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PAGE SIX
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BEGIN HERE TODAY.
After eight years of married hfe,
Mark Sabre gradually realizes that
he is neither unde* - ' -uod by his pur
suit- wife, Mabel, ~or by his colleagues
in the firm of Fortune, East and Sa
bre. A promised partnership in the
business has been denied him and
promised to Twyning, a jealous asso
ciate. Suddenly an old sweetheart.
Ncntf, now the wife of dashing Lord
Tybar, returns after two years of
travel. Mabel becomes suspicious
when Nona writes Sabre an informal
invitation to visit her.
GO ON WITH THE STORY.
“An invitation? Whyever didn’t
she write me?” “Whyever,” again!—
“May I see it?”
He took the letter from his pocket
and nanded it to her. “It’s not ex
actly an invitation —not formal.
She did what he called “flicked”
the letter out of its envelope. He
watched her reading it and in his
mind he couid see as perfectly as
she with, her eyes, the odd, neat
script; in his mind he read it with
her, word by word.
Dear Marko—We’re back. We’ve
been from China to Peru—almost.
Come up one day and be bored about
it. How are jou? NONA.
Il’s thought was, “Damn the let
ter
Mabel handed it back without re
turning it to its envelope. She said,
“No. it’s not fcrn'.ai.”
She snipped three roses with
astonishing swiftness—-snip, snip,
snip!
In half an hour the shallow basket
was beautified with fragrant blooms,
and Mabel thought she had enough.
“Well, that’s that,” said Sabre as
they re-entered the morning room.
111.
She took up a creamy rose and
snipped off a fragment of stalk over
the saucer. “Why does she call you
‘Marko’?”
He was utterly taken aback. If
the question had come from anyone
byt Mabie, he would have quite failed
to connect it with the letter. But
here had distinctly been an “incident”
over the letter, though so far closed
as he had imagined, that he was
completely surprised.
He said, “Who, Nona?”
“Yes, Nona, if you like. Lady
Tybar.”
“Why, she always has. You know
that.”
Mabel put the rose into a specimen
THE STANDARD
IMPORTED RATINE
AT 98c YARD
Bright Sport Colors, a yard wide.
And as effective as if it cost sev
eral times the price, Per Yard 98c
PRETTY NEW PERCALES
AND MADRAS AT 25c
The good kind used for making ser
viceable Shirts for men, boy’s
waists, children’s dresses, wo
men’s dresses, etc.; twenty neat
new patterns to select from;
full yard wide; colors guaran
teed. Yard ....' 25c
BEAUTIFUL CURTAIN
MARQUISETTE AT 20c YD
We have sold thousands of yards
of this very grade one year ago
at 50c yard, and they regularly
sell for double our price today in
some stores. These are perfect
goods, white and ecru, tape
edge; here Monday and Tues
day, Yard 20c
FINE SEA ISLAND; BEST
MADE; 10 YDS FOR 98c.
A Monday and Tuesday leader;
The best yard wide Sea Island
that you have seen in a long
while, fine, closely woven and at
a price little lower than the
mill; here Monday ai d Tuesday,
10 Yards for 98 c
LARGE CRINKLE BED
SPREADS AT $1.39
One hundred Crinkle Bed Spreads;
large sizes for large double beds;
no ironing required; just wash
them and put them on the bed;
value $2.00; here Monday ami
Tuesday, Each $1.39
PEPPEREL BLEACHED
SHEETING AT 49c YD.
Genuine Pepperel, bleached snow
white; enough for the largest
beds; under the mill price; here
Monday and Tuesday, Yard . 49c
BEST STANDARD BLEACHINF
5 YARDS FOR 69c
Regularly 25c Yard. Sold only
on Monday and Tuesdav; full
yard wide; soft finish and free
from dressing, Monday and Tues
day, Five Yards for ...69c
FINE SOFT FINISHED LONG
CLOTH, 10 YDS. FOR $1.39
Actual value 25c yard; full yard
wide; soft, silky finish; free from
dressing; here Monday and
Tuesday, 10 Yards for $1.39
10 BARS ARMOUR'S BIG
HAMMER SOAP FOR 25c
Twenty cases of Armour’s Big
Hammer Soap; none better made
at any price; full size cakes, and
sold only on Monday and Tues
day, 10 Bars for 25c
Forsyth St. Next Bank of Commerce
Standard Dry Goods Co.
