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NEW ORLEANS
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1013.
LONDON Chester Overton PARIS Marquis de Castelllane BERLIN
SUNDAY AMERICAN'S SPECIAL CARLE LETTERS RECEIVED FROM ALL THE GREAT CAPITALS OF EUROPE
C. de Vidai-Huimdt
Fritz Jacobsohm
ROME
J. M. E. B’Again
George M. Bruce
Jewels Add to Ostend Charm
+•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+
E STflTE, Fair Bathers Wear Gems in Sea
On Yu AN LArLH I After Swim, Cigarette Is Popular
BYFAKE'PAULS'
T AND CANT
SALUTE KING
Have Not Kept Pace With Man in
Process of Civilization, Declare
The Cigarette
Stroll, now a
Author of “Three Weeks” Calls
Persons Who Pose as Hero
Italian Monarch Not Offended by
Incident, and Takes icture of
London Scientists.
popular after-
“Funny People.”
Carbineers.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 6.—A recent state
ment by a scientific authority that the
higher types of savages have embar
rassingly rjch languages and are gift
ed talkers has led The Daily Mirror to
Inquire into how far women have ad-\
vanced from savagery. A well-known
doctor in reply to the query, said:
“A man may chat, but a woman
only chatters. Savages chatter all
day long, mostly about nothing. The
higher type of savage is particularly
rich in his language. So is the higher
type of civilized woman. You car. not
restrain either type—both must have
their way.
“Women are bom talkers. And it is
Somewhat significant that girl babies
usually speak much sooner than boy
babies. That women are more chil
dren of naturi and less hlghlv civi
lized than men is a fact accepted by
most alienists and psychologists. In
the first place, women are notoriously
deficient in logic. Now, the ability
to draw deductions from logic and to
be actuated by such logical deductions
is the chief point of difference be
tween civilized and uncivilized man.
Women Can Hide Pain.
“The untutored savage weeps when
he is sad and laughs when he is glad,
being affected by no restraining in
fluences. Women in their relative
ability to control superficial emotions
again show that they have not ad
vanced as far from primitive ways as
have men.
“Another way in which women
show that they are less affected than
men bv so-called modern civilization
is their greater ability to endure se
vere physical pain. Every doctor with
any hospital experience will agree
that women patients show a greater
stoicism in accepting excruciating
pain than do male patients.
“In this greater stoicism, as well as
ih the freer play they give to the
easily aroused emotions of vanity,
pleasure, sorrow and jealousy, women
show that their progress cut of their
native savagery has not kept pace
with man’s.”
The following are some of the chief
points which are said to prove that
woman has *«till much of the savage
in her composition:
Lack of self-restraint, love of self-
decoration, inordinate vanity, inher
ent cruelty, love of bright colors,
wants at once what attracts her, \vcrd j
not to be relied upon, will lie with
out hesitation and without thinking
of the consequences, easily pleased
and depressed.
Cruelty Pointed To.
Walter M. Gallichan, the author f
“Modern Woman and How to Man
age Her,” has some strong remarks
to make about women’s savagery.
Woman’s belief, according to him. is
that she must be cunning and deceit
ful, mean, selfish and cruel if she is
to prevail.
“Nothing,” he says, “can excel the
callous and malignant cruelty widen
second wives often display in iheir
treatment of children by the first
wife. There are innumerable rec
ords of beating, burning and mu
tilating children which might lead us
to believe that ‘gentle sex’ and ‘a
mother’s love’ are merely poetic fig
ures of speech.”
And, according to Mr. Gallichan
woman Is no clumsy tyrant. On the
contrary, she has carried her cruelty
down until it becomes almost a fine
art. Unlike man. her cruelty is not
“a short madness,” but is “though r-
fully planned and deliberately carried
through.”
“A bruise on the flesh is nothing,
he continues; “a wound on the sensi
tive heart is one of the most terrible
forms of torture. * * * Many
women are perfect mistresses of mor
dant sarcasm, and they delight in
scarifying their victims.”
