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LAY 00 RN 00 I
CHATTER e SOCIETY
BY POLLY PEACHTREE
MK girls who went to Macon for
T the leap year ball last week
throw amusing light on what
"o may expect at the fortheoming
Affair with which Atlanta girls may
Bave an epportunity to’ repay the
oourtesies of thelr friends among the
young men—also to repay discourte
sles, from the accounts aforesald.
For instance, Dorothy Arkwright
declares that the most amusing as
pect of the ralnbow ball was the
plainly displayed anxiety of the men,
8 to whether or not they would be
popular at the affalr, The giria of
course, asked the men to dance, “out
ia™ on the other giria, and all that
According to Dorothy, the “stags™
who grouped themselves about the
hallroom wore a look of strained anx
fety or of “pained pleasure™ while
MWhh“uMh-I
stead of the well-known look of bore
dom or superiority such as men
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Societhy Nelus of the Gouth
usually assume in similar positions
“And whe was the beau of the
ball ™
But Dorethy, being & comparative
stranger in Macon, could not tell me.
Herein lie possibilities for Atlanta
women apd girls .
Why not pay back, in kind, the men
who have been our beaus this year
past?
“Alas!” say timid souls, “the leap
m-mmmmmml
we be? In the same old position of
walting to be clalmed by his Imperial
Anyway e -mu.unuml
. 1 am |
we can teil who was the “beau of the
ball” after the leap year dance on the
20th at the Terrace. I believe'l could
tell now if I wanted to
Imlda‘t'.n.ttg!
{ILE on the subject of leap year
Wm:mwmn
to one of the older women of
the city who knows Atianta soolety
from its beginning. Interesting were
‘&Mdm'm first
leap year held in this ety
| "um*\slm*m“
“and | remem that we weren't
quite so brave about it as girls are
nowadays. We did not go to their
homes after the men, nor did we ‘foot
the bills' ™
1 suppose they felt awfully bold if
they signified to the men that they
were willing to go with them in those
days. However, as someone sald be
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_ATLANTA, "GA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 191
;:ng::u-‘upnm
‘s another instance of the
change
“The givis all wore calico frocks
and the men ‘wore ties of calico to
mamq—:«uumfi|m
‘brought. Their gowns were beauti
fully made—generally by hand, and
the hand of rcu-m.lulu.
ma":‘: at..-..".'.;‘.?m
¥
‘eauuun’:vuhu"
Of course, 1 didn't deny L nor
would have thought for a minute of
denying it. She is a living refutation
of such a thought. I queried the gen
tle lady about the belles and beaus of
that ball. And some of them she
mentioned I remember. There were
Miss Nellie Peters (now Mrs. Block),
“Mrs. P. H. Snook, Miss Augusta Hill
(later Mrs. Joseph Thompson), Mrs.
Lewis Clark, Mrs. J. H. Morgan,
Missty Leila Pullen, Georgia Cooper,
Gusste Mitchell—“maiden names”
these, long since forgotten by their
friends, who know them now as mem=-
bers of Atlanta’s Pioneer Society
mayhap.
~ Somewhat like a modern girl, this
belle of the sixties could recall many
more of the men at the leap vear ball
than women! 2
“fhere was Henry Grady, Hayne
Ellis, Joseph Thompson, Ralph Pe
ters, Hugh Angier, Louls Orme, Een
TWM:N.:N; PP - % i - 2 \ - = . " . .
Visitors and College Girls in Social \X/mrll
Miss Marjorie Davidson. of St. Joseph. La.. on left, the guest of Mrs. Beaumont Davison, of Druid Hills. In the
center, a group of Atlanta girls at the Driving Club t,ea-dnnc-e. includes Miss Q,l‘qy‘w,,,&f.dw(kfi) | Mus : l-:;h.lm
Amorous (center) and
Miss . Janet Hatcher. Oun
the extreme right stands
Miss Helen Barnes, of Ma
con, the lovely guest of
Mrs. John Marshall Slaton.
Hill, “the Alexander boys,” Julius,
Clarence and Joseph Albert; Major
J. H. Morgan, Sidney Dell, Joseph
Scrutchin, and ever so many more.”
1 believe some of those men went
“stag,” even t.o.a. zea;z year ball!
T the brilllant reception last week
A when the new Mrs. Wilson made
her debut as hostess of the
White House, Mrs. E. W. Cole, of
Nashville, was among the women
singled out as being most elegantly
be-jeweled in the great throng.
Washington being the city of all
others in.-this country where gorgeous
jewels are displayed, th? triumph otl
Mrs. Cole is all the more wondcr.’u:.l
Atlanta knows and likes this grande
dame of the- South for her cordial,
gracious personality and for her loyal
support of our opera season. Not a
single year, if-I recall' cormectly, has
N
Mrs. Cole failed to have a box and
to do her part toward making At
lanta’'s week ‘of grand opera a sucCess.
On somse of these occasions we have
seen the gorgeous emeralds with
which she bedazzled even = Presl
dential reception. I
Among the guests at this affair |
which attracted the attention of 50~
ciety all over the United States was
charming Mrs. Albert L. Mills, one
of the most popular women who has
ever sojourned in our midst. Mrs.
Mills wore a cloth of silver gown with
white tulle draperies and some hand
some diamonds.
The new First Lady, who was.the
cynosure of all eyes, was sald to have
been lovely, and so she must have
been, in a robe of silver brocade soft
ened with tulle and made with a full
Icourt train. .
I noticed that Callie Hoke Smith
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'was an admired guest, whose podu
-11-.rity called for mentlon in accounts
of the affair. Callie wore white satin,
‘with pearl embroidery and Spanish
fringe.
Mamies Ansley timed her departure
from Washington at an Inopportune
moment it seems to me; for, after
five weeks' visit with Callie, she re
turned just bejore the new Mrs. Wil
son made her debut. However, Mamie
went to stay two weeks, I believe,
and was persuaded to remain flve;
o she had a great tims, anyway, even
if she did miss the White House af
falr, A dinner-party or two on the
Mayflower, several Annapolls balls,
numerous affairs at the Chevy Chase
and the Army and Navy clubs—and
her picture in The Post—were soine
of the pleasant incidents of Mamie's
visit. . .
» . .»
STHER HOLLEYMAN, cne of
E our first “regularly” married
brides of the new year, will
have some fine old heirlooms in her
\trousseau. First and foremost, is the
veil which she will wear with her
bridal tollette. The veil is 200 years
|old and has been worn by several
generations of brides in Esther's fam -
ily. It was brought from the Old
World by Esther’s great-grandmoth
|er, who was an Irish beauty, and
| wore the wveil of Irish lace on her
{ wedding day in <County Cork—or
some other county in the Emerald
Isle.
| A collection of rare mosaic jewelry
which is probably unsurpassed in At
lanta will be included in the collec
tion of bridal presents for this young
woman. Hsther's choice from the col
lection owned by her mother, I am
told, 1s a set of lovely Orientx.l-loafié;
ing mosaics, which bear miniatures
of fine old churches, art sa.llertu‘ofi
| cathedrals of England, France and
| Italy, each miniature being different
tand all worked out with tiny stonss
| not larger than a grain of sand,
There is a bandeau for the halr
{ which is of quite the most fashionable
| design this year, a pair of bracelets,
.{a ,necklace, bhrooch and eunt:gf:
: These will probably_::_c‘t ba worn .
-] {Continued on Page 4, Column I.}