The southeast Georgian. (Kingsland, Ga.) 1894-1996, April 10, 1908, Image 3
m m :-7, 3 •s. m ^ 5“ 41. – <S> XI ^5 IHi a 2Pl p ■■m m m §r m. m m i 9 long sleeves, and is adapted to all the pretty thin materials, which are very nearly legion. In this instance, how r - ever, it is made of banana colored crepe de Chine, with trimming of vel vet ribbon and bands of stitched taf feta. The long narrow chemisette is a feature, and the high girdle gives the short -waist line that is so popular just now'. In this instance tucked mousseline makes the chemisette, but all-over ls.ce and lingerie materials are having equal The w >*■ lini The quantity ot material required for the medium size is six and thi^fl quarter yards twenty-seven, V w if* 5} ,j*ol •o „ 3 – Kagazine Verse. ■dark ■right, tarn sodden rain » Kt tarnish and turn again white. ts I the pulsing, misty years and gloom, eddying swirl of p tears— ? doom! gpicture Bio you sigh? these awful scenes. ft’t know what this poem means? ref do I. —Washington Herald. 9 Political Success. picker—“What politician?” makes r. success iocker—“The ability to tell a Uwagon from a hearse.”—Judge. What is Oblivion? my—“Pop, what is oblivion?” uny's Pop—“Getting married ifamous woman, my son.”— klphia Record. Husical Comedy Phrase, is gay New York.” [ who are these sad-faced [ are the gay New Yorkers.” kille Courier-Journal. Exercising the Dog n,” said Mrs. Wyss. Ireplied £ou Mr. Wyss. speak a kind word to ft make him wag his tail? Mmd one bit of exercise all ^■ncott’s. Ae erent Then. simple, truth-telling krge ^d Washington!” Senator Sorghum, ftt as much compe Bftf politics then as ' S.hington Star. . Igemout. ■tel ■f . 51 W t w 1 'D j "Did he get on his knees?" “No, he couldn’t; I got there first!” _York Telegram. Industry. Bowery Lady—“Why don’t yer look fer work ’stead of beefin’ about hard times?” Bowery Gent—“Work? Gee, don’t I work! Don’t I stan’ three hours on de bread line ev’ry night?”—Puck. , His Initiation. Mr. Hogan—“\Vhere did Oi git th’ Dlack oye? O’im pust afther bein’ initiated.” Mr. Kelley "Into what society? ’ Mr. Hogan—“Into th’ society ay me mother-in-law.”—Leslie’s Week* iy. He is a Wonder. "Mrs. Rollins has the most accom* modating husband I know.” “What has he done nosiill “Wh; Vl NATURE AND ADVERTISING. What Public try Did Tor Mammoth Cave a Half Century Ago. What happens when advertising rtops is well shown in an article re cently printed in The Philistine, the monthly publication that made El bert Hubbard and liis Roycroft print ing shop famous. The writer takes up the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky as an example of what publicity does for even a wonder of nature. Up to about IS70 the cave was well advertised. As The Philistine remarks, a visit to it' was considered a sort of finishing touch to one’s edu cation, and a person w'ho could not talk intelligently about it had no standing in polite society. Records kept at -the Mammoth Cave Hotel from the time it was opened in 1837 show that while the place was being advertised in var ious ways the number of visitors was many times what it is now, when the publicity promoter knows it not. In 1844, for instance, w’hen the popu lation was less than twenty millions, instead of the eighty-odd millions of to-day, those who came to see the natural curiosity numbered on an average ninety-three a day. They traveled hundreds and thousands of miles—for many crossed the Atlantic to behold it. Sixty-one years later —in 1905—the average was less than a dozen a day. The public simply has been per? mitted to forget that Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave exists. The man who owned it died in 1869, and his thirteen heirs, scattered all tered all over the country, simply over the country, simply devoted themselves to spending the in come that they derived from the They thought the financial stream vyould keep on running without any expenditure on their part for adver tising. They have been disappoint ed, of course. As soon as the advertising was abandoned the people became indif ferent about the cave, and finally it figured no longer as one of the great show places of the world, In the language of The Philistine, C3Ves are not necessary to human happiness until some man by astute advertising fills men and women with a desire to see them, and when the advertising ceases the desire ceases also. Liberal advertising is essential to success. The story of the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky is only one of thou sands that prove the truth of this. And do not forget, also, that when there is a let-up in business the man who advertises his wares more than his competitor is going to get the orders and make money.—From The Paper Mill. New Ideas and Old Ones. Modern tendency is toward the la conic in action as well as expression, notes The Newspaper Maker. There is so much to know, so much to do, so much to say that short cuts are indispensable, if one would accom plish anything. In the printer’s art there is con stant tendency to cut things short, Not one-half the punctuation points are usecl that were in vogue ten years ag0 - Italics are in bad form in the body of an article and one does not use any more capitals than he can help. Dipthongs have gone into des uetude and now a proposition iis made seriously to do away with jus tifying in book and newspaper work. This would leave the right side of the columns in the same uneven appear ance as typewritten matter. Time may come when spacing will jo; the old Romans knew nothing of if and they read probably as facilely as the moder is. Or it may be that capitals will be abolished altogether. jpg mos j beautiful manuscripts in existence are those in which the cap itals are absent. All of these changes would result in economy of a prac tical nature. Or, why not go farther and do as the ancient Hebrews, omit the vowel letters ' f om writing and printing. " ” * 9 ■ r * « it* :: The Cn/y Indian