Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 06, 1912, HOME, Image 8

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THE HAGA ZWE PAGE Daysey Mayme and Her Folks By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. THE ETERNAL QUESTION. THE friend* of a married woman meet her for the first time in years, and they a«k her a ques tion like this "How many children ha\e you now' If ahe says "Eight!" some friends ex claim. in tones of horror. "Well, why on earth did you have so mans Other friends, who are extremely old fashioned. and therefore ran. sa\ in pious tones "Well, the Lord HAS been good to you!” Which leates the mother of eight without a word to sat But when friends of a spin, meet her for the first time in years they ask In the tones of one who knows. How does It happen you have never married" It is the eternal question every spin, meets on every eternal occasion, and the degree of pity in which it Is asked never varies, the mother of eight ex pressing as much pity as. the mother of one Daysey .Mayme Appleton has met this question every day since she passed twenty-five. Let ft be known to her ■ credit that «he never looked at her | married friends with a question of amaze, and replied with the question, | "How does it happen YOU have?" She Makes Up Her Mind. But recently she made up her mind she would answer the eternal question She would tell the whole story. She tailed on a friend, the mothfr of nine. The mother of nine used a baby's dress to wipe molasses candy off a chair which she handed her caller. She prepared to feed the youngest, after slapping her seventh for pulling the hair of the eighth, and giving the eighth a cookie to console it. Then she sat back in her chair and looked with pity at Daysey Mayme "How does It happen," she asked, “that you have never married?” Daysey Mayme was prepared. "When 1 was nineteen." she began, as one who has a long story to tell. "T was engaged to Phil Barbeck, and he" "Stop teasing that cat!” screamed the mother of nine. "And—Johnny, if you take another cooky from the jar I'll w hip you." "Excuse me." she said to her caller. "Now. do go on." "And he.” resumed Daysey Mayme. “didn't like It because I flirted with” — The mother of nine left her chair abruptly, so abruptly that she deposited the ninth on Daysey Mayme'a lap be fore it had finished its dinner. Which mad- it set up a howl. She grabbed her fifth by the arm. and her fourth by one leg and dragged them, screaming, to the door, cuffing both as she pro ceeded Then she shut them out. and returned to the ninth, who. however, refused to he consoled because of the interruption to its meal, and yelled louder. The mother of nine walked the floor with it till it was quiet, and while she walked Daysey Mayme's answer to the eternal question proceeded with inter ruptions like these It Was Like This. • "another man. and (If it's the ice man. tell him to come tomorrow. 1 haven't the changer so I broke the en gage” (There, look at the way you've torn your pants. I’ll have to sit up all night to mend them) "ment, and then there was Will" (Drat that child, what is it screaming for now?) "arbey, but” (No. 1 can’t give you a cent for candy. It is all I can do to get money out of your father for necessities, without such foolishness) —*-etc.. etc., for two hours, when Dav aey Mayme left, with her story still un told. "How does it happen you have never married?" remains a question she has never answered. DO YOU KnOW- ttreat Britain spends more money on the upkeep of its roads than on its nax y. Violet is the color of the clothes of those who are in mourning in Turkey. Including natives and Europeans, the population of India is 315.000.000 Trial by jury does not exist tn the Netherlands. FOR THE NECK AND SHOULDERS A Free Prescription That Instantly Re. moves Blemishes. Tans, Freckles and the Wrinkles and Marks Left by High Collars. The Dutch neck and the evening gown too often expose the discolora tions and blemishes of high collars or the effects of tan and freckles. It is easy to overcome these conditions and make the neck beautiful and white and soft and smooth —to remove, in other words, every blemish and to’makeWlit ' Dutch collar as attractive as it Is com fortable. This prescription can also be used on the shoulders, and it is mar velously effective to beautify the hands and arms. If you want to try it go to your drug gist. get an empty two-ounce bottle, also a one-oun< e bottle of Kulux Com pound. Pour the entire bottle of Ku lux into the two-ounce bottle, add quar ter an ounce of witch hazel, then till with water. Prepare this at your own home and then you know what you have. One application will astonish you. It is deliciously cool and sooth ing and is not affected by perspiration It w ill not rub oft If you put it on one hand only, or >n one side of the neck, and note the difference you will see the wonderful change It makes instantly The results •re permanent, and continued use of this prescription will result in a skin ».