Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, July 15, 1907, Image 8

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THE ATLANTA GEOKUiAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, JULY 15. 1WT. DISEASES Bone Pains, Itching Skin Diseases, Eczema. Permanently cured by taking Botanic Blood Balm. If you have achee and pains In bones, back and joints, Itching skin, blood feels hot or thin, risings and bumps on the skin, aore throat, plmplea, or offensive eruptions, or rash on skin, are run Down, or nervous, ul cers on any pert of the body, scales or watery blisters of ecxema, carbuncle* or bolls, take Botanle Blood Balm, guaranteed to cure even the worst and most deep-seated coses. Heals all sores, stops all swellings, makes blood pure and rich, completely changing the entire body Into a clean, healthy con dition. B. B. B. la the recognised blood remedy for all Blood Diseases. CANCER CURED. If you have a persistent pimple, wart, swelling, shooting, stinging psins, take Blood Balm and they will disappear be fore they develop Into Cancer. Many apparently hopeless cases of Cancer, suppurating swellings, eating sores or tumor cured by B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) is pleasant and safe to take. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Composed of pure Botanic Ingredients. Strengthens weak kidneys and weak stomachs, cures dye- E spsla. Ssmpls sent free by writing lood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga, Sold by all druggists at'tl per large bottle, or *ent by express prepaid. TROLLEY LINE IS BEING_PROJECTED Company Plans Long Inter- urban with Capital of $5,000,000. A nurvpy for another Interurbnn trolley rood running out of Atlontn In now being mode, niul when It In finished work will probably be commenced on building a line to Augusta. The company which la doing tbla la the Atlanta and Carolina Construction Com pony, with James W. English, Br„ aa presi dent, Matthew Mason, vice-president and general manager, and M. T. Edgerton, sec- retary. The company la capitalised at 15,000,000, and waa granted a franchise through sev eral Atlanta streets some time ago by council. At that time, however, It was uot known who was behind the company. Neither wus It known that Atlnutu waa the destination of the road. The route from Atlnuta to Augusta will be from here to Llthoula, then to Conyers, to Monroe, to Athens, to Washington and then on to Augusta, a total distance of 180 mile* Ho far the engineering party, of which <tenoral Manager Mason Is at tho beau, has surveyed a route from Atlanta to Conyers and from Athena to Augusta. Tho Intervening route from Athena to Conyers will lie surveyed probably this week. Mr. Mason states that the entire route will lie surveyed within the next three weeks. Csptaln English, while admitting that tho compuur had been organised with a capital of J5,0(i0,000, said the entire route to Au gusta had not been surveyed and that at present the company was uot prepared to give out the entire details, but that In a abort time something of Interest to the public would be given out The route Into Atlantu will he Into the limits of the city on Confederate avenue, to Boulevard, to (ilennwood avenue, to l/tgnu street to Martin street, 40 Haweon street, to Pulliam street to Garnett street, to Mad ison avenue, to Alabama street up to Broad “jet, with the city depot for Itroad and Alabama streets. Th? Ghost of Lschrain Castle Jl Thrilling Novel of Love, Intrigue, Tragedy and the Mystery of a Famous Diamond By MR8.C. N. WILLIAMSON, Author of “Th’e Lightning Conductor,' Etc* Etc, CHAPTER XIII—Concluded. With the fierce strength that only desperation gives, the girl tore at the hand which covered her mouth, and regaining her liberty for a second's space, uttered such a shriek as she could not have given In a moment of leae peril. It rang wildly through the corridor, and waa terrible even In the glrl'a own ears. It seemed to her that 11 might almost make a dead man turn In hla grave to be called thus. But would It wake John Kenrlth and Cap tain Oxford ? She could but pray that It might be 1, for the scream was stifled In the midst by the hand which crushed her face again, with an Iron grip under her chin, and a pressure so savage over her llpa that It seemed the blood must spring through the delicate akin. Her neck waa bent ao roughly that her mua- cles were strained and her breath chok ed back upon her lungs. A shower of sparks seemed to rise and fall before her eyes, smarting and raining tears In the thick smoke. She struggled again, but vainly, and In tpe agonising struggle of body and mJnd against the unseen, compelling force, lost breath and cQnsclousness. When she awAked, It seemed that she waa lying on a bed—a bed at the same time comfortable and familiar. What had happened? Had she had a horrible*dream? she