Secret of
I Keepinb a
F Secret
7oW fry a Young Wife Who
Found no Difficulty in
Keeping Her Marriage
from the World for Four
Years.
| And Here Narrated
- ?a
SH! Don't breathe it to a soul, but
listen?
The man who started the story
about woman's inability to keep
a secret deliberately broke the ninth
commandment with malicious intent,
or else he didn't know the species.
Woman can keep a secret. That
she can has been practically and theoretically
demonstrated: The "nay"
of any disagreeable and contrary
minded person will not be heard amid :
present plaudits and affirmative acclaim.
The libelous statement of the
t original man is obsolete.
Woman, lovely woman?Woman,
with all her faults?(These aro new
and very original remarks that ure
absolutely necessary for the success J
of the story)?Woman?she of the ,
erstwhile weaker sex -run keep a se- I
cret. The wordH ha,re a joyful sound ;
to sufTrnge-enlightenpd ears.
i Know woiuun c:in keep a secret,
because I've seen one who did!
She V ?pt it lor lour years and thus j
disproved the old theory.
For years woman has been trying,
more or less successfully?generally
less, but don't tell anyone?to live
down the slanderous Implication. For
generations it has been a stumbling j
block in the path of- all feminine prog- I
ress. Now it no longer exists. The
entire sex is vindicated and a pretty ;
little bride, a matron in Newark. N. J., '
has suddenly found herself famous.
She really and truly kept a secret.
There wero three others in the secret.
but they don't count. They wero
mere men?the bridegroom, the best
man and the minister. With tho usual
short-sightedness and scepticism of
man, every one of them fully believed
he would tell.
Forced to Answer an a Duty.
Rut she didn't. Now she almost
wishes she hud. For when it Anally
caine out. she was kept busy "shooing" j
away anxious inquirers who sought to J
know how it wasi done. One of them
wouldn't "shoo." The question was |
too vital. The fate of a whole suf- '
fering suffrage world might rest in the ,
iinswcr. To get it was u duty owed to j
humanity.
The "shooing" gradually ceased
The little bride smiled her most winsome
smile. Her husband was coming
up the steps armed to the teeth?
with most interesting* brown paper
parcels, mutely suggestive of belated
wedding gifts and something good for
eupper. He was hospitality personified.
His smfle was all-embracing
Under its influence the woman who
had kept a secret was moved to relent.
The next scene discovered the prin,
ctpals seated in easy chairs in a cozy
apartment where all things were new
and Invishly tagged "with best wlsheu."
A great silence reigned. The
woman who had kept a secret was
giving practical demonstration of howshe
had done it. She was saying
nothing. Hut at last?
"Tell her, Mabel."
It was the voice of mere man. It
was more of a suggestion than a command,
but it had a good, reassuring
sound. Kvidentlv tli?? '??i
lzed that even though silence might I
have Its value in keeping a secret. j
feminine perfection has not yet risen
ibove the curiosity mark. This is still I
unaffected by modern improvements j
and must be sutisiied.
For the Good of Humanity.
So. for the good of humanity, Mrs
William Wack, teacher in the Ham- ;
burg school of Newark, told Ten Hest !
Ways of Keeping a Secret.
First, don't tell. Second, don't belong
to u bridge whist club. Third,
don't have a confidential friend.
Fourth, don't appear superior to common
mortals who haven't a secret,
and don't think that everybody is just
dying to know it.
That's five in the negative. The others?oh.
talkative woman, pause; read, j
mark, learn and inwardly digest the
words of the oracle:
When you have a great and mo- i
mentous secret, don't think about it. i
Ho natural. Cultivate calmness and !
vo.won KUtwl onm,.
. . |>IU OXIII. luii^riiui | ULl'UJia- I
tion and stick tc It. Almost anything i
will do. If you enn't tench school. |
teach politics. Chock off each succeeding
day of the secret with feelings of
pride that you've kept it so long. and.
lastly, lie sure your mother is trained
i in the same art.
Some mothers are not. Mrs. Wack's !
mother wus. If she hadn't heen the
secret of the marriage of her daughter,
Miss Mabel Garrabrant to William
Wack, clerk in a New York national
bank, would have ceased to be a secret j
three years ago. That was when Ma- j
bel broke the news to mother. For a
whole year, however, she had never
told a soul.
