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This beautiful American Flag, the very latest, with 48
stars, made of fine bunting.
Out oat Coupon below, and bring to THE HEARST’S
SUNDAY AMERICAN and ATLANTA GEORGIAN Of
fice, with 90 cents, and secure one of these beautiful flags.
THIS COUPON cod 90o entitles the holder to an American Flag, S feet
by 8 feet, when presented st oar offloea,
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
80 BAST ALABAMA ST. 85 PEACHTREE ST.
Flags will be mailed at an additional charge of lOo for postage.
Every man is proud to say he is an American, and it is
his duty to see that “Old Glory is flung to the breeze” on
every appropriate occasion.
See that you have one of these flags at your office or at
your home.
Take advantage of this offer.
9 Edgewood Avenue,
20 East Alabama Street
ATLANTA, GA.
An Opportunity
ToMakeM onev
Uvmton. n ,f id.M «><2 t»T«ih., akOiry.
dmy fc>r our !nt of tvrraOou and prao of<
mantrf arhjrm
„.f*!r:‘ i -wv «
Fail. How fee Get Your Patent and Yaar Moat
valuable bookie* Mat few* to aar gridr—
RANDOLPH & CO
(Fateat Atrwrner*.
618 “F* Street. N. W„
WA»MIWOTOJI, O. c.
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, ATTGT’RT 31, 1313.
©
BOOK
to
REVIEWS
By H. EFFA WEBSTER
Arranged for The Sunday Amer
ican by K. L. Thornton, Steward of
Ihe Atlanta Athletic Club.
MONDAY.
7YR EAKFAST.
Grapes
Oat Meal
Hashed Chicken on Toast
Frlpfi Grit*
Hot Biscuit
Preserves
Toffee or Tea
DINNER.
Cream of Barley
Young Onions
Boiled Bait Pork and Spinach
New Potatoes. Baked Yams
Georgia Hoe Take
Tomato and Bell Pepper Salad
Fresh Peach Roll. Rrandv Sauce
• Jced (‘offee
SFppER
Told Corned Beef
Potato Salad
Hot Rolla
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
HASHED THTTKEN ON TOAST—
Take the left over chicken from
your Sunday dinner and cut Into
squares (dice) and about one or two
boiled potatoes and cut the aame
Put in pot and cover with ha’f
cream and half broth. I^et cook
slow; season vreT) with salt, pepper
end butter Thicken and serve on
toast.
TUESDAY.
BREAKFAST
Sliced Peaches
Force and Cream
Broiled Calf Liver
Shirred Eggs
Buttered Toast
TofTee or Tea
DINNER.
♦"“onsomme in Tups
India Relish
Chicken Stew with Dumplings
Meshed Potatoes, Kale Greens
Corn Bread
Baked Macaroni and Cheese
lemon Sherbet
Furar Tooklee
Buttermilk
SUPPER.
breaded Veal Chops, Tomato Sauce
Mashed Brown Potatoes
Hot Waffles
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
baked macaroni and cheese
Boll until tender in aalt water the
amount of macaroni for your fam
ily. Put in baking pan after drain
ing and add two well-beaten eggs,
spoonful of butter, one-half cup
of milk, little salt, pepper and one-
fourth pound chopped American
r h Pefie . Mix well and slice cheese
and cover the pan. Bake a light
brown and serve In the pan It is
baked in.
WEDNESDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Stewed Apricots Grape-Nuts
Broiled Lamb Chops on Toast
French Fried Potatoes
Wheat Cakes Syrup
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Puree of Kidney Beans
Radishes
Boiled Brisket of Beef
New Potatoes Spiced Beets
Com Pone
Alligator Pear Salad
Green Apple Pie
Milk
SUPPER
Broiled Squab on Toast
Lye Hominy In Cream
Rolls
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
PUREE OF KIDNEY BEANS—One
pound dry kidney beans and one
ham hock put Into pot with two
gallons stock, one onion and season
ing; boll until beans are very done
and then run through sieve or col
ander; put back on fire and let
cook slowly until ready to seme.
Toast some block of bread (crou
tons) to serve with the soup
THURSDAY.
