Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 01, 1913, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

1 ' I ' I I. \ A I . \ ' > l'.UK< i I -\ s V \ I > ■n r. \v n. CME1 'S LAMS vNO pet for an apartment dweller The week-end dinner-dance at the Piedmont Driving Club Saturday evening will be attended by 150 guests and will be one of the happiest in the series of weekly dances given at this club. Several large parties have been arranged, and among them will be a party of twelve guests, winch Mr. and' Mrs. Albert Howell give. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer L. Moore will have a party of twelve in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Frederic .1. Faxon. Mr. and Mrs. Hollins Randolph will Little Mary Call'i new pet, “ Whitey." MANY PARTIES ARRANGED EOR WEEKLY DINNER-DANCE! Lays Conviction as Bigamist to Grudge By Father-in-Law CITt BREVITIES. Robert Yancey, of New York, who has been tendered a round of parties is the guest of Mrs. Joseph Raine, Jr. There were two tables of bridge, an 1 the prizes were a bridge set ami a lin gerie bag. Yellow chrysanthemums err decorations, and luncheon fol- ed the game, for an apartment house Mary. Lamb's Spectacular Career. The career of “Woolly,” now de ceased, was short, but highly spec tacular. He didn’t run far, bu ran all the time on six cylinders. the altar of public opinion, a victim of his own appetite, aided and abet- 1 ted by his vocal chords and tempera ment. At one time “Woolly” was lamb of much promise. Then he fell a victim to the blandishments of his pretty little mistress, and demanded constant attention. Whenever little Mary was not playing with him yearned for her mightily, and his yearning took the form of nightly bieatings, rich in tonal qualities and of remarkable volume. Naturally, he attracted attention, and it was then that he began to indulge his appetite Someone threw him an old shoe one night. "Woolly” nked it and cried for more He got it—and also he got quantities of everything that could be thrown out of a window. Then “Wool ly” went foraging on his own ac count and ate a lot of things he shouldn't. The report spread that "Woolly” knew the whereabouts of a certain alarm clock that had disa neared—and “Woolly” was doomed. Everybody Misses Him. Little Mary chattered volubly about pets in general and “Woolly” and “Whitey” in particular Saturday morning. “I miss 'Woolly' dreadfully some times," she said. “Other people miss him, too, but not the same way I do. I asked a man yesterday if he didn’t miss ‘Woolly,' and he said 1 could just bet my life he did. He seemed to be afraid i was going to get another lamb I'd just as soon have ‘Whitey as a lamb. Isn't he cute, with his funny ears and red eyes? Look how he throws his cars up when I cuddle him. He’s g« he knows m^ aliri< V did.” of sense, too. and ell as ‘Wool- r r3IT You ean conquer It K • tnslly In S day*, lin * prove your Lealt . prolong your life. No more Htom acli trouHt. no f. .a Lreal.. i.o li< art weakness. He rn n!y vljcr. calm nerve*, clear eye* ami mi I .lor mental Ktr<r«th. Whether you chew or smoke , ip,, ciKari'ttt <iK»ns. y t my interesting Tobacco li Worth Its weight In k Mailed free. E. J. W000S. 534 Sixth Ave., 748 M.. New York. N. Y. FREE T R E A T I 8 E. The Leach Sanatorium, Indianapolis. Ind., ha* i '.'dished a booklet which rive* Jr.trre*t n,; fact* Write for it to-day. have a large party in honor of Miss Emily Wins hip. whose marriage to Hugh Scott takes place next month. Mr. and Mrs. Preston Arkwright will have a party of twelve. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L>. Rhodes will have a party of eight. Colonel and Mrs. Wil liam Lawson Peel will have four guests, and Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Nel son will have a party of four. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Cooney will have a party of six. and Mrs. Robert Yancey, of New York Mrs. Joseph Raines guest, will be the central fig ure in h party of six. Dr. Montague Boyd and Bowie Martin will have a small party and Horton Mathewson will have a party of four. Miss Goldsmith's Luncheon. The buffet luncheon Miss Marion Goldsmith gives next Saturday will assemble a limited number of guests to meet Miss Emily Wlnship, a bride- elect, and Miss Katherine Ellis, a debutante. . Mrs. DeGive Postpones Dinner Party Mr. and Mrs. Henry DeGive have | postponed the dinner party they were I to have given at the Piedmont Driv- \ ing Club Saturday evening, on ac- count of the illness of Mias Lamar | Latham, of Washington, D. f\, in I whose iionor the affair had been ar ranged. Christmas Parlor Sale. Mrs. A. P. Coles has loaned her • beautiful home, No. 565 West Peach- j tree street, for the bazaar which the j 'oseph Habersham Chapter will hold next Wednesday. The display will be open at 9 a., m. and will contain many unique. and original features The millinery ta ble will show many beautiful and stylish hats. The art table will have all sorts of pretty and useful cretonne and brocade articles, and there will ; be aprons galore. Dolls to suit all I tastes can be found, also articles in j crochet and embroidery. Most attractive will be the bargain j counter. Beautiful cakes made by the fair , hands of the Habersham ladies will i be on sale and delicious homemade j candy. All friends of Mrs. Coles and of the chapter will receive a cordial wel- i come. The public is invited. For Mrs. Holliday. Mrs. George Breitenbucher gave a ! surprise party Friday afternoon cele brating the birthday of her daugh- : ter, Mrs. Ware Holliday. Yellow chrysanthemums were decorations, and the prizes were won by Miss Sophie Haas and Miss Virginia Hoff man. The guests included twelve close friends of the honor guest. Informal Luncheon. The luncheon given by Mrs. James : D. Robinson Saturday was arranged in honor of Miss Umar Latham, of Washington, D. C., Mrs. Charles ' Conklin’s guest. Dinner and Supper at St. Philips. The women of Ht. Philip’s Cathedral will give a dinner and supper In the .Sunday school room, corner Washing ton and Hunter streets, Thursday, De cember 4. Dinner with turkey, cran berries and plum pudding, will be served from 11:30 to 2:30, and sup per, with creamed chicken and oys ters, will be served from 5:30 to 8 (o'clock. All friends of the church and the public are cordially invited. A special invitation is extended those who expect to attend the theater af ter supper. The women in charge are Mesdames Robert Sharpe. Dunn. (\ IPettigrew, \\ . M. Hawkes. George Noble, H. A. Haler, Frank Allen, E. H. Barnes, B. L. Owens, E. H. Roylston, T. H. Aus tin. Mary Jones. H. K. Stockbridge. Baker, 11. B. King Burkett. Oliver, Waller, W. L. Percy, Christian, Ruf- fey, Bruce, Montgomery. King, Walter Reynolds, Rollestone, Hein, Roswell King. C. T. a Pise Misses Carolina and Louise Sisson, Luia Snook, Annie Barnwell and others. McDonald - Seal*. The wedding of Miss Annie McDon ald to Clarence H Seals took place at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Fannie McDonald, on Courtland street, Saturday morning at 10 o’clock, the Rev. H. M. Du Bose officiating. Miss Lydia Hatcher, of Augusta, was maid of honor and T. E. Addi son was best man. The bride was gowned in her trav eling suit of blue duveiyn. with a hat of black trimmed in Numldy feathers. She wore Bride roses. Immediately after the wedding Mr. and M i k ' Sea a ft. I ■; a trip to Plot - ida, after which they will reside with Mrs. McDonald. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding were Misses Doris Spech, Lillian Hatche”, Mrs. J K Morris and little Edwin Epoch, Jr., from Au gusta, and Miss Myrtle Butler, of Asheville, N. C. Lecture on China. The Rev. Jere A. Moore will deliver a stereopticon lecture on China at Park Street Church Sunday evening at 7:30 o’clock. The lecture will he without charge and all are cordially invited. The free-will offering will be for the cause of missions Dr. Moore is well known as a lecturer on the peoples of foreign lands, and much interest is felt in the Illustrated talk which will be given Sunday evening. Equal Suffrage Association. At a meeting of the Atlanta Equal Suffrage Asociation next Wednesday afternoon C. L. Ashley, Councilman from the Fourth Ward, will speak on “Municipal Government." Bazaar and Oyster Supper. The Woman's Guild of Epiphany Church, Inman Park, will have a ba zaar and oyster supper at the home of the rector, the Rev. R. K. Smith, No. 100 Moreland avenue, on Tues day, December 2. A delightful cold lunch will be served - for 35 cents from noon, continuing during the''after noon. Oyster In any