King George to Pay
His Own Postal Bills
British Monarch to Lighten Burden
of Expense on Hosts
He Visits.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 6.—To the relief of
his many hosts, King George has de
cided that in future the cost of the
temporary private post and telegraph
office always established at any house
he visits for more than 24 hours shall
be met out of his own private purse
and not borne by his hosts.
This Temporary telegraph office
generally costs about $500 to the
host, but, of course, this Is a mere
“drop in the ocean" as compared
•with the entire cost of a long royal
visit. The late Duke of Devonshire,
who entertained King Edward in
sumptuous style, usually spent about
$51,000 on a royal visit.
Founder of Tollies’
At End of Career
gwirfi pastime
at Ostend, is
shown in the
upper picture,
while below a
pair of pretty
bathers are
shown wearing
the necklaces
they wore in
the surf.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 6.—Mrs. Elinor
Glyn, who recently denied through
the American the claim of the so-
called Prince Paul de Clalrmont that
he was the original hero of -Three
Weeks,” said to-day she had no
knowledge of him beyond what has
been sent to her in press cuttings
"When any one creates a character
which attracts the public eye," she
added, "numbers of cranks and im
postors try to get some benefit out
of It. I have had many amusing ex
periences in the last six years of
queer people posing as the Paul in
my ‘Three Weeks.’
"The funniest of all was when J
was last in America, some ridiculous
Special Cable to The American.
ROME, Sept. 6.—The hunting sea
son in the Italian Alps and lake re
gions was officially inaugurated the
other day when King Victor, accom
panied by a brilliant party of army
officers and diplomats, proceeded to
the royal reservation In the Valley of
Cogne for the annual three days of
chamois and deer hunting.
The King’s arrival at Cogne is re
garded by the villagers as the most
Important event of the year, and dur
ing the three days the, hunting lasts
the population of the summer colo
nies of the neighborhood Is greatly
C. Pellissier Has Broken Down
Completely and Condition Is
Thought Hopeless.
One-Piece Bathing Suit Attraction Given Added
Lustre by the New Custom.
Special Cable to The American.
OSTEND, Sept. 6.—Attractions of
the Ostend bathing beach have been
world famous for years, for here was
first flaunted the one-piece bathing
suit, and in no instance were the
pieces, large. But now Ostend’s fair
bathers are endeavoring to outrival
themselves. They are striving to add
to their physical loveliness so gener
ously displayed and are actually
wearing their jewels in the surf.
P"irst, just bangles and bracelets
were worn in the sea, or rather out of
it, for the bathing “machines” have
ever been more popular with these
fair bathers than the briny deep. But
as this custom spread the desire for
novelty grew.
Now necklaces, some of them worth
a fortune, and every other bauble dear
to femininity are seen on the beach.
Another fad that has grown this
season is the after-swimming smoke.
It is now no unusual sight to see a
young woman, after she has had her
dip, don a coat that but accentuates
the charm of her nether limbs and
stroll up and down the beach puffing
on a cigarette.
It is hardly likely, though, that the
daring of Ostend will spread across
seas, as Ostend has heard of this re
cent occurrence at Atlantic City:
A woman came blithely down the
strand there clad in a one-piece suit.
A parade of admiring persons of the
masculine gender immediately formed.
The procession was observed by
Hewling Craig, official censor of the
beach. He arrived just in time to see
her dive into the surf.
He ordered her out of the water and
a life guard hurriedly wrapped his red
cloak around her and escorted her
back to the bathhouses.
The bather was extremely indig
nant, but as her utterances were all
spoken in French, Craig is not cer
tain what she called him. He knows
that she did not call him Craig.
Russians Attracted
By American Yacht
T. H. Burgess’ Carina Is Ranked as
Handsomest Boat in Neva
This Year.
cial Cable to The American.
lONDON, Sept. 6.—H. C. Peliasier,
famous founder of the ‘‘Ponies"
ertainment, will delight America
more.
