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HKAKST’S SinviJAT AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, I'D*.
American Wife of Turk Happy jj
He Is High in Diplomatic Life
min nnni iumti - *•* +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
ANU bUULMAIL Will Let Son Choose Own Faith
Physician in BrookHne, Mass.,
Gives Up Lucrative Practice
for the Simple Life.
Dr. Dennett, Who Has Long Had
a Platonic Friendship for Mrs,
Chase, to Live With Them.
Madame Blaque
Hoy, American
wife of the
Ottoman Min
ister to Court
of Austria, who
visiting
old home.
Be pure according to the teachings
•f Christ.
Be peaceful according to the teach
ings of Tolstoi.
Be thoughtful according to the
teachings of Emerson.
BOSTON, Sept. 6.—These are th#
three cardinal principles that induced
I>r. H. Lincoln Chaae. a Brookline
physician for 30 years, to give up his
lucrative practice and remove to East
Alstead, N. H., where he intends to
establish a community life with klm
dred eouls and will prove that the
above principles can be lived and
make for happiness.
Associated with him are his wife,
Mrs Margaret Chase, and Hartley
Dennett, commonly known as her soil
mate. Already Mr. Dennett and Mrs.
Chase are located there, where they
are preparing to receive the doctor as
•oon as he can conveniently leav»
Brookline after selling his attractive
home, No. 22 Kennard road.
Dr. Chase is an authority on the
training of children, and will give the
results of his long experience to the
town's people. He will be also in
every civic improvement of the vil
lage, and will aim to carry, as far as
he can, his practical ideas of what
makes an ideal neighborhood.
The presence of Mr. Dennett in his
home has caused some comment, but
they share with each other the same
views about life and both teach them
by example and precept.
Dr. Chase has been identified with
the Board of Health of Brookline for
22 years. He was me first to intro
duce physical training among the
school children, and was head of
many improvements in the town,
where the best part of his life has
been spent.
The community life that will be
established may be the beginning of
a project which may spread to other
towns. Anyway, Dr. Chase hop^s to
interest other villages in his cardinal
principles.
Three Cardinal Principles.
Dr. Chase said:
The three cardinal principles that
will be emphasized there are purity,
peacefulness and thoughtfulness. .My
wife, Mrs. Margaret E. Cha.se. Hart
ley Dennett and I will get together in
our home life and follow out these
principles. .
Don’t understand me as meanm a
by purity that this refers to the body
merely. It will be made to do service
to the bodv, mind and soul. Hygienic
teaching is included in that /'Word
purity. Christ in His teaching had no |
narrow idea of purity. We have in
many ways limited that word in our
application. .
I want to have Its meaning broad
ened. The country town offers spe
cial inducements for this. People
there have more leisure. They .are
not distracted by so many things or
conditions. Everything that we do
will apply to the community. What
will make the country town ideal.
Whv do we need to make people pure .
But pure is no conventional sense.
In other words, we intended to give
the widest meaning to this term.
Everything that will imp r°ye Tig
country town must come under this
head of purity. ...
With the practice that I hope to
have there as a physician I shall atm
to show my interest in every indi
vidual and in every movement for the
betterment of the community.
Then in our community life we
shall aiscuss the teachings of
Tolstoi It is the teachings of non-re
sistance. This is what I mean. Be
peaceful. The kingdom of God upon
earth consists, according to Tolstoi,
that all men should be at peace with
one another. Never quarrel over the
simplest thing. Peace among men is
the greatest blessing that can. exist
upon this earth, and it is within reach
of all men. This is the true religion.
It is the extinction of "enmity among
mankind.
Emerson’s Teachings.
Then we shall weave Emerson into
our discussion. Why Emerson? you
Bay. Because he teaches us to talk.
It is one of the hardest things to
think. .
The essays of this philosopher will
be used. , ,
May this not explain the relation of
Mr. Dennett in our community, who
shares so much along with us in
thinking the right thoughts that will
help along this project at East Al-
etead? Emerson thinks well. We
Want to think rightly. There is so
much unwise thinking and miscon
struction of one’s plans. If you can
look rightly upon certain movements
you then have the gift of thinking.