Forayth St. Next Bank of Commerce
AMERICUS, GA.
vase with immense care and touched
a speck off its petals with her fin
gers. “I really didn’t.”
“Mabel, you know you do. You
must have heard her.”
“Well, I may have. But long ago.
I certainly didn't know she used it in
letters.”
He felt he was growing angry.
“What on earth’s the difference?”
“It seems to me there’s a great
deal of difference. I didn’t know she
wrote you letters.”
He was angry, “Damn it, she
doesn’t write me litters.”
She shrugged her shoulders. “You
seem to get them anyway.”
Maddening!
And then he thought, “I’m not go
ing to let it be maddening. This is
just what happens.” He said, “Well,
this is silly. I’ve known her —we’ve
known one another—for years since
we were children, pretty well. She’s
called me by my Christian name
since 1 can remember. You must
have heard her. W’e don’t see much
of her—perhaps you haven’t. I
thought you had. Anyway, dash the
thing. What does it matter?”
“It doesn’t matter”—she launched
a flower into a vase—“a bit. I only
think it’s funny, that’s all.”
“Well, it’s just her way.”
Mabel gave a little sniff. He
thought it over. But it wasn’t
over. “If you ask me, I call it a
funny letter. You say your Christian
name, but it isn’t your Christian
name—Marko! And then saying,
‘How are you?’ like that—”
“Like what? She just said it,
didn’t she?”
“Yes, I know. And then ‘Nona.’
Don’t you call that funny?”
“Well, I always used to call her
‘Nona.’ She’d have thought it funny,
as you call it, to put anything else.
I tell you, it’s just her way.”
“Well, I think it’s a very funny
way and I think anybody else would
think so. I don’t like her. I never
did like her.”
He thought, “My God, this bicker
ing! Why don’t I get out of the
room?”
“Come back for a day off with me!
It’s a funny thing you came back
just in time to get that letter! Be
fore it was delivered! There! Now
you know!”
He was purely amazed. He
thought, and his amazement was
such that, Icharacteriskically, his
anger left him; he “Well,
of all the—”
But she otherwise interpreted his
astonishment. She thought she had
made an advantage and she pressed
fA SIOO RING EAC
SIDE SEAT □|J V
Tex Rickard Presents
The Official Moving Pic
ture of the World’s Heavyweight
Championship
PRIZE FIGHT
JACK DEMPSEY and
HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE WORLD
Georges Carpentier
HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION OF EUROPE
FIVE REELS OF TERRIFIC ACTION -ONE SOLID HOUR!
The pictures give every blow from the moment Dempsey and Carpentier wrecgaffßei?''-
enter the ring until Carpentier staggers, struggles, crumples and falls under
the terrifie blows of the champion—Knocked Out! You see the pictures from
close range; you see them in ordinary time, just as the action occurs, and 'Wi
then you see each round in slow time, so slow that you can easily follow *'*
each blow, blows that were too fast for the human eye to follow. You see
Dempsey and Carpentier training in their camps and on the roads. You see
it all for 50c. You get a better view for four bits than the fellow who paid ■ Ttf
SIOO at Jersey City. *.
PRICES: Adults, 50c Children 25c War Tax incited i
SHOWS BEGIN: 11 A. M.—12:15 P. M.—1:30 P. M.—4:30 P. M.
7:00 P M.—B=ls P. M.—9:30 P. M.
Tuesday, April 4 te.
OPERA HOUSE
it. “Perhaps you knew it was com
ing?”
“How on earth could I have known
it was coming?”
