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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS
FRIDAY. APRIL 23. PM:'
STRENGTH
IN
WEAKNESS
The Dingbat Family
<''pyrijih:. 11913. Int**rn«tijcal N>vts Sirt;
I V^TOtD ME It iVAii A AftHtb
EAsy b-EAJtfeEL HARA1L6t>S)
rv'r\arr rua '
'■S \T06. REA/HISM )
HON MV • WHAT A bSL\6HTFi
Subject To PAINT mv IHRica
Beloved : aajo tell me. it i
TTBE MASlc lUCr," IS IT AJOT
NmV HEAfeTS E A/Si AVER
I Dow A/.low No &E.viut’Es
To Scare. Aie Mr. 3. beamish
b& Th&v /A) ever so aiaav
n->_ A1ASIC TlMAAV-JOHNS • £
T. AlO 'SIR /LESS;
■Pos/Afe- AS'The GEN\l"OP l
The MAGic <306 A/at he
—f/VIADE-UP" SWELL T/“
IT is -MV quei*/ 7 ^
It Is MIDBED (_ ’
The LlAGiC Jug 3
AC /A A/D -/
OCCUPATION) DID AT CHA
HEH DID ATT CKA ~
V V'SKWIES — /"<-—
/ LEMMt
EXHA1N, 30ft
, LkMMR
V EK9LA/AJ -
Ignats'; ) Ks-AJMcrrs Krep FromN
\DU Awy SECRETS I AM CALLED \
KRAzy; foe The same Reasous\_
As Mister Toms AAEcAAmer HA' CA/TsT
'ySK/ma/V shaders; sk/am/v; ia/h*a/c
HE IS A Per Bovs, A/vb Dobs
« l^MR. Pty/ww" Look Like A 6
“^D* L—AJO ? WKU.,THBTb Why
KftATy; WHILE Vtou Ate Alcfr exactcv Possess*
OF AW INTELLECTUAL- A1IBA). I WOULD U/*LU
T LIKE T5 Kwow tuny Yco ARE CALLED/
' j^TpsVfeAEy"?/
Vcaajt hand me L
a/o bull LiKE'ThATM
TDurless Dauathamj)
Nes, l
V Would
would VtouTs
W/UAT2BS . I
"PRttry Mice W
T Would You ?
The bell rang. She ran out lierself
to open the door and turned a little
pal.- when she found herself face to
face with the mother, Mrs. Meran.
When they were alone In the room
.Mrs Meran was the first to speak:
‘•1 know my son’s feelings for you,
ni y child I also know that you are
more than worthy of his love, and I
should have like& nothing better than
to have seen you as his wife. But what
, an we do w hen my husband is against
it" Paul is quite crushed ”
Annette buried her face in her hands,
ai d the tears ran out between her slen
der lingers.
••Then my heart, my love, my cour
age count for nothing, because I have
no money. Because r am a poor girl
Mr. Meran parts Paul and me. It is
njus;. terribly unjust!”
And -Mrs. Meran repeated:
“Yes, it is unjust.” and because she
and nothing else to say, she caressed
Annette's hair with her hand and was
silent.
“T know that it is hard to make a
living.” Annette went one, “and I know
that Paul is not earning much money
row, but 1 did not mind that; he would
i.ave got on better later, l would have
shared his days, bad ones with the good,
and later on we should feel we were so
much closer because we had gone
. /rough the struggle together. I would
nave been a good helpmate to him. I
am not selfish, Airs. Meran.”
I know that, my child, and T would
have learned to love you like a' mother.
Dno't cry. dear; you will be happy.
You deserve it. You can get a better
usband than my Paul would have been
’<> you. Perhaps if you had married
him the day would have come when you
would have regretted it.”
“Never, for I love him, and no matter
what sorrows and trials might have
come to us, they would only have tied
“i* closer to him when we thought of
th* confidence with which we began
'•ur life. Oh, Mrs. Meran, it is efruel
io part us."
T feel sorry for you, my dear child.
Vou speak just as I thought thirty
years ago.”
“And when he thinks of tliai. don’t
0,1 Niink Mr. Meran will give in?"
"Give in!
•Mrs. Meran spoke these words as if
if!P did not believe her own ears. Bhr
"iked at Annette and her eyes filled
with tears.
’ !l " you think dear,” she said, sad
“that my hnsband ever remember
0f * e days? Do you think he even think
f them for a single moment?
