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IIEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., ST T NDAY, MAY 4, 101R.
AFTER34YURSI
Sixty Members of Famous Bat
talion Will Go Over Route of
Historic 1879 Tour.
WARM WELCOME ASSURED
Baltimore, Washington, Phila
delphia, tfew York and Boston
on Itinerary—Start May 19.
Mrs. ‘Bat’ Has Rules for Wives
Fighter’s Spouse Bans Divorce
MIAUIOES SUfFRAGISTS
Sixty resplendently-clad men. among
them many of Atlanta's most prom
inent and sedate citizens, will go out
from the Terminal Station in the
early morning of Monday. May 19,
for h visit to Washington. Baltimore,
^Philadelphia, New York and Bos
ton.
A hand will play for them u god
speed; bodies of younger soldiers will
escort them to the station; citizens
everywhere along the line of march
will cheer them. The\ acre the Old
Guard Battalion of the Gate City
(Hiard. and they are going out from
Atlanta to repeat a trip they made
24 years ago.
Then, in 1879, they were younger
and more springy of step, perhaps,
)>ut no more gaJlant. Then they went
out on a mission of peace, to express
to the North and to the Hast the good
will that Atlanta bore all sections.
This time the errand will be again
expressive of friendship, hut will he
lighter in nature thap the historic
tour of 1879.
Will Renew Old Friendships.
Friendships that were made on the
otlu r trip will be renewed, and in
various cities the Old Guard will
participate in functions and ceremo
nies planned to strengthen the ties
between the North and the Houth.
Already the Fifth Maryland Regi
ment, whose recent visit Atlantans
v/ill recall vividly tn connection with
the unveiling of the peace monument,
has sent Lieutenant Nunsem to At
lanta to advise with the Old Ouarrl
officers in regard to preparations for
their reception in Baltimore, while
the State Kencibies. of Philadelphia,
sent Captain T. S. Lanard to Atlanta
on i\ similar mission last week.
Colonel J. F. Burke, who command
ed the Old Guard in 1879, and who
inspired its patriotic mission, will
head the organization. Definite an
nouncement regarding the tour came
yer*" M i 1 dr.r when Colonel Burke and
Adjutant F. J. Spr&tllng posted the
following order;
To Go on Special Train.
The battalion is hereby ordered
i.. assemble at the Piedmont Ho
tel on Monday, May 19, at 9:30 a.
in., in full dress uniform to march
to tin* Terminal Station, where a
special train will be in waiting.
The return trip will be by steam
er to Savannah, (la.
The purpose of this tour is to
meet the military and other or-
u-f«niz:itlons that so warmly in
dorsed the “Mission of Peace” of
thin command to their former ad
versaries in the Civil War, when
t hey visited the KJastern cities 84
years ago.
Accompanying the order Is a cir
cular issued by Captain Bolling H.
Jones, •luartermaster, in which the
Itinerary lor the trip is announced.
The trip, beginning May 19. will end
June 4 when the Old Guard mem
ber will return to the city from Sa
vannah. to which place they will
v ome by steamer from New' York.
Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia.
New York and Boston will be visited
tn order named, with stops of two
to four days in each place.
Warm Welcomes Planned.
The Old Guard will be elaborately
entertained in all these cities by the
most notable organizations in mili
tary. civic and social life. The cere
monies will reach their culmination tn
Boston. The Eastern cities have recol
lections which not even the passage
of nearly a generation has dimmed,
of the historic tour of 1879, and the
< itisens and municipalities will join
In welcoming the Southerners back
again, so they assure Colonel Burke.
Between fifty npd sixty members of
the Old Guard will go on this tour.
Including the following officers:
Colonel J. F. Burke. Captain and
'^Adjutant K J i^pratllng. Captain and
Quartermaster Bolling H. Jones, Cap
tain and Commander A. McD. Wil
son.
Staff Officers—Captain W. M.
«rumley. Dr. E U Qpnn&lly, l^ouis
Ghoistin. Benjamin R. Crew.
First Company—Captain George M.
Napier, Lieutenant Charles P. Byrd,
Lieutenant J. W. Murrell.
Second Company—Captain F. J.
Coo ledge. Lieutenant P. F. Clarke
Lieutenant A. H. Davis.
Atlanta to Give Them “Send-off."
Non-com missioned Staff — Color
Sergeant Ben Lee Crew, Color Ser-|
geant F. T. Ridge, Color Corporal E.
L. Bergstrom, Color Corporal W. P.
I Andrews.
