Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 10, 1913, Image 7

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ITEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, 0A„ SUNDAY. AUCUST in, 1013. 7 n LONDON W. Orton Tewson Chester Overton O A O If (D Payl Pierre Rigmayx ll iYv lrC. il Marquis de Castefllane BERLIN C. de Vidal-Hondt Fritz Jacobsohn ROME J. M. E. B’Aquin George M. Bruce , SUNDAY AMERICAN'S SPECIAL CABLE LETTERS RECEIVED FROM ALL THE GREAT CAPITALS OF EUROPE LIVE LORD JOINS Prince I° hn Is Infant Terrible of Royal Family JAPANESE PLAN IN I! REAL PLOT Finds Dark Secret of Peeress’ Peerless Curls or tun CIS Film Play Proves a Success, but London Is Startled Because / It Contains an Idea. By ALAN DALE. Special Correspondent of The Sunday American. LONDON, July 26.—There’s a real lord in the production of “The Girl on the Film” at the Gaiety Theater. He Ls programmed as Arthur Welles ley, but in real life he is Lord Lan- gan, and—“a chaming chap,” as they say over here I mention this circum stance, you see, conspicuously, be cause it’s good to get anything real in musical comedy, even a lord. But the “nobility” can do no better than stick to C'orge Edwardes He not only provides brides for the nobility, but he gets the nobility into his cast. Lord Langan seems to be a pleas ant young man. Nobody could pos sibly guess that he is more than the program says he is. It is a great thing to be able to conceal one’s no bility, isn’t it? Mr. Wellesley does it. He is blithe and debonair, and he wears evening clothes, with a gray stripe down the trousers. Perhaps a gray stripe down the trousers is a secret emblem of nobility. There is a plot in “The Girl on the Film”—a real, solid, substantial, made-ln-Germany plot—and this is so unusual that George Edwardes pro vides a booklet for each person, set ting forth his plot in narrative form. You get so in the habit of “dropping In” at any old time to a George Ed wardes show that you never dream of a plot. Why a plot? Lest you should miss this one, Mr. George Edwardes places it under your very eyes, as it were. It begins like this: “Max Daly (Mr. George Grossmith), manager, author and actor, is preparing a new play for the cinema theaters, under the title of ‘Napoleon and the Miller’s Daughter,’ in which he is to represent Napoleon. His manageress and lead ing comedienne is Miss Euphemia Knox (Miss Connie Ediss).” Simple, isn’t it? Almost guilelessly Gaiety! The musical comedy Is rather in teresting, because it deals with the cinema business, which, as you know. IS quite a business. A “Vioscope” company arrives, and arrangements are made for taking the film of the picture drama, “Napoleon and the Miller’s Daughter.” You assist at the making of the film, and in the last act you see the very film cine- ma’d that you’ve watched in the ' making. This struck me as a mighty good idea and quite a novelty for a musical show. In fact. I’ve heard many people declare that they didn’t care overweeningly for “The Girl on the Film,” and I attribute this to the fact that it contains an idea. How Is it that a musical comedy dares to contain an idea? Moreover, this film-taking business * contains the plot. The leading lady, who is to play the miller’s daughter, throws up her part, and Fraddy, the heroine, takes her place and is rec ognized later by an Irate father. Freddy Is a very pretty girl, dis guised as a boy, so—you see your Gaiety! I apologize for even sug gesting as much as I have done of the plot. But I felt It was me dooty, inasmuch as “The Girl on the Film” is novel. It is almost sauerkrautishly Ger man in its presentment of sponsors— “from the German Rudolf Bernauer and Rudolf Schanzer, with music by Walter Kollo. Willy Bredschneider and Albert Sironay!” Poor George Edwardes, who has to make a bluff of doing something English for Eng lish people, heads all these names with “A” musical farce by James T Tanner.” The music Is not as good as the plot. It is not epoch-making by any means, but rather pleasant and enervating, as it were. It was being done in Berlin while I was there as the “Flimzauber.” I careful- lv avoided it there. Little Miss Emmy Wehlen, with whom I chatted recently, is very charming ideed as Freddy, the he roine, and is getting quite Gaiety- fled. 1 prophesy that she will be come a great favorite in London, be cause, like a clever girl, she seems to know exactly what London wan<s, i Connie Ediss is all to the fore again with her inexhaustible, warranted - never-to-wear-out cockney diale Jt and all her old mannerisms. Then f there is a somewhat handsome wo- * man called Madeleine Seymour, who is of the large and langurous type. Charles Maude, a relative of Cyril; George Barrett. Robert Nalnby and George Grossmith are the best of the men. Mr. Grossmith is an agile and os like himself as ever. All these