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MAULL
BROS.
SLLoils
Mo.
The Folly of
My Sex
Beauty Secrets of Beautiful Women
Chrystal Herne\Idca oj True Loveliness and How to Attain It.
WITHIN THE
LAW
The Mistakes of Jennie By hal coffman
Being a Series of Chapters in the Life of a Southern Girl in the Big City
“It never occurred to Jennie how they got the good clothes."
CHAPTER IV.
W HEN Jennie's friend, the
motherly boarding house
keeper, came in to call her
the next morning she sat down on
the edge of Jennie’s little white
bed and took hold of the girl’s
hand—for she knew' that some
thing was on Jennie’s mind, and
all was not quite right.
Jennie, however, assured her
that everything was fine and
dandy and that she was only tired
the night before. But they have
a way of knowing when all is not
quite right with children, and it
hur* her the way Jennie acted—
for never before had she failed
to confide all her little troubles
and secrets to her.
Jennie ate a hurried breakfast
and felt all through it as if she
were choking and was Impatient
to be out of the house. On the
way to work In the stupid old
street car she couldn’t help but
think how dull and sordid it
seemed after the ’’taxi” the night
before.
Another thing bothered her al
so, that she had forgotten in the
excitement of the night before-
what about Tom? Tom. whom it
seemed she had ALWAYS known.
Tom, whom the other girls al
ways referred to as Jennie’s
“steady.” What would HE say
when he saw her with THE MAN.
Huh! “she should worry” about
Tom—guess she could put him in
his place, and besides, what busi
ness was it of his? Tom never
took her to a swell restaurant
like she was in last night or took
her home in a “taxi.” Poor! Tom
didn't make much money even if
he did work hard.
THE MAN had asked her to
ring him up, and she decided she
would do so that very day at
lunch time. That morning at the
office she heard two of the other
girls talking girls that always
seemed to have good clothes and
were*: always talking about the
good times they had.
It never occurred to Jennie be
fore where or how they GOT the
good clothes or the good times
they had. She knew they were
each making $7 a week, while
Jennie, who was a faster stenog
rapher and paid more attention
to her work, got a week.
Still she couldn’t afford to dress
the way they did. and they didn't
live at home either. This Jen
nie wondered about all that
morning 'til lunch time when she
hurried out to a public phone and
rang .up THE MAN. That being
Saturday and wouldn’t she go
for an auto ride with him the
next day. They would start early
Sunday morning and go way.
’way out in the country and stop
at some little inn for a dandy
chicken dinner. She was to make-
some excuse at home and not tell
her friend, the boarding house
keeper where she was going but
to meet him several blocks from
her house- and they would Just
have LOTS of fun.
Indeed she VVOl’LD meet him
and she could say she was going
out to spend the day with Tom.
Jennie was so excited she could
hardly wait for the next morning,
and. just think! an AUTO ride
in the country.
Ah. wasn’t it a dandy old world
after all, and lots more fun than
going down to the beach or walk
ing in the old pokey park with
Tom.
HAL <*« fKFMAN.
tTo Continued.)
Little Bobbie’s Pa
By WILLIAM F KIRK.
t "T t KN we caim to this little town
\/\/ ware Pa is fishing he toald Ma
* * that it was different from
other small towns. The peepul here are
as broad as the peepul that live in a
city, sed Pa. and you will find none
of the petty gossip ft skandal that is so
common in other small placep.
I doant know, sed Ma, you will have
to show me. There Is gossip & skandal
eeven In Atlanta, but in a small
place, at leeste in any of the small
places I have ewer been in, thare is sure
to be a good deal of talk.
But this is a different kind of town,
sed Pa. You wait & see. So we waited
& saw.
The first thing after dinner last nile
two married ladies caim to call on Ma.
Pa & me was there, too. We dident
want to stay, but we had to be polite.
You have a nice little village here, sed
Ma to the two ladles. One of them was
Missus Jenkins ft the other was naimed
Missus Jones.
Oh, we do git so tired of it, sed Missus
Jenkins. Thare are so few of our kind
of peepul here that we always like to
meet peepul of reefinement. Moaat of
the peepul here are so common, ain't
thay, Missus Jones?
He Drank.
Hevings, yes. sed Missus Jones. The
only other peepul here besides Missus
Jenkins and myself Is the Browns, ft
Mister Brown drinks appeljack.
I can’t say that 1 blame him much,
sed Missus Jenkins, heekaus his wife
powders her face ft is all the time nag
ging at him. She goes to New York
pritty olTen. too. I wuddent think so
much of it if her husband went with her.
but she goes alone.