[e has completely broken down,
I is suffering from the same sort
creeping paralysis which killed
i Leno, the popular comedian. The
tors say that it is a question af
months or.a year; they regard his
dition as hopeless
he ‘Follies" are to appear at the
iseum in O, lober, ind Mr. J’elis-
•‘s brother, who is not unlike him
appearance, will take the chief
Special Cable to The American.
ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 6.—The
American steam yacht Carina, which
is now here with its owner, T. H.
Burgess, aboard, is accounted the
handsomest pleasure boat seen in the
Neva this summer.
Mr. Burgess and his family visited
Moscow, and since have returned to
St. Petersburg. They gave a dinner
to the officers of a Russian battleship
here.
The Carina came from Boston and
goes from here to England.
FRENCH CHURCH BUILT IN
11TH CENTURY BRINGS $4.19
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Sept. 6.—Eleventh century
churches are cheap in France. One
sacred edifice at Clairefontaine, near
Paris, has just been sold at auction
I for $4.19.
I Before tluj sanctuary was sold, nu-
I merous mementoes were removed by
| the local authorities including a tab-
| let recalling that the church was built
| "in honor of God and of our lady in
1100 A. D. by Comte Simon DeMont-
j fort, son of Amaulry the First, who
was the son of King Robert." ,
Women in Berlin Live
Longer Than the Men
Between Ages of 80 and 90 Former
Outnumber Latter More
Than 2 to 1.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 6.—According to
statistics just published, Berlin ap
pears to have an extraordinary num
ber of old women in proportion to
old men, and with every decade
above 70 the proportion increases as
tonishingly.
The number of men between 70
and 80 is 20,049, and of women, 37,520.
Of persons between 80 and 90, women
are in an enormous majority. The
figures are 3,169 ’men and 7,810
women.
In Berlin there are 364 women who
have passed their ninetieth birthday,
but only 111 men.
little man who sold hops sent long
articles to the papers announcing
that he was the hero. If it amuses
these funny little people to have
these hallucinations about them
selves they are welcome to them, but
it is rather hard on the American
public.
"This particular impersonator of
Paul seems to have had a most
varied career, but one must hope
it is now ended in domestic peace
with the kind lady who has been
good enough to overlook his mis
fortunes.”
Arnold Bennett Sees
A Gold Mine in U S.
Royalties on His Books $100,000 Last
Year and Plays Bring
as Much.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 6.—Arnold Bennett
Is hard at work on a play which he
hopes to have produced in America
simultaneously with its production
here by Edmund Gwenn.
He pricks up his ears at the mere
mention of America nowadays, for
last year the royalties on the sales of
his books in America alone were
more than $100,000.
This figure was equaled and pos
sibly surpassed by the royalties from
“Milestones” and his other plays.
increased by a large number of the
curious from the nearby hotels, who
follow the hunt from the surrounding
hills.
The royal party, besides some 30
and more guests, comprises 250 guides
and mountaineers, who have long been
trained to help in the royal hunt, as
some of them served under the King's
grandfather, Victor Emmanuel II, and
the late King Humbert. For the rest
of the year these mountaineers are
self-appointed guardians of the game
in the royal reservation, and their de
votion and attachment to the King
is such that not a single bird is shot
by outsiders in the whole Valley of
Cogne.
General Brusati, one of the King’s
aide-de-camps, relates the following
episode of this year’s hunt. On the
third day a chamois was shot in one
of the forelegs and was seen .swiftly
running down the valley. Two carbi
neers chased it and overtook it at a
narrow pass, at the same time the
King was nearing the spot. Busy
holding the animal, the carbineers
were unable to salute, when the King,
noticing their embarrassment, cried:
“Hold on. I want to take its pic
ture while under arrest between you
two.”
And “click” went the royal camei^.
GIRLS! BEAUTIFUL,
25 CENT
PET CAT’S LEAP KILLS
MAN WHILE HE’S SHAVING
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS. Sept. 6.—While shaving in
his bedroom here the other morning
Edmond Hury’s pet cat Jumped on
his shoulder, as was its habit.
The animal knocked Hury’s arm,
with the result that a gash was cut
in his throat and he bled to death
before assistance could be summoned.
Of
Try this! Doubles beauty
your hair and stops it
falling out.
Your hair becomes light, wavy,
fluffy, abundant and appears as
soft, lustrous and beautiful as a
young girl’s after a “Danderine
hair cleanse.” Just try this—
moisten a cloth with a little Dan
derine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive
oil and in just a few moments you
have doubled the beauty of your
hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at
once, Danderine dissolves every
particle of dandruff ; cleanses, puri
fies and invigorates the scalp, for
ever stopping itching and falling
hair.
But what will please you most
will be after a few weeks’ use when
you will actually see new hair—fine
and downy at first -yes—but really
new hair growing all over the scalp.
If you care for pretty, soft hair and
lots of it, surely get a 25 cent bot
tle of Knowlton’s Danderine from
any druggist or toilet counter, and
just try it.
Geraldine Farrar's
Voice Wins Strikers
AUSTRIANS SEEK IDE TREASURES
Who Halt Her Cab
Italian Pickets Stop Her Conveyance,
but, Discovering Identity, Give
Her Guard of Honor.
Special Cable to The American.
FLORENCE* Sept. 6.—Geraldine
Farrar, the primma donna, waa the
heroine of an incident during the
recent strike at Milan.
She and her mother were driving to
the railroad station ■when the strikers
held the carriage up and ordered the
women to get out and finish the
journey afoot. They said the cab
man had no right to drive them, as
all the cabmen had suspended work
Miss Farrar protested at first in vain.
Then, on seeing two of the leaders of
the strikers, she appealed to them.
She explained who she was and the
necessity of driving to the station
at once. The men conferred for a
moment and then decided that the
voice of such a singer placed her out
the class of ordinary people. They
told Miss Farrar it v. ould be their
pleasure to care for her. The prlma
donna drove triumphantly to the sta
tion with one striker on the box and
another seated between her mother
and herself.
American Duchess
Robs Paris of Talent
Whenever Lady of Marlborough Pass
es Through French Capital a
Star Disappears.
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Sept. 6.—Whenever the
Duchess of Marlborough passes
through Paris the salons will soon
lose another talented American.
One of them I» Mrs. Waldo Dewey,
of Boston, cousin of the admiral,
who was the whistling soul of the
salons. Mrs. Dewey is now whistling
for the London public.
The duchess also gave a hint about
Miss Minnie Tracey, of New York,
who promptly went to sing classical
music at Scheveningen, Indian songs
In Norway and comic opera in Ger
many.
The Countess Anna de Bremont,
formerly Miss Dunphy, of Cincin
nati, is a writer of sonnets. The
duchess read them, and now the
countess will read her verses in the
fashionable drawing rooms of Fifth
avenue.
ID BREAK THEIR FI
GERMAN TREAT! 01 YEARS DID
.House of Hohenzollern Is Bitterly
Denounced by Press of the
Dual Empire.
!
Ancient Sculpture of Great Value
Recovered From Derelict Off
Tunsinlan Coast
American Girl New
London Dramatist
‘Grace' Lounsbery Adapts Wilde’s
‘Picture of Dorian Grey’ for
British Stage.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON. Sept. 6.—A new Ameri
can dramatist makes her debut 1n
London this week in the person of “J.
Constant Lounsbery,” who has adapt
ed Wilde’s “Picture of Dorian Grey”
for the stage.
“Constant” stands for “Grace"
Lounsbery, well known in Parisian so
ciety.
Miss Lounsbery is a niece of Mrs.
