Newspaper Page Text
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GIRL WHOSE FACE ADORNS BOOSTER
BUTTON AN ENTHUSIASTIC ATLANTAN
She ie one of
City’s Loyal
and Effective
Boosters.
SHim LEAVE,
LOUD III PRAISE
OF OTP
Chief Roban Stevens Marvels at
Beauty of Dixie Women—Con
clave Plans Made.
Delighted with the beauties of At
lanta and more than satisfied that
this city won out In the contest for
the 1114 convention of the Shriners.
the delegation of the Imperial Council
Which visited here to perfect arrange
ments for the great conclave ie now
on Its homeward journey after a tour
that Included a trip to Panama and
the Canal Zone.
Only W. W. Irwin, Imperial poten
tate, remained until Thursday. He
stayed as the guest of Potentate For
rest Adair, of Taarab Temple, and
wae at a dinner given in his honor at
the Piedmont Driving Club Wednes
day night
While the other members 'of the
delegation were praising the advant
ages of Atlanta as a convention city
before their departure, J. Putnam
Sterene, chief raban, of Lewiston.
Maine, remained In meditative alienee
which he broke finally with a panegy
ric upon the charm of the Southern
women. Mr. Stevens spoke with elo
quence and fervor worthy of a true
Southern gentleman.
Great City and Beautiful Women.
He conceded the advantages on
which the others had dwelled, bnt
submitted that one of the chief Joys
that the visitors from the North would
experience would be in having the
delightful privilege of seeing—perhaps
meeting—some of the famed Southern
belles of whom so much has been
Written.
"You have your historic associa
tions. I grant ynu that, sir,” began
Mr. Stevens, impressively.
“You have a beautiful and enter
prising city. Anyone can see that
with half an eye. You have a city
that rose from the ashes of the Civil
War and has become the center and
capital of the South. That Is a won
derful achievement and a tribute to
the spirit of your citizens. You should
be proud of it.
"But you have more than this. You
have, sir. the most beautiful women
on whom I ever have Bet my eyes. I
Am from hleak old Maine. It's a
Inighty good State and I don’t want
to be disloyal. 1 am not saying that
It has not its charming women. It has
plenty of them, and that is why my
admission now that I must take off
jny hat to the women of Atlanta and
the South, has all the more weight."
Promisee Friends Surprise-
Mr. Stevens accompanied his dec
laration with a sweeping bow that
(bad all the gallantry implied in his
remarks
"If my good friends from the North
Aren't surprised—most delightfully
Surprised—I’m greatly mistaken,”
continued Mr. Stevens. "Of course,
they’ve read of the beauty of the
Southern women, but they regarded
this as more or less the product of
literary and Imaginative license. But
1 Just want to stand on Peachtree
Street with some of them on a pleas
ant afternoon during the convention
and see them change their minds.
"I admit that I was made a captive
Within the first few minutes after I
ventured on Peachtree street to-day.
I was held in chains of respectful, but
none the less powerful, admiration.”
Mr. Stevens had to hurry to catch
his train.
"I mean every word I have said,”
be laughed In departing, "but some
one up in Maine is apt to get mighty
Jealous if she ever hears what I have
said down here."
Hospital Inmate’s
Bed an Incubator
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 11.—Ma
ternal longings and the mother in
stinct, heretofore expressed in "play
ing" dolls, led Vera Sotter, an Inmate
of the Ctty and County Hospital, to
Secrets five eggs in her bed, with the
result that three tiny chickens were
batched and added to the hospital roll
of “charges.”
Miss Sotter is a Hungarian, 34 years
•f age.
Husband Dying, Wife
Seeks Missing Son
MEMPHIS, Sept. 11.—Mrs. S. E.
Battle, No. 30 Clifford avenue, West
Kirkwood, Atlanta, becoming anxious
tor the safety of her son, G. W. Bat
tle, whom she has not heard from
tor three weeks, has written to Mem
phis newspapers.
