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Bucknam Pasha, American Ad
miral in Sultan’s Navy, Sees
Prosperity Ahead.
Special Cable to The Georgian.
LONDON, May 13. — Bucknam
Pasha, the famous American, who
1s an Admiral in the Turkish navy,
has been rn London for two week a
He has no hope that conditions in
Turkey will straighten themselves out
for at least a year. The various de
tails in regard to the signing of the
peace treaty, the delimitation of the.
frontiers and the arrangements for
the payment of ctebts will take a least
a year.
"So far as Turkey is concerned.” lie
said, “it is a blessing in disguise for
her to lose her European provinces, as
they were a source of continual ex
pense and trouble. The Turks are
essentially Asiatics and their destiny
now is the development of Asia Mi
nor. which is rich in oil and mineral
wealth, which simply needs intelli
gent working. Even on the European
side close to Uonstinople the oil fields
are of incredible richness. In fact,
Turkey will be the coming oil coun
try of Europe.
"Turkey needs money to straighten
herself out.” continued Bucknam
Pasha, "and Europe will undoubtedly
furnish it. I do not expect much
from the present Turkish Govern
ment. It is essentially a military dic
tatorship. It answered the purpose
for the time being, but must soon
pass away.
"Now that peace has been restored
one of the difficulties with which the
Turks are confronted is that after
the despotism they haye not the de
velopment capacity of a government
and it will be necessary to introduce
trained Europeans to take charge of
every department of State and teach
the Turks the science of government.
Financially, Turkey is in better con
dition than the people imagine. The
entire funded debt if* only about $40.-
000,000 and this comprises everything
There are practically no municipal
debts. Constantinople, in 1912. for the
first time in its history, borrowed
$5,000,000, yet the borrowing capacity
of the city, based on European stan
dards. is equal to the entire funded
debt of the Empire.*’
'Ten Cars of Cattle
Killed in Explosion
FORT WAYNE, 1ND.. May 13.—The
explosion of a tank car filled with oil
in a freight wreck near Fort Wayne
to-day blew a brakeman from the top
of a car and set fire to the- train. Ten
carloads of cattle were burned to
death.
Their frantic bellowing* Were heard
for miU>s. and farmers from the coun
try around, attracted by the bedlam,
helped the train crew battle the
flames.
ODOM CONCERN FIGHTS
RECEIVERSHIP ACTION
MACON, GA„ May 13.—The L.
Farter Company, of Odom, Gn., a
$100,900 corporation, against which a
bankruptcy petition has been lodged
"by four creditors whose claims aggre
gate $885, will make a fight against
being put in the hands of a receiver
before m Judge Emory Speer in the
United States District Court on
Thursday. The company claims that
it has paid one of the four creditors,
that another’s name was used with
out authority, and that It does not
owe the other two. It asserts its
complete solvency.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
poods. Try it!
MOB THREATENS COURT AT
TRIAL OF JERSEY STRIKER
PATERBON. N. J.. May 13.—Five
thousand Industrial Workers of the
World, most of them silk mill work
ers, swarmed about the court house
to-day when the trial of Patrick
Quinlan, one of the leaders, under In
dictment for inciting riot by inflam
matory speeches, was resumed.
The nu.b threatened to storm the
I
building, and hasty calls were* sent
for extra police.
OBITUARY NOTICE.
D. B. Jacks, 48 years old, and a res*
ident of Madison, Ga.. died at a lo
cal sanitarium Tuesday of an acute
affection of the heart. The body is
at the* Greenberg & Bond rooms, 35
Houston Street. It will be sent to
Madison for interment.
Mutiny Threatened by
Montenegrin Soldiers.
VIENNA, May 13.—Seven thousand
Montenegrin troops in and near Scu
tari, enraged at the decision of King
Nicholas to give up the Albanian city
at the cemand of the powers, are
threatening to mutiny and cont
inence a massacre of Albanians.
Word to this effect was received
to-day from C’attaro by the official
newspaper. Neue Freie Presse.
The dispatch further stated that
unless the troops from the interna
tional fleet arrive at Scutari within
the next 48 hours the Montenegrins
will probably be out of hands.
9 The arrival of the international
force at Scutfiri has b\en delayed by
bad weathm although the city has
already het^# surrendered io Admiral
Burney, coShaander-in-chief of the
war fleet which has been blockading
the Monteiegrin coast.
Company Stops Cars
In Cincinnati Strike
CINCINNATI, May 13.—Not a
street cir moved in Cincinnati to-day,
owing (o the strike tie-up, and the
official* of the Cincinnati Traction
Company announced that until a de
cision is reached by the carmen as
to wiether they will agree to arbitra
tion.proposed by Mayor Hunt and ac
cept'd by the company, no attempt
will be made to run cars.
'Ihe .union members are to take up
the arbitration proposition at a mee*-
ln: thfs afternoon.
the proposition is to end the strike
piiding the adjustment of differences
ty an impartial board.
Bells Put on Poison
Bottles in Hospital
ST. LOUIS, May 13.—Sleigh bells
tinkled in all the wards of the City
Hospital to-day. There was such a
merry concert as the nurses moved
from' place to place that the curi-
ositv of the patients was aroused.
They foundn that the belle were
chained around the necks of bottles
containing poisonous drugs.
Dr. Wayne Smith, superitendent.
Issued an order to put bells on the
poison bottles after Thomas Adams,
an attendant, had ben ipdicted for
airing carbolic acid to a patient by
mistake. The patient died.
POLICE AND FIRE CHIEFS
KILLED AS CHURCH BURNS
STRATFORD. ONT., May 13.—Po
lice Chief McCarthy, Fire Chief Dur
kin and Policeman Matt Hamilton
were killed this morning when the
tower of Knox Church collapsed dur
ing a lire. The.tower had been struck
by lightning.
SUNDAY BAN FOR LOCKER
CLUBS LIKELY IN MACON
MACON. GA., May 13.—The City
Council will decide definitely to-night
whether the locker and social clubs
shall be closed on Sundays. The City-
Attorney having already ruled that it
is within fhe power to enforce this
regulation, it is expected that Council
will order the clubs to close hereafter
8t la o'clock on Saturday night, not
to reopen until Monday morning.
Ponce DeLeon Rink Now
Open.
He Wanted Cover
And Took It.
One of the best known of Atlanta’s
younger physicians—it really wou.J
be mean to tell his name—is an en
thusiastic motorcyclist.
Sunday he rode his machine to Ma
rietta. It was late—very late—before
he started on the trip home. So late,
In fact, that when something went
wrong with the engine a few miles
out of town he waited in vain iLr
assistance to com?* along.
Painfully he pedaled the heavy ma
chine in to town, and dismounting
before his boarding house, crept up
to bed.
Heated by his exertions, he quickly
feli asleep, only to awake in a few
minutes, shivering with the c*el i.
Failing to find any additional cov< rn
in his room, he arose in the darkness,
quietly entered the "spare bedroom”
made a hasty grab at the bedclothes
and dragged them into hia room.
There he wrapped himself up an*]
blissfully sank into the arms of Mor
pheus.
It was not until the next morning
at the breakfast table that he learned
a young lady friend of the family
missing the last car to her suburban
home, had been placed in the “spare
room” for the night.
The young lady’s opinion Is not ol
record.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
goods. Try it!
Did You Ever
Hear of Such Luck?
“Ever notice how some people have
all the luck in the world at poker?”
asked a gentleman who is noted for
his love of poker.
“Coming down from New York not
long ago a number of us got up a
little game in the smoking room < f
one of the big boats. We were all old
friends, but interest in the game grew
until finally the stakes mounted in
the hundreds.
“I was dealing one jackpot and only
two men v^ere drawing cards'. The
opener took one. The other hesitated
he had been lucky all evening. Then
he spread his cards out face up. He
had a split .straight with a queen
lacking.
“‘Just deal me a queen, old man.,
he said.
"The opener scoffed.
" ’Great chance you have. I’ve got
three of the ladies to come in on.' lie
said. *
" 'What’s you bet i don’t get my
queen?’ asked the lucky one.
“ All you want, at ten to one.’
" ‘Done, for a hundred.’
"I dealt. The two bet around cau
tiously for a minute, then the man
with the split straight raised the
opener $100.
"’Call your bluff/ said the opener,
showing down his three queens.
“ ’And it’s my pot.’ said the other,
fllipping over a queen.
"That broke up the game.”
He Sure Was
Absent Minded.
‘Tve heard of absent minded p,-*'-
sons,” said the barber as he prepared
his implements of torture and shoved
a lather brush into his patron's mouth
to hush his protests, "but the strang
est case I ever knew of happened right
here yesterday.
"One of our best known lawyers,
who has been wearing a beard for
several years, dropped inland ordered
it taken off. After the operation ’
“Operation’s good!” interrupted the
customer, feelingly.