She seemed to pause, to be con
sidering. “She might have told you.
You might have seen her.”
He said, “As it happens, I did see
her. Not three hours before I came
back.”
She seemed disappointed. She said
“I know you did. We met Lord
Tybar.”
And he thought, “Good lord! She
was trying to catch me.”
She went on, “You never told me
you'd met them. Wasn’t that funnj •
“If you’d just think a little you’d
see there was nothing funny about
it. You found the letter so amazing
ly funny that, to tell you the truth,
I’d had about enough of the Tybars.
And I’ve had about enough of them.”
“I daresay you have —with me.
Perhaps you’ll tell me this—would
vou have told me about the letter if
I hadn’t seen you get it?”
He thought before he answered
and he answered out of his thoughts.
He said slowly, “I—don’t—believe —
I—would. I wouldn’t. I wouldn’t
because I’d have known perfectly
well that you’d have thought it —
funny.”
IV
No answer he could have made
could have more exasperated her. “I
- -don't— believe l—would.” De
liberation! Something incompre
hensible to her going on his mind,
and as a result of it a statement that
no one on earth (she felt) but he
would have made. Anyone else
would have said boldly, blustering
ly, “Os course 1 would have told you
about the letter.” She would have
liked that. She would have disobe
lieyed it and she couiy have said, and
enjoyed saying, she disbelieved it. Or
anyone else would have said furious
ly, “No, I’m damned if I’d have
is l
“I don’t live.. I just go on”—she
pased—“Flotsam.’
shown you the letter.” She would
have liked that. It would have
affirmed her suspicions that there
was “something in it,” and she
wished her suspicions to be affirmed.
It would have been something defi
nite. Something justifiably incentive
of anger, or resentment, of jealousy.
Something she could understand.
She could not express her feelings
r THE AMERICUS TIMLS-RECORDER. V
in words. She expressed them in
action. She arose violently and left
the room. The whole of her emotions
she put into the slam of the door
behinef her. The ornaments shiver
ed. A cup sprang off a bracket and
dashed itself to pieces on the floor.
CHAPTER IV
1
These events were on a Monady.
On the following Thursday Nona
came to see him at his office.
She stood still immediately she
was across the threshold and the
door closed behind her. She was
smiling as though she felt herself to
be up to some lark. “Hullo, Marko.
Don’t you hate me for coming in
here like this?”
“It’s jolly surprising.”
“That’s another way of saying it.
Now if you’d said it was surprisingly
jolly! Well, shake hands, Marko,
and pretend you’re glad.”
He laughed and put out his hand.
But she delayed response; she first
slipped off the gauntlets she was
wearing and then gave him her hand.
“There!” she said.
“There!” It was as though she had
now done something she much
wanted to do; as one says “There!”
on at last sitting down after much
fatigue.
She tossed her gauntlets on to a
chair. She walked past him towards
the window. “You got mv letter?”
“Yes.”
Her face was averted. Ker voice
had not the bantering note with
which she had spoken at her entry.
“You never answered it.”
“Well, I’d just seen you—just be
fore 1 got it.”
She was looking out of the win
dow'. “Why haven’t you been up?”
“Oh—l don't know. I was com
ing.”
“Well, I had to come,” she said.
He made no reply. He couid think
of none to make.
II
She turned sharply away from the
window and cam towards him, ra
diant again, as at her entry.
“Well, I like you best when you’re
thinking. You puzzle, don’t you
Marko? You’ve got a funny old
head. I believe you live in your old
head, you know. Puzzling things.
Clever beast! 1 wish I couid live in
mine.” And she gave a note of
laughter.
“Where you you live, Nona?”
“I don’t live. I just go on”—she
pased—“flotsam.”
Strange word to use, strangely
spoken!
