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‘WOMEW TEE SOCIAL WOHL©’
THREE CHARMING ATLANTA GIRLS
I AT THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS BALLI
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Left to right, Misses Marguerite Ward, Lucy Manning and Rosetta Wrigley.
BRiDES-ELECT SHARE HONORS
AT PARTY GIVEN BYMISSMUSE
Miss Ruth Stallings and Miss Nancy |
Prince, two bridesielect who are being
tendered a round of pretty parties I
preceding their marriage, were honor ,
guests at the informal party given
Monday by Miss Caroline Muse.
A group of young girls, including
those who will be bridesmaids at the
two weddings, with two or three oth
er friends, assembled at the Muse
residence in Ansley Park, where some
very dainty handiwork was brought
forth by the guests and an informal
time enjoyed over sewing. Luncheon
was served later, the guests being
seated at a handsomely appointed ta
ble, decorated with white lilacs and
double daffodils, arranged in a large
basket. The silver candlesticks were
shaded in yellow, and the minor de
tails of the table were in yellow and
white.
The two honor guests were charm-
THE JOY OF COMING
MOTHERHOOD
A Wonderful Remedy That is a Natural
Aid and Relieves the Tension.
Mother's Friend, a famous external
remedy, is the only one known that is
able to reach all th'* pi” *s in-
111
wived. It is a penetrating application
after the formula of a noted family doc
tor, and lubricates every muscle, nerve,
tissue or tendon affected. It goes di
rectly to the strained portions and gen
tly but surely relieves all tendency to
soreness or strain.
By its daily use there will be no pain,
no distress, no nausea, no danger of
laceration or other accident, and the pe
riod will be one of supreme comfort
and joyful anticipation.
To all young women Mother's Friend
is one of the greatest of all helpful in
fluences, for it robs childbirth of all its
agonies and dangers, dispels all the
doubt ami dread, all sense of fear and
thus enables the mind and body to await
the greatest event in a woman’s life
with untrammeled gladness.
Mother's Friend is a most cherished
remedy in thousands of homes, and is j
of such peculiar merit ami value as to
make it essentially one to be recom
mended bj all women.
You will find it on sale at all drug
stores at 11 a bottle, or the druggist
will gladly gnt it for you If you insist
upon it. Mother’s Friend is prepared
only by the Bradfield Regulator i.’um*
pany, 1?7 l-arnar Building, Atlanta. Gu..
who wid send you by mall, sealed, a
very instructive book for expectant
mothers. Write for it to-day.
| ingly gowned, Miss Stallings wearing
a modish gown of black crepe de
I chine, the skirt draped in front and
! the blouse having a little chemisette
of white net. Her hat was a close- i
lilting model of black velvet.
Miss Prince wore a suit of black
velvet with blouse of peach blow chif
fon and a small hat of seal.
Invited to meet Miss Stallings and
Miss Prince were Miss Sarah Gibson
Chenault, of Lexington, Ky.: Miss
Naomi Andrews, of New York, Mrs.
Robert Cotton Alston’s guest; Miss
Martin Burke, of Macon. Miss
Prince’s guest; Miss Nell Prince, Miss
Emma Kate Amorous, Miss Lula Dean
Jones, Miss Marion Goldsmith, Miss
Mary Helen Moody and Mrs. Hugh
Scott.
Informal Dinner Party.
Yellow tulips arranged in a large
plateau with a small pot of these
lovely flowers marking the place of
each guest, formed the derocations
at the informal dinner party by Mrs.
■ Laurie Davis Anderson, at the Pied
mont Driving Club.
The table was placed in the green
room of the club, and the guests in
cluded Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Sciple,
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Bucknell and
their guest. Mrs. Alfred Austell Cun
ningham, of Washington. I>. C.; Dr.
and Mrs. William .1. Blalock. Mr. and
Mrs. Hudson Moore. Brooks Morgan
•and Lieutenant Commander C. R.
Miller, of the United States Navy. |
For Washington Visitor.
Mrs. Alfred Austell Cunningham,
of Washington. D. <’., is spending a
few days with her sister, Mrs. How
ard Bucknell, having accompanied
her father, J. C. Jeffries, chief coun-I
sei for the Southern Railroad, in his
private car from Washington. Mrs. |
Cunningham stopped over in A tian - !
ta to visit Mrs. Bucknell for a few
days during her father’s absence in
Florida and is being delightfully en
tertained.
Dr. and Mrs. Bucknell entertained
in her honor at dinner al the Pied
mont Driving Club Saturday even
ing, and she was a lovely guest at ,
t.fte informal dinner party given by-
Mrs. Anderson at the Piedmont Driv
ing Club on Saturday evening.
Patronesses for Play Benefit.
Several prominent women of the
city will act as patronesses at the
I benefit performance at the Lyric
Theater Monday evening. February
Z 3, when the Joseph Habersham
Chapter. Daughters of the American
Revolution, will receive a portion of
tlie proceeds. They will include Mrs.
Reuben R. Arnold. Mrs. H. M. Atkin
son. Mrs. L. H. Beck. Mrs. Howard
Bucknell. Mrs. W I » El' s. Jr . Mrs
c’harles L. Gatch. Mrs. I Yank Haw
kins, Mrs. Edward H. Inman, Mrs.
i Gordon Kiser, Mrs. E. P. Me Burney.
; Mrs. Arthur Powell and Mrs. Hugh
Richardson.
A number of special features will
be included in the play, and several
prominent Atlanta women will ap
pear in the ballroom scene. The bill
will be ' Forty-five Minutes From
Broadway,” and the birthday' of
George Washington will be remem
bered in many pleasing instances.
The sale of seats opened Monday
morning and a record-breaking at
tendance is assured.
For Augusta Visitor.
Mrs. Thomas R. Gentry gave a mat
inee party at the Forsyth Monday
afternoon, followed by tea at the Cap
ital City Club, in honor of Mrs.
George Conkling, of Augusta, other
guests being Mrs. Knowles Young
blood, Mrs. P. S. Rustill, Mrs. Thom
as Luckett, of Washington. D. C.;
Mis. Harry Reed and Miss Clyde
Williams.
Dinner for Miss Andrews.
Miss Naomi Andrews, of New
York, the guest of Mrs. Robert Cotton
Alston, will be tendered a dinner par
ty Saturday evening at the Piedmont
Driving Club by’ Mr. and Mrs. Alston,
and will also be honor guest in a
small party at le the dansant Wed
nesday afternoon at the Driving (Tub,
given by Mrs. Willis Westmoreland.
Washington’s Birthday Party.
The Al anta Chapter, D. A. R., will
celebrate Washington’s Birthday next
Saturday afternoon by giving a. party
at the chapter house. The Rev. Hugh
K. Walker, chaplain of the chapter,
will make an address, which will be
followed by an appropriate program
SAVES ELDERLY PEOPLE FROM |
KIDNEY AND BLADDER MISERIES
. Sleep Disturbing Bladder Weaknesses, Backache, Stiff Joints,
Rheumatic Pains Disappear After Few Doses Are Taken.
While people along in years are
naturally more subject to weak kid
nej b, they can avoid the tortures of
backache and rheumatism and be
saved the annoyance of getting up ai
night with disagreeable bladder dis
orders. for the new discovery, Crox
one. quickly relieves the most severe
and obstinate cases.
< roxone ( ures these conditions be
cause It removes the cause, it is the
most wonderful remedy ever devised
for ridding the system of uric acid. It
Is entirely different from ail ot her
remedies. It Is not like anything else
ever used for the purpose, ('roxone
makes the kidneys filter the blood and
sift out all the poisonous acids and
waste matter that vauxe these trou
bles.
It soaks right In and c leans nut the
stopped-up, inactive kidneys like w.i
ler does a sponge-. dissolves, and
THE ATLANTA HEOKGIAN AND NEWS.
of music and other features in ac
cordance with the life and history of
General Washington.
Following the regular program
there, will be a buffet luncheon served
from tables decorated with the col
ors of the chapter. Mrs. J. O. W ynn
is regent of the chapter.
Luncheon for Mrs Conkling.
Mrs. Knowles Youngblood will give]
a bridge luncheon Tuesday for Mrs. |
George Conkling, of Augusta. The;
guests will include Mrs. Thomas R 1
Gentry, Mrs. Thomas Luckett, of
Washington, D. Mrs. Harry Reed.
Mrs. A. R. Griffin. Mrs. E. A. W eiantt. :
Mrs. Martin Jones, Mrs. Katherine 1
Williams and Miss Clyde Williams, j
Silver Tea Benefit.
A silver tea will be given at the!
home of Mrs. J. S. Sewell. No. 30
Bark street, West End, Tuesday from
4 to 10 p. in., for the benefit of the
Ladies’ Aid Society of the West End
Christian Church. Refreshments will i
be served.
D. A. R. to Meet at Macon.
Many beautiful plans for the big I
conference of Daughters of the Amer
ican Revolution, which will meet in
Macon, have been perfected. The
luncheon to be given by the Mary i
Hammond Washington Chapter will .
carry out the colonial idea, the young
women serving refreshments and
wearing dresses of that period. The j
members of Die Nathaniel Macon
Chapter will decorate the ballroom of
the Dempsey Hotel to represent Fort'
Hawkins and everything will be ini
keeping with that period.
