Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 09, 1913, Image 10

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About the Only Thing a Man Will Permit His Wife to Have a Monopoly of Is Patience 'D, What Dante Fashion Is Offering Tim A rtf Styles Described bx Olivette * ix HIS moHi ^rnceful ereniug frock on the left Is made of apricot silk cashmen The bodice * in made over a foundation of light pink ,-hlk muslin, with an embroidered and beaded galloon. \ very Tvide piece of applique lace, edged with a narrow band of Fable, panned over tho shoulders, eils iho arms and falls in two long ends, front and back These points sre finished by long beaded tassels. The skirt is shirred very full at the Empire saisf line, the bead of which is rather high, adding to the short -walsted effect. It is trimmed with in emulation* of beaded embroider? and is finished h> a rounded train. This garment attracts particular admiration be !»c* of the manner In which it bangs in the most graceful lines to the feet. Many of the season’s evening gowns arc worn shorter than ever, and. in addition, are drawn up Up-to-Date Jokes in the little village of Pershora a *onm: mmlttel suicide by hanging *rse)t o an apple tree At the funer n\ a neighbor, noticing the *a<1 appear sne* of the <usband, consoled him by raying t 'h - hr ' a«l met with « terrible OHS .r “Yes sa-d t ie uaband, heaving a ■••gii :she must have kicked like thun der > shake off six bushels of green apples tiiaJ would have been worth a iollar » bushel when they got r'.pt* ' • •> * • * gentleman who had been spending « ollday at a Scottish seaside villa*, noted fur its g 4i links asked one of i he raddles K he g<»t much carrying in winter time. "Nae, sir. nae replied the caddie. Thfere's nae carry'ing In the winter ume. Ye see. it's this way. If it's no «na’ it’s frost; if it’* no frost it’s sna if it s neither sna’ nor frost, it’s rain. • f it’s no rain, it’s wind; an’ if it s a flm ■ iHy, Us the Kawbath!" • V * A young lady’ who was going out to New Zealand lo get marred want to a West En«l dressmaker tor her trousseau. The dressmaker suggested a warm one The voung lad> a*ke<1 why. seeing ■hat the climate o f New Zealand is h beautifully mild one The dressmaker replied. ' I assure vou madam, you are mis a hen, for that « where the fror.en nea comes from." MO* tones If M- Oldboy makes any such ♦ exertion I wl 1 denounce him as a liar. President Mr Jones. I call you to •roer. Our by-laws do not allow you • > go that fan Jones Then i .-all M; Oldbov a bar m.e far j.» ir ..- permitted by the by* Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRIGX FAIRFAX A1 N BA" 7 A Thrilling Story of [ Society Blackmailers 'NovsIlMd by> % high in the back. I’lu& slylc Ls illustrated by the accompanying model of "'jonquil hoi rifle do sole” (jonquil silk breath) and green and jonquil liberty silk on the right The bodice, made of souffle do sole, is draped both front ami back with a crossing, or Priscilla, effect, and Is richly embroidered with Immense green flowers covering tho shoulders. The effect is a deep decollete in V. unlined and with very short sleeves. The skirt is made up of three parts The lop skirt is of green and jonquil double-face satin, gathered very full at the waist, showing the pan nier effect on either side, and trimmed with a huge bow at the hack. It falls over a second tunic made of gathered flounces of Jonquil souffle do soie. The lower skirt is of jonquil liberty silk veiled by souffle de soie of the same shade and embroidered with huge green flow or*. OLIVETTE • Krojii <■ play Im Georg* b.