Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 13, 1912, FINAL, Image 12

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. 'WED ST 25: DET babies mse 1 Mrs. Belmont Tells Suffragists That’s Way to Live: “Not for Me,” Says Girl. NEW YORK, Dec. 13. In Addressing the members of the Junior Political Equality league at their first meeting. Mrs. Q. H. P. Belmont told them that 25 was the proper marriage age and that after marriage the wife should keep right on with her work and hire some body »■ care for the babies. The association was formed by Miss Eugenia McKenzie, a Pankhurst suf fragist recently from I»ndon, and Is composed of girls from sixteen to eight een years of age. Mrs. Belmont had hardly launched into her address and had just told the girls about the marrying ag< when one of them piped up with: “Too Long to Wait." "But that's entirely too long to wijit. And besides, if a g'rl marries, shouldn’t she stay home and keep house and not —" '“Not at all,” interposed Mrs. Belmont hastily. "When you marry keep right on with your wor k. Then you will have enough money to hire a cook and your home will be happier." “How about the babies?” chirped a dark-eyed, black-haired girl in the front row. "Ought not a girl stay nt home w and care for the children?" Brunette Scorns Plan. "Certainly not,” emphatically an swered Mrs. Belmont. "A young moth er would be very little use to a baby, it is better to hire an oldc- nnd more ex perienced person who knows how to take care of children.” "Oh, I don't think that’s an ideal way to live," said the brunette, rather scorn fully. "It mny not be Ideal,” said Mrs. Bel mont, “but it's practical. A wife should have an independent purse and should not have to go to her husband for money.” "Well. when I marry,” resumed the dark-eyed one, "I want my hueband to give mo everything. 1 don’t want to have to work for the money." “If you can find that kind of a man. go ahead,” advised Mrs. Belmont, and the meeting adjourned. RHODES SCHOLARSHIP TO MILWAUKEE YOUTH MADISON, WIS„ I>e<’. 13. —The Rhodes scholarship was awarded to Arthur B. Doe, of Milwaukee, a law student in the University of Wiscon sin, by the Wisconsin Rhodes scholar ship board. The delicious flavors or the best fruit und more economical. SAUER’S EX TRACTS ALE FLAVORS. Thirteen highest awards and medals. <Advt.) FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS. ATLANTA FLORAL CO., Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree. < Advertisement.* IMPORTANT NOTICE SOUTHERN RAILWAY CHANGE OF SCHEDULES Effective Sunday, December 15, train No. 29, "Birmingham Special," will ar rive Atlanta from the EAST 11:15 a. m. Leave for Birmingham 11:30 a. in., In ■teud of arriving Atlanta 10:30 a.’ in., departing 10:45 a. m., as at present. J. D. MEEK, Assistant General Passenger Agent Southern Railway. tAdvt.) AN IDEAL GIFT FOR THE HOUSEWIFE • aa| gM r— **■—vif.u.Mi!g!_g£*£s}y il iiiH- THE SANITARY MILK CABINET Protects the daily milk supply against the bad effects of summer's heat or winter's cold. Powerful insulator creates vacuum that maintains even temperature from five to six hours. By its use your milk CAN’T FREEZE IN WINTER, CAN’T SPOIL IN SUMMER Save six first-page headings from consecutive dates of THE GEORGIAN Present them, with $2.00 cash, at our office and get this practical and unique necessity THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN Circulation Department. 20 E. Alabama Street Out-of-town subscribers add 25 cents for packing and shipping. Claim to Divine Thought Made by Count Tolstoi DIARY REVEALS BELIEF I’AklS. Dec. 13 -/mt of the moat strik ing sentences In the dairy of the late ‘ 'Gnnt Ixjo TulHtol (which in printed in The Journal de» Debats as his hitherto unpublished statement and wan replaced by a brief formal will dated July 27, 1910. by which he left ail bis literary property to his daughter. .Alexandra) reads; "If the people of the world wish to read my writing, lei them dwell on those pass ages where I know the divine Power has spoken through me and let. them profit from them throughout their lives.” The diary is printed on the authority of Count Sergius Tolstoi. It was writ ten by his father under dale of March 27, 1895. Count Leo Tolstoi asked that all refrain from sayjfig good of him after his death. After referring to himself as the inter preter of Divine Power, he said: “I have had moments when I felt my self to be the medium for the expression of the Divine will. I have sometimes been so impure and so subject to per sonal passions that the light of this truth has been obscured by my own obscurity, but. despite all, I have served at times as the intermediary for His truth, and