“ ,” proceeded the tonsoriil
sharp, unheeding. "I wouldn't have
known him if I had met him in the
street.
"But a stranger thing was that he
didn't know himself. When he got
out of the chair and looked at his
face in the mirror he turned around
to see who the strange chap was
whose face he saw in the glass.
"Shampoo? Face massage? Cold
cream? No? Thank you, Next/;
ATLANTA LOSES FIGHT FOR
BRITH ABRAHAM MEETING
BUFFALO, N. Y„ May 13, -.Al
though the Atlanta delegate* offered
$10,000 for entertainment of the nex*
biennial eonvenlion of (he Order Brith
Abraham, it a as voted this afternoon
te meet in Philadelphia. Delegates
considered strongly the invitation ex
tended from Atlanta. Samuel Dorf.
of Nett York, will be re-electod grand
master this afternoon
Every Woman
Knows That
instead of sallow skin and face
blemishes she ought to possess
the clear complexion and the
beauty of nature and good
health. Any woman afflicted
or suffering at times from
headache, backache, nervous
ness, languor and depression
of spirits—ought to try
BEECHAM’S
PILLS
the safest, surest, most con
venient and most economical
remedy known. Beecham’s
Pills remove impurities, insure
better digestion, refreshing
sleep, and have an excellent
general tonic effect upon the
whole bodily system. Theyhave
a wonderful power to improve
the general health, while by
purifying the blood, Beecham’s
Pills clear the skin and
Improve
The Complexion
Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25c.
No woman should fail to read the valuable
directions with every box.
«2T
BROU’S 1
IWJCCTlOW—A PEWMA-
NSMT CURE
L
most obau <ate - a*e* guaranteed
from 3 to 6 days no other treatment i
<iuired. s&i* bj> all fruifUte
CHAMBERLIN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE CO.
Atlanta New York Paris
We Are Pleased To Announce
Mrs. Marvin Is Here
Demonstrating
La Vida Corsets
Tlie coining of Mrs. Mar
parture.
Until now her visits liav
in tlic fall and early spring.
To have her with us now
of t he summer season is good f
The corset for the light a
be right, it must give the prop
dresses “hang” gracefully. A
that summer comfort is largel
mer corset?
It is along these lines tli
this is warranted not only by
the splendid models of LaVid
command. *
vin at this season is a new de-
e been confined to two a year—
for two weeks at the beginning
ortuue.
ud filmy summer dresses must
or support to* make such
nd what woman does not know
y a matter of the right sum-
at Mrs. Marvin will help you—
her corset knowledge, but by
a Corsets she has here at her
No, It Is Not GENERAL Information, But
Accurate and Definite Information That
The Mr. Foster
Free Information Service Gives
For instance, suppose you are considerng an automo
bile tour of Europe, or through any p.‘ft*t of America, for
that matter, these experts on traveling will fix up the
itinerary that is best—they have done the same trip before
you and know.
They will give you the day’s run and the night’s stop
ping- place for the whole tour like adding a guide to your
party, but this guide neither takes up a seat in your car nor
costs you one penny. This information on traveling is free
to all who will avail themselves of it.
A gen Is for Butter ick Patterns and Publications.
Chamherlin Johnson DuBose Co.
CHAMBERLIN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE COMPANY
ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS
A Sparkling, Brilliant Sale of Jewelry
We Do Not Know That Prices Have Ever
Been Treated in Any Such Fashion
A clearaway in the Jewelry
Section to-morrow!
And such a clearaway it will
be!
50c Belt Pins for ioc; $1.00
to $2.50 Brooches for 25c;
$3.00 Vanities' for 50c; $7.50
LaVallieres for $2.00, etc,, etc.,
etc., including watches, watch
fobs, hat pins, scarf pins, fan
chains and the like.
But properly to advertise
such a sale as this places us in
a dilemma. To do full justice
to the radical reductions, the
really unheard of prices, it
would seem that the jewelry is
not right and desirable, so
prone is the mind to judge
events by past experiences.
In this instance you must not!
You see below what the
prices are; the jewelry that they
stand for is exquisite—good-
taste jewelry, chosen because it
possessed the qualities that ap
peal to a woman’s refined sense
of ornamentation.
True, • there are some few
pieces that are a bit damaged,
but they are the rare excep
tions; they figured but slightly
in the causes of this sale.
It is a clearaway, a Chamber-
lin-Johnson-DuBose Co. clear
away—and so the prices!
This list below is not so long
as it might be. There are oth
ers and other pieces all reduced
on the same scale.
