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HEARST’S SUNUAY AMERICAN, ATUANTA, UA.. SUNDAY, AUGUST 10, 1913.
5 A
S1ILZLR TO CULL
TRDOPS TO 1
IF
Will Use Force of Arms if Attempt
Is Made to Oust Him
From Office.
Light Music Leads
In Park Programs
Piedmont and Grant Park to Hear
Bands at 3:30 o’Clock Sun
day Afternoon.
LOOKS HAGGARD AND WAN
Articles Calling for Expulsion
Because of Campaign Fund
Scandal Are Prepared.
ALBANY, N. Y., Aug. 9.—Articles
of Impeachment of Governor Sui
ter are being: prepared by Senator
Robert N. Wagner and Speaker Smith
at Saratoga to-night. They will be
presented to the Legislature probably
soon after the Frawley committee’s
report is submitted Monday even
ing.
While Wagner and Smith, during
a. brief visit here to-day and a long
secret conference to-night, declined
to outline the case, the indictments,
it is believed, will follow very close
ly this forecast:
First, that the Governor commit
ted perjury in swearing that he re
ceived neither directly or indirectly
more than $5,240 for campaign con
tributions.
Second, that he wrote the Farmers’
Loan and Trust Company he had
authorized Secretary Sarecky to ac
cept contributions, and that Sarecky
had deposited in that bank $12,000
during the campaign.
Third, that the Governor used a
number of concealed campaign con
tributions to speculate in Wall street.
The Governor appeared at the
Executive Chamber to-day looking
more laggard and wan than he did
at the time the Mignon Hopkins suit
was brought. “I will make no state
ment until I have the full stenograph
ic report of the Frawley committee
before me,” he said.
A friend of the Governor declared
that the Executive would resist with
the strength and force of the Na
tional Guard any attempt to remove
him from office.
The Frawley committee report
probably will not recommend im
peachment, but that it will lay before
the Assembly and the Senate the
facts.
It will dwell upon the failure of the
Governor to account for thousands of
dollars received by hi*p for campaign
purposes and ignored in his sworn
statement of receipts and disburse
ments filed with the Secretary of
State.
Belmont Says He Gave;
Doesn’t Know How Much.
SARATOGA, N. Y., Aug. 9.—Au-
gust Belmont, who arrived here to
day on his return from a European
trip, was interviewed this evening
concerning a $5,000 contribution which
he is said to have given to Governor
Sulzer’s campaign.
“I have no knowledge of such a
contribution,” said Mr. Belmont. "I
undoubtedly contributed, but as to
the amount and circumstances of said
contribution I can not say without
referring to such records as my sec
retary may have. I can offer no
opinion as to the impeachment of
Governor Sulzer, as I am entirely un
familiar with the developments of the
investigation by the Frawley com
mittee.”
The following are the programs
announced for the concerts to be held
at Piedmont and Grant Parks Sunday
afternoon at 3:30 o’clock:
Piedmont Park—March, “T. M. B.,”
King; overture, “Light Cavalry,”
Suppe; selection, “Bohemian Folk
Songs,” Vogner; bolero, “Spanish
Gaiety,” Eno; waltzes, “Enchanted
Night,” Moret; selection, “The Grand
Mogul,” Luders; Argentine Tango,
"La Rumba,” Brymn; medley over
ture, "Remick’s Hits, 1913,” Lampe;
selection, “Gypsy Love.” Lehar;
march. “King Bombardon,” English.
Grant Park—March, “Colonel Gale,”
Tomas; medley march. “I’ll Get You.”
Marshal; song, “When It’s Apple
Blossom Time in Normandy,” Gif
ford; selection, "Sunny South,’
Lampe; society tango, “Hacienda,”
Blese; two step, “Waiting for the
Robert E. Lee,” Muir; waltzes,
“Dream of Heaven,” Bauer; para
phrase, “Silver Threads Among the
Gold,” Danks; medley overture,
“Good-bye, Boys,” Vontilzer; chaao-
teristic, “The Dixie Rube,” Allen;
march, “Troopers’ Tribunal,” Fill
more.
C. E. Barber, band master of the
Fifth -Regiment band, is director of
the park music.