Mrs. Battle says the boy left Cin
cinnati for Memphis in August. His
father Is said to be dying. The lad’s
disappearance is a mystery.
Breeds Hybrid Onion
That Leaves No Trail
ST. CLAIRS VILLE, Ohio, Sept. 11.—
W. N. Miller, former County Com
missioner here, declares he has dis
covered an onion that leaves no taint
on the breath.
This triumph of horticultural hy
bridizing was accomplished, he as
serts, by combinining the Bermuda
and the Golden Yellow.
Britain Settles Bill Miss Wilson Has Law
Run by King George Waived for Blind Tot
Petticoat Apparently
Extinct in Gay Paree
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
PARIS, Sept. 11.—Evening gowns
of the chinolene trimmed with fur
will feature the coming winter’s fash
ions. according to Modiate Wingrove.
The fabric beloved by our grand
mothers will extend to the knees with
softer substances below.
Panniers again will be popular and
while slit skirts will be lowered, even
ing gowns are to be extremely decol
lete, with chiffon bodices common.
Modiste WingTove does not mention
the petticoat, so it is Judged that it
has become totally extinct in Paris.
Potomac Park to Be
A Rival Coney Island
WASHINGTON. Sept. 11.—Poto
mac Park bids fair to be a municipal
Coney Island for the people of Wash
ington. It is proposed to have an
18-hole golf course. 25 or 30 baseball
diamonds, several tennis courts, an
athletic field and a stadium seating
40,000 persons, a tea garden and a
lagoon as its chief attractions.
The proposed tract comprises 325
acres.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 11.—King George
has Just won a prolonged dispute
with the treasury regarding his coro
nation expenses. After the ceremony
Lord Knollys. the King’s secretary,
asked the treasury to pay $6,000 for
geld drinking cups given to three In
dian Princes.
King George refused to settle the
bill until the treasury should ad
vance the money. The treasury, fear
ing a scandal, compromised.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—The lit
tle blind daughter of Rural Mall Car
rier Sherry, at Mandale, Ohio, may
ride with her father over his rout%
although the postofflee regulation ex
pressly forbids It, because Miss Jes
sie Wilson, the President’s daughter,
got Postmaster General Burleson to
Issue a special permit.
L4tt!e Jessie Oolumbla, 13, of Cleve
land, wrote Miss Wilson about the
case, and an appeal to the Postmaster
General was followed by an order
waiving the Government*® regula
tions.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
THIS LADY
OBEYED HUSBAND
Alderman and Former Supreme
Court Jurist Defends Police
Anti-Public Spooning Edict.
John S. Candler, city Alderman and
ex-judge of the Supreme Court, on
Thursday gave a lucid interview to
The Georgian on the rights of the
State as opposed to the rights of in
dividuals.
It was given as a result of the out
cry against infringement on personal
liberties in the police anti-kissing
crusade.
Alderman Candler explained that
the very basis of our State and Fed
eral Constitutions was Individual
rights. He said that a lack of per
sonal liberties and rights brought on
the Revolutionary War, and that our
colonial forebears believed in those
principles of government as Intensely
as they believed in God.
"But times have changed since
those days,” he said. "We confront
conditions our forefathers never
dreamed of. And in this great change
Individual privileges have perished in
the interest of the rights of the ma
jority.
Revenue Laws an Examols.
"What would the gentlemen of the
old school have thought if they had
been prevented from taking their ap
ples and peaches to the neighborhood
distillery and having them made into
brandy?
"When Tooitabs and the other dis
tinguished Georgians drafted our
present Constitution in 1877 they
never dreamed of the State giving
children anything more than a com
mon school education
"We have many laws to-day which
If enforced 100 years ago would have
caused a second revolution. Think of
our great railroad systems. To-day
they are run by the labor unions and
the Government. The individuals who
own them have little to say in their
management.
•‘Individuals’ rights as to morals has
changed from a basic nat/onal princi
ple of government to a local Issue.