masked herself. There was the same pleasant, ming ling fragrance of dried lavender and old wood which she had smelled every night when she had waked up In the wonderful bed In the tower room. Often she had told herself that these scents would make her think of that room, no matter where she might be, and how many years might have passed. Only last night she had thought that, not knowing she was not to sleep In that bed again. But, she said In her mind, perhaps It was part of the dream that she had been changed to another room. Surely she could pot mistake. No other bed could be Just like that. And then If she were not there, why should she he In bed at all? What about the fire shin ing behind tho closed door In the cor ridor, her frantic knocklngs, her scream, and the hand that had choked away her breath? Had she really gone thriajgh that fearful scone? Oh, she could not doubt It. Perhaps, even at this minute, Mr. Kenrlth and Cuptaln Oxford were being burned to death. Somehow she must save them. She tried to sit up, but something held her down. Her arms were crossed behind her hack nnd tied together at the wrist; she could feel where they were bound. And her feet were bound also. She was powerless to move, but at least she could cry out. Suddenly she remembered how near the corridor of the burning room os the tower. If the Are spread It would reach the tower; and If In reality she were lying on her old bed In the tower room, It was only the question little time before tho Are should reach her, and she would be burned to death. Klspeth Dean was young anti strong, the black depths or some hideous cubl lette; but she rolled from the bed upon a solid floor, covered with something soft, like a thick nug. And the fall was so slight that she was not even Jarred. For a few seconds there was com plete stillness, and then something that moved brushed against her cheek. She believed that It was the bed being rolled away again. "Now I am to be murdered? perhaps, was the thought that crept coldly Into Elupeth'a mind; but she could do noth ing to avert whatever fate might be In store for her, except to cry out, and If she did that) It would probably pre cipitate her death. It was by instinct rather than calcu lation that she lay still, scarcely breathing. Voices whispered near her in the darkness. She could neither recognize the tones nor make out the words, but she felt her fate was being discussed, perhaps hanging In the balance. "If only they would believe me faint ing," she thought. "They will wonder that I don't make a sound, and pres ently they'll strike a light and look at my face. 1 must lie wi^h my eyes shut and hold my breath as long as I can." Scarcely had she formed this plan of action, when a stream of white light fell upon her closed eyelids. With all the force of her will she kept them steady, her long lashes lying on her cheeks without a flicker, "FalntecL" came a whisper, louder than before. • "Can't be sure," murmured a second voice. "She may be shamming.” A moment later Elspeth felt the pressure of a hand on her chest. "She doesn't seem to breathe," was the whispered copunent. Well, then, let us leave her for the present. She can't possibly escape." . "She cun screen.” "If she did, she wouldn’t be heard." "Yet we are whispering." "Loud voices might rouse the girl to consciousness. It’s more convenient that she should be as she Is. We've no time to waste upon her now. Little wretch! If she hadn't spoiled our game down below with her yells, the Are ould presently have saved us all trouble. Our two birds would have been killed with one stone.” Too late to think of, that. There must be no suspicion against us. We had better go now. But I would feel safer if I were certain she could make no noise." Simple enough to close her mouth. You mean”— Not what you think I do. We can't afford to risk the smallest telltale stain when we show ourselves downstairs among the people who’ve boen roused by the Are, and, besides, I've another plan. The thing must be done before morning, and in such a way that she can be carried back to her bed and laid there quietly, with no one to guess that she met death by violence. A dose of laudanum Is the thing; the bottle found by her side. It will be thought that she killed herself because she'd been discharged." You think of everything.” I have had some experience; other wise I shouldn’t be where l am.” Can you get hold of the laudanum?" Yes. I always keep plenty of stage properties. There, I've made a gag of a sort out of my handkerchief. A sec ond's work to At It in, and she can hen she likes, without causing Otters Superior Advantages In College Courses. Music, Art and Elocution are Specialties. Founded Alfred Shorter 1877 SHORTER COLLEGE Education under ideal conditions la offered to girls and young women who can furnish satisfactory references. Session opens Sept. 12th. Requests for reservations will receive prompt and courteous attention. Interested persona are cautioned against delay fct writing; but if the registration fee la received too late to secure the admission of the sppUcsnt, the money wJJJ be promptly re- .turned. If you would like te see the oew l$0-pjgo catalogue, illustrated, BOX 1005! ROME, GEORGIA. Endowed for the higher education of women WASHINGTON SEMINARY, NORTH AVENUE AND PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA 30th year begin* September 12. Faculty of 18 specialist*. 