« F l et ’ P® 11 Sodety n GREETS
Science Finds Game’s Bugaboo JUNIOfi BUB
Fair Players Scoff at Scare
Miss Pattie May Holland beginning a drive. The popular
young Atlanta golfer is shown addressing the ball. Note the pe
culiar position of her feet. The three smaller pictures show dif
ferent positions of the feet taken on one drive and will illustrate
the theory that golf tends to make larger and uglier the feet of
Raw Food Club for
Plain Corn on Cob
Organization Is Devoted to Man’s
Prehistoric Diet and Abolition
of Kitchen Range.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., Aug. 9.—
Dedicated to the purposes of resorting
to man’s prehistoric diet, eschewing
palatable dishes from the kitchen
range and resolved to abolish the
functions of the modern cook, the
Minneapolis Raw Food Club came
into existence here to-night.
The meeting was enlivened by an
impromptu debate between President
Dee Atkinson and Secretary G. Heis-
ser as to the relative merits of raw
corn, when eaten off the cob, or when
previously scraped from the cob. The
verdict rested with the club members
and samples of shelled corn, in its
raw state, were passed around. Then
a cob was produced, and each of the
herbivorous disciples took a munch
for himself. The cob exponents won.
A raw food banquet is to be given
by the club soon.
CASE TD REACH
women.
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Benjamin J. Symons of Savannah
Will Probably Be Chosen to
Head the Council.
Warrington and Norris Girls
Star Witnesses to Be Called
by Prosecution,
■
"
MACON, Aug. 9.—Large delegations
from all councils of the Junior Order
United American Mechanics in Geor
gia will attend the State convention
of the order to be held in Macon
Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday at
which convention Benjamin J. Sy*
mons, of Savannah, will be elected
State councilor.
Symons will succeed Judge Walter
W. Shappard, the present State coun
cilor. who Is alro a member of one
of the Savannah councils. That two
Savannah members of the order
should successively hold the highest
office In the order in the State is
thought to be a high compliment to
the personnel of the Savannah organ
ization.
The convention, which is held ev
ery two years, will convene in Odd
Fellows' Hall.
At this convention it is thought that
John Stofer, of Savannah, will be In
dorsed for the position of national
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Owes Her Good
Health to Duffy’s
jMgl
MRS. MART CARMODY.
•‘About a ynr ago I down with a vory
heavy cold and I had a bad pain under my shoul
der blades. I was under the care of dlffenot
doctors but did not improve. I was so weak I
could hardly stand, and I could not keep any
thing on my stomach. A druggist near where I
lived advised takina a tablesroonful of Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey with an >gg in milk before
meals, and after following his advice I found
that I could eat; I overcame my weakness, and
gradually gained In weight. 1 believe that Duffy’s
Pure Malt Whiskey as a tonic for run down people
is a great thing, and I recommend It to my many
friends in Brooklyn and New York. I can not
orals* Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey too much.'*—
Mrs Mary Catmody, 116 N. Elliott Ave., Brook
lyn. N. Y.
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey
should be in every home as a safen’a-d in emer
gencies requiring a stini ■■
ulant. and ready to be
taken on journeys for the
protection It affords the
traveler.
ItR regular use by the
weak and ailing gives re
markable results 1 r.
health and strength a*;
well as proper weight !>>
stimulating the stomach
to better action, and In
consequence nourishing
the entire body.
BE SURE YOU GET DUFFY'S
Th, pmdn. Duff,', Pure Malt Whl»kcy 1. sold
H. SKAT ED BOTTI.ES ONI.Y. I.» druKtots. irocira
2>d d«lrn. Should our for .n, re..on
...T,* : to w-urr It In their looellty. we will
hlee it shipped to them from their nearert dealer.
“”es, prepaid «••*& *» »<vomj>inj order) at the
follOTlM prices^ Bottle,, $4.30
6 Large Bottles, $5.90
12 Large Bottles, $11.00
rv.rtfv's Pure Malt Whiskey should be In every
u«wwTsnd we make the above announcement so
yJu may become familiar with a source of
“Tumlt hr erpreea order, poetofn-e order, or cer-
tmed clwek whisker Cornpenj.
„ White St.. Rochester. -N- Y.
’
SAN FRANCISCO, Au*. 9.—That
the fate of Maury I. Diggs, fomier
State architect, charged with violat
ing the Mann white slave act, will
be In the hands of the Jury in the
United States District Court next Fr’-
day is the opinion, of the opposing at
torneys in the case to-day. The pros
ecution expect# to conclude Its case
on Tuesday, after which the presen
tation of the defense’s evidence will
require two days.
The Government's case will be con
cluded with the testimony of the two
star witnesses, Marsha Warrington
and Lola Norris, the two Sacramento
girls whom Diggs and F. Drew Cami-
netti are charged with transporting
to Reno for immoral purposes.
The defense in its cross-examina
tion of the prosecution’s witnesses has
shown that it will endeavor to estab
lish that the girls went of their own
free will, entering into the escapade
as a sort of lark, and heartily enjoy
ing themselves from the time they
left Sacramento until they were ar
rested by Chief of Police Hillhouse
from the bungalow where they were
living with Diggs and Caminetti in
Reno.
Diggs will be called to the stand
in his own behalf and his comrade.
Caminetti, who is under indictment
on the same charge, also will testi
fy for him, according to the present
plans of the defense.
Diggs’ attorneys also intimated at
the conclusion of yesterday’s session
of court that Mrs. Diggs, wife of the
defendant, will be called to testify
for her husband.
Southern Chinese
Rebels Take Nanking
Report Yang-Tee Valley Indicate
Government Is Making Little Prog
ress Against Revolutionists.
Special Cable to The American.
PEKIN, Aug. 9.—It Is reliably re
ported from Nanking that the South
ern Chinese rebels last evening oc
cupied the Government house there
and are again in command of Nan
king.
Consular and other reports from
the Yang-Tse Valley Indicate that
the Chinese Government is making
little headway against the rebels at
Shanghai. Th e railway from Tien-
Tsin to Pukow 1r not yet opened.
The revolt at Chung-Klng, in the
province of Sze-Chuen, Is regarded as
offsetting the minor Government suc
cesses of the week, but the rebels
have no central organization.
WIFE AND DAUGHTER GONE
WHEN HE RETURNS HOME
Returning to his home. No. 137
Spring street, after an absence of
several days, W. W. Mills, an em
ployee of the Southern Book Com
pany, found his wife, Mrs. Edna Mills,
and their 8-year-old daughter gone.
He has asked the police to search for
them. Mills declares that he knows
of no reason why they should have
left home, and says he thinks they
have gone with a woman friend to
Charlotte, N. C,
BUFFALO BILL’S SHOW
TO BE SOLD AT AUCTION
DENVER, Aiiff. ■'9.—Judfre R. E.
Lewis, In the Unif&i States District
Court, to-day ordered the property of
the Buffalo Bill Wild West and Far
East Shows sold at public auction in
Denver August 21.
‘If Motive Is Right, Where Is the
Sin?’ Asks Negro Preacher
Who Took Furniture.
Jeff Peters, a typical negro preach
er who might be “Old Black Joe”
himself, from all appearances, can not
understand why he should be charged
with a crime just because he broke
into the luxurious home of the late
Major Livingston Mims and Mrs.
Mims, the Christian Science apostle,
at No. 445 Peachtree circle, and took
a number of chairs and tables and
an amount of valuable bric-a-brac.
He had planned to furnish his church
at Riverside with the costly furniture
from the Mima home.
The old negro was arrested Satur
day night by Detectives Davis and
Rturdivant and was brought to police
headquarters defiant.
“If the motive is right, where is the
sin?” he asked loudly and devoutly,
over and over again.
The Mims home has been closed
and boarded up since the death sev
eral months ago of Mrs. Livingston
Mims. Her husband, former Mayor
of Atlanta, dilettante and patron of
local art, literature and the social
niceties, has been dead several years.
The house seldom was occupied
after his death. Mrs. Mims, a national
leader in Christian Science w r ork, a
pupil and close personal friend of
Mrs. Eddy, being away much of the
time. She died in Boston five months
ago.
TAMPA BUSINESS MEN
TOUR GEORGIA IN AUTO
Mother Goose Ball
Rouses Suffragettes
‘Anti’ Demonstration Only Shows
Need of Reform, Says Mrs. Alice
Gardiner Whippier.
MACON, Aug. 9.—A party of Tam
pa business men, who are touring
Georgia in an automobile, are spend
ing a day or so in Macon. They will
leave to-morrow morning over the
National Highway for Atlanta. In the
party are T. C., W. M. and E. P.
Taliaferro, C. E. Tuft, B. Martin
Withers, W. E. Hunt and T. F. Gil-
lett.
Men’s Linen Suitsj
STODDARDIZEDi
The price of STODDARDIZING Men’s Woolen Suits
is ONE DOLLAR-bui we STODDARDIZE Men’s
Linen or Palm Beach Suits for FIFTY CENTS.
A Wagon for a Phone Call.
We pay Charges (one way) on Out-of-Town Orders of $2 or more.
Stoddard
126 Peachtree Street
Bell Phone. Ivy 43
Atlanta Phone 43
Dixie’s Greatest Dry
Cleaner and Dyer
i.
§i| ■ %
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—Mrs.
Alice Gardiner Whippier, a noted
Washington suffragette, has issued a~
philippic against the recent anti-
suffrage Mother Goose ball given by
Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, at Newport.
Mrn. Whippier says that Mrs. Fish‘3
attempt to stop a world-movement by
a spectacular presentation of nursery
rhymes shows the world’s need of the
new woman. Mrs. Whippier con
tinued :-~
“Who were these guests of Mrs.
Fish whosa wearied minds needed re
freshment? It will seem to a casual
reader of the list of names that the
persons who wear jewels of such
enormous value that a cordon of po
licemen has to be -drawn around the
wearers as they dance are not much
heckled or disturbed by the problems
of the business world. The most se
rious problem which confronts them
is a sociological one. and has to do
with those plain clothes men and the
policemen outside.”
m •
mm. $ v> ,
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Doctor Says That Peculiar Positions Assumed by
Pedal Extremities of Devotees of
Pastime Threaten Size.
Kern Would Rid
Navy of Snobbery
Senate Leader Declares Officers
Should Realize There Is No No
bility in United States.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.—Senator
Kern, majority leader of the Senate,
renewed to-day his attack upon the
American naval officers.
“When I referred the other day to
‘perfumed naval officers,’ ” said Sen
ator Kern, “I had reference to the un-
American snobs who discriminate
against their equals because they ara
in the ranks of the enlisted service. I
believe that the great majority of our
naval officers are too brave and too
thoroughly American to forget that
this country has no order of nobility
to which every worthy man is not
eligible.”
Senator Kern also denied for the
Secretary of the Navy, Josephus Dan
iels, that the latter ever expressed a
sentiment indicating that it was his
opinion that officers and sailors
‘should mess together.”
DR. ROUGLIN RETURNS.
Dr. Louis C. Rouglin. who has been
on a vacation for the last two weeks,
will return to Atlanta Monday. Dr.
Rouglin traveled extensively through
out the East.
Somebody has scared golfers of At
lanta, particularly affecting the wom
en who pursue the ancient game.
The word has gone out that the feet,
which in golf are twisted and turned
and strained more than any other
portion of the body, are likely to suf
fer and maybe—horrors—to grow big.
So far it i3 nothing but a theory
where Atlanta Is concerned. You
wouldn’t dare term the feet of the
girl golfers at East Lake or Brook-
haven anything else than neat, dainty
or beautiful, more beautiful, divine,
the adjective altogether depending
upon the girl and the way you feel
about her.
But in spite of the present beauty
of the feet of Atlanta golfers, there
is a trepidation. A very cruel medi
cal man has said that the twisting
and turning of certain muscles of the
feet and ankles has a tendency to
maye feet, especially those of young
girls and women, to spread and be
come flat.
Science Watches Feet.
Feet, at the best, are unconvention
al things, behaving according to their
own will. Nobody has ever thought
to govern their whims, until now,
when science has said that they will
bear watching.
Even the scoffers in Atlanta’s golf
set are sorry that it has been thus
announced. Golf, they say. makes
girls forget feet and everything else,
makes them nonchalant and natural,
makes them real girls. And now, they
lament
Watch, for instance, Colonel
Bogey’s lady in action. Very naive
and pensive she bends over the warty
little ball when she addresses it. pre
paratory to the drive. Then sudden
ly her calm pose is transformed into
an eager straining. Her club is swung
backward over her left shoulder, her
lower lip is caught tensely between
ner teeth, her feet are flung from
their-sedate station into a grotesque
tangle.