"It was very easy," she remarked :
**1 Just didn't tell; that was all."
Perfectly Simple.
How perfectly simple and practlc 1
Die: Anyoouy can learn it without
oven taking a lesson. ,
i A i
*
V
*-J.t
I / 3
"1 never had any desire to toll." cbn- ,
tinned Mrs. Wack, with a mischievous I
twinkle in her blue eyes. "It always |
seemed to nie that it was nobody's i
business."
The remark was not meant to he
rude. It was merely expressive. Mrs. '
Wack said so.
"The longer we kept the secret.'
she observed, "the easier it was. It's j
really just a matter of practice. A? i
llrst 1 had to be a little careful how I i
referred to our trip to Hlizabeth?"
"You know wo were niahriod over at ;
Klizabeth." interrupted Mr. Wack. ra- |
diant with happiness and quite ready '
to tell all he "knew. His wife resumed ,
the theme.
"1 told my mother I was going to a
little social affair. I had to cive some '
reason for dressing up', you know."
Of course this was the truth. Mow
could a wedding bo anything else j
than "'a social affair?" Resides that
Mabel had on her very prettiest dress
?a blue silk -with a corsage bouquet
of lilies of the valley and bride roses.
To see her no one would ever have
dreamed that she was going into
training as a long-distance secret j
keeper. Certainly there was no Indication
of poverty.
It was the poverty fairy tale followed
by one of great wealth suddenly
acquired that made Mrs. W'ack almost
decide never to reveal to the world '
whether or not it really hurt to keep
a secret.
Refutes Gossips' Tales.
"The gossips said we kept our marriage
a secret because Will was not
over rich just at that time," she exclaimed
ulmoHt tragically, and William
joined vigorously in denouncing as
untrue all the many statements to
that effect.
"I was in just as good a position
to innrrv four v?:iri ucn I " ?
day," lie announced. "It wasn't poverty
but a desire to please Mabel's
parents that made us keep, the secret.
They wanted her to teach school, and
she wanted to teach. I didn't want
her to teach, and so we decided to
wait until she was willing to give
tip "
That was enough. It brought the >
young wife again out from the realms
of silence.
"Until Will was willing to let tne
keep on teaching." she observed.
"Now that he says I may, I rather
j think I'll not teach loner than next
I June."
Suffragettes should not lose the >
moral of this tale. The woman who i
can keep a secret is sure of victory. j
I I know, for Mrs. Wack said so.
"It is natural lor me to be reticent."
she explained. "That's why it was
easy for me to keep a secret. I can- :
not recall an instance when 1 felt the
least inclined to tell."
Think of it, O daughters of Eve!
What heroism to compier even the in
clination to embroider a "W on an in- ;
conspicuous wash cloth! What self- 1
sacrificing devotion to principle that,
for four years could undergo the privileges
of Ituth and resist proclaiming
from the housetops, "Ills people are
my people and my mothi r is his mother-in-law!
"
All honor to the Newark woman
who so tactfully divined the time to
keep silent and the time to speak.
So far as it is known, only one otlie.r
pioneer has preceded her into the 1
realms of secrecy. That one is the
immortal bard who wrote the pathetic
stanza beginning with the soulful line,
"I 1/ no it.' comofhintr I uton't ^11 "
It was just that way with Mrs. 1
VVack. With William it was different. :
He couldn't keep a secret.
"I haven't told Mabel yet," he willspered.
"but the boys at the bank presented
me with a purse this afternoon?"
Mabel reappeared and the whisper j
ceased
Mr. and Mrs. William Wack of
Newark. N. J., are not living in the
lordly splendor that the alleged fortune
made in Wall street would indicate.
Neither have they ever been
much impoverished They are just |
two very agreeable and unaffected |
young people, housekeeping for the i
past few weeks in a eonimod ? cs j
apart melt In an old-fashioned house, j
\ )
/
occupied on the first floor by Mrs. '
W.n-k's girlhood tri? ml but not her
confidante She never hud one.
