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FRIDAY, APRIL 23, RR,'.-
-THE ATLANTA OEORGIAN-
-ATLANTA. OA,
Hiss Morgan Is Opera Schedule Details
Bride at Home
Wedding
Given Out by Directors
New photograph of Lucrezia Bori, an Atlanta favorite, in th
•W opera, “The Love of Three Kings.“
The marriage of Miss Elizabeth
Morgan and Edward Spalding Lewis i
took place Thursday evening at the
home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas H. Morgan on Peachtree
street. Bishop C. K. Nelson officiating,
asststed by the Rev. W. W. Memmin-
ger.
The ceremony was performed in the
living room, where a background for
the bridal party was made of palms
and ferns. Above the group was a
canopy of smilax, showered with
white roses and fringed with lilies of
the valley and hundreds of electric
lights. Easter lilies were mingled
with the greenery about the priedieu.
The bride, entering with her father,
was gowned In ivory white satin. The
bodice was made in the old-fashioned
basque effect, embroidered in seed
pearls. The sleeves were of tulle and
flounces of lace on the skirt were j
caught to the satin with orange bios- j
soms. The court train of satin hung I
from the shoulders and from a wreath |
of orange blossoms was draped the |
tulle veil. She carried a bouquet of i
white lilacs and white orchids.
The attendants included Misses Al
ice May Preeman and Clifford West,
maids of honor; Dorothy Hebert, of ;
New' Orleans; Margaret Lewis. Nell !
Prince, Laura Cowles, Aimee vJunni- ■
cutt, Dorothy Dillon, maids; Mary I
Cohen, Marian Dean, ribbon bearers, i
and Ralph Lewis, best man.
The maids of honor wore pale
green taffetas, the full skirts edge«te|
with pinked frills with girdles of sil- i
ver lace and they carried sprays of j
pink roses.
The bridesmaids wore white taffetas i
and tulle, the bodices made of the tulle
and the flounces of pleated tulle. Their ;
flowers wer also of pink roses in spray
effect.
The little ribbon bearers wore white ■
lingerie frocks trimmed in cream lace I
and they carried French bouquets of |
rosebuds and lilies of thev alley.
A reception followed the ceremony I
and a buffet supper was served in ;
the dining room, where the table had j
a central decoration of pink roses en '
mound with a circle of lilies of the j
valley surrounding it. The candles 1
were shaded'in pink and the French !
bonbons were in pink and green.
Throughout the house was a decora- i
tion of spring flowers in the colors of !
pink and green: apple blossoms and I
flag lilies mingling with snap drag- :
ons and white wistaria to form the j
decorations.
Punch was served on the porch,
which was enclosed and made into a
summer parlor. Here Misses Marie j
Ridley, Nancy Hill Hopkins, Margaret
Grant and Martina Burke, of Macon,
presided. t
Assisting Mrs. Morgan in receiving j
her guests were Mrs. T. S. Lewis. !
mother of the bridegroom. Mrs. Frank
Dean and Miss Ruth Lewis. \\v
Mrs. Morgan was gowned in crepe
meteor, with a soft drapery of cream
filet* lace. She wore a corsage bou-
quet of lilies of the valley.
Mrs. Lewis wore a gown of gray
brocade crepe-de-chine trimmed in
silver lace with violets.
Mrs. Dean wore black tulle over
white satin with jet as a finish.
Miss Lewis was gowned in white
taffeta, the short bodice of embroider
ed chiffon.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are In North
Carolina for their wedding trip and on
their return they will make their
home in the Hampton Court apart
ments on Peachtree street.
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Roberts. Mrs. George Longino, Mrs.
P. H. Brewster. Misa Bess Smith, Mrs.
Clarence Wickersham, Mrs. Walter
Price, Mrs. Lowndes Connally, Mrs.
Walter Marshall, Mrs. Roy Wilhelt,
Miss Ollie Mae Osborn, Miss Anna
Quillian, Miss Della Wimburn, Mrs.
Henry Leonard, Mrs. Lewis Leonard,
ATTSS Kener, Miss Mary Gray, Mrs.
