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I!KARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 1913.
Book Reviews By Edwin Markham and H. Effa Webster
By EDWIN MARKHAM
Arranged, for The Sunday Amer
ican by E. L. Thornton, Steward of
the Atlanta Athletic Club.
MONDAY.
BRKAKFAST.
Baked Apple*
Cream of Wheat
Broiled Lamb Kidneys and Bacon
Baked QritB
Griddle Cakes
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Chicken Mulligatawny
Radishes
Baked Chicken Pie, Farmer's Style
Creamed Potatoes Fried Okra
Corn Muffins
Head Lettuce German Dressing
Ginger and Yam Custard Pie
Iced Tea
SUPPER.
Chicken Patties a la Reins
Chip Potatoes
Graham Gems
Coffee or Tea
RECIPES.
CHICKEN MULLIGATAWNY—Boll
one large hen in about two or three !
gallons of water and season with I
salt, pepper and two red peppers, i
After the stock Is strong enough I
remove the hen. Add two quarts of '
milk and one quart of cream, six
chopped hard-boiled eggs and two
cups of boiled rice. Let continue to
boil slowly for one hour, then add
teaspoon of curry powder and some |
chopped parsley. Let cook slowly
until ready to serve.
CHICKEN PATTIES A LA REINE—
It is more economical and saves
time to buy the patty sheila from
your baker. The filling is as fol- I
lows: Remove the white meat of
boiled fowl and cut into slices and
put into sauce pan with enough j
cream sauce to cover. Add one-half
can of mushrooms and one ounce of
good sherry. Let cook very slow j
and fill patties when ready to serve.
TUESDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Bananas and Cream
Force
Fried Calf Brains. Brown Gravy
Hash in Creamed Potato©*
Waffles
Coffee or Tea
Syrup
DINNER.
Pepper Pot
Mangoes
Fricassee of Veal Indienne
Broiled Potatoes Corn on Cob
Hoecake
Tomato, French Dressing
Watermelon Sherbert
Wafers
Buttermilk
SUPPER.
Spaghetti—Chafing Dish
Rye Bread
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
FRIED CALF BRAINS, BROWN
GRAVY—Scald and clean two sets
of calf brains. Split and flour an.l
fry a light brown in very little
grease. When brown, remove and
place on nupkin and make gravy in
pan from the grease left. Put on
platter and pour gravy over and
garnish with chopped parsley.
WEDNESDAY.
BREAKFAST
Cantaloup©
Toasted Corn Flakes
Smothered Steak and Onions
Hot Grits
Flannel Cakes
Coffee or Tea
DINNER
Tomatoes and Celery
Young Onions
Roast Peef and Sweet Potatoes
New Potaoes Collard Sprouts
Eggbread
String Beans and Onion Salad
Fresh Peach Roll. Hand Sauce
Iced Tea
SUPPER.
Golden Buck—Chafing Dish
Buttered Toast
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
ROAST BEEF AND SWEET POTA
TOES.—Roast the beef and pota
toes in the same pan and be sure
to baste well. Have plenty of gravy
by thickening the stock in pan and
season with salt and pepper.
GOLDEN BUCK—The same ns
Welsh Rarebit with a poached egg
served on top.
THURSDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Fresh Pineapple
Oat Meal and ('ream
Deviled Calf Liver
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Hot Rolls
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Puree of Flageolets
Sour Pickle
Smoked Tongue with Spinach
New Potatoes, Candied Yams
Georgia Corn Pone
Mexican Salad
Frozen Claret Punch
Vanilla Wafers
Iced Tea
SUPPER.
Lamb Tongue Bearnaise
Julienne Potatoes
Graham Rolls
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
MEXICAN SALAD—This salad is
made of vegetables such as green
peppers, tomatoes and lettuce cut
into squares and served with
French dressing.
FRIDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Grapes
Shredded Wheat Biscuit
Country Scrambled Eggs
Hot Grits
Wheat Cakes
Preserves
Coffee or Tea
DINNER
Bisque of Crab
Olives
Baked Red Snapper Creole
Browned Potatoes Snap Beans
Corn Bread
Boneless Sardines Vinaigrette
Green A4ple Pie with Whipped Cream
Coffee or Tea
SUPPER
Patties of Shrimp a la Newburg
Buttered Toast
Sliced Tomatoes
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
PATTIES OF SHRIMP A LA NEW
BURG—Heat one quart of cream
sauce and add two egg yolks and
one ounce of sherry. When ready,
add one can of shrimp and fill pat
ty shells.
SATURDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Stewed Prunes and Cream
POft Toasties
Fried Salt Mackerel (corn meal)
French Fried Potatoes
Hot Biscuit
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Corn, Okra and Tomato Soup
Sweet Mixed Pickle
Irish Stew, Dublin style
Baked Yams Mustard Greens
Georgia Corn Muffins
Beet and Pepper Salad
Bread and Butter Pudding, Wine
Sauce
Buttermilk
SUPPER.
Omelette with Sweet Bread
Fried Grits
Hot Waffle*
Syrup
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
OMELETTE WITH SWEETBREADS
—After boiling, chop sweetbreads
very fine and put in saucepan with
butter and let cook while you pre
pare the omelette. When omelette
Is ready to turn, add the sweet
breads and let brown: then turn
on hot platter and garnish with
lemon and parsley.
SUNDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Sliced Peaches and Cream
Cereal
Broiled Squab on Toast
Lye Hominy in Cream Fried Potatoes
Wheat Cakes
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Beef Bouillon In Cup.
Celery Mangoes Radishes
Bake Chicken Sage Dressing
Mashed Potatoes Fried New’ Corn
Yams Glare Butterbeans
Baked Stuffed Green Pepper
Head Lettuce and Egg
Fresh Fig Ice Cream
Chocolate Cake
Cheese Toasted Salttne*
Coffee
SUPPER.
Cold Roast Chicken
Cold Vegetables
Sliced Tomatoet*
Toast
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
BAKED STUFFED GREEN PEP
PER—One slice of fried ham. one
hard-boiled egg. one sprig .celery
and one-half cup of cracker crumbs,
chop ail very dm and mix well an I
fill peppers. Butter on top and bake
until brown.
Recipes for Busy Cooks
MEAT LOAF WITH
HARD COOKED EGGS.
C HOP one pound each of raw
veal and beef with one-fourth
pound of salt pork. Add one-half
teaspoonful each of thyme and
marjoram, or one tablespoonful of
poultry seasoning and one-half
teaspoonful of onion Juice, one
tablespoonful of chopped parsley,
and salt and pepper to taste. Mix
it with one-half cup of bread
crumbs and two well beater eggs.
Butter a mold and fill half full
with the meat mixture. On this
place lengthwise two whole hard
c< oked eggs, then fill with the
rest of the mixture. Place a ta
blespoonful of melted butter or
beef shortening on top and bake
*n a slow’ oven one and one-half
hours. When served the meat will
have a round slice of hard cook
ed egg in each slice of meat.
Parsley may be used for a gar
ni: h and the meat may be serv
ed hot or cold.
GERMAN CHEESE CAKES.
npiilS recipe from a famous Ger-
-I- man chef, Alex. Berger, makes
delicious cheese cakes. Beat the
yolks of four eggs with one pound
^cottage cheese or schmier kase,
tablespoonfuls of flour and
tablespoon! uis of sugar.
Add a little salt and a pinch of
ground mace or nutmeg and last
ly the whites of four eggs beaten
very stiff. And sufficient milk to
make a batter about the consis
tency of griddle cake batter. Line
a baking tin with a sheet of but
tered paper, spread the mixture
uniformly thick, sprinkle some
ground cinnamon and a few cur
rants over the top and bake in a
moderately hot oven.
