Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 31, 1913, Image 7

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i Lit tie Bobbie’s Pa “Care Casts Anchor in the Harbor of a Dream” BY NELL BRINKLEY Copyright, 1W3. International Nrvm Serrlce. -4 4T Si 1 ? LLIAM F. KTRir SAW Will Gage Corey last nlte," sed Pa to Ma. "He was looking fine, and he tells me that he Is making munny so fast rltelng short stories that he has all he can do to spend It all. Do you know, wife, Pa sed, I believe I wilt go in for short Story rltelng. Corey sed It wasent hard, onst you got started.” It may not be very hard for Mister Corey, sed Ma, but rltelng Is a thing peepll cant lern. It has to be born In them, sed Ma, the salm as poets ft collectors are born & not made. Anybody can be a collector, sed Pa 1 doant see why you class them with > poets. A!1 a collector has to do is to collect munny. I doant think that Is vary eesw Ma sed. My father was a lawyer for a few years, Ma sed, until he found out that moast of his law' blzness was to malk colleckshuns, ft he newer had the hart to collect. He used to call ,on sumbody & wen the lady of the house wud cry Pa wud go back to bis law offls & send the bill back to the oredltor & say that It was no good. Poor, deer father, he Is gone now, With his kind hart. Doant be all the time talking about yure relashlons, sed Pa. Getting back to this short-story thing, X reely mcen that I am going In for It. Jest think how proud you wud be IP yure nabors cud pick up the magazeen ft see yure husband’s big naim at the hed of short stories. You cud eeven reed sum of the stories aloud to them, Pa sed, ft think how proud you wudkta to open my mall ft see nice big oWcks from the different moga- zeena 'She Is Doubtful. The check part of ft llssena goofi, sed Ma, but you have bilt so many cassels in Spain without ever having to buy any furniture for the cassels that I will naterally be a littel du bious, Ma sed, until the checks cum rolling in. Oh, the checks will cum rolling In all rite, Pa sed. Doant worry about that part of it & after thay cum rolling in we will put sum of them In the bank & we can send littel Bobbie to college & talk a trip to Europe every year. Won’t that be fine? It wud be fine to talk the trip to Europe every year, sed Ma, but I doant think we shud go to the expense of sending Bobbie to college now. He knows too muc>i as it is, Ma sed, & the munny that you wud lav out for tooition cud better be used by me to git up a nice lot of clothes to ware Wen wd are touring the Continent & the British lies. Of course, sed Ma, 4 > Eu rope with the few clothes T have now. I want you to be proud of yure littel wife wen you taik her abroad, Ma sed. I suppoa.< we can arrange all that, peel Pa. & send Bobble to college, too. They Cost a Lot. I fear that we can not do both, sed Tou know, deer, that women’s clothes cost a awful lot moar than tbay used to. If you have yure hart | so set on sending Bobble to college, Ma sed, I suppoas I can stay at hoam & not go to Europe. Oh, deer, sed Ma, I mite have known It. Then Ma beegan to cry. Thare, thare, fleetest, sed Pa. Tes. I might have known It, Ma sed. Stay at hoam and see the salm old cities oaver and oaver while Missus Black and Missus White are enjoying themselfs with thare husbands oaver In Europe. Thay go every year ft you bet thay doant have to worry about what thay a.re going to ware, eether. Then Ma cried sum moar. If you go on like that, sed Pa, I won’t rite any short stories at all. Nobody wud print them If you rote them, sed Ma. I doant see why wimmen can’t be re^sonabel like us men. Diamond Cut Diamond. In the days gone by they had been sweethearts; but, alas, hatred Is ever akin to love, and the relationship had changed In this case. One day the former lover had to rpake a business call on the girl’s father, and, of course, It so hap pened that she answered the door. “I beg your pardon,” said the young man, keeping his nerve In the trying circumstances remarkably well, “Miss Perkins, I think. Is your father in?” “No, he’s not, I’m sorry to say. Did you wish to see him personally?" asked the maiden, without the slight est sign of recognition showing In her eyes. “Yes; but It will do to-morrow. Thank you. I will call again! Good afternoon! ” /But this was too much. As he Asached the bottom step, the lady spoke: “Pardon me! Who shall I say called?” A wonderful magazine given I'REE with every copy of the next Sunday American. to the Ad vice Lovelorn WITHIN THE LAW A Powerful Story of Adventure, Intrigue and Love Copyright, 1913, by the H. K. Fly Com pany. The play ••Within the Law ie copyrighted by Mr. Veiller and this novelizatlon or it is published by hla permission. The American Play Com pany is the sole proprietor of the ex clusive rights of the representation and performance of ''Within the Lav*” In all languages. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. THEY ARE RIGHT. FlEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am twenty-one, and deeply In love with a young man one year my junior. We have been keeping company for two years. He Is sick in bed and the doctors advise him to leave the city for his health. He wants me to mar ry him before he leaves the city, and live with his parents, who like me very much. My parents object to the marriage. VIOLET R. There are many objections to his plan. Tou must not marry a man who Is In bod health; you must not marry until he can take you to a home of your own, and you must not marry when your parents object. Are not these enough? NO. TVEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am nineteen and deeply In love with a man of twenty-three. We were very lovable for a time, but a girl friend of mine changed his mind entirely by telling him he can get a rich girl with money Instead of a poor girl. Should I waste my time waiting for him? I love him and fear I can’t do without him. STELLA. Tou are wasting your time and emotion In caring for a man whose heart can be turned so lightly. Don't say you can not do without him. Tou can do It, and very' com fortably, too. B IS RIGHT. rYEAR MISS FAIRFAX: ■*-' A says It Is a man’s place to bow first to a woman. B says It Is a woman’s place to bow first. L. J. S. The first sign of recognition comes from the woman. Nell Brinkley Says HERE is the bachelor—so easy-going, “hard-game,” arrow-proof—who does not sit back and, shifting a certain loneliness which he dnbs “care” from his bnsv brain, dream snch a dream as this in his cigarette smoke—a bit, of a bungalow in the wind ing shades of a canon, with a fireplace in it and roses over the door, the fine wine of twilight over it all, a little woman shading her eyes, her skirts blowing in the coming-night wind, holding tight the hand of a stnbby, tanned-kneed baby, waiting for him at the end of the path? There’ll be a dog, too—maybe not a thoroughbred—(though the first two are all right)—and maybe a little tame deer in a wire enclosure under the trees—and—and Where is the bachelor who does not plan his little institution—whose care never casts anchor in the harbor of a dream? Snap Shots By LILLIAN LAUFERTY. Different Points of View S HE was about 19 and she wore a canoe shaped hat with one rod rose dangling rakishly off the back of the brim. Her cheeks were as pink as a baby’s. The head- gear of her male companion had a lit tle bow at the rear. His trousers had cuffs at the ankles and he had not shaved often enough to have acquired the whitish-gray complexion of a grown up man. The two fell Into the chairs at the little table in the con fectionery store and ordered choco late sodas with the exuberance of youth. “Goodness!” said she, following with her red eye§ a middle-aged couple who had entered and taken a table in a corner. “Shouldn't you think when people were as old as that they would have got over caring for soda water and Ice cream?” Pretty Old. “I should say so,” agreed the young man. His expression was distinctly pitying as he watched the newcomers. The man was getting portly, and while the woman’s hair was arranged in the latest mode it was sprinkled with gray and she had a decided matronly look. One could be certain that she had tucked all the children in bed before she and dad started for their evening stroll. “Wouldn’t you hate to be as old as that?” said the young man. “What do you suppose people find to enjoy in life at that age?” “Goodness knows!” said the pretty girl. “They can’t go to dances any more, and to have gray hair I should think would be perfectly awful! I read about a woman once who was a famous beauty and when she found her first gray hair she died of a broken heart. 1 know Just how she felt!” “You'll never get gray!” comforted the young man. “Not if you live to be 100. But I should think people like those over there would envy young folks like us when they saw them getting so much enjoyment out of life! Why, they aren’t even talking to each other only now and then! They’re just bored with existence. I don’t wonder!” “I should think,” said the pretty girl as she daintily poised her spoon and watched the persons under dis cussion, “that they’d feel kind of silly coming in here and ordering anything so juvenile as sodas! It seems funny, somehow! You never think of old people liking such things!” “We’ll never be as old as that,” said the young man meditatively. “We won’t let ourselves get so old. I can't imagine you getting old, anyway. You’ll always be Just as slim and girlish as you are now ” “And think of you as fat as that man.” She trilled with laughter. “I suppose they have grown so apathetic that they don’t care! Poor things!” Meanwhile the middle-aged man In FREE TO YOU-MY SISTER TAKE A TRIP BY RAIL AND SHIP Through trains, large, easy and well-ventilated coaches, parlor and sleeping oars, via Central of Georgia Railway to the port of Savannah, Ga., thence a joyous palatial ships to the big cities and eool summer resorts in the Bast. ROUND-TRIP FARES FROM ATLANTA Including moals and berth on ship Nov/ York $38.25 Baltimore .... $29.25 Boston 42.25 Philadelphia. 