It seemed to £&bre to drop with a
Car Load Os
MULES
Just Received
J. D. HOLMAN
FIRE, LIFE, CASUALTY
INSURANCE
HERBERT HAWKINS
Phona 186 14-16 Planters Bank Building
strange, detached effect into the con
versation between them. His habit
of visualizing inanimate things
caused him to see as it were a pool
between them at their feet, and from
the word dropped into it, ripples that
came to his feet upon his margin of
the pool and to her feet upon hers.
He took th#? word away from its
personal application. “I believe
that’s rather what 1 was thinking
about when you came, Nona. About
how we just go on —flotsam. Don’t
you know on a river where it’s tidal,
or on the seashore at the turn, the
mass of stuff you see there, driftwood
and spent foam and stuff, just float
ing there, uneasily, brought in and
left there—from somewhere; and
then presently the tide begins to
take it and it’s drawn off and moves
away and goes—somewhere. Ar
rives and floats and goes. That’s
mysterious, Nona?”
(Continued in Our Next Issue.)
Miss Mamie Cassady and her sister,
Mrs .Ellen C. Berry, will leave to
night for Atlanta, where Miss Cas
sady will attend the convention of
chiropractors Saturday.
WOMAN FINDS REMEDY
WORTH FABULOUS FORTUNE
“I wouldn’t take a million dollars
for the good Mayr’s Wonderful Rem
edy has done for me. I have finish
ed the course and can say I am en
tirely cured of very severe indiges
tion, bloating and colic attacks I suf
fered from for many years.” It is a
simple, harmless preparation that re
moves the catarrhal mucus from the
intestinal tract and allays the in
flammation which causes practically
all stomach, liver and intestinal ail
ments, including appendicitis. One
dose will convince or money refund
ed. For sale by K'owell’s Pharmacy
and druggists everywhere.— (adv.)
11111
Golds cant make
fne quit work.
USED to lay off many a day
1 with my winter colds, but no
more of that for me.”
Dr. Bell’s Pine Tar Honey, with
to balsamic, healing: qualities gets right
(kwn to work at the first sign of a cukf.
Loosens up the phlegm, eases the irritation
suxd stops the cough. Get a bottle from
jour druggist's today, 80c.
Dr.
PtneTar-HonegW
IMPORTED
Plain and Embroidered
FRENCH
ORGANDIES
RATINES
And Other Fabrics
‘ Came to us this morning by express and they are
the most magnificent line of beautiful things you or
we have ever seen in many a day. A lady from
Montezuma said: ‘‘There isn’t as pretty or as diver
sified a display as this in even the big cities this
season.”
Embroidered
Organdies
In Lavenders, Saxe Blue, Tangerine and other swell
sport colorings. In prices ranging from, Yard —
$1.50 to $3.50
Plain
Organdies
In all the late and popular Sport colors and shades
In prices ranging from, Yard *
35c to SI.OO
Sport
Ratines
In all the newest Sport stripes, plaids and plains.
Colorings and shades to meet every one’s individual
wish. Ranging in price, Yard
49c, 75c, 91c
$1.25, $1.49
Silk Pongee
WAISTS
Seven different styles, tailor-made and fancy trim
med. $5.00 values for
$3.50
Take A
Look !
At Our Windows. Bargains For Tuesday
Golden Rule Sale Day
IN THE CENTER WINDOW are samples of nearly
800 garments, for ladies and children, consisting of
House Aprons, Children’s Dresses and little Boys’
2-Piece Wash Suits, Rompers and Creepers. •
These are garments that heretofore have
been $1.50 to $2.00, and the fabrics
are not trash, but real merchandise. Colors as good
as is possible for dyes to make them. Complete
range of sizes, and the price Tuesday only FOR
CASH—
98c
Garment
Look
Again
The SMALL NORTH WINDOW has a line of La
dies House Aprons, Children’s swell styles in Ging
ham Dresses and little Boys’ Two-Piece'Wash Suits.
Values ranging from $2.00 to $2.50. Tuesday only
for cash —
$1.39
Garment
ANSLEY’S
Agency For Pictorial Patterns and Publications
SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1922.