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THfc ATI AM \ (i 1'AIKli 1A A AM) \ hYV tS, l< KilJA t , At'lflL L'o, lJli:!.
.1,
NEW TtMPERAMENTAL GOWNS
EXPRESS MOODS OF MILADY
“Let's Have Less Talk of Univer
sal Peace and Wore American
Manhood,” Says Senator.
WASHINGTON, April 25.—“If the
Vnlted States is affronted somebody
Js going to get whipped before any
more peace treaties are adopted by
the Senate.”
This emphatic protest against Sec
retary Bryan's plan for universal
peace submitted t,o the Foreign Re
lations Committee was made by a
prominent member of that committee
to-day. He is one of the leading law-
years in the country, an aggressive
American,. \vho believes in being able
to compel peace on the part of those
■nho would insult the United States.
• We have had enough of peace
treaties." this Senator continued.
“Twenty-six arbitration treaties are
now on the statute books. Secretary
Bryan's scheme inciudea everything—
even national honor. Even when that
is at stake he asks us to tie ourselves
up to wait- a year before we do any
thing.
Dangers of Plan.
"Suppose we were a party to such
an absurd agreement and we had
trouble with, let us say Mexico. Dur
ing the year that trouble would be
under inquiry we must sit idly by and
wail without even increasing our ar
mament.
Suppose, for instance, Japan be-
heved she had a grievance against us.
While we were maintaining our ex
isting military status umil the Mex
ican problem was solved, what do
you suppose Japan would be doing?
The Cnited States is now feeling
the effect of too hasty treaty action
in our controversy with Great Britain.
We've had enough of peace treaties
until there is occasion for more.
Men who travel over the world tell
us that the general impression exists
that we art' a nation of shopkeepers
and cowards, afraid to fight lest we
disturb business.
Is America Cowardly?
Is there no longer good red blood
in our veins? Have we reached a
point where we can't say who may
and who may not own property in
this country?
In Mexico the distinction between
th Engishman and the German anti
the American is sharply drawn. The
American is looked upon as a coward
because his Government does not pro
tect him. Universal peace! l.et us
have a little universal American man
hood!”
Water Wagon Wine,
in Washington Now,
Bryan Serves “Soft" Drinks to Diplo
matic Corps and Others
Follow Suit.
WASHINGTON, April 25.—William
J. Bryan, Secretary of State, is ad
hering to his lifetime role of taboo
ing all strong . drinks. He gave a
rl nin to the diplomat.c corps and
» v (1 unfermented Juices Instead of
wines. The red color was in the
glass, but the aicohoi was not there.
The diplomats tasted, then looked
amazed.
At the dinner given by Representa
tive Robert X. Page, of North Caro
tin. i. to Walter H. Page, Ambassador
to England, a non-alcoholic punch,
which Mrs. Robert N. Page recom
mended. was served instead of win-
HftPPUADGHIHG
CHILD SHORTLY
—
; If Cross, Feverish, Bilious and
Sick Let “SjTup of Figs”
Clean Its Little Waste-
\ Clogged Bowels.
U. S. Supreme Court Decides
Discriminatory Tariff May Not
Be Enforced.
WASHINGTON, April 25.—The
Commerce Court to-day handed down
a decision sustaining an order of the
Interstate Commerce Commission pre
scribing rates from Shreveport. La.,
to points in the north and eas*t of
Texas.
The gist of the decision is a bread
affirmation of the power of the Con
gress and the authority of the com
mission to remove a discrimination
caused by State rates which are much
lower than reasonable interstate
rates.
The Attorney General of Minnesota
Booklet of valuable information tret on reifiust.
pkgrim mfg. company
Stop Experimenting
with “so-called" hair destroyers. The
time thus wasted onl> serves to make
the undesirable hairs take firmer root.
j*
The Guaranteed Liquid Hair Deatroyer
Is the only preparation that immediate
ly and without the slightest injury to the
most delicate skin, will remove
Superfluous Hair
It Acts Instantly Wherever Applied
You will find it not offensive, a requisite
others dare not claim for their prepara
tions. Take no malodorous or worthless
substitutes. Insist upon El-Rado.