style will be I served. All kinds of beautiful ar.i- I des for Christmas will be on sale, las well as homemade candles. The | public is cordially Invited. Woman’s Pioneer Society. The Woman's Pioneer Society wi!T meet tn the Winecoff Hotel December 3 at 3 p. m. All members are re- i quested to attend. Free Kindergarten Association. The Atlanta Free Kindergarten As sociation will meet Monday morning I at 11 o’clock at the Carnegie Library Altar Society. Th<° Ladies' Altar Society of the j Sacred Heart Chtych will meet Mon- I day at 3:30 p. in. at MaYist College. I The meeting of the executive board I will be held at 2:30 p. in. College Park Woman’s Club. The College Park Woman's Club j will meet In Cox College chapel Tues- ' day at 3 |>. m. instead of Wednesday. I An executive meeting with business (of importance will b** held at 2:30. Tile meeting will be under the auspices of the civic department. Dr. Toepel will be the principal speaker. A delightful musical program will be rendered. A full attendance of the club Is expected. H ughes-—Beck. J. B. Hughes announces the mar riage of his daughter, Wllhelmlna, to Ralph Lamar Beck, on November 22. Charles R. Smith, sentenced to tour years In the prnltentl.ti \ alter bellf convicted of marrying Miss Gertrude Wilson, daughter of S M. Wilson, of Atlanta, when he had another wife liv ing, probably will he taken to the State Farm at Milledgeville soon The verdict of guilty Friday afternoon was followed by a dramatic parting be tween Smith ami the daughter of the man who urought the charges against him. They embraced tearfully, and Smith declared that ‘‘at the end of four years I'll oome back to you.” When making his statement on the witness stand. Smith charged that Wil son caused his arrest to satisfy an old grudge He declared that when he was a child Wilson had hltn placed In an orphan asylum In order to defraud him of his rightful interest in property near Macon. PERSONAL Golf Tournament at East Lake To-day Golfers of the Atlanta Athletic Club who have never won a trophy in com petition ovei? the East Lake course will be given an opportunity to win one this afternoon. George W. Adair, club golf cham pion. has offered a handsome silver loving cup to be presented to the player winning the first flight in this event. The entry fee will be $1. Unless th«*Te Is a change made in the ar rangements to-day. there wil lbe no qualifying round. The first sixteen entrants on the list will compose the first flight, the second sixteen the second flight and so on. There will be a cup for the win ner and runner up In each flight. <■ N. Anderson has been named bv •fudge Newman, of the Federal Court as receiver for the Yancey Hardware < tgnpany, acalnet which an Involuntart petition In bankruptcy has been tiled hv foreign creditors. Among them are in, Globe Stove and Range Company, of Ko knmo, Ind . which claims an indebted ness of $835.06; Draper-Maynard Com puny, with a claim of $1,163.61, and the 1-ord Motor Company, of Detroit with * claim of $35.45. A dance in honor of the football team of the Eleventh United States Cavalrv of Chattanooga, will be given by the en listed men of the Seventeenth Infantry at Fort McPherson Saturday night fol lowing the football game between the ri val teams Saturday afternoon. The en tire band of the Seventeenth Regiment will furnish music for the dancers. The dance is under the auspices of the Regi mental Social Club, and a general invi- I tation has been extended to all friends of the soldiers, especially the ladles Governor John M. Slaton left for N*v\ | York Saturday morning, to confer with Eastern bankers regarding the refund ing of a portion of Georgia's bonded debt, amounting to $3,679,000. He wil; he gone about ten days. Some means of refunding the bonds must he devised b% the State Legislature at Its next session and It Is probable that Governor Slatoi will return from New York with plans, which he will place before that body The first of the bonds, amounting to $227,000, fall due May 15, 1915. The New- South Bakery wa* host to 300 Atlanta grocers at the Annley Hotel Friday night An elaborate dinner was served, followed by a smoker, which was greatly enjoyed. The hotel orches tra rendered a program of popular airs during the evening, and performers from the Forsyth Theater did “stunts” for the amusement of the diners. L. E. Rogers, of the American Bakeries Corporation, presided over the feast. Mrs. Louise Walthall Wellborn will leave Sunday for a month’s visit to friends in Boston. Miss Martha Drake, of Griffin, who has been visiting Miss Marion Field er, returned home Friday. Mrs. F. A. Gentry, of Chattanooga, is visiting her son, Dr. J. A. Gentry, at the Georgian Terrace. .Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Warren Car- nagy have returned to Atlanta and are at home at No. 530 Spring street. Mrs. Warren Boyd and young son, Spenter, returned home Saturday after a two weeks* stay In New York. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dargan. Jr., whose marriage took place recently, are at the Grove Park Inn, Ashe ville. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sharpe have returned home after spending the month In New York, Boston and Nor folk, Va. Mrs. Rosa McCully, of Anderson, S. C„ is expected to arrive in Atlanta Monday to visit Mrs. S. J. Notting ham in The Jefferson, in West Peach tree street. Mrs. Mary L. McLendon, president of the Georgia Woman Suffrage League, left Atlanta Saturday for Washington, D. C.. to represent Geor gia in the forty-fifth annual meeting of the National American Woman Suffrage League, which will be in session from November 30 to Decem ber 5. For Mrs. Yancey. The Informal bridge party at which Mrs. W, C. Jarnagin entertained Sat urday morning complimented Mrs. MOVING PICTURE SHOWS ALAMO No. 1 Monday. “The Diver,” a thrilling Vitagraph. showing Mme. Ideal rescuing a child from Niagara Falls. Danford, the Man Behind the Voice. ALAMO No. 2. Monday. “How the Day Was Saved,” laugh able Blograph comedy. “Blnk'e Vacation,” another Blo graph comedy. “Mellta’a Sacrifice,” Lubln drama. “A Game of Cards,” good Vita- graph drama. Monarch Comedy Four, with the Great “Aurlema.” ALCAZAR THEATER Monday. “The Last Days of Pompeii,” one of the greatest productions yet pre sented to the public, and one that will Interest and thrill from begin ning to end. SAVOY THEATER Monday. "Mike and Jake Go Fishing,” a comic that Is a scream. “A Son’s Devotion,” a great two- reel Eclair. MONTGOMERY Monday. “War in Mexico.” This great fee ture picture was made directly after the capture of the battle-ecarred city of Juarez. This picture is 500 feet long and thrills from beginning to en<T •'The Tell-Tale Handkerchief,” a two-reel Clnes. Special musical program by orches tra. the: elite: Monday. “The Daughter of Pan,” a big three-reel Warner, featuring Mlee Helen Gardner. . VAUDETTE Monday. “American Born,” a great two-reel • American. “The Woman Haters,” Keystone. Chamber of Commerce Tour of At lanta. Steinway Comedy Four. Horse Breaks Store Window to Get Hay A hungry horse and a pile of hay in a show window created excite ment at the King Hardware Com pany on Marietta street Friday. Two large sections of plate glass were crashed to bits, and the buggy to which the horse was harnessed was badly scratched. The horse is “Zeh,” the pet of C. R. Gamer, the Marietta street furni ture dealer. The sight of a stack of fodder in the window brought back the days of his youth. Without fur ther ado he started Into the store to Obtain the fodder The glass damage was $250. JUDGE’S WIFE STRICKEN. CHATTANOOGA, Nov. 29.—Mrs. T. H. McConnell, wife of Chancellor Mc Connell, who was stricken with apo plexy at her home yesterday, was re ported slightly improved to-day Mrs. McConnell was found by her husband in an unconscious condition. KODAKS '••nd fnr Cdtdl _ — A. K. HAWKES CO.^S# H WMV.hd(l Sayre and His Bride Sail on Honeymoon NEW YORK, Nov. 29 F Bowes Sayre and his bride, who was Miss Jessie Wilson, daughter of the President, sailed to-day for Europe on the liner George Washington. President Wilson, Miss Eleanor Wilson and Dr. Cary Grayson, o' Washington, the President’s phys clan, went to the pier more than an hour before the boat sailed and spent a half hour In the Sayre’s stateroom bidding the newly-wedded couple good-bye. No Syrup Like VeIva No Syrup So Good KODAKERS. Special Enlargement Offer 5x7 Art Mount • • • 25c SxlO Art Mount • • • 30c By Mail 5c Extra Select your favorite negatives and have enlargement.* made—handsomely mounted -a desirable Xmas gift. CONE'S—Two Stores—Atlanta, Ga. flg.