« soft and smooth as a child s. a skin from which redness and roughness ami freckles have been entirely removed. ' * * Mid-Summer Creations From the Paris Shops •* * ' W 3 // : \\ '' k \\ a la Koal A L Z'' ™ . I A i' g s /7 ZL /Ahi, ■». KyJHHMHVu Cr /k\u£ r C- iMT —Met A PICTURE HAT OF CHIFFON. A CHIC CONFECTION. A TH REE CORN ER ED CH APEAU 2Z | “THE GATES OF SILENCE” * By META SIMMINS > AUTHOR OF “HUSHED UP” TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. So the days passed, and the weeks lengthened into months, until just as it seemed to him when he had got to that stage of his prison life when the outer world had become more or less of an ab straction. and the Inner life of the prison a more or less numb pain, the news came to him that for some reason hla time of probation had been shortened, and that, Instead of spending the probationary nine months at Wormwood Scrubs, he was to be drafted off at the end of the third to one of the regular convict establishments. The thought of the Journey from l«on don to Bilmouth—which, after the veil of mysterious secrecy which is characteristic of prison discipline in such matters was withdrawn, he finally learned was bis destination -did not, oddly enough, fill Jack Kimington with any sense of shrink ing On the contrary, he felt a certain quickening of Interest In him under the crust of apathy that every day had seemed to be hardening upon his heart. To leave this whitewashed cell, to breathe air that was not the contami nated air of a prison exercise yard, to see green grass that was not overshadowed by prison walls—perhaps to hear birds sing; the more he let his Imagination play over the pitiful fact of his journey from one place of degradation to another the more Rindngton's excitement grew. For all the pain that In accomplishment it cost him, perhaps this change saved him his reason, or at least arrested that mental degeneration that was undoubtedly in progress. During the first weeks of hfs impris onment his mind had wrestled with the problem of the crime of which he was accused until his brain had reeled Who had killed Fitzstephen? He had forced himself to face the facts of the money lender’s death from every point of view, to callously fix the guilt upon first one and then another. Betty, even a crime of madness; the man who had escaped prison ami the death of the rope to die at the hands of Anthony Barrington. Paul Saxe himself. For a time the conviction of Saxe's implication in the crime was so strong as to Induce that paroxysm of despair in which ail things solid Had slipped from beneath his feet, but gradually the conviction had died It was not Paul Saxe. It was not Betty; no. never again would that thought cross his mind! The weary treadmill of his thoughts had never brought him any nearer to a solution, a elew or a hope, and gradually the thoughts and wonderings and mental strivings had ceased. Even the glad vision that had some times comforted and sometimes mad dened him, when he had seen in imagi nation his cell door flung open and a remorseful governor come to inforuj him that the criminal had confessed, and that he was free -even that had passed also. He had begun to acquiesce in his lot—begun to settle down to be a number, a man without a name, a small nut or rivet in a vast and complicated piece of machinery, when just in time had come the mercifid awakening of the change to Bilmouth. "The shame of niollei That was the phrase that came to Kim ington s mind when he saw his fellow travelers collected and himself mirrored in the person of each one of them. The hideous prison garb, marked ironically with the. symbols of swift flight, the ringed stockings and the great boots. He felt sick with sliame at the sight of them, familiar as it was To be linked to these men with the shaven heads and the evil, degraded faces, chained to them, and paraded for all the world to see A rare sight to be pointed out to fortunate children on station platforms, to be jeered at. perhaps spat upon, by the virtuous free! In his cell, thinking of this Jour ney. Kimington had thought of none of these things. Now the thought of them was to poison every moment of what had loomed up as a great and glorious event in his life lie dreaded lest any one should recog nize him as he stood in his infamous garb, waiting beside the tram while about him his companions laughed and joked and made tile most of this nm | merit of comparative freedom He need not hmi feared; * ven Bettv herself might [have looked twice at the tall figure, a' little bowed about the shoulders already, without recognizing in this clown with the shaven head and the white, drawn face tjie handsome boy who had taught her the first lesson of love under the overhanging trees of a Thames backwa ter only a few short months ago. He was thankful when at last the train moved out from the station, thankful for the roar and rattle of the train after the silence of his cell, thankful even for the coarse laughter and conversation of his companions, the sound of human voices upraised in something that was not an order or a reproof; thankful to be herded with those to whose level the law had reduced him. out of sight of the shocked or horrified or gloating eyes of the free. 7’he train rushed on with its burden of the living dead, through the mean pur lieus of the great city, past suburban gar dens ablaze with autumn flowers, out through the wide spaces of the open coun try in Its glorious livery of red and gold Overhead the wide spaces of the sky, about him the smiling, flying fields of an English countryside, before him the gray, desolate, hilly stretches of the peninsula of Bilmouth, bleak and treeless, with its vast gray quarries and its huge, unlovely fortresses where, in a world of silence, men work out the expiation of their sins When the gang of convicts alighted from the train a damp mist was blowing