Irwinton bulletin. (Irwinton, Wilkinson County, Ga.) 1894-1911, December 16, 1910, Image 3
HELEN GOULD’S 160,000 BATH TUB LAST WORD m LUXURY EW YORK.—Did you plunge into the foot and a half of Croton’ that all but over flowed from your four-foot bathtub this morning? Did you float on your back, gazing up at the rays of the sun, which didn’t fll ' ter through the - stained glass win- 'dow of your cupboardlike bathroom, and imagine you were battling off ipalm Beach? Did you happen to bump your head on the medicine closet which projects over the end of the tub as you scram ibled out to the floor, which felt for all the world like a cake of ice? If you did, how would you like, just Ifor a change, to take a bath in a $60,- ! 000 tub? i Perhaps you may have that privilege (some day if you should be fortunate .enough to receive an invitation from (Miss Helen Miller Gould, for Miss <Gould is having erected on her beauti ful summer estate, Lyndhurst, at Irv- Jngton-on-the-Hudson, a bathtub that •will cost that amount of money. ■ Just think of the plumber’s bill if (anything should happen to go wrong! (What the plumber might do, however, ‘evidently has no terrors for Miss (Gould, who planned for a private bath (that would excel any other of its kind (in the country. New Society Amusement. Society, surfeited with every pleas ure that money could buy, has at last i found a new way to amuse itself. Jt 'has taken to swimming, and, like the small boy who has a secluded little ipool back of the old mill to which he steals whenever he can escape from school, so do rich people build their own little pools to which they can re tire when the routine of dances and dinners becomes irksome. During the last year many of the wealthy have built out-of door pools on their summer estates, pools that are surrounded by pergolas, loggias and tropical gardens. But Miss Gould is going to have the finest of them all. Directly opposite her handsome home at Irvington she is having erected a magnificent bath house which is to contain not only a huge swimming pool, but small baths and showers. The luxury planned for this bathhouse reminds one of the baths of imperial Rome. Building Beautifully Designed. Constructed of red brick, with gran ite trimmings, the building will be 138 feet long and 68 feet wide. The front, which will be of Doric design, will be two stories in height. A beautiful shaded walk connecting Miss Gould’s mansion with the bath will lead to a flight of marble steps. Back of the granite pillars at the top of the steps will be three massive doors of oak and plate glass. As the doors swing out ward, the guests yill find themselves in a spacious lounging room where they may rest in ease and. comfort be fore and after the bath. The floor of cork will be covered with oriental rugs and divans, and lounging chairs will be scattered among the palms, which will convert the room into a tropical grove. At either end of the lounging room doors lead to dressing rooms, each of which might well belong to the boudoir of a princess. When Miss Gould’s guests in their bathing suits step through the wide doors at the rear of the lounging room to the walk surrounding the pool itself they will be face to face with the glory of the |60,000 bathtub. Gently lapping the marble sides of the pool will stretch the huge basin of water. At the end nearest the loung ing room the pool will be four feet deep, sloping gradually away to a depth of eight feet at the farther end. Pool Fed by Spring. The water will flow through the pool in a steady stream fed by a spring far back on the spacious grounds of Lynd- hurst, and at the opposite end an out let 'will keep the depth constant at all times. Surrounding the pool will be 16 mar ble columns, supporting the roof of glass and standing upon a walk of ceramic tiles, bordered with white marble benches. Scattered about this walk will be marble benches, covered with rugs and pillows, on which the bathers may rest as they become fa tigued from swimming or from which their friends may watch them while at play in the water. White and green will be the prevail ing colors. The pool itself will be lined with green tiles. At the base and along the upper edge will be white marble. The interior walls are to be white, and the rays of sunlight will be filtered through the delicately tinted glass ceiling. Water Supply Provided For. In order that the water in the pool may be ever fresh pipes through the basement of the building will carry wa ter not only from the spring on the grounds but also from the mains of the city water system. Should an ex ceptionally dry season cause the spring to run dry it will be possible to make use of the other means of filling, the pool. The pipes will carry the water first through a system of filters that will remove every foreign, particle, then through boilers which will heat it to the required temperature. It will take two and a half tons of coal and sixteen and a half hours of time to fill the pool for the first time. Once it is filled and heated, however, it will constantly remain at an even temperature. It is the expectation of the builders of this modern bathtub that the glass roof, which will be of w’hat is known as puttyless glass—the joining of one pane to another being invisible to the eye—will not only serve to light up the pool during the day, but that the rays from the sun will also aid in re taining the heat in the water. Extreme Luxury. At night clusters of electric lights will be suspended from the roof and from the ceiling over the walk sur rounding the pool, while single lights will shine in every corner of the build ing. Not a detail that will add to the lux uriousness