VEAL LOAF WITH MUSHROOMS.
jp UT tw o pounds of veal and
one-half pound of fresh pork
through the meat chopper; soften
one cupful of soft but stale bread
crumbs in one-quurter cupful of
milk and add to the meat. Sea
son with one-quarter teaspoon
ful of pepper, one teaspoonful of
salt, a little nutmeg and the juice
and grated rind of one lemon;
add two well-beaten eggs and
one-half cupful of button mush
rooms. Shape into an oblong loaf
and place in a greased shallow
pan: dredge with Hour and pour
the liquor from the can of mush
rooms around the loaf. Bake 40
minutes. basting occasionally
while baking. Place the loaf on a
hot platter. Thicken the sauce
with two teaspoonfuls of butter
and two teaspoonfuls of flour
rubbed together, season well, add
remainder of the mushrooms,
cook gently till thickened, then
pour around the loaf on the plat-
tt
A Spirit Book.
Miss Etta DeCamp insists that
Frank R. Stockton, the author of “The
Lady or the Tiger?" is still writing,
though he passed to the Great Be
yond many years ago.
Miss DeCamp backs up her start
ling assertion with a volume of sto
ries, “The Return of Frank R. Stock-
ton " (The Macoy Publishing Com
pany), which she says she penned
after spiritualistic seances with Mr.
Stockton. She explains thus how she
(am* to t&ke up i he duty of puttin*
Into earthly words the spiritual tale*
of the deceased writer:
“Early in 1909, when I first
learned that Mr. Stockton was eager
to write, I was a school-teacher
“At that time my time was so taken
up with material affairs that nothing
psychic entered my mind.
“After a busy day In the latter part
of January, and while resting before
dinner, I picked up an evening paper.
My attention was attracted to a few
lines announcing that a book had been
written by William T. Stead giving
his experience as an automatic writer.
I laid down the paper and began to
think.
“The third night I determined to
find out what it all meant. I said: If
there is a spirit here who would like
to communicate with me, he must
write more legibly.’ That night the
writing consisted of words, clear
enough, hut meaningless when taken
as a whole.
“In March, two months later, I re
ceived a message from my father,
who had been dead twelve years, say
ing: 'We will bring you the spirit of
an author who wish** his stories
written.'
"The next night the spirit told me
the author who wished to w’rite
through my instrumentality was
Frank R. Stockton.”
Apart from the investigation made
by the Society for Psychical Re
search, the stories collected by Miss
DeCamp do bear a strong flavor of the
Stockton style.
Yet, without prejudice, may we ask
why Mr. Stockton, of all those In the
Elysian Fields, is alone in wishing to
transcribe his thoughts into a mun
dane copyrighted book?
The Masked War.
Ignorant, indeed, is the person who
knows not of William J. Burns. His
name is a household word. He has
not only proved himself a terror to
criminals, but a revelation to wise
men. We have seen his hand In .1
play, and now, under the title "The
Masked War” (George H. Doran Com
pany, $1.50), he gives the Inside story
of the case that made him famous.
Of this remarkable history—the his
tory of the operations of the Mc
Namaras—we have read in the news
papers. Yet the story, as Burns tell3
it In book form, has all the freshness
of a bratid-new novel.
Perhaps it is because thp great de
tective leaves "the ego" in the back
ground. He takes occasion to give
his opinion of J. J. McNamara In bis
dealings with women, throwing a fur
ther new and unenviable light on that
Individual. Dynamite was McNama
ra's Jack of all work. He tried to
blow up a stenographer who had been
led away by his fascinations.
That, of course, Is only an incident.
Says Burns, speaking of taking over
the serious task of running down the
dynamiters in September, 1910:
“I have always Insisted that every
criminal leaves a track—that many
times Providence interferes to un
cover the footprints left by the crimi
nal. And on this occasion, one charge
under a second girder failed to ex
plode, due to the fact that the dry
battery used In the clock bomb lost
its voltage.
