Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 07, 1913, Image 11

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I Catcara Di^eitive The Dige ataot Lszativ OvtMii Segrada . 1: combined wliii fUmna Po4oi **#P»lo* DlaeiaaetaN Hanoi e*l» tU«oiod AJoohoi 10% Kiepared by COVRSKY St MUNN ATLANTA. OA OotniilMO under Taro loot and Otamn Act •< Juno *0. 10OA Ko II h 103 Peachtree Street 34 Whitehall Street 33 Peachtree Street lFive Points) fs GET SUFFRAGE “SEM’S” CARICATURES OF CELEBRITIES TANGOING SET EUROPE BY THE EARS M. Boldini, the famous artist, is at the left, dancing with Mrs. An , an American heiress. Roth Boldini and his “willowy” style of painting are caricatured. Next are sev eral Parisian financiers practicing the “52” steps in a whirl of abandon. In the center is Rubinstein. M. Massager, of Gabriele d’Annunzio with Ida the Paris Opera, is at the end. Privilege of Voting Will Be Grafted Before the General Election of 1918. DEPUTIES FAVOR THE CHANGE President of Commission Has Re port Ready for Presentation to the House. Special Cable to The American. PARIS. Dec. 6.—Probably because the F'rench women have never for a •Ingle moment thought of using mil itant methods, the women of France •re certain to receive the privilege of voting before the new general elec tion in 1918, for the number of friends of woman s suffrage Is rapidly grow ing in the Senate as well as In the Chamber. Only a few days ago, M. Louis Andrieux pointed out in the latter House “that universal suf frage is a sham as long as the half, and the best half,’ of the population Is left out.” The Frenchwoman,” said another Nationalist Deputy, “is the most eco nomical of housekeepers,the most de voted wives, the most vigilant of mothers and the most ardent of pa triots. Those are the solid qualities which our women will bring to the ballot box. when suffrage becomes tea 11 y universal.” Altogether, there are about 200 Deputies quietly working for wom an's suffrage. The Socialists, of course, are fem inists to a man, but they only num ber some 70 or 80. The rest are drawn from all sections of opinions, and include names of the highest •landing in French political circles. M. Ferdinand Bulsson, president of the commission, has his report ready, end is only waiting for the opportune moment to present it to the House. He is wise enough not to be in a hurry in order that the question may be thoroughly gone Into. The Prime Minister is of the same mind. Girl Swimmer Angry At Male 'Rescuer’ Special Cable to The American. PARIS. Dec. 6.—When entering her boat at the Quai de Marine, recently Mile. Jeanne Delume, a girl of 16, •tumbled and fell Into the Seine. She Was swimming sturdily toward the bank when a boatman, who had seen the accident, came to her help and dragged her to shore. As soon as she had gotten her breath and voice again, Mile. Delume employed them to rate her rescuer. ‘‘What did you need to come med dling for?" she said. “I’ve fallen into the Seine twenty times before, and got out without anybody’s help.” And the ungrateful lady followed her rescuer to the police station, where he went to claim his reward for the rescue, and there registered a formal protest. KING RETURNS TO ROME. Special Cable to The American. ROME, Dec. 6.—The royal family returned this week after five months •pent at San Rossore and Racconigi the Alps, thic being the signal fof the opening of the toefal season. It promises to be one of esieclal bril liance. vN M ‘Wit’ Entertains by Taking Piano Apart Insistent Hostess Punished When Amateur ‘Monologist’ Declares He Can Not Repair Instrument. Special Cable to The American. PARIS, Dec. 6.—A Paris wit, M. Galipaux, is w’ell known for his amus ing monologues. Recently at an even ing party his hostess was particular ly pressing that he should entertain. M. Galipaux at last consented. “I must have a hammer and a screwdriver,” he said. "I will give you a monologue on the way in which musical instruments are made.” The tools were brought, and the humorist began to take to pieces th* grand piano, keeping up a running stream of amusing patter. At last the piano lay a tangle of wires and keys on the drawing room floor. The applause was sincere. “The only thing is,” whispered M. Galipaux to his overinslstent hos tess, "I have not the faintest idea how to put it together again.” Wilhelm Puts Speed Limit on Son’s Auto Special Cable to The American. BERLIN, Dec. 6.