We propose to learn how to think
up in East Alstead.
Mr. Dennett’s wife did not believe
In his theories and obtained a di
vorce. In a report made to the Su
preme Court by Fred W. Dailinger,
referee, to decide who should have
the custody of the Dennett children,
Mr. Dailinger said:
"Mrs. Chase wrote a letter to Mrs.
Dennett, in which she said that
neither her marriage vows to Dr.
Chase nor Mrs. Dennett’s to Mr. Den
nett should be allowed to interfere
with the free expression of the deep
•nd sincere love existing between her-
lelf and Mr. Dennett.”
Ill LIVES
OUT FOR PLACE
AS GJLR.GHIEF
Liveliest Race in History of Or
ganization Predicted for Chat
tanooga Encampment.
CHATTANOOGA, Sept. Every \
indication points to a spirited contest
at the Chattanooga encampment of
the Grand Army of the Republic for
commander-in-chlef. Five States have
s«o far made entries, and each entry is
a popular man. The States already in
the contest for the prize are, in alpha
betical order, Indiana, Michigan, Ne
braska, New Jersey and South Da-
Lota.
The Department of Indiana has in
dorsed O. A. Somers, a private in the
ranks. Mr. Somers lives at Kokomo,
and is a popular man with the mem
bers of the Grand Army. He has the
active and undivided support of his
State and counts on help from a num
ber of the strong States of the Cen
tral We3t and from every member of
the Grand Army; to use the words of
a friend and supporter, “who believes
that the time has come when a pri
vate soldier should be honored.”
Nebraska has entered the lists with
Colonel C. E. Adams, a banker and
farmer, of Superior. Nebr. He is in
dorsed by his State Department, and
has a war record linked with the his
tory of the Fourteenth Army Corps.
Colonel Adams won distinction on
many fields, is loyal to the Grand
Army's interests and a successful man
of affairs.
Michigan Presents Gardner.
Michigan will come to the encamp
ment carrying the flag of the Hon.
Washington Gardner, of Albion, the
well-known editor-statesman, and en
ter him as a candidate for the honor.
Colonel Gardner enlisted in the serv
ice when only 16, was with General
Is.
hc*r»«j
Mrs. Winnifred Harper Cooley,
Domestic Science Expert,
Makes Experiment.
Mrs. Winnifred Harper Cooley, na
tional president of the Associated
Clubs of Domestic Science, with
headquarters in New York City, and
recognized all over the country as an
expert on food, agreed to undertake
an experiment in living on 9 cents a
day. For a week she lived well and
at a total cost of 63 cents, working
regularly, both mentally and physi
cally. and attending to her ordinary
avocations.
She was in fine feUle at the end of
the experiment, stronger in body and
even better fitted for sustained mental
effort. Furthermore, she lost ten
pounds of superfluous flesh, thereby
gaining greater ease and more free
dom and grace of movement. She
tells the results of her experiment:
Foods Purchased.
1-3 (12-lb.) basket (9) potatoes
(old) 05
1 mess spinach 05
1 loaf whole wheat bread 10
Cocoa (1-5 lb. can) 10
Baked Beans 10
1-2 package natural rice 06
1-5 lb. oleomargarine 05
3 bananas 05
1-3 lb. sugar 02
1 egg 03
1 apple 02
Total for food for 1 week (9c per
day 63
Nutritious Food Cheap.
"It has often distressed me to see
working girls—and hard-working
men, too—spending the small pums
which they allow themselves for lunch
on impossible bakery products—soggy
pies and sour puffs," says Mrs. Cooley.
“I know that some of the most nutri
tious foods in the world are the
cheapest. The cereals and whole
grains, untampered with by foolish
producers; the cheaper cuts of meat,
so universally neglected, yet which
make most appetizing stews; the sim
ple vegetables and fruits, uncolored
with coal tar dyes and unpreserved
with artificial and chemical preserva
tives—all of these go to build up a
strong body and a clear brain, and
yet are very cheap.
