Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 21, 1912, HOME, Image 12

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THE GEORGIAN'S MAGAZINE. PAGE ' ~ -.-™~.~- ~ • * *. What Dame Fashion Is Offering * * | Some Evening Gowns For the Spring Season jKjk- "TS$ - JSL*I f®Br M <Z ' ». &BN L * ' JwsET - 9> -l»ia w k «* Mr 7X f*r • ■•£ \xMB k* <■’ * w ™ • • Kl •’ A ’ W«r*w || O'Mi Fwr : w IHF F X'il OL JF I’ll jMB IBrar i 4 I JBiPy i w ?'® BF f\X 1 Sfffl II MF ''' '--si Mg I w|Oj»f t I Eg ;' h . . '$ B ■■ ■ %.■■■ wS&'il B 'L k| i ; xi/MeS HE n| J ■MI IWBB/ iM, 1, _ ‘ ■** JmE i 0 ■ A ? ' Tiwb mmß- • 1 IB V ' ■■ llw& BBfILi fl M IHE«' W ' WIIWMKhHwM- \ w iO«WF •V\ sM«w*Z; W ?W!»ll|r *' '’K Sflbß M* TW» /W .... 'WI a®sj*C»fl?v»r k v MB' xy gMfeft^jSMiptjßra*wWpyiißFCflwßgX«<3B<W&^ , • v *< i diiwVf BUBHBh ■• K .... • >- m.lw- • BHHHp - - ■ ,4' / ' Ui. \ \BB -■ -i ’J rak ■. vWb< 13lfeM•- ■ ’ BRI \\\ <■ fe / /In cicninij \\\ / /5 orl gou n carried / cientng frock, of out in rose- \ / acc 15 heavily colored Liberty JEL embroidered satin, the tunic ' / ’ n ° es^n being made ; : 5> ■ c! the edge of of chiffon em A/, skirt and broidcred with /Z imind the tunic, pearls in an which is circular ivy-leaf pattern. at the back ond 1 he 7 unic is slightly overlaps GOLD AND PEARLS WITH BUTTERFLY MOTIF. , , , edged with a just below the rote nf Above is illustrated a magnificent evening gown of white silk veiled ) teaivt-linp ■' ° , with ninon crusted with lines of pearls, which are so arranged on the $ DCarls J bodice as to give the appearance of a butterfly. The train and over- > ffont “ ' < dress are of gold lace. The sleeves are made of ninon slightly rucked. ? • DAYSEY MAYME AND HER FOLKS By Frances L. Garside | AS a lecturer before the Mothers club, Daysey Mayme Appleton often hears that a spinster is not tn position to give suggestions for the raising of children. "What," a mother of seven will say to her, "do YOU know about babies? You never had any'" True, too true! Rut she felt that her work in helping mothers even against their will was too important to be dis continue because of the slight over sight of having had n > children “I have been getting my information out of books, she said to herself, "but hereaftrr I will go to th- fountain head I will go to the mothers themselves I will spend the afternoon with a woman who has nim ” She called, was given .1 hair from which were first removed a broken doll, one piece of molasses ■ andy, one stock ing, one hair ribbon and one piece of cake. She stated her errand and the mother of nine smiled widely and wisely. "I Sensible Women Know Foundation of Health As health talks to women become more general, both in the newspapers and on the platform, the mat's of wom en are beginning to realize what the more cultivated have always known, that good health can not be found in a powder box The externals of health may be obtained in that way, but the basis of health lies deeper, and yet is Jus' as easily obtained The most important thing that a | woman can do for herself, and about which she is often most neglectful, is to watch the < unditlon of her stomach and bowels, The weary eyes, the bad breath, the frequent headaches, the pimples, the general air of lassitude, is nine times out of ten the result of con stipation or Indigestion, or both. Many simple remedies can be obtained, but the best in the estimation of most women is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It is’rnlld, pleasant to the taste and *xa< tiy suited to her needs. It is far guess," she said, "there Is little I don't know,” pausing between each word to wipe this child’s nose, shove another child away from her knee, and put an arm between two other children who were clinched for a tight. "Tell me, first of all." said Daysey Mayme, "what you think of raising children, not according to one rule for all, but according to Individual Tem pera merit." The mother of nine would have looked puzzled If she had bad time. Busy Little Temperaments. ■1 ‘oppose you mean by that, giving Susie a boiled egg, and frying John nie’s, and giving Mary bread and Jelly because she doesn't like egg at all.” Daysvy Mayme had time to look puz zled. and.looked it. "Well,” began the mother of nine, but she had to pause a moment. "Marie, let your brother alone. I'll spank you if I have to speak to you again—— Temperament is a serious - Yes, you can have an apple, bitt that's the last you can have matter io discuss Give Louise half of ii if superior to salts, cathartic pills, wa ters, etc., which a entirely too violent. Women should see to it that they hate at least one movement of the bowels oath day, and when showing any tendency to constipation should take Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin tn the small dose prescribed A brief nee of it will s., train the stomach and bowel I muscles that all forms of medicine can ’ be dispensed with. These opinions .ire voh rd by thousands of women after personal experience, among them Viola Caper, Covington, Ga.. and Mrs E E Brewer. Central, S. C. Any one wishing to make a trial of this remedy before buying it in the regular wav of a druggist at fifty cants or one dollar a large bottle (family size) can have a sample bottle sent to tile home free Os Charge hv simnlv —sslng D- W R Caldwell 4<i„ Wash ' n d""dt S ’" " ' ' V.. .r name and address uu a postal cautj will do. there is only one without previous —Oh, well, keep it for yourself, then No, I am not talking to you. I’m talking to Charles - -Where was I? You know conversation when there are child I said Yes.' didn't 1? Are you deaf? Yes, conversation is difficult under these .circumstances——well, web. don’t cry; mother loves it and last night I was up all night with the baby, and (here she stopped long enough to spank two of them, cuff a third, and shut a fourth in the closet) and I am a little more nervous than usual. "But, as I was saying, temperament is a serious I’ll Just walk the floor with him while I talk, and then maybe he will stop crying -Oh. that boy has spilled water all over your dress! - you will find a towel in the bath room None there? Then look on the kitchen line. Oh, Susie, you get it." A scream from Susie, who had pulled down the line of clothes and upset her. self. A scream from the baby, who apparently had taken Susie’s cry as a signal for a duet; then it became a trio, and then a quartet. Too Much For Daysey Mayme. Daysey Mayme found herself mur- I muring something about calling again. She had heard so much, she said, from | th- mother of nine that was valuable to her in her talks on "The Temperament f the Child" that she would come again to hear more. And Don't come to the door" from Daysey Mayme. and "You WILL have to excuse me" from the mother, and the ! noiS' now indicated it had become a | .-•-xt.-t, and Daysey Mayme found her . st If on the streets, w alking rapidly to | ward home bi) sey Mayme is very susceptible to I disturbing influences. I fee." she said, ’ubbing her eyes land gazing around her with the air of | mi. who has been called in the middle >f .• h d dream, "as if 1 had been sleep- I mg under a crazy quilt.” Getting On In Life By THOMAS TAPPER. IT is stale fruit that leads to illness. And it is stale work that leads to Fruit becomes stale when It remains untouched too long. So does work. Eat the fruit nhen the bloom and blush are on It and it gives yotl health. Do the job when the bloom and blush are on it and it gives you joy and several other things. What is the bloom of the job? It is the promise shining out of it that ass/.<s us that when the job is done we have accomplished one more thing—that we have laid another brick in the temple of character, raised our selves up in the world by another mil lionth of an Inch. "Is it worth while?" you ask. It ail depends on your frame of mind. I know a college professor who seems to have lost all his ambition and effi ciency because he knows that in a few years he will receive a pen.-.on income. That fact has taken all the snap out of him. Another man has raised a family of four sons and started them off in life with no further fortune than this sin gle sentence of advice: IF YO(’ WANT TO SUCCEED. LOAD YOURSELF UP WITH RESPONSI BILITIES. The bloom is off ihe Job for the col lege professor. It will always be on the job with the four boys if they follow instructions. In other words, the bloom is the joy of work. It Is true that we all have to do disagreeable tasks, BUT THERE IS NO PRACTICAL GAIN IN MAKING THEM MORE DISAGREEABLE BY HATING THEM. It is better to look such a job straight in the eye, and say: "No, you can not come it over me by looking ugly. You and I are going to have a wrestling match. I am going to throw you and sit on your chest un til you give in." This raises a man’s ambition and makes him win. It also shows that if you want your job to have a bloom YOU MUST PUT IT ON. You must look at it that way. You must argue with yourself and call yourself a coward, and gradually become boss of yourself; then the job will shine like a golden opportunity. On the other hand, if you do not care, if you would rather coddle yourself than be a man, if you prefer to let small things run you instead of running small things, then the job will be about as bright as a hole in the wall on a pitch dark night. The reason a man lets a woman stand in a street car is because HE CAN NOT MAKE UP HIS MIND TO GET UP. Such a man does not neces sarily lack tbe .qualities of a gentle man. He probably feels sorry to see a woman stand. But he has let little things boss his mind for so many years that he simply can not act quickly. Watch him. He gets behind his paper, and grad ually slips and slouches down in his seat until he no more looks like a man made in the divine image (that is what he prides himself to be on Sunday) than a bag of meal looks like the Apollo Belvedere. All you have to do to paralyze the mind Is to let little things get the up per hand. Put them off, fear them, dodge them, neglect them, then one fine day you find that something worse than cramp has possession of your brain. You may want to get up and give tile lady your seat, but you can not. You simply slip farther and farther down into your coat collar, and there you are —a true picture of what you have be come by missing the bloom on things. When the four walls of life begin to shut in on us. the room we live in gets smaller. THE FIRST THING TO DIS APPEAR ARE THE WINDOWS. Then the shutting up process goes on until we are pressed out of existence. Is it fate? No; it is pure laziness. Why should we be crushed to death in a compressing machine when, by a turn of the mind, we can make those four walls move the other way, giving us a larger and yet larger room with more and more windows? There is only one answer. We pre fer being mentally paralyzed to being alive. There can be a bloom on every job, big or little, but you must put it on. And you can put it on by learning to keep your head well up out of your coat collar and never slumping into an imitation of a bag of meal. There is no divine image about that. Do You Know— A man breathes about twenty times a minute, or 1,200 times an hour. Peasant girls in Russia receive a pound for their luxurious locks. Fatal accidents to the number of L -182 occurred in various industries last yea r. A < aterpillar can not see anything L- yond a distance of two-fifths of an inch. Among birds the swan lives the longest, at times reaching rhe great age of 300 years. Te falcon has been known to live 162 years. Lightning does moert damage in level, open country. A town or city, with its numerous projections and wires, is comparatively exempt. Mr. J. M Barnett, Carlisle athlete, has skipped 3.603 in twenty minutes, and has passed 2.000 in ten minutes. iannipuisa.s\ reau satja wajq jpqi tn inoa asn or ion papioap uopuo’i jo aq> >nq) sajp fßoo jo neius aqj pastllMP os tyaqpzna tMnt) -je Oh! By the Way Sombody Has Suggested Paying Wives a Stipulated Wage ' 1D A NOW FNFTER I WASH MARY? > JA>CK I 6-OT FOUR. Ti/aS JACKS AND / . EXTRfi M&ALSTHIS > / ANMiES AND THE BABY'S * I vyEEK FOR COMPANY, \ ipA wili B& HOME An »'LI J DAMMED Six SOCKS > x E T <aE BE ATI N ' \ /X ND FIXED THREE NECK I \ BFrNDS THATS 3.(,3 X , / 1 A z 4 |Il W> ( OKw & v ' edrf y O XA/AGES - NOTHING A WtEK ——... AND ABUSE Z OH DEAR, YfHKT s /\ A V4EEK'. SIX 7 A bridge parties, THREE TEAS / \\ euchres / \\'X x ' ' Lu/jMy? \/ (Y\ v i n \o c >V/1 h-y y I ■) 9 jE Pour vos \ /Ml I ' '» \ I A— PETITS < X — > ’ ’ 1 / VS- L /PiEDS J should w& Dock her Poc»R dear, • 4CTD OO A WEEK and j (/ occasional tourims —Xg/- x"—X A i >ARYWIuI\ A\ / k - ~zi | EOT) J p - .Ji— .... r£M)R U<FB!( < , L - /-/j ' . ITS PAST / . /// , I QUITTiN / / V TIME J jT77 WILL SH& r C^ =s= save rr out mew coat sou toodlgs. of hER>y*GES : fl) 1 OVERTIME ? ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN * * By Beatrice Fairfax I THE ONE YOU LOVE. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been going with a young lady for the past two months. I met her at a party, and I loved her very much. She has disappointed me on several occasions. 1 met another girl at a ball about two weeks ago that I like as much as the other one. As this one keeps her ap pointments with me. and as 1 love the other one very much. 1 would like your advice on which one 1 should turn my attention toward. F. F. The one you love the more, of course. Naturally, it is a disappointment to you when this girl Is slow at keeping an appointment, but nothing like the dis appointment you will experience if ;ou marry the wrong girl. ARE YOU NOT UNREASONABLE? Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 19 and have received the atten tion of a young man two years my se nior for the past three months. This young man has never asked me to keep company with him. I see him regular but think that if he wants my company he should ask for it. I have a number of friends who would be only too glad to» have my company, none of whom I like as this young man. ANXIOUS READER. He has been paying you attention for three months. Has this not proved that'he wants your company? If it is a declaration of marriage you seek, then it is certainly In his favor that he hasn't made it on such slight acquaintance. Give him time. PERHAPS YOU ARE TOO SURE. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been keeping company with a young lady for the past two years and have loved her very dearly. Os late this young lady has been acting very SPAGHETTI NIGHT Once a Week in Every Home In the American household where the nourishing value of the different foods is understood “Spaghetti Night" is a weekly event. On that night a great dish of sav ory, steaming spaghetti takes the center of the table and becomes the feature of the menu. Meats are not needed, for spaghetti gives all the nourishing ele ments the body requires It Is not onlv a dish that all enjoy, but one that costs so little. A 10c package of Faust Spa ghetti makes a real Spaghetti Night for a big family. Faust Spaghetti is made from the finest quality Durum wheat, which is so rich in gluten. It is made In the cleanest factory in the country, under the most sanitary conditions. It is packed in sealed pack ages. so its purity, goodness and freshness are preserved until it reaches your kitchen Get a package of Faust Spa ghetti at your dealer's and give your fam ily a real "Spaghetti Night." Just try it once and you will make it a weekly in stitution. 5c and 10c packages at al! gro cers ' Write for free book of Faust Recipes MAULL BROS., 1221 St, Louis Avsnue, St. Louis, Mo. peculiarly, and when I called the last time, which was about three weeks ago, . I found her more disagreeable than ever. Seeing this. I did not think it looked ■ very well for the future, so have dis- • continued my visits, especially as I had •intended giving her a diamond ring , and becoming engaged to her at her , next birthday, which Is near at hand. Do you advise me to keep up my friendship, as I am almost heartbroken? R. Me. • You speak of "becoming engaged” to , her as if you had only to state your intentions and she would fall into your hand like a peach off a tree. You are ’ too sure of yourself. Perhaps she sees 1 it, and resents it. Be a little more i humble, and go to her In that spirit. I am sure if she cares for you at all. i you)- humility will lead her to confess it #0 MORL OWUFF, FALLING HAIR OB ITCHY SCALP IF YOU DO THIS ' Your hair looks soft, fluffy, lustrous and abundant after a Danderine i hair cleanse. i Immediate?—Yes. Certain?—that's ' the joy of it. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a Danderine hair cleanse. Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it L through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and ' in just a few moments you have dou- LOWEST PRICES—BEST WORK GUARANTEED rb ~ Gold Crowns y® .Vv JNTWJI! 5A fenKna OTHER gif prices JUST ■" AS REASOM- able SET OF TEETH 15.00. ALL MY WORK GUARANTEED 08. E. G, GRIFFIN'S „S?I‘ L SSJ„, YOUR PARENTS ARE RIGHT. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 21, and in love with a lady six years my senior, who, I am sure, loves me dearly. Now, the trouble is. I am the only son at home, and have always been de voted to my parents, who say that I am too young for her. and that I should wait a few years longer. I told my fiancee this, and she was very’ angry, and said she was too old to wait. FRANK MILLER. You are too young (you will always be too young) to marry a woman who wants to get married solely because "she Is too old to w'alt.” Her anger, and her reason prove her to be the w’rong sort of a woman for you. You owe your parents a greater obligation than you owe her. Insist upon a wait of several years, and in the meanwhile your troubles may ad just themselves. bled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits par ticularly those who have been careless, whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry, brittle or thin. Be sides beautifying the hair, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stopping itching and falling hair. Try as you will, you can not find any dandruff or a loose or falling hair and your scalp will never itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use of Danderine, when you will actually see new hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair sprouting all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots of it: surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from* any drug store or toilet counter and just fry it.