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THE ATLANTA UEOKU1AN ANL) NEWS, WEDNESDAY. MAY J4. 1913.
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‘Give Women Time and They’ll
Be Sorry They Ever Had Right
to Vote,” Says Ex-Champion.
DENVER, May 14.—John L. Sulli-
* an, ex-world’s* champion of the prize
ritifr. has given out a new set of
aphorisms that he wishes the world
t<* read - "and read prayerfully”—a-
he expresses it. in an interview in this
city. He says:
Children are not what they were
twenty-five years ago.
Women are afraid of being
mothers on account of losing their
figures.
There’s too much highfalutin'
nonsense to-day about raising
children. •
Money is a curse and it curses
those who have it.
We shouldn’t be too severe on
the rich, for we don't know what
mental suffering they go through.
I would rather be John L. Sulli
van that John D. Rockefeller.
Drink never abused anybody:
it’s people who abuse drink.
Give children practical, not
theoretical education.
Every man hr>s to sow wild
oats—and sometimes women do.
Give women time enough and
they'll be sorry they ever had the
right to vote.
Knows “Where He’s At.’’
John L., who says he always knows
"where lie's at" since he stopped try
ing to reduce the supply of strong
drink, tweive years, ago, took a deep
whiff of the mile-high atmosphere,
and leaned back in an easv chair it
the hotel, and waded into an inter
view with as much earnestness as he
tD'ed to display when delivering short-
arm jabs. •
"We’re always reading about the
* rime of bringing children into the
world of poverty.” he said. "That’s
nonsense. Kids that have to hustle
’■' itn life from the start male* better
iv* n and womert than the gold-spoon,
silk-glove variety.
"I havert’t much patience with all
this new -fangled nonsense about chil
dren. People have been born and
raised ip the old-fashioned way for
centuries, nnd I think the. output of
nld .times wu - superior to that of
‘he present. of thi- modern
.theore'ica; nonsense for me!
< Men ‘Teed Planters.”
"And another thing, there's on!y on'*
real school—that’s experience. Of
* otirse. the men are the original seed
planters, and when their harvesting,
time comes they often mow down c
lot of innocent women and children:
t but you might talk your head off. it
' would do no good—they have got to
have the genuine experience."
‘if woman suffrage, John L. said:
■•Women have the right to vo.e out
here in (.’dorado because they w- re
smart enough to put it over on the
men. I don’t see what women want
political offices#anyway.
"I've had a pretty eventful life and
I’ve had mine, all right. 1 haven’t
toched a drop of liquor for twelve
years but I had co learn ii was a los
ing game bef< iv I quit. More people
die of eating than they do of drink,
and you don’t hear of any anti-eating
unions, do you?”
The ex-chnmplon sayn he is in
nearly svmpjrhy with the people of
<’al; f *rni • against the Japs.
“1 know what 1 am talking about.
I've been in Japaj It’s a land of
h-rr. blossoms and immorality, and
our own William Jennings Bryan
would have learned a few things 1'
he had staved in Sacrumcmo long
enough.”
Powers' Troops in
Scutari Keep Order
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
VIENNA. May 14.—An internation
al force of marines, bluejackets and
soldiers from the fleet which ha-'
been blockading the Montenegrin
eoaa; entered Scutari to-day and put
an end to fears that mutinous Monte
negrin soldiers would commit a mas
sacre because King Nicholas gave up
the city. *
Military law was established.
ENGLISH SEND $100,000
POLO PONIES FOR MATCH
NEW YORK. May 14.—Forty-two
English polo ponies, valued at more
than $100,000. arrived from England
to-day on the liner Minneapolis. They
will be used bv the English polo play
ers In their match with the Ameri-
c a ns June 10 and 14.
Twenty-four of the ponies are the
personal property of the Duke of
Westminster.
Harvard, '13, Broke;
Graduation in Peril
i _____
«’AMBRIDGE, May 14.—The Har
vard Senior Class is in financial difti
cultles, with class day only a month
away, The stringency Is the worst
ever experienced at Harvard, and
the class officers are burled in the
work of scraping together enough
money to make fhe 1913 exercises
as glittering as tlios; of previous
years.
Call after call to the Seniors have
not succeeded in luring real money
from half of the class.
Ensign Who Defied
T. R. to Be Restored
LOS ANGELES. May 14.—Joseph
Austin, the ensign on the battleship
South Dakota wo defied the then
President Roosevelt about five years
ago and married his sweetheart at
Honolulu instead of waiting, as the
President commanded, until he had
attained a lieutenancy, will he re
stored to rank and receive full nay
for the years of his enforced retire
ment from the navy.
