Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 28, 1912, FINAL, Image 8

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THE GEO SOHAM’S MAGAZME PAGE Daysey Mayme and Her Folks Bv Frances L. Garside I 1 ■x O not." said a text - book on Man I land His Habits, "overlook the material nearest at hand. Make a study of that, and you will know all men." Daysey Mayme Appleton pondered. How could she hope to win a husband unless she understood the men" And the text-book nearest at hand—was Father! "Why." asked Lysander John Apple ton some days later, "are you always following me around with pencil and paper? What are you up to now"'' Could he have looked over Daysey Maypie's shoulder he would have read the following discoveries she had made by taking him as an example of his sex A man takes more credit to his sex when he walks the floor one night with the baby than a woman takes to her sex when she supports the whole fam ily It is easy for a man to remember his sweetheart's likes and dislikes, but after a woman has married him the only im pression she can make on his memory is by preferring the cheapest. If a man tells a falsehood, his re moves M having told it is never. as great aa Ms pride In having told It so well it pasaed for the troth. Conversation between a man and his vrtte never languishes tn summer, the asgtinxent whether the kitchen or his of fice is the hotter lasting from May till September Mo matter how much a mi.n loves his vrtfa be is of the opinton he served his tins* toning her so during the engage merrt A man iirrflt errve of many things con eerning Ms wife, but he Is sure of one thing beyond all doubt: That she ooeMrrt haws dome better When a man has trouble at home, he goes outside for sympathy, nnd finds more tremble. After ho has been told that hie hair le getting thin on top, he learns how to handle a hand glass. Nothing happens to him down-town that he can't make a reason for being cross at home. In crying over the milk ha spills, he. stops long enough to claim it was cream The farther away he gets from the /anty /DRUrxie jr /IHnBEMSMHBK, Tk. I*A .flffifcr-Ms. ---w, A *IMB“ 'Kte <-rK* w Anty Drudge Saves Valuable Lace. Mr* Here I’ve boiled and nibbed this lace and the coffee stains are in it yet. I’m simple afraid to do a thing more to it. It looks weak already, guess it’s a goner.” Anty Drudge Not if you will take my advice. Rut you've certainly given it a cooking, take that boiler off the range, fill it with cool water, rub the lace with Fete-Naptha and soak it a short time. Then mb it lightly and rinse it. The stains will all be gone and the lace’ll look as good as new.” “Boil until tender” is what all the cook books say. Boiling makes most anything tender, even hard wood. And that's precisely what boiling does to your clothes. Makes the fibre tender. Then you wonder why your clothes tear so easily and wear into holes so soon. How else will you get your clothes clean? Fels-Naptha dissolves and loosens the dirt in cool or lukewarm water, without hard rubbing. No hot water, no boiling, in summer or winter. It’s such an easy way of washing; makes the clothes cleaner, whiter and purer and they wear twice as long. Be sure to get the genuine Fels-Naptha and follow directions on the red and green wrapper. day nt his sin, the more he Is convinced he is not guilty. When he has a chance to get even with an enemy, and passes it up, he gives women the impression it is be cause he is a good man. Rut other men know he is saving his bricks for a bet ter opportunity. Up-to-Date Jokes In due time the women came Into au thority and power in the courts, and the first culprit haled before them for punishment was a man who had spent his life advocating drees reform for the fair sex. "Wretch that you are!” decreed the stern lady who presided on the bench, "the decision of the court is that for the term of your natural life you shall be permitted to wear none blit blouses that button up the back—and that you be compelled to button them yourself." Salesman ‘‘Here you are gentlemen —the greatest Invention of the age!” Passerby (stopping to listen)—"What is It?” Salesman—"A magnetised keyhole plate for front doors. It will attract an ordinary steel key from a distance of two feet. All you have to do to find the keyhole at night is to take out your key and hang on to It.” Three man were injured in the crowd that rushed to buy. The good widow was about to sell he household furniture, her rugs, plated ware, and what not As she was going over these articles her eyes filled with tears, a host of memories rose to her mind, and, laying aside a half dozen knives, she said: "Oh. dear! I can't let these go. They've been In poor George's mouth too often!" George "She sings nicely, doesn’t she?" Tom—" Oh. yes: when she sings they have to close the windows." George --"My goodness! What for?" Tom "Her voice Is so sweet il draws the files." "She's as pretty