Lounsben, of New York, who has
been spending the season at the
Berkeley Hotel. Eleanor May Robson,
who is a friend of the family, was
present at the final rehearsal.
By FREDERICK WERNER.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 6.—Strong dissen
sions are marring this summer's per
formances of the European concert. In
spite of the leaders’ efforts to dissem
ble them. The worst of them come
from the unruly double monarchy
governed by the old and sorely tried
Nestor among European monarchs.
Emperor Francis Joseph, whose sub
jects are exceedingly bitter against
their friend and ally, Germany, and
especially against the Kaiser. At
present it is the press of Bohemia,
which has adopted a tone that has
made an exceedingly unpleasant Im
pression here.
The principal organ of the Czech
agrarians, “Venkow,” has published
a. series of violent attacks on the
federal policy of the German Empire.
Faith Receives Stab.
“The faltn of our rulers in the
Niebelungen has received a fatal
stab,” the paper writes. “To-day
Vienna realizes the ingratitude we
are now reaping In return for the fact
that Austrian authorities have closed
their eyes to the fact that all the ele
ments that worked to split up Bohe
mia for years went to Berlin to seek
advice as to methods and means to
humiliate the monarchy of the Hape-
burgs.
"To-day Vienna realizes what a
fatal mistake our diplomatists made
when at Ischl they refused to accept
the late King Edward’s offer to liber
ate us from the disgraceful yoke of
the Hohenzollems. To-day there is
not a single Austrian who d'oe* not
confess, to himself at least, what a
dreadful price we have paid for the
alliance with Germany, an alliance
which is to-day the principal bar to
Austrian interests.
“It is fortunate, however, that we at
last have had our eyes opened, for
now that Germany has hit them in
the face with her fist, our statesmen
must find means to strike off the Ger
man shacklea.
Friends Not Needed.
“It is difficult and sad for the Aus
trian Empire to stand utterly alone
without an ally and without friends,
but it is necessary to seek these where
we find sincerity in place of gTeed and
honesty instead of treachery, and that
means that Germany is not the place.”
The article quoted here is, of course,
one of extraordinary severity and be
hind it stands the old hatred of the
Czechs against Germany and every
thing German, but no German is ig
norant of the fact that to a certain
extent it expresses what millions of
Emperor Francis Joseph’s subjects
feel.
There is a strong conviction among
all classes of people in all parts of
Austria-Hungary that Austria has
been shamefully treated by Germany
in the settlement of the Balkan affair,
even If the anger is rather directed
against the Kaiser personally, who is
thought to have directed Germany’s
policy, forcing his Minister of Foreign
Affairs to carry out his ideas.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 6 >—-Sunken art
treasures of fabulous value have Juet
been recovered from the wreck of
a ship off Madhia on the Tunisian
coast.
A Tunisian squadron eent to In
vestigate the report of Greek sponge
fishers found a sunken vessel of
about 400 tons, 100 feet long and
25 broad. She was laden with an
extraordinary cargo, consisting of
blocks of marble, bases and capitals
for columns, effigioa, statues, furni
ture, tiles, leaden piping, lampe, am
phorae, etc.
Among the fragment# were found
figures of a deml-god afcd a maiden
and faun, which correspond almost
exactly with the Gorghese vase dug
up in Rome and now in the Louvre.
A Hermes of Dionysius bears the
signature ‘'Boethoa,” the sculptor of
the celebrated “Child with a Goose”
of the second century B. C.
In the bottom of the hold the treas
ure seekers found about 61) columns
of bluish-white marble thirteen feet
high. AH the Inscription deciphered
relate to Attica and personages of
the middle fourth century B. C.
Some writing on lead ingots also
is In the Latin of that epoch and
experts have concluded that the ves
sel was loaded In Attica for Rome and
probably the cargo was the spoil aft
er the taking of Athens by Sulla In 86
B. C.
FRECKLES
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