Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 04, 1913, Image 13

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i TilK ATLANTA GLOitGlAX AN"!) NKWS. 1i AT r TT , * J- b. J- PRETTY BUFFET LUNCHEONS FEATURE GAY SOCIAL WEEK The present week is proving the gayest df the season, each day being lilied with a number of social affairs, and each evening: being bright with large functions. While the younger set has been a rded much attention, the married s . i also has come in for a large share v ntertaining, and among the hand- - mest entertainments of the season v t . . been the buffet luncheons given Wednesday and Thursday by Atlanta hostesses. The buffet luncheon is a favorite form of entertaining and gives an opportunity for elaborate decorations and an ideal expression of hospital- 4 Mrs. J. Carroll Payne gave the sec- <,rd of a series of buffet luncheons Thursday, when 50 friends were en- ti rtalned at her Peachtree street resi- d. ii< r. and Mrs. Thomas Philip Hin- man entertained 30 of her married friends at an elegant buffet luncheon fr,i Mrs. Robert Yancey, of New York, the guest of Mrs. Joseph Raine. Jr., i:,ese affairs being among the hap piest of the season. The Payne residertce for Thursday’s Juncheon was elaborately decorated jvith Liberty roses arranged in the drawing room, with pink roses in the nmsic room, and handsome palms throughout the apartments. The din ing room table was covered with a lac- cloth, and hatf for a centerpiece a large silver vase of American Beau ty roses and white carnations sur- r .unded by smaller vases of the same flowers. Mrs. Payne’s daughters. Mrs. Alex Smith. Jr., and Mrs. Charles T. Hop- k.ns, dr., with Mrs. Howell Peeples received with her. Mrs. Payne's toilet of taupe-colored chiffon was com bined with velvet. Mrs. Smith wore black charmeuse with corsage of white chiffon. Mrs. Hopkins was in' midnight blue charmeuse combined .with « hiffon, and Mrs. Peeples wore For Mrs. Boyd. Mrs. Alex C. King entertained a few friends very informally at tea Thursday afternoon for Mrs. Isaac .Boyd, of Nashville, who is being pleasantly entertained in an informal way an the guest of Mrs. James H. Gilbert. For Misa Margaret Grant. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Richardsqn will give a small dinner-dance at their nome Thursday evening, December 18. complimenting their niece, Miss Margaret Grant, a lovely debutante of ihe season. •Sunday Lecture. The Rev. A. C. Spiers, of Rich- .mond, Va., Swedenborgian Minister, will lecture Sunday at 3 p. m.. at tiie Cleveland-Manning Hall, No. 80 Worth Pryor street. Children of the Confederacy Booth. The Children of the Confederacy with Mrs. Paul G. Rauschenberg as chairman,' have one of the prettiest booths at the U. D. C. bazaar in Whitehall street, in the old Lycett Building. Among the young women assisting •t the Winnie Davis canty* booth are Miss Mari* Griffith, president of the auxiliary of the Julia Jackson Chap ter; .Miss Louise Turner, Miss Viv ien Matthema, Miss Florida Barron, Miss Frances Dowman, Mr. Pierce ‘Turner and other members of the as sociation. Civic League Bazaar. The Women’s Civic League of Kirkwood will hold a bazaar at the school auditorium on Saturday, De cember 6. from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. Bolls, cakes, candies and various ar ticles suitable for Christmas will be on sale. Sandwiches, coffee, chocolate and No Syrup Like VeIva No Syrup So Good colored cloth and chiffon of the same shade, garnitured in gold lace. For her luncheon Wednesday, Mrs Payne chose the Lady Millington rose, which filled baskets and vases in her spacious library. The polished ma hogany table was covered with a. rare cloth of ecru lace, and was adorned with a low silver vase tilled with Aaron Ward roses surrounded by four smaller vases of the same kind of roses caught together by slender silver chains. The hostess and her two daughters were handsome as they received. Mrs. Payne in brown charmeuse with cor sage of chiffon and gold lace, Mrs. Smith in taupe-colored crepe me teor bordered in ermine, and Mrs. Hopkins in black chiffon cloth com bined with skunk fur. For decorations at Mrs. Hinman's luncheon a variety of exquisite flow ers were used. In tlie hall the man tel was banked with flowering pink begonias, and in the library Enchan tress carnations in silver vases adorn ed the bookcases and tables. In the dining room a low French basket was filled with Lady