That isent very reemarkahle, is it?
sod Ma. I dare say she goes there to
shop.
That's what she says, sed Missus
Jenkins, hut we think what we please
up here. Besides, it seems like she puts
on an awful lot of airs going to the city
to shop. If her husband paid his hills
here it would look a whole lot better,
wuddent it. Missus Jones.
Yes, Indeed, sed Missus Jones. Don’t
you think so yourself? she asked Ma.
I am sure I am not interested, sed Ma.
She was boeginning to act kind of cool,
the way. she acts sumtimes at brekfast
tiie morning after Pa has went to the
Elks. Pa looked kind of cheep, too.
after the way he had talked about tht
peepul in this little town beeing so
broad.
Doant you think this lady's son looks
like Harry Baker? Missus Jenkins asked
Missus Jones.
More Scandal.
lie is better looking than Missus
Baker’s boy, sed Missus Jones & I can
see he has been fetched up different.
Harry Baker newer had no fetching up
to speak of He won all my boy's mar
bles playing that awful gaim of “keeps”
last week, hut I can’t blame him for
wanting to gamble. Mister Baker, his
father, plays poker and they say he
cheats.
Then Me. got busy. She waited till
Pa ha<l left the room & she sed Ladles,
pity me. The reason my husband left
the room is beekaus he doesn’t pay his
bills and he drinks three quarts of whis
ky a day ft. he plays poker so much
that he is beeglnning to git a curled
mustache like the King of Clubs. He
beats me, too, said Ma.
He does? exclaimed the two ladles.
Me certainly does, doesent he, Bob
bie?
Almost every nite wen he cums hoara,
I sed, & he heats me, too.
The village ladies dident stay long
after that.
Not I aikative
Lady Dorothy Nevill in her "rem
iniscences” has told, a story of the
third Duke of Devonshire and his
brother, Lord Cavendish.
Both were very silent men. Stop
ping once at an inn in Germany they
were told that they could be accom
modated only with a chamber con
taining three beds, one of which was
occupied. They made no reply, but
quietly retired to the apartment.
Peeling some little curiosity about
the third bed, however, each took a
momentary peep through the cur
tains. They then immediately got
into their own beds and slept soundly.
Next morning, after they had
breakfasted and paid their bill, the
duke sajd to his brother:
"George, did you see the dead
body?”
“Yes,” was the reply ; and they both
got into their chaise and proceeded on
their journey without another w r ord.
by BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
N INETY women gathered In the
garden of the old Schwab es
tate adjoining the Hall of
Fame the other afternoon to receive
the first instruction of the spring
garden course by Henry Griscom Par
sons. director of Department School
Gardens. New York University.
Of the ninety women only two were
prepared to do practical gardening, as
there were only two women who had
brought their aprons. The women
wore tight skirts, high-heeled shoos
‘and white kid gloves, and when given
seeds found they could not kneel down
or bend low to plant them, as their
' skirts were too narrow-. When they
tried to bend as low- as their skirts
and corsets permitted they could not
obtain sound footing with their high-
heeled shoes.
They took off their kid gloves, dis
closing hands that were burdened
with rings, and were as helpless be
fore the simple little task before them
as if they had been so many babies.
They had not dressed suitably for
the occasion. Do any of my sex these
mad days make any pretense of
dressing to suit the occasion?
To Regulate Dresses.
A Chicago alderman has introduced
an ordinance to regulate the dresses
worn by women on the streets, solely
on moral grounds. The costliness qf
the attire, its unfitness so far as serv
ice and endurance are concerned, he
waives. He considers only the moral
aspect of the dresses, garments so
vulgar in conception and suggestion
as to cause some explanation for the
calling of a vice commission.
The girl qii her way to her work
behind a counter, or bending over a
typewriter, wears a garment as near
a duplicate as her purse will permit
of the garment worn by some woman
of wealth and fashion who rides in
her automobile to a pink tea. The
business woman’s dress is as low in
the neck, her heels are as high, her
pumps as low. her stockings as thin.
There is no element of vulgarity
which tlie woman of wealth intro
duces in her attire that is not aped by
her sister with the flatter purse.
The blame lies not with the girl on
her way to work, but with the woman
of wealth and leisure.
The eighty-eight women who gath
ered to learn gardening In matinee
clothes were women of wealth and
high social standing, women who arc
supposedly intelligent, yet they wore
ns silly, and with less excuse, as the
.'.working girl who wears a dress on
the street that should not be worn
outside one’s home, and then when
women only are present.
Not So Divine.
