
anything that grows and can
be utilized the entire year.
The prices at which good
farm land can be purchased
at present in Georgia are so
low that it is a matter of
comment—some thinking
that the land is not so good
as stated. The land is good,
but there are thousands of
acres that are now lying idle
and the good people of
Georgia are anxious for good
farmerstocomeamongthem.
Consequently the land is
cheaper here than elsewhere.
Information Furnished
t 1 ... — ■■ .
If there is anythingyou would
like to know about Georgia,
a letter to the Real Estate
Dept, of Hearst’s Sunday
American or Atlanta Geor
gian will bring just the infor
mation you desire without
cost to you.
Come to Georgia, where life's
worth living. Address
Real Estate Dept.
Hearst’s Sunday American
or Atlanta Georgian