34.05 Proportionately low fare3 from other points. For all details, berth reservations, etc., ash the nearest Ticket Agent. Warren H. Foaa, District Passenger Agent, Cor. Peachtree anil Marietta Sts.. Atlanta. Ga. Free to You and Every Sister Suf fering from Woman’s Ailments. I am a woman. I know woman's sufferings. E have found the cure. I will majl, free of any charge, ray home treat- ir.ent with full Instructions to any sufferer from woman's ailments. I want to tell all women about fills cure—you, my reader, for yourself, your daugh ter, your mother, or your sister. I warit to tell you how to cure yourselves at home without the help of a doctor. Men can not understand women’s sufferings. What we women know from experience, we know better than any doctor. I know that my home treatment is safe and sure cure for Leucor* rhoea or Whitish discharges, Ulceration. Displace ment or Falling ot the Womb. Profuse, Scanty or Painful Periods. Uterine or Ovarian Tumors, or Growths; also pains in head, back and bowels, bearing down feelings, nervousness, creeping feeling up the spine, melancholy, desire to cry, hot flashes, weariness, kidney and bladder troubles where caused by weaknesses peculiar to our sex. I want to send you a complete ten days’ treat ment entirely free to prove to you that you can cure yourself at home, easily, quickly and surely. Re member. that It will cost you nothing to giro the treatment a complete trial, and if you wish to continue, it will cost only about 12 cents a week or less 'than two cents a day. It will not Interfere with your work or occupation. Just send m# your name and address, till me how you suffer If you wish, and I will send you the treat ment for vour case. < r : i r • ■ fr . . dn plain wra: ;-r. return mat!. I will a ho • n ’ you free of cost, my hook -' WOMAN S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER" with explanatory illustrations showing why women suffer. and how they can easily cure themselves at home. I-very woman should have it, and learn to think for herself. Then when th. doctor says—“You must hate an operation," you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women have cured themselves with my home remedy. It cures all, old or young. To Mothers of Daughters, I will explain a simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leucorrhooa, Green Sickness and Painful or Irregular Menstruation in young Ladies. Plumpness and health always result from its use. Wherever you live, I can refer you to ladles of your own locality who know and will gladly tell any sufferer that this Home Treatment really cures all women’s diseases, and makes women well, strong, plump and robust. Just send me your address, and the free ten day*’ treatment is yours, also the book. Write to-day, as you may not see this offer again. Address MRS. M. SUMMERS, Sox H Notre Dame, Ind., U. S. A. the corner was saying to his wife; “That’s a pretty girl over there with the funny shaped hat.” “Yes,” agreed the wife. “I may get one like it for Milly. How callow the boy with her looks! Somehow it always makes me want to cry when I see two inexperienced young things such as they are!" “I know,” said her husband under standing^. “They are so beautifully sure of themselves and their knowl edge of the world! When you think of all they’ve got.to go through ” The Infants. “And all the disillusionment and heartaches,” said his wife. “And it takes so many years to get to the point where you can begin to under stand and really enjoy life! I sup pose they fancy they’re having a good time! ” “Silly children,” smiled her hus band. “They’re only playing with toys and dolls yet! I’ll bet they haven't exchanged one sensible re mark since they sat down there!” “She’s got an engagement ring!” said his wife suddenly. “Think of in fants like that marrying! Why, it’s terrible!” “You were only 3 8 when you mar ried me,” her husband reminded her. “That was different,” said his wife, quickly. “We had more sense than those two! They are so terribly inex perienced! Life must be so empty for them, really!” "But they think they’re having a good time,” said the man as they rose. “They don’t know you have to be as old as we are before you're really happy. Poor things!” Up-to-Date Jokes Even doctors are not always literal in their prescriptions. “You must take exercise,” said the doctor to a patient. “The motor car in a case like yours gives the best exercise that—” “But I can not afford a car, on in surance pay,” the patient growled. “Don’t buy one; Just dodge ’em!” said the doctor. • * • Customer—I must say, waiter, this is the first timeTve ever had a really ten der steak here.” Walter (aghast)—Good gracious! I must have given you the proprietor's steak!" * • • Mrs. De Fashion—Where’s the morning paper? Mr. De Fashion—What on earth do you want with the morning paper? Mrs. De Fashion—I wish to see if the opera we heard last bj&UI was good or bad. T Then pales and fades away HE golden glory lingers, The silent shadows lengthen And sadly dies the day. The mists rise from the river And shroud the world in gray. The pulse of life Is stricken And sadly dies away. The twilight hour passes. Grlrp biack o’ertakes the gray. The giant winds are hushed to rest— And night has followed day. • • • SPARE ME MY DREAMS, Relentless Time. that gives both harsh and kind, Bravo let me be To take thy various gifts with equal min<J And prcyud humility; But even by day, while the full sun light streams, Give me my dreams! Whatever, Time, thou takest from my heart, What from my life, From what dear thing thou yet may- est make me part, Plunge not to deep the knife; As dies the day and the long twilight gleams. Spare me my dreams! —Richard Watson Gilder. For Business Men. F. I. Fletcher, at the Sphinx Club din ner in New York, told an advertising story. “A man,” he said, “entered a shop one bitter cold day and bought a woolen muffler. When he opened the muffler, he found Inside it the photograph of a beautiful girl, together with a note say ing: “ 'If you are single, please write to me.’ “A name and address followed, and the man smiled. He was single, and he put the photograph on his sitting room mantel. There, every evening, looking up from his book, he beheld it. It was very beautiful, and in a week he had fallen head over heels in love. “So he wrote to the girl. Another week passed, a week of anxious, nerve- racking suspense. Then the lovesick man received this crushing letter: “ 'Sir: The Mary Smith to whom you wrote was my grandmother. She died nine years ago, aged eighty-six.— Yours truly.’ “Our heart-broken bachelor, on look ing into this strange matter, found that he had foolishly bought the muffler from a dealer who didn’t advertise.” By MARVIN DANA from the Play by BAYARD VEILLER. TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. Glider sighed resignedly. His heavy face was lined with anxiety. There was a hesitation In his manner of speech that was wholly unlike Its visual quick decisiveness. "I don’t like this sort of thing.” he said, doubtfully. 'T let you go ahead because I can’t suggest any alterna tive, but I don’t like It, not at all. It seems to me that other mothods might be employed with excellent re sults without the element of treachery which seems to involve me as well as you In our efforts to overcome this woman.” Burke, however, had no qualms as to such plotting. “Tou must have crooked ways to catch crooks, believe me,” ho said cheerfully. "It's the easiest and the quickest way Into trouble for them." The return of the detectives caused him to break off, and he gave his at tention to the final arrangements of his men. "You're In charge here," he said to Cassidy, "and I hold you responsi ble. Now, listen to this, and get It." His coarse voice came with a grat ing hote of command. "I’m coming back to get this bunch myself, and I'll call you when you're wanted. Tou'Il wait In the storeroom out there and don’t make a move till you hear from me, unless by any chance things go. wrong and you get a call from Griggs. Tou know who he is. He’s got a whistle, and he'll use It If nec essary. * • * • Got, that straight?” And When Cassidy had declared an entire understanding of the directions given, he concluded concisely. “On your way, thenl" He Turned to Gilder. As the men left the room, he turned, again to Qllder. "Just one thing more,” he said. “I'll have to have your help a little longer. After I’ve gone. I want you to stay up for a half hour anyhow, with the lights burning. Do you see? I want to be sure to give the Turner woman time to get here while that gang Is at work. Your keeping on the lights will hold them bark, for they won't come In till the houBe Is dark, so, In half an hour you can get ofC the job, switch off the lights and go to bed and stay there—just as I told you before." Then Inspector Burke, having In mind the great distress of the man over the unfortunate entanglement of his son, was at pains to offer a reassuring i word. "Don’t worry about the boy,” he said, with grave kindliness. "We’ll get him out of this scrape all right.” And with the assertion he hustled out, leaving the unhappy father to miser able forebodings. CHAPTER XVII. Outside the Law. G ILDER scrupulously followed the directions of the Police In spector. Uneasily, he had re mained In the library until the al lotted time was elapBed. He fidgeted from place to place, his mind heavy with distress tinder the shadow that threatened to blight the life of his cherished son. Finally, with a sense of relief he put out the lights and went to his chamber. But he did not follow the further dlreatlons given him, for he was not minded to go to bed. In stead, ho drew the curtains closely to make sure that no gleam of light could pass them, and then sat with a cigar between his lips, which he did not smoke, though from time to time ho was at pains to light It. His thoughts were most with his son, and ever as he thought of Dick, his fury waxed against the woman who had enmeshed the boy In her plotting for vengeance on himself. And Into his thoughts now crept a doubt, one that alarmed his sense of Justice. It occurred to him that this woman could not have thus nourish ed a plan for retribution through the years unless, indeed, she had been insane, even ns he claimed—or Inno cent! The Idea, was appalling. He could not bear to admit the pos sibility of having been the involun- I tary inflieter of such wrong as to send I the girl to prison for an offense she ! had not committed. He rejected the | suggestion, but it persisted. He knew [ the clean, wholesome nature of his ! son. It seemed to him Incredible that 1 the boy could have thus given his heart to one altogether undeserving. A horrible suspicion that he had misjudged Mary Turner crept Into his brain, and would not out. He fought It with all the strength of him, and that was much, but ever It abode there. He turned for comfort to the things Burke had said. The woman was a crook, and there was an end to It. Her ruse of spoliation within ths law was evidence of her shrewdness, nothing more, Mary Turner herself, too, was In a condition utterly wretched, and fob the same cause—Dtok Gilder. That source of the father’s suffering was hers as welL She had won her am bition of years—revenge on the man who had sent her to prison. And now the Joy of tt was a torture, for the puppet of her plans, the son, had sud denly become the chief thing In her life. She had taken It for granted that he would leave her after he came to know that her marriage to him was only a device to bring shame on his father. Instead, he loved her. That fact seemed the secret of her distress. He loved her. More, he dared believe, and to assert boldly, that she loved him. Had he acted otherwise, the matter would have been simple enough. • • • But ne loved her, loved her stfil, though he knew the shame that had clouded her life, knew the motive that had led her to accept him as a husband. More —by a sublime audacity, he declared that she loved him. There came a thrill In her heart each time she thought of that—that she loved him. The Idea was mon strous, of course, and yet— Hers as always she broke off, a hot flush blazing In her cheeks. » • • Nev ertheless, such curious fancies pust- suea her through the hours. She strove her mightiest to rid herself oi them, but in vain. Ever they persist ed. She sought to oust them by thinking of anyone else—of Aggie, of Joe. There at last was satisfaction. Her Interference between the man who saved her life and the tempta tion of the English crook had pre vented a dangerous venture, which might have meant ruin to the one whom she esteemed for his devotion to her, If for no other reason. At least, she had kept him from the out rageous folly of an ordinary burglary. To Be Continued Monday. Blamed the Farming. * S A man traveling in the country met * a middle-aged farmer who said hi* J father, 90 years old. Was still on the 1 farm where he was born. “Ninety years old, eh?” “Yes, father is close to 90," “Is his health good.” “ 'Tain’t much now. He’s been com plainin' for a few months back.” “What’s the matter with him?” “I dunno; sometimes I think farm ing don't agree with him.” CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND IIRAWn A 5# MOTHER SO POORLY Could Hardly Care for Children. Finds Health in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Bovina Center, N. Y.—"For six years I have not had as good health as I have now. 1 was very young when my first baby was bom and my health, wae very bad aft er that. I was not regular and I had pains tn mjr back and was so poorly that I could hardly take care of my trwo chil dren. I doctored, with several doo- tors, but got no better. They told me there was no help without an operation. I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it has helped me won derfully. I do most of my own work now and take care of my children. I recommend your remedies to all suf fering women."—MRS. WILLARD A. GRAHAM, care of ELSWORTH TUTTLE. Bovina Center, N. T. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- mnd, made from native roots and erhs, contains no narcotics or harm ful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy we know for woman’s Ills. If you need such a medicine why don't you try it 7 If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (con fidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held In strict confidence. G Every Woman is interested atjd should know about the wonderful Marvel 5 r tf Douche THK DIAMOND It RAND, Lsdlre! 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