"In thlp way we were able to de
termine the method used by the dyna
miters for bringing about those si
multaneous explosions, as through
this clock-working device they were
enabled to set the explosion for 11
hours 59 minutes 59 seconds,
which would give them plenty of lee-
wav to escape.
•They could thereby establish a
perfect alibi.
"I detailed the very best operatives
In our service and personally directed
each step of their operations. They
returned several times with final re
ports. and each time were sent back
to dig further.
"Knowing that nitroglycerin could
not be transported on railroad trains,
we felt that It must have been manu
factured within easy reach of where
the explosion took place. Besides, the
dynamiters used the original can in
which tWv purchased the nitrogly
cerin that failed to explode. There
was also an empty can found In the
vicinity, and in the same spot were
found some grnlns of sawdust, all of
which had been carefully gathered
up.”
It was those few grains of sawdust
that resulted In the running to earth
of the McNamaras and in their ulti
mate confession.
Mr. Burns makese it clear that self-
respecting workingmen would never
countenance the outrages perpetrated
by the McNamaras.
Tales of the Sea.
Delightfully told and full of th«
Inspiration that comes from a heart
felt interest in the things of which he
writes are the sen stories in "From
Wheel and Lookout," by Frank T.
Bullen. (J. B. Llppincott Co.. $1.25.)
Mr. Bullen Is well known as the au
thor of "The Cruise of the Cschelot."
and while the present volume contains
only a series of little tales Incidental
to the sea, It can not fall to add to
his reputation.
There’s the little account of the
figurehead which leads the book—
nothing could be more sympatheti
cally pictured and the rest of the
stories are well up to the standard or
the first.
The Thunderhead Lady.
“Wanted: By a Harvard gradu
ate, a permanent position as hus
band. Carefully trained by an anx
ious mother, and used to feminine
domination.”
So begins a clipping from The Bos
ton Herald, written in Jest, and
printed from bravado, which elicits
a reply from a chance reader, and
results in a correspondence not only
interesting but romantic, and form
ing the theme of “The Thunderhead
Lady,” by Anna Fuller and Brian
Read. (G. P. Putnam’s Sons, $1.00.)
The letters which pass between
the correspondents are full of com
ment and wit. Naturally they verge
more and more upon the personal
as the volume nears an end, and
finally the lady has the last word,
which is “ves,” to a question as old
as the world.
In Another Moment.
Yes, that’s the way you feel. “In
Another Moment,” the latest from
the pen of Charles Belmont Davis
(The Bobbs-Merrill Co.) is evident
ly intended to keep the reader on the
ragged edge of expectation. The
author lays fils scene in New York,
among the men and women who
have more cash than moral purpose,
and his heroine is always rescued in
the nick of time.
Fay Clayton, saved from the sea,
grows up with the usual poor family
and reaches a beautiful young wom
anhood. This is as it should be. All
the neighbors see stamped on her
brow the traces of ages of lineage.
In love with her Is a boy who has
grown up with her. But, of course,
trouble Is in store for Fay. A New
Yorker, who has only to see a pretty
girl to entrap her, falls desperately
in love with her, and to get her to
the city gives Fielding a position in
his brokerage office.
Then the lure of the theater la •
placed before Fay and she becomes
a show girl. What might have hap
pened to her “in another moment” no
one can tell, but there comes a kind
ly millionaire (they do exist) and
she escapes the shoals by marrying
him.
“In Another Moment” discusses a
phase of metropolitan life that we
hear a good deal about, but of which
it is to be hoped we know little.
Plain Woman.
What most of us do not know
about women would fill more volumes
than have yet been written. We may
learn a little of the vast lot there
Is to learn from consulting “The Old-
Fashioned Woman,” by Elsie Clew’s
Parsons (Putnam & Sons. $1.50.)
Mrs. Parsons writes in a fresh and
convincing manner. She shows that
what she calls “primitive fancies
about the sex” represent an immense
amount of research.
Throughout her book she deals
with facts and figures proving that j
man has always been the favored of ,
the race. It doesn’t matter what>
part of the world is under discussion,
the arrival of a boy is always more
to be welcomed than that of a girl;
and as the two grow it Is always the
male who receives the plums in the
pudding.
The book is full of most interesting
data, all tending to convince “mere
man” how foolish he has been not to
have recognized that woman was his
equal long ago. Says Mrs. Parsons in
her chapter called "One:”
“A few years ago Washington so
ciety was highly diverted by an Inci
dent at a State dinner at the White
House. As the guests were going in
to dinner the aide noticed that two
couples stayed behind. They were a
Western Senator, his wife and their
dinner partners.
" ‘I find,' said the Senator to the
aide, ‘that I am not taking my wife
in to dinner. I married my wife to
take her in to dinner, and unless I
can do so here to-night we are going
home’ • • • The President after
dinner clapped the Senator on the
back, saying: ‘Bully for you, old fel
low: I wish there were more like
you.’ '*
And in a footnote she adds: "It was
also said that the wife of the Senator,
a millionaire, got her carfare from
him as she needed It, and that to win
his consent to a new dress required
considerable maneuvering.”
A refrain to one of Mr. Kipling’s
poems says: "And I learned about
women from her.” “The Old-Fash
ioned Woman” is a good thing for the
new-fashioned man and the old-fash
ioned man to read.
On Love and Death.
Edward Carpenter is known on
both continents to a select inner cir
cle. ' His “Towards Democracy” is
perhaps the most advanced* book of
the century; ami his “Love's Coming
of Age” treats boldly some of the
difficult and anxious problems of
sex, problems coming more and more
into the light of popular discussion.
To these Mr. Carpenter now’ adds
“The Drama of Love and Death.**
(Mitchell Kinnerley, $1.50.) It Is a
study of human evolution and trans
figuration under the pressure of na
ture and spirit. His survey reaches
back into the dim aeons and sweeps
forward into the eternities.
Among other great matters, he
treats of love as an art. of the art
of dying, of reincarnation, of the
mystery of personality. He also dis
cusses the problem of the inner or
spiritual body and the great ques
tion of the state of man after death.
This is a book for all w’ho are
touched by the pathetic mystery of
our existence.
By H. EFFA WEBSTER
“The Book Mother.”
Have you tried being a “Book
Mother” to your Mary or Elizabeth or
Margaret?
Recently a sweet, brown-eyed moth
er confessed without shame that she
is not above letting books bring up
her daughter w’hen her own maternal
resources fail. She explained as fol
lows:
“I have found the right kind of
books often put my girl in the way
she should go when my own teach
ings failed.
“The best-natured little girl some
times gets tired of her mother’s voice
She wearies of the oft-repeated les-
h’ons of life. She knows mother is
right, hut she ‘Don’t want to be talked
to,’ as she says.
“Then I became a ‘book mother.’ I
simply think of some well-written
girl’s book which embodies, in the
heroine, some particular trait or con
duct I wish my little girl to adopt.
“For instance. when Catherine
seemed to be a little thoughtless to
ward children less fortunate than her
self I put her in the way of reading
‘The Little Colonel’ series, those
wholesome books which have led to
formation of dozens of boys’ and
girls’ clubs all over the country.
“ ‘The Little Colonel’ books by An
nie Fellows Johnson (L. C, Page &
Co.. $1.20), too, are entertaining and
delightfully pure in spirit and free
from mawkish sentimentality.
“Result—Catherine plunged Into
the series, read one book and another
about ‘The Little Colonel’—who Is a
girl, you know—and absorbed fine
ideals without realizing that yhe was
being Instructed.
“I might have told her the same
things and not have Interested her
half so much, merely because she
would have regarded It as one of
‘Mamma’s talks.’
“That’s what I mean by being a
‘book mother’ once in a w’hile.” We
pass along the brown-eyed mother’s
suggestion to other members who die
like to talk their little ones weary.
Harlette.
Of all the early rulers in the times
of the Crusaders “Robert the Devil of
Normandy” makes perhaps the most
powerful appeal to the imagination.
His romance with Harlette, the peas
ant woman of Falaise and mother of
William the Conquerer, is one of the
landmarks of modern history.
The story of “Harlette” Is told in
book form by Marion Polk Angelottl
(The Century Company, 75c).
Harlette of all human beings is the
one person w r ho has no fear of the
King Robert has poisoned his broth
er and the knowledge of the deed
preys on his mind and drives him Into
fits of insanity. Harlette, the tan
ner’s daughter, always dispassionate
and calm, manages to bring him out
of these attacks until after eight years
she advises him to make a Journey to
the Holy Land to gain absolution for
his crime.
Before he goes he has her pro
claimed regent and his son heir to the
throne of Normandy. At the Holy
Sepulcher Robert finds peace, but dies
on his* way home.
The author has taken some liberty
with the exact historical facts, but
none that is open to criticism. She
tells her story in a dramatic and hu
man way.
The Old Adam.
Of course, everyone who likes Ar
nold Bennett remembers “Denry the
Audacious;’’ we take it for granted
that Denry can not be forgotten. We
are glad to meet him again, even if a
little older and not displaying quite so
much of "the Card” as he did in his
earlier years.
Under the title “The Old Adam”
Mr. Bennett gives ue sbme of Dr-nry’s
fu*|her adventures (George H. Doran
Co., $1.35). But he is no longer
“Denry”—with increasing wealth and
circumstances he has become Edward
Henry Machin.
At forty-three the "Alderman” de
cides that he is too provincial and he
sets out to make another name for
himself. By accident he finds an op
portunity to take over the lease to
a plot in London on which it is pro
posed to build a theater. Naturally
Henry know’s nothing about theaters
but, alas—he soon learns.
From the moment of his determi
nation to embark in this wild venture
Denry is filled with visions of his
new importance. The theater is built
and the show—a poetical show—is
put on.
How the proprietor makes of this
a success is told in Mr. Bennett’s in
imitable manner. Denry is always
equal to an occasion—nothing stops
him. Hi.s hurried trip to New York
and hi.s daring move in replacing one
of his stars with a suffragette w’ho
had gotten herself arrested and was
the talk of two continents is an In
spiration.
Denry triumphs and returns to his
admiring wife. A delightful book
full of philosophy and humor. We
hope Denry will not cease his activi
ties. May The Five Towns live for
ever!
About Gardening.
Of gardening most of us know too
little; we are too busy cultivating the
famous national plant—the dollar*
flower—to stop over the rearing of
geraniums and roses.
Yet in our hearts there Isn’t one
of us who wouldn’t like a rose gar
den—somew’here. Jessie Peabody
Frothingham, in a volume issued by
Duffield & Co. (1.25), called “Success
in Gardening,” gives more than 300
pages of advice and experience on
the most fascinating of pursuits.
Frankly she says: “Those who
know about gardens will find nothing
new’;” and, quoting Sir William Tem
ple, "Success is wholly in the gar
dener."
Of manuals there are many, but
here is a book which takes up, week
by w’eek, the ways of the garden. In
this it is unique. If, after following
its chapters in actual practice, your
garden fails, surely there can be no
help in you.
There are many illustrations.
Thou Shalt Not Kill.
Is it ever allowable to cause an
other's death, even with the compas
sionate motive of relieving human
suffering? This is the theme of “The
Decision” (G. W. Dillingham & Co.,
25 cents), a novel by Leon de Tin-
seau, which is Englished by Frank
Alvah Dearborn.
A soldier is fatally wounded. A
comrade, to put an end to the sol
dier’s awful agony gives him, as he
thinks, a fatal dose of morphLne. The
deed torments his conscience. The
woman he falls in love wdth (and she
is the soldier’s widow’) condemns the
act, and even w’hen If is^discovered
that the draught was harmless, not
poisonous, she still denounces him
for Intending the death, and pro
nounces him guilty of murder by In
tention.
The story forces upongkhe reader a
delicate psychological qupstion—what
Is man’s answer, and God’s?
E WA NTEDIMASJ
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-"iriMir — 1
SKIP'SssSSfi
Book For Men, Free
8,000 Words, 30 Illustrations
TO MY READERS:
Of the little Illustrated «Mee book described below,
whloh I gladly send free to all men who All In the
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Information of a private nature whloh I am
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sions of debility, loat nerve force and falling
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It is. reader, this vast and unusual op
portunity which has enabled me to compile
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Remember. (Ms book of over 8,000
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Ther* la absolutely no obligation on
your part to buy anything or pay any
thing. and merely the receipt of thle
book does not meen in any way that
you are to use one of my VITALIZER0
(see description below), and. in fact,
only a portion of the book has any
reference to the VITALIZER at all.
Primarily it la a compendium erf u*e-
ful information for private reference, which you
•od ail other men may easily profit by through
a?;
i Ears
, SAXDE.W AUTHOR.
It to a fact, reader, which you and I must
rrcogni*e and admit, that the whole world ad
mires and is fascinated by strong, vigorous, hue-
ky, manly manhood, and we must also admit that
k » this same* manhood and this alone which is
back of the real leaders and producers in every
walk of lifs No matter where we go. we find It
to be the manly, vigorous, vital fellow who forges
to the front, who fascinates men and women of
Me community, who does the really greet things.
An unmanly man merely me ana nature's laws gone
wrong, for it la he who halve and heeitatea, who
take* the back aeat. who doe* not fit into the
picture in a way that a manly, vital nature
should. And yet. reader, it Is my Arm belief that
any man. no matter what hie put. no matter
what dlaalpatlona or follies may have left their
mark upon hie physical and mental being, I say
to you that alien a man. unless there he some
unusual reason, may hope for a complete return
of his strvugth, vigor and self confidence, if he
but go about hie self-restoration in a natural,
oomraouaense way.
I make a little appliance which we will call
a V1TALIBER, because I think that is the beet
word to describe lu* strange power. I don't want
you to think of getting one of these VITAL HER 8
MAXLY MEN MOVE THE WHOLE WORLD.
Met now, hut I would like you to investigate my
claims as to what I believe can be aoeompllebed
by almost any weakened man who uses this VI
TAI.I7.ETR faithfully for a few weeks. I sneak.
at course, of him who la willing to give up dissi
pation and lead a decent, oonaervative life, not
only while using the VITALIBER, but for the
future. The other kind of man, the dissipated,
can hope for nothing from any treatment, no
matter what It may be, henoe such a man la
eliminated from my consideration.
This little V1TALIZER Is made to wear upon
the body all night. It weighs only several ounces
and is no more unhandy than an ordinary belt,
yot it aeneratea a great FORCE that I call VIG
OR, which flows into your blood organa and
nerves while you sleep. Men sax It often takes
any pain or weakneas out of the hack in owe ap
plication. and that 80 to ©0 days' use has been
■ufflciant to restore manly strength and to pui
men In the “never felt better In my life” class
Special attachment* oarry the FORCE of the VI-
TAI.J7.ER to any part of the body, for the uee
of women as well as men In cases erf rheumatlem.
kidney, liver, stomach, bladder disorders, etc.
Over two hundred thousand of those VITAL2Z
F.RP- have been used or are now being used by
men all over the world.
Von had better learn move of this VTTAI.IZ
ER. Tt la fully described In my free book. If
you live near me, why hot eall end test the
V1TAL1ZER yourself.
