Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN’S MAGAZIME PAGE
The Stopping-Off
Places
By FRANCES L. GARSIDE
■pend vour
opportunity of '
SpeaJdng a > »■- w ■>- m:. mg a ;
| friend.'
| There ar* man’- =f-r,n off r i_ ■ i
: in the course of r i< mn
| engaged in. Son'- aie r.>:-rre'■' *'■ •r
--»of mon’hs and -*»-'■ dir.i non \r . >•
|«OKie places lhe sto;
sider It l.r-rt.
make friends. or to ma'
A greater n ■ < •
is a lack of p- rman*n' •
' suits in t 1 ■ ■ r
feeling of "h.-r.- tod . •
row-" that gives b H to < 1 'ln’ - 'i’i
under the head ■ f .fi- ■’ ness». n itr ■
, nese and tndiffe • ' ' -
'•What is the ns'.' the no will n.-
- who arrive? at i :'
E making fri*nd.-? i r.'..ov • ■’ >•• o*-'
.. morrow."
It is as Imp 'riant tn oak' trim.; tor '
I tomorrow is t. make frlr-nde for ton )
. years hence
"I have lived many rar " J recent!, i
heard a wlT< ' i;rrd.
' investment; - '■ it: itn 1 ' ior ■- '
■ in hatred some :n i<- '• ■ rd -■ “ m ■
materia- pur i’-r t ■ . fre- '>n-' -
th* tnvestmer' ’ ■ ' ■ 1
of all was th i’ i ad- n W ■
It Costs Nothing: Pays Well.
’ It is an im -im>-nt th <t n -pit:-s no 1
expenditure "f nnn ,i
Jus’ a llttl- o- l onmtu: ■■ of ' !:■ -tight ■
fulness, i km -< tni< w-wd.
and every stoppn '■ ■ . i--- r •'< r
so brief, is mark'd by ■ft i nd.
I It heron-* srm Inn-* ' n v tnory of tn- ;
forced extl- b< |
comes a pleasing - •I!• •" t b»!'. rd a
friend.
And I would not have i end ur ,
sojourn with making friend ■ which, I
though the g of i not a"
I would hn'e oil mi!:< of your .ibid,
ing place, no ■ Miter how l<-mporarv. a
home.
Women who f mu l
are comp’ll*d h <n urn-■ a"■ ■ tn hmm
the loneilne? -if bar."!' r<w> m "de-
Ing house:- »nd h' ■. : '• iv • .; r-i-<1 t h .
advice us Ruskin :•> : ■■ n "<i■ ■ 1 lai pr—•
sessions
Thev arc- prepared to ? intirn thor is '
If it is to be for lit?, and -am with
them a pretty i ■ tt-rr op '" o. little o<l'' ;
'and ends of drap i->. photo.: <ph and
nil the little knb I kt > k* -ilnr-h v. 11l
go in on* corn? d i trunk, .mJ * l-i- h
make a string-' room 100. I, •> ~ HOM 11 !
As quick!', i if th* trnvetr-f iv*d
an anchantf‘- wand, the look of t [
temporary ib'd'n- p!:ic“ is ..--m and a i
homelik 1 room tak; ? it? ■ i
L-ittl* pains, but big gainr. for no om |
- can do her best when opoross-'-l by th- :
feeling that evei' thing around is only i
tempo’ ary
Such an atmosphere is -ondti'lv-' to
disregard * other md a too ino . n
trated regard of -?lf
If one thinks. ''M bit ? th-- tse of
hanging up a pietufe ’ Ther* i no on*
but mo to s< it '’i n- thought : >
"What s the its* -.f l.' lru: kind - id e
lite and agreeable 1- on': hr her--
long "
Outward Things Hein the Heart.