Plans 1-Day Flight
Across the Atlantic
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
SYDNEY. N S. May 14 An
nouncement was made to-day by Al
exander Graham Bell inventor of
the telephone, that F. C. Baldwin
one of his assistants, will attempt to
cross the Atlantic in an aeroplane
starting from Halifax A prize, of
$55,000 has been offered the first
man that can accompliih the feat
in seventy-two hohrs.
"The Journey must lie made all in
one spurt." t<aid Bell Starting from
Halifax in the morning we ought ts
arrive in Ireland for a late dinner.
BURNETT FAVORS RIDDLE
FOR GADSDEN P0ST0FFICE
GADSDEN. ALA.. May 14. Con
gressman John L. Burnett to-day rec
ommended S. W. Riddle for postmas
ter at Gadsden. Mr. Riddle is a
prominent business cotton buyer and
broker.
Kaiser Gives Rebuke
to Ex-King Manuel
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
BERLIN. May 14.— Former King
Manuel, of Portugal, has incurred the
i wrath of Emperor William, it is said.
| The Emperor has withdrawn his in
vitation to the King to attend the
wedding of the Princess Victoria
Louise to Prince Ernest of Cumber
land this month.
The Kaiser discovered that Manuel
had been deeply interested in. if he
had not instigated, the recent royal
ist uprising in Li ebon. A compro
mising letter signed by Manuel was
j found on a Portuguese officer, it is
(alleged. His crime in the Kaiser's
! eyes was that the letter was dated
from the Castle of Sigmaringen. the
home of Manuel's affianced. Princess
Augustine of Hohenzoilern.
If you have anything to sell adver
tise in The Sunday American. Lar
gest circulation of any Sunday news
paper in the South.
Fire Drives Mercer
Pupils From Beds
MACON. (1A„ May 14. Fire In the
Mercer College dormitory at 2:30
o’clock this morning drove 200 col
lege boys from their beds. Scantily
clad, they camped on the campui
until daylight.
The loss by fire amounts to about
$3,000, but the damage by water will
be mluch larger. Many of the stu
dents lost their clothing The dor
mitory kitchen was wrecked
Professor J. F. Sellers announced
this morning that over 200 students
would have to get their meals else
where until repairs were made.
SON OF MAKER OF C. S. A.
FLAG TO GET U. S. JOB
WASHINGTON. May 14.-Colin M
Selph. of St. Louis, stands n fair
chance of being |>ostniaster at St.
Louis. Mr. Selph is a direc t descend
ant of Robert Mills, the architect who
designed the Treasury building here
and the Washington monument
He is the son of Captain Colin M
Selph. who. as quartermaster general
of the Confederacy, made the first
Confederate flag
30-MILE INTERURBAN LINE
PLANNED FOR CHATTANOOGA
CHATTANOOGA. TKN.V. May 14
A special session of the James County
Court will be held next Mondav to
c onsider s franchise for the East Ten
nessee Trsc.tkin Company to build i
30-rnile interurban line between
Chaltanopga and Cleveland, Tenn.
The ot her .count ies through which tiie
road will pass have already acted fa
vorably.
Eckman’s Alterative
FOR THE THROAT AND LUNGS
Eckman’s Alterative is effective in
bronchitis, Asthma. Hay Fever,
Throat and Lung Troubles, and In
upbuilding the system. Does not
l contain poisons, opiates or habit
forming drugs. For sale by all lead-
; Jng druggists. Ask for booklet of
cured cases and write to Eckman
Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for
additional evidence. For sale by all
of Jacobs’ Drug Stores.
IT’S POOR ECONOMY
to use cheap stationery. Letters written on distinctive
stationery are sure to be read. Our line of
STEEL ENGRAVED and EMBOSSED
Letterheads, Envelopes and Business Cards
Are in a Class Alone. Write for Prices ami Samples
.J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO.
47 Whitehall St. ATLANTA, GA.
Guthrie Approved
As Envoy to Japan
WASHINGTON. May 14. The ap
pointment of George W. Guthrie, of
Pittsburg. Pa., to be Ambassador to
Japan was approved by the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations to
day.
George \V. Guthrie first gained
prominence in the public eye as tlie
"reform” Mayor of Pittsburg. In 190k
he defeated Alexander M. Jenkinson,
the "millionaire” candidate for the
mayoralty, and from that time until
The end of his term in 1909 he kepi
riie politician-* of Pittsburg in a ((in
stant turmoil.
FOREST FIRES IMPERIL
PENNSYLVANIA VILLAGE
* JOHNSTOWN, PA.. May 14—An
area more than ten miles long and
nearly as wide, including practically
all the forested are: oetween South
Fork and the Black Lick Creek, north
and east of here, is on fire to-day.
Residents of Rutherford, h hamlet in
the district, are reported in flight.