Their First Meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Wank met at a party
at I'ncle George's?William's I'ncle
George?in 190G. They were very
youthful, so they waited two years bofore
slipping quietly into the state of
silence and connubial bliss.
After four years they emerged
First came the announcement cards,
then the searchlight of publicity.
Kven the faithful keeping of a secret
has its consequences.
"It's been worse than a church wedding."
sighed the aggrieved ones, re
trenching themselves behind wedding
rrift^J rovinlviwl i tool'L ? loet cf o mi
before surrendering to the attacking
party.
"We never wanted to appear in
print. "We"?
It was no use. The citadel was
taken and the Wacks surrendered.
Mrs. Wack modestly admitting that
for five years sin- has played the or
gaa in the Union stn et M E. church
of Newark; that ilurold <\ K. Foeller.
the Columbia senior who enacted
the role of best man and helped keep
the secret four years, is now in btisl
noss in New York; that. she. herself,
is a suffragette and that she has been
more harassed since she told her
secret than in all the four years of '
keeping it.
Lucky Hill! Even the lee man will
never know how much Hill paid the
Elizahctan pastor' The bubble of the
witch's cauldron has broken. Secrecy
is no longer a lost art, but a discovery.?
Marie Coolidgo Ttask in New
Yorlc World
COAST GUARD DESERVE PRAISE
Very Little Is Heard of Men Who
Suffer Hardships to Save Human
Lives and ProDertv.
Housed snug by the fire, safe from
the gale that whistles in the eaves.
It's hard to realize that such a winter
ns this brings no "piping times o'
peace" for those who stand at the
very door of the perils of tho sea
to save what they may of human
life ami property. Of the army and
the navy unending tales are tcljl In a I
thousand papers and magazines, but
of the stalwart corps that braves the
lonely dangers of our coast we hear j
little or nothing. Yet an army of
over in.nou men stands watch, and
watch about to tend the lights and
buoy or hasten succor to those who
go down to the sen in ships Tonight
though the winter star.'ight or
the driving storm the beacons flash
their warnings from the rocks and
shoals and ruddy lights gleam in little
gale-swept stations on the sand
where the surges pound and pound
and pound?little stations where nenr
the socket-gun and motor boat there
sit quiet men watching and waitir ;
for the flare of the rocket, or the helpless
shout that tolls tie r patrols of
a ship in danger on the shore
Then conies the call for brain and
brawn and bravery greater than ever
sighted a turret gun 01 faced a bullet.
Out with the boat, Into the surf and
over the har. Out with the gun ..ml
the rocket to send her a line* Stand
ay to man the breeches boiiv! Waist
(loop in me winter son. what matter
if the \\ in<l drives sand and snow
and spuno till It raws the faro and
hands are numb with the biting cold''
There's life aboard that ship; and
her. are men for you.
Philosophy.
Lot us learn to be content with
what we have. Let us get rid of our
false estimates. s?>t up all the higher
ideals?a quiet home; vines of our c wn
planting; a few books full of the Inspiration
of genius; a few friends ;
worthy of being loved and able to
love us in turn; a hundred innocent
pleasures that bring no pain or sorrow:
a devotion to the right that will
never swerve: a simple religion
empty of all bigotry, full of trust and
hope and love?and to such a philosophy
this world will give up all 'hiempty
joy it has.?David Swing
f >.&
4
Backache M
Nothing ages anyone more quickly than
weak kidneys.
II is not alone the aching back, the stiff,
painful joint*, but the evil effect of bad.
poisoned blood on the nerves, the vital
organs and the digestion.
The condition of the kidneys makcB good
health or ill-health. (
The kidnevs are the filters of the blood.
Active kidneys lilter from the blood every
day over one ounce of poisonous waste
and pass it off dissolved in the urine.
If the kidneys are weak or diseased, only
part of this filtering is done anil the blood
is heavy with uric acid and other poisonous
or waste matter.
Instead of being nourished by the
blood, the nerves and vital organs are irritated.
and the circulation, digestion, etc.,
are disturbed.
If your back aches constantly, if your
joints are stiff, lame and painful, suspect
the kidneys.
