Newspaper Page Text
4
TEA TABLE
GHAT
MF. Robinson Weds
o T ‘
Miss Putnam |
_%he marriage of Miss Ftta Putnam
snd Aquila Turner Robinson, Jr. of
Washington, D. C., was a pretty event
of Wednesday, taking place at noon at
the home of the bride's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Owen Johnscn, on West
Peachtree street
Dr. Henry Alford Porter, pastor of
the SBecond Baptist Church, performed
the ceremony in the presence of a
aumber of close friends and relatives,
Miss Emily Cassin was the bride's
‘snly attendant, and Guy Robinson, of
gnndywine, Md., brother of the
pridegroom, was best man.
Stately palms and foilage plants
formed the altar in the drawing room,
and the bride entered with her fa
ther, Owen Johnson, wearing a smart
tailored suit of navy blue velour and a
small turban of black velvet trimmed
with pheasant feathers, She wore a
porsage of orchids and valley lilies.
The maid of honor was gowned in
pronze Georgette crepe draped over
gold satin. She wore a large pleture
at of gold lace and her corsage was
of Ophelia roses,
A wedding breakfast followed the
geremony and throughout the recep
tion rooms were arranged baskets and
vases of giani chrysanthemums, tied
with yvellow tulle. In the dining room
the table had as a central decoration a
silver basket of Killarney roses and
pnarcisei, and smaller baskets of the
same flowers were placed at either
snd. All minor appointments were in
pink,
Mrs. Johnson, the mother of the
pride, was gowned in Chinese blue
smbroidered charmeuse combined witi
Jeorgette crepe. Her flowers were
Parma violets and wvalley lilles.
Assisting Mrs. Johnson in enter
taining were Mrs, J. D. Cromer, Mrs.
Alfred Newell, Mrs. Jacob Patterson
Mrs. M. W. Reid, Mrs, Caroline Mur
phey and Mrs. Henry Troutman. Mrs.
W. O. Foote served coffee during the
morning.
Mr. Robinson and his bride left for
Washington, I). C., where they will be
at home to their friends at No. 5611
Fourteenth street.
Among the out-of-town guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Hewlett Hall, of New
s Dr. and Mrs. E. B, Davis, o 1
%mvme; Miss Mildred Brown, of
hington, D, C.. and Guy Robinson,
- »f Brandywine, Mda.
- Hostess House Opens.
5 The formal opening of the Hostess
~ House at Camp Gordon will he an
. Interesting event of Thanksgiving
- Day. Mrs. Emily C. MacDougald, 10~
~ cal chairman of the Young Women's
~ Christian Association war work
- pouncil, will officially open the Host
pss House, dedicatory exercises to be
. pondueted by Billy Sunday in the
.~ morning. Brigadier General Frwin,
_ In behalf of General Swift, command
~ Ing officer at Camp Gordon, will for
~ mally accept the building. A flag pre
‘3 sented by the Red Cross will. be giv
i%-. the singing of the national air to
;';b.mducted by Mr. Kimsey.
L 3 Hostess House will keep openl
o “throughout Thanksgiving Day.
In the afternoon members of the ln-‘
. cal chapter of the Colonial Dames
. will assist Mrs. MacDougald in re
ulflu and entertaining.
. Entertainment for Soldiers.
. The Rotarian Club rooms in the
| Healey Bullding for army men will be
. ppen Saturday evening, when coffee
~ and cake will be served. ,
A program of music will be given |
. Bunday evening In the clubroom, in
which men from Camp Gordon and
- Bprt McPherson will take part. '
. Miss Cora Buckmaster, hostess m‘
~ the club, will be assisted Saturday
,m\mdly evenings by a group of
, members of the familles of
- stome of the Rotarfans,
.~ Sunday night a musical program
. wmas given by the Segzal children, dl
- rected by Mr. Wolkin.
.~ A series of entertalnyments have
. seen planned for the soldiers who
*‘;md their Sunday evenings at the
. Miss Bedell in ‘Reecital. - - 3 1
~ Miss Carolyn Cobb will present
- Miss Ellison Bedell in = reoital In
. Btelnway Recital Hall at Phillips &
. Orew Company’s music house Friday
- ®vening. |
. Miss Beadell will give a dramatic
i reading, “Within the Law.”