“And s*o, without any theories or
fads as to the desirability of eating
this or that ‘health food,’ I decided to
Two Meals a Day
Costing Nine Cents 1
MONDAY.
LUNCH—Coca, baked beans,
whole wheat bread.
DINNER—Fried potatoes, one-
half mess spinach.
TUESDAY.
LUNCH—Whole wheat bread,
cocoa.
DINNER—One-half mess spi
nach, two potatoes, one banana.
WEDNESDAY.
LUNCH—Rice, cocoa.
DINNER—Whole wheat toast,
rice, baked potato.
THURSDAY.
LUNCH—Banana, rice.
DINNER—Toast, potato, bana
na,
FRIDAY.
LUNCH—Banana, rice.
DINNER—Rice, cocoa, toast, one
potato.
SATURDAY.
LUNCH—One egg, cocoa.
DINNER—Two potatoes, apple
sauce.
SUNDAY.
LUNCH—One cup cocoa, two
slices whole wheat bread.
DINNER—One boiled potato,
five cents’ worth baked beans.
limit my menu to 10 cents a day fora
week.
“So successful and no provident did
I become, in the zeal of the experi
ment, that I found myself the last
day with 7 cents to the good. A ter
rible moral struggle then transpired!
Why pamper myself by unnecessarily
spending the 7 cents all at once and
gorge myself to repletion with an ex
tra egg or two, or even several fat
bananas, when I could get along quite
comfortably the last day on the same
type of diet which had stood me in
good stead for six days? Of course,
one loves to overeat: hut do not
Rockefeller and Carnegie and other
omniscient multi-millionaires tell us
that it is by saving the pennies that
we may become plutocrats of the
highest rank?
Can Live on Even Less.
“With visions of Hetty Green de
lighting my mind's eye, I therefore
nobly withstood the somewhat natural
desire to minister to my conventional
appetite, and saved the 7 cents as a
nucleus'for my future vast fortune.
“It will readily be seen, then, that
the average was reduced from 10
cents a day to 9 cente.
“It is. of course, possible to live on
even less. One may exist on dried
apples and cereals, and, naturally, if
one buys In quantities and always
raw material and cooks the edible**
herself, there will be a saving over
that spent w hen 5»he purchases bakers'
bread, for instance.
“On the other hand, for a very little
more, one can have many ‘luxuries
which I did not permit myself on 9
cents daily. Among these I might
mention, breast of lamb (15 cents’
worth, which makes a delicious stew
that will last several meals), prunes,
rhubarb, stewed nates and figs, plenty
of egg. u , milk and buttermilk, and the
less expensive green vegetables.
“But the important thing is, that
for the sum of 9 cents per day it is
quite possible, not only to exist, but
to live comfortably, work strenuously,
bodily and mentally."
.
Veteran of Civil War Says Spouse
No. 1 Advised Him to Will
Property at Seance.
ST. DO UTS, Sept. Stephen F.
Garlock’s determination to expose an
alleged conspiracy between his wife
of the flesh, Mary, and the material
ized spirit of his first wife was re
vealed when he started an action for
a divorce to-day. He is 69 years old
and a Civil War veteran.
His principal charge is that his wife
Inveigled him into a spiritualistic se
ance and there called up the spirit of
his dead wife, who advised him to
transfer his real estate to the living
wife.
The petition does not set out in
detail all that transpired at the se
ance. It recites that w’hen he re
fused to pign away his property as
directed by the spirit of his first wife,
the second wife, in the presence of all
the real and materialized spirits,
called him “an uneducated, unrefined
and ignorant damned fool,” causing
him great humiliation.
It was through the Influence of a
daughter by his first marriage that h i
was prevented from signing the deed,
according to Mr. Garlock. The peti
tion alleges that, falling to get his
property in this way, Mrs. Garlock
persuaded him to give a note to her
for $500, secured by deed of trust on
real estate, and that a week later she
had the locks on the doors of his room
changed ani bolted him out.
^gjfgSmoof/i as a
Rose Lear
perfumed
as fresh air—
so pure it floats—no grit.
Borated. Guaranteed
pure. 10c a box.