23b last session. DISTINCTIVE FEATURES: Small classes, averaging ait ” ten. to secure personal Instruction: conservatory advantages t n \r u '. Art, Elocution; three courses of study leading to full graduation: certifies.‘ admits to Vassar, Wellesley, etc.: boarding students limited to to vide refined home life; excellent primary department. Write for catsin.„ or phone 647-J North. L. D. SCOTT. EMMA SCOTT, Principals, IS YOUR BOY PREPARING FOR GEORGIA TECH? IF SO, SEND HIM TO DONALD FRASER SCHOOL WE REFER, BY PERMISSION, TO PRESIDENT K. O. MATHESON or THE GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY ' For Catalog Writs Q. Holman Gardner, Principal, Decatur, Ge. wake r.is|ituu ucihi wim youiiK Him 01 rung, „ a i, , „ vetnel^The'physlcal* repulsion'to* death I ^l£f * hearu was Intense in her. nn.i the erv „„ versat on, and when a hand pressed GIRLS AND WOMEN TERRIFIED BY FIRE Chicago. July 15.—Fire ruined the aouth annex to the Iljrda Park Hotel yesterday and the firemen had a difficult task to pre vent Jt from communicating to the main •t met ure. Two hundred and fifty gueiita, moat of them women and children, together with thirty-five of the servant girls and half n doten men employee* were terrified when the building filled with amok*:. Four were overcome by %moke and'two were badly cut by broken glaaa. Ita way to her llpa wnn rendered even more piercing by the quick horror of thin thought. Hhe screamed long nnd nhrllly. but a voice within her seemed to nay with the echo of her own shriek that rung In her cars: "If you are In the tower, one will hear you. You might rile hundred deatha before any one would come/' The girl shivered from head to foot, nnd lying there helpless, waiting the horror that warn to come, she felt that the bed had begun to move. There had been a cllfk, like the nharp Hound of a released nprlng, and then alowly, •moothly. the bed began to glide along ah If eliding In a groove. ch/TptefTxiv. The Mystery of the Tower. BlHpeth's eyeg were wide open, but the darkneaH was like a dark cloth laid upon them. She could see noth ing; but as the bed slowly moved, Inch by Inch, she felt an Intensely cold air which surged round her like the wind made by a pair of giant wings. Then the bed stopped, still In thick darkness, nnd she heard a nourtd of hurried foot steps and of light breathing. There was another, curious, clicking sound, nnd while the girl wondered In chill terror what would come next, the bed on which she lay tilted suddenly up at such an extreme angle thut she rolled off. There was a brief Instnnt of horror, ns she tried vainly to save herself, ex- Donald Fraser Summer School. SPECIAL TEACHING IN E NGLI8H AND MATHEMATICS. ERNEST L. LLOYD, D«catur, Ga. Ball Phon, 306. TO ALL ADVERTISERS— During the present important agitation The Georgian is easily the best advertising medium in Georgia. It. is going to the best class of newspaper readers in Atlanta and over Georgia. We are offering advertisers an increased daily circulation upon a cost basis of 30,000. Can you afford to miss this’ opportunity ? i ' ? Elspeth henril every word of this con- was Intense" in her. and the cry on I J h^Vlomh'she it. .vuv t„ h.r lit.. wn« rotirinrfui »von down her chin to open her mouth she lay llitjp nnd motionless ns before, mak ing no resistance. A great lump of cam bric was forced between her teeth, and still she feigned unconsciousness. Her hearing seemed now almost abnormally keen. She heard tho breathing of the two men. She heard the soft sound of footfalls on the thick rug of carpet, nnd at last a faint click which seemed to come from a distance. After that all wus still, and she knew that she had been left alone. She had heard why the men woro go ing. and It was reasonable to suppose that they would be gone some time. Still It could not be so very long, If she were to bo disposed of "before morn ing," nfter the fashion which had with so much quiet grlmness been suggest ed. They would need darkness to hide the deed, If she were to be carried through tho house and laid upon tho bed In the new room whose number they must already know. It Is dllflcult to recognise a voice from a whisper, and Elspeth could not have guessed the Identity of either speakor from the murmurs she had heurd; nevsrtheless she waa sure that she had guessed the name of one .man. The other was still a mystery to her: she had no Idea who he could be. But, after all, It mattered little. Nothing, Indeed, need mntter much to her now. unless she could free herself and es- cape. To sxpect to do this seemed like ex pecting to perform a miracle. And yet Elspeth could not believe that she was to die tonight. ltl u For her there was but one ray of light In darkness. She had hoard one of the men say to the other that slu* had "spoilt their game." That must mean, the thought, that the alarm she hud given had been heard; that John Ken- rith and Captain Oxford had been saved. And the idea that she had boen able to do this gave her courage to at tempt more. She did not know where she was, but If she could only free her self she could And out; nnd If, after ward, she could escape, she would be able to give at least one villain up to justice. ••Oh, if I could only loosen these band £ that hold my arms," she said to hirself. "If I could do that, .all the rest mid be easy, perhaps. Klspeth Dean was a lithe !lnd supple well as a slender creature, with all the elasticity of youth and health, a child she had boen able to do all sorts of wonderful things with her lively lit tle body, und she and her brotner, two or three years older than herself, had often played a glorious play in which they were contortionists In a nursery circus. It was many years since the £rl had practiced any of the feats for which she hid been famous among her little companions, and Indeed, she had forgotten all about Hem until this mo tnent. Now, however, she suddenly remem Ik rod how well. In the old days, her body hud been ac-ustomed to obey her will. And In the desperate danger which threatened her she called up her ancient skill to her old. So did she writhe and twist her slim arms and shoulders as to loosen the bonds made to hold less supple muscles. Presently she felt a slight relaxing of the bands which held her wrists. Slowly, slowly, grudging each moment, she twisted one hand out of bondage, the fiftieth part of an inch at a time. Then suddenly it was free, nnd she could have sobbed In Joy and thanksgiving, though she as far from being out of danger. With one hand nt liberty. It was but the work of a few seconds to tear the gag from her mouth, and to release the other hand. Then she sat qp, and un wound a long, narrow strip of wooly material which felt like knitted work, from her ankles. She was free to move, free to escape—If she could but And a way. Tremulously, tottering a little at flrst, she scrambled to her feet, and for the flrst time since .she had rolled from the moving bed seriously asked herself where she was. Gropingly, she tried to And a wall, stumbling on, catching her foot in the wrinkled folds of a rug, and saving herself from a fall by seizing an edge of some hanging drapery. Thus she steadied herself, and found behind that drapery the wall for which she had searched. Her hand touched a surface of wood, and passing her Angers along it, she discovered that it ended as i door might end, in a framing of stone. "The tower wall!" she said to her self; and remembered how the head of the strange old carved bed In the al cove had seemed to be set In the wall. '•That was thfe secret of it,” she thought. "It was made for a murder trap in the old, old days when people used often to get rid of their guests In the night, and no one outside ever, ever knew what had become of them.” The girl stood still for a moment, viv idly recalling the sounds whlch^fcad robbed her of rest, as she lay In that curious, carved bed in the alcove of the tower room. If she were right in her guess, sho must be now In some secret passage Just behind the wall; and If the footsteps she had heard there were made by human beings, not ghosts, those human beings must have found their way in through some hidden entrance. Elspeth would have given anything now for a match, even a single match; but It was useless to wish, and she be gan to feel along the surface of wood for something like a spring. She could discover nothing, and, giving up hope at last, she groped farther on, until to her delight she came upon a steep, nar row stairway. It also was covered with some thick, soft material, as If to deaden the sound of footsteps, but here and there a board creaked; and tho girl fancied that the noise was like some she had heard, lying In bed. In the tower room. The stairway was so exceedingly steep as to resemble a ladder, and the girl counted thirty steps before she reached the top. Above was a floor of wood, which she tested with her hand before trusting her feet upon it. She imagined now that she must be In the rbom above the one she hud oc cupied In the tower; and as she had been told that it was in a ruinous con dition, she stepped carefully, but she found no sign of loose debris as she moved cautiously