Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 17, 1912, HOME, Image 8

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THE GEO OGHAMS MAGAZINE' PAGE The Evervdavness of Life By BEATRICE FAIRFAX • ‘True love is but a humh'c, low-born thing And hath its food served up in earth enware. It is a thing tn walk "(th hand In hand. Through the everydayne®® of t » work aday world." James Russell Lowell. PERHAPS just that on» word ex plains why much that passe® for love fails to survive; It la' k® the dualities that are needed tn me-* of life A maid and a man meet, and the <a-< «f attraction which I® not cnniol by any rule or reason ••® ’He rest They select under the • iys of moon light that which the, demand must sur vive the hot boatire of the sun and every storm of ever-. «oa®on Recause thev love in smooth sailing, they Imagine they win continue *•• love when there is every strain ever, t,-®t. put upon that love to weaken or break It. The man get® A very small 'alary "It is la-ge enough for Inn" the, ar gue. having for the rime being lost all appetite for such material things as bread and meat. Older head®, that should bo wiser, make no protest, and there Is a mar riage on an in* onie that never sufib od for one '>r if older heads do protest, no one heeds. "You lack sentiment: vou are cold blooded. you would kill all the romance and love In life If you could." the older heads bear when they point to the high 'Cost of living Romance is gratified. It always Is. and there Is a marriage with the wolf mingling among the wedding guests. Older married folks know what It means to have him al the door. When a man and woman marry without any means of livelihood in ®lght. the wolf boldly waits at the altar Once In the house. It takes the united effort of man and rife to dislodge him and sometimes the struggle that begins with the wedding day never ends, and he is one of the family till the end. They intend to fight him with eron otrj, but not many of the young folks of today know what economy is. And by that I mean old-fashioned thrift. The pennies that should go fm ne cessities go for adornment first. So often a ribbon Is paid for'with money that would have bought a soup bom They are thoughtless because hither to some one has done their thinking for SUPERFLUOUS 111 “CURES” THE NEW M WORLD COMMENTING ON THESE JO-CALLED “CURES” Says—T hey “have numbered their victims by the hundreds of thousands.” The New York World, conceded by leunitHw everywhere rr on* of th* ■nos’ Independent, fearless newspapers levoted to the public welfare, published tn article nf Interest to women about lepllatories While it commends very llghly a well known depilatory, it also points out the imposition practiced by tnscrupulous manufacturers of so- i tailed superfluous hair "cures." It is reprinted tn part. Read It “Unscrupulous manufacturers have played on her faith and Ignorance and lave made their fortunes decade after i ieeade by publishing erroneous state ments and unfounded claims concern jig the alleged efficacy nf their meth- , ids or agencies to eradicate unneces- , •ary hair The vital Importance of hav- , ng the treatment non - poisonous, anti- i •optic and germicidal was not ree*g- . □’zed The fakes put on the market in ' •_he last ten rears have numbered their | vic Ims by the hundreds nf thousands I i Emptv promises have been made by I . scores -»f promoters tn the wild scram ble to get the money The marvel is . that woman, has not become so thor oughly disgusted as to n-Ject all treat- ; ments for good , 'But her hope for a remedy was not ; n vain. • • • only a few years ago '.he now well known DeMlrade 'rwat- , pent was brough' forth, and ft proved | to be a revelation in modem science , A. representative of The New York World Investigated th* discovery and the methods by which it was ntro- ■ iuced to 'h* pili ■ He found . x '.a is live tests have shown I’ to b» the i*ng ies’.red practi*a expe-’itlous nr safe way In which to destroy the growth of lair Those who put it before the pub ic knew the fallacy and dishonesty of publishing -\travagant Haims ’['hex iid not resort to any catch schemes, •uch Rs making a prospective customer t special offer of personal interest' They started in to win th* confidence of those interested and In this way they cave b**n eminently *>.■■■• ssful. "The news of It- markable q .ilin.-s spread rapidly I < now ku> an and widely used from • a'-l to coast and from Hudson But 'o t ■■ Gulf of Mr-, ico What is more to -lie point. It ta . oecn Indorsed by peon nent pl’v sleia ns. i representative medics mirnals and leading magazines man's ’aus* There Is to., mi; s -<kt to! risk such Indorsemm's f 'hm m* mu i frue to the lettet lit’’. 