—The Kaiser is determined to stop the recklessness of his sons when riding or driving their autos, which has already cost a number of human lives and which has been sharply criticised in prac tically the whole German press. German law imposes no speed limit on members of the royal families, but the Kaiser has ordered all the members of his family to keep with in the speed limit of the Berlin taxis, sixteen miles an hour. Any infringe ment of this paternal order will be punished severely. STAID OLD LONDON TINES UNBENDS TO NOTICE DANCE Modernist Passion for Gay Color and the Spec tacular Its Explanation of Vogue. How to Make Better Cough Syrup Than You Can Buy A Family Supply, Saving $2 and Fully Guaranteed. A full pint of cough syrup—as much as you could buy for $2.50— can easily be made at home. You will find nothing that lakes hold of the ordinary cough more quickly, usually conquering it inside of 24 hours. Excellent, too, for spasmodic croup, whooping cough, bronchial asthma and bronchitis. Mix one pint of granulated sugar with pint of warm water, and stir for 2 "minutes. Put 2Va ounces or Pinex (fifty cents' worth) in a pint bottle, then ad/i the Sugar Syrup. It keeps perfectly. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. This is just laxative enough to help relieve a cough. Also stimulates the appetite, which Is usually upset by a cough. The taste is pleasant. The effect of pine and sugar syrup on the inflamed membranes is well known. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of Norway white pine extract, rich in guaiacol and other natural healing pine ele ments. Other preparations will not work in this combination. This Pinex and Sugar Syrup rem edy has often been imitated, but the old successful mixture has never been equaled. It is now used in more homes than any other cough remedy. A guaranty of absolute satisfac tion, or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. Your druggist has Pinex, or will get It for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne. Ind. Whips Girl Typists Who Make Errors Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Dec. 6.—Almost unbe lievable conditions were exposed here in a police court recently, when two voting girl typewriters accused Jo seph Josephson ( a Russian, of beat ing them. They were apprenticed to him. The girls said they were required to take an “oath of obedience" to their master, that they were required to enter their mistakes in a "fault book,” and that when their master considered they had done wrong, he whlped them with a small cat-o'- nine-tails. French Flier Tries To Pawn Aeroplane Special Cable to The American. PARES. Dec. 6.—It is seldom that an article, however bizarre Its nature, is refused by the French Mont de Plete, or State pawbroking estab lishment. An aviator In the Midi, however, has had to suffer a disappointment. To 6ave the expense of garage for tho winter, he got into his new ma chine and flew to the nearest large town, where he tried In vain to put It Into pawn, aeroplanes not being on the list of articles taken in pledge. Merchants and Manufacturers Get Ready to Extend Commerce. Good Feeling Prevails. By FREDERICK WERNER. Special Cable to The American. BERLIN, Dec. 6.—There is not tho slightest doubt that German mer chants and manufacturers are ex ceedingly well pleased with the new customs tariff of the United States and that it will stimulate them to make strong efforts to extend the German market in the States. It is impossible to read a German paper without noticing the new spirit of good will toward America which the revision of the American tariff has created. It has entirely taken the wind out of the sails of the Pan-Ger- manistic movement and everywhere you hear the opinion expressed that there is really no longer any reason why the relations between the two countries should not be most cor dial In every w’ay. Germans fully realize how isolated they stand in Europe. They are per fectly well aware that their country does not possess a single friend here and that every effort should be made to win the respect and confidence of ( America. It is especially hoped that the two countries may find a way of working together in the Far Ea3t, where both are interested in coun teracting and keeping down Japan. In the opinion of our most up-to- date and energetic merchants and manufacturers, the commerce of the world is bound to fall into the hands of Germany and America,' whose methods are more progressive than those of the more old-fashioned Eng land and France. Germans know that Americans will be their most dangerous competitors, but every where they have already met them, :n China as well as in South America, they have found them fighting fair and their relations have remained friendly. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Dec 6.—Now that the tango has been banned and barred by maoy cities and has been forbid den to Catholics, it is interesting to note the progress the new dance has made in England, where it hA» be come a craze among all classes of so ciety. Even the dignified London Times devotes a column or so to it daily. Society has gone stark, staring m id over It. and professors are cropping up from every corner of the earth to teach it. E. Emile Jacques Dalcroze Inaugu rated his School of Eurhythmies at the King's Hall, Covent Garden, only’ a fortnight ago, and already he has nearly 1,000 pupils. "The object,” the Inventor said, ' :s to teach people to realize the rhyth mic melody’ of life. The new science is based upon the natural Instincts of the human species.” Says The Times: The “Times’” Comment. “We may fairly ask, then, to what sentiment of our own time the tango responds It Is certain, for one thing, that it has only become as popular as it is because dancing in general has become more popular. “This may be laid to the credit of the Russian dancers. It is due to Pavlowa. who has succeeded in con vincing the general public that danc ing is true poetry, and to Mordkin and others, who have persuaded them that a male dancer does not necessarily— as Southey thought—deserve to be ham-strung for effeminacy. This re vived interest in stage dancing is one of the reasons why people are anxious to perform in the ballroom a dance like the modern tango, which is adapted to the theater. Tango a Pageant. “The rage for the tango is, in fact, part of our new sense of pageantry. The latter days of the waltz In Lon don were days which saw’ few pomps except the Lord Mayor's Show. Much has changed since then. The last two reigns have given us a revival of roy al ceremonial. “At the present moment feminine apparel has a note of exotic fantasy, w'hile the staid yellow and brown bricks of our streets a.- being dally r°olaced by Babylonian palaces with majestic columns. The dances of a spectacular age must likewise catch the eye. That is the secret of the tang<j.” It It “Restful." And one critic thus describes the new dance: “No longer will it be permitted, as in the drawing room Lancers, to seUe a lady round the waist and whirl her violently off her feet. “The practice of gripping a lady by the throat, or twisting her round and round, after clutching at her back hair, as performed in the Apache dances w’hich were so popular in Mayfair last season, will be discour aged by those dignified and gracious courtesies of the tango. “It is the dreaminess, the absent- mindedness of the tango, which ap peals so much to Its devotees, and ii so restful after the violence and Jerk- iness of the turkey trot. A man maj compose poetry or say his prayers while he dances it. [ Prince Henry of Prussia There Incognito to Feel Pulse of the Public. Special Cable to The American. PARIS, Dec. 6.—Prince Henry of Prussia has Just arrived in Paris on an incognito mission of a curious kind, if an as yet undenied story be true. He has been sent by his broth er, Kaiser Wilhelm, to “spy out the land.” That is rather a harsh way to put it. He is sent to feel the pulse of the French people. Wilhelm has great desire to visit Paris. Since the Franco-Prussian War, German sovereigns have not been especially popular this side of the border. Wilhelm has sent Henry to learn whether the Kaiser ever may come here as a welcome guest. MR. OR MRS. DYSP STOMACH RIGHT- In Five Minutes ! Time It! No Indigestion, Gas, Sour ness, Belching. “Really does" put bad stomachs in or der—"really does" overcome indigestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes—that—Just that—makes Pape’s Diapepsln the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, un digested food and acid; head is dizzy EPTIC! GET YOUR -RAPE’S OIAPEPSIII and aches; breath foul: tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indi gestible waste, remember the moment Pape’s Diapepsln comes In contact with the stomach all distress vanishes. It’s truly astonishing -almost marvelous— and the joy is ltB harmlessness A large 60-oent case of Pape’s Pia- pepsln will give you a hundred dollars’ worth of satisfaction «** your druggist hands you vour money back. It’s worth its weight in gold to men and women who can’t get their stom achs regulated. It belongs in your home —should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It’s the quickest, surest and most harmless stoma* h doc tor in the world.