Non-commissioned Line Officers
Sergeant W. E. Hancock. Sergeant
Harrison Jones. Sergeant W. O. Wil
son. Sergeant F. M. Berry.
Including the above officers, fifty-
two members of the organization,
which includes many of Atlanta’s
i most distinguished citizens, have an
nounced their intention of making the
i tour. A few ladies, wives and daugh
ters of Old Guard members, also will
>be in the party.
In the two weeks before the de
partures. Atlanta will prepare to give
the Old Guard a great farewell dem
oust ration.
MRS. JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN
SERIOUSLY ILL IN FRANCE
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, May S.—Mrs. Joseph Chain-
oerlain, wife of the former e Sere tar y
"““‘e for the Colonies, is reported
ive condition at Cannes. France,
her was W. C. Endloott, Arr.er-
icretary of War under President
itlv she underwent an operation
wndicitls. She in suffering now
Here Is Advice on Happiness by
the Bride Who Has “Made
Up” With Nelson.
RULES FOR WIVES.
Don't Talk of Old Loves
Talk Baseball.
Feed Him Well.
Hew on His Buttons.
Keep Chip off Shoulder.
Make Horne Everything.
BOSTON, May 8.—Mrs. Battling
Nelson, wife? of the former light
weight boxing champion, who hat
“made up" with her husband thinks
trial divorces nr* nauseating Happy
again with her husband In their
Huntington Avenue suite, after she
separated from Mm and said she
would never live with him again, Mrs
Nelson lo-day told what she thinks
about divorce* in general, about love
and what wives should do to hold
their husbands. She says that di
vorce* are caused by “some one not
giving In."
Here are some of the rules she lftys
down If married couples want to live
happily:
Treat your helpmeet as a good com
panion.
Say “good-bye" and “Well, darling,
are you back again?" to your husband
when ho goes and when he returns
home.
Don’t be grouchy or throw things
around at the table.
Make? everything of your home life.
It Is the best after all.
Always meet your husband com
ing back to the house with a warm
greeting.
Don’t Aay. “How do you do” in a
whisper. Go up to your husband
when he enters and Just tell him that
you are glad to see him and kiss
him.
Forget Former Loves.
Don’t talk to him about what
happened during the day and what
Is disagreeable. Forget everything like
that
Then when your husband leaveR
in the morning, bid him the right
kind of a good bye. Don’t shout
all over the house, "If you don’t
bring home my suit to-night when
you come, you'll not get any dinner."
Don’t do that.
Then the husband must show that
he appreciates what the wife has been
doing.
If the table looks well at dinner.
Just remark about it. The wife
can also say something pleasant to
her "hubby."
Don’t fling tilings around at the
r&
m
%
National Style Committee Decides
on Milady’s Wearing Apparel
for Next Year.
o <y
MRS. BATTLING NELSON.
table to show that you have a
grouch on. Just stop that sort of
thing.
Don’t talk about former girl* that
you loved to your wife. The wife
on the either hand should not men
tion, how many beaus she hat lie-
fore marriage.
That’s about the meanest fuel in
conversation that 1 know about. It
is bound to make a row before long.
Don’t say anything about the
pa si.
Don’t forget to talk baseball with
your hoy. Read the sporting news
In the newspapers.
Don't let your husband go to the
club when he talks baseball. Let
him talk to you, and then let him
see that you know & thing or two
about the game.
Make the home everything. If
you are married expect to have
children. Re happy that you can
help to bring a human soul Into the
world. Oh! I’ve Just changed in
my old idea# of life. Whim a
woman Is earning her living she
gets independent ideas and forgets
her happiness in other ways. That’s
Just mo.
I sat down and thought that I
wan a married, woman, and then I
lied back to “Bat."
I do not believe In divorce. All
this business about trial divorce is
simply nauseating. It makes you
sick to read about it.
First Hindu Becomes
An American Citizen
Court. Granting Claims, Decides
Certain Caste in India Is of
Caucasian Origin.
SPOKANE, WASH., May 8.—Akhay
Kurnar Mozumdar. a Yogi philoso
pher and a native of Calcutta, India,
to-day became an American cltlr.cn.
He Is the llrst Hindu ever to attain
this distinction.
Cntted States District Judge Frank
H Kudkln grantad the application,
notwithstanding In the t’Rst the
court* huve held against Hindus.
Judge Rudkin's decision settled a
question Involving the differences ra
cially between certain of the castes
of India. Mosutndar's contention was
that he was a "high caste Hindu of
pure blood of the ruling caste In In
dia and that this caste Is of Cau
casian origin."