people, if they dared to try and be * like anybody else, would be horribly unrecognized. If >ou once make a hit at the Gaiety you are O. K. for life, provided you never try to do anything different. Novelty and ver satility are fatal. You must be your self until you fall by the wayside. It’s a nice performance, take it all in all, and I’m bound to say I was agreeably surprised, for I had heard that it was not a nice performance. You see. it had a plot to contend with, and in London they are used to aim less philandering. Also, it is Ger man, and English is, of course, more popular. There was an ‘ad on the program that amused me a lot. Really, they are as “ad”-ridden and indiscriminate in London as they are in New York. This was the ad; “So-and-So, Inquiry Agent to the Nobility and Gentry, in trusted with divorce and delicate ne gotiations in all parts of the world. Go to him if blackmailed, or in dif ficulties.” I thought that almost w himsically amusing. But “The Girl on the Film” is bet ter than some of the Gaiety Girls, and It seems to have caught on here. anti-cholera serum found. Special Cable to The American. BARIS. Aug. 9.—Dr. Pierre Roux, di rector of the Pasteur Institute, an nounced before the Academy of Sciences to-day h’s discovery of an anti-cholera serum. Tie said monkeys infected with c holera had been perfectly cured by in- ulation with the serum. Prince John, youngest son of King George, taking a donkey ride ‘ 4 incog” in the London Zoo. Youngest Son of King George Is Fear and Joy of Monarch's Household, Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—A British pro totype of that well-known pair of juvenile stars, the Katzenjammer Kids, is nobody less than Prince John, the youngest son of King George of England. Th e young Prince is the infant terrible of that tight little HEART ISSTARTED AFTER VICTIM DIES French Physician Tells How Ac tion of Organ Was Resumed by Massage Treatment. iecial Cable to The American. PARIS, Aug 9.—Dr. Bouchon, fol lowing in the footsteps of Dr. Carrel, recently succeeded In reviving the normal action of the heart ten min utes after death. In a paper which he will read at the next meeting of the Academy of Medicine Dr. Bouchon says: “After a motor car accident I w’as called in and immediately perceived that the victim had been killed in stantaneously. Despite my assurance that there was no doubt as to his death, the friends of the victim in sisted that a desperate attempt should be made at resuscitation, and about ten minutes after the last breath 1 decided upon a surgical operation having diagnosed traumatic rupture of the heart. “I opened the thorax and In 50 sec onds laid the heart bare. I imme diately found about a pint of blood in the pericardium and a heart wound about two and one-half inches long on the inner surface of the left ven tricle. After suture, I proceeded to apply my method of reviving heart action. “After filling all the cardiac cavi ties with a special organic liquid, I made a rapid tacheotomy and Intro duced oxygen by the tracheal tube, while my assistant performed artifi cial respiration tractions. ‘I then began alternate auricular massage of the heart, and at the end of about a minute I clearly perceived that the heart had resumed tonicity, and, to my great surprise, it contin ued to contract by its own true ac tion. “Radicat pulsation then became perceptible, and after I had closed the thoracic flap the heart continued to contract for 35 minutes. At the end of this time the contraction* sudden ly ceased, and all subsequent efforts to re-establish them were in vain.” Mrs, Peter Hewitt Hostess of Nobility American Woman Is Shining Light of Society in Paris This Season. Special Cable to The American. PARIS. Aug. 9;—Mrs. Peter Cooper Hewitt is a shining light just now In society here. Some nights ago Mrs. Hewitt gave a charming dinner, which was fol lowed by a dance. Her guests in cluded the Grand Duchess Anastasia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, whose daughter is the German Crown Prin cess; Eugene Murat, Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., who has since left for Deauville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Car- roll, of Carrollton; Mrs. Frederic Bell, Mrs. Widener, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Cary. Lord Dudlow, W. Iselin, Prince Qhika, Mrs. Astor Chai.ler and Harry LehT. j King's Conscience to Take a Brief Rest | Lord Haldane, Its Keeper, Must Go to Montreal Soon to Address Bar Association. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—The Lord Chancellor, Lord Haldane, Is to de liver the annual address to the American Bar Association at Mon treal on September 1. This will necessitate his absence from England from August 23 till September 8. As Lord Chancellor, Lord Haldane is the keeper of the King’s Con science, the outward and visible sign of which is the Great Seal, without which no act of Parliament can re ceive the royal assent. The Great Seal travels with Lord Haldane in this country. But it must not leave the United Kingdom, there fore it is to be placed in the custody of three commissioners. CCSTT®rCW rKT MPttATio.ro-v ( ttx-ttr sE-srvtc*/’ island, and mothers and fathers are discussing his widely heralded pranks with horror or with glee, according to the varied temperament of mothers and fathers. The last story is the best. The newspapers have told it, and it must be so, that a certain lady of high de gree was invited to have tea with Queen Mary. It was a pleasant oc casion, indeed, taking tea with the Queen. But when the peeress arose from the table she discovered with horror that golden ringlets of hair, ringlets that had been highly praised by friends and sung by poets as her chiefest beauty, were lying on the floor at the back of her chair. The Prince, investigating the beau tiful ringlets, found out what had been lost to the discriminating eyes of friends and poets. The ringlets came off too easily. That is only one story. The other day he told his nurse, without so much persiflage, to go to a certain place where snow is unknown. The nurse, instead, went to the Queen with her complaint, and the royal mother ordered her son to apologize. He did. It was a royal apology. “You needn't go,” said he to the nurse. The boy Prince is very democratic, and when offered his choice of out ings he selects visits to public parks, donkey rides, elbow brushing with boys and girls of the middle and low er classes. The two other sons of the King of England, Prince Henry and the Prince of Wales, are comparatively staid youths. Henry is going soon to Eton, where he will live the life of the ordinary English schoolboy. The Prince of Wales will Join a cavalry regiment, with sorrow in his 19-year- old heart that he can not rear a mus tache. NOTED ACTOR WORN DOWN BY MACBETH FILM POSING Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—Arthur Bourohier, the well-known English actor and his wife, whose stage name is Violet Van Brugh, have just returned from Ger many, where they p'ayed "Macbeth” for cinematograph purposes. It is un derstood that the couple received $5,000 for their work, which occupied a week. High though the remuneration was, Mr. Bourchier found the task not so easy as he had expected it would be. He complains that ne had to get up at I o’clock in the morning In order to ateh the proper light, and that the ne cessity of waiting ubout in costume for hours was most unpleasant. BUSINESS CITY Mayor Would Have Capital Be come Industrial Center of the Empire in Near Future. Special Cable to The American. TOKIO, Aug. 9.—A bigger and bus ier industrial Tokio is the dream of Baron Sakatani, Mayor of the capital of the Japanese Empire. Osaka, great industrial city to the south, has made giant strides as a world port, and Mayor Sakatani is anxious that Tokio should show more rivalry to Osaka, which he calls the Manchester of Ja pan. The Baron is convinced that China offers a great field for Japanese en terprise, and that the commercial de velopment of Tokio is necessary so that Japan may take advantage of this field. Manchuria and Korea also loom up as possibilities for increased Japanese commerce, but in order to get this trade Tokio must devise some more convenient means of transporta tion than by Kobe or Tsuruga. < Would Open New Port. The first step, the Mayor thinks, should be the opening of a new port at Nayoyet«u, in Echlgo, north of To kio. In its commercial development Tokio suffers from the disadvantage of higher wages and more extrava gant habits of living. Tokio has been a city of consumption rather than of production, and it is the national center of ease and pleasure. “Everything comes to Tokio,” May or Sakatani says, "but seldom Is any thing sent from Tokio elsewhere. The disadvantages to be overcome are the high cost of fuel and labor If Tokio Is to secure the Chinese field for her manufactures, we will have to im prove our system of water commu nication and settle various phases of the local labor question.” Since the revolution in China the demand for foreign manufactures has grown enormously, and Japan should be in a position to take her share, according to Mayor Saltytanl. An im portant step to that end is the mak ing of Tokio a greater commercial and industrial center and cultiva tion of the friendship of China by pro moting mutual understanding between the merchants of both countries. Explore for Colony. t Scrutiny of the Pacific coast of North and South America and the South Sea Islands for the promotion of productive colonization, is the an nounced object of the Japan Explora tion Society, recently formed for the general purpose of inaugurating Jap anese exploration. The first expedition will leave in September fpr a two years’ cruise on a 115-ton schooner. The course for the cruise includes the Izu and Bonin Islands, the South Sea Islands, the coasts of Brazil and Chile and the Pacific shores of North and fc»outn America. The schooner will then visit Cuba and the coast of Africa, and later make her way through the Med iterranean Sea. On the homeward trip she will touch at several points in India and Australia. S. Takeda, a graduate of the Japanese Nautical College and a seasoned sailor, will be the captain of the little vessel. The Exploration Socle! v is com posed of a number of influential Jap anese and it has the support of Fleot Admiral Ito. SUITOR OF FI ISO PEERESS London Society Is Interested in Hamel's Attempt to Win Heart of Lady Victoria Pery. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—Whether an en gagement - caps the romance of Lady Victoria Pery, the fascinating daugh ter of the Earl and Countess of Lim erick, and Gustav Hamel, the avia tor, remains to be seen, but the mother publicly emiles on tho young flying man and the progress of the courtship is watched with interest. During the spring. the peer's daughter went to London to fly and the good looking Hamel escorted Lady Victoria cloudwards for $25. Soon afterward, society was mildly thrilled to see Hamel in the train of Lady Limerick and her daughter at many smart balls. Lady Limerick invariably asked for invitations for Hamel and he was always seen dancing and supping with the mother and daughter. Little serious import was placed on the strange combination until the last night of the opera. A prominent box party at Covent Garden comprised Lady Victoria and Hamel in front, with Lady Limerick chaperoning beamingly in the background. Since then gossip has engaged the young people, but no announcement is forthcoming from the family. Lady Victoria has been one of the most conspicuous girls in society since her debut. In one year she was engaged twice; once to Duke San Antona and afterward to the Hon. Luke White, Lord Annaly’s son. Both engagements were abandoned and the Irish beauty continued her career of heart breaking. | Young Marquis Still Loves Daisy Markham Northampton, Who Paid Actress $250,000 Heart Balm, Writes Let ters That Shock Family. Cuts Off Fat With Electric Instrument Scientist Shows London New Dia thermic Treatment Applicable Both in Medicine and Surgery. Special Cable to The American. LONDON. Aug. 9—Professor Nagel - schmidt, visiting London, performed two operations yesterday for the Lon don Hospital, using his diathermic treatment, which is applicable to both medicine and surgery. In the for mer, electric rtiys of a very high temperature pass through the effected parts and in surgery the current reaches the tissues from the edge of a knifelike instrument and acts as a bloodless cautery. Professor Nagel- schmidt has used the treatment for reduction of obesity and says that forty patients thus treated were de prived in the aggregate of 500 pounds of unwanted fat. Market for Old Coins Is Hit by Discovery Laborer In Rome Unearths Huge Quantity of Money Buried 2,500 Years Ago. Special Cabie to The American. ROME. Aug. 9.—There was a bad slump this week in the market for old coins, which has been very active, ow ing to the interest taken by King Vic tor Emmanuel. In digging a trench here for a sewer, a laborer struck and broke a largo clay pot. A stream of coins poured out. He filled his pockets and ran away, but was caught. Altogether there w r ere 7,GOO coins of the early consular period, dating back about 2^500 years, and all well served. Americans Rent Deauville Cottages Prince of Monaco There Announces He Will Make Trip to United States. Special Cable to The American. DEAUVILLE. Aug. 9 The most bril liant season this resort has ever had Is now at its height. All the villas are occupied; many are rented to Americans Mrs. K. Moore is entertaining the Princess Guy PeFauclgny Luelngo, Countess Louis DeGontant Boron, Comte and Comtess Jean Desegonzac. Mrs. Potter Palmer, Daniel G. Reid, Mr. and Mrs J. J. MacKay, Mrs. Oli ver Belmont. Mr. and Mrs. Craig Biddle also have villas. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, who are at Normandy Hotel, are going to LeQuesay, where the Duchess of Marl borough will Join the party. The Prince of Monaco left Havre aboard his yacht Hirondella for a cruise to the West Indies and North America. He will visit New York. Bernard Shaw Shies At Yankee Lionizing Dramatist Says He Admires Country, but 18 Afraid to Pay It Visit. Special Cable to The American, LONDON, Aug. 9.