. Friends of Miss Cobb and Mlss Be
. fell are invited to attend the enter
- lainment.
o | NOTICE!
~ 'Dr. L. Amster has resumed his
~ practice. Office 215 Trust Com
g y of Georoia Building. Tele
~ phone Ivy 3629. Residence Ho
~ tel Winecoff, Telephone Tvy 1200.
- ‘Piedmon Sanatorium, Telephone
- Main 984.—Advertisement.
Bt
F£OR COLDS AND GRIPPE
JOCTORS FIND REMEDY
All
UL
Physicians and druggists are elated
S over the fact that they have at last
found a genuine and dependable rem
.My for colds, sore throat and la
" grippe. For years they have depended
. thiefly upon the old style calomel,
_®hich is certainly fine, but unfortu
- sately many people would not take it
. decause of its nauseating and danger
. dus qualities.
e g that the pharmaceutical chem
- Ists have perfected a nausealess calo
e med “Calotabs,” whose medici-
L es are vastly improved, the
- loctors and druxgsm are claiming
. ibat Calotabs are the ideal remedy to
W;% a cold overnight and cut short
%, attack of sore throat or la grippe.
~ They are also finding it most effec
~ ‘ive as the first step in the treatment
}ékgenmonh.
~_One Calotab on the tongue at bed
. ‘me with a swallow of water—that’s
.Ml No salts, no nausea nor the
. slightest interference with your eat
-Mg or your work and pleasure. The
- #ext morning r)ur cold has vanished
. ¥nd your wl gystem is purified and
sfreshed. Calotabs are sold only in
Iginal ‘ price thirty
yé cents. Your druggist recom
inds and guarantees them by re
g the price if you agp not de-
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN 000 A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes 000 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1917.
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s . :
Mrs. Aquila Turner Robinson, Jr., of Washington, D. C., who
‘ s 2 :
was Miss Etta Putnam, before her marriage Wednesday morning
Parties Planned for Visitors. 1
Miss Grace Bloodworth has as her
guests Misses Evelyn Fishburne, of
Roanoke, Va. and Mirlam Jones, of
Albany. A number of informal af
fairs are planned in their honor.
They were honor guests at a dinner
party at the Capital City Club Tues
day evening, and will be guests at
the large dinner party given at the
Thanksgiving ball at the Piedmont
Driving Club by Franklin Mikell, .
Thursday, December 6, Miss Blood
worth will] compliment her guests
with a buffet luncheon at her home
on Myrtle street. Those invited to
meet Miss Fishburne and Miss Jones
will include the members of the De
butante Club of last year and a few
other friends.
For Mrs. Collier.
Mrs. Albert Collier, of St. Louls,
Mo., who is spending some time with
Mrs. W. B. Couch on St. Charles
avenue, will be honor guest at an in
formal bridge-tea given Saturday
‘afternoon by Mrs. Thomas Daniel at
‘her home on Spring street.
‘Chri Cheer’ I
ristmas Cheer’ 1s
The desire of H. L. Bagley, of No.
128 Paynes avenue, for a supply of
Chirstmas whisky Wednesday proved
costly for Bagley and alsc for C. A,
Puckett, of Forsyth County, and F.
M. Strawn, an Atlanta taxi driver,
when all three were held by Judge
T, O. Hathcodk, in the Municipal
Court, in bond of S6OO each for trial
in the Criminal Court on charges of
violating the prohibition law.
The men were captured Tuesday by
Deputy Marshals C. M. Lancaster and
James Everett when Puckett deliver
ed three gallons of whisky in a va
cant house in Marietta street.
The officers testified that Bagley
told them he was obtaining the whis
ky for Christmas, as it was custo
mary with kim always at this season
to “have a little on hand.”
.
Mich. Youth Held as
Clayton Opdycke, 19, who told the
police he was a German of Sturgis,
Mich,, Wednesday was being held on
suspicion pendiang a thorough investi
gation,
He told Policemen Hamilton and
Boggus that he was a mechanic and
that he came here with the hope of
securing steady empolyment.
RACES WITH STORK.
