Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 09, 1913, Image 3

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T7IE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS’, Author of “Love Affairs of An Old Maid,” Reared in Atlanta, Seeks Divorce. CHICAGO, 8ept. 8.—Mrs. Lillian Bell Bogue, authoress, who has dis cussed marriage and love from end to end, always with sprlghtliness and a snap of cynicism, who charmingly lave evidence of the wilfulness of the artistic temperament by declaring, in an article, that men under 86 were stupid, egotistical and unfit for mar riage. and then fell in love at first flight with and married Arthur Hoyt Bogue, who was then 25. the while she was 13, would now divorce him when he Is 38. Pt Isn't because he has grown older —'their marriage took place in 1900— but in papers that are prepared for filing in Delaware, Ohio, she alleges drunkenness and non-support. Tht Bogues have been separated for some time. They have one daughter, Lilian, 12. Bogus, who was In the real es tate business with hds father In Chi cago at the time of his marriage to Miss Lilian Bell, Is now thought to be residing In New York. "Lilian Bell" Is well known In At lanta. Though bom in Chicago her parents moved to the Georgia capital and the future author passed her childhood and was educated in that city. In "The Love Affaire of an Old Maid," that Mrs. Bogue wrote when she was 22, she had much to say re garding love and the ideal man. and she makes her old maid heroins re mark: "It needs a compelling, not a per suasive, power to win a woman. No man who takes me like thl*" closing her thumb and forefinger as if holding a butterfly, "can have me. The one who dares to take me like this," clinching her hand, "will get me." Two Weeks' Courtship. Mrs. Bogue did not discuss to-night whether young Bogue had filled this bill, but the fact Is remembered that he courted and won her after an affair of only a few weeks. In the interview Bhe only shook her head and said. "A man will never give up drink ing for a woman, no matter how much he loves her, after he haa acquired the liquor habit. I am not a temperance fanatic, but I will not shield my hus- mand from criticism any longer. "My husfoand has never earned a living for me since we were married. I have eupported him and our daugh ter for the last ten years, and all the money I earned by my writing was banked In his name. Any affection I had for him once has been killed." When she was asked about the ar ticle she wrote In her book, "Prom a Girl's Point of View," In which she said no husband should be chosen from the ranks of men under 85, she smiled and said: "Oh, that article was merely the re- sultof a conversation with a maga- eine editor, and while seme of It la true, I Afi not really believe all the things I wrote. But, of course, my subsequent marriage to a man seven years my Junior made good copy for bhe newspapers." At the time that the news of the separation of the author from her younger husfoand was being published Bogue, in an Interview, remarked: "My wife became fanatical and finally objected to serving wine on our table at home. I have been accus tomed to wine and objected to having It taken from me. Finally she told me to choose between adopting her re ligion or a separation. I had no in- Are You Sick, Diseased, Nervous, Run Down? Have You Blood Poison, Kidney, Bladder or Catarrhal Troubles? IF SO, CONSULT (FREE) Dr. Hughes, Atlanta’s Long Estab lished, Most Reliable Specialist. I cure to stay cured. NERVE, BLOOD and Skin Diseases, Varicose Veins, Ulcers. Kidney and Bladder Diseases, Ob structions, Ca tarrhal Dis charges and all Nervous and Chronic Dis eases of Men - and Women. give 006, the celebrated German • paratlon, for Blood Poison, and arantee results. Everything ab- utely confidential. If You Can’t Call, Write. »e Consultation and Advice to All. )URS—9 a. m. to 7 p. m. Sun days. 9 to 1. DR. HUGHES Opposite Third National Bank, 2 N. Broad St.. ATLANTA, GA. j $2.00 TO CHATTANOO GA AND RETURN W and A. Railroad will sell round trip tickets from Atlanta to Chattanooga and return for train leaving Atlanta at 8:35 a. m. Thursday, September 11, 1913, good returning not later than train arriving Atlanta 7:35 p. m. Saturday, September 13 1913. C. E. HARMAN, General Passenger Agent Judge W. C. Horton, Atlanta Pioneer, Dies Judge William C. Horton, a pio neer citizen of Atlanta, died Sunday morning at his home on Marietta street, after a long Illness. He was 76 years old. Judge Horton came to Atlanta when the city was known as Marthasvllle and was a conspicuous figure In the early politics of the town. The wife, four children, and grand children