Mrs. Walter Lamar, president of
the Georgia Daughters of the Con-
• drives out every particle of uri< a< id '
and other poisonous impurities that
lodge in the joints and mus< les and
cause rheumatism. It neutralizes the
urine so it no longer irritates th--
bladder, overcomes unnecessary
breaking of sleep and restores the
kidneys and bladder to health and
strength.
It matters not how long you have
suffered, how old you are, or what
else you have used. The ven princi
ple of ('roxone is such that it is pr.ic
: tically impossible to take it into the
human syst *m without results. Then
iis nothing else* on earth like it. It
! starts t<» work the minute you take It
and relieves you the first time you use
it, and all your miser.x and suffering
noon disappear. You <an secure n
original package of ('roxone at trifling
cost from any firnt-elas* druggist. All
I driiggiHis ire authorized to p< rson
i ally return the ; ur i. < pri< • • If h
. fails in a single ta•< , Advt.
federacy. will entertain at her home
for the U. D. C., of Macon. The wo
men receiving will wear hoopskirls,
rutHed-to-the-waist dresses, strapped
slippers and all the details of the war
time fashions.
The last day us the conference will
conclude with a brilliant pageant to
he given at Wesleyan College, when
the history of Georgia will be given
in tableaux, beginning with the
signing of the treaty between General
Oglethorpe and the Indians, and end
ing with the birth of the United
States flag.
A number of Atlanta women will
attend the conference, both as dele
gates and visitors. Among them will
In* Mrs. A. 11. Alfriend, regent <»f the
Piedmont Continental Chapter. D.
A. It; Mrs. ,1. O. Wynn, regent «>f rhe
Atlanta Chapter. 1). A. R.; Mrs. John
A, Perdue, regent of the Joseph Ha
bersham Chapter; Mrs. Frank Orme,
Mrs. S’, w. Foster and Mrs. William
Y earn He.
Mobley -Roberts.
The marriage of Miss Frances T.
Mobley, formerly of Social Circle, to
George T. Roberts took place Sunday
evening. The couple are at home al
No. 663 South Pryor street.
Club Meeting Called Off.
The meeting of the Tuesday Eve
ning Dinner-Domino Club of West
End. which was to have been held
Tuesday, has been called off on ac
count of the death of Senator A. U.
Bacon.
Addresses for City Federation.
The City Federation will hold an
important meeting next Friday after
noon at the Woman’s Club, with
“Echoes From Our City Government”
as the subject of the meeting. A pro
gram varying f om the usual order
will be presented, as follows;
opening pra\'*i by the Rev. I O.
Bricker; introductory remarks by Mrs.
Snnuel Lumpkin, president of the
City Federation; address by Mayor
James G. Woodward on “The Mayor
alty:” Claude (’. Ashley, chairman of
the Board of Sanitation, “Sanitation;”
Jesse w. ArmbOead. chairman of the
School Board, "Schools:” A. W. Far
lingpr, chairman of the Library Board,
and Jesse Wood will give interesting
talks along their Hues of work.
Dr. <’laude Smith, City Bacteriolo
gist. will speak on “Health and the
Segregation of Contagious Diseases."
Janies 1... Ala son. City Attorney, will
give a talk on “Civic Rights.”
Everv woman in Atlanta is invited
to attend the meeting.
The executive board will meet at
2:30 p. m.. and the open meeting will
begin al 3 o'clock.
Cabaret at Georgian Terrace.
S.u ieiy is keenly interested in the
P’rench ••abaret evening at the Geor
gian Terrace Tuesday at 8:30 p. m.,
for the benefit of the Home for In
curables. The tickets st $1 are on
sale at a number of places—the Geor
gian Terrace. Hotel Ans’ey, Piedmont
Hotel, Brown A- Allen’s. Jasobs’ Phar
macy on Whitehall street, and the
Cole Book Store.
These will entitle a person to dunce
afterward, as well as witness the per
formance.
Numbers of supper parties are being
A Revelation to Coffee Drinkers
300 Cups to the Pound
A scant teaspoon makes two cups. Steep five minutes only
Published bv the Growers of India Tea
j arranged after the cabaret in the large
. dining room, since a special supper
is being prepared for the occasion.
’ The menu wi’l consist of oyster pat
ties, olives, sandwiches, chicken sal-
■ ad, ice cream, cake and dvmitasse
': | personal;
. ! Mr. and Mrs. Julian DeGive ami
I I children are in Florida, where they
will stay until April 1. During their
I * absence Mrs. DeGlve’s sister, Miss
I Bessie Westmorland, is with Mrs.
i | Nelson Spratt in Oakland City.
1| Mrs. .1. O. Wynn will be entertained
■ extensively during her visit to Ma
? con this week. She will be the guest
i of Miss Mattie Nutting and Miss
. Nutting will give her a beautiful
luncheon.
11 Mrs. Henry Bankhead has been ill
I for the past week al her home at
j Fort McPherson.
| Mrs. Paul \ ose has returned home
! after a visit to her sister Mrs. Hamp
* I ton Fields, in Cartersville.
<■’
l | Mrs. Harry Lowman las returned
home from Washington, D. (’., where
she was delightfully entertained dur
ing an extended visit to her mother,
Mrs. Joseph Minetree.
t Mrs. George Argard has returned
j from Florida.
Miss Rosa Pringle Smith, of Ath
ens. who has been the guest for sev-
I oral days of Mr. and Mrs. Alfredo
| Barilli, has returned home.
Mrs. William Yeandle loft Monday
_ for Macon, where she went as a dele
gate from the Piedmont Continental
Chapter to the convention of the
Daughters of the American Revolu
’ tlon. She will be the guest of Mrs.
Clem Steed on College street.
, Dr. L. P. Langston has recovered
from a recent illness.
r Mrs. Lee Hembree, vho has been
r ver\ ill at her home No. 113 West
- Peachtree street, has been trans
f ferred to the Georgia Baptist H<>>-
Pitol.
J Mrs. Louise Walthall Wellborn will
have Tuesday for Thomasville, wher*
v she will spend a week with Mrs. Jo
seph Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Eiseman. who
'■ i have been visiting their daughter.
■ Mrs:. Sidney Winter, in Montgomery.
‘ have returned to their iio-ne on Mer
ritts avenue.
| Miss Nell Lynch will leave Febru
t | ary 19 for the Mardi Gras at New
I Orleans.
Mrs. William Adair Marlin is ai
St. Josephs Infirmarj.
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Victor Brooks
announce the birth of a son, who has
been named after his maternal grand
' father. John Sartelle Brooks.
! Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M Erskit t
.mnounco the birth on Friday of «i
t daughter, Rosemary.
“Fresh Flowers’’
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
5 97 Peachtree St. Ivy 2879.
U. S. ‘Movies' to Show
Georgia Hog Killing
VALDOSTA, Feb. 16.—‘James •E.
Downing, of the United States De
| parlment us Animal Industry, who
j has charge us the Boys’ Pig Club work
In Lowndes County, is here prepar
ing to have moving pictures made
showing the killing, handling and sale
of hogs.
He will get a moving picture dis
play of meat in the cold storage ware
house here, showing the methods em
ployed in the cold storage, as well as
the smokehouse for curing the meat.
Man Believed Dead
Home After 7 Years
DECATUR, ILL.. Feb. 16.—Mullt
Achultz, who was believed to be dead,
returned t<> his home here after seven
years* absence. He had been living
in Sharon. Pa.
Serum Gives Paresis
Sufferer His Speech
x VERONA. N. J.. Feb. 16.—A serum
•njocted into the skull of a vistim o.
paresis at the Essex Hospital enabled
him to regain his power of speech.
Costs
Less
Bakes
Better
CALUMET
(
PGWPEB
ECONOMY — that's one thing you are
fif'J ———- looking for in these days
fj'/ of high living cost —Calumet insures a wonder-
Rj ful saving in your baking. But it does more. |A£vM|}|
E Q It insures wholesome food,tasty food-uniformly raised food. W
Calumet is mnde right—to sell right —to bake right. Ask ■ itSSoJ
j<<i one of the millions of women who use it —or ask your grocer. 19
Bjj RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS
■ji! World** Pure Food Exposition, Chicngo, 111. iRUim nrt||(9 I
R*. Pari* Exposition, France, March, 1912. pU’’ j
Z Yaa daa’t *»▼• «*a«y wkea y*a b«T efce*p er big-eaa bakiac aswier. Dta’t be added. Bar Calrast \
Zh’« ec***ancal »or* wUkaoara-gw*» beat r***h*. Calwaet i* far txgerier to seat nik a*d soda, y
'Radium Cures Blind,
; Says Reading Doctor
, I NEW YORK, Feb. IS —Dr. John
- I Ege, of Reading. Pa., who professes
> to cure blindness bv radium, has
; treated twenty paiients here. Sev
enty-five sightless persons appeared
> at his free clinic, and of these he
, chose "hopeful'' eases.
"Notwithstanding the positive as
sertions of scientists in Europe and
America that sight can not be re
stored by radium." said Dr. Ege, "t
s can produce two patients who cams
to me totally blind and who can now
read."
Convict Camp Boss
; Robbed of Clothes
. COLUMBUS. Feb. 16.—A thief visited
a convict camp in Russell County, in
charge of Boss Dozier, and while Do
-1 zter had his men out at work on the
: county roads, stole a grip containing a
suit «>f clothes and other wearing ap
parel.
Green Haired Hound
l Named Tipperary
i UNIONTOWN, PA.. Feb. 16.
ren Burke Is the owner of a grey*
1 hound pup which has a coat of dark
green hair. Tipperary is Its name. 4
9