AN ATLANTIC PORT, Nov. 28—
Mrs. Ida Liao, wife of the Chinese!
Charge d’Affaires at Havana, arrived
here today on her way to Washing
ton, D. €., in a race with the stork
{eh bird is on his way to Wahsing
too, having in mind a visit to
)(!:‘)Lim’s daughter, who is the wife
of a'member of the Chinese mission.
Miss Traynham Entertains.
Miss Dorothy Traynham was host
ess at a seated luncheon Wednesday
at her home on Peachtree road, ln‘
compliment to Miss Martha Pound,
of Grand Rapids, Mich, the guest ot‘
‘Miss Laura Sawtell, one of the esa
son's debutantes. ‘
Killarney roses and narcissi in a
silver basket formed the centra] dec
orations of the luncheon table, with
sma ler vases of the same fiowers
placed at intervals.
~ Miss Traynham was gowned in an
afternoon toilette of blue satin com
bined with Georgette crepe.
The imvited guests included Misses
Pound, Laura Sawtell, XKatherine
Duboes and Wyckliffe Wurm and Mrs.
Donald McKinnon.
Red Cross Home Closed Thursday.
The Red Cross House, No. 258
Peachtree street, will be closed
Thanksgiving Day, and its activities
suspended until Friday, wehn the
committees will resume work. This
announcement has been made by Mrs,
Spencer R. Atkinson, general chair
man.
Al |
abama Town to Get,
FLORENCE, ALA,, Nov. 28.—--Ma.ny‘
rumors are aflcat in regard to Mus
cle Shoals development and te pri-}
vtae enterprises to be located here,
but there is nothing definite.
Indeed, the belief that immediate
location of the Government nitrate
plant would follow upon the visit of
the Alabama Senators who came as
“ambassadors from Washington to
say that the location of the big ni
trate plant her erests with the people
of this locality,” has given place to
fear of indefinite delay.
The DuPont Powdar Company has
purchased a tract of land in South
Florence for the erection of a large
powder plant, and the Louisyille and
Nashville Railway Company has be
gun laying rails for tracks along the
northern and southern banks of the
Tennessee River to the proposed dam
site,
Injunction Against
Rail Board Is Heard
~ Judge John T. Pendleton, in the mo
‘tion division of Superior Court, Wed
'nesday was engaged in the hearing of
‘the tnwm‘fion suit of the Louisville
and ashville Raliroad Company
agsinst the State Railroad Commis
‘gion to prevent the commission from
forcing t“xe construction of an indus
trial sour track in Cherckee County.
An order authorizing the building of
the spur track was passed recently by
the I{‘lflmnd Commission, but its ex
ecution was held uP by a temporary
restraining order obtained by the rail
road company. The railroad contend
ed that such an order was without the
Jurisdiction of the commission.
The plea of the railroad was pre
sented to the court by Attorneys 'gye.
Peeples & Tye, while Judge James X.
Hines appeared in behalfpof the Ralle
road Commission. v
Miss Woolridge to
Entertain 200
ege Oet
Of Colle
Miss Mary Woolridge will entertain
200 of the colléege set at a tea-dance
Friday afternoon at the Capital City
Club. Miss Woolridge will receive
her guests from 5 to 7 o’clock. They
will include Misses Hallie Pool, Ma
riah Stearn, Nora Sterling, Hallie
Crawford, Georgia Rice, Nellie Dodd,
Sarah Schoen, Grace Goldsmith, Mar
garet Wilkinson, Mildred Sweeney
Caroline Shivers, Carrie Lou Borne,
Sina Hopkins, Charlotte Meador, Dor
othy Webber, Julia Gentry, Mildred
Kern, Dorothy McCollouh, Irene Hart,
Margaret Nelson, Willie Green Chiles,
Katherine Haverty, Sarah Orme, Con
stance Leßoux, Frances Peabody, Ly
dia Matthews, Martha Louise Cassells,
Courtney Ross, Christine McEachern,
Elizabeth Crawford, Helen Tucker,
Mary Malone, Alice Stearns, Marjorie
Stringfellow, Ann Stringfellow, Bettie
Black, Elizabeth Bancker, Ernestine
Campbell, Rudine Becht, Georgla
Briggs, Ruth Yarbrough, Katherine
Hook, Caroline Johnson, Madeline
Beilinger, Marie Stoddard, Frances
Winship and Jane Crandall.