Made only by
Talcum Puff Co.
Miners and Manufacturers
Butti Terminal Building
Brooklyn tt tl New York
WIFE, AGED 15, IS A MOTHER.
EVANSVILLE, IND., Sept. 6.—A
boy baby has been uorn to Mrs.
Charles Taylor, almost 15 years olci,
this city. The mother's playthings,
Slscard«(i only a short time ago, will
soon be in the hands of her first child.
She is the youngest mother jn the
city.
Madame Blaque Bey, With Husband and Boy,
Visits Former Home in St. Paul.
ST. PAUL, Sept. 6.—A. St. Paul
woman, wife of a Turk high in of
ficial life of the Sublime Porte, is
visiting her home here, and she de
clares she has found perfect happiness
in her married life with the Moslem
diplomat.
She is Madame Blaque Bey, wife
of the Turkish Minister to the Court
of Austria, and he and their 11-year-
old son are with her on her trip to
America.
He is largely of French blood and is
highly educated, but is a Mohamme
dan, though he is a monogamist. His
wife is a member of the Anglican
Church.
The Turkish Embassy at Vienna
has always been one of the most pop
ular of the diplomatic posts on ac
count of the brilliance of the social
season in the capital of Emperor
Francis Joseph, and the wife of the
Turkish Minister has been a promi
nent figure in this life.
Madame Blaque Bey, who was Miss
Josephine Kalman, of St. Paul, savs
that no effort has been made to di
rect her son’s religious tendencies.
He will be allowed to choose his own
faith when he grows to manhood.
Grocers Tell Clubs
To Mind Own Affairs
Pure Food Advocates Advised to
Stay at Home and Nurse
Children.
LIMA. O.. Sept. 6.—“Mind your own
business, stop pinching, handling and
nibbling our fruits, stop sampling our
goods exposed for sale and stay at
hpme and look after your children,”
was the reply hurled at the Lima Fed
eration of Women's Clubs by the Lima
Retail Grocers’ Association.
The grocers are aroused over legis
lation submitted to Council by women
who are clamoring for purer food con
ditions. An ordinance proposed by
women calls for drastic regulations.
The matter was taken up in a spe
cial meeting of the Grocers’ Associa
tion last night and the reply was
formed and mailed to the federation.
CONVICT TAKES VACATION
AND RETURNS TO PRISON
COLUMBUS. OHIO, Sept. 6.—Joseph
Dickerson, an “honor” convict at the
Ohio Penitentiary, returned to that in-
stitntion this morning after a week's
“vacation," announcing that he had
had a splendid time
Dickerson went to his home in Ur-
bana. There he got into a fight and
I receiver! a thrashing. Thence he re
paired to Springfield and had numer-
J ous drinks.
Police Adopt Army
Flag Raising Custom
National Standard Will Be Raised
at Sunrise and Lowered
at Sunset.
LOS ANGELES. Sept. 6.—Promptly
at sunrise each morning a squad of
officers stands at attention at each of
the six police stations of the Los An
geles police department while a ser
geant slowly raises the Stars and
Stripes to the peak of a flagstaff
above the building. At sunset the
flag is lowered with the same cere
mony.
The "every-day-is-flag-day” idea is
that of Chief Sebastian. He put the
idea into reality several days ago
when he ordered six big American
flags and six 26-foot poles.
Rain or shine, summer or winter,
the flags will be raised promptly at
sunrise and lowered at sunset—the
same as is done at military posts.
GETS DIVORCE AT 73 ON
GROUND OF “NAGGING”
SPOKANE, WASH.. Sept. 6.—At the
age of 73 and after thirty-six years of
married life with a woman ten years
his junior, Michael Dundon, wealthy
rancher, told Superior Judge Webster
that he “wanted to upend the remainder
of his old age in peace and comfort,
away from the scolding nagging and
faultfinding of his wife.''
The court granted him a divorce.
Sherman during the campaign from
Chattanooga to Atlanta and sustained
a serious wound at Resaca, which ne
cessitated retirement on an honorable
disc harge. He was a member of Con
gress from Michigan ten or a dozen
years, pterving with high honors on a
number of important committees,
making a national reputation as one
of the Republican leaders.