survive. Funeral services will be held at the residence at 2:30 o’clock Monday afternoon. Interment at Riverside. When the Smoke Commission hears the protest of the apartment house owners against the enforcement of the smoke laws Tuesday afternoon, the cruiclal test in the fight for a cleaner Atlanta will be on. The manufacturing plants, rail AVIATRIX HOSTESS TO SOCIETY LEADER IN AIR cllnatlon toward her religious belief and could not Join It In good faith. That is why we broke up. I have never been habitually Intemper ate and resent the accusation. "A College for Lover*.” In an article written three years be fore her marriage in which she advo cated “a college for lovers," she sug gests a post-graduat© course for hus bands and set down the following courses for instruction on: "Giving your wife an allowance. "How to develop your wife's In dividuality. "How to manage a clever woman. "Tow to get on with a nervous woman. "How to make a frivolous woman amount to a row of pins. "How to keep your wife In love with you. "The necessity of not interfering with your wife’s discipline of the chil dren." But even then, in prenuptial days, she was no great enemy of divorce, for in this same article she concludes: "And after the lovers—bless them! —had passed successfully through this course of Instruction and had come out the perfectly equipped ar ticle we all would have them to be, they would be presented with a diploma tied with a white satin rib bon, containing the famous aadvice, with Its deliciously subtle sidelights: ‘Marry early, and, If circumstances permit—often.’" In an article printed two 3 T ears ago, with her own separation impending, she wrote: "Marriage is a man-made inven tion for the prevention of w r or»e evils What is marriage for, anyway? Is It built on anything but selfishness? And, If so, Is it surprising that it fails? The wonder to me Is that so many hold. But what of a marriage where evil secretly indulged In has disintegrated a once fine character Into an unrecognizable mass in which there Is not one redeeming trait? I know of marriages of this kind where the wife has grown and continues to grow along mental, idealistic, noble lines, while her husband scorns her ambitions and saps the foundations of her respect by a deliberate descent Into a lower stratum of materialism each day he lives." Maud Allen Warned Not to Dance in India NEW YORK, Sept. 8.—"If Miss Maud Allen dances in public in In dia," declared Swania Bodhananda, leader of the Vedante Society In this city, "she will be rated as low as the native nautch girls, and the prestige of the whit# woman there will be di minished. "In our country," said Bodhananda. "all dances are done by nautch girls. These women are of the lowest caste." Lemp Pays $100,000 Alimony in a Lump ST. LOUIS. Sept. 8.—A receipt was filed In the Circuit Court acknowl edging the payment by William J. Lemp, brewer, of $100,000 alimony to Mrs. Lillian Handlan Lemp. BIRMINGHAM EXCUR SION ROUND TRIP $2.50. Special train leaves Old Depot September 22. Re turn on regular trains. SEABOARD. v MISS RUTH LAW. AIRS. R. R, SINCLAIR, JR. RmIeiTbut roads and office bulldlnsr* have capit ulated one by one to the reform movement. Except la a few Isolated cases, every downtown furnace will make far less smoke this season than last, the city Inspectors say. They point out that there will be no trou ble to handle the obstinate Individu als In the Recorder’s Court. Apartment Owners Obstinate. But In the fight to prevent the law from affecting apartment houses many of Atlanta's most prominent and Influential citizens have com bined. They are opposed to spend ing the money It will take to remodel their furnaces. Chairman R. M. Harwell, of the Smoke Commission, dsclared Mon day that he believed the Commis sion would be strong enough to op pose this Influence. He said that smoke abatement in Atlanta was past the experimental stage, but that the apartment houses demanded Im mediate attention because they were among the greatest sources of the smoke evil. Little Cmoke in Pittsburg. "Persons constantly are referring me to Pittsburg as an example of a failure to abate the smoke nuisance," he said. An official report from the Pittsburg Smoke Inspector repudiates these reports and says, among other things: "The plain logic of the question is that Just as soon as each Individual will realize that It Is his duty and that It will work to his own benefit to co-operate In that which will re sult In the greatest possible good to all concerned there will be no more necessity for any anti-smoke ordi nance. • "Incidentally, the escape of uncon sumed hydro-carbon means higher coal bills, and the only economical method of getting rid of iraoks Is to burn It In a lurnace properly de signed for the purpose. "The present high cost of living haa attracted the attention of property owners to economy In fuel consump tion as much as any other economic nroblem.” Ruth Law, Birdwoman, While Still an Amateur, Asked John D. to Fly—In Vain. NEW YORK. Sept. 8.