Woman Lawyer. Miss Lydia Conley is the only In dian woman lawyer in the world. She is a member of the Kansas bar, and has a large and lucrative’practice in Kansas City. She has been of great service to her own people since she opened her office, but her work is not confined to members of her race. Her ability is widely recognized,— Washington Star. Miss Templeton a Preacher. Great interest was expressed in ec clesiastical circles over the appoint ment of Miss Cecilia Payne Temple ton to the assistant pastorate of the First Congregational Church of St. Louis. According to the announcement made by the pastor, Dr. Albert H. Jordan, Miss Templeton will conduct a branch o r practical philanthropy in connection with the church work. Miss Templeton is an Albany girl, and has had much experience in settle ment work. For a while she was secretary of the training school of the Young Women's Christian Asso ciation of Chicago. Miss Templeton advocates the establishment of a ho tel for self-supporting women in St. Louis similar to the one recently opened in New York City by the mil lionaire, AY. R. H. Martin.—Wash ington Star. A Business Woman. “Si “The woman lodger pays twice as much in my house,” said the land lady, “as the man, for she Is twice the worry and trouble. Suspicious! I had one woman lodger whose cook ing I did. Well, she used to snap shot the remnants of her chicken or roast before it left her table for the cupboard. I had another who had a stove in her room. My charge for coal was five cents a bucket. Cheap enough, eh? It didn’t suit her, though. She sneaked in her own coal over night, on her return from work, in a suitcase. Another lodger —she paid two and a half for her room—brought home two or three guests nearly every evening to sleep with her. It turned out she worked in an employment agency and her guests were strangers whom she took in temporarily at a quarter a night. I think she must have made ?4 or $5 a week that way at my expense.” —New York Press. ■ ; • ■ Keep Busy. The young woman accepting her first position, finds that results are what count the most in the world of wage-earners, and that the young ■woman who makes ready promises and does not keep them will not be apt to be favored with an increase of salary when the personnel of the working-force is gone over to see which of the women in the employ of the firm are giving efficient service and deserving of recognition. She must make up her mind to ac cept her first position with one point in view—that she will work all of the time while on duty during business hours, and that she will not allow any portion of the work to lie ne glected. The small tasks accumu late rapidly, which will make work outside of regular hours a necessity. When you see a woman working over time, you can generally surmise with accuracy that she wasted her time during the day. The young woman xvho does not keep her work strictly up to the notch will not hold a posi tion very long. The young woman must learn to so divide her work that it will last all through the day,, for she must re TT iiUtii’ijiTlifli i iliiiii'H 11 m n,(i'i body who ought to know better throws a fresh faggot on the craze for centenarianism, and every one seems to- have a vague idea that it’s pe culiarly virtuous to live a great many years—no matter what use is made of said years. I’m glad to observe, though, that some very well known doctors are throwing cold water on the craze of late.” Knitting as a Recreation. A prominent physician near Eoston advocates knitting as an occupation especially suited to persons who, for a time, are equal to little exertion, mental or physical, and who find it truly hard work to sit in absolute idleness, says a writer in Good House keeping. Moreover, he himself tried the prescription before giving it to his patients. Recovering from a long and severe attack of typhoid fever, he found that merely to “live out of doors and keep cheerful” was much more difficult than it had seemed when he prescribed it for other peo ple. Even listening to reading proved fatiguing, and one day, in despera tion, he began to cut out paper dolls and then to color pictures in a maga zine, as he had seen his children do. Another day he demanded silver to clean, and finally he polished up soma of the family jewelry. All this, how ever, although providing the neces sary occupation, was unsatisfactory because of its comparative useless ness. It was not necessary that tha silver should be polished daily, and there were already more paper dolls in the house than the children could dress in a month. It was then he learned from his mother the plain knitting, which has comforted so many women who “always want something in their hands.” There was no counting of stitches neces sary, and the monotony proved rest ful while the occupation was divert ing. With hands busy on something to be used by his wife, daughter, or even the little girl’s doll, he could soon listen to reading without weari ness or impatience. Even now, fully recovered and busy with a large and varied practice, he occasionally takes up knitting to rest, thus literally working out in action his theory, that real recreation seldom comes to a naturally active man through ab solute idleness. One of his patients—* a hoy nineteen years old, who was stricken with paralysis several months ago—-now knits with much interest, and finds the prescription of cheerfulness more easily taken when his fingers are doing something worth while and his mind is free either to work or rest.—McCall’s Magazine. _ x~. fa It Rajahs are out in border edges. Bordered batistes are one of the good things of the season. Braided and corded net is being used for tunic and bodice guimpe waists. The flat, round turban with deep brim is one of the season’s new shapes. The latest petticoat outdoes all others in the sheath-fitting effect of the hips. Those new Louis coats and pele rines of cretonne are going to be worn with the white frocks. ■