—The actions of the young Marquis of Northampton, who recently paid Daisy Markham, actress, $250,000 as a balm for her wounded affections. Is giving his noble relatives a great deal of concern of late. It is an open secret among members of liis family that the Marquis is still in love with the young actress. A few days after his refusal to bid her good-bye in the high, court the day of the trial he sent her a note bearing the seal of Northampton, which was full of good wishes and hopes for her future and profuse apol ogies for his apparent ill treatment. He impressed on her that what he had done had been due to great pres sure and was not dictated by his heart. According to one report current here, he has been meeting the actress, but the young woman declined to re new their former friendship. It is known that three weeks ago ho sur prised and shocked his sister, Lady Loch, by announcing that he intended to rent the old family estates and give up society for three years. Vienna Sees Sun After 6 Weeks’ Rain Trainloads of People Are Leaving City as Fair Weather at Last Arrives. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—George Bernard Shaw has grown too modest to visit America. “There is no greater admirer of the United States than I am,” said Mr. Shaw, “and I have been debating for some time how I could sneak into the country withoyt attracting the at tention which is so odious to me. I am afraid they would lionize me, ani I am getting too old for that sort of thing. “Only recently a New York woman sent me an offer of $2,500 if in event of my coming to New York I would spend the first evening at her house.” Chinese Porcelains Bring Record Prices Equestrian Group Sells for $1,207, While Nanken Vase Is Pur chased for $1,470. Special Cable to The American. LONDON. Aug. 9.—A sale of Chi nese porcelain at Christie’s to-day realized about $20,000. Patrklge paid $1,207 for an equestrian group of three and $945 for a familleverte vase, enameled. 14 1-2 inches high, Kang- He period Blazler gave $1,470 for a Nankin cylindrical vase, 30 1-2 inches high. A famille-verte cylindrical ewer, 18 inches high, Ming period, went to Woodward for $1,207. VIENNA. Aug. 9.—After six weeks of rain, the sun has returned and trainloads are leaving the city every day for Ischl. The engagement Is announced of Alfred Piccaver, first tenor of the Imperial Opera, formerly of Al bany, to Fraulein Johanni, a lead ing Viennese actress. Mrs. Boalt, who donated the law building to the California Univer sity. Is here to carry Marguerite Melville and a musical party to Switzerland, where they will Join the musical colony. Visitors here Include Mrs. Frank and Miss Dorothy Wells*, Miss Kath erine Waldo, of Chicago; Mrs. and Miss Edgar, of Brooklyn; Mrs. Hall, of Boston; H. Martin, of River side, Cal.; T. Wilkon, of Oakland; M. Listlc. of New York; L. Tucker, of Boston; Mr. and Mrs. Lathrop and family, of New York; Dr. and Mrs. Bayonne, Dr. and Mrs. McFadden Hackeback, Mrs. Frledlander and Mrs. Heym&n, of New York. $100,000,000 Tax On Childless in France Every Family With Less Than Three Children Must Contribute to Sum. Special Cable to The American. PARTS, Aug. 4.—A hundred mil lion dollars annually is the estimated revenue from the proposed tax on persons not contributing to the in crease of population in France. Statistician Bertillon declares there now are in France 1.350,000 celibates, 1,800,000 couples without children, 2,050,000 families of two children, 2,400.000 families with one child. All these will be required to pay, as it is proposed to tax every' citizen who reaches th<. age of 45 without three children living, or who Reached the age of 21. The tax will be $0 per child for each one under the minimum. Austrian Monarch Speaks Eleven Languages Well—Emperor William Ranks Second. By MARQUIS DE CASTELLANE. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Aug. 9.—Statistics Just published here by an investigator show that Francis Joseph, ot Aus tria. Is the greatest linguist of all reigning sovereigns. He speaks elev en languages fluently. They ore Ger man. French, Hungarian, Czech, Pol ish, Servian, Croatian, Ruthenlan, Dalmatian, Roumanian and Italian. All these living Languages he needs for practical purposes within his own patchwork empire. It was in view of preparing him for his high position that as a boy 70 years ago he was taught the tongues of all his subjects. He also acquired a gentleman's knowledge of Greek, Hebrew and Latin. German Emperor Second. Tho German Emperor comes sec ond as a royal linguist, being master of German. English, French, Russian, Polish and Latin. He holds, however, that the German is the only language in which to express a great mission. Czar Ferdinand of Bulgaria knows all the Slavic dialectB, but not many languages. He speaks French, Eng lish, German and Russian. King Pe ter of Servia is similarly equipped. King Nicholas of Montenegro is not a linguist. He has, however, & suffi ciently liberal education to have been able to act as tutor for his own five daughters and two sons. The Greek King Constantine’s