Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 22, 1913, Image 8

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IK Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. YOU ARE. HliAR MISS FAIRFAX I am deeply in love with a girl 16 years of a go. 1 am four your a her senior. She seems to return my love and care for me Tory much. Do you think we are too young: to be married? IGNATZ. You are too young: to know wTmt love is. Wait four years, and, if wis dom comes with these years, you will (Mill think you are too young CERTAINLY NOT. r\KAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am nineteen. I speak to a girl every day and I would like to keep company with her. What shall I ask her? Is it improper for me to seek companionship with her if she is two months my senior? C. C. The difference in your ages is too slight to consider You need not ask her to keep company with you. Take her to an entertainment occa sionally; be thoughtful and gallant, and the first thing you know you will he keeping company without having made such a request. HE IS SELFISH. T"\EAR MISS FAIRFAX For a year and half I have been keeping company with a young inan of thirty years. I am twenty-two. He says he loves in* ra<»re than any thing In the world, ir>d I believe he does, but he sm- at married life would not suit hi*., nul that he never Intends to mar. He said he would never get tired of me, hut that he Just thought married | life would not suit him. t>ne time he told me that he pitied a wife that had to stay at home, while her husband wan at the club, and he says a man will promise a wom an anything until he gets her then they usually went back to the old habits. This man loves me, I know. Juat as much as 1 do him, but his friends always advise him to stay single, oh, what does he mean? He knows that I am a nice girl, and I know he would never try to take any liberties, but why does he love me. when he says he never Intends to marry? LONELY. He wants all the Joy of a woman’s live, and none of the obligations that attend. He is enjoying himself while wasting your time Perhaps if he learns that some other man loves you In a less selfish way he may change his mind. GET BETTER ACQUAINTED. A EAR MJH8 FAIRFAX: I am deeply in love with a young girl who lives opposite me and I think she loves me. but can not come to the conclusion to ask her If she loves me. Sometimes we sit by the windows and talk to each other, b|it she does not wait to talk much to me. How can I find out If she loves me? LESTER I. You must get belter acquainted and give her more time If she loves you j after a mere window acquaintance her love isn’t well founded. Pay her every attention a girl likes to receive and be hoih constant and consistent. © © The Manicure Lady § @ By WILLIAM F. KIRK. I T'S all baeball now, ain’t it George?” said the Manicure Lady. *Tve been dreading it ail Winter, the Spring opening of the £ ns They tell me that Hilly Smith Is going to win the pennant, that < haAtanooga won’t finish in first divi sion, that Ty Cobb won’t land a con tract this season and a lot of stuff like that. Every customer I have liad i*i the last two days. George, has come In here on purpose to /*plll a lot of that baseball talk into my un willing ears. 1 have often thought It wouldn't be a bad idea to have a Rind faced parson put my hand in eome’s else find say them blessed words which can make two souls beat the grocer as easy as one, hut on the level, George, if I had a chance to marry a millionaire and found that he was a baseball bug, I would give him tho gate." That’s What Wilfred Said. “Well,” said the Head Barber. “I never seen many ball games and don't take no interest In them. I had a brother once that came near getting In the big league, and a cousin that batted against Rube Waddell in a game out West and made three hits off him, but none of the rest of our family ever took any notion to the layout. It's all right for the great stars of the game to make their five to fifteen thousand a Summer, but file woods is full of fellows that wear uniforms and play their heads off to earn a woodchopper’s salary.” “That’s what Brother Wilfred was saying the other night.” said Gv* Manicure Lady. “Wilfred has >: v all over the baseball fever since the time he had his mind made up that he y. jib going to be a member of the Trackers. Some friend of his intro duced him to Smith, and when Brother asked If. here whs a chance o sign. Smith told him to report at Ponce DeLeon in one w eek. The poor boy was that flustered that he couldn’t sleep nights nor do anything daytimes except to go out and limber up his arm, as he called it. playing catch with anybody that came along. He was so sure. George, that he was going to Join the Crackers that he wrote a poem about the man he thought was going to be his next Relief For Headache boss. I always remember that poem, it was so fierce. This is how it went . Bill Smith, thou great and noble tatter, The taseball world looks up to thee. And almost any careful reader From the lowest to the highest degree Must know when reading the sporting page The wonderful chieftain that thou art; Thou art an athlete and a sage; I worship thee with all my heart.’ ” "That was fierce, wasn’t it?” said the Head Barber. “I guess that kind of tripe wouldn’t go very far with a man like Hilly Smith.” “That's what poor Wilfred found ou mid th< Manicure Lady. “®b< morning that In* reported at Ponce DeLeon Smith told hlin to go and put .»n n uniform for morning practice. That's where Wilfred made another mistal-.*’ of his life- -the kind that he is all tin* time making Other fel lows make little mistakes once in a a change, but **\ ery mistake Wilfred makes it is the mistake of his life, to I rear him tell it. Instead of putting on his uniform right, away and getting out to practice with the other boys, he had to go and show that oie« e of cheese he called a poem. Smith read it through, so Wilfred told us, and then told him that he didn’t need to mind putting on the uniform He told poor Brother that ho had boneheads enough on his team as it was. without signing any poet, and he said that the best he could do would be tu give Wilfred the posi tion of assistant bat boy. That’s how Wilfred came to lose his interest in baseball.” The Summer Silliness. Try Anti-Kamnia Tafcftfi find be convinced that all pain—headaches from any cause, excessive brain fag, indigestion, grin*? .coryza, over-indul gence—neuralgia. rheumatism, gout, etc., yield quickly to these wonderful pain relievers. Not atimulanta, dm• prmaaanta or habit formera. Ask Your Druggist for Any Quantity or 10c and 26c Packages "It's funny how many people kind of lose their minds in summertime," said the Head Barber. "If it Isn't baseball it is golf. There were three fellows in here this morning—the cnly three that have been in my chair. Two of them were baseball bugs, and the other couldn’t talk about anything except the new links near his country home on the Ma rietta road. He had a stack of clubs with him that looked almost as big as a cord of wood, and when he got out of the chair he showed me a dozen new golf balls he had just bought. While he was showing them to me and telling how much they had cost him. he oozed out of the door kind of dreamy without handing me no tk> at* all. 1 guess there is even more golf cranlfs than baseball cranks.” "I don’t think so,” said the Mani cure Lady. “I’ll bet you a cigar, George, against an ice cream soda, that the next fellow* that comes In here will start right in beefing about baseball.” And I'll bet.” said the Head Bar ber. "that he starts In gabbing about golf.” The door opened and a flashily dressed young chap came In and made for the Head Barber’s chair. “Fine weather, this, for outdoor sports,’’ remarked the Head Barber, evidently anxious to bring things to a head. “It is that," replied the stranger. “Gee, won’t it be great w*hen we get racing again?” t>) a ‘April” Copyright, 1913 by American-Journal - Examiner. By Nell Brinkley To An Expectant Mother By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. I iO an expectant mother: You tell me another child is com ing; and that you are worried and full of trouble and anxiety; and sorry for yourself. It does not seem to enter your mind that you are forming the nature of your child by your moods; and that you have an obligation, resting upon you to use will power, .self control, prayer and faith while thL helpless being is carried under your heart. You are building something which will means good or evil for the world for time and enternity. You are bringing into existence a HUMAN BEING. Such a colossal thought ought to take such a complete possession of you that nothing petty, nothing gloomy, noth ing selfish, nothing less than greatness and glory could enter your mind. which I am Invested, endowed. me, stir me, enlighten me. with "V. dom; give me light and miklance; I show me the way to give to the * r u a perfect child.” This prayer will be from the depth I Vnur heinp” rtnH It nrtii u - I of your being: and it will b© I every day, and you will fall asleep ^ I night with the words on your lip 8 . ■ Other Incarnations. That child now under your heart has lived many times before on earth. It will come with many impulses and ten- tencies brought over from old incarna tions: and many others from ancestors • >f your own and the ancestors of the father. BUT GREATER THAN ALL THESE IMPULSES AND TENDENCIES IS THE MIND OF THE MOTHER TO MOULD AND SHAPE THAT CHILD