BREAKFAST.
Sliced Bananas
Corn Flakaa
Prowned Beef Hash and
Green Peppers
Block Fried Potatoes
Hot Biscuits
Blackberry Jam
Coffee and Tea
DINNER.
Okra and Pepper Soup
Chow Chow
Roast Duck and Guava Jelley
Potatoes, Cream Sauce
Stewed Tomatoe
Torn Muffins
Pineapple Water Tee
Iced Tea
SUPPER.
Cold Roast Duck
Quartered Tomatoes
Graham Rolls
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
FRIED NOODLES Boll one packag
of noodles until very tender, dry
and put In fry pan with half hut
♦ er and half olive oil. Fry for ten
minutes; stir often and serve 01
hot platter. Sprinkle grated che« s
over If you like.
FRIDAY.
BREAKFAST
Grapefruit
Cream of Wheat
Broiled Spanish Mackerel
Saute Potatoes
» Com Cakes
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Bisque of Crab
Cucumbers
Baked Trout Creole
New Potatoes Swine Cheese
Torn Bread
Combination Salad
Bartlett Pears and Cream
Layer Cake
Coffee
BTJPPER.
Rrolled Kippered Herring
Baked Potatoes
Sliced Tomatoes
Rye Bread
Coffee or Tea
RECIPES.
TnMTTTNATTON SALAD Cut veg
etable*, such as radishes, onions,
green peppers, cucumbers and to
matoes. even rizes, and put In bowl
Mix 1n half olive oil and have vine
gar. salt, pepper and paprika. Serve
on lettuce leaf.
8ATURDAY.
BREAK FA ST.
Figs and Cream
Post Toasties
Broiled Squab Chicken
Hot Grits
Griddle Cake*
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Scotch Rrofh
Mixed Pickle
Brnlsed Ox Joint with Vegetables
Crenmed Potatoes Steamed Rice
Egg Bresd
Spaghetti Tomato Sauce
Cabinet Pudding Sherry Sauce
Teed Tea
SUPPER.
Cold Boiled Hnm
Head Lettuce
Toast
Coffee or Tea
RECIPE.
BRATSED OX JOINT WITH VEGE
TABLES T r njo1nt two ox tails and
put 1n roaot pan with quartered
carrots, turnips and potatoes
Sprinkle flour over and little grease
and some stock or water. Put in
oven and brown, stir often. Take
out of oven when brown and put In
pot, add one can of tomatoes, sprig
garlic, little more stock and stew
until very tender. Mix In some
chopped parsley before serving
SUNDAY.
BRE A KFA ST.
Baked Apples
Cereal and Cream
Broiled Steak with Mushrooms
German Fried Potatoes, Hot Grit®
Hot Waffles
Peach Presemes
Coffee or Tea
DINNER.
Bouillon In Cups
Celery. Melon Mangoes, Radishes
Rosst Goose with Dressing
Crab Apple JeU •
New Potatoes, Browned Yams
Asparagus Tips, Candled Tomatoes
Macaroni an Oratln
Chicken Salad
Nesselrode Pudding (Frozen)
Macaroons
Cheese, Saltlnes
Small Coffee
SUPPER.
Cold Meat and Vegetables you have
left from dinner
RECIPE.
MUSHROOM SAUCE FOR STEAK
—Take some brown sauce and the
liquid from on£ can mushrooms, on*»
browned onion and put In frying
pan and let boll until thick. Strain
and add sherry to tagte, and the
mushrooms.
A Book on Perry.
It i/- obvious that the recent fervid
interest in the erection of a splendid
monument in commemoration of
Commodore Perry's heroic service for
our nation incited James C. Mills to
write a detailed history of this naval
commander, together with an explicit
account of his splendid endeavors and
conquests In support of our Govern-
m ent.