linguistic attain ments are not. of a high order, al though he speaks French, English and German in a halting way. Alfonso Speaks Only Three. King Alfonso of Spain was edu cated Hke an English prince, more at tention being given to sports than languages. He speaks French, Eng lish and German. The Czar of Rus sia is not much better equipped ex cept In Slavic dialects. The three worst linguists are the Pope, the King of Italy and King George of England. Plus X never ex pected to be Pope and was not trained for the position. King Victor Em manuel has not the language faculty. King George thought that the educa tion of an English gentleman consist ed in being able to read Horace and ride to hounds. Had he not the ven erable authority of Oxford for this? Tolstoi Works To Be Destroyed in Russia Holy Synod Decides His Posthumous Writings Are Unorthodox—Czar Approves Order. Special Cable to The American. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 9.—A dis patch from Moscow states that the Holy Synod has decided on the de struction of the posthumous works of Tolstoi on the ground that they in cluded unorthodox comments on the Old Testament. The Czar has approved this de cision in spite of the protests of rela tives of Tolstoi. New Italian Cruisers Found Unseaworthy Board at Loss to Remedy Defects, but No More Will Be Built. Special Cable to The American. NAPLES, Aug. 9.—It is practically admitted officially that two new 5,- 000-ton Italian cruisers—Nino RIxio and Marsala—are unfit to encounter a heavy sea. A technical commission Is sitting here to consider measures which may be taken in order to correct the se rious defects in these two vessels, but up to the present nothing has been decided upon except that no more cruisers of this type shall be built. •ASrrsi'" 00 '/ 1 a ’ “ Kose Lear Delightfully perfumed Healthful as fresh air— so pure it floats—no grit. Borated. Guaranteed pure. 10c a box. Made only by Talcum Puff Co. Miner* anrl Manuiacturers Bueh Terminal Building Brooklyn n n New York ell pre- BURNS TO TAKE CURE TO RECUPERATE STRENGTH Special Cable to The American. PARIS, Aug. 9.—William J. Burns, head of the detective agency of that name. Is in Paris awaiting the arrival of his wife and daughters from Lu cerne. Then he will go to Aix-Les- Bains for cure. He says he came to Eu rope three months ago to recuperate, but Instead of being permitted to carry out this Intention he has had three of the busiest months of his career and now he must attend to his health and regretfully cancel his Chautauqua lec tures. lie loaves for home next month. How toLose Your Tan, Freckles or Wrinkles (From Woman's Tribune.) A day's motoring, an afternoon on the tennis ground or g-.lf links, a sun- \ bath on the beach or exposure on a sea trip, often brings on a deep tan or vivid j crimson or, more perplexing still, a vig : orous crop of freckles A very neces- ; sary thing then Is mercolized wax, which . removes tan, redness or freckles quite easily. It literally peels off the af fected skin—Just a little at a time, so there's no hurt or Injury. As the skin comes off in almost invisible flaky par ticles, no trace of the treatment Is shown. Get an ounce of mercoljzcd wax at your druggist’s and use this nightly as you would coJd cream, washing it off mornings In a week or so you will have an entirely new skin, beautifully clear, transparent and of a most delicate , whiteness. Wrinkles, so apt to form at this sea son, may be easily and quickly re moves! by bathing the face In a solution of powdered saxolite. 1 ounce dissolved in witch hazel, Vi pint. This is not <>nl\ a valuable astringent, but l as a bene ficial tonic effect also.—(Adv.) TATESPRING OtOER NSW MANAGEMENT A high, oool, healthful retort, in the heart of th* Cumberland Mountains of East Tenm unexcelled climate. Modern hotel—one thousand park and grounds—eighteen hole golf course—saddle horses—fine flvc-ptooe orchestra for concerts and dancing and that most famous of all American Mineral Waters, TATE SPRING NATURAL MINERAL WATER always a help, nearly always a cure in In digestion, T w7 nervousness and all ailments attributable to im proper functions of the bowels, liver and kidneys. Rev. Dr. E. E. Hoss, Bishop Methodist Church, Nashvftfls, T*mv* •ays; “It gives me the greatest pleasure to eay that I regaro Tate Spring water as the best remedy for all disorders of the stomach, bowels, liver and kidneys of which I have knowledge.* Enjoy the healthful water at the spring or hare it shipped be yew home. For sale by all druggists, in sterilized bottles, filled and seaied at the spring. Send postal to-day for Illustrated booklet, giving rates, location and description of this ideal place for the summer outing. Address TATE SPRING HOTEL CO. S. B. ALLEN, MANAGING DIRECTOR, TATE SPRING, TENN. ATLANTA MINERAL WATER CO., LOCAL DISTRIBUTORS.