Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 29, 1913, Image 7

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Advice to the Lovelorn i By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. FOR HER SAKE, DO. p)EAK MISS FAIRFAX; I am twenty, and deeply In love with a girl of eighteen. She told me she loved me, and 1 love her. too, but some way I doubt her love. The other eve ning she attended a dance with a friend of mine after I asked her not to go. E. S. B. Your attitude is one of fault finding. and I not sure that the giving of your love to a woman means her happiness. She says she loves you. Be grate ful for that much and don't attempt to control her as if she were a child, if you can not be that generous. It will be a kindness to her to transfer your affections. DON’T GO TO EXTREMES. F) EAR MISS FAIRFAX: ^ I am a girl 20 years old. A few young men would like to keep steady company with me but I always refuse because I do not seem to care for them much. Do you think I should accept just the same? 1 am so lonesome be cause I am always home, while the other girls have a good time. LONESOME. Unless these men are objection able to you, you must accept an occasional invitation, for It may be the means of meeting the man you will some day love. Don’t get into the habit of isolation and consequent lonesomeness. It will grow on you. FORGET YOURSELF. T“\ EAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am a young man of twenty and have been keeping company with a young lady for the pas' six months. I love this young lady very much and would be thankful for your advice on how to win her. R. M. Forget yourself In an effort t< make her happy. Be considerate, agreeable, persistent; let her know you love her and are willing to devot* your life to her. A Popular Song Copyright. 1013. Intern*Uon*l Ntws Service. BY N1 "If h *~4 t h >; i <r Moths can be kept away from furs or clothes by putting a piece of linen damped in turpentine in drawers or wardrobes. This should be renewed onoe or twice during the year. Moths will never attack carpets and curtains which have been well sprinkled with salt. A small box of brickdust with cork in it kept at the side of the sink will be found most useful for taking stains from knives, cups and all kinds of china and enamel ware. If at hand at washing-up time it saves many an after cleaning. A good cleaning paste for enameled baths, zinc pails, etc., is made of equal parts of shaved yellow soap, whiting and common soda, dissolved over the fire in the least possible amount of water required to keep it from burn ing. To hang pictures on a plastered wall try dipping the nail into cold water before driving it into the wall. 1 1. will bite into the plaster if this is done, and will hold a heavy weight without loosening. Little Bobbie’s Pa By WILLIAM F. KIRK. T HARE was two ladies up to the house last nits. Both of them has daughters wlch is Jest go ing to git married & that nmiks them feel kind of love sick them- selff, 1 guess, beekaus that is all that thay did all the time thay was to the house, talk about love. Pa dident like it a bit, beekaus both of the ladies was oalder than he is. & 1 have offen herd Pa say that wlinmen shud talk about other topicks than love wen thay git middel aged, topicks like church work or how much life insurance thare husbands is going to leave them when thay die. One of the ladies was naimed Missus Raymond fv the other was Missus Belcher. Missus Raymond sed to Pa: "Don’t Cry,” Said Ma. 1 was jest telling your wife beefoar you cairn in the room how sweet & Innocent gurlish my littel daughter looked to-day wen she was looking caver sum prltty material for her trousseo. The deer littel cherup seemed so charming and confused and bewil-deringly pretty that I al most envied the man that is going to taik her away from me, sed Missus Raymond. Then she beegan to cry. I doant think 1 wud cry if I was you, deerest, Ma sed to her. Do calm yurself fk taik cumfurt in thinking about the pritty hoam that her hus band is going to malk for her. Maybe you will be thare a grate deel of the time. Won’t that be nice & cumfurtable? Ma sed to her. It will be pretty tuff corn beef for her husband, sed Pa. the yung lady’s husband, I ineen. Wife, sed Pa, I suppoas you reemember the time yure loving mother calm here all the way from Wisconsin A started rite in trying to be the managing editor of our littel hoam. Of course, you ree- inember It, sed Pa. Will you ewer fergit, sed Pa. the look of pained surprise that caim into her eyes wen 1 explained to her. as gently as I cud, that she dldent have anything In the world to say about man agernent of my domes tick affair*? If my memory do sent fall me, Pa sed. & F do not think it does, she stayed only three days insted of all summer You acted like a perfect cave man all the time ghe was