Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 14, 1915, Image 6

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ATLANTA. QA. f TES ATLANTA GEORGIAN An Unexpected Addition to the Family THE DINGBAT FAMILY ^ rr breaks mv heart Vo l>o it, Rot' -Toe Bearish Copyright. 1015. Internsrional J| ?MR. SDCH /A/S. / IMJDfcft-TArtYAXy (WOULD ’—\ /ftfexjwfefe 'THt. EFfeKPS OF I A MECHANICAL EAKjMJfcfiA, A CARpEAlYffL, AAJD wA e/ \ H006C-/MOVESL, HOtJUWEft. SE6. UlHAr Owu; XlBE- Did — / -J0DEE6. 0- DE&O. ’-'A ) JUfcT Knew 'T wowd ]—> V OWE. To this ^0*ie 5AV j V 7 tuny ‘D/wwy; The EW <f\30E DEAMySH' IS REAlOYfcDN HP ■ fftjjM Thfjt 'BAft&eR-SHOp; ^ WWEVefe (WHILE OUR. He A/wr got ajo tonsorial ATMOSPHERE-, ‘STILL AMD * \rs A 6HELTEA., AMD »f WAVIT VOU SHOULD ASK/ -TtHAT HE SMRE.1T/ HWTH W)S ~ C" ^ Nov) Dour set All hey up \ 'AWIT IT ‘Al/A); "BILL. BOLLVA)’ S. Did nt Chuck -tde out on the] world s cold cap Trom aajv d. s2£ 1P15. Jfwi H*rv|c0 HlfcE HAS 60TTA L»IT OUT OL M'AgAABfcfc ,V'6fcE I'/M (?0AWA HAVE THE rLACS- /— \ PAIRED AND AITSRATiOAJL /MADE--I V c>o its mo Place. fUR H/m - / j v y_Hts (SoYTA So /fbcft. CCE*3bE' ®£TK /(WHEW He d settle D«ujaj FOk HlS LOM& SUMMER aiap Too — aimS- That Too Bap^/- Oj 'THAT DHV 6ES/MS / \ HI6 Diet WE, <AA® Fall Sdh iwhat a c=: r — k dlHATETY (WHAT/ ,4./1a TRATE<jy-; ■^■“(pTfBRE Be Amoaj« you, ANV, ^UffRieajYW /^PPESYed /-o'Pfls PHILANTHROPIC PR0CE>jgg LLE BesTHaT >0(J Abide t^gE ...UMTIL ThfeMOOVOU). It's Just a Gilt with Some People JERRY ON THE JOB Copyright, 1915, International New* Serrlee. IT.T (NOTOEWUl. Suue-tllvlav- lUT 1 VONYVcNOoj ONE MOTE EUOCA ***. AMCTWEP-. / AH-AT LAST ^30 l PELYWIS m* DEODTO I Tb PRACTICE EH { VNEU. W,- ITS"Tut OWLS/ WAT j L* L^T,. h Nou n, pjer Br <_ d- / S ASLS'YD Vt>V.J C/n THINGS VNcVSc A UTn£- Slow omfs. at tvs oan ci wa; School-so l Twtdgkt / YD Blow in J «»«*/ And iEE I ^ou. r .« And ill- PRANCES’ That Palm Beach Suit Wasn’t Wasted Alter All; Far from It POLLY AND HER PALS Copyright, 1915, Newspaper Feature Service, Inc. Great Britain Rlghta Reserved. W/OOLD (T EE^UST ThE. ^4ME lb S6u IP l OTRoLLtD UP 5th-^(/E WWD crAUE'THE. HchJ. BuT Surel/ VA. Vou ARtWiT £>fRlOUS?r I ^mJTIIaIL'/ am! lilt ^>WoRE (D ' MEv/ER (WEAR Them 'P/iM- BEACri Clothes A€ i*i'1]— I ThiaIR lY'i A DHAME To i That BtAuliruL r . out fit r' 1 5 /111 i Do/dT Holler <-^| a’Fore Yer Hurt. They /IiaIT "Be Hasted\y\ W/tLL, AURWOiR /Re Vt?U iTHERE BuM Cov/6t at kid. Bum (/c$6E 1 61rls /< Treat - y 7 Do You Really Think Eaglebeak’s Explanation Is Strictly on the Level? Personally, We’re Doubtful US BOYS Registered United States Patent Office. SHAKERS GOOfitLY DEPT tn sorrTTa Telly a this son. i DOAfT VLAMNA TEU.TA THIS AT ALL boT its all Tour, fault that WERE LOSlN'TO-OAY. |’m AFRAID TA chuck my fast ones ‘cause if i euer! Do you'll HAFTa'XeTch"‘em andyouk! HANDS is LlBBLE YA itET BOSYED So iM LEYYlkj' THESE BOOBS HIT Tb MAKE J , (T EASY PORTA, EASY E)R YA SEe/j?| WELL Known SAYINirS ILLUSTRATED BY 8.S. AJOVvl DONT Ler ne have TO SPEAK To YOU A<*A/N 1 1 avyjh..o^, At(su>€a To l^je/oti^dcLc^/ 3 UUHY IS A WOMAN CHURMIN5- Ll(lt6 . A CATERPILLAR f BECAUSE SHE MAKES THE BuTTer-FLY MOT A ooueTJ Nor a doubt. 1 FROM (DA F/N6ERHOOD HARLEM. U. i A. WHAT" NAME OF A* STATE CANNOT" BE" UURlTTeN WITHOUT A PENCIL.? ANSU)SR„ moiodav Thank Sccdaie-ss yTBepb A ATT \SlX riCT0KT5 •) IN THE SlYTH INWINO- OP YESTERDAYS <f/ANT— SOUYHlE LtAME. L.VYON BY SOOTniSS, ioq TO Ta) WHEN Y«e MARVELOUS EACfLEBEAK. E>PROPER COMPLETELY EXONERATED HiMstLF IN T»4E EYES OF TNE ENTIRE SPoRtlXUj- WORLD. 8Y THIRD STRIKE- STANDIN& OF THE <?LOBS (5-IAnTS lose South IES BAT EA4LE- BEAK SPRUDER ALL ODER. TH5 LoT AND IHTo THE STREET HiMklSS (^/AMTS Sooth »e 6 OLSAS 6*4 *0i AJA^4?tA find joy and joy to find work. Make happiness and enjoy the simple things phenomenal luck to hope that the credit side. The glass of discouragement so mag nifies the failure to become a singer of ►songs that the doing of deeds be comes nothing. The equity is for gotten, and the net value of a life that is really successful is reduced almost to nothingness; while the failure mag nifies to tremendous proportion. Joy, seen through the reduclng- glass of unfulfilled desire becomes negligible. What is the good of a glorious day in the country if you focus your reducing glass of desire to own a limousine on it? Too many of us ignore the balance of life. We forget the big sweep of net happiness remaining on the credit side of our books. There may be a mortgage of responsibility, and a debt of sorrow aud care—but does not an honest balancing leave a sur plus on the credit side? There is