—Advt. Metchnikoff Not to Visit United States Famed Bacteriologist 8ays Only Journey He Ever Will Take Is to the Grave. Special Cable to The American. PARIS. Pec. 6.—Professor Metchnl- koff,leading bacteriologist and discoverer of the efficacy of artificially soured milk In curing troubles of the stomach. Is being continually Implored to come to the United States. He said recently that several other countries have offered him flattering posts, but he declares the only Journey he will ever make is the Journey to his grave from the Pasteur Institute. This Is a reference to his announce ment that he has bequeathed his body to science. The director of the Pasteur Institute insisted when he made his offer of his body that the remains be Interred In the nearest cemetery to ths Pasteur In stitute. Now Suggested That Dressmak ing Firm Induce Church Lead ers to Condemn Fashions. Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Dec. 6.—London is In th* grip not only of the tango, which Is bad enough, but also of the morality crusaders, which is worse, he Bish ops of London and Kensington have condemned music hall turns they have never seen, and formed an unholy al liance with two of London's most sen sational papers, w hose specialty is the publishing of scandalous details from the divorce courts. If there were enough business spir it in our leading dressmakers, some of them would immediately hire a bishop to tell the world that their clothes are Immodest. Any dress making firm who could induce a bish op to make such a statement abo it their particular gowns would roll in wealth. There is a certain number of el derly titled ladles, eager to make a favorable impression on Queen Mary, who are seriously thinking of forming a new league for the purpose of cen soring women’s dress and apply for powers to enforce their views, but they are doomed to fail. But let a bishop come forward and condemn certain dresses as immoral and the dressmakers will be as grat e ful to him as are the managers of the "Palace” to the Bishops of London and Kensington. SPEECH RETURNS AFTER YEARS Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Dec. 6.—A naval pen sioner of Lowestoft, who was render ed deaf and dumb by an explosion seven years ago, has recovered his speech. He w r aa suffering from a cold, and, feeling a choking sensation, drank some water. Shortly after ward he was astonished to find that he could speak. Walter Winans Is Taken Up by Alfonso Special Cable to The American. MADRID, Dec. 6.—Walter Winans, the American sportsman, who is a favorite of several European sover eigns, has now been taken up by King Alfonso. His Majesty has sent him a signed portrait of himself, and also has con ferred on him the insignia of a com mander of the Order of Isabel the Catholic. No FLUFF! HI- More Dandruff or Falling Hair — A Real Surprise Awaits You. he possessed of a head of heavy, [iful hair; soft, lustrous. flurry. and free from dandruff, is Merely tter of using a little Danderine. is easy and inexpensive to have soft iiair and lots of ii- Just gel cent bottle of Knowlton’s Dander- ■ v\ -a I drug stores iteommind it- a itlle direct* d and w Urn ten .es there will bp an appearance cl Unne: fre^niiess. fluffin east and an Incomparable gloss and luster, and try as you will you can not find a trace of dandruff or falling hair, but your real surprise will be after about two weeks’ use. when y-ou will see new hair—fine and downy at first-^yes—but really new hair—sprouting out all over your scalp— Danderine is. we believe, the only sure hair grower; destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp, and it never fails to stop falling hair at once. If you want to prove how pretty and soft vour hair really is. moisten r cloth w’th a little Danderine and careful y a r ' aW it through your hair—taking one j small strand at a time. Your hair will l ho soft, glossy and beautiful in just a few moments - a delightful surprise; awiiita one who tries this. Advt. i Brains, Not Pull, Now Test for Diplomats Special Cable to The American. LONDON. Dec. 6.