The outward i .id-nco of home and
permanen • ■ sut' n ~y. m ■ ird .imht
tion to match It
If the eves get . h mellk f»eling. th.
hear' seeks It also .nd find it in mik
Ing friends of those who w. • .. r in . •.»
yesterday, an who ■-•- . n- r be- .?■ i
after tomorrow
There I- llttl.'. . ounf n- • in h o
actor building thin - ■ ' - r. , O s ~. ,
manency Th-- . ’ w !-• i ns h< u st
lesson in the bool with the b. I t that
she wilt go th ' it i . t ■ - I '-. i. i
lesson I-- i n. d ■
The girl who ' is .i position down
town and does h- nrl thinking that
She mav not b- th-’-re mor, thin ,i f.-w
weeks Is coni ''!' -I b> th. spirit of in
difference. m-i ■ -r 'it it well
If a girl rec '? mri-i :,?■ th- l-.r-tln
ning of many ' • ■ mor- 'e . r.,1
more thouehtfu' . .’ ”■ ■■ ' kirdiv ?:>-
knows tb-i’ tod.i ■the b- vin'-'m. ’
al! ttnv if g' is th bl • 'f ■ erm
nancy in control
I do not b'-ii- t ..i: anything is >i
greate r t : .f - ■■ r t ll i> - 1 > ; iy i ■
at a stopni-'-: I' pi I.- |. I? isy -
b* rude and l ! ’ppint ."'-1 thought ■ ss if
one think H-it ' >y.-. -n t -mor
row.
For that . -is*n. = ui-. i.’
the truth - -• R in sa- -iv'
keep it in bea-t -.nd -n. ' n-t); r
stay is for an hour, i «-■ k. i month ■
for 11!
•"Tis a goo ' and afe rm.- h wm>
"to sojourn in p 1 . is if i
meant to sp*n ■ \ ■ --f. > ■ ■-.- n y.
omitting an ■pr ••ur ■- nt c. •
kindnes- -t >i -kin.- .i t v, ■' .1. ~i I
making i j • ■
y—R— T- ..-r -“*■!■•-—• r-« >■ «< » -'gt-arj-^g- I —i" ■<—»—?»•
fff ’ 1
I livfAL i
1 BAKING
| ' POWDER i
® Absolutely Pure
B -
■ Economizes Butter, Flour, & '
Eggs; malies the food more
f appetizing and wholesome
w
•Im The only Baking Tawder made
from Royal Grape Ci t am oi Tartar
Lillian Lorraine’s Beauty Secrets For Girls &
//oic to Avoid FreckL’s, and the F.harm of a "Reality Spot"
■,
/ ■. ''WwifG-fZ
/ m
, Jel - - v>
/A. 4
\“9 tX. ■k A' ; W7
w 1 t ‘Oil (nw
•• r A ■
HO
/ C'A 'till ‘Ar 'A*'Bfer \
Beaut / soots, oi patches, are like costs that point to some spt-cla’ \ k x ' gS>
attrreticn. \ = ~ . i A' -JflK
\
— -
Bv LILLIAN LORRAINE.
Isn't it a s'ranti' 1 thing that the
little bln k spot ■.hu h you paste
on -our fur is s hr-.mt- spot, and
the Utt l ' fi' l-.ti' that Xotui'r- put.=
th‘T< iri.i., you ; o murh that you
try everything in th" world to get
rid of it.
I’..mt- spots nrr coming into
fashion. ng.iln. that moans the
■ nurt plnsti r lin >. of rout s'., but
Pi-i- hl lis'i haie their season of
P' piii,i rit v.-hfi h begins with the
first warm dav
rir»t, i Weill about thr real be.au
t spots l don't suppose there
ever vns a girl who didn’t it one
tin’" anoth'-r piste a’iittle piece ■'
of ■ omt plaster op her t.ii just to
see flow it v mild look. Those cun
ning little .-pits are certainly fas
'in itirv ind if on pit them op in
just th< ri"itt v.i.■. th’v bring out
,u v. hi! • s- of i < hit.- skin or
rit i>v attotit ion tn i l>. ml iful eyr -r
a pretty month. . ,
Reauty spots >r patches are like
sign posts that p.-int t.- some espe
cial .itp'i lion Os c .iii -. you must
be snrr that .nit have tbit attrac
tion, whether it be handsome eyes,
ora well cun cd |tp, because if you
don’t, the- littl. sign post sticking
up ther- says. T.ook it this eye.
that ought to hr- beautiful and
isn’t." or this complexion which,
cam" on* -f a box inst aii of N.i .
iuro s laboratory "
In Franc. tbs position of • .1- h
beiut" spot in<ii atos some special
sentiment, ami there i- an entire
ciisw of bi lutv spots Just as
iivre i- a liv.'u.iu'. of stamps, the
it imp Indicating. bv th" way it is
,' i ■ ’ .■>. ' 'i■ r nvr lope, s'".n. ?.■ ■ ■■.•■ t
■■ , ig. from lb' sender to the tv
. ipje-nt
Where to Place Them.