as a picture,” said the young man. "Yes." replied the young woman, with a glance at her rival's complexion, "and hand painted, too." The Big Question N — By Nell Brinkley GW T 1 i \ lift ■ 1 1 > /.TA 7 1 '''/ ' ■ • -7 w - / ' t'k\A\\A >'■ Wj- *. ) HE BIG QUESTION. VERY OLD. NEVER YET ANSWERED. LABORED OVER BY PHILOSOPHERS AND LOVERS. IS MADE UP OF THE DAINTY SILKEN FIGURE OF A WOMAN FOR THE CROOK. AND LOVE'S TROUBLED BLOND HEAD FOR THE DOT! 7he Tyranny of Man : : : : : : By Beatrice Fairfax A NXIOUS” writes the following letter: "I have been keeping steady company with a xoung man since last summer, and I think a good deal of him "1 do not go out with other gentle men. because he doesn't like It. but he goes out with other young ladies. Do you think tills Is fair'.’ 1 have given up a great many friends for him, and have even gone so far as to give up some of nty girl friends." Make haste as rapidly as you can to those girl friends and ask their for giveness. The next time a young man seeks your company grant it, and if this tryant objects arfswer his objec tions, by making more engagements with other young men. And never slight your girl friends. No matter how much your lover may storm and rave, hold fast to every girl friend you have There is no one on earth whom you will need more than girl friends if you continue In a love affair with a man like this. They will be all you have to give you any Joy of life if you marry him. This lover of yours is not an unusual variety of man. He is very fair speci men of his sex. The difference be- Do You Know— The largest pyramid In Egypt con tains 9d.na0.000 cubic feet of stone A test for the purity of sugar is to burn a small quantity if it is pure it will leave no ash. London is the richest city in the world. Its slums are a disgrace to civ ilization. The secretarx of the Next Zealand Waterside Workers association was re cently flned for aidlug aad abetting < strike Skeb tons recent x found in * D’lr ham mine are believed to be those of colliers who have been misled sinCx 1756 If headai lies ox etn after bathing t ie trouble rs probably due to xialer in the head and future lie.uiai hes ran b’ pt - vented bx placing a piece of cotton woe' m each car. tween him and men less tyrannical is that they have been trained. Those xx ho do not say to a wtsinan, "1 can. but you can't" have been, snubbed and sub dued till all such inclination has been crushed out of them. You have gotten hold of a piece of raw material, and. if you marry him or not. you owe it to your sex to mould it into the shape a man should assume. He needs vigorous treatment to reduce his conceit. His bump of tyranny, un less promptly pressed down, will make him the kind of husband who regards his wife much as he regards the door mat. He is selfish to the core of his heart, and needs rubs and knocks and blows that no one on earth can administer but the girl whom he "honors" by pay ing attention. You have a wonderful opportunity, my dear. They talk and write fluently i of the great tasks that the women, anti i the women only , must perform for this 1 o|d world's betterment. I have never seen any of these tasks assigned to woman In her girlhood days, a serious mistake, for it is then xx hen she h is the greatest influence. No gray-haired mother; no mature married woman has the opportunity, that lies at your hands. And that op portunity consists in making a good man out of the most unpromising ma terial. The woman who takes the conceit out of a man gives a better man to the world. The woman who can make a r ■ Nadinola Talcum Bwill please the MOST EXACTING There’s None Bettet Contains More Antiseptics Sets free just enough oxygen to keep the skin white, soft, smooth and healthy Nadinola Talcum Powder is composed entirely of sanative ingredients Soft as velvet Guaranteed Ry toilet counters or by mail 25 cents 'NA TIONAL TOILET COMPANY. Paris. Tenn man wiio is tyrannical a creature of humility does the world a greater ser vice than if she went wisely to the polls. You may not love this man: I hope you don't. Rut some day some woman will love him, and you owe it to that woman to use your influence in making him a man more worthy of her love. It is an obligation every woman owes her sex from which she is never re leased. \ A High Grade Institution For Young Women. Beautifully located near the Mountains, in the my st healthful section of I ...... thoSouth not a death in t.ie College during the forty years of Tts existence I very convenience of modern home. Only two girls to F w X a room with laige study between every two rooms. Every building <’f re-enforced concrete, absolutely fire-proof, thoroughly modern —■ jP* f «" 5 acres ,n . K J. ounds and campus. Faculty chosen from finest Amer,can and European Universities. Full Literary Course lead ax ingtoA.B. degree; unexcelled advantages in Music. Art. Exprea- W quest Specia stlent,on to Physical Development. Catalog on re- W " VAN HOOSE » President, Rome, Ga. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS STONE MOUNTAIN. GA. ERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS is a regular school where bovs are taught and not i> -t compelled to attend classes. A school fashioned after the old stvle system of tuuorimr where in ? ,v ’ I d “? instruction is given each student; where the finer attributes of a gentleman not taught uuiKkd r ' * ted: * ,OUnd ’ he ‘ lthy coincident wi’th a broad‘ T teA a eh . o°' 0 °' Wh *T* boar«y * ar « transformed into men equipped, mentally and physically to take un tin* , fl'’*" 8 '*?!.“ f ' r T fou J’ d ? tlon on which to build their education in the higher Hons of learnmjc Th.s is done by limbing the students to 96; one instructor for ex ert ten 1< x i Mor. than Tu-enr, per cent, of t he student body, each year, are brother, of former student, ~ , . . ’v't'c «■' a boy; ue II give you a man. a < catalog and information ’ mished. Ad.be,. SANDY BEAVER, Principal. Box 53 STONE MOUNTAIN. CA. ■ . .... ATLANTA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Iwcntx-one tears of remarkably successful work Greater demand for our aradn Addre S ’ n " an S ” rP Be9 ’ a " en ’ ii ‘ ,l ”“ <>f I'hila-lelphii Hegims "ctFber 1 GEORGE F. PAYNE. PH. G. 38 , Edgewood Ave.. Atlanta. Ga. “The Gates of Silence” By Meta Stmmins, Author of "Hushed Up" TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. The Ax and the Tree. Pau! Saxe walked down the deserted little street that led to the shop at the Sign of the Toby lug. The afternoon was smiling and pleasant, one of those late February days that delight in mas querading as May. He wore his favorite gray, his Homborg hat was set at a rakish angle, and in his coat was a carnation of a subtle shade of pink. His whole aspect as he strode along in that easy, loose-limbed stride of his, was well worthy of the original adjective applied to him -he looked positively a radiant and beautiful vision in that dreary little street. The mental attitude of Mr Saxe, how ever. lacked that pleasant ease which his outward bearing displayed. He felt some thing as near uneasiness as his sanguine mind ever experienced—an uneasiness that was not altogether unmlxed with fear The simile of a cat who, dozing on the hearth rug. dreams of the turning of the tables and goes in terror of her life before the menacing advance of a stalking mouse, w'ould probably meet the case exactly. Ha had been summoned to the Toby Jug that afternoon. There was no other way of putting the matter. Not “Will you kindly” or "If it is convenient, sir,” but "Please call at the shop this after noon on a matter of business.” Os course. »it was preposterous. He must read Jex a sharp lesson. Yet it was significant that It had not occurred to F’aul Saxe to refuse that request. What had occurred to him more than once as he walked was that lately Jex had appeared to be getting a bit out of hand. Ever since the affair of Sir George Lumsden—that very clumsily maneuvered suicide in Dieppe—as a matter of fact. It had showed itself in various ways, this spirit—in a certain insistence on the rights of "Little Bess," the red haired imp of evil he was supposed to acknowl edge as his daughter. For all the radiance of his look, there was a very ugly expression in Paul Saxe’s eyes. His flexible, well colored lips were set in a rigid line as he pushed open the door of the shop and went in. letting it bang behind him with a great ringing of the sharp-voiced little bell. No one came out in response to the bell's warning. Only Leah, the big gray eat asleep on the counter, on which the dust lay thickly, rose amicably to greet him. yawned with a vast display of red mottled mouth and age-revealing teeth, and. jumping down, stalked solemnly be fore him the glass door of the parlor. Samuel Jex, it may be stated here, had not for a moment intended that It should have been left to Leah, the gray cat, to welcome and entertain Paul Saxe on his arrival at the Toby Jug. When he had issued his peremptory request for the financier's attendance to Armadale street he had fully intended to be present with the particular item of business referred to in that request ready for discussion. It began with the taxicab. It had seemed to Jex that the occasion war ranted extravagance of such a vehicle. He was going to call upon a personage That in itself, perhaps, would not have affected Jex very greatly. What made of this morning a true festival day was the fact that he saw within a few hours of him the pulling off of that great coup for which he had been working so long. In a few hours he would have shaken off the chains of his bondage forever. In a few hours he would be the master of his master! Walking up into Victoria street he had hailed a cab from the rank outside the army and navy stores. His destination was the large house outside Regents Park which Prince Ser gius