Defense Closes in
Police Heads' Trial
New York Inspectors Fail to Take
Stand and Effort to Show
Alibi Is Vain.
NEW YORK, May S.—Tlio defense
closed its case In the trial for con
spiracy to obstruct justice to-day af
ter former Police Inspectors Sweeney,
Hussey, Murtha and Thompson had
failed to take the witness stand in
their own defense and the attorneys
had striven tn vain to establish an
ulibi for the defendants.
The State’s case, woven with the |
reluctant testimony of confessed
conspirators. corroborative testi
mony of Innocent witnesses and
damaging circumstantial evidence, re
mained unbroken despite the efforts!
of the four attorneys for the de-
fense.
The case cannot go to the jury
until Tuesday.
Typhoid Scourge in
Paris Latin Quarter
Epidemic in Which Seventeen Die
In Week Laid to Carelessness
of Pipe Fitter.
Special Cable to The American.
FARI8, May 3.—The present serious
typhoid epidemic in the T^atln Quarter
it has been found, was caused by the
carelessness of a pipe titter, who mip-
connected the supply pipe to the recent
congress on physical education at the
CoUege of Medicine of the Sorbonne.
I hus ordinary Seine water was fur-
nlshed for drinking purposes to the ns-
ftiysielans. the students
ana the trainers.
™V ame * e 7 or was made In piping
to JJ ,ai student lodging house.
J v l re sev ?*‘teen typhoid deaths
this week, Vs against a normal of four.
TOLEDO, OHIO, May 3.—Feminine
fashions In gowns, suits and coats for
the fall and winter of 1913-1914 are
to l>o similar In outline to the most
“advanced’’ inodes of the present sea
son-only more so. Definite decree of
what shall and shall not abide as per
missible in thoroughly modem cos
tumes for women during the coming
season was handed down by the
American National Style Committee,
and given sanction by an assembly of
almost 200 critics, reviewers, design
ers, manufacturer* and delineators
here to-day.
According to the verdict of the
style show, in the real pace-setting
type in suits the normal waistline is
to be obliterated. In dress suits and
in many of the street suits the waist
line is to be high.
Waistline Dropped.
The “waistline" of Jackets will be
dropped to the hips. Suit Jackets are
to button high and be longer. The
Russian blouse 4s to return and cut
aways are given first favor.
Suits will be made of two kinds of
material, jackets and skirts to con
trast In colors. Best suits will have
skirts slightly draped. Skirts are to
be even narrower at the bottom,"
many of them plashed over the left
Instep to a height of a foot or more,
and all will be much wider at the
hips than at the hems.
Mandarin sleeves are given prefer
ence In fall and winter coats, The
coats are to be unshaped and gath
ered about the bottom. They will
button high about the neck, and at
tached fur collars are to be common.
Large sleeves, with deep cuffs, many
of them trimmed with large buttons
to correspond with fasteners, predom
inate. There are to be few short or
full-length coats. Favored lengths
are from 48 to 50 inches. A few nov
elty short coats arc approved.
Every conceivable material Is to be
used. Coarse diagonals, heavy ratine
and wool corduroy are favored in so-
called “plain goods.”
In addition to these materials,
cross-grained serges of pronounced
novelty stripe weaves, the old-fash
ioned camel’s hair cloth and otheT
similar goods of unusual texture are
to be used in the plain tailored suits.
Plainer materials in peculiar and sta
ble shades are to be used in the Rus
sian blouse, extreme styled and high
ly trimmed suits.
Shades Vary Greatly.
In shades materials for suits and
coats vary to a degree never even an
ticipated by the rainbow. Kings blue,
which haa taken feminine fancy by
storm this spring, is to be permissi
ble, but not conceded the leading po
sition. It will be seen principally In
winter weight ratines. Tans of every
shade are to be supreme. Shades
from canary yellow, in suits, to
browns verging on black are indorsed.
A shade deeper than the new nell
rose is approved for Russian blouse
suits and “dressy" two-piece cos
tumes.
For evening coats brocaded astra
khan in Persian or Dolly Varden de
signs Is to form the acme of per
fection. A coat of dark red and black
brocade astrakan, trimmed in black
ostrich down and ermine, is one of the
most sensationally successful modes
to be offered. Persian silks figure
most prominently in coat and jacket
linings. Linings are to extend over
lapels and to be displayed on reefers
when coat fronts are left partly
opened. Red (subdued) is to be a j
favorite.