The "female form divine" is not so
divine as the silly women think. Few
arms are just plump and shapely
Enough to look well bared from the
y hand to the elbow. Not one neck in
five hundred would cause an artist in
search of a model to take a second
look. Feet and ankles and the display
many women make above them are
suggestive more often of vulgarity
than of beauty.
The woman who dresses modestly is
credited with charms she may or may
ot possess, but the woman who
resses immodestly proves by the ex-
ihits made that she does not possess
.hem,
• That is immodest” restrains no one
in these days of fashionable indecen
cy. "Your neck is scrawny.” "You
have an ugly arm,” "You are flat-
footed and your ankles are thick may
-erve ns more effective weapons :n
the war that must be waged against
the foolish of my sex.
\n appeal to decency and modesty
having failed, the'same results may
i.e obtained by appealing to vanity.
Household Suggestions
T TGLY cracks in furniture may be eas-
U ily filled in with beeswax, so that
the marks will hardly show. Slightly
soften the beeswax until it becomes pli
able; then press it firmly into the
cracks and smooth the surface over with
a thin knife. Sandpaper the surround
ing wood, and work some dust into the
beeswax. This gives a finish to the
wood, and when it is varnished the
. racks will have disappeared.
If your skirt has got splashed with
rind'hang it before a fire-but not loo
dose—so that the mud may dry quickly.
When dry the mud spots should be
loosened by rubbing with the edge of a
penny, and the dust should be gently
brushed off with a brush of moderate
firmness. If after this brushing the
mud marks are still visible sponge the
spots with alcohol or methylated spirit.
" To remove smoke marks from ceilings
mix a thick paste of starch and water,
and with a clean flannel spread it over
the mark. Allow it to get thoroughly
dry, then brush off with a soft brush
and the marks will have disappeared.
Before sweeping the carpets take an
old round tin. pierce holes in the bottom
Kiul fill with common salt. Sprinkle this
over the carpet. It. prevents the dust
from rising, brightens the colors and
prevents moths.
To prevent an oven from smelling
when cooking a joint, clean it out thor
oughly once a month with white chalk.
,11 will take all smell away and It will
”.r an enameled oven.
CVCURSIONS
A j/ \ Personally conducted
tour July 19, August 16.
Canada, Great Lakes, Atlantic oesan,
Eastern cities. Intensely Interesting
Features. Low rates. Write for book
let, maps, etc. J. F. McFarland, Box
1624, Atlanta, Ga.
By LILLIAN LAUFERTY.
upon ;i time
II Chrystal Herne, in
time,” began
the most
approved fashion of our be
loved fairy tales, "I saw real beauty
—so I know what it is. It is a spirit,
the spirit that flares up within and
lights the face. Spirit makes a plain
face lovely, and without it perfect
features are not beautiful.”
It was between the acts of the star
revival of our good old friend. “Ari- '
zona,” at the Lyric Theater, in New
York, and I had been admitted to that
fascinating realm behind “the old j
9tage door.”
“Won't you tell me about that ‘once
upon a time' wherr you saw real
beauty?” I asked.
Miss Herne has wonderful gray
eyes—deep, tender, and set in the
wide oval of a face so delicately love
ly that not half its beauty can be
guessed across the barrier of the foot
lights. A brooding mist came over
those eyes and into her soft voice.
“It was my father’s face.” she 'said '
gently. “I was a very young girl, and
we were cruising about Peconlc Bav
in our little yawl, when a storm cap
sized us. I thought that cold gray
water was going to hold me forever— j
but suddenly my father’s face came j
between me and horror. He had j
righted the boat somehow, and he got
me into it. And the wonderful light
shining in his face as he saved m"
was beauty. Yet, except for his rare
ly fine expression, my father was not j
a handsome man.
“That was absolute beauty. It ga /e j
me an ideal: Live on a high, fin-
plane; be so splendid that spirit will I
illuminate your face.”
The spirit of her own fineness—her
high ambitions -always shines back
of Chrystal Herne’s flower-like love- ;
liness. But as she spoke, her love '
and veneration made her beauty one j
of the most exquisite things I have
ever seen.
Wants To Be Fat!
“Now. you want the work-a-dav.
practical ideals of beauty, don't you?”
she asked.
"My first one is fat! I can’t see any
beauty in bones and angles. I ha''e
struggled and struggled to get fat!”
Think of that, you who bant and
swallqw unpleasant doses, and im
merse yourselves in baths of salts, so
that the curves and grace may disap
pear and the cubist angles an*
squares betray your bony structure.
“Well, i can’t get fat. I have found
out the hopelessness of that ambi
tion.” went on Miss Herne in a prac
tical tone, “so I do the next best
thing—I make the best of what I am.