E. D, Caswell, Harry Stearns, Noel
Smith, Perry Day, Newton Thomas,
Sidney Rosser, Kendrick Scott, John
Bell, Francis Scott, Duff Palmer, Ed
gar Dunlap, Everett Strupper, Tom
mie Semmes, Rankin Bickerstaff, Wil
liam Millard, Robert Robinson,
Charles Wilkes, Charles Ewin, Marion
Hamilton, Kendrick Goldsmith, Law
son Kiger, Marion Kiser, Hamilton
Bowers, Joe Bowen, Howard Lowry
Morris Markey, Baxter Maddox, Ju
lius Hilllard, S, A. McGill, Mike
Dowe, Arthur Booker, Mr, Calley, Sida
ney Lewis, Mr. Howser, Mr. Stubbs,
Dill Edgerton, Dud Golden, Charles
Mallally, A. Bell, Judy Harlan, Percy
Lambright, John Oliver, Perry Adair,
Delos White, Oscar Oldknow, Wilson
Wimberly, Harry Bewick, FEugene
Haynes, Bill Mallard, Fred Howden,
Ralph Rardwell, Ham Dowling, War
ren Irwin, Morgan McNeil, Wright
Brown, Jimmie Johnson, Lawrence
Willett, Lewis Sams, Bill Bronson,
George Howard, Charles McMurray,
Frank Willlams, Joe Walker, Colton
Cone, Cecil Fife, E. E. Dawes, D. C.
Rand, Clyde FEllis, Sidney Lewis,
Mark Pope, Bill Parker, Hop Owens,
Shorty Guill, John Shaw, Garry Hall,
Stewart Asbury, Lawton Duncan,
Jack Merriam, W. D. Bands, O. Bled
soe, D. W. Rowland, George Raine,
Percy Ansley, Frank York, Bill Ed
gerton, John Malone, Mr. Howder,
Alvin Morgan, Cobb Torrance, Jim
Bedell, Lieutenant Robert Redding,
Mat Briggs, Kenneth Merry, E. B,
Phillips, Bill Lovell, A. D, Hill, Henry
Nevin, Francis Scott, Shad Hubert,
Sam Dußose, Lee Jenlac, T. T. Rob
erts, McKenzie Barnes, John Robin
son, Edgar Hunnicutt, Jr,, T. W. Con
rad, T. M. Betterton, R, H. Jewell, Mr.
Peabody, Kenneth Dunwooddy, Mr.
Carpenter, C. M. Angel, Harry Ansley,
Custic Anderson, Joseph Mathewson,
Clifford Hatcher, William Goldsmith,
M. A. Nevin, Clarke Foreman, Mil
lard Camp, Forney Wiley, Rhodes
Perdue, Oscar Davis, Henry Walker
Bagley, Ashby McCord, Sanders
Hickey, Ben Milner, Henry Grady,
Abel Winburn, Sidney Stubbs, Mr
Phillips, Joe Heard, Bowling Jones,
Hugh Bell, E. P. Courier, Mr, Lyons,
Dan Rountree, Howard Durant, Paul
Malone, Lewis Tate, Hunter Price,
Henry Ormand, Harry Comer, E. P.
Hoffman, Peanut Hoffman, C. B.
Blackwell, G W. Blackwell, Ernest
Baker, Pope Baker, Royal LeCraw,
Gilbert Frasier, Bob Glover, A. I.
Pool, Hodge Havis, Bennie Wilkins,
Lewis Hamilton, Wayne Martin, Bob
Scott, Cobb Torrance, Wilmer Moore,
Jr., Howard Cole, Edmond Brady,
Tritz Pease, Harry Reese, Riley Reese,
Allen Parmalee, Phil Warren, Har
rold Ittener, Bob Kennebrew, Hr. Hu
bert, Dick Moore, Woodrow McMillan.
Dinner to Lieut. and Mrs.. Hny?ood.