£*ew Jersey’s candidate for the hon
or is Colonel Ralph D. Cole, a popu
lar Grand Army man, who has a cred
itable war record. He has the in
dorsement of the New Jersey Depart
ment of the G. A. R. and is regarded
as the candidate of the Eastern sec
tion, although sectionalism plays but
little part in the selection of the com
mander-in-chief.
South Dakota has indorsed Captain
N. H. Kingman, of Selby, and will
come to Chattanooga determined to
land him. Captain Kingman organ
ized a company in the Thirteenth
Wisconsin Regiment, and served with
that organization until the close of
the war. He has been one of the
prominent figures in the Grand Army
of the Republic since its organization
and his strength is general.
With five strong candidates, said to
be the greatest number ever presented
before a national encampment, the
fight for the honor promises to be
spirited and full of interest. It should
be explained that these men are can
didates in the sense that their re
spective State Departments have in
dorsed them.
20,000 Veterans in Parade.
General Alfred B. Beern, command -
er-in-chlef, has forwarded to the
Chattanooga Encampment Association
the formation for the parade of vet
erans at the forthcoming national en
campment. General Beers gives the
number of veterans ikely to partici
pate in the parade at from lf>,000 to
20.000. The parade is made up of the
national officers of the Grand Army,
the officers of the departments and
representatives, and then the mem
bers of the organizations who are
present at the encampment and the
Sons of Veterans.
The average age of enlistment dur
ing the Civil War having been 25 and
the war having continued through
four weary years, it stands to reason
that most of the living veterans are
now nearly 80 years old.
This indicates that for every vet
eran who is physically able to make
the trip to the forty-seventh national
encampment of the Grand Army of
the Republic at Chattanooga in Sep
tember there must be at least 25 who
can be present in spirit only.
Fall Fashions
In Muse
Boys’ Shop
Bovs that will bo men, who would be well-dressed men, get their
“running start" in the BOYS’ SHOP AT MUSE’S.
Every suit sold here is of equal importance, whether it is “young”
or “old” in size—Boys’, Youths’, Grown-ups’ each bearing its own full
worth.
Boys' New Fall Styles are being shown in our window.
Fall Suits are Norfolk, and all the smart tricks of pleats and belts
that lend variety have been entered to highest advantage.
The Muse Boys' Shop will serve you to your own satisfac
tion. Try it out now while it’s school time. The new suit will fur
nish much of the needed inspiration which is every boy’s requirement.
$5 to $20.
Boys’ Shop—Second Floor.
Write to us for information about New Fall Styles.
Geo. Muse Clothing Co.
EXTRA
COMING
FIELD
Greater
^%SS95*Z3S9SSSSS$S$$999S%
Minstrels
28th-Year of the World's
Greatest Indoor Show
—28th—On a Plane of
Magnificence Beyond
Compare.
“THE MINSTRELS OF
THE NATIONS”
An International Specta
cle.
The Military Powers of
the World in Review.
The Songs of All Na
tions—the Flags and Em
blems of All Countries.
The Aviation Meet.
The Airships.
Bert Swor’s Latest Lift.
The Days of’61
Pastimes and Dances of
Long Ago.
In Panama
A View of the Locks and
Course of the Great
Canal from the Atlantic
to the Pacific.
All the Old Favorites and
Many New Ones.
William Walters'
Gold Band
Special Train of Cars
ATLANTA
Thursday,
Friday,
Saturday
SEPT. 25, 26, 27
Matinee Saturday
Sept. 27th
Will Also Appear
Sept. 23—Charleston.
Sept. 24—Augusta.
Sept. 29—Nashville.
Oct. 1-2—Memphis.
Oct. 3-4—Birmingham.
P. S.—“Watch Your
self Go By,” one of the
popular books of the day,
by Al. G. Field. For sale
by newsdealers, or sent
prepaid by addressing
Field Publishing Com
pany, 50 Broad Street,
Columbus ,Ohio.