Price SI at Jacobs’ ten stores.
Boy Rises in Coffin;
Grandmother Expires
Double Funeral, Instead of One, Is
Held When Physicians Fail
to Revive Child.
BUTTE, CAL.. April 25.- A double
funeral was held at the home of Mrs.
J. R. Burney to-day.
While the family was listening to
the services for Mrs. Burney’s three-
year-old son yesterday, the boy sat
upright in his coffin. Mrs L. P. Smith,
his grandmother, aged XI, saw him
and dropped to the lloor dead.
The boy fell back into the casket
and efforts of two physicians fafled to
revive him.
The grandmother and boy were bu
ried together.
ill a brief filed with the Supreme
Court contend# that the Shreveport
case, upon which so much stress was
laid in the Government’s brief, does
not apply to questions involved in the
Minnesota cases.
Flyers Urge Federal
Control of Aviation
Hill in Congress Would Put Aero
nautics Under Government
Bureau of Navigation.
V
W ASHINGTON, April 2'5.~ Ail
aviation-control bill was introduced
in the house to-day by Rejiresent.t -
tivc Varc of Pennsylvania at the re
quest of tlie Aero club of that state.
It would place aeronautics entirely
under the control of the bureau of
Navigation of the Department >f
Commerce.
It provides that every person build
ing or owning an areopJane must
apply to the bureau of navigation
for ;i license, paying a fee of $5. l)ach
applicant for a license as an aviator
would be required to submit proof
of his qualifications for operating tile
type of machine he names.
' Such a law,” said Mr. Vare, “will
make the business of aeronautics
much safer than it is at present.”
Are-
BlKfcrl
IRS—1
37 East 2RtH St.
New York.
JARDINIERES
For a short time we are
at bargain prices.
offering these;
goods
Were.
Now.
1 vorv pottery Jardinieres
$1.00
$ .67
Art Potterv Jardinieres .
5.00
Art Potterv Jardinieres .
4.50
Art Potterv .Jardinieres .
3.50
Art Potterv Jardinieres .
3.00
Brass Jardinieres
3.50
1.98
Umbrella Stands
3.50
1.98
Mantel Alarm Clocks ... .
3.50
1.98
Mission Lamps
1.00
.55
WATCH OUR WINDOWS
MIW IlAIVl/i
87 Whitehall
1 ARC WJ.
53 Peachtree
m i
S if |
t f - t
j R^iVivVtiWv Charge purchases rest of month go on May statement.
, RICH & BROS. CO.
President Gets Race
Segregation Plea
Democratic Fair Play Association |
Says Southerners Won’t Work Un- j
der Negroes in U. S. Service.
WASHINGTON, April 25.—“There
are cases where white women are un
der negro heads, and it is for this rea
son that our great South has only C
per cent of the Government positions,”
said Ernest D. Martin, well-known
Missouri lawyer, chairman of the new
National Democratic Fair Play Asso
ciation. in explaining the organiza
tion’s objects.
“Do you think,” he added, “that a
man brought up in the South would
work under negro supervision, or that
you would want your sister or wife
working under a negro?”
President Wilson, Cabinet officers
and Congressmen have received copies
of the association's platform, which
advocates the segregation of white
and negro races in Government de
partments.
Locomobile Branch
Holds Open House
Marks Completion of New Building
Here and Inauguration of
Headquarters for South.
Paris Has Produced the Very Quintessence of
New Thought in Dress.
If Madame or Mademoiselle At
lanta is beset by temperament the
latest gowns will aid her in express
ing her feelings, and, instead of go
ing in the boudoir to weep when
things are gloomy, all she will have
to do under the vogue will be to
change her gown to fit the mood.
Paris has decreed it. Out at the
race tracks where the dressmakers
of Paris send their samples for the.
rest of the world to copy the new
style has appeared.
Fifth Avenue and then Whitehall
Street will be the next stopping
places of the idea. The chronology of
a style runneth this wise: Monsieur
Yardstick haS a notion. He shapes
Ship Leaves Husband
Bride Grows Frantic
Absent-Minded Denver Mag Is Put
Aboard Liner From Tug After
Heart-Breaking Chase.
No matter what ails your child
gentle, thorough laxative physic
should always be the first treat
ment given.
If vour child isn’t feeling well;
rusting nicely, eating regularly
and acting naturally it is a sure
gn that its little stomach, liver
and 30 feet of bowels are filled
with foul, constipated waste mat
ter and need a gentle, thorough
cleansing at once.
When cross, irritable, feverish,
stomach sour, breath bad or your
little one has stomach - ache,
diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold,
t«»ngue coated, give a teaspoonful
pf Syrup of Figs and in a few
hours all the clogged up waste,
undigested food and sour bile will
£“ntly move on and out of its
little bowels without nausea, grip
ing or weakness, and you will
surely have a well, happy and
smiling child again shortly.
With Syrup of Figs you are not
drugging your children, being
composed entirely of luscious figs,
st nna and aromatics it cannot be
harmful: besides, they dearly love
its delicious fig taste.
Mothers should always keep
>YHjp 0 f Fjg s handy. It is the
°uly stomach, liver and bowel
:, nser and regulator needed—
httl" given to-day will save a
sick child to-morrow.
i uil directions for children of all {
‘‘Q'S and for grown-ups plainly
• -■’inted on the package.
•'sk your druggists for the full
nic. “Syrup of Figs and Elixir
•Senna,” prepared by the Cali-
,l -‘ Fig Syrup Co. This is the
' Jous tasting, genuine old re- ?
Refuse anything else of- >
i
Open house will be held by the Lo
comobile Company from 3 to 6 o clock
this afternoon in their new building,
K>9 Peachtree Street, the occasion
also marking the opening of the
Southern branch of the company in
Atlanta. The building is handsome
and complete in every respect.
F. W. Roberts, formerly with the
Locomobile Agency here, but branch
manager at Washington for the past
two years, will be in charge of the
Southern branch, with E. M. King, of
Washington, as associate.
The territory will take in Georgia.
Tennessee, South Carolina. 1* lorida,
Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and
Texas.
The first floor of the new building
will be used as salesroom, the base
ment and rear second floor as a gar
age for Locomobile owners, the third
and fourth floors as a repair shop.
The building is beautifully decorat
ed for the opening.
NEW $10,000,000 MAIL
ORDER HOUSE IN CHICAGO
CHICAGO, April 25.—A mail order
house capitalized at $10,000,000 was
licensed to do business in the State
of Illinois to-day. The company is
organized under the laws of Dela
ware, but the main offices will be in
Chicago. .
The new organization will use the
parcel post for delivery of its mer
chandise.
2 SETS OF TRIPLETS.
FREE UNION. VA. April 25. Mrs.
Charles Mowbry, wife of an apple
grower of Albemarle County, is the
mother of her second set of triplets—
two boys and a girl.
Two years ago the stork presentee
her with two girls and a boy.
All the children are living.
PRICE AT CAPITOL.
.1 |> price, of Farmington. m:ic, will
succeed J. -1. Connor a« State Commis
sioner of Agriculture, was at the cuju-
tol to-day in conference with Mr. < mi
nor Jt was announce!i that tin? eon
fercince had only to do with routine de
partmental affairs.
NEW YORK. April 25—When the
Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, steam
ing to-day across the briny deep,
pulled out from Hoboken a frantic
woman crowded to the rail, waving
her hands and screaming. Two deck
stewards restrained her, and while
she struggled with them she cried:
“Jimmy! Jimmy! Oh, Jimmy!”
And on the pier was “Jimmy,
Jimmy,” her husband, and he had the
passage tickets and all the money.