Hillington roses and valley lilies, and this, with silver com potes with yellow cakes ai.d bonbons, glace nuts, etc., adorned the hand somely-appointed table. Platters of gorgeous autumn fruits were on the buffet and serving table, and in the hall Mrs. Robert Davis presided over the silver coffee service. Quantities of Killarney roses adorned the recep tion room. Mrs. Hinman was very attractive in an imported gown of blue satin, with the three-tier skirt combined with tulle and the corsage of tulle and lace. A corsage bouquet, of yellow roses and valley lilies completed the becoming toilet. Mrs. Yancey wore black rharmeu.se with corsage of white chiffon and American Beauty roses. Mrs. Raine was gowned in purple charmeuse satin, and Mrs. Davis wore sapphire blue velvet with corsage of lace and chiffon. other refreshments will be served. Birthday Party. Mrs. Ella Wright Wilcox enter tained 40 children at a dancing party Thursday afternoon, celebrating the birthday of her little daughter, Cathe rine Howard Wilcox. There were ap propriate favors, and the ices, cakes and bonbons were in pink and white. For Miss Emily Winship. Miss family Winship, a bride-elect, was tendered an informal luncheon Thursday by Miss Caroline Muse, the party of twelve including the most in timate friends of the bride-elect. The luncheon table was graced with n basket of pink roses, and the candle shades, bonbons, etc., were in pink and white. The place cards were hani painted in brides’ heads, and many pretty details were observed. Miss Muse wore white charmeuse combined with chiffon. Upchurch-Griggs. The marriage of Miss Mattie Lou Unchurch and John A. Griggs has been announced. The bride was an Inman Park girl and member of the junior class of the Girls’ High School The bridegroom formerly was of Montgomery. They are at home at No. 5 Battery place, Inman Park. For Mrs. Yancey. Mrs. Albert Collier gave a smcM tea to eight guests at the Piedmoof Driving Club Thursday afternoon f >r Airs. Robert Yancey, of New York, Mrs. Joseph Raine's guest. The Informal bridge given Wednes day by Mrs. Stuart Stringfellow eort- plimente’fl Miss Bessie Tharin. :.f Montgomery, and Mrs. Yancey. For Miss Jackson and Miss Ellis. Airs. Robert Cotton Alston enter tained at bridge Thursday afternoon for Miss Eula Jackson a. bride-elect, and for Miss Adgate Ellis, a debu tante. Misses Pnnce to Entertain. Misses Nell and Nancy Prince will give a bridge luncheon Friday morn ing for Miss Mary Scott Ferguson, of Roanoke, Ya., who arrives Thurs-* day to visit Miss Lula Dean Jones, and for ATjss Emily Winship, a bride- elect. The guests will include the ATLANTA GIRL IS ART STUDENT IN NEW YORK Miss Aimee Ilunnicutt, a charming Atlanta girl who is studying art, in New York, ller return home i'or the Christmas holidays is happily anticipated by her. friends. View Exhibits in Leyden House for Data To Be Used in Essays in Walter Rich Contest. girls who will bridesmaids. be Miss Winship’a Supper at St. Philip’s. Besides the elaborate dinner which was served by the ladies of St. Phil ip’s Cathedral on Thursday, a deli cious supper'wil also be served in the Sunday school room of t lie church from 5:30 to 8 o'clock Thurs day. There will be creamed chicken and oysters, with other good things. The patronage of the public is asked* Gen. and Mrs. Evans to Enterat'n. General and Mrs. Robert K. Evans will entertain at their Peachtree street residence on Wednesday aft ernoon. December 10. PERSONAL Art Dcp’t 2nd Floor Buy Your Gills Here 1,000 Oval Photo Frames, all assorted frames and subjects; regular 25c values. Special Xmas price, 2 for 25c. “Birth of Christ.” hand colored. Circassian Walnut frame, 10x16, in handsome folding boxj very choice gift for Xmas; $2.50. Calendars for 1914, old master subjects and nov elties, each one in a nice box. 25c and 50c. Silver Oval Iftioto Frames— 25c kind for 19c. 50c kind for 39c. $1 kind for 89c. Harrison Fisher Pictures and many other beau tiful subjects, framed, from 50c upward. Visit this collection and also see the many other novelties displayed there. W ill repay you. Mrs. Fred Foster, of Madison, Ga., who has been the guest of Mrs. A. D Adair, Jr., returned home Wednesday. Airs. John S. Holliday is the guest of Mrs. Sidney Perry Cooper, in Hen derson, N. C. Miss Evelyn Martin, of McComb, Miss., is the guest of Mrs. William Adair Martin. are receiving sympathy from their friends on the death of their infant *re Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lewis left At lanfa Thursday for New York, wher they will be at the Martinique for sev eral weeks. Miss Ruth Hodgson, of Athens, is spending several days with Miss Laurian Johnson, and is being pleas antly entertained. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Richardson have returned from a stay of several weeks in the East where they visited their son. Hugh Inman Richardson, a student at the Tome School, witn whom they attended the Harvard- Princeton football game. Air. and Mrs. Richardson spent Thanksgiving in Baltimore with their son. ACCEPTS AUGUSTA CALL. AUGUSTA, Dee. 4 —The Rev. H. L. Veach, of Wytheville, Va., has ac cepted a call to the pastorate of the West End Christian Church, and will preach his first sermon here next Sunday. i».i. ai,u ... 0 .vi^. Pittsburg, who are en route to i°h kior- lda, are -meats of Miss Jveila Seer, on East Eighth street. Leon, the little son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Hyland, who has been very ill at the St. Joseph's Hospital, is rapidly Improving. Mrs. J. W. Gibson will leave Thurs day for Brooklyn to spend Chrlstm is, and to attend the golden wedding re ception of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Winship Nunnally IF YOU ENJOY GOOD SINGING AND DANCING GO TO THE BONITA The popular Bonita Is gaining new friends every day on account of the good show* there and the • splendid treatment of its patrons. ! There is nothing said or done that 1 could offend the most sensitively , modest, and there is fun and frolic fer all in a way that is not ob- ‘ noxious. You will never be disap- ' pointed if you go to the Bonita, for th» shows there are good shows— j all of them. The Well-Dressed Atlantan You, who put ofF having your overcoat cleaned with the sham solace, “I’ll wait for real winter,” are like the man who pays a debt with a note and murmurs, “Thank Ilcaven, that’s off my mind.” Call the Trio Laundry to-day—get it oft' your mind and on a handy peg—ready for emergencies. We take out grease spots, press out the wrin kles and put in the creases to your satisfaction. J. V!. HIGH CO. Ivy 1099 E. H. WILSON. W. H. HARRIS. Thursday is “Schoolgirls’ Day” at the Child Welfare and Public Health Exhibit in the old Leyden House, on j Peachtree street. Three hundred pupils of the Girls’ High School and several hundred seventh and eighth grade girls visit ed the exhibition in relays of 100, in charge of Miss Jessie Muse, principal of the High School. Each relay of girls spent several hours inspecting the welfare and health exhibits, and every feature of the exhibit was thoroughly explained to them by Miss Emily Cove and Miss Elian C. Babbitt, who are directing the show; Mrs. Charles J. Haden. Airs. Howard Buckncll and a number of other prominent Atlanta women whose work made the show' possible. Upon their return to their school work the High School and grammar school girls will write essays on the feature of the show that made the greatest impression upon them, com peting for prizes offered by Walter Rich, of the AI. Rich A Bros.-Com pany. These prizes aggregate $25. On Monday the boys of the four Atlanta High Schools will visit the show, and, on account of the limited room, they probably will come also in relays of 100, in charge of their teachers. The crowds’ that v isit the exhibit continue to grow, and interest among the parents of the city is increasing. Several of the proprietors of the large factories have notified the show man agement that they w ill send their em ployees to see the exhibit, among them being the Fulton Bag and t’pt- ton Mills, the Nixon Company and the Schlesin’ger-Meyer Baking Company. The Sheltering Arms Home is laying plans to be host to 100 mothers at the show, and another organization plans to bring the needs of ten fami lies to see the exhibit. Nurses from the various hospitals of the city are assisting the''general committee in caring for the children who are taking part in the various exhibitions and classes. Thursday the nurses from the Nobel Sanita rium had charge, and on other day.? nurses will be there from the Atlanta Hospital, the Georgian Hospital, the Georgia Baptist Hospital, the Presby terian Hospital, the Grady Hospital, the Wesley Memorial, St. Joseph's, Elkin-Goldsmith -and others. ‘Belle of Newport’ Becomes Bride of Henry E, Oelrichs NEW YORK. Dec. 4.—Mias Esther Moreland, daughter of Andrew .*1. Moreland, Pittsburg. and called “Belle of Newport” during the past i season at that resort, was married at noon to-day to Henry E. Oelrichs, of New York and Newport, son of Charles M. Oelrichs. The. ceremony took place in St. Patrick’s Cathedral rectory in the presence of relatives and a few friends. Monsignor l>a- vellc presided. Leonard M. Thomas was Air. Oelrichs' best man, and the I bride was given away by her father. The engagement of the couple, an nounced Tuesday, caused a surprise, as society has been greatly interested j in hot# young people because of their j wealth and social standing. On Sat- ! urday Mr. and Mrs. Oelrichs will sail for Europe, where they will spend [ th*ir honeymoon. They will reside in this ( t. m<i Jwwport Only 1,000,000 Carats; Of German Diamonds Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. BERLIN, Dec. 4—The Imperial Chancellor, Dr. von Bethmann-Hol- weg. has issued an order that the marketing of German diamonds in 1914 shall be restricted to 1,000,000 carats. T-he production in 1913 was approx imately’ 1,440,000 carats. Dorsey Unopposed For Athens Mayor ATHENS. Dec. 4.—With no opposL | tion, W. F. Dorsey' was elected Mayor of Athens in the election held yester day. following the primary of some weeks ago. The new Council will constat of A. G. Dudley, Vincent Mat thew’s, H. P. Hinton and H. H. Gor don This will he the third time that Dorsey has served as Mayor. He now' succeed* H. J. Rowe, who declined to stand for re-election after two terms. Perfumery Exhibit Attracts Crowds Crowds are attending the Educa- | tional Perfume Demonstration w’hich is* being held this w'eek at Jacobs' I Pharmacy in Marietta street. The | annex itself is especially decorated j with patriotic red, white and blue colors, combined with the gold, white and dainty colorings of the many hot- I ties and boxes. Products of every manufacturer of perfumery, including Jergens, Van- tine, Kerkoff, Rigaud, Hndnut and others, are exhibited. Nowadays one sel dom hears the ex- pression-“Bread like Grandma’s,” and there’s a REAL reas on! The bread that we ate years ago is no longer considered a stand- rd. Great, such as you’ll find in the ard. Great, scienti fically built ovens, such as you’ll find in the Schlesinger- Meyer Bakery, and this condern’s perfe cted process of bak ing Uncle Sam Bread —have made Uncle Sam Bread the stand ard bread in Atlanta. If you want the beat bread --tasty, easily digested and nourishing bread—t hen ask your grocer for Uncle Sam Bread. He sells it USE GEORGIAN WANT ADS. AUTO VICTIM DIES. CHATTANOOGA. Dec. 4.—Joe Driver, run, down by an automobile belonging to J. M. Card a week ago, is dead from his injuries. Driver was emloyed by the Card Lumber Company. Money-Back Guarantee on It. TANGO Roots Out Corns Painlessly. TANGO for Corns ends pain instantly. Applied In a second; no fussy bandage, no soreness. Roots out the core pain lessly or your money refunded by the druggist. TANGO is the safe, GUAR ANTEED remedy for hard and soft corns and bunions. 25c at All Drug gists Made and guaranteed by Jacobs’ Pharmacy. Atlanta. —Advt. Maxwell House Blend Coffee For those who ap preciate real coffee excellence and are willing to pay the slight extra cost necessary to insure it Auk yam grocer far it. Ckeek-Neal Coffee Co., Nashville, Hvostov. Jacksvvilla. A Ruffling Sale a* 25 c w. Tv-morrow wc show 400 pieces of popular Ruffling and Plaitings for neck and sleeve trimmings—-of Nets, Chiffons and Shad ow Laces. White, Cream and Ecru —-nothing ha* heen so acarce and stylish as the*e popular plaitings. Every style of gar ment is finished with these plaitings this season, and, because of the great demand, THIS will prove to he a most welcome occasion, when you can get them ^ —lace u —net yd. --chiffi — ecru —white —cream 25 on KEELY’S Allen s Great December COAT SALE Reduced Now in Progress---Every Wool Coat---Some Fur Coats Best Coat Values Announced This Season Here are cold weather coats at warm weather prices—giv ing you choice of any cloth coat in this store at reductions as be low—including a wealth of handsome black coats of every wor thy material. Fur fabrics and novelty weaves, broadcloth and a few fur coats. $15 (’oats $18.50 Coats $20 Coats $25 Coats 16.75 19.75 I 'oats $45 Coats $10.95 $24.75 13.75 & 28.75 m 34.75 39.75 $44.75 $45 Real Russian Pony Coats $24.75 A handsome Coat makes a most acceptable gift in the family at Christmas 51 and 53 Whitehall $50 Coats J. P. Allen & Co.