A ery soon he got into the habit ol
sa :- n S. ‘I want this’ and ‘I want that,'
ar.d utter a while I was only a shadow
• myself, while he seemed to grow
ipT'; , and 1 trembled at him. My hus-
^ d! He very quickly forgot that I
5 ' a(1 a heart, that I loved him. He took
^ leelings for granted, as something
liat w as his by right. Yesterday he
I*11 “ICAAzy,
By Cliff Sterrett
It’s Always That Way With Poor Pa
Copyright, 1913. ln!'-rn*tlrra*l News Reiwir*
i dowt See Mow/ vfeR 6om»j4 1
/tw' frir a Ouch I Aiur
6oim<3 'ThROL/dH 'This
SoMMER LiUE. I DID
LAC~r l
ME Some |
6l4d R4GS~! j
DAWdow IT l i Told MA To
"Throw This' ole lid AWMV
LA& Fall! tit We
TPE. BLAMED ThlUCr
-T&O 4LR£ADV.I
Ah'There's blUClAI
WHV iHA’ RdoRChild'T
dHOhS" is UlERALLT
TALUU 1 OF Her. FeeT i
To 6>4V UoTHtUb OF
RJTH'i Widdil/6
toeSewt, Ruth'll Cost
VtR Rtiy/ A PPElTY
PEfJU^ 7AKE. IT (—
6ir a R4io OvtT TMif mouTh,
vtR PAW’S Life.
M&bauce iC Due om )
“Tut “22wo l f J
prom Me !
va‘c LAS-x
VfeAUB
MkJAMA.
Skinny Knows How to Treat a Girl
By Tom McNamara
Registered United State* Patent Office
ASK TER LIKE A FRIEND TO XS IF TOO
|60SH HANL IT SHRIMP IS TRT/M' To
AUJ I WILL M6T SHE: MUHt
TH/NK. I'M TEA LOOSj ; ~
i SKINMT S'HAMEft'S
600SLT DEPARTMENT
EAST Nal jj>
DSAOJ/N*^
LEYSCtft
•l-TEALOUST
:0f> EMIIT AUJ AT FROM /»16- 6T (iOLLT,
A- i.ARC.6
FAMIOi Of
SHE'S MT SWEETHEART- (ll 00 OP To
m AND SING 1 ET'
4IS MAP AU
CIDER. HIS / YlSBKfe f .
SEEZER. !) V
SDK full op
MAI l%
Ltm it vau*i«wr;
G/nAuyfjL Zer
60&S OiHEM A AOTc-"
mobile 4/.vT- ujHeic'
|T TURNS TorTlB l
flop Ter CiUSiuN’)
Jt.
LiTTlS BELL* RoSffNBERU.
JD*)ES PARK- U. S, A
WH'-l DO FIRIEND&
AIFUER SHAKE HANDS,
UU/TH 77/e/ft left HAN9S?
HORRTOP A lift TAKE
YOUR TiffiS TD THIMK
THlA OUEIR 1
ANE’LicQ. To-MORROLU-
TAUJUIUJVUUiHU! >
, ■.> ><. >• "
I'LL UUALK R14HT BY 'EM )
U/HISTLIN' LIKE A lark /
AND l UJOM' r SPEAK Tt> i
^kimnt 5£ar in Hats the
(Tee i por&otwouu
ARKS UUHlSTlE
MATTER
vUHISTjHS
► LIKE A
lark
calmow;
*u's Meran said, as if to herself:
1 r1 -cc. thirty years ago. my husband
- • a .scene- and treated me very un-
He had left me sitting at home
imp rushed and scared at his tem-
,,er l*i the evening he came back from
' h ' an upset, witli a face which
•: if recognized. He had been un-
■ -dl« <1 by one of his superiors. I
- t he had made a scene and had
position, so i asked: ‘And what
1 uu say?’ 'Nothing; he is stronger
me, isn’t he.” he replied.
Gauged His Courage.
‘ ’li. Annette, that day r knew what
;i, i of courage he possessed, and I also
what a poor companion l had
N pp n to bin . I had always submitted
*r.d, because I was weaker, he had taken
h a revenge on me when he had been
abused by one stronger than himself.
hen he tyrannized us it was because
r P knew he had nothing to fear from
Us And Paul, who loves you, An*
J'GU;, W ould have tyrannized you,
,n “ eb he has no courage himself."
. Mmette listened no longer, a terrible
e *Hhg tilled her heart, the feeling that
t ne had come near giving all that was
hi her to a man who w r ould not
, av e appreciated it and who would have
° v ec her so little as to make her either
a -jav • or a rebel.
’•d Mme Meran continued talking of
youth:
H did r.ot even protect me. me
1 did not even dare to open my heart
in my darkest hours.”
e ie listens no more. .She is ery-
‘ ■ Tt!j and murmurs:
;l d courage: I was not afraid «i
-il courage!”
•' 1 • Meran finished her tt.ought, say-
A^ARA
Some Smiles Worth While
Things Worth Remembering
Put ur.d Mike were crossing the river
■ :i a ferryboat. They were watching
intently a big dredging barge that was
sending lrs mammoth scoops under the
water and bringing up tons of mud.
“Pat,” says Mike, “wouldn’t yez loike
to be a-workin’ over there on that mud-
digger?”