Kidney sufferers are likely to feel dull,
heavy, restless at night, rheumatic, dizzy
at times, subject to headaches and annoyed
with sharp, piercing pains that
i.i.iiw nm k. mi iiiiHin anu resi uiqiossioie.
Moan's Kidney l\!ls are the best-recommended
and most widely used remedy for
weak or diseased kidneys. They act quickly:
contain no poisonous nor habit-forming
drugs and leave no bad nfter-alTects
of any kind just make you feel better all
over.
MATERNAL INTUITION.
. p>
'
* i -- i ,Mrs.
I'ig?Now, Curly, when you're
at the party 1 want you to behave like
a perfect hog!
If your appetite is not what it should ho |
perhaps Malaria is developing. It ifl'eets J
the whole system. OX I1)IX1\ will clear
nwav the germs, rid you of Malaria and
generally improve your condition. Adv.
Eager for His Rights.
As little Freddie had reached the
mature ago of three, and was about to
discard petticoats for manly raiment
in the form of knickerbockers, his
mother determined to make the occa- \
sion a memorable one. The Hristol
Times tells what happened.
Tho breakfast table was laden
with good fare as the newly-breeched 1
Infant was led into the room. "Ah." j
cried the proud mother, "now you are
a little man!"
The fledgling was in ecstasies. 1)1 splaying
his garments to their full ad- ]
vantage, he edged closer to his mother,
and whispered, '"Mummie. can I
call pa Mill now?"?Youth's Companion.
FACE DISFIGURED WITH
SKIN TROUBLE
3107 Foster Ave., Baltimore, Md.? '
"About five months ago little blisters
appeared on my face. They looked
like blisters from lire burns. They
Itched and burned something terrible,
which caused mo to rub them and they
burst, then sores appeared which dis- !
figured my face. My face was all full
of sores. The disease spread from my
face to my neck and back. When anything
touched them they would burn
and stick to my clothes, which kept
me from sleeping and made me suffer
terribly.
"I used home remedies and I used
a salve but it did no good. I suffered
about three months then I saw the
Cuticura Soap and Ointment advertised
and I thought I would send and
get a sample and try them. I used the
snmple of Cuticura Soap and Ointment
and they helped me a great deal,
KO T honcht onmo ntwl *io/wl tl...??? <
two months and they completely cured
me." (Signed) Edward V. Thomas.
Mar. 26, 1912.
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
freo with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address
post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Hoatoa."
Adv.
Wanted Slavees for Missouri.
On January 27, 1778, Don Hernardo
do (Salver., governor of the Spanish
province of Louisiana, which included
Missouri, petitioned the king of Spain
for aid for the settlers along the Missouri
river and Mississippi river in
Missouri. "The said inhabitants," lie
wrote, "in order to promote the cul
lure of these plants (flax and hemp),
would desire that the compassion of
the king should deign to provide then:
with negro slaves on credit, for whom
they may pay with the crops afore
said."
Hi* Status.
"That inan 1h something more than
a more marine."
"Do you mean he Is an ultramarine
r*
To prevent Malaria is far letter than
to cure it. In malarial countries take a
<io?e of OXIDINK regularlv one eaeh week i
and nave vonreelf from Chills* and Fever
and other malarial troubles. Adv.
It tak ? a sharp inan to make a tool
of a dull one.
?
* i < v
akes Anyon
? r,.- rr.tr. - c.
j ju'vcrj ? mure i euj u Ofpry j
f
WPBaa? ! linn ????
our Back is Lame?Remember the
'S KIDNEY" I
. Price 50 cents. fostcr-Milburn Co? Buffalo,
Mi
Easier and Pleasanter.
Talking: of ladies' shortcomings re...iio
b ?i ..# - I
> umo ?* j i * v cuvij uruiu ui *i liir^i'
and determined-looking woman who
wore* a very large hat one evening at
the theater.
"Madam," said the attendant politely.
*1 must request you to remove ;
your hat. It is annoying this gentleman
behind you."
The massive lady turned and
haughtily surveyed the complainant.
"I)o you mean that little weedy, undersized
creature?" she asked.
This gentleman behind you." the
attendant correctpd her.
The lady settled herself In her
place.
"You will ilmi it easier and pleasanter."
she said decisively, "to re- [
move him!"