A nice situation for a charming
bride. “Jimmy” is James W. Philips,
a wealthy mining man of Denver.
Col.* Mr. Philips is absent-minded.
“Stop the ship! Stop the ship!”
My wife’s on board” cried the frantic
brides groom, who was finally put
aboard a f ug, and after a heart
breaking chase placed aboard the lin
er with his bride.
SLAYER DIES IN CHAIR.
LEXINGTON. KY, April 25. -Ben
Jenkins was electrocuted to-day ;
Eddyvilh* penitentiary for the murder
of Sheriff George Hart, at Winch- s-
ter. Seven murderers await execu
tion in the next month.
it on a model. Then he makes it in
to a gowh.
Next Yvette. Nanon, Mercedes and
Lila are called into play and they
aTe duly arrayed in the new crea
tions and sent out to the races where
the polite world takes a slant at
the new togs and then all of us be
gin wearing them.
So this is a tirst-past-the-post im-1
pression of what is on the way here
in the line of gowns.
But to get pack to the moods.
There are styles for the merry,
styles for the grave, styles for the
tearful and styles-for the woman who
has just been tellfng her husband
just what she thinks of him. ’And
they are illustrated ideas, every one.
The illustrations are done in hftnd-
painted effect upon the . panels <>i
cretonne—a little diacritical mark
over the “e” please—anti the sub
dued shades and tones, set off with
flowers, make up creations after, the
fashion of tlie Pompadour period.
The skirts are draped and the
coats half-fitting, full in front and
gathered at the back with 1 two small
straps. A plain linen coat, finished
six inches below the waist line, and
straw hats trimmed with, flower.':
make up the rest of the picture.
“Forget-Me-Not” Type.
The “Forget-Me-Not” type of
gown is supposed to reveal the moody
sentiment. “Among the Roses” is to
typify the girl who is feeling just too
happy for any use, while “Dry
Those Tears” is a modiste’s invita
tion to a turkey trot.
“Bells are flinging” means that
there will be something doing in the
old town that is a trifle out of the
ordinary and the idea is for the peo
ple who see the gowns to guess what
the wearer really means by the dress
scheme.
The feature of the new creations
Is that they are all of the semi-dress
cut, with low, Medici collars and
clingy effects.
Jewels Are to play their part in the
game, with pearls as the predominat
ing scheme.
Two V/hite Hairs
Poking out under the curl?
Are you %-ying to cover up
your gray hairs with' puffs
and curl pieces? It seldom
succeeds.
Better far to restore your
cwn hair to its original color
and beauty.
Robin n a ire
Hair Dye
restores lifeless, colorless,
faded gray hair to its original
color and beautiful, healthy
condition.
It is not a preparation to
change the color of the hair.
Simply a restorative that
puts natural color and life
and luster into the hair.
TRY IT. The hair responds
quickly to proper care and
treatment. Non-sticky and
does not stain skin or scalp.
Prepared for -light, medium
end dark brown and black
hair. Trial size 25c, post
paid 31c; large size 75c, post
paid 83c. Pure and harmless.
FOR SALE BY
All Jacobs’ Stores
And Druggists Generally.
1250 Pieces 75c Neckwear at 49c
A grouping of special lots captured by our buyer on bis
recent New York trip. Some secured a third underprice; others at a
half. On sale to-morrow for the first time, and at the same savings.
All new neckwear; fresh, attractive styles. * Pretty
PI mien and Point Venise Laces in the new “Sunshine” collars popu
larized by the “Sunshine Girl” Musical Comedy now running in New
York. Square and regulation shapes, also cream anti white. Princess
lace yokes with collars attached are included in the sale. Charming
round and square styles. 75c and $1 values; buy a whole summerful
at 49c. (Neckweai—Main Floor, Right)
Lavish Assortments of Blouses at $2.50
A price made possible because we reproduce, in great
quantities, the individual model conceived by an artist.
