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THE__aEQ>Q]IAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE
i:: A Thousand Times "No" ::
By Beatrice Fairfax
PERPLEXED writes: "I am sev
enteen years old and very fond of
a young man one year my senior.
p f . bus visited me several times in my
h 0!..;... and has been very attentive to
, n . ind quite ardent. The last time he
c ~( 1 T was very quiet and could not
k myself be lively, and he' acted
coolly toward me and did not
t. call again. I am not a very
jj v< v girl, and do you advise me to be
frls ilous instead of so quiet?"
Mv dear girl, any man so stupid that
:.. v aies not for a girl unless she ca-
•i< and ehatters continually, like a
, llin key. is too stupid for any girl of
sense to love.
Buskin says, “Trust thou thy Love:
f -he be proud, is she not sweet? Trust
thou thy Love: if she be mute, is she
not pure?”
Would this young man prefer a girl
~ho doesn’t meet Ruskin’s description?
Then refer him to the magpies that
. halter, chatter, all day long, and that
c oin generation to generation say noth
ing.
Let him stray to the girl who Is viva
ous. Let him marry her, and in just a
little while he will find that vivacity
h;is become garrulousness. Let him
seek the girls who scream with a loud
noise, and talk in shrill tones, and
whose idea of a good time is a noisy
one.
Such a desire indicates his own in
ability to think. He wants to spend
his evenings with girls who are “en
tertaining,” and by that much-abused
word he means girls who keep a con
versational ball going with sharp tit
ters and shrill screams.
If 1 mistake not, he is the kind of
man who hears nothing sweet in the
song of a bird, preferring the shrill
scream of the calliope. He would find
no pleasure in the murmur of a brook,
finding it “tame” compared with some
noisy mllldam.
Loving the noise in sound, he also
prefers It, I am sure, in colors, and his
socks and his ties would make a west
ern sunset pale in comparison, and to
* Little Bobbie’s Pa *
By William F. Kirk
was a Farmers Instltoot in
town last nite & all the farmers
was thare with thare wifes &
nibly. Pa &■ Ma & me went, too. Pa
■ nt beekaus he set! that he used to be
farmer, & Ma went beekaus she sed
she dident use to be a farmer, but that
he is a farmer's wife now. 1 went
beekaus 1 wanted to visit with sum of
rhe littel farmer boys.
You see. wife, sed Pa, one of the rea
sons that I am going is beekaus I men
shuned to Mister Hones, the editor, that
I was expecting to be there. I asked
Im pleese not to call on mo for a
speech, & he sed that he wuddent, as
they had the program all made up. But
I know that he is going to surprise &
treat them farmers, sted Pa, by asking
me to make a few remarks on how a
farmer may rise to be a. successful city
man, eeven as I have.
Ma nudged me & began to lass.
What is funny? sed Pa, did you see
sumthing funny in the street, or what?
You shuddent lass much in a small place
tike this, sed Pa, eeven if you see pee
"ul you want to lass at.
The only person I have seen up here
■hat I have to lass at a good deel of the
time, sed Ma. is ynre doer self. Why,
’he sed to Pa, e-even if you think that
you are a successful city man. wich
you wud have a hard time making
twelve men beeleeve. what do you sup
poas those welthy & independent farm
ers care about you? Why, deerest luv,
’ed Ma. if you went up to one of them
& started to talk farming to him, he
"ud say I have nJ! my hired men, &
then he wud walk away. I’d like to
iiiaik a nice littel bet that you doant
git asked to talk at all, sed Ma.
Pa dident like that vary well, & he
lident say a other word until he had
" ot us to the place ware thay was hav
ing the Farmers Institoot.
Thare was a lot of nioe-looking pee
iul thare, too. Pa calm in a old sute
that he used for hunting & he had on a
"id blue flannel shirt & shoes with nails
in them. These good peepul from the
country will think moar of me if I go
here dressed like one of them. Pa had
loald Ma beefoar we went.
I am glad Ma & me was dressed up,
1 ekaus all the farmers & thare wives
is dressed up. sum of them eeven was
" '• vning clothes. .<• our seets was
IIOHT nUNWIN*
Not sold under any other
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Buy direct and secure
maker’s advantages.
We rent and repair, also
make needles for all ma
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Can save you money and
trouble.
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him the perfection in pictured art is
that which is noisiest with flaming
reds.
Is not his choice in reading the sort
of a book from which no lasting benefit
is gained?
The one thing in the world that
should be lasting is love, and we will
suppose that your present sentiment for
him lasts till you are old enough to
marry.
You gained him by affecting a friv
olity that was not natural, and by
troubling your own ears with noisy
measures. Can you. do you think, keep
a love won in that way, when the reali
ties of matrimony have crushed all the
frivolity out of you?
It is not hard for a girl to caper and
chatter like a monkey. Much of this
excess of spirits is natural to youth, but
it will be a playing part that will tear
her heart and sicken her soul to con
tinue to chatter and caper when the
years have taken al! such inclinations
away.
Therefore, be your own sweet, mod
est, quiet self. If silence doesn't win
him, you don't want a man who is won
by sound. The best people, the most
useful, the most worthy, and the most
talented, have never been the drum
beaters of life. The world never called
for a leader and found him playing a
calliope.
It comes natural for you to be quiet.
So much to your credit, and so much
greater promise of your usefulness and
worth.
Did you ever read of the Wish Prin
cess? After telling a young girl that
she would wish her wealth, and fame
and beauty, did any of these count in
the final reckoning, she concluded::
“And so, since these will not avail, in
life’s uncertain war. I’ll wish you ever
more, my dear, to be just what you
are."
And that is what I wish you: “To
be just what you are,” and some day
the man who knows gold when he sees
it will come, and when he rides away, it
will not be alone.
rite in a row whare everybody except
Pa was well dressed.
Mercy, sed one of the la. mer's wives
to her husband, I wonder who that poo.'
old backswoodsman is.
Oh. sum buckshot from nowhere, se.i
her husband. He probly has a job
working sum little farm on shares. He
cant help it if that is all the clothes he
has. All the time Ma was nudging me
* lasting, & all the time Pa was gitting
red in the face.
The man which was lecturing notised
that everybody was looking at Pa, &
that made the man kind of mad. He
stopped talking a minnlt. & then the
crowd gaiv him sum attention. The
minnit thay stopped looking at Pa i:e
whispered to Ma, you wait here till the
show is oaver, & I will change my
clothes & meet you outside X- taik you
hoam.
Then Pa sneeked out & went hoam rt
put on sum good clothes & he cairn
back & took us hoam.
Farmers dident dress up in finery
wen I farmed, sed Pa, on the way home.
I doant think you ewer were much
of a farmer, sed Ma. & tonite, when,
thay was all laffing at you, you dident
look like a successful city man, eether.
M— hi ■ TWarcz—Kujisji-i. jr. as w.nwm ■ a,™ -,-e. • -■r .-w.-Tarravwr
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A Plum Pudding Dream
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ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN « * By Beatrice Fairfax I
JOIN A CHURCH.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
i am a young American who has
been living for the last five years
in Europe. I have been back in
America two months. How may 1
get acquainied with young folks.'as
those I knew before 1 left America
have al' drifted away? My age is
nineteen years. HENRY.
There are societies in all the churches
these days for giving young men and
joung women the opportunity for get
ting acquainted. Go to such a church
and show your credentials to its pas
tor. If he has a heart in his breast hi
will make an effort to help you.
TOO YOUNG TO TRY.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
f am fifteen and deeply in love
with a boy of eighteen. 1 think he
likes me. but is very bashful, I be
ing the same. He is very homely
and I am considered very pretty. 1
am a bookkeeper, while he is a col
lege boy. How could I win ills af
fection? BECKIE.
A girl of tit'ti vii is too young to make
such efforts with any advantage to her
self. The boy is only eighteen, and in
college. If you really lov< him, don’t
you want him to concentrate his mind
on his books? Let love alone till you
ar<- old enough to realize its perils.
UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES. NO.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
1 am a young lady twenty years
of age and have never been in love,-
but there is a cifrt.iin gentleman
42 years of age who is very much
infatuated with me. lie has never
asked me to marry him, but I do
not eare for him in any way. Now,
I know if 1 married him I would
have everything I desired, for he
has a very good position and is
wealthy. Do you think I could be
happy witli this man? Should I
wait until 1 meet the man 1 love?
STF.Nt >GRAI‘H ER.
If lie were a mulli-inlllioraire, you
would not be h:qmy with him unless
you loved him.
By ali means wait till tile right man
chines along.
Z L ... . . _ • ” ~ . ■ ~*L~ _TX"L.—i —■‘i . 1
, |
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THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY NUMBER OF THE
LOS ANGELES “EXAMINER” will be issued WED
NESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1912, and will be the greatest
edition of its kind ever published, giving you every possi- |
ble information about this famous land.