Dorsey Osborne. Mrs. Thomas Rawls,
Mrs. Charles Evert Mrs. Oscar Pal-
mour Miss Annie Thornton Miss Eva
Thornton. Miss Emma Jones. Mrs.
Arthur Kitchir.gs, Mrs. E. C. Barrett,
Mrs. W. H. Wallace and Mrs. George
Findley.
Will Read “Magic Flute."
A delightful program Saturday de
voted to the exposition of “The Magic
Flute” will close the series of con
certs which has been conducted at the
Piedmont Hotel for the benefit of vis
iting nursing among the poor of this
city. The musical numbers, in the
hands of Mrs. M. E. Carthew Yors-
toun, R. E. Dale and James C. Ward-
well. doubtless will he eagerly antind-
pated by all who have heard these
singrers in previous concerts. The
numbers to be sung include the solos
of the “Queen of Night." "Pamina,"
“Tamini, Tarastro and Minostatos.”
Mrs. Merrill Hutchinson’s reading Is
being looked forward to with pleas
ure. especially by those to whom the
allegorical structure of the libretto
has proven more or less mystifying.
David Jenlkins and Walter M Stan
ley will act as accompanists. Admis
sion 35 cents.
Inman Park Girls’ Club.
The Inman Park Girls’ Club will
entertain at a dance on Saturday
evening at the Vesper Club A small
admission fee cf 50 rents will admit a
couple. The proceeds of the dance
will go for charity. There will be a
few exhibition dances and also a prize
for the best old waltz dancers. The
chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. For
rest Adair. Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Thrower, Mr. and Mrs G. A. Good
rich, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dunn. Mr.
and Mrs. S. C. Dobbs and Mr. and
Mrs. Julian Chase.
Dance for Mi»e Sutton.
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. B. Hoxey will
entertain with a dancing party at their
home on Piedmont avenue Friday
evening for Miss Sutton, of Richmond,
Va., the kuest of Miss Elizabeth Lov-
Mrs. Pearson’s Concert.
The old-fashioned songs to he sung
by Mrs. Frank Pearson at a benefit
concert given in the Ansley ball-room
Saturday evening will be the chief
features of an unusually beautiful
program. Mrs. Pearson has selected
old favorites of especially fine melody,
and her voice will be heard to the
best advantage in such songs as “Ben
Bolt,” “Annie Laurie” and the like.
The program will be supplemented
by violin selections given by the
leading violinist of Atlanta, George F.
Lindner. Miss Acker will be the
reader, and Mrs. W. H. L. Nelms, the
accompanist. The ladies will wear
quaint 1S30 costumes for the occasion.
A large company of Mrs Pearson's
admirers will be present for the con
cert.
S.
For Mrs. Eastman.
Mrs. C. E. Kauffmann entertained
her bridge club Wednesday afternoon
in honor of her guest, Mrs. G. O.
Eastman, of Nashville, who will be
with her through opera.
On Saturday Mrs. Eastman will he
honor guest at the luncheon which
Mrs. W. F. Niel will give.
Mrs. Johnson To Be Entertained.
Mrs. Joseph B. Johnson, of Tampa.
Fla., will be The guest of Mrs. George
C. McCutcheon during the week of
opera. She will be the honor guest at
a luncheon Monday, given by Mrs.
McCutcheon, and on Wednesday Mrs.
B. F. Ulmer will give a luncheon for
Mrs. Johnson, this to be followed by
a matinee party, Mrs. Frank Pearson
being hostess. At the opera and aft
erward at the Capital City Club on
Monday, Wednesday and Saturday
evenings Mr. and Mrs. McCutcheon
will entertain their opera guest.
Dance at Davison Home.
Beaumont Davison, Jr., will enter
tain about 50 of the college set at a
dancing party Friday evening at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Beaumont Davison, in Druid Hills.
Mrs. Dunlap Entertains Visitor.
Mrs. Edgar Dunlap gave a luncheon
of eight covers Friday at the Druid
Hills Golf Club in honor of Mrs.
Frank Beard, of Kentucky, who is
visiting Mrs. J. W. Millard, which was
Mrs. Bates wore white and green taf
feta and her young daughter, Miss
Annie Wlnship Bates, who assisted in
entertaining, wore white lingerie.
“Rose of the Wind” To Be Presented.
The College Club will present "Rose
of the Wind,” a play by Anna H.
Branch, Saturday afternoon at Marist
Hall. The east is made up of well-
known young women and will be at
tractively staged. The performance
will begin at 2:30 o’clock. Those in
the cast are Miss Cleveland Zahner,
Mrs. E. T. Ware, Miss Mary DeGar-
mo. Miss Constance Berry and Mrs
Hamilton Block.
Argentine Club Dance.
A pleasant event of the week will
be the third dance of the month given
by The Argentine Club at the club
rooms in West End for members and
their friends Friday evening of next
week which will be attended by a large
number of the younger set. ■
For Miss Ward.
At the box party at the opera .per
formance next Tuesday when Miss
Rosa Belle Chapman will give a party
in honor of Miss Marguerite Ward, a
bride-elect, the guests will include
Miss Ward, Miss Madge Horne, Miss
Mary Lucy Turner, Miss Eloise
Walker and" Mrs. Emerson Ham.
Zionist society to Meet.
An open meeting of the Atlanta
Zionist Society will be held Sunday,
April 25, at 4 o’clock at the Jewish
Educational Alliance. The literary
wearing white lace with a picture hat.
Mrs. Allen Brown was gowned in
white net, with a leghorn hat laden
with pink roses. Mrs. Richardson
wore black lace over blue silk.
Several others joined the players
for tea, those present being Mrs.
Brown, Mrs. George Forrester and
her guest, Mrs. Martin Cannon, of
Concord, X. C.; Mrs. William C. Jar-
nagin, Mrs. Edward Richardson,
Misses Jackson. Mrs. Samuel C. Por
ter, Mrs. Alfred Murrell, Mrs. Hunt
Patent Vamp
pleasant affair. The table was f th meetinK w m be devoted to
vollnw snannrii?nns. l “ . i„ i i
decorated with yellow snapdragons,
with minor details in yellow and
white.
Mrs. Bates Entertains Miss Godfrey.
The afternoon bridge party at
which Mrs. Elisabeth Winship Bates
entertained Friday in honor of Miss
Frances Godfrey, of Covington, was
one of the week's happiest affairs.
Mrs. Bates' home was decorated wi'.h
quantities of dogwood blossoms, crab-
apple blossoms and white flag lilies,
and the prizes included a copy of
VanDyke's poems, an Irish crochet
bag and a dainty piece of lingerie.
the life and works of the late I. L.
Perez.
Mrs. Coleman Brown Entertains.
The afternoon bridge given Friday
bv Mrs. Coleman Brown at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo
Richardson, was a compliment to Mrs.
Alien Brown, of Nashville, Tenn. The
house was decorated throughout with
quantities of Hag lilies and other
spring flowers. The game was played
on the piazza, where there were pot
ted plants and vases of cut flowers.
Mrs. Brown was a cordial hostess,
WEEK-END SPECIAL
TO-DAY AND SATURDAY ONLY
BOX OF
40
Choice
Home
Grown
,oo
WEST VIEW FLORIST
_ . . c*—.* JOHN WILSON, Manager.
^Largest Rote Growers in Dixie. Write. Telephone or Telegraph.
“Spat Pump
Gray and Sand Cloth Tops.
3JKtofYl fi.Y.V MWi ftWftIfcWft Store Closes Monday at 1 p. m.—Memorial Day ftVVftUWAVVWiYi ftWWWWYi
M. Rich & Bros. Co.
» ' * 111 ■ 11 » ■
I New Wash Goods at Half Price & Less
A MAZING values, every yard. We like them ling in all day, trying to buy “five yards of this
1 so well that we gave them an advance win- and ten of that.’’ But not a yard goes on sale
dow showing to-day. And people have been flock-1 until Saturday. All fresh, new goods. Choose from
75c to $1.50
Wash Goods
69c
-Fine embroidered white crepes and voiles,
richly embroidered in black or colors; 36 to
45 inches.