those have been the happiest moments of my life, May God will that, passing through me. these truths have not been sullied and may mankind find In them its pas tun It is only in that that my writings have importances. ’’ Requests Cheap Burial. The diary begins by saying that if he does not make another This shall be his testament. Tolstoi then requests to be buried w here he dies—if in a city, in the least expensive coffin and in the least expensive cemetery “as the poor are bu rled.” He continued: ’‘Let there be no flowers, no wreaths, no discourse, and, if jsisslble, let the fu neral take place without priests and with out liturgy, but if that Is disagreeable to those who bury me, then let me interred with the liturgy’, only as simply and cheaply ns possible/’ After asking that no announcement of his death appear in the newspapers and that no obituary ba printed. Tolstoi writes 25 GENT ‘OKNNE FOR FAILING HAIRANDDANDRUFF-GROINSHAIfI Don’t Pay 50 cents for worthless hair tonics—Use old, reliable, harmless “Danderine” G-et results. Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair Is inuto evidence, of a neglected scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There Is nothing so destructive to the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of Its luster. Its strength and Its very life; eventually producing a feverishness and Itching of the scalp, which if not rem edied Causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and dlu —then the hair falls out fast. A little Danderine tonight—now any time vvlll surely »are your hair. DIAMONDS, WATCHES JEWELRY See Our Stock and Prices Before Buying Bargains in Diamonds Satisfaction or Money Refunded Provident Loan Society, Inc. 14 Auburn Avenue w. E. McMillen THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.FRIDAY. DECEMBER 13. 1912. at rone*-; ning r," n-; o. -.'>n of * - works. Referring to hir unpublished writing.-, he prescribed that only those be printed which will be “useful to mankind.” He asks his heirs to abandon to the public the right to publish his former works — that is, I-, renounce the author’s writ ings. Destruction of Writings. After giving instructions relative to the classification of his papers by his wife and daughters, he orders his writings to be destroyed when what is worth preserv ing has been extracted from them. This applies particularly to the jour nals he kept when a bachelor, when, he says, he Jed the usual miserable life of young men without principle. Then he adds: ‘After all, let my diaries remain as they are. It may be seen from them that de spite the platitude and misery of my youth, God did not abandon me, and that as I grew older J learned, however little it was, to understand and to love Him.” MILD CENSURE FOR CAPT. STEUNENBERG NEW YORK, Dec. 13.—Major Gen eral Leonard Wood, chief of staff of the army, has announced that Captain Hteunenberg would be mildly censured for his poem, “An < tbject Lesson,” whish appeared in the current Issue of The Army and Navy Journal and which criticises the German method of teach ing military tatics. Captain Steunen berg will be requested in future not to sign ids poems as an officer of the United States army. VALDOSTA GETS DUBLIN MAN. VALDOSTA. GA.. Dec. 13.—R. M. Martin, now secretary of the Dublin Board of Trade, has been elected secre tary of the Chamber of Commerce In this city, and it Is understood he will take up the work here early in the new year. Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton a Danderine from any drug store or toller counter, and after the first application you will say it was the best Investment you ever made. Your hair will imme diately take on that life, luster and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy and have the apitearance of abundance; an in comparable gloss and softness, but what will please you most will be after just a few weeks’ use, when you will actually see a lot of fine, downy hair — new hair —growing all over the scalp. - (Advt.) AUGUSTA SEEKING GOVERNMENT AID IN BUILDING LEVEE AUGUSTA. GA. Dec. 13.