Mr. and Mrs.' Rudolph Geissler en
tertained at a handsomely appointed
dinner Tuesday evening at the Geor
gian Terrace in honor of Lieutenant
and Mrs. Atticus Haygood, whose
marriage was an event of Tuesday
morning at 11:30 o’clock at the resi
dence ¢f the aunt of the bride, Mrs. L
V. Morehead, in Ansley Park.
The dinner was served in the rose
dining room and the central decora
tion on the table was a basket filled
with giant yellow and white chrysan
themums. At intervals on the table
vases of these same flowers were dis
plaved. The place cards were in
hand-painted designs of cupids.
| The guests Ircluded Colonel and
Mrs. William Luhn, C&?tain and Mrs.
Robert Whitehurst, Lieutenant and
Mrs. Kirkwood Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
William Niller, M.r and - Mrs. Hugh
Trotti, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Haygood,
Jr., Mrs. Wilbur Haygood, Sr., Miss
Marion Dunson, Major McKinley,
' Captain N. R. Jones, Captain Ernest
Kuhle, Lieutenant Albert Irwin, Lieu
tenant William Bedell and Innis
| Morehead.
Tea for Mrs., George Sunday.
Mrs. Charles P. Byrd entertained
at a tea Wednesday afternoon at her
home on North avenue in compliment
to Mrs. George Sunday, and invited to
meet the honor guest were fourteen
ladies. The tea table was in pink.
The central decoration was a vase of
Killarnev roses. bordered with ferns.
Miss Gladvs Bvrd poured chocolaie,
Miss Laura Sawtell poured tea, and
her guest, Miss Martha Pound, pre
gsided at the coffee urn. All of the
appointments were in pink.
Mrs. Byrd was gowned in black vel
vet,
~ Mrs. Sunday wore a gown of blue
velvet. \
~ Miss Gladys Byrd wore a costume
of blue velvet.
CH! SO GOOD
ICE CREAM
SODAS
BROWN:ALLEN
TERMINAL STATION
ersonal |
?WM—QJ
)
Mrs. N. J. Dorn is ill at St. Joseph’s
Infirmary.
Miss Odell Hunt, of Columbus, will
spend several days as the guest of
Miss Nellie Dodd.
Mrs. James K. Jordan is spendinz
Thanksgiving with Captain Jordan in
Pensacola, Fla.
Miss Margaret Rowe, of Athens, is
the guest of Miss Loudie Speer at
her home on Peachtree circle.
Mrs. A. M. Outlaw has returned to
her home in Forsyth after a visit to
relatives in Atlanta. ‘
Miss Laura Cobb Hutchins has re
turned to Athens after a visit to!
Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb.
Miss Roline Carter, of Nashville,
Tenn., 18 the guest of Mrs. Willlam
P. Dunn at her home in Ansley Park.
John Simpson, Charles Fuller, Earl
Sargeant, Kenneth Matthewson and
Charles Whitner leave Wednesday for
an outing at Lake Bennett,
Miss Dorothy Hodgson, of Athens.
arrived Wednesday afternoon to
spend several days as the guest of
Miss Mary Thompson.
Mrs. Dora Kiser Webster and Miss
Harriet Webster, of Norcross, are
{esiding in Atlanta during this win
er,
Mrs. J. F. C. Myers has returnéd to
her home in Savannah after a visit
to Lieutenant and Mrs. Jack Myers
in Atlanta.
The friends of Mrs. J. M. Snelling
will be interested to know that she
celebrated her 87th birthday anni
versary last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hinton Clark and
Miss Mildred Hinton Clark will spend
Thanksgiving in Griffin with rela
tives.
Miss Ellen Mell and Thomas Mell,
of Athens, spent the week-end in At
lanta as guests of Dr. and Mrs. Pat
Mell.
Miss Elizabeth Rose, of Knoxville,
Tenn., will arrive lin December to
be the guest of Mrs. Robert Maddox
for the Christmas holidays.
