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XHL A l i.A \ i A (ibUKUiAA AND .\MVb, W DD.N L16DA i, MAI 21,. lLio
Real Beauty Is Spiritual, Asserts Miss Hanson
a +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
PDR BALLOT IS Declares Sincerity Is the Key to Stage Success
Millionaire Convert Stages Pro
duction in Washington to Aid j
Cause Win Advocates.
21 -
pqtinl
M r
N>
N«
WASHINGTON
blow win struck i
here yesterday w h
Hmmmick. milliona
flfcutt'. produced h
'Woman." at th*
ater. A hundre
prists and Washlnjtoi
and girls took part Ir
was in the nature of
ilgned to depict the
lation* of woman. Th
ten by Mrs. Hemmlck. wh
lied In the drama lor seven
Woman was presented
and bound. Her attitude
that she had Just awaken
deep and long sleep. A* v
to her from the wings an
i unlqu
suffrap
pla:
1 The
suffra
w ome
and
play
E
r
! I
Work in South, Described at the
Washington Conference,Shows
Big Membership Increase,
hi
d e -
tribu-
w lit -
rial -
i! years.
shackled
suggested
e<l from a
oice called
§j _fl|B d told her
that It was Freedom site sought. Obe
dient. she set out In pursuit. She
called to him and he paused. While
she was appealing to him to deliver
her. man stepped upon the stage Be
tween man and woman immediately
arose a controversy.
Into this dialogue the author has
worked many of the arguments for
and against woman suffrage, pre
senting them in a new frame.
Woman was unable to make any
impression upon man. so she appealed
again to Freedom, who told her she
wanted Justice, who was sloeping
With a wave of the hand Freedom
dispelled the mist from beforf the
eyes of Justice, who then awoke, just
II* Ignorance, with her twins, Preju
dice and Sin. came onto the stage.
Justice, now fully awake, asked Wom
en w hat she had accomplished
In answer woman led a pageant
across the stag--, representing herself
in history- Among the characters
shown were Qiteen Elizabeth, Char
lotte < *ofda\. St Hilda. Deborah of
Biblical fame. Lady Jane’Orey. Sapho
and Madame Cure, the discoverer of
radium. Justice displayed the live
liest interest in the procession and
when the last of the marchers moved
from the stage she struck the shac
kles from woman and the play was
at an end
Cornell Men Prove
Good Breadwinners
ITHACA. N. V.. May h- It is
found that 1.060 Cornell undergrad
uates are partially self-suppporting.
and their combined earnings a year
amount to $164,006. or $1731 per capita
by figures compiled by an organiza
tion of working students
This sum represents 32 per cent of
their college expenses, which amount
ed to $573,794. Only 123 students are
earning their room and board.
Of individual earnings. 3Sft men
made between $100 and $200. 21M
between $200 and $300, 51 from $300
to $400, 31 between $400 and $500,
snd 42 more than $600.
WASHINGTON. May 21.—Before
thousands of representatives from all
parts of the earth as^emblfd at the
thirty-ninth session . of the General
Conference of Seventh Day Advent
ists here in a 24-day session, the
Southeastern Union Conference of
Seventh Day Adventists, composed of
the States of Florida, Georgia, North
Carolina, South Carolina and the
eastern half of Tennessee, delivered
its reports to-day through its presi
dent, Elder C. B. Stephenson, of At
lanta.
As the South has always been con
sidered an Important field by Seventh
Day Adventists. Elder Stephenson
rilence throughout his entire report.
Elder Stephenson reported that
during the quadrennial session there
had been a growth in membership in
his union conference of 778, and that
the total membership at the present
time was 2.556.
There are 45 ministers now in the
territory of the Southeastern Union
and 32 licensed missionaries. In ad
dition to these laborers there are 66
evangelistic colporteurs, making a to-
CABLE
NEWS
Important Events From All
Over the Old World Told in a
Few Short Line*.
CAPITAL GUI CLUB
T
Chinese Loan Oversubscribed.
LONDON. May 21.—The subscrip
tions for participation in the $125,-
00ft,000 loan to China were closed to
day. the loan being far oversub
scribed.
Turkey Told of Persian Plan.
CONSTANTINOPLE, May 21.—The
Porte to-day was notified by the Ger-
.man Embassy to be prepared to
recognize officially the Anglo-Persian
convention relative to England s con
trol of Southern Persia. The conven
tion will be ratified by various powers
of the Near East.
Firebug Syndicate in Hamburg.
HAMBURG, May 21.—An incen
diary syndicate has been discovered
in this city, and the police to-day b?-
. . , . _ , Jan a search for its members. In the
had the attention of the vast au- ® Hgt few dayg over $-,00,000 damage
has been done by incendiaries in th*
business district.
tal of 143 workers in the territory
Three sanitariums are being oper
ated—the Atlanta Sanitarium, at At
lanta; the Oraysville Sanitarium, at
Graysville, Tenn.. and the Florida
Sanitarium, at Orlando.
ARMY JOB FOR W. P. BOYD.
WASHINGTON. May 21—William
Alexander Boyd, of Georgia, was nomi
nated to-day by the President to be a
first lieutenant in the medical reserve
corps of the United States Army.
Spanish Workmen to Strike.
CORUNNA, SPAIN, May 21.—A
general strike, to go into effect to
morrow. was called here to-day by the
affiliated trades unions. All work
men havj promised to obev the order
to walk out. and the authorities fear
that the city will be completely tud
up.
Germany Frees English Spies.
GLATZ, GERMANY, May 21.—Cap
tain Trench, of the British royal ma
rine service, and Bertrand Stewart,
an English lawyer, two of the three
Lease Signed Takes Over Brook-
haven for One Year With Privi
lege of Renewing or Buying,
500 Churchmen at
Fellowship Dinner
The Capital City Club wil!
session of the Brookhaven
Peachtree Road on June 1.
terms of a lease which was
take pos-
Club on
under the
executed
Tuesday between the owners of the
property and a committee from the
Capital City Club, beaded by Robert
F. Maddox.
The lease will run for a year, with
a privilege of renewal for two years
at the end of that time and the addi
tional right to purchase the property
at the end of three years for $100,000.
to be paid in first oiprtgsge 5 per
cent bonds.
Brookhaven will in the future he
known as the Capital City Country
(Hub, will be conducted on the same
plan as the city house and for the
exclusive benefit of the members of
the Capital City. The new home of
the club is one of the most magnifi
cent country estates near Atlanta.
There ife a fine dub house, golf links,
tennis courts and large lake.
The committee from the Capita!
City Club which carried on the nego
tiation* with the ow ners of the Brook
haven property comprises Robert F.
Maddox, chairman; Edward * H. In
man, John E. Murphy, Jack J. Spald
ing. Dr. \V. S. Elkin. Preston S. Ark
wright and W; G. Humphrey.
Spontaneous fellowship talks, none
longer than two minutes, marked the
supper given to 500 Presbyterians at
the Kimball House last night.
Speeches were impromptu. The sub
ject of fellowship, union and co-oper
ation was the theme of each.
Presbyterian brotherhood and the
follow ship It inculcates wa.« explained
by Dr. A. L. Phillipe, secretary of the
Sunday school board of education. Dr.
Will W. Derby, of Clarksville. Ark.,
predicted far-reaching results by the
brotherhood work in his State. Dr.
T. S. Merrill, of New York, outlined
fellowship work in the metropolis.
Moderator Russell, of the United
Presbyterian Assembly, emphasized
the manhood of minister-’. Dr. Stan
ley B. Roberts, of Minneapolis, prom
ised Atlanta's hospitality would never
be forgotten. James Morrison. Con
gressman from Indiana, and A. T.
Sharp advocated co-operation as ex
emplified by team work. Dr. Rufus
W. Miller, a famous Sunday school
worker and class organizer, wound up
the symposium with a talk on inter
denominational fellowship.
English "spies” liberated by Emperor
William on Monday, left here to-day
for Berlin en route to London. They
had been Imprisoned in the fortress
here.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
goods. Try it!
In everything—rin eating and drink
ing—as well as in emotion.
"Feel, but don't give it out to ex
haustion. It’ll make a nervous old
maid of you.”
Must Care for Body.
"Of course, to be beautiful, also—”
this emphatically—"there's physical
care to he taken of oneself. It's
wrong to neglect one's body. But
beyond taking care of health and th<
natural beauties of hair, form anr.
face, and dressing oneself proper^,
nothing else is required. If the tin-
necessary time spent oh the toil't
were devoted to getting fresh air and
improving one’s mind and soul, th.*
expression the face would naturally
acquire would more than repay the
difference."
Finally Miss Snook said:
• If a woman has looks, it’s up cO
the Lord. She hasn't got a thing to
do with it, and it's almost sacreligt-
ous for her to claim the credit.”
First Carload of
Watermelons Received
Great, big, ripe, luscious watermel-
ictually melt in
Miss Olndvs Unnson Snook.
Reserve Banks Urged
As Cure for Panics
WASHINGTON. May 21 A syu-
tem of ''receive hanks" throughout
the United States to operate in such
a manner that financial panics will be
* thing of the past, was advocated
by Senator Owen, of Oklahoma,
chairman of the Senate Banking and
Currency Committee, at a visit to the
White House to-day.
"Panics arise primarily from money
stringency at certain points," said the
Senator, "particularly at crop-moving
time. The security for this financial
aid should be the credit of the United
States, the power of the reserv e banks
and the notes of, the farmers them
selves."
What is beauty?
Gladys Hanson Snook, all In white
and sitting in a big porch chair at
her country home on Cleburne Ave
nue. discussed the question interest
ingly.
"Actual beauty le a matter of spirit
ual growth, bodily cleanliness and
habitual kind thought*," she said.
"Quicker than anything else, sympa
thy and womanliness draw. Beauty
never gets an audience except for the
first moment if an actress hasn't got
those two qualities* she's a flat failure
at everything except sitting still ancj
looking pretty.
"Or.
like Th
he considered, "doing part:
arriage waits, my lord.' "
Even Friands Deny Vanity.
Miss Snook, or .Gladys Hanson, h
Special 35c Lunch
Served in Our
Balcony Tea Room
At the Main Store
Menu Thursday, May 22d
Prime Roast Beef
New Mashed Potatoes
Sliced Tomatoes Hot Rolls
Coffee, Sweetmilk or Buttermilk
•For 35c
JaCOBS' Balcony Tea Room at the Main Store t» orie of the coolest
and mo»t delightful place* in town to take lunch All of the cook
ing i* prepared in our own clean, sanitary kitchens. • and it is
delicious, wholesome home cooking which you will genuinely enjoy
Our prices are most reasonable, whether you take the Special Lunch
or a la Carte service
Balcony Tea Room
Jacobs’ Pharmacy
At the Main Store
6 and 8 Marietta Street
she is best known, is the Atlanta girl
who has fcored such a big theatriehl
success all over the ecniutry in the
past six years. She has been with
Frohman. Sothern and Belasco, and
will be with the latter again next sea
son. She is at home now* shaking
hands with old acquaintances, as ; t
were, and even her beat friends de
clare ?-he hasn't "got the big-head;'*
which is unusual on the part of most
best friend*.
"To put it over—stage or other
wise" Miss Snook laughed—"a per
son’s got to BE SIN''EKE. She can t
fake sincerity and ‘get by.' but if sh«?
really downright is. INSIDE, why, ant
could have a crooked nose and folks
would raye over her beauty! They
would < all it *h type,* maybe, hut
they'd be convinced to their shoe f-*ole*
that she was the very real article."
Feels Strongly on Subject.
' Excuse my slang,” she apologized,
making a grimace at me, "but i fed
strong about the subject."
"How to get real beauty?—well. let's
see.” she plumped her head down on
one hand.
"In the first place. I should say"—
after a minute—"start right out to
working on your soul. Take a figura
tive plow and root out all the unkind
thoughts and meannesses m you. Then
sow in regular, real understanding of
other peop'e. and encourage it to grow
to tree s'Zf Get love for everybody—
people and children and cats and dogs
—and don't bo afraid to show It. Just
be a radiator for kindness—that’s the
best 1 know how to put it.
The Uses of Solitude.
"Go off alone for a part of every
day. Get out where trees grow, or
take h book and go to your room—
but he alone. Deny yourself to peop 1
for that time, no matter how gv.od
friends they may be. without it’s a life
land death cn*e—or they're pa>.nn ; -;
through the city for the last \inie in
the real fiesh. The. reason for being
alone is because, if you're the real
sort, you* leave so much of yourself
around ptaees -a little bit with Mary
and a iUtie bii with John and Sally
and other folks—a little hit more in
the railroad station and so on—that
| you sort of have to get heart-recuper-
atci.
"Another reason for being alone Is
it gives you a . ha nee to take stooi*.
of your qualities, and find out from
S headquarters just what you reallv
j are—whether you're a faker ar giving
out the actual goods. It’s a mighty
j fine thing for people tp look them
selves straight in the face when tin
make-up’s not on."