happiness enough in life to make its sorrows endurable. Nei ther joy nor sorrow in their transient enduring are a fair measure of life. What counts is the equity. Balance and hospitals might tell you with & wealth of grewsome detail. But it means choosing what is at first the hardest way, indeed. To me the meaning of work for wom an is this—the keeping alive of all th» white fine things of life; valor and hon or and courage that make belief in hu man nature survive any other shattered ideals. And the glorious perquisites that go with your pay en\ r elope are these—la- dependence, self-respect, freedom of body and soul, and the hope of grow ing into fitness to know all the finest, most sacred of life's secrets. Seeing Sorrow With a Telescope What Work Means to Women He Understood. Mike was a good gardeaer, but a bit slow in brain power. One day his master gave him several letters to post in the village. Mike no ticed that one of them bore no address, but dropped it into the letter box just the same. On his return his master chanced to ask him if the letters were all right. “Sure, sor,” confessed Mike. “I no ticed that wan av thim had no address at all, at all.” "No address!" gasped the master "Then why in thunder did you post it?" "Re aisy. sor," replied Mike, with a knowing grin. "I thought mebbe you didn't want me to see who ye wor writ ing to." By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. H ER pay envelope is not all of a ^working girl's salary! It just / begins there—and there are splendid perquisites attached; Idving on eight dollars a w’eek is hard sledding. You have to get up to ten before you are decently comfortable and free from the haunting demon of "What W'ill happen if I get sick?” and its twin, “Suppose some one comes along and gets my Job away!’’ And even when you gt t up to ten dollars a week in your pay envelope life is a series of going without lunches, i so you can have a pretty new collar on your coat when Jim takes you to Coney on Sunday—and going without collars for your coa*t so you may eat nourishing enough lunches to get over your tired- cheeks that won't attract a Jim for you. And you are pretty likely to get bit ter about the necessity of your working your >outb aw*r* while rich girls play reality irr^ ** jp m youth and other girls-lik« -^ance merrily down the p.drmtw pat*. And you feel that no one gives you credit for sticking to your job and earning your bread and butter by straight, honest toil—when cake and jam might be had more easily. Well, think of this—“WORK MEANS THE CHIVALRY OF WOMANHOOD.” Work means keeping your garden weeded and the house of your soul trim and fresh and clean inside and out. Work means choosing the hardest in stead of "the easiest way.” And how hard that easiest way would be in the end all the makers of statis- Too Much for Her. It was at a village concert, wher* some pretty girls were acting as» at tendants, showing people to their places. One specially charming damsel a£ proached an old gentleman. “Shall I show you to a seat?" murmured, with a bashful blush. The old man stared at her, and the girl repeated her question, feeling most abashed. "Can 1 show you to a seat?" she said, in louder tones. "Eh. what—what?” exclaimed the old man. w ho was very deaf. That finished the poor girL "Shall I sew you to a sktWT' ane Arrcoimwl wll dlv. tlon on one side of the account we feel that terrible injuslce is being done us. Unsatisfied longings of the deb it side instead of all the possessions on the credit side become the test of life’s fairness. We let what we lack overshadow w hat we have. We ignore the equity. Suppose we look through the mag nifying glass of discouragement at our sorrows. Perhaps there was a youth ful dream of being a great poet. It never was realized, but instead there has bVen wonderful success in the Big For Hi* Age. It was the last football match of the •*ason at the country oollege. and among the visitors was fr old farmer. During the interval he walked round •ne particularly stalwart player, eyeing him as he would a horse. Then turned io his wife. ! "Nigh on six feet, ain't he, Hannah?" h* ;i.-ked. / „ ’ry inch of it,” the old lady af- wmed. muttered the old chap, iHPUfc / f • • i‘ '• this ver game v*-l.-;i . : .ear.; a fcer?;. -.-•<*!> v. t , nHw 1 -u \ *-» - Both Right. A provincial clergyman recently announced that in the course of the week he expected to go on a mission to the heathen. “Why, my dear sir.” one of his parishioners exclaimed, "you have never told us one word of this before; it leaves us unprepared! What shall we do?" “Brother." said the minister sol-