-ar borough, rmw being presented at the Thirty-ninth Street Theater. New York. ^#*rinl rights held and copyrighted by International News Service, i TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. APT.UN HML.BK*JOK had stopped just beyond the great curtains. He Mood, a straight and sp'iendld figure in his loose topcoat, and marked himself that absolute gentleman who wears Ids dress clothes with the same graceful ease and self-forgetfulness lie shows in tennis flannels. Then suddenly fiie "de v il-may-care" ease of the up standing Irish gentleman, than whom there is no finer, went from his simple pose, lie became no mere onlooker but 'one who feels a sudden vital Interest ; in what lies before him. Holbrook gave the room the quick in l spection of a man trained In the mili tary. He turned h.s head sharply frgm side to side inhaling—while abruptly fear crossed his face In the lightning flash with which a drowning man »•** the panorama of hta life—Larry Holbrook lived over a hap py scene—a merry little dialogue he had heard that afternoon. “The Man “'I'ell me what perfume s that you're wearing? The Girl: “It is vile, isn't it?" The Mar., “it haunts me like a dream j of summer what is it?" The Girl: “It Is named Chypre. j The Man: “To be sure -Chypre -I ! loafed away a fortnight there. \ god- oewH like jou does well to wear the per fume of the IkIaikI of Cyprus Chypre is the French for that island where I Mount Olympus stands, and the girls of j Cyprus wear that Olympian perfume, too." j The Girl: “Do you like it The Man: “1 adore it." The Girl: “Father doesn't— he says it ' .saturates the house y nuzzled look a look of pain came across I m rr\ Holbrook’s face. That perfume saturated the room In which he Mood and the girl and the man. in the conversation which had just flashed its message of horror across his brain were Aline Graham and himself! The chief turned to look at Holbrook. That gentleman had too often found hu man life depending on ease and savoir t'aire to be at a loss now'. There, was but a momentary pause. Then Holbrook spoke easily: “Shot, wasn't he, Donnell'!’ “No " “ Wasn't?’ The captain's tone bespoke utter as tonishment. * “Htruck with one of thlm iron paper toiies," explained Donnell, with a heavy brogue that was elder brother to the wee touch of .Irish music in Larry Hol brook's voice. “Powder smoke in the air. said Hol brook In easy explanation of his theory. \nd to himself he added very serious iy: “And perfume." “I thought this Job would be too big for the headquarters men. Chief—” began Donnell. “Oh, I'm not on it officially, Donnell— Just to look It over with the inspector. , Ha* he been here?" Donnell shook his head. "The Iuspec- THE FAMILY CUPBOARD A Dramatic Story of High Society Life in New York YOU MUST HEED YOUR MOTHER Dear Mia* Fairfax I am 16 and would like \ er> much to go on the stage. 1 am keeping company with a young man about the same age. who is on the r*tage. and has asked me to go with Mm. If 1 go I will have • to leave home, for my mother said that l could not go. 1 am in love with this young man and he said that if I do not go on the stage he will have nothing more to do with me He says he love* me M. V C He doesn t love you. No man loves a girl if he advises her to disobey h*-r mother, This is proof that he .•» it is u«*rmltl this association A Reel Joke. \N .> in a woman mind hk« vine* picture*?" I give it up." IVfr ■ * ne» ire 'tvRg-'Y LIVE CHEAPER—CUT YOUR MEAT BILL DOWN You can cut down your meat bill two-thirda and get more nutritious food b' eating Faust Macaroni A 10c package of Faust Macaroni coo tains as much nutrition ns 4 lbs of beef ask your doctor Faust Macaroni is extremely rich in gluten, the bone, muscle and flesh builder It is made from Durum Wheat, the high protein cereal Delicious, too. You can serve Faust Macaroni a hundred different ways to delight the palate Write for free recipe book showing how jin air-tight, moisture-proof package**. ]~ and lb csnlB. MAULL BROS i At LetiHL Me lacks sincerity, sense and honor. Y ou I must not see him again, and you must gi\e up all thought of the stage. NO APOLOGY Dost Miss Fairfax 1 would like to know whether it Is up to me to apologize to a girl for the following reason: 1 keep company, and my girl friend and myself with another couple were at an affair when we hat! some trouble with some boys, uud they saw this other girl hold tier friend's cigarette and tho thought bad of her. l told her about having a bad reputation with these ly»ys and she got sore I Now my friend refuses to talk to me until I apologize to .my lady friend. H J \our motive was so good that you j ow e no one an apology Perhaps however, you might have stated your objections more delicate ly A* 11 was, you have ui fortunate ly offended