$1.25 to $2
Wash Goods
98c
-Sheer organdies and cobweb voiles in beauti
fully embroidered ailover patterns; 36 to
45 inches.
$2.48 to $4 A(\
Wash Goods 1
—Our finest French organdies and voiles. Sheer
as gossamer; in a flower garden of embroid
eries, posies, etc.; 36 to 45 inches.
(Wash Goods—Main Floor, Left.)
PERSONALS
Mrs. R. A. Powell, of Valdosta, will
be the guest of Mrs. Hugh Powell in
the Palmer apartments during opera
week.
Mrs. Clifford Ateheson and Miss
Marian Ateheson will spend the
month of May in Nashville with Mrs
Atcheson's relatives. Later they will
go with Dr. Ateheson to Atlantic City
for a stay of several weeks.
The W. F. Slaton school will give an
entertainment Friday night at the cor
ner of Pavilion and Grant streets,
when "The Mikado" and folk lore
dances will he included In the pro
gram. An admission of 25 cents will
be charged.
Mrs. Sam Blanc and her daughter,
Miss Elizabeth Blanc, will leave At
lanta Saturday night for Texas to at
tend the wedding of Mrs. Blanc's
niece. Miss Willie Allen, which will
take place next Wednesday near
Houston. Mrs. Blanc and Miss Blanc
will visit in New Orleans before re
turning to Atlanta June 1.
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| M. Rich & Bros. Co. f
3 DOWNSTAIRS- SHOE SECTION. ■
%
5
i
Real $4
Values
$2.95
A new arrival, with light sole and leather Cuban
heels, as illustrated. In C, D and E widths only. A
reallv meritorious style at the minimum price.
Durable cloth tops, choice of gray or sand color.
Boys’
Oxfords
About 75 pairs of
Boys’ and Youths’
Gun Metal and Pat
ent Lace. Oxfords,
<£ I worth $2.50 and $”>, on
^ sale Saturday f o r
only $1.00.
Some Misses’ Strap
Slippers included.
WAWMM Downstairs—at Rich’s IWW
mmm
Best Looking Waists in Atlanta at $1
RAORE than 1,000 Waists, Shirts & Blouses—23
1 distinct & distinguished styles—every one
favored of fashion. See them in window.
The quantity of waists and variety of styles, however,
are merely incidental—
It is the Waists, themselves, that
merit your earnest attention.
Because in fineness of material and beauty of fashioning,
they are far and away the best-looking waists ever brought to
Atlanta to sell at $1; choose from—
All-silk blouses—all white, of China Silk. /i*
All-linen shirts white, solid colors and stripes. j
White crepes—smooth, striped, barred and nubbed. **
Crepe de chines—silk and cotton in white and colors
Cotton crepe de chines—in white and colors.
Voiles—plain white, solid colors and stripes.
Embroidered voiles—with white organdie collars.
(Ready-to-Wear—Second Floor.)
All Shades in
Silk Hose at
50c, $ l, $ 1.50
At least every wanted
shade. “We’ll match it”
with
25 shades at 50c,
in boot silk hose.
75 shades at $1,
full length silks.
20 shades at $1.50,
McCallum silk hose.
T HE hose at $1 deserve
special mention—the
fact that we stock them
in every shade is proof of
that.
Novelty Stripe
Hose at $1
Guaranteed Silk
Stockings $1
T HEY wear to your sat
isfaction or a new
pair or your money back.
—Nothing to sign, nothing to
wait for: we leave the
whole matter to your sense
of fairness.
—It's the broadest guarantee
ever placed on a silk hose
at $1. Though we've sold
thousands of pairs, we are
called upon to replace less
than one pair in a hundred.
Ask for Rich's “Blue Barvd”
—the hose with the guaran
tee Pure thread silk; high
splicing; double lisle top.
Black only.
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$1.98 1
For Choice of Many Trimmed
Hats. Values Up to $5
Another big occasion in the New
Popular Price Millinery Section.
* | r HE popular price millinery section has only been
open two weeks. Already the crowds have learned
to come for stylish millinery at moderate prices. The
purpose of this sale is to make the department more
widely known.
—The hats are cleverly developed of hemps and novelty braids,
in black and all the desired spring shades. Prettily trimmed with
ostrich stick-ups, feather-fancies, flowers and ribbons. Values to
$5; choice $1.98.
(Popular Millinery Annex—Main Floor, Right.)
, J,
New De Bevoise Brassieres 25c
C 1 T T over the regulation 50c De Revoise patterns and finished identical
with the best 50c models. Cross back and hook front.
New $1.50 Corsets $1.05
Spring models of Royal Worcester Corsets—made of a fine summer coutil;
three pairs of hose supporters attached; crochet trimmed: all sizes.
(Corsets—Second Floor.)
Just in Time for
Grand Opera
12 & 16 Button
$3 Kid Gloves
$1.69
P LEASE don’t be con
fused by the $1.69
price. These are neither
lambskin nor schmarchen
gloves, but simon-pure
kids in prime condition.
Choice of our entire stock
in
Trefousse
Chanut, Etc.
in black, white and tan,
12-button gloves.
Also a $3 sixteen (16)
button kid glove in all
white or white with black
stitching, at $1.69.
$3.50 Gloves
Are $2.69
Included here are
Fownes’ and Perrins’ 16-
button kid gloves in white
and black ; some Trefousse
with colored stitching. All
sizes. Here, too, are the
famous 16-button Washa-
new (washable) white kid
gloves at $2.69.
80c Palmolive Combination
39c
One 50c jar Palmolive Cream, 50c.
Three 10c cakes Palmolive Soap, 30.
80c Combination, Saturday only, 39c.
10e Sterne's Peroxide Rath Soap, purely vegetable oil, 6c.
15c Mennen's Talcum Powder, violet or borated, 11c.
25c Woodbury’s Face Powder, white or flesh, 16c.
25c-size Sozodont Tooth Paste or Liquid, 16c.
50c Odorno, for destroying perspiration. 37c.
50c Daggett & Ramsdale’s Cold Cream, 39c.
50c Hind’s Honey and Almond Cream, 37c.
15c, 8-ounce size, Osborne’s Peroxide, 11c.
10c Household Ammonia, 1-quart size, 7c.
20c 1-lb. box of White Castile Soap, 12c.
39c Elite Face Powder, rose or violet per
fumed ; white, flesh or brunette tints, 19c.
15c Williams’ Violet Talcum Powder, 12c.
1-th. size Violet Talcum Powder, 10c.
25c J. Parker Pray’s Rosaline, 17c.-
50c-size Lambert’s Listerine, 37c.
Pound Mirror Candies 29c
Fresh and wholesome—each “goody” covered deep with
lavers of chocolate. Full pound 29c.
Mirror candies also in packages, jars and in bulk.
(Main Floor, Left.)
B v
New Stationery 25c
CONTRACTING for an enormous quantity of this writ
ing paper and marking it a thin profit, we are able to offer
Rich’s French Lawn Paper in
Lt. Blue, Pink, Lavender, Gray
at, 25c for a full pound box. The paper is firm and crisp, with
a smooth finish that insures easy writing. Envelopes to match,
10c a package.
Engraved with your initials, 25c extra.
(Stationery—Main Floor, Center.)
50c & 59c Union Suits at
T?cT ~
One Style as Pictured;
the Other With Tight Knee
360 Union Suits (30 doz
en) in all—and every suit
perfect to the last thread.
—Beautiful qualities of fine
gauze lisle ribbed; trimmed
with crochet and washable
linen tape.
—Neckless and sleeveless, as shown; tight or deep
lace knee. Sizes 4, 5, 6. Choice, 37c.
No Phone Orders. (Main Floor, Right.)
jfrAtNmnWVSflMMfiM. RICH & BROS. CO. flMMARMWflMWAMWM. RICH & BROS. CO. »“WWAVflfWM