The club swings across, and from
behind her right shoulder it is swept
in almost a complete circle.
Feet Catch Jerk.
As It sweeps it catches the ball
and drives it down the course. As
it sweeps, her body turns with a jerk.
Much of the jerk is caught by the
feet, which serve as the pivot for the
turn, and which are moved from the
first unusual position to another as
unusual. She holds the second po
sition for several seconds, uncon
scious. while she watches the ball
as it flies and bounces over the green.
Milady has driven.
The feet, you see, bear the brunt
of much of the stroke. Most At
lanta girls on the golf course wear
loose shoes, or scant pumps, within
which the feet move easily and nat
urally. The problem has been work
ed out without much deliberation, for
who before this has ever considered
the feet as the subject for thought.
But now
councilor. At the las»t national con
vention, which was held in June at
Fabyans, N. H., Stofer was elected
national council warden, and his
friends think he Is eminently quali
fied to fill the higher office.
At present the officers of the State
council are Judge Walter W. Shap
pard. of Claxton and Savannah, State
councilor; Benjamin S Symons, of
Savannah, State vico councilor; T.
D. Ridley, of Macon, junior past State
councilor; J. E. Lovelace, of Atlanta,
State secretary; O. H. Puckett, of
Atlanta, State treasurer; A. B. Coog-
Ier, of Riverside, State conductor:
John W. Kersey, of Macon, State war
den; E. S. Horton, of Macon State
outside sentinel: Rev. W E Porter
of Brunswick, State chaplain.
Everything 0. K.
With your appetite—your |
digestive organs—your
liver—your bowels.
If not, you should
try a short
course -
#5
s\
It
helps Nature
overcome such ills
as Flatulency, Indiges-
Itlon, Constipation, Bilious
ness. Cramps and Malarial
I Fever. Get a bottle to-day
IMPROVED ROOFLESS PLATE
Made of gold or aluminum, no
gums, no roof. Truly Nature’s du
plicate, made only by us. Perfect
fit or no pay.
GOLD CROWNS
WHITE CROWNS
BRIDGE WORK
20-YEAR GUARANTEE
We will continue to make our Whalebone Ever-
stick Suction Plate for $3.00. The lightest and
strongest plate known.
EASTERN PAINLESS DENTISTS
UNTIL AUGUST 15th
■ R. R. FARE ALLOWED 2S MILES
Southern Suit & Skirt Co.—Atlanta, New York—Southern Suit & Skirt Co.
Grand Final Clearing
Linen and Ratine Suits
They Sold Up to $16.50===On Sale Monday Morning
CHOICE
$A.%
THE MOST REMARKABLE REDUCTION
OF THE SEASON—these elegant Suits of fine
Ratine and Linen, beautifully made in all the
latest styles—delightfully appropriate for vaca
tion and early Fall wear—every one in stock,
and they sold up to $16.50, will go on sale to-mor
row, while they last, at one price
All Fine Lingerie Dresses
That Sold at $25 to $35 Go Monday at
CHOICE
A final clearance of the most elaborate and
beautiful creations brought out this season.
Of course the number is limited, but the se
lection and range of sizes is fairly good. Not
a dress in the lot worth less than $25, and up
to $35, for quick clearance, to-morrow ....
More Extraordinary Reductions
$ 9.85 to $12 Lingerie Dresses, choice . $4 95
$12.50 to $15 Fancy Voile Dresses, choice $5.85
$10.00 to $12 Fancy Voile Dresses, choice $4.95
$ 7.50 to $9.85 Fancy Voile Dresses,choice $3.50
$10 to $12.50 Ladies’ Motor Coats, choice $5.45
$6 Lovely Ratine Novelty Coats, choice . $1.95
TDEMODELING has already begun on our second and third floors. When com-
1 ' pleled we will occupy the entire three floors, making the Southern Suit & Skirt
Co. the largest exclusive women’s apparel store in the South. There will be
no interruption to business during remodeling.
Southern SuitS: Skirt Co.
“Atlanta's Exclusive Women’s Apparel Store”—43-45 Whitehall Street