both the girl who acted; silly, and also your friend Tell her you intended no offense LIT HFR ALONE FOR AWHILE Dear Mis* Fairfax How r*n i win back the love of a girl I once neglected to meet on an a-rranged appointment'' T had been keeping company with her for six 1 month* She doe# not pav any at tent Ion to letters I send her' ex cusing myself In every wa\ but she has my ring in her possession and does not want to return It. and talk* to friends of mine about me. asking them main different ques tion* HEARTBROKEN I think she would like to make up, 1 but wants to punish you tirst. You have apologia*!. L*t the matter rest I4*ere for a few months Perhaps when she thinks you may no longer 'Novelized by! (V (From Owen Davis' piaj now being pre sented at the Playhouse. New York, by WtMiani \. Brady. Copyright, 1913. by International News Service.) TO- 1).\Y '3 I \ST A LLMENT 'Til get you money.' said Kenneth with the grimmest sort of determina tion. He still felt the debt of the house of Nelson to this girl and a man must have love. If the best is out of Ills reach, he is sadly likely to take the worst, If a smiling face masks the hoi : lowness of the cheap substitute. “When’ll you get me the money* in sisted Kitty. “Now!" He took out Ins watch and I came over to her—away from the sun-I shiny window and reverie—back to the: drab room of heavy air, to Kitty- anc ! fact. “I’ll pawn this! Advancing In businesslike fashion Kit- ] ty examined the watH^ “What is it worth?" “It cost ?100!" “You can’t get more than Ko. said' Kitty, with brisk certainty. "Can I have j ji»?" “Ter You can have It all There was a happier time when with the assurance of youth and in the ar got of Broadway. Ken would have add- eo and cheap at half the price “ For given money he knew* Kitty' would be sweet again. She was like a gas meter that sputters and refuses to give out light unless it is fed the quarters that it likes to devour! He started for the door and a* he opened it he found Dick LeRoy stand tng on the threshold In the very act of entering without the preltminarv of a knock “What are you doing here*' snapped —not Ken—but Kens overwrought nerves “What d'ye want of my poor life*'" asked Dl^t with his unfailing Iauittl ness He seemed to have an ability, shared by ducks, rubber and cravenette cloth, of shedding the heaviest and j grimmest of rains! • Nothing What do > i want of me*** ! asked Ken. with knowledge that he had \ been bought and paid for “I’ve come to sa> gt*id-bye." an- I pwered Dick, in the tone of an unjust- j ly suspected cherub *y it before I ge l>ack that gives} minuter 1 #•.> Jim ;•»•>* good!" said Ken. He had determined on a season of house-cleaning. Ivittj T should have her dues —his broken life must be patched as best It could—but to the waifs and strays of Kitty’s errant fancy he would no longer offer a refuge. The door slammed with insistent em phasis. "Where's he going?' “To hock his watch! explained Kit ty nonchalantly . Dick came closer and said, in a confi dential and familiar tone of understand ing and good fellowship “Gettin’ to be a regular little feller, ain’t he?" “He’s all in. said Kitty, unsenti- mentally. “Sure he is, but what's the odds if you love him! Love's better'n money. It gets you more- if you rwn 1t quick enough. Well—I’m off. T open Monday up in Albany. Eighty per if it is four show's a day, looks pretty soft—after this!” He looked around him with a sneer. t His roving eye lingered a bit on Kitty’s face to see how she would take the suggestion he meant to convey. “Good-bye, Dick!" said Kitty in a far away voice. She had put the table between them, and had seated herself in a high, straight c hair Her hands were clasped loosely In her lap -and she seemed scarcely conscious of Dick Is Roy and his "eighty per." Dick came over to lhe table and leaned across it—so that hDi sleek brown head was dose to her golden one. He did not attempt to touch her—he only gave the impression of neatness. His eyes were always intent on her far away gray-blue ones they were sweep ing her face with the remorseless re vealing of the clear searchlight “A hundred and seventy-five double!" He waited a moment for thia to sink Into Kitty's money -loving conscious ness. “I got It in black and white—" His voice took on a deeper tone, but his manner was guarded—held In leash. "A hundred and seventy-five double— and a wedding ring, if you’re fond of Jewelry." Kitty put her elbows on the table and •unk her ehtn in the palms of her hands. She was still a taring—scaring intently. Dick wondered what she vis ioned Bat the visions of even a Kitty riaire are a little beyond the happy-go- lucky Dick Le Roys of this world. Ls a* Caoiiau^sf Tai.tssKW^ The Futurist Twirl * id ponauuvri w # No. $—The Final Steps—Mr. Brian 's Last Article , tor juet phoned and asked you to please wait for him" "I see.! Kverj moment tha ; we wasb* . may be fading a clow IV e had belter . look about a hit," said the Chief more truthfully than he knew The two officials with that cold- | blooded air of business rhat they must all the mure assume in the presence of | mysterious deatii walked over and look- ( ed ar the body Judson Flagg lay sprawled across the I table ae he had died. And one clenched fist held the clew' that must betray Aline Graham with pitiless certainty. But the Chief did not touch the Inert mass of evil that lay before him. All must be left ss it had been at the moment of death Inspector MacIntyre must find every clew intact. Bo Judson Flagg’s remorseless dead hand still edv ered Its bitter evidence. Larry Holbrook still, stood motionless near the door. He felt the stern ne- ceasttr for dear thought—the situa tion threatened to be xtrangely com plicated What did it all portend And that was the very question that a trem bling girl wax asking of the night’s darkness- what did it all mean? Suddenly Holbrook spied a crumpled rose at his feet her rose—could It be? But no there were thousands of Klllar- ney roses in Washington. He stooped and picked up the flower -In another moment It would have been uafe in the pocket of his coat, but Chief Demp ster looked up. and. assuming a fine air of casual Interest, Holbrook dropped the flower at his feet. Another piece of evidence lay shrieking to the Heavens of Aline! “Right over the heart. ’ said Donnell with unctk>n. Even a crime neatly con summated may have Its admirers! “Not a had weapon «t that." ad mitted Chief Dempster. The Chief began moving about quiet ly, and as he scanned everything in a quick, alen way Donnell watched him admiringly. Holbrook still held his position near the center door, but suddenly he took off hie top coat ami tossed it and his hat on an inconspicuous chair. His manner had become alert and deter mined. There was a military crispness in his bearing as he came forward and scanned everything as quickly a* the Chief himself. He seemed to be listen ing to Donnell, but he was following a train of thought far removed from Don neil. “] wus on Sixteenth street, an' I heerd the Kid a-yelling an' I ran over here, a-blowin’ my whistle a# I come, an' I found what you *ee and I phoned headquarters, and ” “See anybody after you go* here?” asked the Captain. j “Only the boy—he's upstair a—but he I don’t know nothing about It." A look of relief croseed Holbrook's , face. What did he fear? And could his j love stand ths strain---tf It all proved true? Could a man go on loving a woman after he knew that she had 1 committed murder? Would he still wish j to marry a girl whose hands we^fe stained with the blood of human life? “Him," said Donnell, nodding to the | thing that haxTbeen Judson Flagg, "and ‘ the boy lived here to themselves." “Made any Investigations?'^ asked the . Chief crisply. “Never touched a thin*, no, sir—Just as you *ee it." To Be Continued To-morrow, that a written description of thl* last movement is not entirely aiie qnat.e because the steps are orltfl nal and not at all easy to learn or to understand, either, for thst matter. And, although I have great hopes for those who have experimented with a great many of the new dances, still the dance should really he seen In order to perfect this sixth movement ar well as the fifth. However, those who are familiar with the sols sors step will have very little trouble in catching on to this slight variation. The secret of the Futurist Twt-rl The Drag. By DONALD BRIAN Star »f “The Marriage Market.'’ Copyright, 1S13. International News Servioe. nHE sixth movement of the Futurist Twirl is a still fur ther elaboration of the tur key trot. It begins with a drag forward, the man starting with the right foot, the girl backward with the left foot, aB in the picture, and the man going forward with the left and the girl back with the right to make two drags or four counts. This drag is simply a skip done slowly. Then there are eight hops, or eight of the dragging steps done rapidly, very rapidly, so as to make them almost a skip. This rapid movement may be bet ter known to dancers of to-day as the scissors step. The legs are held rigid and the movement of four counts ends with the poee in the second pic ture finishing up the eight counts of the music, the left foot of the man across the right foot of the girl. Don't forget to have your music right with you—hum if you have nothing better—for this dance depends on the lilt of a good tango for its better understanding. This position in the second pic- In the 'drag' the legs are held ngid, the movement ending- with the pose in the top picture. The Skip. ture is exactly the position for the beginning of the scissors step also, so that when it is practiced it will help a great deal to fall into the position immediately • After the sixth movement eight more counts of the turkey trot are added, and then a repetition of the fish walk described in the third movement. Of course it can readily be seen is now' revealed. And 1 hope by this time its intricacies have been, mastered by many. At any rate, it has beer/ a gro* iflcatiou to me to see It danced this Winter, and I have no doubt that I shall some day stumble upon some of my pupils xvho have faith fully studied my directions through these columns, and who will dance it a great deal better than I do. A Merry Christmas to you all Do You Know- Wollsteixi, a village near < ’asset, in Prussia, has been abandoned by its inhabitants on the ground that fife there is hopeless. The soil i« sterile?, and the authorities refused to link the village to the outer world by rajl. Only one Inhabitant remains. Frau Roeft, a ahepherdegs, who is SO years old, and declares that she will die in the village where she was born. The White Star liner Zealandic, 8,090 tons, which hasYailed from Liv erpool for Western Australia with 1,100 emigrants, will travel to Austra lia a distance of 11,800 miles, without ('ailing anywhere on the way. The Zealandic expects to complete the journey in 34 or 35 days. A wedding without a ring seems in congruous, but in some parts of Spain no ring ls used. After the qeremony the bridegroom moves the flower In his bride's hair from left to right, for In those districts to wear a rose above your right ear is to proclaim yourself a wife. The authorities of the Berlin sub urb of Spandau have decided to tax perambulators. Every citizen who sends hia child riding in one must pay a yearly tax of 30 cents. This wiil entitle him to push it along on the footpath. Tnrlted to a} Cheltenham wedulng, an army offleef flew to the church in an aeroplane, and he was accompanied by two other of fleers with aeroplanes Every Woman !i> lute rested sad should know soont tbm ussasrfu: Marr«l Vf'T’ Douche When Run Down in physical condition it is usually because, the action of the organs of digestion has become irregular or defectix^e. Then there is need for a safe and speedy medicine to relieve the ills which occasionally depress even the. brightest and strongest. The one remedy you may take and feel cafe with is BEECHAM’S PILLS (Ths Largest Sale of An* Medicine in the World) The first dose gives speedy relief in sick-foeadache, .bilious ness, constipation, lack of appetite, heartburn, dyspepsia, and lasting improvement follows the timely use of thrie fa vorite and reliable home remedy. You will become healthier and stronger, and more cheerful if you let Beecham’s Pills Pick You Up r Sold everyv^hcre. In boxes. 10c., 25c. Dirocfions with every box point the wsy to health sad sre ecpeoially valaable to women. Aax rsor irmlttfor It. u ha caaact sa»- Olr tha UARYgf.. accept ao other, hut send stamp forbook Herrin ML:34St JtT. f * I