along, literally inch by inch, nnd it occurred to her that the stairway she had seen bricked up had probably been made a no-thorough tare tor some other reason than tho one be lieved by Mrs. Warden, the house keeper. There was no time to speculate upon that now, but Elspeth could not help recalling the night when the blood-red drops had rained through the cracks between the oak rafters In her room. Now she was In the abode of mystery, yet she could guess as little at the ex planation as on that night when she started at the fuillng rubles as though unable to believe her eyes. As sho moved slowly along she stretched out her arms, trying to touch the wall, as she had before, when sud denly she tumbled over something which lay at her feet—something soft and heavy, over which she would have fallen If she had not recovered her bal ance with a quick backward step. In the excitement of discovery and progress Klspeth had almost forgotten her fear, but now it returned upon her, like a cold, overwhelming wave. What was this sbft, heavy bundle on the floor of the hidden room In the tower? She hardly dared stoop touch it with her hand, which grew ice cold with fear of the coming contact. Though every moment was of the ut most Importance now, and life or death might He, for her, in the difference of a second, she bent down with slow re luctance. Her groping fingers touched something smooth and silky, like” a woman's hair, and her Impulse w spring up with a shriek. But she forced the cry back, and Instead of drawing away her hand sho passed it over the silky surface once again. There was no doubt this time. She was touching a woman’s hair, hair elaborately dressed In thick waves and coils. Still compelling herself to do a thing against which her flesh and blood rebelled, she touched a face so cold that It might have been carved stone; then, when her trembling An gers had outlined the features, wan dered to a marble throat and motion less breast, clothed In silk, she yielded at last to her Impulse and shrunk back, sick with horror of the thing she had found In the darkness. Who was It who lay there, dead Who was the perpetrator, who the vie tim, of this crime—since crime it must surely be? Klspeth could not guess; neither nerves nor brain were in a con dition to make guesses, and her one thought waa now to escape from this horrible place—wherever it might be. She groped for the opening at the head of the stairs, and found it again, risking a fall by almost running down the steep steps; and thankful a* she ‘Ihe Georgia School of Technology is better equipped end organized In all departments than ever before, end prepared to do tho best work In Its bistory. FREE SCHOLARSHIPS In drder to afford the young men of Georgia high-class technical education, the legis lature baa assigned fifteen free scholarships to each county In the state. Take Immediate advantage of this opportunity and write for latest catalog, containing all Information necessary for a prospective student, end setting forth the advantages of the Georgia Tech. Advanced courses In MechenlcaL Electrical, Textile, Mining, and Civil Engineering, Engi neering Chemistry, and chemistry. Extensive and new equipment of Shop, MU1, Labora tories, etc. New Library and new Chemical Laboratory. The next session begins SepL 25, at which time prospective students are urged to report promptly. For further Information address „ _ ,, K.G. MATHESON, A. M., LL. D.. President, ATLANTA. GA. Agnes Scott College FOR WOMEN DECATUR (Near Atlanta), GA. Offer* advantage* equal to thoae of any educational Institution In the Bouth. Elegant buildings, modern gymnasium, laboratories and full college equipment. Exceptional advantages in Music and Art. Ideal climate. Health record unsurpassed. Box 16 F. H. GAINES, D. D., President. BINGHAM SCHOOL 1703 1908 been trained to be MIN at th« I PUjtMu. Orfinliittoc MrUTARY for dliclpll.it, control and carrU,.. Bon,,. from oth«r rohool* »ot rroalrod. Virion* boys *i»*ll 4 n Hlllng **010^ b»pl*4f* of honor. IUt*« ruroubl*. Ad4r«*( Cot. s, BINCJF ~ “ - “ •«j*U 4 M i NOR AM. Supi./xTF. D. H*. i/iJIHEVILLI. N. 0. KEEP CLOSE TO HOME while you are away. Order The Geor gian and News lent to you every day— anywhere. 