INTO WHAT IT WILL BE. If yoip. realize how wonderful is the work given to do, and how far reach ing will be the results of how you do it, a gnrat awe, will fall upon you, with a great exaltation. You will fall on your knees and lift your face to the Invisible Helpers, and cry out: “Creator, God and all Holy Angels and Intelligences in the worlds and systems of worlds about and be yond me, help me to be worthy of this mighty mission of Motherhood with Avoid Everything Ugly. Then you will guard yourself f re . I all evil thinking or speaking, I gloomy or depressing thoughts; ? c ause you will know that one who . respects the mission entrusted to he and who so believes in her great I •ponsibllity will be guarded and help* I over all the hard places by the DhrJJj Guides, who are ever about us ’ You will avoid looking at the ugly I the deformed or the repulsive thlin I >f earth. You will read no tales of | crime and allow no one to talk | things to you, because you will no '| I want to pass on to your unborn I anything but the beautiful, healthful an< I Inspiring things of life. You will read good books, books or I biographies of noble lives, books of bravt and noble needs: and you will i» to good music, and go into church© I and galleries and see beautiful picture* or walk in woods and fields and look at I beautiful nature. And always will there he the prayer ! and the faith in your heart that bring* I he Invisible Helpers near. You will believe that a Great Soel I is earning to earth through you, a soul that will be helpful, and happy, and that will bring the best joy into your own life that it has ever known. And with all your heart and mind and I mental and spiritual powers you will love this baby : and you will be brave and courageous and know that all must I be well with you and it. For of sucli is the Kingdom of Heaven. li Daysey May me and Her Folks By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. W HEN It comes to love affairs, the modem girl’s heart is an in cubator, compared with which the old-fashioned girl’s heart was a hen. Which means that the capacity of the modern girl’s heart is unlimited. Daysey Mayme Appleton has always made it a point to use the scraps of her funeral-baked meats for an ap petizer for the succeeding love feast. With one swipe of her powder rag she wipes out the traces of tears shed for a departing love, and touches up her nose to attract a new. No widower returning from a brand new grave in the cemetery ever wasted less time. Such energetic measures are not with out their results, and before her fami ly had recovered from her last broken engagement, she was engaged anew. Her lover, who lived in a distant town, had proposed by letter. It would take time to reply. It would be at least eighteen hours before he could get her answer. “He might in that long time,” mused Daysey Mayme, “change his mind.’’ Such a risk was too great to contem plate. She would telegraph. Ten minutes later she was in the nearest telegraph office, facing a youth who looked as importnat afe if he were the United States Government. “How many words,” she asked him, “can I send for twenty-five cents?” He told her ten. and she retired to a A TOIL comes down the steps of the world, with her chapeau ** tilted over one tender bine eye. (“One eye must be in hid ing," says insolent Pa^ee.) Her gown is fearfully and wonder fully clutched up here and there. At every step the cloth about her feet gasps silkily and draws back from four or five inches of gossamer stocking. The buckles on her insteps twinkle and mock like a pair of wicked eyes. With her come the clouds of Spring birds from the South; soft, cream-puff clouds and fruit-tree blos soms. Beside her way lusty Pan pipes away a thrilling, honey - sweet chanson. And the baby lamb lounges at his woolly, Mouth ful easel April comes down the steps of the world! UT RECKON,” said the first farmer, 1 “that I get up earlier than any body in this neighborhood. I am always up before 3 o’clock In the morning. ' The second farmer said he was always up before that and had part of his work done. The first farmer thought he was a liar, and decided to find out. A few mornings later he got up at 2 o’clock and w*ent to the neighbor’s house. He rap ped on the back door and the woman of the house opened it. “Where is your husband?” asked the farmer, expecting to find the neighbor in bed. , . . “He was around here early in the morning,” answered the wife, “but I don’t know where he is now.” table to compose her answer. ‘Yes, 1 atn proud, to say it. Come | at once." Just ten! She was delighted with her I reply, till a sudden harrowing thought | struck her. That word “Yes,” was i little aim unobstrusive. Suppose it | should get lost off? She would