This book is a perfectly becoming
and ably written feature of the pur
pose to honor Perry with an Imper
ishable memento near the place on
!.«!<• Erie where he commanded the
' h " ■ »n fleet and i*-<i hi* man to
victory in one of ihe greatest battles
in the world’s record of naval con-
fib ts, a victory that stands as one of
our nation's most Important histor
ical milestones
Mills « aptlnns his book “Oliver
Hazan] Perry and the Battle of Lake
Erie." It In published by John Phelps,
Detroit. The Immortal hero of Erie
bequeathed a flame of patriotism to
every schoolboy. Men and women re
member his loyalty with a paean of
praise
. This biography of one of the nn -
tlcn'a greatest heroes deserves a place
In every assembling of literature per.
talnlng to the history of the United
States.
Shaw Philosophy.
Everv little while there’s a sparkle
of marvelous philosophy in the lines
of Bernard Shaw's plays and literary
products. These flashes of delicious
reasoning are mingled with caustic
comparisons of conditions of life, with
tiltlngs of wit, and with terse dis
cussions that lead to situations and
to the relationship of individuals—
this entirety blooming Into the trage
dies and comedies of life, or Into criti
cism a.
Shaw uses language deroratively
and seriously, always to a direct frui
tion of the theme nr plot. Not every
line that he writes Is a scintillation
of philosophy, <’harlotte F. Shaw has
sifted out a full measure of signifi
cant expressions of splendid thought,
and she presents this gleaning in a
little book entitled “The Wisdom of
Bernard Shaw.” There are 420 pages
of this wisdom, and every page Is
a treasury of mental brilliancy.
Among the Illuminated topics are
“Cowardice,” “Courage,” “Cruelty,"
"The End and the Means," “Ideals,"
"The Personal Factor," “Hell,”
“Heaven," "Ibspn,” “The God of Fine
Ladies," "The Golden Rule," "Individ
uality,” “Marol Passion," “The Pas
sions," “The Lie,” “Love," “Mar
riage.” Really, there’s a big grist of
highly spiced ideas concerning the*
elemental forces of life and the prod
ucts of literary geniuses.
Here’s one quotation that’s worth
adopting as a self-principle; “You
can not believe In honor until you
have achieved It. Better keep your
self clean and bright; you are the
window through which you must see
the world "
There are other quotations of the
same quality. The book is bound in
limp leather with covers decorated in
gold Published by Brentano.
By EDWIN MARKHAM
"The Efficient Age.”
The Doran Company sent out “The
Efficient Age.” by Herbert Kaufman.
The book is prickly with spurs of
epigram. Here are a few of the
many:
“The world changes its mind every
hour. It alters its Ideas every Time ad
vancement disproves a sophistry, cor
rects an errer, or proclaims a discov
ery. You can never be sure you’re
right because no one brain can keep
pace with the work of all brains.
"Man can he only as accurate ns the
Information upon which he bases his
corn Minions, and that oasia is always
subject to revision.
“You can’t have your work up to
date If you H on’t keep your mind up
to date. You may be the most bril
liant. member of your profession or
trade, but your Intelligence can’t pos
sibly be as broad as that of every
body else engaged In the same par-
suit.
'The sponge that cease* to absorb
quickly shrivels the man who use®
hfs tongue oftener than his ears soon
•queeze- his brain dry. When you’re
satisfied with your attainments you’ve
started on the down grade.
“In this age of keen rivalry nnd
limitless aspirations you wont stay
ahead if you don’t plan ahead.
“Thormignrar* is everywhere. The
highways are not blocked by coronets
nnd coats-of-arms special classes no
longer legislate for their kind.
You can’t remain where you are or
retain what you have if somebody
with greater ability determines to
supplant you.
Civilization, like the carpenter has
no pet tools the moment you grow
rusty vou will be thrown aside for a
brighter nnd sharper instrument of
progress.
We have no sentiment—the twen
tieth century pave history’s highest
wage to its thinkers and Its tinkers.
But we close our books each 24 hours.
Yqu receive full credit and full re
muneration, and we take a quitclaim
every day.
So long ns you satisfy, we'll ac
cede to your demands; but when we
meet your better. we’ll put him in
vour place. We warrant you nothing,
because you can’t guarantee any
thing. . . i
We’re always searching for faster
men, for men who can conserve en-
ergv for us. for men who can in
crease output and minimize costs
•IF YOU STAND STILL YOU
DON T STAND A CHANCE.”