45 centa a month or 10 cent, a week. Phone 49Z8 or write circula tion department, The Georgian and News. No trouble to change addrcia. Wouldn’t It pleaio you to read all the nawa every day while you are "vacat ing?” Order over 'phono 4928 or by letter to tho circulation department Tho Georgian and Nawa aant you.. 45 centa a month, 10 cento a weak. No trouble to change addresi. Emm 'College S ’ CONSERVATORY of MUSIC for Women CHARLOTTE,” N. c. Experienced teachers from leading I European and American Unlvcr- aities and Conservatories. College -plant, f2C0.000.00; Park I Campus 20 acres. New. flro-proof I buildings. A. B. and Elective De-1 greo Courses. Schools of Mus c, I Art, Expression. Climate, health and thoroughness unsurpassed. Interdenominational. Coat KM to 3300 per year. Opena S,pt 18th. Catalogue m Application CHAS. B. KIND, President DR J. LEWI8 BROWN"! WILL RE. CEIVE PUPILS IN HIGHER PIANO AND ORGAN PLAYING, HARMONY, COUNTERPOINT AND C0MP0SI. TION, IN HIS RESIDENCE STUDIOS, 271 IVY STREET. THREE MANUAL PIPE ORGANS FOR LE8S0NS AND PRACTICE. Lilt? UHtJ had felt a few minutes since, to reach the top, she was a hundred-fold more thankful to be at the bottom again Once more she searched with eager Angers for some spring on the wide panel of wood which she took to be the back of the movable bed; but finding nothing, she moved on until she came at last upon a knob of metal, and press ing it the panel slipped silently, smoothly away from under her hand. Instead, an open apace was left, through w hich her body could pass, and Elspeth flung her*elf into the aperture with a WARM SPRINGS, GEORGIA. The Resort for Health, Rest and Pleasure. Mountain Climate; better bathing than the Surf; only 75 miles from Atlanta; morning and afternoon trams via Southern Railway. Board $2.00 to $2.50 per day, $12.00 to $14.00 per week. Four or more weeks $10.50 to $12.50 per week. Special family rates. CHARLES L. DAVIS, Proprietor. QUEEN OF THE MOUNTAINS, Porter Springs, Ga. BELL PHONE. DAILY MAIL A most dollghtful drive ovor splsndid country road from Gainoavillo. Good hack aervica. No city’s smoke to mar tho sky. No sound of traffic strikes the ear; The hush of nature gives the lie To every thought of turmoil near. NOW OPEN. Correspondent, Can Addresi PORTER SPRING8 LAND CO., Joyous sensation of being saved. For an Instant the stood bewildered, but the faint light which took the glare of blackness seemed brighter than It really was, to eyes accustomed to the dark. Dimly she could see shapes she soon made out to be chairs and tables. She was In a furnished room, with un curtained windows that were squares of starlit sky. "The tower room!” she gold to herself, as the familiarity of the surroundings Impressed themselves upon her mind. ' "The tower room! And I must have come In by the entrance through which the ghost—or man—appeared the other night. That Is why he vanished so quickly and so silently. He came through a secret door, and went back by the same way.” Elspeth waited only long enough to close the door (which shut by a spring, ‘ as It had opened), made sure with an Montgomery, Ala., July 15.—A. Carmichael, speaker of the house of representatives, will be one of the next candidates for governor of Alabama on the Democratic ticket. Friends of the speaker Informally announced his can didacy today and .Mr. Carmichael tac itly confirmed It. This announcement exploring finger that she could find the mlchae/and Henrv 1 B*Vjr»v Jl ar ‘ spring again. If need were, and then Snant g^erno® ' the “ eu - WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS GREENBRIER WEST VIRGINIA (Ths "OLD WHITE" Sulphur.) Now opsp. Famous for Its sulphur baths. Modern Improvements, with prtvata P Q Permanent orchestra. Terms, SIS J° to ^ P* r ®onfb. VVrtta for Illustrated booklet. Address. GEO. A. MILLS, Jr„ Manager. Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs, w. V*. HOTEL • CUMBERLAND, New York. Southwest Corner Broadway, nt 54th Strwd. Near, 50th Street Kubwnv Station nnd 63a Street Elevated. SPEAKER CARMICHAEL CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR, she fled to the door which was the known entrance to the room. Bhe had feared to find it locked, nnd so It was, but only by a bolt on the In side, which she slipped back. Then she wo* In the landing which led to the tower stairway, and there the air was still thick and acrid with smoke. It was her one way down toward safety, but she took It with fear nnd trembling, realising fully that she was far from being out of danger yet. Continued in Tomorrow's Georgian. i LOW RATE EXCUR SION TICKETS to Moun tain and Seashore Resorts now on sale via Southern Railway. Phone 142, J. C. Lusk, . District Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. HEADQUARTERS FOR SOUTH ERNERS. , Ideal location near theaters, ehops ana Central .Park. NEW, MODERN AND ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF. Coolest Rummer hotel In New York- ontafde room,. Transient rotes f- ” ™ bath, and up. Special rates for summ« months. SEND FOR BOOKLET. HARBY P. BTBISON. , Formerly with Itotel Im:"”!* 1 - n. J. niNoiiAM, ... Formerly with Hotel WoodsaM. HOTEL WOODWARD, Broadway and Fifty-Fifth Street. NEW YORK CITY. A high class transient and resident'" hotel, catering otaly to » refin« and exclusive clientele. T. D. GREEN, Manager- THE GEORGIAN AND NEWS will be sent to anybody anywhere for any length of tlmo by notifying the culation department Phone * .. Standard 4401, 45 cents per month, « cents per week.