FIFTH AVENUE
Pretty Women Led by Inez Mil-
holland Carry Banner of
“the Cause.”
Continued From Page 1.
Ing the general, came her three
pretty aides—Mrs. John Boldt, Mrs.
Alexander Baird and Miss Phoebe
Dawn.
Section after section, heels clicking
on the asphalt like hammer taps, the
women marched in time to the band
music. For the most part, the hands
played militant airs. But ever and
anon broke forth a lighter strain of
ragtime and several of the Women’s
Political UrlJon and Woman Suffrage
Association sections came along with
a decided tang of tango In their
step.
Approbation came from the side
walks. not only lit cneers. but In
money. A huge yellow fiag bearing
the battle cry of the cause was car
ried outspread by 47 girls. In the
course of the march, nearly $50 was
tossed into the widespread banner.
The money came in dimes, nickels
and quarters.
Policeman Heads Delegation.
Heading the delegation from the
Twenty-first Assembly District of
New York State strode a policewo
man. No member of the Central of
fice squad was ever more austere,
more commanding, more tremendous
in aspect than was she. She was
clad in a jaunty coat and three-quar
ter length skirt of excellent fit and
hang. She carried a nightstick and
twirled it in approved Broadway fash
ion. Leaders of the movement who
were not among the marchers were
Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont and Mrs. Car
rie Chapman Catt, both of whom are
in Europe, and Dr. Anna Shaw, pres
ident of the National Suffrage Asso
ciation, who sailed a few hours be
fore the parade to fill important lec
ture engagements before she goes to
address the International suffrage
convention at Budapest in June.
"I regret exceedingly that I am
>able to march," said Dr. Shaw be-
sailing. “I beliewe it is the first
parade of its kind that I have missed
taking part in. but I found this was
the last steamer I could get in order
to fill important engagements, which
I made several weeks ago."
unab
fore
Suffragettes
Close Parade
With Speeches
NEW YORK, May 3.—With every
seat in Carnegie Hall from the par
quet floor to the uppermost gallery
'Battle Hymn' of
Suffrage Parade
Following is the song sung
bg the parading suffragists in
.Vetc York yesterday. The air
is that of the “Hattie Hymn of
the RepublicThe song is dedi-
eated to the Men's League for
Women Suffrage:
God bless the Land of Liberty,
Where men together stand,
With sane, sincere integrity
To voice what they demand.
Let equal laws and equity
Prevail throughout the land—
We’ll vote for woman's rights.
Chorus:
Glory, glory, Hallelujah!
Glory, glory, Hallelujah!
Glory, glory, Hallelujah!
We’ll vote for woman’s rights!
This Is the age of chivalry;
We welcome warm Its birth!
Our sisters In captivity
With songs will bring them forth.
To meet us in equality
To share with us their worth—
We’ll vote for woman's rights.
(Chorus)
Rise, ye sons of liberty,
with all your might and main!
Ye loyal sons of chivalry.
You’re on the road to fame.
Be pioneers of industry,
Ye men with brawn and brain—
We’ll vote for woman’s rights.
(Chorus)
MAYOR LIKELY
JURY OF GRAFT
Woodward Greatly Aroused by
Exoneration of Accused Aider-
men and Fire Chief.
Mayor Woodward late yesterday
strongly intimated that the various
graft charges against Councilmen and
fire officials would be presented to the
Fulton County Grand Jury. The May
or had predicted “whitewashing" by
the Council investigating committee,
but the announcement of complete ex
oneration for all accused has aroused
his resentment as though it were un
expected action.
John S. Owens, foreman of the
Grand Jury Just adjourned, had an
nounced that an investigation on be
half of the State would be instituted
If Council did not take impartial ac-
, tion, but his jury was adjourned be
fore the investigating committee had
completed their work. A new Grand
Jury has been impaneled and will be
charged to-morrow.
Report# Filed Monday.
Alderman John S. Candler’s com
mittee, which Is investigating the
charges against Aldermen F. J. Sprat-
ling, J. W. Maddox and I. N. Ragsdale,
met yesterday afternoon to prepare a
report to Coupcil. All five of the
members agreed on an emphatic re
port to Council that the Aldermen are
not guilty; but they adjourned until
to-morrow to write out this report.
The fire probe committee also will
meet to-morrow to sign Its report ex
onerating Chief Cummings and the
Fire Board.