It will tell you about its farming possibilities, its pcul
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industries, its live stock, its cotton, and, in fact, anything |i
and everything you may wish to know abou* Los Angeles |!
and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis. j
The information will be accurately and entertainingly
set forth, and appropriately illustrated.
The proposed opening of the Panama. Canal tuma all the erea of toe
world on this region.
This special edition will ba mail*'! to any address in the United States
or Mexico for Fifteen Cents per copy.
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I i Enclosed please find cents, for which yon will J
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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
*ri ’ i
‘ < ’Tk #a XX/kirx* ’ Exciting Tale of Love and Adven-
IHe W I lip ture That Grips From Start to Finish
By BERTRAND BABCOCK.
The Story of the Play of the Same Name
Now Running at the Manhattan
Opera House, New York.
(Copyright, 1912. by Drury Lane Com
pany of America, by arrangement
with Arthur Collins, managing
director of the Drury
Theater of London.
“Wife?” he almost shouted. “It’s a
lie!”
Lady Diana had gone straight to her
grandfather, and. ready to fly to the ref
uge of his arms, stood close to him.
Brancaster Denies.
“Madam,’’ said Beverley, in deep [tain,
“if this is some ill-timed piece of brava
do —some attempt— ’’
But Mrs. D’Aquila took the words from
his mouth.
“It was an attempt to save your grand
daughter humiliation. ’’ she said. “Lord
Beverley; perhajw something worse. It is
now an endeavor to assist ybu in explain
ing to her exactly my position in this
house.”
While Lady Diana’s eyes followed Bran
caster wistfully, despairingly, the young
earl turned to the company of friends
and neighbors.
“Gentlemen, on my honor —“ he ex
ploded. “Beverley, this is an outrage.
Turn this woman out’’’
Beverley seemed half inclined to take
the hot-headed suggestion of his neigh
bor and act upon it.
“Mrs. D’Aquila- ” he began.
“That is not my name,” she said, firm
ly “You don’t believe it?”
“1 believe Brancaster,'’ said the racing
marquis, clasping the hand of the young
er man
Suddenly the woman held out to him a
paper.
“Then read that,’’ she ordered.
Beverley,' without taking into his own
hand the document, looked at it as though
it were a thing which might scorch him.
It plainly wa 4 s a marriage cert ideate.
“Great heavens!” he exclaimed.
“It’s Foraed.”
But Braneaster had been looking over
the marquis’ shoulder.
“It’s forged—it’s false. You know it!”
he almost shouted into the face of the
smiling woman.
Lord Beverley gave anotiter long look
at the document and read then the
signature of th< Rev. Verner llaslaiu.
He walked slott’l.v mward the vicar, hut
not before Sartor is whispered lo him
savagely;
“Stick to it!
Lord Beverley now had the paper in his
own hands and he passe <1 it to Haslam.
Haslam, is this tru« .”’ he said,
extending the document toward the vicar.
But the vicar did not l<w>k at it. Speak
ing with tin greatest possihh* effort, he
slightly bowed, as he answered in a h»w'
tone;
“That is mj signature, L< rd Beverley.”
His manifest difficulty in speaking hut
strengthened his assertion, us all pres
ent thought that the clergyman hesitated
merely bei ause he found a vt ry unpleas
ant duty before him.
But the vicar was not to escape with
out telling a real falsehood.
CASTOR IA
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The Kind You Have Always Bought
*s
“It can’t be. Beverley— Df— I
swear,” began Brancaster and stopped.
But Beverley paid no further attention
to the pale young girl. To the clergyman
he turned, asking:
“And It’s true that you married them
—that they are man and wife?”
The Vicar Affirms.
Again Haslam bowed, and then, as he
felt the cold, menacing eyes so Sartoris
on him. he managed to add a hoarse:
“Yes.”
W ith a half sob and a scream. Lady
I Hana flung herself into the arms of Lord.
Beverley. The old man gathered her
closely to himself, and then glowered
upon the smiling Mrs. D’Aquila and the
sullen Brancaster equally.
“You hound,” he said sternly to Bran
caster, “you, knowing this, come here
and would have- Out of my sight, both
of you— Turn this woman and this
blackguard out of my house!”
CHAPTER XII.
Twenty to One on The Whip.
Three weeks after the hunt breakfast
at Falconhurst had ended so disastrously
for Brancaster and La<ly Diana, Sartoris
and Mrs. D’Aquila met in a corridor 1 near
the stahles at the London horse show.
Sartoris had been making secret sig
nals to the woman in a box with a party
of her Bohemian friends.
Continued in Next Issue.
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