Beans in His Head.
Two beans, one of which had
sprouted into an embryo plant, were :
removed from the head of a Mexican
laborer at San Bernardino. Cal., by a )
Iihvsieisin KYir innntlio tlm mini K.wl
complained of seven? pains. The
beans had entered his head through
his left ear. The growing plant was 1
yearly an inch long and apparently
had flourished in the ear tube.
A Household Remedy.
Which works from outBide. CIIESTOL
(Chest Ointment) will relieve
quickly croup, coughs, colds, pneumonia
and all affections of chest and
throat. Vso freely and RUB! RUB! !
Rl'15! Now sold by all medicine deal
ers. Should he in every home. Burwell
& Dunn Co.. Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Adv.
This Is Unkind.
Tommy?l'op, what is a free ;
thinker?
Pop A freethinker, my son. Is any j
man who isn't married. Philodelphia I
Record.
For SI MMI.lt HEAD ACT IKS
llicKs' ("APITPINE Is the best remedy?
no innttfr whut causes tliem?whether
from the heat, silting In draughts, feverish
condition, etc. Kb-., 2>o and M>c per
bottle at medicine stores. Adv.
Doubtful.
"Have you a good cook now?"
"I don't know. 1 haven't been home '
since breakfast!"?lxutdon Opinion.
ITCH Relieved In 30 Minute*.
Wool ford's Hunitnry I.otlou lor nil kinds of
contagious llcb. At Druggiuts. Adv.
The flirt is always practicinK a i
game she never intends to play.
Sirs. Winalow'n Soothing Syrup for Chile! 'en
teething. softens tin- gums, reduces inlluiutnif
tion, at lay h pntn. cures wltid rolli'.S.V u buttle Atfv.
The sting of defeat outlasts the
sweets of victory.
Marnina Says
"Its Safe for Li?
CHUdreny^.
CONTAINS \jff
opiates
I. it. ?. - * >1 ! !! I
tOO pounds of on
Ordinary PortMlzef
(tmiuc i-S-2) Both 0?
<? ?
f FILl.Ett I CQillcd "C1
' SU l-l.S I
n rr b aVfJOV soda | fertilizers
ia i.BS | 1
i are very
\ ACID I
V j>noapMATS W
M 6o mu Hswuuj?g?awrar
i 1 If you prefer
9 tilizcrs, insist on
/t.mTtvwt.;rxii'4ulY Potash in them 1
as well as to raise
contain more than three times as
It was found years ago that the com posit ion
of the crop is not a sure guide to the most
profitable fertiliser, but itd<><?not take a v.-ry
smart man to figure out that a well-balanced
ferltllier sbaalif coatala at lent aa much Potash
aa Pbaspborlc Add. Insist on having it so.
If you do not tind the brand you want, make 1
\ Talk to your dealer and ask bim to car
tock or order it for you. It will pay y
For particulars aa
GERMAN KALI WORKS. In
Mosadaock Hock, Chicago. III. laak A Trast Kit
EadnMt.
rihBBBHBaSEBaA
IH DfitCoQffhHTrnn. TutM Good. 11m El
* j In tlmt. Bold bj Drorrlfttt. Kd
yij.i:?4.iiH:ifviinTT^|
^
The following case is typical of
iffccted by Doan's Kidney Pills.
cstimony the best evidence.
WISHED FOR
^ured After Doctors Gave Up Hop*
G. W. Ii. Nesbitt, Marion, Ky., says:
'Kidney disease had made me n ehroain
nvnlid. 1 couldn't set out of bed for two
reeks nt a time and no tongue could de- s|^^H
cribe my suffering. J often wished that
leath might come and end my agony. The
lidney secretions were thick and heavy
ind the color of blood. My sight had al*
nost failed. My limbs were badly swollen
nd the doctors said I had dropsy. They
leld out little hope for my recovery. 1
ouldn't raise my arms above my head, in
act. my side was almost paralysed. I
ind lost all hope, when a relative told mn
0 try Doan's Kidney .Pills. I began tn
niprove from the very first dose. Before
had finished one box of Doan's Kidney
'ills. I was greatly relieved of the pain
ind as I continued using them. I was ovcroved
to see the dreadful symptoms from
vnich I had suffered so many yenrs. leavd
ne, one by one. In three months I waa
1 well man, attending to my work. _ I am
irmly convinced that Doan's Kidney
Pills arc the greatest remedy in the world
or diseased kidneys."