up from the channel. Chill and penetrat ing, it struck home to Rimington's heart, yet the shiver that ran over him was not wholly physical. The desolate, cheerless aspect of the place seemed as though it might have been created for a convict settlement, so desolate was it, so plainly was the blight of formalism over every thing The exquisitely kept roads stretch ing to the vast prison, the mighty cliffs, even the magnificent sweep of the bay veiled in the gray mist seemed to em phasize the fact that this was a place where Nature herself had made an im- WISCONSIN WOMAN’S FORTUNE Freed From Pain, Weakness, Terrible Backache and De spair by Lydia E. Pink ham’s Compound. Coloma. Wis. “ For three years I was troubled with female weakness, irreg- ularities, backache and bearing down pains. I saw an ad vertisement of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound and decided to try it. After taking several bottles I found it was helping me. and I must say that I am perfectly well now and cannot thank r~ "*' ' " ” you enough for what Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done for me.”—Mrs. John Wentland, R.F.D., No. 3, Box 60, Coloma. Wis. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to restore their > health. ■ There are probably hundreds of thou sands, perhaps millions of women in the United States who have been benefited by this famous old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over 30 years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering. If you are sick and need such I | a medicine, why don't you try it? If you want special advice write to; . Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi* I i dential) Lynn. Mass. Your letter will' ' he opened, read and answered by a 1 woman and held in strict confidence* passable barrier between the fettered and the free. Here the prison gates opened daily and belched forth their stream of slaves, the men who quarried these stones and made these roads. Their blight seemed over everything. Rimington thought—the pris on blight that kills all that Is beautiful and bright and free in the hearts of men. When, for the third time In his life, he passed behind the second great inner gates of a prison and heard them clang behind him, here more than ever before he realized that he was shut in by gates of silence into a world of silence, a world of ghostly formalism peopled by silent shapes in the hideous livery of degrada tion. a world that might have been, that was for all practical purposes cut off from the world of the living by thousands upon thousands of miles. "That ft may please Thee to show Thy pity upon all prison ers and captives " How many who hear that intoned Sunday after Sunday in the churches of England cast a thought to the thousand nameless men In one penal establishment alone? Was there one in the world of the liv ing thinking of him nowV was-tbere one?' Apart from this air of clrill and gloom, there was nothing -to mark particularly this prison of Bilmouth. to which he had come from the other he had left. He had heard from his ffctlow-prisoncrs on the train vaguely he remembered having read—that penal servitude at Bilmouth was considered infinitely more severe than at other prisons; that the climate in it self constituted an additional punishment. Choose this superb train | to Colorado. ■ Let the Kansas City " Florida Special take you to Colorado. It will take you in the greatest comfort—superb electric light ed, fan cooled sleepers, electric lighted chair cars and coaches —and Fred Harvey service in the Frisco dining car. It will take you via the most interesting route—through the beautiful Ozark county. It will take you via the short cut to Colorado—from Jack sonville. Atlanta. Birmingham, via Kansas City, right through to the Rockies. Leave Atlanta 7:00 a. m. Colorado 7:45a.m. secondday. Kansas City-Florida Special Tickets: 6 North Pryor Street or write A. P MATTHEWS. Di.trict f - *X Ken t. Atlanta, G 0.,, k .:, I I its keen air creating an appetite that the prison dietary was incapable of sat- I isfying. But so far the reception by the > governor’s deputy, the (to Rimington) un , speakable degradation of the bathing in the bathroom cubicles -behind the wooden bars, beyond which the attendant ward ers paraded, to silence talking and admon- I ish cleanliness: the scrutinizing of the ■ body for personal marks of identification, and the medical examination were exactly the same as those to which he had been ’ subjected before. He submitted himself to authority; no one but a fool or a mad- ■ man would have dreomed of doing other ' wise—and heard himself, with a thrill of relief and joy, certified as in sound health. That meant, he hoped, that he would be drafted into the outdoor gangs. Later, when bls fresh clothes were given to him. he knew that this was so, for 1 there was a difference tn the uniform 1 and the boots were heavier. ■ ’Fo work outside! No more to be penned into the little Iron cubicle with its stone floor, measuring seven feet by four, but to work.—to exercise his muscles 1 under the open spaces of the sky. Thank 1 heaven for that. There were sulkers and complafners all around him. men who ( knew the awful sharpening effect of the Bilmouth air. that makes a man so hun- ■ gry all his days; but in Rimington's heart there was something that nearly ap- 1 proached thankfulness He seemed to I know now that If he had been called upon ‘ to go through his nine preliminary months ! of solitary confinement he would have 1 gone mad. , i A Woman Called Deborah. , As time passed this sense of thankful- ness did not die out of Rimington's heart. The outside work was hard. Every morn ing at half-past 7 —for it was winter now —having been up for two hours (the pris on day begins at 5:30): having already done his meed of indoor toil, the cleaning of his cell and its utensils; having break fasted sparsely on thin cocoa and eight ounces of brown bread. Rimington. in company with twenty others, forming a squad, marched briskly out through the great gates, a warder leading and a sen try, with rifle loaded and cocked, follow ing, to begin his work in the cuttings of the quarry; but it was work that wearied him and made sleep imperative; that eased the gnawing pain in his heart and brain by giving him, as it were, a tangi ble substance to fight and wrestle with. To Be Continued in Next Issue. ’ Northern Lakes The lake resorts in the West and North are particularly attractive, rating air added to boating, bathing do much to upbuild you physically. : daily round trip tickets at low fares auu wim lung r eturn limits and will be glad to give you full information. Following are the round trip rates from Atlanta to some of the principal resorts: Charlevoix ------- $36.55 Mackinac Islands3B.6s Chautauqua Lake Points 34.30 Marquette46.ls Chicago - 30.00 Milwaukee 32.00 Detroit 30.00 Put-in-Bay 28.00 Duluth 48.00 Petoskey 36.55 THE ATTRACTIVE WAY TO ALL THE RESORTS ON THE Great Lakes, Canadian Lakes and in the West CITY TICKET OFFICE L”1 4 Peachtree Street phones Vanderbilt University cured for soc. 1124 STUDENTS 125 TEACHERS ti. u r. CAMPUS OF 70 ACRES ALSO S eurCrbv of pile. New e.mpa. fir department, of Medici.. . n< ll)eßti»tr» .. s,ngle .>()<• box of Tetterine I Lxnon>e» low. Literary cour.es for graduate. , n d lettering cures all skin and scalp erun. . .ndergr.rlu.te, Prof«.i. n .| cour.e. i„ '"'IlillK piles, dandruff, old sores ing. l aw. Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacv, Theologv eczema, tetter and ringworm. □end for catalogue, naming department. , l el tonne ca it be had a t aII druffelst* nr L.J- E- HART, Secretary, Nashville, Teon. l ° ' H ' Sa- _ - * WESLEYAN COLLEGE MACON, GEORGIA One of the Greatest School# for Women in the South cr^ sl l ey ? n f°f /cge is the oldest real college for women in the world; has a great body of alumnae, and students irom the choice homes of the South It is situated in the most beautiful residential section of Macon, the second nlt« C V tJ ' ’A th ® w ? r ( ’ Its , buildll ’g s are large and well equipped, its sac- ?b ty « hC Jh CSt <? V ra i ,ned r n . ien ' vomen - Its Conservatory is the greatest in the South. Schools of Art and Expression the best, and a magnificent, new gymnasium has just been completed. Wesleyan is characterized by an atmos phere of religion and refinement. The utmost care is taken of the students For catalogue wnte to REV, C. R. JENKINS, President: 22 BIN ?? A M O in all the Colleges < hev atten-i. North and South. Ventilation. Sanitation iml Aafetv bf Against Fire pro.jounred the BEST by 150 d.rinr., and bi eve" Parent H W A'era yn Gain of 19 pounds I arm of entranee accentuates our Climate of Pupils. Military, u helo in making Men ox Boys. Box ™ d C Advice to the Lovelorn 'By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. AN UNUSUAL GIRL. Dear Miss Pai: fax: I am in love with a girl about my age and would like to have her go to the theater with me. When I make an appointment she doesn't like it I was told by’ an old friend that he has seen her with other fel lows going to the theater. She says she loves me and would not like to lose me and that she can express her love without mak ing appointments. HEARTBROKEN. She is a. most unusual girl if shs doesn’t like to go to the theater. Don't heed what others say about her going the e with others. Perhaps she doesn't She loves you. she says, and still does not care to make engagements that would mean she 'would have your company. It really doesn’t look as I she cares for you very much. DON'T LET YOURSELF CARE. Dea Miss Fairfax: I am seventeen and I am going with a young man five years my senior. Ho has been calling on me occasionally and of late has been coming to see me regularly. 1 have been to quite a number of parties with him hut he doesn't seem to pay much attention to me the-e, but to other girls, and still he tells me he loves me. LILLIAN. Unless his lack of attention to you becomes rudeness, don't appear to no tice it. Remember you have 'he privi lege of giving your attention to other mtn. and remember., also, that jealousy never gets a girl anything but further cause for it. A SPLENDID FOOD TOO SELDOM SERVED In the average American house hold Macaroni is Far too .seldom served. It is such a splendid food and one that is so well liked that, it should be served at one meal every day. Let it take the place of potatoes. Macaroni has as great a food value as potatoes and is ever so much more easily digested. Faust Macaroni is made from richly glutinous, American grown Durum wheat. It is every bit as finely’ fla vored and tenderly succulent as the im ported varieties and you can be posi tive it is clean and pure—made by Americans in spotless, sunshiny kitch ens. Your grocer can supply you with Faust Macaroni—in sealed packages 5c and 10c. Write for free Book of Recipes. MAULL BROS., St. Louis. Mo.