Th. two hi si p. sitions in whi -h to
- fl" I mu .' pot s of copl
I i I i.-i.-r I". ,11 the outside corner of
aßu.-rjilß". <■'——T---->r v—• *— *»*«»»■ >1 ■ i» —t- •
th*- cyn about an inch n bn the
chr-tk hr-ne, or al th'- 1 Mdr* the
~hin. You want tn |v v«ry oar-ful
whom you put this spot, as putting
it ton close to toe nc-> taakrs tho
cyo look smaller, and.'putting' it ton
ctof- to the chin mak*-s thr* mouth
look pinched.
How '-v-t. it if iq ind”. Huai m H
t‘‘r which you can only d<» ido for
vnurs- ls after xpe-; inruiting b\
potting the patch in diff< ren* posi
tions.
I’ho black r patch ch' u’d n d bn
■ vtnrn to over or'iptinnp of the skin,
nr pimples I' is much hett. tn Mt
.1 P'mp'a hr.ll Ttath' I‘ilv vs '-cd t"
the ,rii but if you mu*‘ nut some
thing on It. put a smalt pu-cr of
white- court plaster, ihd powder
<aypr it veto lightly with a perfectly
pier rir* powd‘ r.
•X"\ for the spot that’s n'>t a
b - mty -pot. and which the sun and
wind sprinkles ov'r yoiirJ.-io in lit
fM bits of brown freckles
H Th 1 r ' • ’ • koi.- off; i i.-«
Sntnmi r and winter fr ~c_
k'c S The summer freckles can and
>;-|Ofi I i ya ] . , I], J nd' .t jii•’ S'
v ho ir likely to tin- deep brown
' free kb's that stav on f-o t-x rr, must
protect h.- r si iq whib- 'ho is t:\ing
tn c ’ rid of th ■ f r 'k —■ sh*- ■' «
already acquired, and not gc-j any
new ones.
It is a bore always to wear a
hat and veil, and the girl who
freckles lightly can sometimes do
without the latter. Rut -the unfor
tunate maid w h » collects yins? r
.'••naps, as the box? <ap them, .must,
be <mnsyantly on her guard.
• Tn the first * place, she should
never to out m th< glaring sun,
without preo ■-1 in o- h'-rs’df. by nib
bing a good < omi- • \ion < mam into
her sk>n. and d-ast ing this "W r -a «i u
p.wvde’- When she >m-> in t‘-om
her mitine. if her fan fa's v r
sunburned and inw unfo table, -no
Wi.-Mpd mix coi-nsTari h and w arm
rndk !•» ihc consistency of a thick
paste, and spread it oxer her sun
burned features, until the n.is’e he
gins to dry. Then wash it off
with w irna milk
Buttermilk Is Good.
if < 'U'nsrac'h and milk arc qor
■ andx, or the process c- to-'* long,
bathe your fa-e with buttermilk,
patting the buttermilk into the
skin and ’wiviry it •-n for a f-w
minutes-.
If you have a garden m hich
cucumbers grow fcorly, ’IV the
mimber treatment f '" vour f-< c a- ,<
Tais wi’i 11-o pt '"'ov- tan iod
| Io Hide Ignorance
■ ■
T'b r nrnnu of ' *'im ■ •s’au: a t '
plain? of wondw to s"',»og< ■.- It con-
Tlie country Y’sibm c\ ■: it up an’'
i i-nwn, but oo.il ; n - <k* hot bin? •>f u ■
’And the w.aitm- ■•■ -w >ib mA- by hi
! side.