1 find the*styles 1 ran wear: T find a
dressmaker who understands me and
will help me develop my own type, in
stead of a few pet theories of her own.
“I arrange my hair to frame my
face, instead of straining it into, the
latest cry in unbecominfcnoss."
“Of course, you learn by acting how
to accent beauty i«> bring out
points,” 1 remarked.
"Yes. indeed, you learn to empha
size natural beauty to bring out hid
den loveliness, and, best of all, not o
overemphasize, not to be conspicuous
—just to be r>;;rt of the picture.
“Now. I truly admire the chic type
the girl who is trim and smart,
whose clothes fit smoothly and whose
hats are set at lit* sharp, fashionable
angle. But I can not be that type
at all; 1 can not imitate her to ad
vantage. so I am not silly enough
to try. If drapery and droop
ing lines suit you, wear them, I say-
only adapt them to the styles of the
times, so you won’t be different
enough to be noticeable.”
Mii-s Chrystal Herne’s Beautiful Profile.
pathize with the women who long for
jt. because to be absolutely beautiful
is a supreme gift. There is only one
thing I long for more, and that is to
be a great actress-—to express beauty
by the art of the drama."
And beauty as Chrystal Herne vis
ions it will illuminate the “text of a
face,” and the text of life as well.
Advice to the Lovelorn
Bv BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
True Beauty.
“You disapprov
clothes?” I asked.
"Of conspicuous clothes- and faces,”
replied Miss Herne. “I do so long to
see more pretty girls not pretty ar
rangements and blendings of paint
and powder, but girls who are nat-
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GO, BY ALL MEANS.
ry K A it MISS FA 1H FAX:
1 expect to go to a dance ac
companied by a young man with
whom 1 have quite an understand
ing. This young man does not
dance. Will it be proper for me to
dance with other young men, or
would you deem it advisable for us
not to go to this dance at all?
Iv K. E.
The voting man is taking you for your
pleasure, and knows that means you
will want to dance.
If his experience as a wallflower
proves distasteful to him he will not
repeat ii Could you not persuade
him to learn to dance? I am afraid
this difference, in your qhoice of enter
tainment may otherwise make trouble.
LET IT DROP.
TAKAR MISS FAIRFAX:
i am eighteen and have been
keeping company with a man four
years my senior, I^ast week I was
out of town for a few days, and the
evening I returned a girl friend
asked me to go to a dance. My
friend was there and escorted an
other girl home, but did not take
her to this dance. Should 1 ask for
an explanation, or should 1 let the
matter drop unnoticed? K. R.
You were out of fown. and he did
not know you would he at the dame.
This is sufficient excuse for him if lie
needs one. but 1 don’t think he does
You aro riot engaged and he is not
hound to you by any promise.
i i• LL HIM YOU HAVE NONE.
TAEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
* / I am a rich young girl eighteen
years old and am deeply in love
with a young man one year my
senior. I am alone in the world
with no mother to guide me. He
has asked me to marry him. but
I do not know if he wants me for
love of me alone.or for money. How
can T find out?
» MARGARET.
"All’s fair in love and war,” and
you might try the plan worn thread-
hare in fiction by telling him you have
lost your money.
But a better plan would be to refuse
him. He is only nineteen, and a hoy
of that age is too young to love se
riously. 1
LOSE NO TIME MAKING UP.
T~\ EAR MISS FAIRFAX:
* I have been keeping company
with a girl for one year. We had a
quarrel over some simple thing and
she got angry. I love her. Tell me
what to do. J. W. 8.
Go to her and tell her you are sorry.
You may not feel that you arc in the
wrong, hut that makes no difference.
Unless you are willing to humiliate
yourself, you care more for self than for
her.
D‘
CERTAINLY.
EAR MISS FAIRFAX:
is it proper for a young lady to
ask a gentleman to call when he has
hinted at it, or wait until he posi-
1 tively asks to call?
M A DELON.
She l as the privilege of asking a man
to cajl on her. and a hint between
I friends shuufd be unnecessary.
Copyright. 191*. by the H. K. Fly Com
pany. The piay “Within the Law" Is
copyrighted by Mr. Velller and this
novelizatlon of it Is published by his
permission. The American Play Com
pany Is the sole proprietor of the ex
clusive rights or the representation
and performance of “Within the Law”
in till languages.
By MARVIN DANA from the
Play by BAYARD VEILLER.
TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT.
Garson. with the keen perspicacity
that had made him a successful crim
inal without a single^ conviction to
mar his record, had seized the im
plication in her statement, and now
put It in words.
“Then, you won't leave us? We’re
going on as we were before?” Tn©
hint of dejection in his manner had
vanished. "And you won’t live with
him?”