A Hero Downed by Fate
One need not ask a blither road to
..alms of romance than that which
Frederic S. Isham stakes out in the
opening chapter of “A Man and His
Money” (Bobbs-Merrill Company).
The proprietor of the St Cecilia
Music Emporium had need of a sing-
r to Introduce his latest song,
What’s the Matter With Mother?”
Mr. Horatio Heatherbloom Is the
name a young man gives who hap
pens along at the right moment. This
man warbles the song with a touching
ippeal to tears nnd purse strings. A
rirl wearing yellow orchids hears the
ong -a girl whose scarlet mouth goes
into a cruel line and whose starry
> es flash steel as she catches sight of
the singer; and then” But that’s for
>ou to read.
traordlnary psychologist is fitted to
pass judgment on the manufacture of
steel.
Wo quote from the book: “Tf a man
Imagines himself bound. In deference
to science or psychology, to deny the
existence of personality, he commits
himself to saying, ‘I do not exist.’ If
he shrinks from that absurdity, he
must accept personality a reality:
a person is both a subject who knows
others and an object of others’ knowl
edge.
"The bond, however, which h<jlds
persons, l|iimnn and divine, together,
can not be merely intellectual; it
must be emotional as well as intellec
tual the bond of love."
If the subject appeals, there is no
doubt of the value of the book.
"The Garden of Life.”
Tn a small and artistic volume.
Anne Richardson Talbot has gathered
some of the best known of her poems
under th{» title THE GARDEN OF
LIFE. (Berman, French & Co., 76c.)
Many of these verses hay© appear
ed In magazines. They represent the
average merit of such verse.
"Love vs. Eugenics."
If there is a keynote in the volume
LOVE AND ETHICS, by Ellen Key
(G. P. Putnam’s Sons, $1.60) (no play
on words suggested), professor of the
chair of humanities at the University
of Sweden, it is this—love means the
elevation of the race.
Professor Key has one unique dis
tinction— she is quoted almost as
freely by the antis as by the suffra
gists. and yet she sees for the woman
who is womanly a great sphere of ac
tion.
The changes she suggests, and for
which she admits the world is hardly
ripe, would all tend to the better
ment of the race as a whole. The
species she asserts can only be raised
by eradicating inherited savage traits
through the medium of selection.
"Certainly," she asserts, "the sole
sanction of parenthood is love. Those
nations where marriages have been
arranged many have flourished ma
terially, but not spiritually."
She voices the demand of scientists
in declaring that the individual should
sacrifice his own desire for the good
of the many.
“Humanity," she says, 'has found
in love the form of selection most
conducice to the ennobling of the
species. In studying heredity, more
attention should be paid to the effect
of love.
“There are pure souls that have
loved more than once, because, having
looked in vain for the complete em
bodiment of their Ideal in one indi
vidual, they have found one side of
il in one person, another side in all
ot her person. And their own noble
happiness In love has been a service
to life.
“While society has until now been
satisfied If husband and wife merely
continued to live together, no matter
under what adverse circumstances,
and reared children, no matter how
had. the new conception of duty will
aid In the elevation of life.
“For these new principles have all
the prerequisites to an organic
growth of duty combined with happi
ness, of responsibility combined with
rights and of the union of these things
with prevalent economic and religious
ideals.”
This hook might he called a happy
balance wheel between two opposed
factions.
■ Tales of India.
Tn n volume of short stories Maud
Diver sends out her Impressions of
India under the title of “Simla, a
Himalayan Idyll” (G. P. Putnam’s
Sons, $1.60).
The stories have appeared before
In various English magazines, but to
the American reading public they are
for the most part new.
The author knows Tndla and the
caste system well; she realizes and
pictures in striking touches the wide
harrier between the East and the
West.
Although Kipling has drawn the
native of the Far East in many and
Inimitable ways, still, as they say
there is always room for one more.
A Noble Earl.
What’s In a name? What. Indeed?
And when the name’s a title of the
book, and reads, “The Noble Earl of
Fleetwood, or Kathryn's Promise, ’
what Is the reader to surmise?