of the bath has been omit ted. Under the front of the building a complete system of heating will be in stalled. From it beat will be carried to each dressing room and drying room. Women bathers will even find on their dressing tables the means to dry their hair by artificial heat. The work of erecting this palatial bath is already well under way. The actual construction is being carried on by A. M. Hunter & Son of Irvington. A large force of men has been at work for several weks and the builders ex pect that the bath will be completed by Easter. There are other luxurious baths in many private houses —notably that in the basement of Senator W. A. Clark’s mansion on Fifth avenue, New York, and there are a few magnificent public baths, of which the Broadwater bath, just outside Helena, Mont., is the finest, but Miss Gould’s is the last word in private bathhouse luxury. CROW AN AWKWARD LOVER His Futile Efforts to Soften His Raucous Voice Furnish Amuse men for Bystander. For a few years I had crows, but their nests are an irresistible bait for boys and their settlement was broken up. They grew so wonted as to throw off a great part of their shy ness, and to tolerate my near ap proach. One very hot day I stood for some time within twenty feet of a mother and three children, who sat on an elm bough over my head, gasping in the sultry air, and holding their wings half spread for coolness. All birds during the mating season be come more or less sentimental, and murmur soft nothings in a tone very unlike the grind-organ repetition and loudness of their habitual song. The crow is very comical as a lover, and to hear him trying to soften his croak to the proper Saint Preux standard has something of the effect of a Mis sissippi boatman quoting Tennyson. Y^t there are few things to, my ear more melodious than his caw of a clear winter morning as it drops to you filtered through five hundred fathoms of crisp blue air. The hostility of all smaller birds makes the moral character of the crow, for all his deaconlike demeanor and garb, somewhat questionable. He. could never sally forth without in sult. The golden robins, especially,; would chase him as far as I could follow with my eye, making him duck, clumsily to dodge their importunate bills. I do not.believe, however, that he robbed any nests hereabouts, for' the refuse of the gasworks, which, in cur free and easy community, is al lowed to poison the river, supplied him with dead alewives in abundance. —From Lowell's My Garden Ac quaintance. * Parnell. I never saw a braver man than Par nell. The story of his downfall is .one of the most pathetic in history. There is a rumor that Capt. O’Shea said to Gambetta: “What are we go ing to do with Parnell? He is get ting to be a great danager to the country.” And Gambetta replied: “Set a woman on his track.” And the woman, instead of betraying him, fell in love with the patriot, and that was his undoing.—Recollections of Mrs. T. P. O Couaw. “OF SUCH IS THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN* nF \ •* vy <l3l f < ■ ■. v- . z z ’ v' * "■ ’ I f ? ,'W- f• ' ' 4 -I • * Y ! 0 ' 2 A 1 J I H MfcH- ■•' f. Iw wi ■ ■ ■ m 2J ■ y ' > • -. ■ • .F - ■7. ■' ‘ l I ■Y; ■ . ‘ . & * ■ ■“wJc&aEzsi■ -?• illirCTnuriirL.KJiTLi-in .'.nj Id Ciwa tbe Orist fl pH Child King Fffl At Christmas time we celebrate the birthday of our King. The wise men camo from the far east, attracted by the light of the star, to find and wor ship the King. This blessed day is lighted by a star that ought to at tract our attention and lead us in the same direction and to the same end. This time of music and glad festivities should lay especial emphasis on the kinship of Jesus of Nazareth. It is our privilege to see, in the Babe of Bethlehem, the King of kings and Lord of lords. That vision should be more clear to us than to the wise men of old. They had none of the helps that quicken our eyesight. We may remember the life he lived, the work he did, the sacrifice he made, and the Influence he has exerted and is exerting to this very hour. “Never man spake like this man,” concernihg God, man, sin, life, death, truth, immortality, and “the vast for ever.” He has drawn the intellect of the world to himself. His ideals have inspired civilizations and turned the currents of history into hew channels. He has compelled the world to accept his ideas of greatness and the value of human life. He has drawn the art of the world to him self, for the greatest paintings of the nges reflect his glory. He has drawn it^e music of the world to himself, for .the mighty masterpieces of this realm ■tell the story of his work and in fluence. He has drawn the thought of the world to himself, for there never was one about whom so many books have been written. His life and words have been the inspiration of the modern altruism that is doing so much to lift humanity to higher and better levels. He is rapidly draw ing the heart of the world to himself —is drawing the lives of men to himself. He shall reign, “King of kings and Lord of lords.” Because he humbled jhimself and made himself of no repu jtation, and took on him the form of a servant, and became obedient unto .death, even the death of the cross, [therefore God hath highly exalted him land given him a name that is above every name. If we will not crown him |Lord of all in our hearts here, we shall yet be called upon to crown hhn King of eternity. Let us crown the Christ Child our King in the here and now. Keeping Christmas 3°U Christmas is a day of joy, but joy should not be allowed to die out of our Jives next morning. It should stay (with us ever after. We should sing khe Christmas songs all the new year. We should carry the peace of God in (our hearts continually hereafter. We bhould learn from this time to find the ^eauty and the good will in all things, pnd to show the world that we believe (what we say we believe —that since God loves us, and Jesus Christ is our friend, “all’s well with the world.” They who receive and tell of God’s unspeakable gift of Christ as a Re deemer may carry the gladdest sort of Uhristmas around with them all the year in their hearts. Our early days will not, indeed, come back; yet is Christmas an Indian sum mer evening to the venerable —a re viving reminiscence of ycuth. • THE PRINCE OF PEACE L_ —Js ► By JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL 4 ► J— — -! 