“Live with him?” Mary exclaimed
emphatically. "Certainly not!”
Aggie's neatly rounded jaw drowned
in a gape of surprise tha*. was most
unladylike.
"You are going to live on In this
joint w ith us?" she questioned, j
aghast.
“Of course.” The reply was given
with the utmost of certainty.
But the confident tone brought no re
sponse of agreement from Mary. On the
ontrary, her voice was. if anything, even
colder as she replied to his sugges
tion. She spoke w’ith an emphasis that
brooked no evasion,
“What was your promise? I told you
that I wouldn’t go with you until you j
had brought your father to me, and he
had wished us happiness.'' Dick placed
his hands gently on his wile's shoul
ders and regarded her with a touch of
indignation in his gaze
“Mary.” he said reproachfully, “you
are not going to hold me to that prom
ise?”
The answer was given with a decis
iveness that admitted of no question, and
there was a hardness on her face that
emphasized the words
“1 am going to hold you to that prom
ise. Dick.”
For a few seconds the young man
stared at her with troubled eyes. Then
he moved impatiently and dropped hla
hands from her shoulders. But his usu
al cheery smile came again, and he
shrugged resignedly.
"All right, Mrs. Gilder.” he said gay-
ly. The sound of the name provoked
him to new pleasure. “Sounds fine,
doesn’t it?” he demanded with an uxo
rious air.
“Yes,” Mary said, but there was no
enthusiasm in her tone.
The husband went on speaking with
no apparent heed of hla wife’s Indif
ference.
Mary Answered Quickly.
"You pack up w’hat things you need
girlie,” he directed. “Just a few—be
cause they sell clothes in Paris. And
they are some class, believe me! And
meantime. I’ll run down to dad's office
and have him back here in Half an hour.
You will be all ready, won’t you?”
Mary answered quickly, with a little
catching of her breath, but. still coldly.
“Yes, yes, I’ll he ready. Go and bring
your father.”
“You bet I will,’’ Dick cried heartily.
He would have taken "her In his arms
again, but she evaded the caress.
“What’s the matter?” he demanded,
plainly at a loss to understand this re
pulse.
“Nothing." was the ambiguous an
swer.
“Just one!" Dick pleaded.
“No,” the bride replied, and there was
determination in the monosyllable.
It was evident that Dick perceived
the futility of argument.
“For a married woman you certainly
are shy," he replied, with a sly glance*
toward Aggie, who beamed hack sym
pathy. “You’ll excuse me, won’t you,
Miss. Lynch ? • • * Good-bye, Mrs. Gil
der.” He made a formal bow to his
wife. As he hurried to the door he ex
pressed again his admiration for the
name. “Mrs. Gilder! Doesn’t that sound
immense?” And with that he was gone.
There was silence 1n the drawing room
until the two women heard the closing
of the outer door of the apartment.
Then at last Aggie relieved her pentup
emotions in a huge sigh that was near
a groan.
"Oh. Gawd!” she gasped. “The poor
simp!”
CHAPTER XIII.
The Advent of Griggs.
letter on Garson, learning from the
maid that Dick’Gilder had left, returned
just as Mary was glancing over the re
lease with which General Hastings was
to he compensated along with the re
turn of his letters for his payment of
$10,000 to Miss Agnes Lynch.
“Hello. Joe.” Mary said graciously as
the forger entered Then she spoke
crisply to Agnes. “And now you must
get ready. You are he at Harris
office with this document at 4 o'clock
-and remember that you are to let the
lawyer manage everything
Aggie twisted her doll-like face into
a grimace.
"It gets my angora that i’ll have to
miss Pa Gilder’s being led like a lamb
to the' slaughter house.” And that was
the nearest the little adventuress ever
came to making a Biblical quotation.
“Anyhow," she protested, “I don’t see
the use of all this monkey business
here. All I want is the coin." But she
hurried obediently, nevertheless, to get
ready for the start.
Garson regarded Mary quizzically.
“It’s lucky for her that she met you,”
he said. “She’s got no more brains
than a gnat.”
"And brains are mighty useful things,
even in our business,” Mary replied
seriously: “particularly in our business.”
“I should say they were.” Garson
agreed. “You have proved that.”
Aggie came back, puting on her gloves
and cocking her small head very prim
ly under the enormous hat that was
garnished with costliest plumes. It was
thus that she consoled herself in a
measure for the business of the occasion
in lieu of cracked ice from Tiffany's
at one hundred-and fifty a carat. Mary
gave over the release, and Aggie, still
grumbling, deposited it in her handbag
To Be Continued Monday,