WHAT THE FREE. BOOK TELLS
The free flluatrated advice booklet mentioned above la meant to be a simple declaration of
certain Important trutha that every man In the world should know. The day has gone by when
men are kept in ignorance of t£e real problems pertaining to these private subjects, and this
illustrated advice booklet, which I send to men sealed, by mall, gives certain Important fact*
relating to sox. Just as these facta are. The booklet also fully describee my VITAIAXSR and
you are told how you may get cue for your om* use If you decide that you want owe. Please
flo #: *
use oouduh below, or call
Hours
Sundays, 10 to l.
B. G. SAN DEN 00., (Ml Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Dear Sire—Please forward ins your book, aa advertised, free, i
ALABAMA
PENNANT
SEAL
For 15 Cents and the Pennant
Coupon That Appears Below
Regulation Size—12x30 Inches
Is suggested by us to be used as the centerpiece for table
cover made from the other fourteen pennants listed below,
15c each; 18c each by mail and coupon.
By using the Alabama Pennant Seal for a centerpiece you
have colors that blend well with all colors of the other four
teen pennants.
. For sale by the regular Atlanta Newsdealers and by the
following
IN ATLANTA
JACKSON-WESSEL DRUG CO„ Marietta and Broad Streets.
CRUICKSHANK CIGAR CO., Peachtree and Pryor Streets.
GEORGIAN TERRACE CIGAR CO., Georgian Terrace.
HARBOUR'S SMOKE HOUSE, 41 North Pryor Street.
WEINBERG BROS. CIGAR STORE, Alabama and Pryor Streets.
BROWN & ALLEN, Alabama and Whitehall Streets.
HAMES DRUG CO., 380 Whitehall Street.
MEDLOCK PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets.
WEST END PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets.
JOHNSON SODA CO., 441 Whitehall Street.
WHITEHALL ICE CREAM CO., 284 \yhltehall Street.
STEWART SODA CO., Cooper and Whitehall Streets.
GREATER ATLANTA CONFECTIONERY CO., 209 Peachtree St.
ADAMS & WISE DRUG STORE, Peachtree and Linden Streets.
TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., Peachtree and Tenth Streets.
TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., West Peachtree and Howard Streets.
CRYSTAL SODA CO., Luckle and Broad Streets.
ELKIN DRUG CO., Peachtree and Marietta Streets.
JACOBS’ PHARMACY. Alabama and Whitehall Streets.
WALTON SODA CO„ Walton Building.
Out-of-Town Dealers
Out-of-Town Price, 18c and the Pennant Coupon.
BENNETT BROS., 1409 Newcastle Street, Brunswick, Ga.
JOE N. BURNETT, 413-A King Street, Charleston, S. C.
REX VINING, Dalton, Ga.
ORA LYONS, Griffin, Ga.
SUNDAY AMERICAN BRANCH OFFICE, 165 East Clayton Street,
Athens, Ga. C. Lee Gowan.
ROME BOOK STORE CO., Rome, Ga.
CHEROKEE NEWS STAND, Rome, Ga.
H. K. EVERETT, Calhoun, Ga.
J. D. BRADFORD, Sumter, S. C.
EARL A. STEWART, 451 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga.
ROBT. NEWBY, Vienna, Ga.
GEO. W. HORAN & SON, Dalton, Ga.
If your newsdealer can not supplyyou,
write us. We send all pennant any
where for 1 8 cents each and the Pen
nant Coupon.
SPECIAL COUPON
or
THIS COUPON entitles the holder to any
all Pennants at the Special Reduced
Price of 15 Cents for each pennant when
presented to any Atlanta newsdealer or at the
offices of
Tcan
20 East Alabama St.
7 Edgewood Ave.
LIST OF PENNANTS
’ Harvard
Georgia Tech
Masonic
Yale
Ga. University
Elk
; Princeton
Alabama
Eagle |
j Royal Arcanum
Pennsylvania
Odd Fellows |
| Vassar
Cornell
Columbia
College
University
University j
Three cents extra if sent by mail or redeemed by out-
of-town newsdealers or agents
20 East Alabama St.
ATLANTA
CAN
7 Edgewood Ave.
UVUIVU V MV v* — — —