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THE GEO GUAM’S MAQAZME' PAGE .
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▼- t. \\ hat Dame Fashion Is Offering <*- >•
| Sonic Evening (.lovin' For the Spring Season
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An evening
gown carried
out in rose
color cd Liberty
satin, the tunic
being made
of f biff on cm
broidered with
pearls in an
ioy-lcaf pattern.
Ihe Tunic is
edged with a
row of single
pearls.
I
DAYSEY MAYME AND HER FOLKS I
A ? a lecturer before the Mother
_l \ club Daysey Mayme Appleton
often hears that a spinster is not
In position to give suggestions for the
raising of children
"What." a mother of veven will rjv
to her. do YOU know about babies?
You never had any'"
True, too true' Put she felt that her
work in helping mothers even against
their will was too Important to be di?
continue because of the slight over
sight of having had no chlldrei
"I hate been getting my information
out of bool'=> she said tn herself, "but
hereafter I will go to the fountain head.
I will go to the mothers themselves I
will spend the afternwith a w oman
who has nine "
She called, wa = civen a hair from
which w»r» first removed a broken do>l
one piece of molasses ln ik
ing. one hair ribbon and one piece of
cake
She crated .?«! errand and the mothm
of nine smiled widely n-.d wiseic. i
“J" - >—^’le l " nw I ■ 1..-W
Sensible Women Know
Foundation of Health
As health talks to -nn •. ■ ■ '. o. o|
more general both in th* new ‘- I
and on the platform, rhe mass o'
en are beginning to realize w;-i ■ I
more cultivated Irate always hr wn I
that good health can not be fc .mt ■ . !
powder box The externals of he; •:i‘
may be obtained in that wr but the j
basis of health lire deeper, ar; I y< i ,
just as easily obtained.
The most important thing th ■ a
woman can do for herself, and
which she Is often most neglectful
to watch the condition of her st.
and bowels. The weary eyes, the ba i
breath, rhe frequent headaches. the
pimples, the general air of lassitude, is
nine times our ,-.f ten the result of rnp
gtipatfon o- indigestion or both Man'
simple remedies “an b» obtained but
the best m the r.-omat'.n of
w- men if T ‘ T. ■ s .- ut F'; ■
It it mild, r'easan* ~ the and]
exactly mjlteri to her needs It far'
GOLD AND PEARLS WITH BUTTERFL Y MOTIF
Above is illustrated a magnificent evening gown of white silk veiled
with ninon crusted with lines of pearls, which are so arranged «n ths i
bodice as to give the appearance of a butterfly. The train and over- ,’
, dress are of gold lace The sleeves are made of ninon slightly rucked s’
guess. *' she said, "there Is little I don’t
know." pausing between each word to
wine this child'-- P'-i- e. shove another
child a" a’ from h°r knee, and rut in
arm between two -'her children who
wars clinched for a fight.
"Tell me, first of all," said Davrey
Maymw 'what you think "f raising
- hildren. rmt a'cording to one ruk fm
all, bitt a'Wording to Individual Tem
perament."
Th» mother of nine would have
looked puzzled If she hail had lime.
Bus? Little Temperaments.
I -uppose yon mean by that, giving
Susii a boiled <-gg. and frying John
nie's. .mJ giving Marv b ead and .b'lly
bocausi she doesn't like ”gg at all "
Daysey Mai me had time tn look puz
.■led, ami ; O"ked ft
■\\ ell," began the motho’ "f nln".
but she bad to nausea moment.
"Mario, lot y our brother alone I'll
spank you ’f I have to speak to you
.again T*mperan;-'nt is a .uriou*
Yes. you can hav« an -ipple. but
that’s the last you can have m.vttft
to di'-' >:■ Give l.mii o half of <i if
■ iperi-.r to suits. cathartic pills, wa- I
’■ i' 1 -’ ■ ' which >re entirely too violent. •
"op on should see to it that they
I .'<\e .it least one movement of the'
Ibowe.s each day. and when showing;
I iny t.'tnieniw to constipation should
“ 1 "• ''aldwell’s Syrup Pepsin in the'
- nail doe.' proscribed A brief use of |
v id so train the stomach and bowel:
>• • • ’ >•<■ all forms of medicine .an
s-i., ns-. J with. Their opinions are
l' t .'is'inds of women, after]
I" rsi ■ ■ •XI < rience, among them V!- la I
vtngton. Cla, and Mrs. E y- I
i Bren. - . ’entr.ti S <-
t( . "is ; ’ing to make a trial of I
I ' ' hr fare buying It In the I
■ ’ CL ' , “ s ; ' » ..Pugcis- ar fifty cents •
•t • 4 botti* (famtlv ■
sample bottle sent to!
i , r " b? shnrly ad- i
b ‘ ■
j c \ • name '■
11 Ja 1 '' ■* ar<s *\ 11’ do. j
I his short
evening jrock of
late is heavily
embroidered
in a bold design
of the edge of
/he skirt and
round the tunic,
a hich is circular
at the back, and
slightly overlaps
, just below the
( waist-line
i in front.
is only one —without previous
Oh, well, keep it for yourself, then
No. I am not talking to you. I'm
talking to Charier —Where was I'.'
You know conversation when thee are
child l said Y? didn't I? Are you
deaf' Ye , conversation is diffv ult
under these cir< umstan''es —well. welt,
don't ■r\ . mother loves it —and last
night I ivtn up all night with th” baby,
and there she stopped long enough to
spank two of them, cuff a third, and
shut a fourth in the closet) and 1 am a
little more nervous than usual.
But. a- I was saving, temperament
is a serious - I’ll just walk the floor
with him wh’le 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."
\ •foam from Susie, who had puikd
down the line of clothe? and upset her.
sr.f \ scream from the baby, who
apparently had taken Susie's cry as a
•ignal for a duet, then it became a trio,
ind then a quartet
Too Much For Daysey Mayme.
I Day sey Mayme found herself mu -
'miming something about calling Again.
. She had hea-d so mm h, she said. from
pise mother of nine that was valuable to
i tier in her talks on "The Temperament
!i ‘ ’m- Child" tiiat >ho would conn- again
| to hear more.
And ‘Don't come to tile door" from
j Daysey Mayme. and "You W ild, have
|t<> excuse mo" from the mother, and the
Incise now indicated it had become a
si xtet anil Daysey .Mayme found her
self ott the streets, walking rapidly to
ward home.
Day.-‘.v May inc i very susceptible to
, disturbing influences
I fee she said, "übbtng her eyes
sn i gniing around her with the air ■
• ’•» who his been called in tb.i middle
■f t bad drr an as if I bad be-ui siee.p
--j u g on i«r ’ crazy quilt.
Getting On In
Life
By THOMAS TAPPER.
{ T is stale fruit that leads to illness.
And it is stale work that leads to
discontent.
Fruit becomes stale when it remains
untouched too long. So does work
Eat the fruit when the bloom and
blush are on It and it gives you health.
Do the job when the bloom and blush
are on it and it give, ’you joy and
several other things
iA hat is the bloom of the job?
It is the promise shining out of it
that ass' .. s us that w hen 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. ,
■‘ls It worth while?" >ou ask.
It ail depends on your frame of mind.
1 know a college professor who seems
to have lost all his ambition and otfi.
ciemw because he knows that in a sow
tears he will receive a pen. ion income.
Fhat fact hae taken all the snap out of
him.
Another man has raised a family of
four son and started them off in life
with no further fortune than this sin
gle aen f ence of advice:
IF YOl AVANT TO SUCCEED. LOAD
YOURSELF UP tATTH RESPONSI
BILITIES.
Tin* bloom Is off the job for the col
lege professor. It will always be on the
ion with the four boys if the- follow
Instructions
In other words, the bloom ia the joy
of work. It l.« true that we all have to
do disagreeable tasks. BUT THERE IS
NO PRACTICAL GAIN IN MAKING
THEM MORE DISAGREEABLE BY
H V7IXG THEM
It is better to look such a lob straight
In rhe eye, and eav
"No. ' ou 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 -.it on your chest un
til you give In."
This raises a man's ambition and
mokes him wln It also show . that if
vott want your job to have a bloom
YOU MI IST PUT IT ON.
Yon imut look at it that way.
You must argue with yourself and I
call yourself a coward, and gradually
become boss of 'ourself, then the job
’ ill shine like a golden opportunity-.
On the other hand, if you do not care,
’f ven would rather coddle yourself
than be a man. If you prefer to let small
’hings run y ou Instead of running small
thing.-, 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 rar Is because HF.
C AN NOT MAh F, I P HIS MIND TO
GET I P Su ( ’h a man does not neces
sarily lack the qualities of a gentle
ni tn. He probabl' reels, = orry to see a
woman stand Rut he has let little
tilings boss bis- mind for so many years
that he slmph- can not act quickly.
Watch him.
H<- gets behind h|s 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 got the up
per hand. Put them off. fear thorn,
dodge them, neglect them, then one fine
day you find that something w orse than
:amp has possession of your brain.
Aon may want to get up and give the
lady your seat, but you can not. You
simply slip farther and farther down
mto vour coat collar, and there you are
a true picture of what you have be
ome by missing th<= bloom on things.
A) hen the four walls of life begin to
slmi in on us. the room wo live in gets
- mailer THE FIRST THING TO DIS
APPEAR ARE THE AVINDOWS.
Then the shutting up process goes on
until wo are pressed out of existence
Is it fate?
Ni>: it is pure laziness
Why should we be crushed to death
in a compressing machine when, by a
turn of the mind, wo can make those
four walls move the other way. giving I
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 nut 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 m’nute. or 1.200 times an hour.
Peasant girU in Ru. sia receive a
P >und for their luxurious locks.
Fatal accident.- to the number of 1.-i
i-'.' occurred in various industries last
year.
v ..aterpijlae ■■ an not see anything
beyond a disi im e of two-fifths of an
inch.
Among birds the swan lives the
longest, at times reaching the great age
of 300 years Te falcon lias been
known to live 162 years.
Lightning does most damage In level,
open country . A town or city, with its
numerous projections and wires, is
comparatively exempt.
Mr. .1. M Barnett. Carlisle athlete,
har skippi d 3.603 in twenty minutes,
and has parsed 2.000 In ten minutes.
iaieuiuns=»A\ trail
Jtaqi ut (tee? asn oi leu pant,.an ucntio-r
jo sta.we.iq aut iwp sajp inoe ;o ipiu-.. 1
sqi cs uisqw'ni iiaantj
' Oh! By the Way
Sombody Has Suggested Paying Hues a Stipulated H age J
' ~ S'' ' Fmo*J AFTER I WASH MARTS')
[ <JACK I 6-OT FOUR l Abl'? T'Ms AMD ».IACKS AMD
: EXTRA aa£AL_STHIS ( a NNIgs AND THE BEST'S ’
/ vn£EK FOP Company, \ L | gE home Am 'LI J
i DARNED Six SOCXS A \ E T *vE R&ATIN
i AMD FIXED THREE MECK / r "
* WAfeHS “ K'OTHI‘4 £ A
—_____ J _ AND AgljSE
• Z OH DEAR.VfHAT' --/\
A anEEK! Six y A-
- PARTIES
THREE TEAS
Hl £ F )
zh'' s / r - pour vos)
z>4l < tL 7\ PE - T,T s J
, should w& Dock her
Po«r dear, na/as-es t . acr tiaae ope ?
4 5-000 * 'A.'EEK and an (
OCCASIONAL TOURIMG v y- > X
—4 Kj
<mARTWIuI\ J\X /"a = >
JK, ' ■ Wrti
1 jfpUITTIN 1 / z 7
i will She
---Cd, 1 r ' ' Save it out
=S==== 3 L.l n MEW Coat F-OE TOODIES, OF MERGES?
QM E RTi a/\ £ ?
| ApvrcFTOjHF^waßßrT By Beatrice Fairfax )
THE ONE YOU LOVE.
. Dear Miss Fairfax:
I have been going w ith a young lady
for the past two months. I met her at
a party, and 1 loved hit very much.
She ha? disappoint'd me on several
occasions.
I 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 w ith me, and as I love the
other one veiw much. I would like your
advicA on which one I 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 la slow at keeping an
appointment, but nothing like the dis
appointment you will experience if you
marry the wrong girl.
ARE YOU NOT UNREASONABLE? :
Dear Miss Fairfax’
I am 19 and have received rhe atten- '
tion of a young man two years my se-
I nior for the past three months. This ’
I young man has m ver asked me to keep
I company w ith him. I see him regular,
but think that if he wants my company
ho should ask for it. 1 have a number
of friends who would be only too glad
to have my company, none of whom I >
like as this y oung man.
ANXIOUS READER !
He has been paying you attention for;
three months. Has this not proved I
that he wants your company'’ I
If it is a declaration of marriage you
seek, then it is certainly in his favor
'hai he hasn't made it on such slight
acquaintance.
Give him time.
I PERHAPS YOU ARE TOO SURE.
Dear Miss Fairfax
1 have been keeping company with a
young lady for the past two years and
have loved bee very dearly. Os late
this ytiung lady has been acting very
SPAGHETTI NIGHT
Once a Week in Every Home
In the American household where the j
Nourishing ralue of rhe different foods is '
understood "Spaghetti Night” is a weekly
event. On that night a great dish of sav- j
cry. 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- i
ments the body requires. It is not only |
a dish that all enjoy, bur one that costs 1
so little. A 10c package of Faust Spa
ghetti makes a real Spaghetti Night for a
big family. 1
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, ft 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 a' 'our dealer's and goe your fam
ily a real “Spaghetti Night.” .lust rr; ft
once and you will make it a weekly in
stitutlon Sc and tOr package’- a' all gro
cer" tv rite for free book of Faust
Recipes
MAULL BROS.
1221 St. Leuls Avenue, St. Ma
peculiarly, and when I called the last
time, which was about three, weeks ago,
1 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 giting her a diamond ring
and becoming engaged to her at h*r
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" io
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
It. and resents it. Be a little more
humble, and go to her in that spirit
I am sure if she care? for you at all
your humility w ill lead her to confess it
NO MORE DANDRUff. HUI.INC HAIR
OB ITCHY SCALP If YOU 00 IBIS
Your hair looks soft, fluffy,
lustrous and abundant
after a Danderine
hair cleanse.
Immediate? Yes. Certain? —that’s
the joy of it. Your hair becomes light,
w avy. 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
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-
I ■ ■ i i—gggßßg. 1 J."-'.!!. 1 .. ■■ ■■ HBBBSggßgßMgagg
LOWEST PRICES—BEST WORK*
GUARANTEED A AA
Gold Crowns .(JU
mkJLr ° jher
FRICESJUST
W AS REASON-
SET OF TEETH Sc.CO. ALL MV WORK GUARANTEED
DR, E, G. GRIFFIN’S DE £?I E L & S
>4", WHITEHALL ST.—OVER ERCW*! AND A'.'=• « k
IWIIII.IIJB - j
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
m® dearly.
Now, the trouble is, I am the only son
at home, and have always been de
voted to my parents, who say tha» I
am too yaung 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 tn wait
JTiANK MILLER
You are too young (you will always
be too young) tn marry a woman who
wants to get married solely because
"she is too old to wait."
Her anger, and her reason prove her
to be the wrong sort of » 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 th* hair. Danderine
dissolves every particle nf 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 w ill never itch, but what will
please you most will be after a few
weeks' use of Danderine. when you
actually see new hair—fine and downy
at first —yes—but really new hail
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 oi’ toilet counter and just try IL