Karazoff had rented for the last three years—ever since, in fact, the tragic suicide of his young wife had made him a voluntary exile from his own country and from society The prince was a man of science, who used the big laboratory, built out over a large part of what had once been a garden famous for its beau ty, very seriously indeed. But it was not as scientist Samuel Jex was going to con sult with the prince. A Personal Affair. It was on a matter intimately per sonal to his serene highness—a matter touching the honor of the dead and the vile dishonesty of the living—a matter which, as Samuel Jex thought over it in ' the fastnesses of the cab. caused him to smile that evil smile of his. in the pro- | cess of which his eyebrows went' up too 1 high and his nose came down too low ■ over his chin and transformed him into 1 a laughing satyr far from pleasant to ; Then, at the Oxford street end of Great Portland street, the taxicab had smashed into a private landau standing outside a shop. had been an ugly crash, a narrow shave for the driver and Jex himself, that had necessitated a delay of quite an hour. Then when, late for his appointment, he reached Gensing Lodge, the prince was engaged, and he had to wait, kicking his heels and nursing his wrath to keep it warm for another cou ple ol hours. Not that It had needed artificial stimu lation, this hatred against Paul Saxe that had lain close and hidden in his heart ever since that day in New York, years ago now, when Saxe—not a great man himself then, but merely secretary to the wife of a great man—had surprised him in his very ingenious and quite profitable scheme of money making, which had con sisted in the occasional and adroit sub stitution cf a paste replica among the stones of the very valuable jewelry he was called upon to repair in the great jeweler’s where he was employed. Saxe had been extraordinarily mag nanimous—at a price, a lohg, long price. Well, that debt would soon be paid. When the first glimmering possibility of this repayment had come to Samuel Jex, in the mental intoxication that had come upon him, he had sent that mysteri ous message tinkling over the telephone wires: "Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee.” Not that night, as it had happened, nor for many nights, had the time for payment come, but it had come now. Agid at one time it had seemed to Jex that Paul Saxe would pay the price with the long drop and the hangman’s noose; for more than three months he had been morally certain that Paul Saxe had been. If not the actual murderer of Fitz stephen, at least the instigator of that murder. Subsequent events had weak ened that belief. Nor was John Rlmlng ton, ths convicted man, guilty, he wa.s convicted of that—but neither was Paul Saxe. He had probed and wormed and watched and spied, and for all that ha could find Saxe, if anything, had been a loser rather than a gainer by the money lender's death. To Be Continued in Next Issue. ' California and Return Only $ 73 30 First class round trip tickets with long limits and liberal stopover priv ileges, on sale August 29 to September 5 inclusive. Round trip tickets are on sale every day at rath of SBO.BO with limit of October 31st, 1912. Homeseekers’ tickets will be sold on first and third Tues days of each month to and including October 1912 to San Francisco. Los Angeles, San Diego,Stockton and many other points in California. Tickets are limited to 25 days from date of sale and are honored in Tour ist sleeping cars upon pay ment of berth rate —just half the rate in a standard Pullman. Choice of Three Routes Via Colorado Scenic Route to Salt Lake City—thence Western Pacific thro’ Feather River Can yon; via Colorado Scenic Route to Salt Lake City and Ogden— thence Southern Pacific; via El Paso and Newt Mexico the direct route of lowest altitudes and route of the de luxe "Golden State Limited" in connection with the E. P. & S. W. and Southern Pacific. For tickets, reservations or In formation phone, write or call. rrnrigfex—, H. H. HUNT |H ’ LsTftl District Passenger JU RPI ill■ L 18 North Pryor St. Phone Main 661 J- S'H. F r - FERED 14 YEARS with itching ?! ,L^ S - TE I TTERINE CURES THE CASE Mr. .J. T .Shuptrine. Savannah, Ga. Bellaire. Mich., Nov. 19, 1908 About sixteen years ago 1 had a case of itching piles. I tried first one thing and then another, until I had tried all the remedies I had heard of. A clerk In the Economical Drug Store, on State-st . Chicago, sold me a box of Tetterine. I did not use more than half the box be fore I was entirely cured—and after four teen years' suffering • GRADY G. WILSON. ryrgTHMsirrw I LJi ■ Nplunj. WhlU«y and Drug Habit treat* I M S * ,l Hom * or ■’ Boot aiblect Froa. Dft. R y WOQLLKT. 24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga CHICHESTER S PILLS . T,H: diamond lin.txi, . fit B «t. Safest. Al~lv.Reli.hl, A SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE