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UST . now the mind of woman-
J kind is on new clothes, and
there has been much talk of this
innovation and that. Already we are
tired o6f the remarks about extra
short skirts and extra tall shoes and
Quaker hats and so forth,
I haven't seen many conservative
Atlantans wearing extremse styles as
yet, though I suppose they will when
the autumn breezes decide to blow.
Despite a remark I overheard ves
terday on Whitehal] street—evidently
from an out-of-town shopper—that
“Atlanta women wear winter clothes
in the summer and summer clothes
in the winter,” I see no signs of rush
ing the season. The remark I in
terpreted to mean that we don fall
garments too soon and ditto spring.
But I think the speaker must have |
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74
Y poiLy
EACTTTER
mistaken another out-of-town shop
per, wearing her new clothes, for a
Peachtree native. We have our
clothes ready for the cold snap, of
Course. But we wait for suitable
weather to wear them—that is, most
of us do.
Early tryouts sometimes crush an
-offering of la mode before it has a
chance. Some of the new styles are
always susceptible to being reduced
to absurdity by that eager company
of women and girls ever ready to lend
themselves as an instrument for kijl
ing a freakish fashion by adopting
it.
However, and in .direct contradic
tion to all I have said so far, Caro
line King has a new fall hat and is
wearing It—a bluish-purple toque cf
velvet, trimmed ip rosettes of purp
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sh-blue “something.” 1 forgot to
observe more closely, for right after
I had passed Caroline, on Whiteha!l,
the othér day, came Mr. James H.
Nunnally, wearing in the lapel of his
faultless gray coat a lovely little hot
house gardenia. Ang that brings on
more talk!
* * -
HAVE always liked the fad of
| wearing a boutonniere, if dis
creetly chosen. But the “if” is
important. There are only certain
{
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AXLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1915
flowers which men can wear, and
these should accord with the styv'le
,ot suits worn and even with the time
of day. And I believe also, I shall
add, that only certain styles of men
should wear flowers anyway. Now
Mr. Nunnally, in his gray suit of good
“lines,” his general air of careful
grooming and his aristocratic pres
ence, accorded perfectly with the low
er de luxe which he sported as he
walked down Whitehall Wednesday,
about noon.
And, somehow--but I suppose this
is because we are so accustomed 10
it—the red carnation that Dr. William
Perrin Nicolson wears as constanily
as he wears his coat ig Just the flow
er to suit his cheery, unaffected geo
niality. I believe Dr, Nicolson males
the assertion, ilf asked about it, that
he has worn a red carnation in his
lapel every day for twenty years.
A few violets are Appropriate for
lapel adornment-—only they wilt eas!-
ly. A very small rosebud has the
same merit and defect, |
I have seen elderly men who ex-‘
pressed the very spirit of spring with
a Jolly little buttercup or sonquil on
their coat lapels. And one gentleman
of the old school whom most of you
know wears that seemingly impossible
flower, the zinnla, during the autumn
months, He selects a rather small,
full blossom of some bright hue and
you've no Ildea how nice it looks,
unless you've seen him. A young
woman neighbor of this zinnia-lover
one morning happened to look out of
her back door, just as he was select.
Ing, with diserimination, a flower for
his buttonhole, from her bed of red,
vellow, orange, pink ang purple “Old
Maide"
“I've caught you!" she called oyt,
and his reply was just as optimistic
“Well, well! I have been getting a
‘button-hole bouquet’ out of youe
sinnia patoh for twe months, and'
First Autumn Brides and Micls
; Mrs. Carl Vretman, on right, 4
iwho was Miss Emma Kates
{ Amorous until her wedding |
¢ last week to Carl Vretman, of }
{ Stoekholm, Sweden. The bride
y was attended by her three
{ sisters, Isreal, on left, Janice
{ and Rosalind, in center. The
{ Vretman - Amorous wedding
( inaugurated an interesting,
{ though not numerous series of
! weddings for the fall season
¢ in Atlanta society.
this is the first time you have caughi
me!”
o 9
HIL 'ENGLE and Frank Sprat.
D Un, two of the autumn’s bride
grooms-to-he, were conversing
confidentially in the midst of a crowd,
Phil sald:
“Are you getting scared, Frank?
And Mr. Spratlin denled the Asser
tion, firing the same question to his
vis-a.vis,
“No, I am not scared yet; but then
my wedding Is further off than
yours."” 1\
And would you belleve It, Frank
Spratlin, then and there, gave him
self away to the extent of acknowl
edging that he did not know how far
off his wedding wae®. Three weeks,
he made it, but the other man, more
statistieally Inclined, sald: “No, mine
Is three weeks off, and yours only
two.”
The eavesdroppers almost Riggled
at this. but they managed, with su
perhuman effort, to keep quiet, while
the two bridegrooms-elect continued
their confidential conversation.
Phil volunteered the information
that he had his apartment all fur
nished and ready.
“Now, I am busy gettin’ up my
troussean,” he sald, which was too
much for one of the listeners, so she
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broke up the conversation with an
unexpected question of her own:
“What color are you getting, Phil?”
e 9 »
OOKING over the groups ofj
L Buests gathered at tables
more or less large the other
afternoon at one of the club tea
dances, I reflected on the fact that,
while Atlanta soclety in one way jus
tifleg the accusation brought against
it by Macon and Moblle and Charles
ton of letting anybody who wants to
come In, there is another side to look
at, too,
Atlanta soclety, in a word, has
achieved the seemingly impossible of
being both democratic and exclusive.
They work it this way:
A certaln number of congenial
spirits make it a custom of going to
the club dances toether, and another
group of congenial people, who may
‘be entirely different in their degres of
social standing, family pedigree,
‘wealth, culture, tastes, habits and
manners, will go to the same affairs
at the same club,
And ne'sr the twain shall meet!
Newcomers of all kinds, almost all
grades, will And a congenial Kroup to
“take them In" And so it happens
that one may be “in society” and yet
not in real soctety
. Bald & comparatively newcomer
| here—a married man who has been ;
accorded the entree into the most ex«
| clusive circles, where public hilarity
s not so noticeable as in other
'| groups:
“I met little Mrs, So-and-So, and
I like her, because she is awfully
Jolly. But I hear that ir we go with
that set we will Eet a reputation thag
I could stand—<but not my wife”
This new custom of forming pare
ties to the club afrairs and dancing
only with “youp party” makes this
complicated arrangement possible, [
heard a young matron at the tea
dance Wednesday eXpress a regret
over the old order of things:
“1 think the old way i better; we
used just to go to a dance and when
we entered the baliroomd everyone
‘mixed up together, and all of us
knew each other” i
Bhe might not like this so well if
she realized other changes—the lete
ting down of the bars, for instance,
by the general use of the clubs fop -
nearly all soclal affairs,
-e9 = 4
REFRESHING view from the :
A “Inside.” giris, Is what lam able -
to give you this week, thanks
to a communication which came to
me from some of the “Tech men,” ace
cording to their letter, which is signe
Mm:od on Page 4, Column 1,