—Nisbet Winyti’-id, commissioner of public ••works of Augusta, is now in Washing ton. here h- and Congressman Tlafrn as W. Hardwick are working on plans far the Savannah river and for Augus ta’s levee. Th<- government has agreed to ap propriate $125,000 additional to finish the rip-rap work on the banks at Au- Ku-ta. Already $250,000 has been spent i,n the rap-rapping work, half of which wa paid by the city and half by the government. Congressman Hardwick Is now at work with the rivers and harbors com mittee of congress to secure an appro priation from the government to help pay for the levee. Mr. Hardwick takes the position that inasmuch as the gov ernment is to assist in building levees on the Mississippi river, the city of Augusta should not be discriminated against. GETS RECOMMENDATION FROM HER EX-HUSBAND AL I HAM. MASS., Dec. 13. Bearing a ■ ( rtl!i< ate of fitness as a housekeeper J. r,,n ‘ her husband, with whom she has lived 31-years, Mrs. Mary C. Whitaker, w’fe <»f Lev ]. a. Whitaker, head of the \\ elfare Sales union, is seeking to begin life anew’. Mrs. Whitaker says she in tends to earn her own living. |SIAWEEK_SI| I ~ls I fl $1 J. 951 I ji|w 1 ■ I W SATURDAY! I URw H ■ Ff I are going to put on sale every Ladys’ Coat— | P rices ranging from $lB to h L®; 4 M $ 22 -50 for $14.95. There is I wßfl every kind of Coat and " style in this showing. This jo Li . . w price is for Saturday only. surrsi hicoo a SATURDAY We are going to put on O* sale Men’s Suits—-prices jr S| sls, $lB. S2O and $25-all % > B go for sls. There is no use 5 H I*” looking shabby when such T* E prices as these are offered flHl and when you can get such || M terms as we offer to every Pl working man. 191 ,1,9 |g S I AWEEKS I S Over A. &P. Tea Co., 73% Whitehall Street. ST. PATRICK’S STOLEN REGALIA IS RESTORED LONDON, Dec. 13.—The 84. Patrick installation regalia which was stolen from historic, Dublin Castle in July, 1907, has suddenly and mysteriously been replaced in its original position. The regalia, properly known as the Dublin “crown jewels,” was worth $235,- 000. <A reward of $5,000 was offered for the recovery of the jewels. The mystery of the disappearance created a scandal in the Irish vice regal court, making the position of Sir Arthur Vi cars, Ulster king of arms embarrassing URGES PRESIDENT TAFT TO CLEAN UP CAPITAL WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.-President Taft was appealed to today to take some action looking to the purifications of the national capital and the suppression of "certain hotels.” The request is the outr come of a mass meeting presided over by Senator Kenyon, of lowa, author of a bill pending in congress which would elimi nate the segregated district here. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of I ! THE GLOBE CLOTHING CO. ® JMK g as ss i ® 555 mix 4 \\ as / /■ t. Is H A W* » i S IS | i gffi ■— *: M,x ;: XIK ■ HERE’S AN IDEAL XMAS I i SHOPPING LIST il s; What Twenty=Five Cents Will Buv===at The Globe iii Jg Two pairs ‘'Radium ” Socks. Silk Handkerchief. One pair Silk Socks. Cuff Buttons. Silk Neckwear. (In Xmas c / rf r I ’ in ', „ \wS hov v Silk Initial Handkerchief. < | J . e. Two Collars. Pair good Suspenders. Men’s or Boys’ Caps. What Fifty Cents Will Buy=--=at The Globe S *•* Sir Silk Mufflers. Suspenders. ;jb Silk Socks. Neckwear. (In Xmas boxes.) SIS Silk Initial Handkerchiefs. ?, in or Cuff Buttons. «« «* N1 S ht Shlr t- t übiu b i X S Six 800 d handkerchiefs. (In j” Initial Belt. boxes .) v JJI gt A good Shirt. A good Cap. *1 Splendid Underwear. Garters and Arm Bands Gloves. Phoenix Muffler. 21 5K g What One Dollar Will Buy===at The Globe :ii Sit The best Shirts made. st Good Underwear. Combination Sets —Socks, gg SIS a iT m kr„ik Tie > Handkerchief. JI S; A good Umbrella. A good Sweater. «« S? Pajamas and Night Shirts. A cowboy or Indian Suit. W Sx Silk Handkerchiefs. Scarf Pin and Cuff Buttons. S 3 SIS Silk Neckwear. (In Xmas A soft Crush Hat. gg boxes.) Two good Shirts. jft SIS Silk Socks. Gloves. «! What $1.50 and $2.00 Will Buy===at The Globe I *•* J iw »■; A good Hat. A warm Sweater. Sg •J; A splendid Umbrella. An Auto Coat. Good Underwear. initia £ buckle ’ x« ' Leather Cases, Combination Six Sets gg gg -Combination Sets. a neat Vest. . ;•» Silk Neckwear. (In Xmas A Flannel Shirt. gj SIS , boxes.) White or colored Shirts. ISIS *jm Indian Suits. Kid or Mocha Gloves. A good pair Trousers. Gauntlet Gloves. Sj! «•* Si* || What $3.1H1 and $3.5(1 Will Buy-at The Globe g ■ *|g An all-wool Sweater. A silk Umbrella. A handsome Vest. • A silk Shirt. -*♦« Flannel Outing Robe. A Boys’ Raincoat. A pure Fur Hat. Boys’ Overcoat. «* Pair “Duchess”. Trousers. Two good suits Underwear. 3$ A splendid Boys’ Suit. A Stetson Hat. XIX S What $4.1111 and $5.00 Will Buy=-at The Globe II gg A good pair Trousers. An all-wool Sweater. Terry cloth Robe, with Slip- ne Shirt, ners A Boys Suit ' P A Boys’ Overcoat. «* Flannel Robe. A good Raincoat. | What SIO.OO, $12.50, $15.00, SIB.OO, $20.00 Will | si* Buy===at The Globe | I The Best Suit, Overcoat or Crav- | enette ever shown in Atlanta, S and we can prove it ; x?x as i mw " Si* 88 ■ SI ais jpaSCaSWwB. si si gg fz z Y / L 1 I * E gg W U Sft ass ; xix MAIL ORDERS FILLED xi« 5*2 f The Globe Clothing Co. | » 89 WHITEHALL STREET ® *•* w «I - I«