—When the se lection board met at the Foreign Of fice to interview candidates for the future diplomatic representation of England a number of “nuts” of the first water, just fresh from the uni versities, appeared. One might have thought monocles and the latest extravagances in socks and ties were among the essential qualifications for budding Ambassa dors. But the candidates have to be brainy in these days, and the visi tors found themselves up against a stiff oral examination, particularly in the matter of languages. The pres ent-day system is a decided advance on the old plan of admission to the Diplomatic Service largely, If not mainly, by Influence. Has Stuff Ghosts Are Made Of, He Says Special Cable to The American. BERLIN, Dec. 6.—“Teleplasma" is what ghosts are made of. according to Professor Von Schrenck Notzlng, the famous expert in psychical re- I search, who has just published a book, “Materialization Phenomena.” to prove that spooks are composed of tangible stuff. In his psychical experiments with a French medium. Eva S., Notzlng I took elaborate precaution to prevent deception. The medium was often entirely nude when photographed by nine cameras simultaneously, an1 also by a bioscope, which showeo spirit matter emanating from her and materializing into specters. Notzlng claims he lias proved "there are such things as ghosts.” \ Party Climbs for 27 Days to Mouutaiu Top Special Cable to The American. TURIN, Dec. 6.—Dr. Lorenzo Bo- relli. a member of the mountain climbing expedition financed by the millionaire. Dr. Mario Piacenza, just described here the ascent Mount Ken 24,000 feet, one of most difficult of the Himalayas. It took 27 da^'s of ice climbing to reach the top of this almost inacces sible peak. The party spent four months in ex ploring totally unknown regions of the Himalayas, ajoir.ing those the Duke of the Abruzzi climbed ETTER Koi a Patent Medicine THAN SALT! “CASCARA DIGESTIVE’ PRESCRIPTION A New Digestive Laxative That doesn’t gripe—that doesn’t strain the delicate tissue? of the stomach—that doesn’t carry off the food undigested CASCARA DIGESTIVE acts upon the liver—the stomach and the intestines. It causes the food to digest before passage. Can be readily taken by delicate WOMEN and children CASCARA DIGESTIVE is a palatable and efficient digestive laxative which physicians will readily indorse when they know its ingredients. This prescription is made and sold exclusively by the COURSEY & MUNN DRUG STORE, of Atlanta. PRICE 50c A BOTTLE Orders by mail 10c extra. has of the FOR ENOSED LE ITTB. ICach fTnM vane* rayii enta. Caacam Hagrada Disordered stomach, biliousness, indi- Senna I/artt PodopfejliuB gestion and a general run-down condi- Pepaie Seal# t.ion. Especially beneficial for relief Dlaataaa Rauuin from overeating. Remember this. srvnr^An t.t ft.avorfd The Mnnt ased In th la preparation la fraa from the sripinf principle. Have your doctor phone u.s your prescriptions. This de partment receives our personal supervision, and Is as efficient as It Is possible to make it. Our Prompt Delivery 6arrioa la Evw at Tour D lap oral. Phono M IS. Bell. Phone 13. Atlanta. PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT Lei’s Have an Old Fashioned Christmas The kind that sim ply bubbles over with the real Christ mas spirit, and makes everybody happy. You remember it well, don’t you? It could almost be railed a Candy Christ mas. The kiddies’ stockings were filled with bright, hard candies. The Christmas tree fairly groaned with boxes and baskets of candy for almost every member of the family—every face was radiant with smiles. It was an occasion of supreme happi ness and contentment. It was a Merry Christ mas—without extravagance. Fine Candies make just such an ideal Christ mas. Our stores contain more than a hundred varieties of dainty sweets—all of them fresh, pure and clean. The bright, pure “stocking” candies 25c the pound are the very thing for the little fellows. Tell Santa Claus to fill their stockings and let them eat all they want. Nunnally’s Gift Candies in beautiful satin-lined baskets, or exquisite satin boxes, will delight even those who are accustomed to the luxuries of life. An enviable quarter century reputation for quality backs up your judgment when you buy Nunnally’s. They are always pure, always fresh and always de licious. Leave Your Orders To-day COURSES & MUNN, 29 Marietta Stree' Corner Bread at