'ILLS <jy
N Y Pro
Surprised.
"I nrn going to bring my son up so
that like George Washington he can
say: 'I cannot tell a lie.'"
"Why, I thought you were going
to bring him up to follow In your footr
stops?"
A great minority of summer ills ?e*
due to Malaria in suppressed form. Laasitndc
and headaches are but two symptoms.
OXIDINR eradicates the Malaria
germ and tones up th?j entire system. Adv.
Turn about is fair play?except
when applied to a hand organ.
J
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver to
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gentlvbut lirmlv com-^ ?
pel a lazy liver to^HMf 'ADTCD^Q
do its duty. ^P 1J1TTLE
stipation, ln-^jjK WW |IVER
digestion,
Headache, ~
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS
If you fcfl "iml of sorts"?"run down"or-'?ot the
blues."sufTnr from kidney.bladdnr.nnrvouadlfirasoa,
chronic wv?kni'swi. ulcers, skin nrupllons.plIrs .Ac.,
wrlto for njy KKKKbook. It Is the mo*. instruct!**
medical book erer written. It tells all about thesw
.1 im'rm'h undthn remarkiiblncn res effected bjthoNaw
Krrn.h Iteraedy "TIIKRAPION" No. I.No J, No.?
and you ran decide foryoursnlf If It Is the remedy for
your ailment. Don't send a cunt. It's absolutely
r'llKK. No ' fol1ow-up"clrculats. Dr.I.eClnrr .Mrvd.
Co.. Haveratock ltd., Ilsmpitasd, LmSm, Sag.
gs&asa Hsis'Sfpa- i
M|MHrciSCIwiur< aud bwuitifles th* tote
HI "> ni- >1* a bunnsnt growth.
BiHjy ^|n?nr rails to liretor* Oray
MTjri|\ - *??ir vv ivm louuuai VOUJC. I
KJ%rfO?^BBrrt*T<-nt? hair fall Inc. I
?2^k?SULlLl?^J-?SCClSl!?_aJ
Mi
;
nRHP^Y thbatm). qitoquick r*^'
JFmi UllUr^l nef( usually remoTe awel\
ling and short breath In a few days and
Ms.~wE entire relief In 11-16 days, trial treatment.
Cr fl FKE?. DH """" bos S, K?i i.lUuU,Ua.
/f\ K/Anil/r and High Ursde
Mj> C) K If II A It O finishing. Mail
LffrntS^ nwn^a-aanw orders given Spertoi]lt3L
r'H' Attention. Prices ri-asonabla.
j^QS^Hervtce prompt. He nil for Price I.int.
?^ .. mm* Divno? iUAKLUiUa, (V
rPrr C A MPT P*C <>f elovon (llrr.rrn*
* I'LL a/\lYlrL.LO liurnili'?K. new arinDllflc
pri'paralliiii*, to mnko old, lonni. inon mid
women lM<?utlful unit utt nirtlvo. \\ rn<- today.
As vIlt^i wunlcd. Ludalit Laboratories to., Washlagtoa, D.C.
W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE. NO. 1-1913Well,
balanced
Fertilizer
these are _ ?
omplete"
r nitrate, or soda
_ _ at too
I but they
different. 'Sw
- I
rcvly-miied fer- .wmT.0> M
iiavmg cnougn i i>otash i
to raise the crop
the price. Crops
much Potash as phosphoric acid, i
car by adding enough Potaali to make It right.
To increase the i'otash 4% per cent, ((or
cotton and grain), add one bag Muriate of ,
l'ot.ish per ton of fertilirer; to increaae it
9 per cent, (truck, potatoes, tobscco. corn,
etc.). add two bags Sulphate or Mar late
> per ton.
Zjgt?& Potash Pays
id prices writ* to *
c*a 42 Broadway. Now York
If.. Ssvaaaah, 6a. WMtasy tak IHg.iwtrta?.la
, Atlanta. 6a.
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