Lieutenant Thomas Crenshaw has
rettgmed to Camp Wheeler after
spending the week-end in Atlanta
with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Thom
as Crenshaw,
Mrs. Katherine Toft Jones has gone
to New York, accompanied by Miss
Katherine Morton, of Athens, the lat
ter to spend the winter there studying
music,
Lieutenant Bassil Woolley is the
guest of his mother, Mrs. B. M. Wool
ley, on West Peachtree, until Decem
ber 15, when he leaves for Charlotte,
N. C., where he will be stationed.
Miss Hughie Allen, who s at
tending Shorter College, is the guest
of Miss Mattie Sue Cheek, en route
to Elberton to attend the Allen-
Brown wedding, which takes place at
noon on Wednesday.
Captain and Mrs. Meredith Strong
and their children, Meredith and Dor
othy Strong, will leave the latter part
of this week for Augusta, where Cap
tain Strong will report for duty on
the medical staff at the hospital at
Camp Hancock.
Lieutenant Maxey Tupper has re
turned to Camp Wheeler, where he is
stationed, after spending the week
end in Atlanta as the guest of his fa
ther, S. Y. Tupper, Sr., on' West Elev
enth street,
Mrs, J..T. Pendleton, who has been
fll for several months at her home
on Piedment avenue, is convalescent.
Miss Dolores Bellinger is in Mont
gomery for a week, during which visit
she will be the maid of honor at one
of the season’s brilliant weddings.
Mrs. D. C. Jones, Jr., formerly of
Memphis, who has been spending the
fall with her parenis, Mr. and Mrs. J.
F.~Milner, of College Park, will leave
Friday to join Mr. Jones in Detroit.
Mr. Jones has accepted a position
with the Government as inspector of
engineering material and is for the
present stationed in Detroit.
Lieutenant Coulton Leidy is the
guest of his relatives, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward H. Barnes, and Miss Mollie
Bostick, at their home on Juniper
street. He has just finished his
training at Fort Oglethorpe, and will
spend his vacation of two weeks in
Atlanta before being assigned for
military duty. Lieutenant Leidy made
a splendid record at the training
camp.
Utopian Club Dance.
_The regular semi-monthly &ance of
the Utopian Club will be held Friday
evering at the clubrooms, corner of
Peachtree and Third streets. A full
orchestra will give the program and
the regular chaperons will be in at
tendance.
Hunter-Gordon.
Of interest to Atlanta friends will
be the marriage of Miss Lenare Hun
ter, of Savannah, to Captain Ambrose
Gordon, U, 8, R, in that city Wednes
day evening, The bridegroom-to-be
received his commission at the Fort
Oglethorpe training camp this week.
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aIIKSOIVING
Time Planned f)U
There are a number of gayeties
planned so rthe Thanksgiving season
in the college set of society. Each
afternoon and evening has a dancing
party to be chronicled on the social
calendar,
The first of the series of parties ar
ranged will be the affair at which the
Cotillion Club members will be hosts
at a dance Wednesday evening at
Segad!ro's.
Thursday afternoon will be the
football game, and following the game
a tea-dance will be given by the Chi
Phi Fraternity, at the chapter house
on North avenue.
Thursday evening the Bulldog Club
of Tech, ehich has a limited number
of members, will entertain an equal
number of young girls at Segadlo’s
John Malone will entertain the
members of the S. T. M. Club at his
home on Oakdale road, in Druid Hills.
The club meets with a member eachl
time a dance is given.
Miss Mary Woolridge will entertaln!
at a tea-dance at the *Capital City
Club Friday afternoon, her guests
to number about 100 members of the
college set. \
The O. B. X. Club, a social organ
ization of young girls, will entertain
at a dance at the Druid Hills Goif
Club, The hostesses will include
Misses Mary Nevin, Frances Peabody,
Marie Stoddard, Hallie Poole, Mil
dred Sweeney, Helen Kennedy, Dor
othy Webber, Marion Dean, Betty
Black, Elizabeth Goldsmith, Marjorie
Kalmon, Helen Tucker, Dorothy Mc-
Cullough, Anne Stringfellow, Dolly
Mart, Ludie Speer, Ruth Yarbrough,
Martha Ford, Marjorie Stringfellow,
Isabelle Kemp, Rudene Becht. Eliza
beth Bancker and Margaret White.
Saturday afternoon there will be a
tea-dance at Segadlo’s this event be
ing the usual week-end dance for the
college set, E
The members of the Kappa Sigma
Fraternity will entertain at a dance
Saturday evening at the chapter
house.