1 ► ’ - “What means this glory 4 ’ round our feet," 4 ► The Magi mused, “more 4 ► bright than mom ? ” 4 ► And voices chanted clear and * ; sweet, J ► “Today the Prince of Peace } > is bom.” 4 ► 4 > “What means that star,’ the < ► shepherds said, > That brightens through the 4 > rocky glen”? ’ And angels, answering 4 > overhead, I Sang, “Peace on earth, 4 ► good-will to men.” 4 J 1 I And they who do their souls < ► no wrong, 4 ► But keep at eve the faith < ► , 4 ► of morn, 4 I Shall daily hear the angel’s 4 ► song, 4 I “Today the Prince of Peace 4 ► is bom!” 4 $ 4 * y EA - Che Way “When they saw the star they re joiced with exceeding great joy.” For men in banked cabins in the arc tic snows and men in the wind beaten ships on remote seas, for men in tropic jungles and men in forgotten w’astes, this day is Christmas. We who spend the day in the friendly security of cit ies and draw about us the familiar in timacies of home and daily friendships are apt to forget the wonder of this, and the significance. But whether they; realize it or not, men draw together during these hours. And this is to| follow the star the wise men saw overl Bethlehem. Christmas for most of us Is. given to’ the closest of ties and the spirit of it is only a warmer glow of well used as-i sections. But the deepest and mighti-j est things are the nearest, and in the* heart of this day is the hope of the* race. Two thousand years ago there; was one who spoke from a mountain; His message was the brotherhood of[ all men. Another time he said: “I am; the way, the truth, and the life.” ToJ day men follow the way though they! do not know, and obey the truth[ though they do not see, and live the; life though they are unconscious of its; pulse beat through the world. For the| way is the way of the race marching painfully to its far goal. The life of the individual and the ( lives of nations are borne upon thej bosom of a great tide. Wise men call; it by different names, but no man 1 lives effectually save in its full cur-! rent Whether we state It in terms' of religion, or of philosophy, or pol icy, Its law is but the divine platitude of the brotherhood of man. The wise man begs to express much! more than proverbial wishes that hisj entire clientele may enjoy the merriest; at merry Christmases. / Good Automobile Tires at Reasonable Prices Ttne, durable tires, made by an Indepen dent rubber company. Give excellent service and aave you about (10 per cent of tire coat. Notice the following low prices: 28x8 £12.80, 80x8 $13.75. 28x3% $15.05, 80x3% $17.80, 82x3% SIB.BO. 34x3% SIB.OO, 30xi $21.70, 81x4 $22.70. 82x4 523.90, 33x4 $24.75, 84x4 $28.80, 80x4 $28.30, 31x4% $31.70, 88x4% $33.20, 30x5 $36.40. Dunlop 15 per cent above these prices. Fine inner tubes 15 per cent less tbau regular standard list. Goode sent anywhere C. O. D., allowing examina tion. Five per cent discount If cash accom panies order. Telegraph orders promptly filled. State definitely style bead desired. 1 Money refunded If unsatisfactory. Give them a trial and you'll order more. The Geyer Sales Company 102 Blmm Building, Dayton, Ohio. If you but knew what harsh cathartics do, you’d always use Cascarets. Candy tablets, vegetable and mild. Yet just as effective as salts and calomel. Take-one when you need it. Stop the trouble promptly. Never wait till night. BS2 Vest-pocket box, 10 cents —at drug stores. Each tablet of the genuine is marked CCC» Fl CURES ^5 Dropsy a y Removes all swelling in 8 to » j ~ days; effect a permanent cure is 30 to 6o days. Trial treatment given free. Nothing can be faireg* Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons Soeciahsts. Box 3, Atlanta* Ba. t 0 remember EL *^»’*wnen you need a remedy ^>* , n r or COUGHS and COLDS TWO OF A KIND. w Dobbins —Is there a list of million aires published? Bronson —Not that I know of, but you can probably get a list of the fel lows who dodge their taxes. Why Do They? Why women like the baldheadetl man it is somewhat difficult to define. It may be because he appears to be: Thoughtful and kind. Trustworthy and confiding. Whim sical. Past the follies and frivolities of youth. •Usually successful. A man of property. Opinions why women like the bald headed man obtained by the Dally Mirror are as follows: He is not silly like young men. He accepts refusals of marriage so nicely that one is sorry one did not accept him. The bald patch looks so clean and nice. One would like to kiss IL A doctor welcomes baldness when it comes to him, as it is a sign of se dateness and dignified learning, which invariably increases his practise. Experience is a safer and more use ful guide than any principle, however accurate and scientific it may be.—- Buckle. Gives Breakfast Zest and Relish Post Toasties A sweet, crisp, whole some food made of Indian Com, ready to serve right from the box with cream and sugar. Flavoury Delicious Economical “The Memory Lingers” - Postum Cereal Company, Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.