Oh, literature, what plots are com
mitted 1n thy name! And yet the
reader 1s faced with 600-odd pages,
all by Mrs. S. F. Annis, at the rate
of three cents plus a page. (The
Broadway Publishing Company.)
The heroes and heroines in these
hundreds of pages—the titled ladies
and gentlemen who speak like—well,
like almost anything but flesh-and -
blood Individuals—employ their time
in gyrations queer and useless. Says
**ne: “Oh, that T might call you
Flora!” and "Hearing dinner an
nounced, Flora murmured, gently, ’Let
us go.’ ”
And again: “Now she seemed ready
to swoon with surprise on seeing the
Earl standing before her in all his
glorious manhood.”
And as for the promise of Kathryn. I
we leave it to you to And out—if you
feel equal to it.”
A New "Pansy" Book.
The “Pansy** books are too well
known to require notice. We merely
mention the appearance of the latest.
Four Mothers at Chautauqua,” which
tells how the four friends of so many
girl readers meet in later life.
The book (I/Othrop, l^ee & Shepard
ompany, $1.50) is profusely Illus
trated and In every' way up to the
tandard long ago set by Its author.
What to Tell the Boy.
A useful little book for parents is
What You Should Tell Your Boy.” by
Edmund Thomas (Platt & Beach,
0c).
The author treats of his subject
in the broad light of the present day,
ind shows how valuable a thing is
n-rfect confidence between the boy
nd his father. At the end he quotes
^ verso of Hal Coffman’s, which ap-
eured In The Atlanta Georgian:
Hand in hand through the woods
they go.
The father and little lad;
Happy are all the youngsters who
know
That a boy’s best chum is his dad.
"Hand In hand through the world
they go.
Sharing each other’s Joy;
Happy are all the fathers who know
That a man’s best chum is his boy.”
There's a whole sermon In this idea.
"Personality"
To the reader who rends to be
amused or thrilled “Personality,” by
J. B. Jevons (G. Putnam’s Sons. $1.00)
will make no appeal.
The question of persons’*ty as Pro
fessor Jevons deals with it takes up
the problem as raised by William
James and M. Bergson.
Obviously the ordinary reviewer Is
no more fitted to pass judgment on
such a work as this than the ex-
86 Pages of Personal Advice
Free to Any Man
personal n
I believe,
round lu
Privet# Tlvgler
for men tha;
takUy
offer
■TY DEAR REAOtRi
In the handsomely
printed little book or
private pocket compen
dium for man (contain
ing 8,000 word# and 40
half tone nhoto-rej.reduc
tion#). which I publish
and gladly forward by
mail, free, sealed to any
luan anywhere in the
world who sends me th*
free coupon below, }
hav# Included certain
part# that contain som
very lmporiaut advice or
•UCgesthcta of a strict,/
traonal nature which.
can not be
any of the
tvate IIv t l ene books
man that are now
soid at high prices all
over the country. it
will thus be seen T here
endeavored, through the
medium of my free
book, to give my reader# absolutely free «f eont
lly MORK. In some respects. than others
ir and make a large charge for. AU you
have to do to get this Tree book of mine la to
uae the coupon below, or If in ray neighbor
hood. 1 extend an Invitation to you to call at
my offloe Plea.* ’ remecuber thut this pee offer
Involve* absolutely no obligation on your part,
and there Is nothing whatsoever for • you to
pay. and nothing whatsoever for you to buy
in any way. unleas vou should decide at soim-
tlme In the future tkat you woui.l like to try
one of my mechanical VITAI.IZEI18 (described
below), but that mats entirely with yourself
Over a mil Mon of these Ultle free books bar--
now been sent to man who wrote for them, a*
I want you to do, and who live in all quartern
of the globe. I publlih thU free book In Eng
ll#b. Swedish. Danish. Finnish, German. French
anu Polish, but I always send the English *<11
lion, of course, unlesa otherwise Instructed. Kind
ly use the little coupon
SANTIBN. AUTHOR.
to yeferrnoe to manly strength. I believe tt
ta now more generally acknowledged than ever
’•efore that fhe manly mao stands back of all
tli at makes for progress, development and
achievement in tho world, a truth which any
of ua can easily verify if we look about uh
with impartial ryv*.
As a matter ot fact, the mao who la de
bilitated. unairuftg and enarvalcd ean not. for
perfectly obvious reasons, expect to approach
thoe# real and masterful attainments which seev»
but a natural and easy accomplishment for him
whose nerve foroe. brain power end manly
strength are perfectly norms! Hence, while
we acknowledge the debilitated. weakened man
to be handicapped in every walk of life where
real manhood counts, yet It would Indeed be
cruel of me to here #o state the fact in public
print were I not of the honest opinion that there
la every hops for the unmanly man to restore
himself to a state of health and rigor, if he
but clear his mind of abnormal fear, and then
make a fair, square effori to redeem himself.
There are two specimen# of humanity for
which I have no earthly use. One is the mar.
who. though now strong and vital, yet plunges
Wiu> dissipation and excise with the certain
MANLY. VIGOROUS MEN BULK THE WORLD
knowledge of his unmanly fate. The other 1#
the man who. though knowingly debilitated and
enervated, make# no effort to get away from his
Ufa of dissipation and wrong practices. A#
a matter of fact, there Is no hope far either
of theft# unfortunates. But for 1dm who ac
knowledges Ids errors, who may come to me
and aay, "I have paid the penalty <4 axy past
folliea. but I am THROUGH with my life of
dissipation. and I an, going to make a manly
effort to restore myself. ” to such a man, I
care not what hla poyaloftl condition may bf. I
can say in all truthfulness. "You. my friend.
irt on the right road V) now strength and new
manhood." for he really is. and there la no
doubt ahmit it
I make a Tittle appHanos that I owfl a
MTALIZER. which I designed to aid Just rack
men who #«ek manly strength 1 am not df-
furlng this YTTALiZER here for sale, but
merely suggewt that you. reader, take the op
portunity to learn ail about what this Uttle
appliance la doing to-day everywhere throngflotit
the world: then, if In the future you w#ut to
uae one yourself and will so write roe. I will
cl a idy make some liberal proposition whereby
y ii may have one to try The VITALICBR 1#
fully described in one section of the free book
winch uni coupon below entitles you te
The VITALIZE!! 1# mode up in a vary right
form, weighing only sevaraj ounce#, and you
wear it on your body all Bight. It generate# a
great, soft, pleasant FoTlOB which I call VIGOR,
rod which flow# in a continuous stream into
your nerve#, organs, blood a»M muscles wtnk you
alrep I am satisfied in m* own mind that 1
have access to a great POwPR in thla little
YITA1.1ZKR which in the future will be more
end more relied upon all over the world tn the
treatment of debilities and nerve wjakueases.
With special attachments which carry lb*
FOR( r of the V1TAI.IZER to any part of fr.a
'tody. It may be used by women as well a# pirn
for the treatment of rheumatism, kidney, liver,
stomach. Madder disorders, nervousness, lack of
fner* Therefore, please send for the book
i>> c . if you happen to live in or near this
•uy. k ehould be very g;ad to see you in person
offloe hours. 9 to I. Sunday. 10 to 1.
WHAT THE FREE BOOK TEACHES YOU
The Bttle free il'ustxated hook of special private information, referred to above. Is meant
reelly to be a self guide for all men through the veart before and after marriage and onward
to s ripe old ag* It is written in perfectly plain language, entirely free from tertmiaal terms,
so that anr one may easily grasp the full power of Its good aavlce from two or three cwvgul
readings It attempt# »o :-oli»t mi! a aafe road to new manhood or new manly strength, and as
such 1# dedicated to mankind generally One part of this book tally uescrlbea icy Uttle VITAL
1ZKR referred to above
Remeinoer. e« # -*r a# the coupon below !# received 1 agre- to forward to you one copy
of this illustrated booklet, absolute> free of charge and in a plain, sealed envelope, so that It
will come to you privately, hist as you receive any waled mail
C SANOPN
Ysrk. N
Brswdwev
M ■ -
Daar Sire Please forward aw your book
u advertised, free, seals,!.
n a \rr,
Ar.pR.Kjaa.