The saie gets under way with
the opening of the store.
1
2
•>
12
6
1(
14
15
10
4.
5,
24
25
11
.50 Belt Pins .$ .10
.25 Belt Pins 10
.75 and $1.00 Brooches .10
.00. $1.50, $2.00 and
$2.50 Brooches 25
.00 to $3.50 Lockets.. .50
.00 to $4.00 Brooches. . .50
.50 Brooch, genuine
Oriental stones .. . 2.50
.50 .Jade Enamel
Brooch with stones 1.50
.50 Bar of real eoiltl
and brilliants 1.00
.50 Oriental Brooch of
real amethysts .... 1.00
.50 Oriental Brooch,
enamel and stones.. 1.00
.50 Real Jet Beads... .75
.50 Dog (lollar, jet 50
.50 Dog Collar, jet . . . .50
.50 Necklace, gilt and
coral 1.00
.00 Vanities 50
.50 •! et Collars 75
.50 Pearl LaVallieres. 1.00
.00 Pearl LaVallieres. .50
.50 Vanities 10
.00 Amethyst Neck
lace and Cross 3.50
.50 Pearl and Bril-
iant Necklace 2.50
.50 Pearl and Bril
liant Brooch 3.50
(M) Silver Gilt and
Pearl Necklace . . . 3.50
.50 Silver (Jilt and
Pearl Brooch .... 2.50
.50 Cold Filled Fan
Chains 1.00
.50 Silver Mesh Bag. . 2.00
.00 Gilt Mesh Bag. .. . 2.00
00 Gilt Me.sli Bag.... 9.50
.00 Gilt Mesh Bag.... 9.50
30 Silver Mesh Bag. . 4.50
$ 5.00 Sterling Silver
Fobs $1.00
3.00 Cameo Brooches. . . .50
2.50Gun Metal Fobs. . . .50
3.50 -Jet Dog Collar 50
4.50 Nickel Watches,
men’s size 2.00
G.50 Gold Filled Ladies’
Size Watches 2.50
5.00 Silver Watches,
ladies’ size 2.00
14.50 Silver Chatelaine
Watch 3.00
16.50 Silver Chatelaine
Watch 3.50
8.50 Gold Filled Watch
es, ladies’ size .... 3.50
12.50 Gold Filled Enam
eled Watches 4.50
.25 Turquoise Beads. . • .10
.50 Turquoise Beads.. .10
7.50 LaA'allicre, An
tique silver and am
ethyst 2.00
12.50 LaValliere, an
tique silver and am
ethyst 3.00
.75 and $1.00 Pearl and
Gilt Necklaces 25
.50 to $1.50* Pearl
Beads 25
.50 and 75c Cuff Links .10
2.00 (,'uff Links 50
1.00 and $1.50 Cuff
Links 25
4.00 Cuff Links 1.00
1.00 Mesh Purses 25
.50 Girls’ and Bovs’
High School Fobs. . .10
1.25 Gilt and Pearl La
Vallieres 25
5.00 Pearl and Bril
liant Chain 1.00
.75 and $1.00 Broodi
es , sterling with
real stones 25
$ 1.50 to $2.50 Brooches,
sterling with gen
uine stones $ .50
6.50 Genuine Amethyst
Brooch 3.00
4.50 Genuine Amethyst
Brooch 2.00
6.00 Genuine Amethyst
and Pearl Brooch. . 2.50
7.50 Genuine Amethyst
and Pearl Brooch. 2.50
450 Genuine Turquoise
Brooch 1.50
.25, 50c and < 75c Scarf
Pins 10
.50 to $1.50 Scarf Pins .25
3.50 Brilliant Hat Pins 1.00
3.00 Brilliant Hat Pins .75
2.50 Brilliant Hat Pins .75
2.00 Brilliant and As
sorted Stone Hat*
Pins 50
1.00 to$1.75 Hat Pins.. .25
.25. 50c and 75c Hat
Pins 10
.75 to $2.50 Belt Pins
and Buckles . 25
1.50 to $5.00 Belt Pins
and Buckles 50
6.50 Bolt Buckles 1.50
.50 Brooches, gold
plate, silver, jet,
liars ana all shapes
and stones 10
8.50 Gold Filled Brace
lets 3.50
2.50 Gold Filled Lock
ets 75
2.00 Gold Filled Lock
ets 50
7.50 Gold Filled Lock
ets 2.00
4.50 Bracelet 2.00
2.50 Dress Shirt Sets.. 1.00
CHAMBERLIN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE COMPANY