here, I. remem ber that, sed Ma No wonder m.v poor mother seldom menshuns you In hef letters. But as I was saying about daughter and Missus Raymond. I cud- dent help thinking as I sat there & saw her. a dainty bud with youth’s fresh blccm on her cheeks, that no mar, in this wurld was good enuff to be the husband of so divine a cree- chur. Of course the man she is go ing to marry is a splendid yung man & Is the vice president of a big bank. But eeven if he were the president of the united Staits, sed Missus Ray mond. he wuddent be good enuff for my daughter. No man is good enuff for a woman. Looks for Gray Hairs. They are good enuff for a woman around pay day, sed Pa. E have al ways notified that when it gtts newt* the first of the month my wife beeglnp looking in my head for gray hairs A calling me her deer o d boy. & the morning of pay day, Pa sed, she al ways follows me lo the door aad kisses me aggenn and aggenn. jYftti the luv lite shirting in her eyes, & says Be sure & come rite hoam after you git yure pay fo-dav, won’t you, darling. I newer do any such thing ,sed Ma, & I agree with Missus Raymond that her daughter or aoy sweet, good gurl is too good for a man. Oil. my daughter, sed Missus Ray mond, can’t let her go. I jest can’t. to my daughter, too. sed Missus Bel cher, it seems as If sum monster of the sea was coming neerer & merer to drag my daughter from her motlv er’s arms. Then they both beegan to cry & Pa sneeked out of the room fir went in the library ware the side board is. o see The Bashful Boy I» • • • 3 By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Nell Brinkley Says- T Silencing the Philosopher. ’Yes,” remarked the philosopher: ‘deafness is indeed a terrible afflic tion. But in such cases nature, you know, always provides some compen sation. At any rate, if a man is deficient in one sense, he usually has another abnormally developed. Now, T once knew a poor blind fellow whose sense of touch was positively uncan ny. Really, it served him almost as well as eyes do a normal man." "Sure." said the genial Irishman, who hitherto had taken no part in the discussion, "an' I’ve noticed that, tbo! There's a friend of mine, he’s lame, poor chap, but he can get about almost as easily as you or I. True, one of his legs is short, but the other makes up for it by being three inches longer!" ’HEY call it “1 LOVE YOU.” The Kings of Babylon and the slaves by the river sang it with equal fervor. In faery I and they know it. Adam brought it home to Eve and sang it tirelessly. On the plaintive “uku lele” of soft-aired Hawaii they have played it since the isles were born. Steel and iron clad men of the rough days of chivalry caroled it to the maids they met from the broad backs of their drav horses. Cleopatra whined it in her honey-sweet voice to dull-witted Antony. In the backwoods of Tennessee they know it. In the gray, melancholy uplands of wild Thibet rough-haired youths whisper it to bead-strung slant eyed girls. In the hidden corner of the music room, screened in spikes of fruit blossoms, a smart young chap hums it to a girl who never twisted up her own hair in her life, and out in the country, in an orchard, on the top rail of a gray old worm fence, a boy in a blue “jumper” chants it to a girl in a pink sunbonnet shading her sun-browned cheeks. Oh, it s a popular song—everybody knows it and everybody always did know it WITHIN THE LAW A Powerful Story of Adventure, Infringe and Love Some Revenge. Farmer (to horse dealer)- No. I don't bear ye no malice: I only hope that when you’re chased by a pack of ravening wolves you'll be drivin' that horse you sold me. “W’ HAT I would like to ask,” writes Rebecca, “is why it is better for a girl to asso ciate with a bashful boy. On several occasions I have noticed that you state that a girl should honor such a young man, but you have never stated why." The qualities In a bashful boy which make him a welcome suitor are more of a negative nature than of a posi tive. It Is not that which he does, so much as that which he does not do. His sins arc of omission and they are small compared with the sins of com mission of his bolder brother. The bashful boy doesn't flirt. With a tongue that halts and stammers, and a tell-tale color that is quicker than the blush of a young girl to proclaim his dishonesty did he attempt to he dishonest, he Is not an adept at hypocrisy or concealment. He is not a dandy. Neither is he a lady's man, and, my dear Rebecca, the presidents of hanks and railroads, the powers in commercial life, the most prefound thinkers and the men of letters the world honors, were never ladies’ men. His Hands. He does nor know what to do with his hands when out hi society, but his employer will tell you he knows good use fry; them when at work. Afraid cf girls he Is forced to seek companionship in books and boys. The