We’re featuring Paris-inspired Blouses at $2.50. Plan
ned for it months ago. Got the makers to bring over fashionable
models; copied them or adapted the styles. Behold the result—almost
a score of beautiful new waists and blouses.
Priced at $2.50—though the styles and materials tempt
one to believe they are worth much more. Possibly so, hut we make
a profit, and a new friend for the house every time we sell one at $2.50.
Just a hint of the styles:
$2.50 crepe—with low neck and round
collar. Finished with black taffeta silk
tie. Long sieves.
$2.50 voile—low neck, lace collar,
black taffeta silk tie. Drop or long
shoulders. Several different styles.
$2.50 Bulgarian Blouses about a
with lace collars and brightly colored Bulgarian embroidered trimmings,
smart.
tf* 1 For New Waists
I More than a dozen styles in voiles
i r and lingeries. High and low
necks, long or short sleeves. Prettier than
you’d think possible at $1.
(Waists—Second Floor)
$2.50 lingerie—high neck, long sleeves
•finished with lace. Lace insertion
trimmed. Lace points button on side.
$2.50 Marquisette—high neck, turn
over collar, edged in pico. Insert of
embroidery all ihe way down front,
dozen styles in voiles and lingeries.
Very
New Mannish Shirts
that tit as they should. Sizes and
styles for all.
Cotton, $1 to $r>.
Linen, $2.50 to $5.
Silk. $2.50 to $8.50.
NERVOUS PEOPLE
Who dread hnving teeth extracted, filled or
crowned should call at my office and 1 will
demonstrate to your entire satisfaction that I
can do it painlessly
$5 a Set
They never slip
or drop. I guar
antee them for 20
years.
Terms:
Don't Worry
New Parasols 35c to 65c Veilings 19c
Fillings in Silver. Plat
num and Amalgam, 50c.
--•K. Gold Crowns,')
Porcelain Crowns)
and Bridge Work. J
Daily 8 to 8
Sunday 10 to 3
Lady Attendant and
Ladies’ Rest Room.
Phone Main 1298.
Gold Dust Vulcanite sets
do not make the mouth
sore nor have rubber
taste.
Shop the town over in vuiii to find
such pretty styles at these little
prices of $2.25 to $4.25. Solid color
silk, silks in Bulgarian colors,
ratines-—the assortment is fairly be
wildering.
Glorietta Silk Stockings
“Glorietta Silk”—a highly or
mercerized cotton that re- “OC
seniblesf silk lisle. The best 25c
stocking for women we’ve ever had.
Makers guarantee it a new pair
for any that go wrong—and you to
be the judge. Black, white or tan.
(Main Floor, Right)
A “close-out” lot from
the same importer who
supplies us regularly.
Duplicates of Ihesc very
veilings have sold here
freely all Spring at H5c,
50c. and t>5e.. These will
go “a-flying” at 19c.
All fresh, new stock, in
i be season’s smartest pat
terns. Hexagon, fancy mesh,
shadow veilings; some with
figures outlined in silk
ihread, etc. Magpie, black
on white, and solid-color
navy, brown, taupe and black. 19c.
(Veilings—Main Floor, Right)
DR. WHITLAW, Painless Dentistry
Largest and most thoroughly equipped office in the
South.
Entrance 731-. Whitehall Street: 4th door from J.
.M. High Co.
Over the Atlantic Ac Pacific Tea Store.) Opposite
Vaudette Theater.
Reference: .My work ami Central Bank and Trust
1 OI |M>! Jit 1UII.
j» Special Saturday Sale of W9 F*
1 Fine Big Carnations «
Full blooming carnations, fine, hardy qualities;
white, pink or red. 75c a dozen.
12 Loveiy Red Roses $1
A cloven of these pretty big-lieaded roses make a magnificent
boquet. Saturday, just $1.
Ferns furnished free with boquets
tm (Flowers—Main Floor, Right)
m. RICH & BROS. GO. M RICH & BROS. CO.
Saturday April 26th
Memorial Day
We Close
at 1 P.