—Society la talking of the daring and coolness of Miss Ruth Bancroft Law, sister of the parachute Jumper and aviator. Henry Rodman Law. Society In full force saw Miss Law take up into the aerial spaces above Garden City Mrs. Richard R. Sinclair, Jr., and Miss Pearl McGrath. The friends of the young women passengers are Interested too, In the fact that Miss Law set what is prob ably a record for a woman aviator, carrying two women passengers. Miss Law made a flight of ten min utes, at an average altitude of 800 feet. She Loves to Volplane. Miss Law simply loves flying, she says, but there is Just one thing in the world more pleasant than skim ming through the air with a throb bing motor. “Going straight up In the air Is good sport,” he said, “but the most delightful feature of the flying Is vol planing. “I like to go away up and then shut off the motor and let the ma chine glide back to earth. “When you do this from an altitude of 4,000 feet It makes a dandy long coast that can’t be duplicated for ex citement and sensation anywhere on the earth, or above it.” Asked John D. to Fly. Miss Law Is also noted as the fly ing weman who asked John D. Rocke feller to go aloft with her. It hap pened at Sea Breeze, Fla. The oil magnate, however, only smiled. "I’ll wait till my wings grow,” he said. Rockefeller's physician. Dr H F Biggar, however, accepted the Invita tion. While they were aloft Rocke feller watched them with apparent anxiety. When they finally came to earth he gave a sigh of relief. Evei erv Woman Caste Loving Glance at The Neatling Cud dled in Ita Bonnet. A woman's heart naturally respond* to the charm and aweetneai of a pretty child, and mure to-day than ever before since the advent of Mother's Friend. This la a Boat wonderful external help to the musclee and tepdoae. It penetrate# the tissue#, makes (hem pliant to readily yield to nature'* demand for expansion. no there la ao longer a period of pain, discomfort, atralnlng. nauaea of other symptom* ao often distressing during the anxknM weeks of expectancy Mother's Friend ; reparea the system for tbo coming erent. and tie uae brings comfort, real and repooe during the term. This haa a moot marked Influence upon the baby, since It thus Inherits a splendid growing system of nerves and digestif* function. And particularly to young mothers la this fa mous remedy of Ineslmabl* value. It enables her to preserve her health and strength, and she re mains a pretty mother Uy having avoided all th* suffering und danger that would otherwise accom pany such an occasion. Mother's Friend thor oughly lubricates every nerve, tendon and muscle involved and ts a aura preventive few oaklng of < the breast* You will find Orta splendid remedy on aale at all drug ntoraa at 11.00 a bottle, and la highly recommended for the purpose. Write Bradflejd Regulator On.. 1S4 Lamar Oldg.. Atlanta, Ca., and 'hey will mall you. seal ed, a vary instructive book for expectant mother*. SEABOARD EXCUR SION TO BIRMINGHAM Monday, September 22, $2.50 round trip. Leaves Old Depot 8:30 a. m. Tick ets good returning on regu lar trains. RECORD SCHOOL ATTENDANCE. AMBR1CUS. Sept. 8.—The public schools of the city have been running for a week now and the enrollment has reached the 1,800 mark. This is a high-water mark for Americus. A jolly picture FREE Seo* the Colgate offer in this issue $2.00 TO CHATTANOO GA AND RETURN W. and A Railroad will sell round trip tickets from Atlanta to Chattanooga and return for train leaving Atlanta at 8:35 a. m. Thursday, September 11, 1913, good returning not later than train arriving Atlanta 7:35 p. m., Satur day, September 13, 1913. C. E. HARMAN, general Passenger Agent. Pillowslip and Birthmarks on Girl's Dismembered Body May Reveal Identity. New ‘Skeeter Skoot’ Is Found by Expert WASHINGTON. Sept. Ths American mosquito will not harm It the recipe devised by Or. L. B. How ard, chief of the Bureau of Entomol ogy, la used. It la thta: Pour on a bath towel a few drops of oil of cltronella, spirits of cam phor and oil of cedar compounded to gether. Throw the towel over tha head of the bed and every mosquito within a mile will hasten to safer quarters. A few drops on the face and hands will Insure free dom from visits. Cruiser Des Moines Rushed to Island to Protect United States ^ Citizens During Revolt. NEW YORK, Sept. 8.