fear of girls gives him a respect for them which is wholesome; the com panionship of boys gives him the out door exercise every young man needs. He needs this tiring of every muscle, not alone for the results that are phys ical. but for moral returns. You are not too young, my dear, to know that the wolf that has been racing furiously up and down hill all day feels at night only the cry of tired limbs and aching muscles begging for rest. He is ixn the wolf that goes seeking an opening to break Into the sheepfold! If a bashful boy loves a girl It is with a sense of humility and his own unworthiness. He knows that he is the one who will be honored if his love is returned; his bolder brother has a faint suspicion, which the homage of sills' girls confirms, that it is the girl who should be on her knees. A Safe Way. During his calf days he does all his signing for love’s sake at a distanoe. B*'hich mothers will agree Is the only safe and sane way for young girls tp bo loved. He is always a good listener—no weman was ever bored to death by the talking of a bashful man. Saving little, he says little for whioh he or others have cause for regret. He is a safe depository for secrets, a good man In whom to have confidence. Tf he Is not a girl’s lover the next best thing that could happen her would be to have him for a brother or a friend. His compliments are not practiced, and are therefore sincere. When It takes effort and stupendous courage to hand a modest little flower to a girl, it follows that he will never throw bou quets at the head of every woman he meets. f Best of all. Rebecca, the bashful boy Is a home boy. He Is unafraid when with nls mother and finds in her com panionship the delight less bashful boys seek from home. He is "a good boy’” in the sweet old- fashioned sense, a boy who has escaped contamination a few years later than it comes to boys more bold. SUMMER FARES. Lake, Mountain and Sea shore Resorts. Daily on and after May IB the Cen tral of Georgia Railway will have on sale at its principal ticket offices round trip tickets at reduced fares to summer resorts in the North, South, East and West, and to New York, Boston, Baltimore and Philadel phia via Savannah and steamships. For total fares, conditions, train serv ice. etc., ASK NEAREST TICKET AGENT CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY, or write to W. H. Fogg. District Pas senger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. Adv. Copyright. 1913, by the H. K. Fly Com pany. The play “Within the Law" Is copyrighted by Mr. Veiller and this novelization of it is published by his permission. The American Play Com pany is the sole proprietor of the ex clusive rights of the representation and performance of “Within the Law” in all languages. By MARVIN DANA from the Play by BAYARD VEILLER. TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. “I guess we can find a way . to have the marriage annulled, or whatever they do to marriages that don’t take." The brutal assurance of the man in thus referring to things that were sacred moved Dick to wrath. “Don’t you interfere," he said. His words were spoken softly but tensely. Nevertheless. Burke held to the topic, but an indefinable change in his manner l LOW SUMMER RATES CHICAGO . . $30 CINCINNATI . . $19.50 LOUISVILLE $18 INDIANAPOLIS $22.80 KNOXVILLE $7.90 CORRESPONDING RATES TO MANY OTHER POINTS Tickets on Sale Daily-Good Returning October 31 Best Service to North and Northwest Lv. Atlanta 7:12 A. M. anti 5:10 P. M, Daily Through Sleeping and Dining Cars CITY TICKET OFFICE 4 PEACHTREE STREET rendered it less offensive to the young man. “Interfere! Huh!" he ejaculated, grin ning broadly. “Why, that’s what I’m paid to do. Listen to me, son. The minute y ou begin mixing up with crooks, you ain't in a position to give orders to any one. The crooks have got no rights in the eyes of the police, .lust remember that." He Was Not Listening. The Tnspector spoke the simple truth as he knew it from years of experience. The theory of the law is that a presump tion of innocence exists until the ac cused is proven guilty. But the police are out of sympathy with such finical methods. With them, the crook is pre sumed guilty at the outset of whatever may be charged against him If need be. there will be proof a-plenty against him—of the sort that the underworld knows to its sorrow. But Dick was not listening. His thoughts were again wholly with the woman he loved, who, as the Inspector declared, had fled from him. “Where’s she gone In Chicago?" Burke answered in his usual gruff fashion, but with a note of kindliness that was not without its effect on Dick. “I’m no mind reader.” he said. "But she’s a swell little girl, all right I've got to hand it to her for that. So, she'll probably stop at the Blackstone- that is. until the Chicago police are tipped off that she is in town." Of a sudden, the face of the young man took on a totally different expres sion. Where before had been anger, now was a vivid eagerness. He went close to the Inspector, and spoke with Intense seriousness. “Burke." he said, pleadingly, “give j me a chance. I’ll leave for Chicago in the morning. Give me twenty-four hours’ start before you begin hounding her." The Inspector regarded the speaker searchingly. His heavy face was drawn in an expression of apparent doubt. Ab- ^ SEND FOR CATALOG. You're missing ,a world of fun ruptly, then, he smiled acquiescence. "Seems reasonable." he admitted. But the father strode to his son. "No. no. Dick.’’ he cried. “You shall not go. You shall not go." Burke, however, shook his h«ad in re monstrance against Gilder's plea. His huge voice came booming, weightily im pressive “Why not?" he questioned. "It's a fair gamble. And. besides, I like the boy’s nerve." Dick seized on the admission eagerly. ‘ And you’ll agree?" he cried. “Yes, I’ll agree." the Inspector an swered. "Thank you," Dick said quietly. But the father was not content. On the contrary, he went toward the two hurriedly, with a gesture of reproval. “You shall not go, Dick," he declared, impetuously. The Inspector shot a-word of warning to Gilder in an aside that Dick could not hear. "Keep still," he replied. “It’s all right.” Dick went on speaking with a seri ousness suited to the magnitude of his interests. "You give me your word. Inspector." he said, “that yqu won’t notify the po lice in Chicago until I’ve been there twenty-four hours?" ‘ ‘ I Don t Like It. ’ ’ “You’re on.’’ Burke replied genially. "They won't get a whisper out of me until the time is up." He swung about to face the father, and there was a com plete change in his manner. "Now. then, Mr. Gilder." he said briskly, “T want to talk to you about another little mat ter' ” Dick caught the suggestion, and in terrupted quickly. "Then I’ll go." He smiled rather wanly at his father. “You know. Dad. I’m sorry, but I’ve got to do what I think is the right thing." Burke helped to save the situation || from the growing tenseness. "Sure." he cried heartily; "sure you have: That's the best any of us can do." He watched keenly as the young don't like it.” Burke slapped his leg with an enthu siasm that might have, broken a weaker member. "Best thing that could have hap pened!" he vociferated. And then, as Gilder regarded him In astonishment, he added, chuckling “You see. he won't find her there." “Why do you think rhaf.?” Gilder de manded. greatly puzzled x Burke permitted himself the luxury, of laughing appreciatively a moment more before making his explanation. Then he said quietly: To be Continued To-morrow. A wonderful magazine given FREE with every copy of the next Sunday American. iii . . Women appreciate j , man went out of the room. It was not if you don’t take snap-shots. We ) ! until the door closed after Dick that he will take pleasure in sending you (j spoke. Then he dropped to a seat on catalog of kodaks and Brownie <| the couch, and proceeded to make his > confidence to the magnate. “He’ll g^ to Chicago in the morning, j oil think, don't you?” "Certainly.' Gilder answered. "But 1 cameras and our new finishing price iist. A. K. Hawkes Co., Ko dak Dept.. 14 Whitehall. the New Blend of Coffee and Roasted Cereals for its mon ey saving value as well as for its delic- i o u s flavor and drinking quality. Order a small can from your grocer for trial. Cheek-Nfeal Coffee Co., NasInriBe. H oast on, Jacksonville Get The Syrup Habit— It’s Good For You Velva Syrup Is more than a mere sweet. It’s a fine, wholesome, health ful food. It’s Just what growing children need — and it’s good for grown-ups, too. Earnest, careful scientists have long ago exploded the mossy idea that sweets are harmful — and they tell you that sweets are necessary. You’ll find ' the syrup with the RED LABEL, fine. It has the smoothest ol sugary flavor and rich color. It makes candies, fudge, cakes and cookies that fust melt In one’s mouth. It goes great with griddle cakes and It will make your good muffins, walfles and biscuits better. Try It and see If this Isn’t so. Ten cents and up, according to size. Velva in the green can, too, at your grocer’s. Send lor the book of Velva recipes. No charge. PENICK & FORD, Ltd. New Orleans, La. ooCv VELVA NUT ICE CREAM 3-4 capful Red Velva 5yrup, 2 cupfuls scalded milk, I tab'espoonful flour. 1-4 cupful sugar, 1 egg, pinch of salt, 2 Quarto cream, 1 cupful chopped English walnut meats, 1 teaspoonful almond extract, * teasDoonful rose extract. Beat up the egg with the flour and sugar, and gradually add the milk. Cook for 20 minutes in a double boiler, stirring con stantly. Cool and add the syrup, salt, nuts, cream and the extracts, and freeze. Serve in dainty dishes with a preserved cherry on top of each.