“Yis,” says Pat. “but, begorra Oi’d
hate to be one of the fellows under
the water that’s fillin’ up thim shov
els."
tery advertise: "Graves_ finely situated,
surrounded by the beauties of nature,
commanding a tine view of the bay, and
in short, meeting every requirement of
the human family. People who have
tried them cannot be persuaded to go
elsewhere. ’
Out of the more than sixty millien
inhabitants of Germany, nineteen mil
lion support themselves by agricul
ture.
tal.e that llgufutivelyV Jf you stand
on your head, you know, you mud
look at things upside down. And look
ing at things upside down was exactly
what 1 did when 1 viewed i ;n»e chalk
marks from the doorway instead of
from the path. I knew the game and
I knew my man from that instant.
Set the lie's mark on every livin' soul
of them,' the mother of Shawn's boy-
had said to him; and—'The Lie's
Mn.rk’ was there! I.ook at those fig
ures ride down. You will find that
tPy « ell I.. !. K., and that the wom
an's son obeyed her to the letter. I
think that's all, Mr. Narkom. so, if
you are ready, we'll say good night
and go.''
|\ ; l beautify the eyebrdws and
j lashes by gently stroking
I them with a soft camel-hair eyebrow
brush. There is nothing which so
enhances the beauty of the face as
tine eyebrows and long, curling, dark
lashes. Clipping the lashes to make
them grow longer and stronger was
long ago abandoned as worse thar.
useless, and smart women of to-day
will risk no such radical method. In
stead. many of them use a perfectly
harmless but very rare and delicate
substance known to chemists as
mennaline. To greatly stimulate and
also to darken the growth of the
hairs In brow and lash, it may be
applied at night with the finger-tips
close to the hair roots Rouge is
always obvious, but powdered coliian-
dum' defies detection, and is quite
harmless.
A raw onion eaten at night is the
best-known remedy for insomnia.
H\ \ J HEN I had Dollops’ report
\l\I on that In my hand and
saw that nine of those
twelve jurors bore the names which
you yourself had given me as being
those of the men who were murdered,
and when I realised that Doctor Sin
gleton’s assistant was not only an
Irishman, but a young one. rather
badly made up to look old. * * •
Oh, well, even u blockhead must have
begun to realize that he was on the
right scent. Still, I was not sure. Ab
solute certainty never tame to me.
Mr. Narkom, until 1 turned as I was
entering this house and looked back
at the traces of the green figures
which had been chalked upon the
doorstep. Then, of course, I positively
knew! A, 1 how?"— He smiled ami
turned to the flws’sui gir . a.fe ue!-
tered in Lady Jennifer’s rms VI:.d-
"That's a neat motto,said Briny
Billina to a building society man who
asks, "Why pay rent when you can
own your own home?”
"Yes." was the reply; "but I have
just had a tenant who revised It in a
way that made me dislike it. He says:
'Why pay for a home when you can owe
the reni?’ "
Spectacles were Invented In the
thirteenth Century.
Value of Bluff.
in a close encounter during the
American Civil War two soldiers, one
from each army, came face to face
within short range.
Each put up his gun and tired, as
it subsequently appeared, his last
cartridge Both missed. The buile;
of one man buried itself In a tree,
and the shot of the other passed
through the coat of his enemy. Each
man. knowing his ammunition was
gone, supposed himself to be at a
disadvantage.
One of thtm made a great show of
reloading his gun. and, stepping for
ward. demanded n surrender The
other threw down his arms with a
gt oan.
"if I had another cartridge i would
never surrender." he exclaimed.
“Ti.ot’s ail light, calmly remarked
:i •• mptcr, n.mchir.g off h'.s prisoner.
"If 1 i.ad .: r.ot Iter, you may he sure
I I shouldn't have asked >eU to sur-
w-hich is the
The Riddle cf the Round House.
U PON what trivia! eircumitances
do «reat events sometimes
hinge! H^re was a vase of
morn than common perplexity-^-more
than the ucjal quota of mystery,
craftiness and diabolical cunning—
and yet, had not Dol’ops cho/en to
“top off ’ a hearty tea of : irlm^c
wattr ere*. 1 -* and cucumber ^and-
wichttf vvitli three cream puffs and a
banana it would mvc; have * o.ne
“I’ll learn ye tae tie the kettle tae
the deg's tail,” Tommy’s mother yelled
In he. wrath.
“I* wasna our dog,'' cried frightened
Thcrra \
“Naw. it ull.yi l. < or dog.’’ almost
shrieked tl.e fnrageo mother, “but it
was oui kettle!”
j Peck—You will never get the dog to
i mind you, my dear.
j Mrs. Peck—I shall, with patience
j You were Just as troublesome yourself
) at first
Hacisuni—AVi:at side do you ganer
ally take when your wife gets into as
argument with somebody elie?
Wiseacre—outside, it’s sater
:i army estir ates tV- the
vido for an expenditure*
). an increase of over
the year.
ink they are Ir.tve b.
love them, obey them.
■ key ate strong, though ii
***e P «* weak and w ., wh
the strong ones ”
c erne
1?
Us .
Boys