—Detectives both here and In New Jersey to-day redoubled their effort* to clear up the mystery surrounding the murder of the girl whose headless body was taken from the Hudson Riv*r, near the New Jersey shore. The finding of parts of the torso Friday night, and the remainder yes terday, together with a monographed pillowslip, led detectives to-day to think that they may soon be able to find the person believed to have killed the girl after an Illegal ope atlon, cut her head, arms and limbs from her body and then cut the body In half and threw It into the river weighted with stones. Four Facte Established. Detectives so far have established the following facts: The murder was committed on the New York side of the river. This ha* been proven by the grade of stone eeed to weight the body —mica stone—which Is found only In New York and not In New Jersey. The girt was murdered In a pri vate house or apartment. An embroidered plllowshlp bearing the initial "A” was found wrapped around one section of the torso. The date of the crime was not earlier than August 31, which has been proven by newspaper wrap pings around the body bearing that date. The victim was not more than 25 years old. She had an exquls- it figure, was a blonde, was used to wearing ultra low-cut gowns, was In excellent health and had four curious moles, or tattoo marks, on her right shoulder. Creates Gre*t Sensation. The legs, head and arms of the girl are missing. Officials are watching Gideons Open Series Of Sunday Meetings Atlanta Gideons began a series of meetings to be held in the Hotel Ansley. Judging by the attendance on the first one, held Sunday after noon, they will provide a valuable Sunday religious meeting for many traveling men. W. 8. Wltham was the principal speaker at the meeting Sunday. Vo cal selection* were sung by the Misses Bearden. A. F. Tedd, preaident of the State organisation, spoke. The speak er for next Sunday will be Dr. 8. R. Belt BAR WOMEN BARTENDERS. SFRTNGFIBLD, MAi*4„ Sept. 8.— Women are barred from selling or serving strong drinks in hotels or restaurants, according to a decision by the License Court, the river shore* In the hope that these may be washed up by the waves and aid In clearing up the mystery, which has caused a greater sensa tion here than did the Guldensuppe murder mystery a number of years ago. An Inquest will be performed to day to ascertain exactly how the girl came to her death. A number of stab wounds were found on the torso, but physicians do not think that these Indicate that the girl was stabbed to death. WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—Great danger to American lives and prop erty in Puerto Plata, Santo Domingo, was reported to the State Department to-day by Vice Consul Esteva, who said the town is being shelled by Do minicans. The United States cruiser Des Moines reached Puerto Plata. Santo Domingo, to-day, according to Navy Department advices. The Des Moines was hurried to Santo Domingo from Venezuela at the request of the State Department. The Government desires to have an American warship on hand to protect foreign Interests during the revolution which began last Thursday. Farmers Rescue Fish In Kansas Drought S A LINA, KANS., Sept 8.—Th* large lake near Kansas Falls, a few miles out of Junction City, was al most dried up, and fish of all sizes and kinds were burying themselves in the mud for moisture. Farmers in the vicinity have been for several days hauling the fish In tank wagons from the lake to the Smoky Hill River, several miles dis tant, to preserve them. Gray to Meet Blue At 0. A. R. Reunion DALTON. Sept. —At a meeting of the Joseph E. Johnston Camp, Confederate Veterans, practically every member present expressed an Intention to attend the reunion of the Grand Army of the Republic veter ans In Chattanooga. Sure? Sure! You’re sure of real juice of real mint leaves— Huge New Zeppelin Could Cross Atlantic FRIEDRICHSHAFEN. Sept. 8.—A new marine dirigible, named "Zeppe lin 12," the largest ye constructed, made its first flight to-day. Its length is nearly 625 feet and its diameter Just over 54 feet. Its mo tors develop 820 horsepower. The company’s engineers believe it could cross the Atlantic Ocean. if you’re sure you see the spear in buying Wrigley’s You’re sure of delicious aid to teeth, breath, appetite, digestion. You’re sure of long-lasting enjoyment at low cost This fragrant pastime is one of the few things you like that you should like, It’s a blessing to smokers, the favorite of children, the pleasant occupation of almost everyone. Chew it after every meal BUY IT BY THE BOX of twenty packages—it costs less—of any dealer—and stays fresh until used Look fox t „ th^ speax