Al la x>.. m despa the Apot damp-p
I fing* rin t'w ; He re on- page, an * j
i s a id,
• Bring me sonar of that.”
'■ T»ui. m siou. replied th** vaitrt.i
mat ng, s HV
I kiu a tun:. m\ man. ? ’ urirt* i ■
j. oun’rynian. ”1 *'an read’”
getieally. "w h t will *• c h,.i\ - :: on j
■ <*»n a p-at w f ooir se - ;• ■
' i
iges «• t” . - ■ - JUi' .C.t . •
Hope I or the Freckle-Faced Girl
Tho.ro are two kinds of freckles—Summer freckles and
Winter freckle.?.
Skimmer fr'-ckles can and should be removed.
( orn.-,larch and milk, buttermilk and cucumbers will drive
away freckles.
\w JE
® '.'W
Beauty snot, put on the right wav, brings out all the whiteness of a
whits skin.
whiten the skin. F ’ the ripe cu
cumhe-rs h-.'-ivin? quite i good deal
of rind on the peel, press the- in -
side *>f the cucumber through a
sir-xo, and bottle it for use. When
x u thin take the tin' * for It. bind
the -trips of cucumber peed over
■ ir forehead and f ? .• e. holding
them in p> • - w ith a piece of mus
lin. Os ' nurse, you put the inside
of the peeling novi the face. If
you ’■ .i '• ' this on all night. >ou will
sc-p ouiti an improvenu nt after a
coup" of days. I’se ‘he cucumber
juice for c’P’ yy the far off with,
and apply with pads nf cotton bat
ting soaked m the cucumber ‘o the .
f, ■-. |. =.-•> hist as often as possible.
Let it diy on
- I 1> O I_i t- • - ;T' i U’nbryo
and'?»!■ •> whc’-ri'-'S - a'rr all good for
removing Arwb •s. I don't see how
anv one can 2- ’ ■’ n • i! ; v»ut using
’■-•r.np is a i' 1 '- para 1 >on. I
use it to whiten the skin, to bleach
fi'ccklos x'ftrn tin- 'Uti H and to
i’h- aL - ' ’ m nads. for the mles of
mv feet Hid •’! n ■a a tom 1 ? in a
basin full of water for faro wash-
I'ut if '"iir * ‘-ckk ire ev<n too
dorp fur that, t - painting them
with .1 Attic peroxide. Aft--, w ish
,ng y<->ur fa. c morning and even
ing, a ppr- : he. p<.mo> ido m the frec
kles. have I’. n until it stings; .
,cb' n thi? sep.'at'on bo-cmes very
painful. was b off ano ivb on a lit
t- o'H ■ roa v nr \ .is- ' in-
F’-.-'iO'”'< think t'nat they
an m'Otniit x ery much tanned or
f’ • - kU"d. w ‘--n. ", reality, it is
n ( 't’v»T£ but a P w !u r banco of the
'' ' . .
[ Rather Deep i
; •
Thr'■<- wi? nW-.- nne subject they
‘I ■• : m’ j Fail? ’■><' i' he pufteii
Lit ’v i ■ I ,■ v norkir.v, in
: *■'' i ’ 1 ■ v" ’. ,i'i "■ l- • -mur? per shift.
bilt th< I'brt't V is - ' V. P livr it p.rik
; !'■ v -■ ■ - tv go down .ir.ii !>ur to
'• : . ’ ' Tiit-t:;;”' U- ,■ mel - and
sinni.i" ■'■■, .if disbelief came
' ' '.I: ii ■ )•> in the room.
"T:\it y ir'ii' c-noiigh." retorted the
V • . ■ •‘m v- • ’• ■ o.ir me.i Is.
i . ii ' ’ tr i nphant!' ili ’r. indvd some-
,i mii'-r v >, tal on abnek for a
■i •n<rt. T’C'-n h ••■ ', !■ .1 nomT'.ilant-
j .■ ■■ I- ' . j .’ .' rtiine f.-i
lemonade, no t*a nr coffee, and
then by using cucumber juice or '
buttermilk, peroxide or lemon on
thr- freckles and tanned skin, the
improvement will he almost imme
diate.
If you are inclined to freckle, you
have to keep right at it, fighting this
tendency and preventing the frec
kles from coming. Remember that
wind will burn your face almost
more than the sun, and that a fog
s' ria ’. with the sun trying to beat
through the mist, is the time to
wear a hat with a wide brim and a
heavy veil, because that is when
the half-hidden aun is painting
i your face with the spots that are
not beautiful.
STOPS YOUR mm FALLIIIG OUT
KUO DISSOLVES fflfflllT ST ONCE
Your hair appears soft, lus
trous, fluft v and abundant
after using a little Dan
derine.
Wh.it 'm?e= Dandruff, itch'- scalp
’.nd fal'ing hair? Who cares—so long
Danrh’ ine ovreomes this—and ft
: d and quickly, too—it does more,
i it grows hair, and we can prove if
Tri as you will, after an application
I of D,i'"-!"i-ine. you can not find a single
trace of dandruff or a loose or falling
hair and your scalp will not itch hut
j what .will please you most, will be
■ q . I,s' us° when 'ou wi' 1
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-
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- «■ » RESS “ N - i
«»le
* SET Or TEETH $5.00. ALL MY WORK GUARANTEED. R
IHR, E. G. GRIFFIN’S DE SII E L & T O V MS
' A. Zr - WHITEHALL ST.—OVER BROWN AND ALLEN’S. SI !
The Universality of Love
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. x
GT 1" ;crr ‘.s t° ms 1 hurd a w oman
I one* say "that to much is made
these days of love. It is given
more importance thin it merits."
Let us consider if she is right.
Suppose the world agreed to drop
the subject for the next five years, if
such a thing were possible, yvhich.
thank heaven, it isn't.
The theaters would close, for love is
the theme of every play.
The magazines yvould suspend publi
cation, for the majority of magazine
readers are more interested in the loves
of Phyllis than in articles on social
justice or treatises on railroad rates or
in reminiscences of the Brownings.
A love story is more than a mental
relaxation: it is an inspiration for youth
and a happv forgetting for the old.
If Love became a forbidden subject,
prose writers and poets would have
nothing of interest to tell.
Every artist would be compelled to
abandon his studio and seek employ
ment painting tobacco advertisements
on billboards.
If Love were considered the outlaw
this woman deems it, the young might
as well be old. for it is Love alone
that makes youth worth having.
Love the Motive Power.
"Love makes the world go ’round."
It is all there is of life. Those who
have it get out of life its fullest meas-i
ures of joy. Those who fail to get it
know as little of living as if they had
been mummies from birth
It has been the theme of the world’s
greatest thinker.-T l*o poet ever con
sidered the dignity of his brain to be
above the subject of love.
If he had entertained such a notion
he w ouldn't hat e been a poet.
Do You Know
That
There are sixteen cables across the
North Atlantic ocean.
When the sparrowhawk is swooping
down on its prey it cleaves space at
the speed of 150 miles an hour.
In London 900,000 persons are living
more than two in a room, and. 26,000
persons are living six or more in a
single room.
America’s very latest is an “at home"
at the bottom! of the Pacific, al! the •
guests—Bo have been invited—being in
diving dress. ,
A test for the purity of sugar is to
burn a small quantity. If it is pure It
will leave no ash If it is adulterated,
ashes will be left.
At the 600-year-nld Audien church,
in Cheshire, England, the curfew is
regularly rung, after which the date of
the month is tolled, a survival of the
times when no Silmana's exsited.
The brief, blunt “Hallo!” with which
most of ns open a telephone conversa
tion is used right round the world, and
has been adopted in such far-away
countries as Japan, Turkey, Russia and
Patagonia
One of the curious sights in Burmah
is a huge bowlder on Kelasa Heights
that rests in delicate poise on the very
brink ”f a rounded cliff. So unstable
is the equilibrium that the rock trem
bles in the wind This odd freak has
attracted the attention of the supersti
tious natives, who look upon it as a
mi’raeulous work of the gods. They be
lieve that the rock is held in place by a
hair of Buddha. Hence they have
clambered to th* top of the rock and
built there a pagoda which is some 25
feet in height.
actually see new hair, fine and downy
at first—yes—but really new hair
sprouting all over the scalp.
A little Danderine now will imme
diately double the beauty of your hair.
No difference how dull, faded, brittle
and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw I’
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is imme
diate and amazing—your hair "ill bi
light, fluff' and wavy and have an
appearance of abundance, an incom
parable lustre, softness and luxuri
> ance. th" beauty and shimmer of true
' hair health.
Get a 2,j cent bottle of Knowlton’s,
. Danderine from any drug store or toil
et counter, and prove to yourself to
-1 night-now—that jour hair is as pret
ty and -oft as any—that it has been
. neglected or Injured by careless treat
ment —that’s all--you surely can have
‘ beautiful hair and lots of it if you will
1 just trj a little Danderine.
All have written'of Love. The most
famous of the great poets have writ
ten of little else.
Says Samuel Taylor Coleridge:
"To know, to esteem, to love —and
then to part.
Makes up life's tale to many a feeling
heart."
Do you want to know the joy.- the
sweet sting of living? Get the habit
of loving.
Love does not come to all in the
same guise.
"The moods of love are like the wind;
And non'- know whence or why they
rise.”
You may not know it has arrived.
“It is difficult." sang Longfellow, "to
know at what moment Love begins—ft
is less difficult to know- that it has
begun."
The only thing for tou to do is to
welcome it gladly and without shame
An honest love is something to be
proud of. It ranks you among those
who think, and hope and feel; it Is t
proof that your heart is not atrophied.
It means that you have not outlived
the emotions, than which there could
be no worse fate *i
Don't Seek a Reason. f
Do ’ not seek a reason for loving.
Can you not enjoy a dower without
pulling it apart to find the secret of
its being?
Would sou treat a heart that aches
with Love as you would treat a sore
toe?
Would you turn an analytical mind
on the supremist of all emotions?
Would you saj "I love; I must know
WHY I love?”
Then you don't love at all. You
haven't the faintest glimmer of life's
most radiant vision. You haven't the
least conception of this greatest of
miracles.
You love with your brain because
you haven't a h*art. and Love that ex- .
ists in the brain only is a. creature
' with sawdust in its veins.
Don't scoff at Love, and claim it is
no longer the fashion. It will be the
fashion so long .is human beings exist. .
“Elaine still dies for Love of Laun
celot. Isolde urges Tristram *to new
proofs of devotion, and Guenevere the
beautiful, still shares King Arthur's
throne. For chivalry is not dead—it
only sleeps —and the nobleness and val
or of that far-off time are ever at the
service of her who has found her
knight."—MjTtle Reed.
SUFFERED ’
EVERYTHING •
For Fourteen Years. J?esto?
I To Health by Lydia E. Pink* ,
ham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Elgifi. 111. “After fourteen years of
Suffering everything from female com-
plaints, I am at last
restored to health.
“ I employed tha
best doctors and
even went to tha
hospital for treat
ment and was told
there was no help for
me. But while tak
ing Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound I began
to improve end I
''''
continued its use. until I was made well. ’’
—Mrs. Henry Leiseberg,743 Adams St.
Kearneysville, W. Va. —“I fee) it my
duty to write and say what Lydia E.
Finkham’s Vegetable Compound has
i done for me. I suffered from female
I weakness and at times felt so miserable
I could hardly endure being on my feet.
“After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and following your
special directions, my trouble is gone.
Words fail to express my thankfulness.
I recommend your medicine, to all my
friends. ”—Mrs. G. B. Whittington.
The above are only two of the thou
sands of grateful letters which are con
stantly being received by the Finkham
Medicine Company of Lynn,Mass.,which
show clearly v.diat great things Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound does >i
for those who suffer from woman’s ills.
If yon want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (canX
dential) Lynn. Mass. Your letter ivTi
be opened, read and answered bv 4
woman and held in strict confidence. ,
WH.TON
JELLICO ■
COAL
$4.50 ? o e n r
Both Phones 3G68
The Jellico Coal Co.
: 82 PEACHTREE ST. y j