'of repeated chemi< a *v: • menis mi a thorough knowledge of t'.. *r'.x u f . hair growth could stand .-c; ■ -- vestigatlon of such authorities Th*| DeMiracle Chemical 1 . tmd above board m every <*• Indorsements ar* not tust ■ 'a ■ y Ittle probing on 'h* j ~t of 'he P X PER disclosed the fact tha* thev are pub lished and sent broad*a«* '■<'•!-. tn* ♦ a.ddrf®' of the ” r’*?* ° r publication added This !• 'b.s stum blir.t' of 2!! ■« • a reputable f the ; profession or a publi.atlor. :n rood ttap.dir.g could -*v'- aff'rd to be :"/r --xif.ed with anything that sa”ors ?. fake, and a voluntary praise ?!•<•-- through these channels is not to be] , I thou. Titey are inn ... Ir able because Hife has not dealt them any practical I ... . ,I,’on ® The' ave never learned the a b. <• of s'lf-denial. and find that ~ , tli, ■. must speak, and talk i,nd v t-' the whole anguage. y,., r. -, ( y- though Ixtve leads them, land t have every Intention to follow lit to th' end. they find themselves los- I mg tnfr-est :n the Journey, complain '■ u ~f us > ardships and wishing they I hd never st arterl. Wimn hove fi:st beckoned, the path w., •• | < . -ant but ’ they first. saw flowers, thev no" find stones. It "as the ev <• rtavnass' of love thev ed to consider when they , oui t"d it Is rhe everyday ness” of ]nve that I® the tost now they are mar ried. Love Fragile. Love is so fragile a thing it will not a ways survive disappointments, hard ','tlp®. < mplalnlng’. disillusions. It Is ®-<> ft.igi I beg those gtr's who wish to keep it (and that mean® keeping Hap pines® alsot. that they look on the pra'-tieal side of life just a little bit more when thev a e e,>urted- it. will not * 1.1 ipen t<>mance tn fig ure on one side the cost of provisions and rent, and put opposite this sum the young man's earnings. It will not rob romance of a 'ingle illusion to make a wide margin for such probable ev-'cnses as sickness and the coming' of children. It will not make Love any the less sweeter to he srpsible, and It most surely w ill make it more lasting. I want girls to love and marry. It is the greatest joy life hold®. But ft be comes the greatest sorrow, a dragyed out tragedy, if their love can not sur vive life’s "everydayness." SAVED FROM SLAUGHTER Young Jorkins is always bragging about his gieat muscular strength and his prowess with his fists. Recently a story went round that he and Smithton had nearly tome to blows after a baseball match, and Tlntson went to th* hero to learn th® truth of the matter. "¥*■>." replied Jerkin®, getting red In th- ftn e. 'Smithton called me a cheat, and I wanted to link him then and there. Aye. and I would have done it, too. if I hadn't been grabbed from be hind and held back"' '■Really?" asked Tinison eagerly. "And who held vou back?" " "ph er Smithton!" replied Jorkins curtly. bought with money. It is given on th* I strength of conviction • • * There is ' no evidence wanting to prove that De- Miracle Is worthy of.lts reputation. • * * It was found by the represen- I tatlve nf The World that among promi nent department and drug stores of New York city th* use of DeMiracle was landed on all sides. Th* proprietor of one of the largest of these establish ments said: The sal* of DeMiracle Is constantly increasing, and we hear nothing but praise for it all the time.’ I,ike expressions were echoed by the others." For years we have been cautioning women against being defrauded by so called superfluous hair "cures.' In spite of all warning it seems that some are always willing to be humbugged, because, as The World says, The fakes put on the market in the last ten years I have numbered their victims by the | hundreds of thousands." The mere fact that fake-dangerous preparations arc short-lived should alone he sufficient warning to avoid the use of any de pilatory but that of proven merit. Don't be deceived or deluded by al luring and impossible claims of Im postors. Tell any on* of them that De- Mlracle Chemical Company will forfeit Five Thousand Dollars If it can be j proven that their so-called superfluous hair "enree" even- eradicated on* single growth of superfluous hair. It is astonishing that some women will take the risk of disfigurement by using unknown and uncertain means for removing th*s* blemishes when there Is such a safe method ns DeMiracle, I which Is acknowledged by eminent and j reputable authorities everywhere as the I standard depilatory the one absolutely ; non - poisonous preparation that dis- | Solves hair, thereby taking the vitality I out of it. consequently retarding and preventing an Increased growth. If further proof is needed as to the reliability <>f DeMiracle, no stronger ar gument cap be advanced than the fact that It Is the only depilatory that has I stood tiie t»st of time There wan more of it sold ten y ears • ago and then- lias been more of It sold I-ach year since than the combined sales , oft he nostrums I Ail reliable, dealers sell and recom i mend DeMiracle. knowing It to be the I t>*s: and safest I'-pilatory Some un- ■ principled ones will tell you they can >yt 1 ■ ire it s<> that they may 'more ■■"'■l y Influem'e you to purchase their’ .■ i posslb some other dangerous. I ■ rtl ’pvs substitute under another | ' al* ‘ for a few < ents more profit To | II meet vou from lust such imposition.' i f out d'-ahr «•: not supply you mail nd we will send vou, all ''ci-'. In plain, sealed wrapper, a u " !■..•(!* of DeMiracle and we will • ou a j resent of a full-aise Jar *f I ti. yri-■>,-i vr , u to, gl.vty ’lf ‘ * r.'c < thp .lenlpr r ? ■ ■_«* ~ « ■ il3,t!or °F I t'jhe-*’- >•*, bnokJet hich ’ e*a'' - plain envelope, “if e **rr*na.r."' 1* V r-.-o gnd'tjfith streets' - ’ ■■ -=.r a’wsvs procure J l ' " - ‘ " "-cut a-g'iment in Atlanta Ifrorr. ■ -.arr.rerhr. Johnson-Dußose Co. The Q ueen of Hearts National b>ws Association By Nell Brinkley s/, i 1 ii la ■VW WllcN'i L W'k-v - \ V’\ '*x\ WW ' ’ Wl/TJ ■ z X\ z l-n i I •'"‘A'’® A-"" .. LtWSP ’ - if 1 ' v a flSiu - A v ,'L" ■x . OmM o pt b e . -~'~TTIIII -' ' “ --A-- X **»-»- ‘WI-g HUH 8. I.xl • mJ J She broke some hearts all of a Summer's ctay. ’ € “The Gates of Silence” & A’v Meta Simmins, Author of ‘'Hushed Up" TODAYS IN ST AI, LME N T. Guilty’ \lready in imagination he heard the newsboys 'Shouting the verdict in the streets newsboys in busy cen ters at charing Cross at the Mansion House, so near by in quiet suburbs—in distant Mey bourne The raucous voices of boys shouting in the street: "Guilty!" Had any other man, he wondered, ever stood there before him. innocent as he was Innocent, wrapped about by an inex tricable net of circumstantial evidence. I prepared to tight to the last for his life I because of lite ingrained instinct which .makes men fight, yet caring so little to I win the life that would cost so dear? It seemed th Rimington that already he had endured all that a man could en dure that the future could hold nothing so merciful as death for him. These weeks since his arrest at Paddington sta tion had been like years of anguish. His first acquaintance with prison Ilf*, the i unspeakable degradation of the Black Ma- I ria. where he had been herded with the I offscourlng *f the criminal world. Hje ! crushing news of the explosion at West ' port, where th* laboratory had been blown lup and charpent’er and bls assistants | killed. i It had been very difficult indeed to nb | <ain full details of the accident. Rlming- I om had chafed and suffered intolerably | under the delay s, the silence, the apathy |of even his own solicitor in the matter. Perhaps he would never know now the I true facts of the ease but he knew enough to realize that the dream of his j lifetime was gone, the bubble of his hope pricked and exploded The formula on which his invention had depended was | lost forever, and the future of which he Iliad boasted to Betty was so much fairy , gold turned to nothingness al his touch lat the moment he had so much desired !to use and handle it. In all the negotia- I lions of the sale. Charpentier had been ' the moving spirit it was Charpentier who ‘ had conducted all the correspondence ' Xow. witli Charpentier dead and himself a ‘ man under ihe shadow of a capital charge I what fair play could he expect from buy j < rs who were bv nature and calling com | nutted to a course that called for silent ] craft and subtlety and secrecy!’ Even f th* formula of his invention had parted I hands, he could never expect to reap any I benefit from it now A Blank Future. 1' was this knowledge that bad 'aid ‘hop* dead In Rimington's heart—the knowledge tha' even If bv a miracle, he could be at quitted of th’s charge brought agams* h’m he w*ould find himself *ac mg the world again per.ntles* wt’b.btMt (.prospect—a blighted man on whom the had laid * ,s> farther than ever the ’••rmar he | I loved, from the g:r! who bad pligh'e.'! frsr troth to him on that day of high hopes, in the punt on th* Thames under the overhanging trees He gave a little upward lift of the head, unconscious that the movement was ob served and carefully noted by a half dozen pairs of observant eyes; and. look ing across the court, he saw the woman of his thoughts entering It. in company with his solicitor. His heart gave a great bound, then seemed to stand still. Since th* miserable day of th* magisterial In quiry. when he had realized for the first time bow Irretrievably he was trapped, he had not seen Betty, save In those dreams that tortured him nightly in the brief snatches of sleep that were more full of pain than refreshment Now her > eyes met his across the court—far off and distant a« she seemed to him. he was sure of that with a message of love and hope She was dressed in white, charmingly dressed as though for a fete day, and Rimlngton’s lover's heart read a message In that also She was full of hope and trust —she knew no doubt and no de spair She was there today believing in the triumphant Requital of the man she loved' Rimlngton’s senses swam For a mo ment the court seemed to revolve mist shrouded before his eyes Thank God. Betty believed In him! Thank God. her iipg were sealed. Paul Saxe had given his word for that —what- ever happened. Betty would not. cou’d not speak. Paul Saxe had sworn that he had made It Impossible for her to speak, and because of that Rimington. standing there In the dock, felt that he could forgive almost anything else to the man to whom Instinct told him he owed his presence there that day, on a charge of murder. I p in the crowded tiers of spectators the heavily veiled woman had also seen Betty enter, and the sight had drawn an unconscious little exclamation from her Her voluble companion had turned sym pathetically toward her at the sound Feeling bad already , are ye?" she said. "It is dose up ere ave a sniff o' this and put up your veil—do. It’s that thick it's enough to suffocate ye'" "Thanks - I am all right. 1 do not feel In the least warm." The timid voice at least was very far from warm It might have frozen a less thick-skinned person than Ada Bryce, out intern on enjoying a Show, and such a show, to Its full Well, the salts Is and'- w en you need em. she said 'And I've a sup o' sper rit er* for later " Her ghoulish tone indicated to her !!»- tene* unspoken horror —the death sen tar.ee 'd* black ip. a -aguely remem bered aw*'il formula ?b.e shivered faint >• putting c*. chtbbilx gloved hands up •'* a*- 'a- * f-r a moment For • ’ittle | ip... * . ■' ome 'he words of the prosecuting ■ unß*l *n deaf ears To Rimington, as he listened to the out line of the case against him, it seemed that in the hour and a quarter which it occupied he heard nothing new It was a recapitulation of the old facts of the magisterial inquiry: the statement as to the finding of the body—the alarm by Saxe—the man seen in the uncurtained room when the lights had flashed up sud denly and been as suddenly extinguished -the finding of the weapon by which the murder had been done, and the sensa tional discovery on the white-paneled wall of the room of his own sign-manual, the print of his hand stained by that acci dental contact with the body during those appalling moments in the darkness when he had groped his way In terror across the unfamiliar room "They will hang me on that." he told himself, callously, though no poin’ had been made of the undoubted!' sensational discovery of this print of a blood-stained hand on the wall when the man Levas seur had been arrested, possibly because his finger prints had not corresponded with the marks on the wall, and the po lice were so dead certain that, because the' bad captured him red-handed, so to speak, he was the man. yet Rimington had been fairly certain the moment the Impress of his own hands had been taken at Brixton fail that the copper cylinder had registered 'he first definite charge of his guilt. And. after all. 'so long as Betty's name was kept out of it. what did It matter" By and by Bettg would forget —not cruel ly and callously, but with the merciful for getfulness which time brings—that she had ever loved a man who had That wasn t true She could never for get. His heart cried out against the thought. Heaven, how cruel the world was! How much longer would this tor ture last? He tried to shut out the clear. Incisive voice of the K. C. who was out lining the ease against him with unan swerable logic Continued Tomorrow. Beautify the Complexion IN TEN DAYS Nad'nola CREAM / \ Th* Unequaled Beautifies i Y”'T USED AND ENDORSED BY Lp’ MH* THOUSANDS WkT-J Guaranteed to remove rfcrgjf tan, freckles, pimples, 7 liver-snots, etc. Extreme cases twenty davs R’.dr pores and tissues of impurities, Leaves the skin clear. soft, healthy. Iwo sires, 50c and SI.OO Bv toilet counters er mail. 1 NATIONAL TOILET COMFANY. FerO. Test Getting On in Life I By THOMAS TAPPER, The Proof of the Pudding FEW people, so It Is satd. have it in them to be a Lincoln or an Edi son. But how do vve know this? Who knows what any boy nr girl may be until the boy' or girl has tried in every way possible to find out just w hat there Is in he or she? H hen they tell you to be content with the simple life, not to want money, not to care for the things that people prize, do not be too quick to act on this advice. You do not go to bed at 5 in the aft ernoon for two reasons: First. You afe not tired at 5 in the afternoon. Second. You like to be up and see what is going on in the evening. The same wish holds good in life. Do not shut yourself up in a narrow’ and restricted way of living too soon. Make up your mind that you have a share in the good things of life. <See rules later on). This is like going to bed early- in the afternoon. You miss a lot and you miss doing a lot. Now, any one of us can have our share of life's good things provided (and here are the rules): 1. w? think about the work we are going to do. 2. We think about the work we. are doing 3. We think about the work, of a harder kind, vve want to do. How the Rules Work Out. This sort of a program acts in an in teresting way—about like this: 1. It keeps you thinking. 2. And that keeps you awake. 3. And. being awake, you know what is going on. 4. And when you know what is go ing on. you are in a fairway to find your chance. 5. And when you have found your chance all the rest is easy. 6. Then you wifi have opportunity and money; and If you want the sim ple life, you can have that, too. But remember the simple life belongs to the independent man. Mr. Edison has money, and he cer tainly makes opportunity. Yet he sleeps only about four hours, and eats prac tically- less than any other hard work ing man in th® United States. If he wanted to, he could have duck, plum pudding and champagne three times a day. Why does he not want these things" He can pay for them. The answer is simple: He would rather get the work out of Mr. Edison than nut ducks .and plum pudding into him. _ L | |\X i/C > j k. n* Anty Drudge Tells How to Make e Housecleaning Easy. p 3/rs. Hardworlc— “l certainly do detest housecleaning time. Here I've been scrubbing and scrubbing until the skin is all off my knuckles, and I just can't get s the doors and paint clean.” Anty Drudge— “ All the elbow grease in the world won’t j clean things if you use the wrong soap. Get A Fels-Naptha and the grease and dirt on floors and , paint-work will disappear like magic.” 1 Fels-Naptha is better than an extra i pair of hands in housecleaning, ' It makes dirt fly from walls, floors, woodwork, linoleum, windows, porcelain • fittings and anything else that's clean able, just as it does from clothes. < No scrub-brush or hot water is nec- essary, mind you. j Just Fels-Naptha, cool or lukewarm water, and a soft cloth. Fels-Naptha dissolves the dirt in a jiffy so it can be rinsed away; it doesn’t have to be scoured off. I As Fels-Naptha is also a germicide, it is a good sanitary precaution to do ( your housecleaning with it. r Did you ever try wasm'ng dishes with ( Fels-Naptha in lukewarm water? It cuts the grease quick as a wink and makes the glasses shine. Directions for all uses of Fels-Naptha • are printed on the red and green wrapper. I This is the type of simple us e e or you to go after. Get work out of your self, with plenty of ideas about it Don’t live for plum pudding; live for what you can do. This is the simplest game in the A world. And yet— * More men play pinochle every day than play this great game of getting ' n. More women play bridge than eve try to get acquainted with the ptm er and character of the «■ u! they hone, some day. to save. All a Matter of Choice. It is all a matter of choice until the A ■day you are. scared to death, and then the plum pudding and the pinochle can do so little for the soul you want to save that ytfu hate them. 11. Well, mister, if the rule is so simple, why isn't everybody at work on It? I do not know. 1 think that a bit of plum pudding that a man can s»e looks better to him than the sou! which he can not see—or, rather, will not see. There may be some other reason. But after all, it must be the plum pudding. Successful men have been praising > work and its rewards for six thou sand years, and they still have a small audience. They have kept on singing for sixty centuries that you can have al! you want if you are willing to keep bus'- And still most people want it with out work. So I think it is the plum pudding 'hat wrecks this chance in life. But it may be the duck or ths ‘ pinochle. DO YOU KnOW- Including the outlay of the British oversea dominions and the lesser pow ers of the world, the aggregate sum > devoted annually to naval expenditure is nearly $1,000,000,000. Displayed in a Paris exhibition in 1900 there was a machine known as the photo-cinema, which was intended t to preserve the portrait, voice and ges tures of human beings. School children in New York hire formed among themselves a secret so ciety for the purpose of clearing the streets of banana skins In one year 4,319,276 hundredweight of meat was imported from America Into the United Kingdom.