It Is predicted In political circles
that these reports will be approved by
every member of Council except Al
derman John E. McClelland, who ac
cused the three Aldermen. The mem
bers of Council assert that thorough
investigations failed to reveal any
corruption. They declare that the
charges of Mayor Woodward and Al
derman McClelland are unsupported
by proof.
Breach With Council Widens.
This program will make the breach
between Mayor Woodward and the
members of Council complete. Re
sentments have been crystallized into
determinations to fight, and factional
lines are inflexible. Many more ve
toes and the overriding of vetoes are
certain, for the split between the leg
islative and executive branches of the
city government is apparently hope-
occupied, the great suffrage demon
stration and parade of to-day waa
brought to a close with speeches and
resolutions to-night.
Mrt. Harriet Stanton Blateh pro* [
sided at the meeting. The three j
speakers were Rev. Walter Taylor
Sumner, D.D., dean of the Cathedral j
S. S. Peter and Paul of Chicago*, i
Miss Margaret Foley, president of
the Women’s Suffrage League of Mas- j
sachusetts, and “General" Rosalia
Jones.
Among those in the boxes were
Miss Lydia Field Emmett, Mrs. :
Ogden Mills Reid, Miss Louise May- j
nard, the Misses’ Irene and Alice
Lewlsohn, Mrs. H W. Cannon, Mrs.
H. O, Havemeyer,. Mrs. James A.
Wright, Mrs. Louise L. Delafleld, Mrs.
William Randolph Hearst, Miss Kath
erine Wells, Miss Ellen K. Lente, Miss
Harriet Pcrritt, Madame Bessie Gluck,
Miss Mary E. Thornton, Miss E. C.
M. Rand and Mrs. Francis G.vLloyd.
“This beautiful meeting." said Mrs.
Blateh in her opening remarks, “is
a benediction to the greatest parade
ever seen in this country, and it is a
fitting and beautiful benediction to
a victorious cause that will win us the
vote in 1915."
less.
White City Park Now Open
T)r. Clay L. Dean, Chi
ropractic Nerve Special
ist, has returned to the
city, and is again ready to:
| serve his patients and
: friends.
BRING YOUR FILMS TO US
and we will d evelop them free. We are film specialists
and give you perfect results and quick delivery. Mail
us negative for sample print. Enlargement# made
and colored. Pictures framed. Chemloals. Camera#,
$3.00 to $85.00.
Freeh films to fit any camera—guaranteed not to stick
or eaten. Write for catalogue. Quick m all order service.
JB!
1
DECORATIVE AND BEDDING PLANTS
BOSTON FERNS
Long, gracefully drooping fronds, which frequently attain a
length of six feet. The most beautiful specimens shown this season.
6 in. Ferns $ .40 each; were $ .60
8 In. Ferns 75 each; were 1.00
10 In. Ferns 1.00 each; were 1.50
12 In. Ferns 1.25 each; were 2.00
All varieties of Bedding and Vegetable Plants fresh every
morning.
<Ard,) McMillan bros. seed co. (B„b>
12 S. BROAD ST.
THE JOURNAL’S OLD BUILDING
J
CERTAINTY OF DEFEAT WON’T
BAR M’KINLEY FROM RACE|
DEC ATT R. ILL., May 3.—Former
Congressman W. B McKinley an
nounces his intention of running for
Congress next year.
“I should run even If I were posi
tive I should be beaten,” he said. He
will return from a trip abroad in Jan
uary to prepare for the campaign.
White City Park Now Open
The city's price for tile side
walks under this year's contract
will be 88 cents per square yard,
payable 1-4 cash and the balance
in one. two and three years if
desired.
CEMENT. STONE & TILE CO.
City Contractors.
T]
Dr. John H. Bowen
Specialist
I treat private diseases of either sex.
I give 606 for Specific Blood Poison
with great success.
CONSULTATION FREE
Special Attention to
Out-of-Town Patients
1 am no new man~have 20 years experience
in this specialty. If you want an honest, square
deal, see me at my office, or write me.
Office Hours: 9 to 12 A. M.; 2 to 6 P. M.
Sundays 10 to 1
412-13-14 Austell Building, Atlanta, Ga.
[1
Office Phone M. 1453
Res. Phone Ivy 7057-J
J
Beautiful Homes For Sale
The above two brick houses are located on
Virginia Ave. They are the best built, most
conveniently arranged and located in best part
of the city. Furnace heat, slate roof, sun par
lors, two baths and hardwood floors. These
houses are built to last for fifty years.
Apply to the owner.
W. E. WORLEY
415-16 EMPIRE BUILDING