write | another message and put it in the mid dle. “You have made me very happy Yes, | come to me.” But the word “Yes” looked smaller j and less secure than ever, and telegraph companies are so careless. She tried it at the end of the message and realized I that its peril was still greater. Daysey Mayme Is a resourceful girl. After chewing her pencil and writing j message after message, she sent one 1 that could leave no doubt. The operator had said ten words. She counted them carefully, and here is the message she sent: “Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. Ye! ' Yes. Yes. Yes.” "If the telegraph company loses half i of them, she said to herself with a sigh j of satisfaction when on her way home, ; “there will still be enough left.” GIRL SUFFERED TERM At Regular Intervals—Says Ly- Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Complete ly Cured Her . Adrian, Texas.—“I take pleasure in adding my testimonial to the great list and hope that i f A RAMBLE WITH EULOGIA A Love Story of the Old Spanish Misssons By GERTRUDE ATHERTON TODAY'S INSTALLMENT. Suffering Humanity Finds thatrelief must be found fortheillswhich may come any day, —else suffering is prolonged and there is dangerthatgraver trouble will follow. Most serious sicknesses start in disor ders of the organs of digestion and elimination. Thebestcor- rective and preventive, in such cases, is acknowledged to be This Standard home remedy tones the stomach, stimu lates the sluggish liver, regulates the inactive bowels. Taken whenever there is need, Beecham’s Pills will spare you hours of suffering and so improve your general health and strength that you can better resist disease. Tested by time, Beecham’s Pills have proved safe, certain, prompt, convenient and that they IAlways Lead to Better Health Sold everywhere. In boxes 10c., 2Sc. The directions \v«th each box should be read by everyone, eipecisti* by women. Dona Pompoea was running toward f them, and while she struggled for her lost breath, Eulogla repeated the pro posal of the American, twanging her I guitar the while. The old lady took but one moment i to make up her mind. “The American,” I she said rapidly in Spanish, “Garflas is | rich now, but in a few years the Amerl- A WHOLE FAMILY MEAL FOR 5c. A 5c package of Faust Spa ghetti will make a whole meal for a family of five. And it will be a real meal—nutritions, tasty and satisfying. A 5c package of Faust Spa- gheti contains as much nutrition as 2 lbs. of beef. It is a glutinous food—gluten is the food content that makes bone, muscle and | flesh. You have no idea how many «li11< fiit ways Faust Spaghetti i*an be served to make fine, einpting meals write for free j I'eeipe book. Sold in 5c and 10c I packages- serve it often. MAUL BROS St. Louis, Mo. can will have everythin*. Garflas will be poor; this man will be rich. Mhrry the American,” and she beamed upon Rogers. Eulogla shrugged her shouldiena and turned to her practical wooer. “My mother say she like you the beet/’ “Then I may look upon that little transaction as settled?” “Si, If you like It” “Which art thou going to marry, Eulogla?” asked one of the girls that night as they rode down the mountain. “Neither,” said Eulogla, serenely. E ULOGIA had just passed through an animated interview with her mother. “Thou wicked little coquette.” cried Dona Pomposa, her voice all worn out. “Thou dareat repeat to me that Thou wilt not marry the Senor Rogers?” Won’h Marry Rogers. “I will not. It was amusing to be engaged to him for a time* but now I am tired. You can give him what ex cuse you like, but tell him to go.” “Ar.d the clothes I have made—the chests of linen with the beautiful desh- lados that nearly put out Aunt Anas- tacia’s eyes! The new silk gown, the magnificent bed-spread with the lace as deep as my hand!” “They will keep until I do get married. Besides, I need some new clothes." “Dost thou, indeed, thou little brat! Thou shalt not put on a smock or a gown in that chest if thou guest naked. But thou shal: marry him. T say!” "Xo!” “Oh, thou ice-coated little devil!” Pvsn Dona Pomposa*s stomach was trembling wttii rage, and her fingers were Jumping. "Whom, then wilt thou marry? Garflas?” “No.’* “Yhou wtlt bo an old maid? Like your aunt Anastada?” “Perhaps.” 