She was gazing off down ihe str e
listening to trees and things.
Must B« "Dead in Earnest.”
• Be in dead earnest about what
i you're doing, that's another thing
! and work overtime at it. That will
| get ihe. blue ribbon at a regular
j beauty show every time. It w:.l
make your mind quick, your eyes
I shine, and pm a tennis swing in the
! way you walk. It'll straighten your
shoulders and make you happy. A .id
whoever saw a hupp) person who
j wasn't beautiful, even if hr happened
to be a man! I've wm some med-
I beauties like that m>self! And don't
ever believe that an active life wil:
fade good looks. It heightens them
if you're careful about getting enough
rest of mind and body.
Miss Snook also'advised moderation
NERVOUS PEOPLE
Those who dread I
having teeth extract
ed, filled or crowned, |
should call at my of
fice, and I will demon
strate to your entire!
satisfaction that I can [
do it "Painlessly.”
NO PAIN
to You
Rhone M
1298
Lady Attendant and |
Ladies’ Rest Room.
*5 00 A SET
M
Y
O
W
N
I
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V
E
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T|
I
Ol
N
DR. WHITLAW
PAINLESS DENTIST
ENTRANCE
1-2 WHITEHALL ST.
Over Atlantic and Pacific Tea |
Store.
KK1 UKKN'i -;s ,\1y work and I
Central Bank and Trust |
Corporation.
Keely’s^Ziegler’s
Fashtonable Footwear /or VFomen
Our exhibit of Keely-Zieglers of
fers such scope for selection, that you
are certain to find precisely the model
to meet your requirements, whether
Pumps, Oxfords or Sandals—whe ther
Black o rRussia Calf, Patent, Satin
or Canvas.
One of the newest
things is a Colonial
Pump. These are prov
ing a popular favorite
among smart dressers,
i hey are shown in Pat
ent Kud and Dull Calf;
Louis or Cuban heel.
Colonial
Pump
$5 Pair
English
Pump
$4 Pair
Just received a new
shipment of the popular
English Pumps and Ox
fords. The Oxfords
can he had in either lace
or button. The leathers
are Tan. Kud, Dull Calf
and Patent.
White City Park Now Open
73 1-2 Whitehall St.
KEELY’S
Bears the
Signature of
■Watermelons that
your mouth!
The first melons of the season!
Sounds food, doesn't it?
Well, there's a whole carload of
them for sale at the Central of Geor
gia melon yard. T. F. Goodwyr. &
Co., 28 Inman Building, know how to
tickle the palates of the public.
Therefore they specialize in melons
during the delightful melon season
This carload contains two of the
finest varieties—Tom Watson and
Florida Favorite. They are the par
ticularly luscious. taste-like-more
kind. They look big to the observer,
but mighty small to the consumer.
Atlanta will eat watermelons this
week. There is no doubt of that. At
lanta enjoys Tom Watsons and Flor
ida Favorites, and the warm weather
demands this moat delicious of fruit.
T. F. Goodwyn & Co. know how to
buy and handle watermelons. This Is
the first carload of the season but
between 3no and 400 Cars will follow.
—Advt.
KEELY'S
KEELY'S
ompany
A. Three Days Sale
of
Children s Washable D
resses
all are new; all are fresh; all stylish
A Two Price Event on
2nd Floor
at
Child ren s Dresses
98
250 DRESSES FOR CHILDREN
c each
ages 2 to 14 years
—ages are from 2 to 14 years, about fifteen
styles are represented. The Materials are of
Percales. Ginghams. Lawns of colored stripes
on white grounds, also a full line of pure white
lawns, variously embroidery and lace trim
med. Full plaited skirts. Some of these
worth up to $1.75
are
ic each
Children s Dresses
at
ages 2 to 5 years
400 VACATION DAY DRESSES
—ages 2 to 5 years. About eight styles in the
assortment. Materials are of Percales, Ging
hams and Chambrays. Self and braid trimmed.
Plaited skirts, long waisted styles. Light and
dark shades in profuse variety. Some of these
are worth up to 69c.
WE HAVE THE HATS, TOO
SPECIAL HAT
SALE for the benefit of
the little people.
STRAWS AND
LINGERIES. Some
are flower trimmed: some
are lace trimmed; others
are ribbon trimmed; all at
$1
one price in
this sale . .
eely Lompany
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought