Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 01, 1912, EXTRA, Image 5

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THE QEOaQIAWS MAGAZINE PAGE Daysey Mayme and Her Folks By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. THERE are pictures and poems and songs on the theme of "Love's Awakening." A subject to attract keener attention would be "Love’s First Wound." A great many of those wounds are re ceived before death results, and no one can tell when the death blow finally falls, for Love has away of rising up gnd winking one eye when it is appar ently ready for the tomb. Daysey Mayme’s love for the drug clerk had received its first wound. She had seen him with Another! Oh, woe is me. and as many alases as the sympathy of the reader can spare. She began to talk a great deal of A False One’s Perfidy, and There Is No One in the World One Can Trust: Is There. Now? Did You Ever Trust Any One, and Fail to Find Your Trust Be trayed, etc., etc. Then- her love received its second wound, gasped, and died, and she pre pared it for the tomb according to the long-established custom. For two days she let her hair go un curled, and ate pickles and sighed, and gazed with sad eyes at the moon when, ever that luminary of love gave her a chance. Then, she took action. The first thing to do was to return his gifts. She searched the house from parlor to kitchen, and all she found was a book advertising cold cream. It was a blow, but even the ’ gifts of a stingy man must be treated according to tra dition. There was also a note asking her to go to a free church concert and a faded flower. Daysey Mayme tied the book adver tising cold cream in white tissue paper, using a pale blue ribbon, which she spotted carefully with her tears, that * being a rule that must never be vio lated. The faded flower she pinned to the note asking her to go to a church so cial. and on the note she shed one. two, three big round tears, each leav ing a blot large enough for a blind man to see. She sent for a messenger boy and gave him the package, lo'oklng after him as long as he was in sight, with her vision so blurred by tears that he seemed to be swimming off. And when her emotion grew beyond her control and the tears began to flow it was as if he were drowning. When he had gone down tn the waters of her grief (1. e., turned the corner out of sight) she returned to her room and looked around with a sad sigh, that being also according to precedent. Then she picked out the very saddest book she could find and soon forgot her own sorrow in the greater sorrow of the heroine. That night Daysey Mayme ate more supper than she had eaten in three days, and the next morning she was heard humming a gay little tune as she curled her hair. Again love had died and been in terred according to tradition and cus tom. Again her heart was ready for a new occupant. V-^ I x olm I The dish that comes first in food value ALL meats and concoctions of the best - chefs take a back seat when compared in food value with a home-cooked dish of FAUST BRAND MACARONI I What a savory, wholesome, appetizing dish it is! Made from Durum wheat, whose rich gluten kernels contain the elements that build brawn and brain. Faust Macaroni can be served in many delightful ways. Let it take the place of meat dishes that are not nearly so good for you. Write for free book of recipes. At your grocer’s—sc and 10c a package. Maull Bros., St. Louis, Mo. Fhese Are Ice Cream Days By Garrett P. Serviss Rllt Von Must I .noir Shurn If Von Want tn ( rPt thp Piirp and (vpniiifip Artirlp \C P- ■ /TwELW ■w? /fn JJ it; ’• Jy/ This shows how the fat globules of cream in its nat- A TYPICAL STREET SCENE. Showing the effect of running cream through a "ho- . (Pictures reproduced by permission from “Good Housekeeping Magazine” ural state appear under a micrscope. fo r July.) mogenizer,” which disentegrates the fat globules. WHO does not remember her, or his—it is more frequently her —first dish of ice cream? As we grow older we are probably less fond of the delicious refection than In our younger days, and yet, if I knew the name of the Inventor of Ice cream, I w ould try, in this hot weather,-to sing his praise. He, or it may have been she, .was a great benefactor. The dog days must surely have been more terri ble when there was no Ice cream to make one forget, for a few delightful moments, that the sun is 16,000 degrees hot, and capable of pouring on every foot of sweltering humanity enough heat to enable an engine to raise a hundred tons a mile high! But ice cream is not an unmixed blessing, as Dr. Wiley reminds us in his Good Housekeeping Magazine article for July. It is mixed in a double sense, first in that it carries some degree of danger, if it is too rapidly eaten, espe cially' when one is greatly heated; and secondly, because the universal spirit of fraud and falsification has seized upon this summer dish, this delight of children and youn- persons, and made it a means of putting more dishonest money into rapacious pockets. Fortunately, genuine ice cream, made of pure materials, in a. cleanly way. Is nutritious as well as cooling in its ef fects and offers no danger, provided only, as already remarked, it is taken slowly, and w'hen one is not in an overheated state. In France a small dish of ice cream, taken at the end of a meal, is popularly believed to be an aid to digestion. Perhaps doctors would not subscribe to that particular opin ion—l do not know —but, at any rate, there are plenty of doctors who eat ice cream. Misplaced Confidence. One might, think, if he had a great deal of confidence in the fundamental goodness of human nature, that the adulterators and subetitutors would have avoided Introducing their mean and dishonest, and stpmetimes no less than satanic, methods of quick money getting in the manufacture and sale of a dish which offers a common pleasure to rich and poor alike, and which is most in demand at just that season when all mankind feel drawn together in the sympathy that comes from bear ing a common burden. But such confi dence, as Dr Wiley shows, and as we all know, would be misplaced. The spirit of greed is never ashamed, If it can do its deeds of darkness in a secret corner. The genuine, virtue of ice cream re sides in the CfctEAM. ('ream is derived from the fat particles of pure, fresh milk. Anything else that goes under the name, of cieam Is a fraud, and it is not less a fraud even if it be innocu ous. Cream, if it is to retain its best “The Gates of Silence” By Meta Si mm ins, Author of “Hushed Up" TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. That journey across London in the fetid interior of the prison van! A hun dred times in that life which already seemed so far off Rimington had seen the "Black Maria" pass on its gloomy journey through the streets, looking like a great black coffee stall van that at a moment’s notice could let down its wood en walls and disclose a dismal and mis erable shop within, and had speculated idly enough on the human contents, their crimes and their feelings. Once as he ha<l passed through a Westminster slum he had seen the van. driven out smartly from a police court yard, made the ob ject of a sudden frenzied attack by a couple of slatternly, aproned, and weep ing women, who had run after It, clinging to the step, screaming and shrieking, re fusing to be shaken off till one had tripped and fallen, and had been left be hind bleeding and weeping in the mud of the roadway. He thought of that scene now as he stood locked into the narrow compartment and listened to the talk of his unseen companions. Tragedy, grim, incredibly ugly and sor did that was what he had always asso ciated with the prison van. Instead, here was laughter, something approaching mirth—a Rebelaisan wit and a wonderful amount of the milk of human kindness. Os all his majesty’s guests, as the warder with the facetiousness of his kind had called them, the most melancholy was a man who had only a six months’ sentence to serve. Besides himself, Rimington knew there was another "lifer" in the van, as well as a defaulting solicitor who had got a well-deserved ten years: this: man, urbane, socially successful, accus tomed all his life to purple and fine linen, was the most cheerful of the lot. The social gift that had l>een his undoing was sparkling brilliantly during his last ride together before the long silence settled down about him. Rimington. in his compartment, held his peace and listened. He had no de sire to join in this laughter of fools. And as he listened, above the talk which went on without let or hindrance from the warders —above the rattle of the heavy van- he heard a curious, recur ring sound. The man who had got six months was weeping like a hysterical woman. He had left a dying wife behind him in the land of the living men. Gradually, to Jack Rimington. that sound of weeping grew, drowning all other sounds —seemed to gather to itself echoes of all the women who wept for all the prisoners in the world. He longed to put his handcuffed hands to his ears to shut out the bitter sound of it. Then the van had stopped: moved on through a courtyard. There was a clang and that everlasting rattle of the keys. Jack Rimington, waiting, knew now that the Gates of Silence had swung to be hind him—for twenty years. Dr. Robert Merton, specialist in 'he diseases of women and children, the man who had, tor all his skill, been pow erless to save Anthony Barrington's son. was a comparatively . recent addition to the number of people who "count” in London society. The time and manner of his arrival, however, were matters of little moment. He had arrived, and all London —that is. the London of rich wom en to whom illness is a luxury, of moth ers able to pay extravagant fees for the satisfaction of learning that their chil dren’s little fingers do not ache flocked to the consulting room of the white painted, spick and span house in the se lect square near Harley • street that was sufficiently removed from "Doctors’ Row” to insure it not being overlooked or mis taken, and not too far removed from it lest a newcomer might be suspected of being ostentatious or eccentric. f’eople who consulted him once never forsook him. With children he was ex traordinarily popular. He effected some remarkable cures, and. above all, he had personality. He understood women, or at least he made them believe he did. In a word, he was successful, and his ap pointment book, which in the provincial town from which lie had migrated had displayed dally virginal pages, in London was as full as that of a popular actor manager. .Sometimes his sui t ess palled on him. He was naturally a lazy man, and the strain Involved by the continual stream of patients was very considerable. Al qualities, should not be used more than 24 hours after it is separated from the milk. When the cream is frozen, to make ice cream, It should be sweet ened with SUGAR, and flavored, says Dr Wiley. with some NATURAL, HARMLESS material That appears to be all there is of genuine ice cream. The definition is plain and simple. Luckily for consumers, there is a great deal of good ice cream on the market, but, unluckily for some of them, there is also a great deal that is fraud ulent. Much of this may not be abso- most inevitably, but for the goad behind him pricking hfm on. he would have fallen out of the front rank from sheer lack of personal ambition. He had never felt more weary of the strain, more im patient of the yoke, than this morning when he entered his study and asked his secretary for the appointment book. Throwing himself in an easy chair, he ran his eyes down the neatly written col umns. No children today, thank good ness! Women were bad enough; but women with children! A marvelously free day altogether—only three appointments for the morning and only twice as many for the afternoon. The afternoon, some how, did not so much matter. He usually felt fortified after lunch; besides, expe rience had taught him that his most strenuous patients usually came in the morning. “Miss Grieve. Miss Thornton. Mrs. Bar rington.” Dr. Merton repeated the names aloud. Al) familiar names except the last -Mrs. Barrington. The name had a familiar sound, yet he failed to recognize It. Lay ing the book down on his knee, the doo* tor leaned back in his chair and turned the name over in his mind. He was a big man. and very gooil looking in the blond way- which is so attractive to women of a certain type. Well built and carrying himself alertly, he looked more like 35 years of age. than the 40 his birth certifi cate registered. His one physical defect was that his eyes displayed that occa sional inequality of coloring in which the iris is partially blue and btow-n. He was curiously sensitive on the subject, and wore glasses solely on that account. He Remembers. "Mrs. Barrington!" He brought his hand down on the book with a smart slap. He had remem bered now. Barrington was the name of the artist in consultation with Heldon. A queer man. who had been half demented with grief over the loss of his child, and who had been extraordinarily rude to his wife, who was remarkably good looking after the fashion of tile heroine of a Mae terlinck play. "Mrs. Barrington!” Dr. Robert Merton repeated the name again slowly, and, BEAUTIFUL BUST Sparkling ** PERFECT E G |1 W FORM ■ bl WMi O| fl 30c Bos Free We want to fftfc US- F* T ’ Elraß&i&F' > Ml a 50r package A T <>f Hr Cather- Jacobs’ Pharmacy in h k i n g the bust plump —— *' n<l I-;-'),; Would You Pay 50c to m?nt ,f herieif and' own and her patients' bust measure- Yes, indeed you would. You pay one molds from 4to 7 inches. Write today hundred times 50e to be cured, and yet and inclose 10c to help pay distribution many persons suffering for years with expenses, ami a 50c treatment will be awful cased of eczema have been cured mailed at once in nlain package. bv a 50c package of Tetterine. Tetterlne DR. KELLY CO.. Dept. 322-HB, Bus- can be had: at any drug store, or will be falo, N. Y. sent on receipt of 50c sent to the Shup- trine Co . Savannah. Ga ••• SEABOARD NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE WASHINGTON RICHMOND NORFOLK Through Service. Convenient Schedules FRED GEISSLER, A. G. P. A. : Atlanta. lICKKT OFFICE PEACHTRCF lutely dangerous—the adulteratorshave no Wish to kill their customers, for that would be killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. But good cream, and nothing hut cream, and good sugar, and nothing but sugar and natural, harmless flavoring materials, and noth ing else, make up a combination which, although it is delicious and wholesome, is at the same time costly. Not too costly, mark, for those who are content with a moderate return on their money, but ALTOGETHER TOO COSTLY for those who want to "get rich quick." So we have "ice cream" which is still slowly, trose and put the handsomely bound appointment book down on the ta ble. A strange look had come over his blond face, a look that aged it curiously. He stood by the table, the tips of his sen sitive looking hands resting on it, his red, full lips drawn tightly together. He was calling up a picture of the face of the woman he had seen in that shaded room standing by the side of the dead child, her eyes fixed not on the child’s face, hut on the face of the child’s father. There had been something elusively fa miliar in its outline; he remembered that now-. Who was she? Was it conceivable that she could have any part in that past between which and the wondrously differing present he had drawn so impen etrable a veil? With a sudden impatient movement of the shoulders Dr. Merton turned away from the table. What a fool he was! What quarter was the wind in this morning that he should suddenly find himself tormented by gloomy fancies, alarmed by fear, simply because in the most natural way In the world a woman who had passed through a time of great stress, physical and mental, had written for an appointment to consult him? H« rang the bell. "There are only three appointments for this morning. Tyson," he said to his man. "J will see no one except these. The last, Mrs. Barrington—" <t To Be Continued in Next Issue. GOOD ADVICE FOR ATLANTA PEOPLE People in Atlanta who have consti pation. sour stomach or gas on the stomach should use simple buckthorn hark, glycerine, etc., as compounded in Adler-i-ka. the new- German appendi citis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE brings relief almost TNS*TANTLY because this simple mixture antisepticizes the diges. tive organs and draws off the itnpuri- ties. Th? Jacobs’ Pharmacy Company made up of starch, gelatin, skim milk, antique eggs and coal tar dye. Prob ably it will not kill you if you eat it. BUT YOU WILL BE ROBBED JUST THE SAME. If a dealer sells you such stuff under the name of ice cream, and charges the price of ice cream for it, although it has cost him much less, what standing could he have in a court of real justice? Yet it appears that he may have a very solid standing indeed In some of the so-called courts of jus tice which now exist; at least, that is what I gather from the following state ment of Dr. Wiley: "In a case brought in the District of Columbia by the health officer against the manufacturer of a debased ice cream, which had a very low content of butter fat and a very high content of bacteria, and which contained a thick ener to make it hold up for an indefinite period, testimony was given to the ef fect that ice cream could be properly made without having either milk or cream In it, and the judge of the 'court upheld this theory and refused to apply the standards which have been fixed by the department of agriculture under the authority of congress.” A Better Decision. However, it is reassuring to be in formed that a Federal court judge in Cincinnati has since then upheld the standards as legal. More strength to that good Federal judge's arm will be the sentiment of all lovers of ice cream. Dr. Wiley tells you-all about the “du bious" kinds of ice cream and what they contain, and all about what real ice cream is, and about the law that some overconfident persons have thought would suffice to protect the innocent public in this matter -and this is just the time to read all that. But don’t let anything that you read dis suade you from eating ice cream when you feel like it, and are in a condition to do it —only make sure that you arc getting exactly w hat you pay for. Ami if you can’t be sure of that, then make your own ice eream, which is not so very difficult. / --- -J* » GEORGIA MILITARY ACADEMY THE SOUTHS MOST SPLENDIDLY EQUIPPED PREP SCHOOL Collage Park, Eight Miles From Atlanta, Georgia Fills every hour of a boy’s life with wholesome mental development, body building, moral and social training, and preparation for a man’s part in the world’s work. A thoroughly disciplined, modernly appointed, attractive school for boys and young men—a gentleman’s school, limited to about 125 boarding pupils, so grouped, as to give every teacher about 12 Cadets for tutoring and over sight at night. Delightful home life—a big happy family of successful, cultured teachers and pupils. Every sanitary convenience. Electric lights, steam heat, artesian water. Elevation nearly 1,200 feet, no malaria, perfect health. Best Table Fare and Prettiest School Campus in the South. Three regular Courses— Classical, Engineering, Commercial. Member Southern Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools. Active U. S. Officer in Charge of Military Department. Classed A by U. S. War Department. Parents to visit sad compare the School with the best in America. COL. I. C WOODWARD, A. M., Ftff. Wesleyan College Macon, Georgia One of the Greatest Schools for Women In the South. FOR PARENTS desiring a most healthful school in a warm and delightful climate among the hills of Middle Georgia, the Wesleyan CBllege, at Macon. Ga., presents a most inviting opportunity. The conveniences of the buildings, the climate of the city, the religious and refined atmosphere of the college life make the School ideal in all respects. Young ladies from the best families of the South find it a most delightful home where they can accomplish the greatest results in their work. It has a thoroughly trained faculty in every department. The rates are very low. Write for catalogue to REV. C. R. JENKINS, WASHINGTON SEMINARY ATLANTA, GA NEW LOCATION 1374 Peachtree road. Just beyond Ansley Park GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS; private park; beautifully shaded and landscaped, affording privacy of the country. Bi lI.DINGS Boarding department (limited), one of the most beautiful homes in the entire city New Academic building a model of school construction in lighting, ventilation, heating, with open-air class rooms, gymnasiums, audito rium. etc Tennis courts ami other outdoor gam s. DEPARTMENTS Kindergarten, primary, academic, college preparatory, domes tic science, physical culture, piano, pipe organ, voice, violin, art, expression. METHODS Small classes; last year 235 pupil: ami IS teachers, allowing ons teacher for every 13 pupils. ACCESSIBILITY Three cur Ums. Peachtree, West Peachtree and Buckhead lines. 20 minutes from center of >-ity PROTECTION Special police officer at 2:30 and 1.30 to protect students get ting on ami off ears CATALOGUE and views on request; thirty-fifth year begins September LX LLEWELLYN D AND EMMA B, SCOTT. I < . l houa 1 ,v oh. Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX., SEND HIM A CARD. Dear-Miss Fairfax: For about three years a young man worked near the office in which I am employed. During this time we never .-poke to each other, not having been properly intro duced. Now. however, he has a position in another section of the city, and I do not see him any more. He has sent me a card, but I diil not answer it. I now find that I care very much for this young man. and I would like to know if it would be proper for me to start a correspondence with him. _ V. B. S. Show him the courtesy of answering his card. An introduction is usually necessary, but it seems to me that a business acquaintance of three years is a good substitute and you will do noth ing wrong by writing to him. But let it be only a friendly little note, and it he does not reply let the matter end tliet e. HOW GIRIS MAI AVOID PERIODIC PAINS The Experience of Two Girls Here Related For The Benefit of Others. Rochester, N. Y. —“I have a daugh ter 13 years old who has always been very healthy until recently when she complained of dizziness and cramps every month, so bad that I would have to keep her home from school and put her to bed to get relief. “After giving her only two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound she is now enjoying the best of health. I cannot praise your Compound too highly. I want every good mother to read what your medicine has done for my child.”—Mrs. Richard N. Dunham, 311 Exchange St, Rochester, N.Y. Stoutsville, Ohio. —“I suffered from headaches, backache and was very irreg — ' """1 ular. A friend ad- vised me to take S> Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound, and before I had taken the whole i?i of two bottles I found relief. I am only sixteen years old, but I have bet s x , , i ter health than for \\ x y » L two or three years. ’ 1 1 cannot express my thanks for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I had taken other medicines but did not find relief.’’—Miss Cora B. FoSNAUGH, Stoutsville, ©hio, R.F.D., No. 1. Hundreds of such letters from moth ers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound has accomplished for their daugh ters have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company,Lynn, Mass.