SOUTHERN SPINNERS MEET
TO DISCUSS TARIFF BILL
CHARLOTTE. N. C„ May 14 —The
Southern Hard Yarn Spinners are
holding a largely attended meeting in
Charlotte this afternoon. It is un
derstood the I nderwood tariff bill is
t'le subject of debate. The sessions
;• re behind clo-ed doors.
GOLF GLASSES
| Any color ground to order, as per
{ your prescription, in shapes to best
> fit your face for comfort and field
' of vision John L. Moore & Sons,
J 42 North Broad Street, Opticians.
HHiCHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND. A
End I pa! AaL your for A
<ht-che*-ter’« l»ltmoif Br*Ad/i\\
•HI* i" Red *"4
l ho»es. sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/
Take no other. Ray of roar ▼
Druilat. Av, wCIII.C irPA.TFR'*
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for t5
years k nown as Best. Safest. A N a vs RelUblA
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERWHFP5
CHAMBERLIN=JOHNSON=DuBOSE CO.
ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS
CHAMBERLlN-JOHNSON-DuBOSE CO.
An Elegant Exposition of the New Fashions in
Summer Dresses
In Which All the New Fabrics and All the New Styles Come in for Proper Appreciation
We might, and very properly, term this an opening. Tt shows all the credentials of such an event. It holds
a greater number of interesting featu res than any formal opening Atlanta has ever been invited to at this season.
Chiefly because there have been evolved this season more interesting fashions and then because our dress buyer,
just returned from New York, has outdone himself. He chose with a free hand,lavishly,in a way that,now that the
dresses are here, insures every woman a dress to her liking. As he forcibly puts it. “This is tlie greatest line
ever brought to Atlanta,” and the confident way he* emphasizes it is very impressive. But you shall decicie that.
In this display are:
Simple Morning Dresses, More Elaborate Afternoon and Party Dresses and Still
More Elaborate Evening Dresses
But they are not the dresses that former summers have brought!
The materials are different, the sty les are different, and, we warrant, to
your pleasure.
The cry is for novelties. Even the least expensive little frocks have the ap
pearance of exclusiveness. It may he a matter of a bit of colorful embroidery,
*>r the use of net forming a yoke, or the drape of a skirt or the way a sleeve is set
in, or it may he due to the fact that the waist is in some dark shade and the skirt
white.
For morning and street wear there are beautiful dresses of crepes, of linens, of ratines, of
voiles, and each of these is divided into many kinds—plain and figured crepes, ramie and Frenc
linens, striped, checked and plain ratines and the like in seemingly endless variety.
Among the evening dresses, wherein the Paris touches become more numerous, the voile
and cotton crepes claim first attention. They are plain, they are embroidered, they arc
in stripes and checks and “snowflakes,” and among these you will find the hand-made
tucks, the hand-embroidery and the wonderful shadow*, cluny, inaerame and Venetiai
laces that women delight in.
But reading of these things will not suffice the woman whose summer wardrobe
is first in her thoughts. See!
We would but emphasize here tin* elaborate way we have gone at the dress ques
tion this summer.
There are more and prettier dresses t o choose from than you have grown ac-
customed to expect.
Prices Go Very Gradually From $5.00 Through $7.50 and Up
to $25.00, $30.00 and $35.00
And there will be many a surprise in store for you, too, after you have admired
dress to note the price ticket. Dresses look to be worth more than their price.
-See!
But again we say-
A Fine Buy Brings $25 Dresses at $18.50
The material is crepe, that holds a high place
among the materials fashionable this season.
You will see at once that they are $25 values.
Dainty, altogether cha ruling!
One style is of white cr epe with a wide band of
Dresden crepe—several colors—at the bottom the
skirt, outlined with a fold of solid color to match in
with the Dresden coloring; the same colors show in
the collar and cuffs and the little vest and the satin
belt, which is set off wit h a pearl buckle.
Not enough of these to make delays safe; just a
little lot very fortunately bought.
New Spring Coats and Wraps
For afternoon and evening wear with light dresses the
high novelty right now and an inexpensive novelty is the Ter
ry doth coat.
These are in plain shades—usually light—and in two-
toned effects. You will like them.
They are short, “blouse-v” affairs, priced at $8.75 to
$15.00.
Then come the richer and more luxurious moire and char-
meuse wraps in white, black and colors.‘and the ratines in col
ors and the white serges in splendid variety of trimmings and
lengths. These from $15 to $35.
And the automobilist and traveler will enjoy the prepara
tions made for them.
Splendid linen coats at $3.95 and $4.95; mohair, pongee
and rajah coats at $7.50, $10 to $18.50.
Chamberlin=Johnson=DuBose Co