04 O—h—I Who Is this?” A stranger in traveling scrape and riding boots had dashed up to the house and flung himself from his horse. ”A your service. senorfL At your service! I come from the Senor Don Thomas Garflas. Word lias reached him that the Senorita Eulogla is about to morn- an American. I humbly ask you to tell me If this be true or not. I have been told in town that the wed ding Is set for the day after to-mor row.” * “Ask her!” cried Dona Pomposa tragically. “Senorlta, at your feet.” “You can tell your friend that I have no more intention of marrying the American than I have of marrying him.” “Senorita! He expected to return and marry you next week.” “We expect many things in this world which we do not get.” “But— a thousand apologies for my presumption, senorita—why did You not write and tell him so?” "I never write letters.” "But you could have sent word by some friend traveling to San Francisco, senorita." * tie would find it out in good time. ■Why hurry ?" . "Ay, senorita, well are you named Dona Coquetta. You are famous even to San Francisco. I will return to my poor friend. At your service, senora. At your service, senorlta," and he bowed himself out and galloped away. Dona Pomposa threw herself into her chair and wept. “I had thought to see her married to a thrifty American. What have I done to be punished with so heartless a child? And the Americans have all the money. The little I have will go too. We shall be left sitting in the street. And we might have a wooden house in San Francisco and go to a theater. Why dost thou not soften the heart of the wicked” Eulogla slipped out of the window and went into the mission garden. She walked slowly through the olive groves, lifting her arms to part the branches where the little purple spheres lay In their sliver nests. Suddenly she came face to face with Pablo Ignestria. , Tvf*o days later she stood with Charles Rogers before the priest in the mission. THE END. The Only Way. Mrs. Jones—How dreadful of Dr. Smith to marry his cook! Mrs. Right—I don’t know; prob ably she had threatened to leave. For the third time in the week he had been given fried bacon for his din ner when he returned from -work, conse quently he was not in a very good humor. During the meal his loving spouse chanced to remark: “There's a cock crowed three times on our doorstep this mornin', James. That's a sign there’s a stranger comin I wonder who it can be? “Well " replied James, gazing glum ly at his plate, “I wouldn’t be surprised if it was th’ butcher.” will be of interest to suffering wom en. For four years I suffered untold agonies at regular intervals. Such pains and cramps, severe chills and sickness at stom- ach, then flnallf hemorrhages unt.i I would be near.! blind. I had five doctors and non. of them could more than relieve me for a time. "Dawkins is tetter dressed than any man in the club," Yaas; he deserves great credit for his taste in dress.” "Well, he gets It from his tailor T HE Russians are manufacturing a fabric f;om Siberian mines which is said to be of so durable a nature that it Is practically indestructible. The material is soft to the* touch and plia ble in the extreme, and when soiled has only to be placed in a Are to be made clean. A Frenchman. Perreyon, has reached in a Bleriot monoplane the height or 10,686 feet This is only 10,000 feet short of the height of Mt. Everest. But Glaisber and Coxwell, the two fa mous English balloonists, once attain ed a height of seven miles—that is, a height of 36,000 feet. The Modern Application. Mother—You must b€ pat font with him. - Bride Oh, I am 1 knew it will take l time for him to see he can't have his J own way. KODAKS First Class Finishing and En larging. A complete stock Aims, plates, papers, chemicals, etc Special Mall Order Department for out-of-town customers. Send for Catalogue and Price List. M A. K. HAWKES CJ 14 Whitehall St. Kodak Departmen ATLANTA. GA- "I raw your advertisement in a pa per and decided to try Lydia E- Fin - ham’s Vegetable Compound. i ’’ seven boxes of it and used two bo tu* of the Sanative Wash, and I a ®. co n m , pletely cured of my trouble, vvnen began taking the Compound I 0 • , weighed ninety-six pounds and no weigh one hundred and twenty-** pounds, r’f anyone wishes to me in person T will cheerfully ‘ all letters, as I can not speak highly of the Pinkham reined^ —MISS JESSIE MARSH. Adrian. Texas. Hundreds of such letters. express gratitude for the good Lydia E. Fi ham’s Vegetable Compound has complished are constantly being ceived, proving the reliability oi grand old remedy. If you want special advice write 0 Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. ' con ' letter fidential) Lynn, Mass. Your will be opened, read and answered b. v and Held in strict confi- Dr a woman dence. tetter Teti^rWe cures tetter. Retd what Mrs. v c 1 i McQulddy. Estill Springs. Tenn. „ #th I had a »evere ca,fl ° f , tl * t t er ',dlni hand* and I Anally got helpless. A »«ami physelan knew of no cure. I decided to 8 Tetterlne a trial. To my utter surprise a«o satisfaction It worked a apoedy cure. Use Tetterine It cures eczema. tetter, erysipelas. J** 1 * 1 ptlrs, kround Itch and all atin maladl. 50c at druogl*t*. or by mall, cundtoitir rn SAVANNA*^ GA