Issue Up to the People.
“While 50 years ago the interfer
ence of the police with a woman for
wearing a hoop skirt would have
caused a riot, to-day it is not unusual
for the police to arrest a woman on
account of extreme dress.
“Different sections differ in their’
regulation of morals. We don't have
the same attitude to many things in
Atlanta that the people In New York
have. We enforce certain laws in
Atlanta that are not enforced in Sa
vannah. Yet the same general prin
cipal holds true—the rights of the
individual are curbed in the interest
WOMEN’S JEWELS
AID HOSPITAL FUND
Wesley Memorial Building Cam
paign Started by Contributions
of Gems and $1,350 Cash.
With $1,350 in Ocash and a valuable
miniature brooch, an heirloom, sub
scribed to the fund by members of
the w*ays and means committee, the
women promoters of the new' Wesley
Memorial oHapital building Thursday
started on the second lap of the cam
paign to raise $100,000.
The subscriptions made at Wednes
day’s meeting w ere entirely unexpect
ed. as the committee intended only to
devise ways and means of raising the
amount necessary. Such enthusiasm
was manifested, however, that in a
short time funds amounting to $1,350,
in addition to the costly brooch, had
been recorded on the subscription
books.
According to announcement, Asa
Candler has promised the women $3
for every $1 raised, provided $25,000
is subscribed. The new' building, the
women 9ay. is absolutely necessary to
care for the large number of patients
admitted.
The officers of the w^ays and means
committee which will plan the cam
paign are: Mrs. H. H. Tucker, chair
man; Mrs. William R. Prescott, sec
retary, and Mrs. John A. Miller. Mrs.
T. R. Kendall, of Gainesville, presi
dent of the auxiliary, presided Wed
nesday.
Released Convict to
Finish Old Sentence
JACKSON, MISS.. Sept. 11.—A. D.
Oliver, who has completed a three-year
sentence In Georgia for bank wrecking
and bigamy, will be returned to Missis
sippi and placed in the penitentiary
from which he escaped three years ago.
Irregular financing and multiple mar
riages are on his record here.
Tool and His Money’
Staged in Memphis
MEMPHIS, Sept. 11.—C. Perry. Alamo.
Tenn., collected $1,600 fire insurance on
a burned building, met two strangers,
saw a bulldog fight In the rear of a
saloon* bet and lost his roll.
piness Was at Stake,
and is Mighty Glad
She Did.
In Matter Where Her Hap
Expresses Delight at Being Se
lected to Typify Famous Gate
City of the South.
Here is Miss Mary Car! Hurst
wearing one of the Atlanta “*600,000
by.1920,, booster buttons.
Miss Hurst was popularly chosen
from Atlanta's many beautiful voung
women to typify the city in the cam
paign for additional prestige through
out the country and it is her own
attractive picture that appears upon
the button.
She was delighted with the com
pliment paid to her in the recent con
test and 1m boosting Atlanta enthusi
astically. She is certain that Atlanta
"is going (o get that 500,000. all right.”
The booster button Miss Hurst is
wearing is identlfal with thousands
of others which are to be distributed
from The Georgian office.
Merchants and proprietors of busi
ness houses will be supplied with the
number they desire for distribution to
their employees and patrons by ap
plication at The Georgian office.
Says Hammerstein
Spirited Away Mate
NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—Mrs. Abra
ham Hammerstein, known on the
ytage as Miriam Henriques, “The Ori
ental Rose,” has filed suit fbr $50,000
against her brother-in-law’, William
Hammerstein, for alleged alienation
of the affections of her husband, a
son of the noted Oscar Hammerstein.
She says her husband was spirited
away so he would get over loving her.
Calcutta May Forbid
Maud Allen Dancing
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 11.—Telegraph
messages received here from Calcutta
say there is good reason to believe the
Calcutta police will prevent Maud Al
len from performing here at all.
Bombay police may permit the per
formance with the Salome dance
omitted.
m OLLIE JAMES
MIXESMINTJULEP
Washington Friends Say Kentucky
Senator’s Silver Mug Concoc
tion Leads All Others.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Friends
of Ollie James, the big Kentuckian,
claim that his recipe for a mint julep
leads all others. Senator James will
ingly gives the recipe when asked for
it. Here it is:
A silver mug, the larg<*r and the
older the better.
But first crush a large lump of
sugar In a mixing glass, dissolved
with a spoonful of water and
mixed wdth a jigger of bourbon
whisky.
Then fill the mug with ice from
a crystal lake, cracked fine but
not crushed.
Pour the sweetened whisky
over the cracked ice and then
stir the mixture until the fingers
of Jack Frost belt the mug.
A generous bouquet of baby
mint should be half buried in the
mug, and then, like an amber dew,
sprinkle a pony of old cognac
over the whole.
That’s a mint julep a la Ollie
James.
Hurt by Tango, She
Will Try, Try Again
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 11.—“I shall
not give up dancing. I shall do the
tango again as soon as I am able.”
This was the statement to-day of
Mrs. Raymond Terry, a society wom
an. the first victim of the tango, who
is suffering from a fractured hip re
ceived in a fall w-hile doing the rag
dance.
What do you think of a wom
an who forgpt her wedding day,
forgot her husband, forgot she
was getting a divorce, then met
her husband in the street and
rushed up and kissed him? A
very remarkable exclusive fea
ture in The Sunday American.
of the whole community.
“The police have now decreed that
there shall be no public kissing or
spooning in Atlanta. I rather think
they are right. But all such issues as
that, I think, finally are up to the
people to decide. In the end the will
of the majority will prevail.
“Undoubtedly there are abuses of
the law’s affecting individual rights.
Officers sometimes go too far You
rarely hear complaints against
sheriffs: they are directly responsible
to the people, and are more con
siderate.
“But officers of the general gov
ernment and city police have no di
rect responsibility to the people, and,
therefore, sometimes go to extremes
in enforcing the law.
“I have no doubt that the enforce
ment of the Mann act in the Diggs-
Caminetti case is not accomplishing
what Mr. Mann intended it to.
“The sacrifice of individual rights
at the demand of the majority has
been for the public good. We never
could have made the progress we
have on the old principle that the
Individual was the biggest thing in
the Government. We take the view
to-dajy that the Government owns all,
controls all.
"If a man went into a foreign
country years ago he took his chances
on his own responsibility. But wher
ever one may wander on the earth
to-day the strong arm of the United
States is there to protect him. We
all know we have the greatest coun
try on earth."
-
KODAK
ALBUMS
Don’t lose your Kodak pictures.
Mount them in an album. Serviceable
silk cloth covered, 26c to $1.50. Gen
uine leather, $1.50 to $3.50. NOTE, out-
of-town Kodakers: Send us the
amount you wish to pay and we will
make selection and send album by
parcel post. Expert Kodak finishing.
Send for price list.
A. K. HA VKES CO.
KODAK DEPT.
14 WH TEH ALL
i
11 •
Sheldon, S. C.—In advices from
this town, Mrs. J. B. Marvin writes
as follows: “For more than three
years, I suffered with womanly
troubles, and none of the different
treatments I underwent, seemed to do
me any good.
“I also had pains in my left side, so
bad, at times. 1 could hardly get up.
“My husband told me to buy some
Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and I did.
I started taking it, and soon began to
feel better. I took only a few bottles,
and now I am perfectly well, and
able to do anything.
“Cardui has done me a world of
good. It certainly cured me of the
trouble I had and I am getting along
nicely.
“I have recommended the remedy to
other sufferers, and they have all
been benefited by it.
“I will always keep Cardui in my
home for use in time of need.”
Cardui Is a purely vegetable reme
dy, containing no harmful mineral
products. Its ingredients act in
a helping, building way, on the
womanly constitution. It has been
relieving womanly troubles for over
half a century, during which time it
has proven of more than ordinary
value as a tonic for weak women.
You can rely on Cardui. It will do
for you what it has done for thou
sands of others. It will help you.
Begin to take Cardui to-day.
N. B.—Write to: Chattanooga Medicine
Co., Ladies’ Advisory Dept., Chattanoo
ga, Tenn,, for Special Instructions on
your case and 64-page book, “Home
Treatment for Women,” sent in plain
■wrapper.—(Ad vt.)
The Kind You Have Always Bought lias borne the
tnre of Cbas. II. Fletcher, and has been made iumicit jus*
persona) supervision for over JiO years. Allow no on#
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
11 Just-as-grood 99 are but Experiments, and endanger tly#
health of Children—Experience against Experiments
What is CASTORIA
Gartnria in a hamiles. substitute for Castor Oil,
forte, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind.
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tha
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THt SIST4US COMPASrr. TT HURRtV STHHT, NtW YORK CITY.
COURTESY
and
EFFICIENCY
Go hand-in-hand in
the Atlanta tele
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By using the Atlan
ta phone you get
the triple advan
tage of rapid-fire
service, lower rates
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ness from our oper
ators.
ATLANTA TELEPHONE
TELEGRAPH CO.
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gins September 16til.
Evening School of Commerce
Georgia School of Technology
165 V. T forth Ave., Atlanta, Ga.
Gasses 6t15 to 8:15 Ivy 4775 Free booklet on request
LOWRY NATIONAL BANK
Capital $1,000,000
Surplus $1,000,000
Savings Department
Safe Deposit Boies
WASHINGTON SEMINARY
1374 Peachtree Street, Atlanta
inrair FACTJL/TY: Plano, Mias Marguerite Bartholomew,
Cr*rTWard Miss PMa Bartholomew. Mias Clernei.Une M .* c * r i Jf or ' ^
f> Scott. VOICE: Mias Mary W. Lovelace VlDLm: Aiexj-ad'xrCTMTIfc-
blnsky PIPE ORGAN* Mias Eda Bartholomew. _MLSPpAJ- IUNDER-
GAHT*UN’ Mlaa Pearl Rivers. EXPRESSION: Mies Nannie Dunoaa.
ART ‘Miss A. C Butler
Thirty-sixth year begins Boptember 11, Mu»e i
• * artv *1me tiuring term
m Ski-
Annie Gartretl Memorial Conservatory of Mu»lc 1
New Location at 506 Ponce DeLeon Avenue.
All r£dM o^^y n 8C t hooi n w*rk°^i«fi»d* I w. h<> wril «
brar.hc* ..f mux.. Large g.our.a.^oj.td^ ^ Oljcte—
EKD INDIGESTION, DVSPEPSli, CIS,
SOUR STOMACH-PIPES BIIPEPSIN
Time It! In Five Minutes Your
Upset Stomach Will
Feel Fine.
You don’t want a slow remedy
when your stomach is bad—or an
uncertain one—or a harmful one—
your stomach is too valuable; you
mustn’t injure It with drastic drugs.
Pape’s Diapepsin Is noted for its
speed In giving relief; its harm-
lessness; its certain unfailing ac
tion in regulating sick, sour, gassy
stomachs. Its millions of cures in
indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and
other stomach trouble has made ft
famous the world over.
Keep this perfect stomach doctor '
In your home—keep It handy—get a
large 60-cent case from any drug
store, and then If anyone should eat
something which doesn’t agree with
them; if what they eat lies like
lead, ferments and sours and forms j
gas; causes headache, dizziness a.nd 1
nausea; eructations of acid and un- \
digested food—remember as 9oon
as Pape’s Diapepsin comes in con
tact wdth the stomach, all such
dhtress^vanishes. Its promptness,
certainty and ease in overcoming
the worst stomach disorders is a !
revelation to those who try It,
Mias Mary
Oarl Hunt,
who won
Great Contest.