Capital City Dance.
The informal dinner-dance at the
Capital City Club Tuesda, evening
attracted a number of guests, who
enjoyed dancing after dinner. Among
those present were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Maude, Mr. and Mrs. Haynes
‘McFadden, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Bridges, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. White,
Mr. and Mrs, Claude Frederick, Mr.
and Mrs. John S. Cohen, Mr., and Mrs.
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82 NORTH PRYOR STREET,
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WANT ADS.
Robert Wessels, Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam C. Webber, Mr. and Mrs. Wal
ter Kenan; Misses Nina Hopkins,
Nellie Dodd, Anne Patterson, Pa.tty‘
McGehee,, Laura Sawtell, Martha
Pound, Dorothy Weébber, Clarice
Young, Grace Bloodworth, Miriam
fones of Albany, Evelyn Fishburn of
Roanoke, Va., Aimee Hunnicutt and.
Wyckliffe Wurm; Lieutenant Colonel
Anderson, Captain Joe Brown Conal
ly, Captain Gilbert Hurty, Captain
N. R. Jones, Lieutenant Sam Lippett,
Gus Ryan, Tom Lyon, Edward Tomp
kins, Rob'Ryan, Van Astor Batchelor,
William L. Meador, Captain Boykin
Wright, William McKenzie, Captain
Franklin Mikell, Lieutenant Byron
Patton, Lieutenant Lauren Foreman,
Lieutenant Doll, Lieutenant Strick
land, Lieutenant Hudson, George
Graves and others.
Complimenting Miss Broyles.
An interesting event of Wednesday
was the luncheon given by Mrs.
Thomas P. Hinman at her home on
West Peachtree street, in honor of
Miss Louise Breyles,’a, popular bride
elect.
White and yellow were the predom
inating colors in the appointments of
the luncheon table. The places were
marked by cards monogramed in gold.
Covers were laid for Misses Broyles,
Blanche Divine, Dorothy Arkwright,
Josephine Mobley, Eloise Robinson,
Julia Murphy and Helen McCarty,
Mrs. A. O. B. Sparks and Mrs. Stuart
Witham.
League Closes for Thanksgiving.
The headquarters of the National
League for Woman’'s Service will be
closed Thanksgiving Day. The activ
ities of the league will be resumed
Friday.
AT :Ei .'f",fi::" |
=YI s S A (‘!\‘a
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Will you be at the A&~
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o
Tomorrow Night?
Of course you love musie, singing
and the piano. Or perhaps you prefer
the string and reed instruments of a
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tra or band. It doesn’t matter which of
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the PTANO in the HOME.
Why Deprive Yourself?
There is no need to deprive yourself
of the pleasure of a good piano in your
living room. Your wife and children
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the livelong day, your home will be
far more cheerful through the posses
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whole family. You can have dignified
credit terms if desired, so why deprive
yourself longer?
Let us talk it over anyway. We know
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PHILLIPS & CREW PIANO COMPANY
have for over fifty years been the trusted ad
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PHILLIPS & CREW
PIANO COMPANY |
82 NORTH PRYOR' STREET |
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Nine o'Clock Clt
Christmas Ba’
'l' $
0 Be Dec. 3
'
{
The Nine o'Clock Club has e
ed on December 31 as the da. br
their Christmas ball. This ass:
which will be one of the most bri
liant entertainments of the seaso
will take place at the Piedinont Driv
ing Club. On account of the war this
will not be a costume ball, as has
been the custom of the past, but will
be a regular dinner-dance for the
members and their friends.
The board of directors at their next
meeting will decide the minor details
of the dance.
This club is one of the oldest so
cial organizations in the ecity, with
some of the most representative fam
ilies included in its membership. The
newly elected officers are Lynn Wer
ner, president; Bowie Martin, sec
retary and treasurer; Edwin McCarty,
Jesse Draper and Stanley Mathewson,
board of directors.
Committee Meeting Postponed.
The overseas comunittee of the Na.
tional League for Woman’s Service, of
which Mrs. Marian Harper is chair
man, will net meet at the league
headquarters Thursday, as an
nounce, because of it being Thanks
giving Day.