Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 20, 1912, FINAL, Image 13

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THE QEOR.QIAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE “The Gates of Silence” A STORY OF LOVE. MYSTERY AND HATE. WITH A THRILLING POR TRAYAL OF LIFE BEHIND PRISON BARS. TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. “Then you can clear yourself?” There was a passionate eagerness in Mrs. Bar rington’s voice. Levasseur smiled at her evilly. Un consciously she found herself contrasting him with her husband. Had she ever, indeed. fSassionately admired this man with the clear cut, sensual features, that brutal heaviness in the set of lips and daw? “No, I can not clear myself. I was in the house the night of the murder. The police have actual proof.” His smile , deepened. “Figure to yourself, my dear Edith—a murder was committed, a gem was stolen and the English police arrest a man with proof positive In his pocket. A Lake of Blood—delicious and Kidd like name—was stolen, and In the arrest ed man’s possession was found a Lake of Blood, the most exquisitely perfect replica possible. Warranted to fetch quite ten francs at any second-hand dealer’s in Europe.” “False? Do, you mean tliat the stone found upon you was an imitation? - ’ “The most admirable counterfeit. Isn’t it delicious? Eafth, the whole scheme was a masterpiece—no one had ever planned such a coup—not a Gaboriau or a Du Boisgobey in their most inspired flight! And that it should all be in vain! The paltry spite of it! All brought to naught by some bungling brute of a mur derer who knifed the old ruffian out of sheer silly revenge or some such paltry motive.” Edith sat like a woman turned to stone. “But I don’t understand?’ she said, stupidly enough. “It seems to me that i&’ou must be able to clear yourself by a |word.” “You were always singularly lacking in intelligence.’’ he said brutally. “I can rot clear myself by a word, nor by ten thousand words. I know that. Only one thing can clear me.” lie leaned across the table, his sneering face very near her own. “You can help me. Will you—or am I, like another Samson, to bring down the ruins of the house in my fall?’’ “What do you mean?” she whispered. To her intense horror and shame, she began to shiver violently. “How can 1 help you? If it is impossible for you to clear yourself, how can I help you?’’ He flung himself back impatiently in his chair. “Eh bien, but yon are dull!” he cried. —W—>**■■>«»■» ar- ■» . w 4 w- - tw. . . WHERE DOCTORS FAILED TO HELP Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound Restored Mrs. Green’s Health — Her Own Statement. Covington, Mo. —“Your medicine has done me more good than all the doc- tor’s medicines. At every monthly period I had to stay in bed four days because of hemorrhages, and my back was so weak I could hardty walk. 1 have been taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and now I can stay up and do my work. I think it is IL zTHs t • I ux ’'j'!: the best medicine on earth for women. ” -Mrs. Jennie Green, Covington, Mo. How Mrs. Cline Avoided Operation. Brownsville, Ind. —“I can say that * Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done me more good than anything else. One doctor said I must be opera ted upon for a serious female trouble and that nothing could help me but an operation. “I had hemorrhages and at times could not ge.t any medicine to stop them. I got in such a weak condition that I would have died if I had not got relief soon. “Several women who had taken your Compound, told me to try it and I did and found it to be the right medicine to build up the system and overcome female troubles. .“lam now in great deal better health than I ever expected to be, so I think I ought to thank you for it.”—Mrs. 0. M. Cline, S. Main St., Brownsville, Ind. Would You Pay 50c to Be Cured of Eczema? Yes. indeed you would. You pay one hundred times 50c to be cured, and yet many persons suffering for years with awful cases of eczema have been cured by a 50c package of Tetterine. Tetterfne can be had at any drug store, or will be ’sent on receipt of 50c sent to the Shup trino Co., Savannah, Ga ••• NOTICE Wilton Jellico Coal $425 Give Us Your Order. Both Phones 3668 j THE JELLICO GOAL GO. I 82 Peachtree "I admit it. What is that you wish me to do?” “Solnethlng perfectly easy. Find the real murderer.” She looked at him with fascinated ter rified eyes, and in that moment he looked such a thing of evil that at once all doubts she had had of his guilt were dis sipated. She leaned toward him suddenly. "You are the man.” she said. A Forced Silence. Levasseur laughed, not a whit taken aback. "Excellently dramatic, but a trifle archaic, my dear Mrs. Barrington. No, I am not the man—nor, unfortunately, can I tell you his name. It all sounds so mad. But. candidly, I should consider anybody a fool who believer! it. It’s a fact, nev ertheless—l know the man who did the murder, but I can not speak. The fact is, that since—for a certain number of months —I have thrown in lot with a gang of—what you would ‘"ffh I thieves— most excellent, light-hearted craftsmen, geniuses in their way—when, from one thing and another, Paris became a trifle tropical—we decided to try London. In London here, the brother of our chief carries on a very magnificent ” He broke off abruptly and laughed, with a very' evident sense of enjoyment. 'But 1 may not tell tales. Not, dear Edith, from any mistaken idea of honor, but merely because the exigencies of the rule demand it. To split on a pal’ and save myself would be merely to escape the hangman's noose to fall by the edict of our society, so I am tongue-tied. Oh, I recognize it sounds incredible. That is why I have to call upon you. my fr.iend " Eor a moment Mrs. Barripgton won dered if the man were mad. But there was a ring of sincerity in his voice, a certain suggestion of fear and despair in his bold eyes that drove the thought from her. Nothing was impossible in this world —that was the experience life had taught her. Another woman might have been less ready to believe the man's as tounding story, but she knew Paris —the seamy side of it —through Anthony Bar rington's eyes. "I can not help you,” she said, with an almost childish fatility. "If you can not tell lite name of the murderer, how can 1 discover him? it is so like you to set me to make ropes of sand, to fling me into a pit with sheer, polished walls and bid me climb out of it.” "Edith, if you help me. 1 give you my word I shall never molest you again.” A Threat. "Oh. don't moc-k me.” She stood up. The interview had lasted too long already; every moment she dreaded lest some one would come. She had all a woman's ig norant terror of the dealings of the law. Levasseur stood up beside her and aught her fiercely by the arms, staring into her face with angry, compelling “You would leave me to die like a rat In a trap?” he hissed. “You think that I will be dead —that the world will forget— that I shall be afraid to speak! Ah, you do not know me—or you have forgotten. The world will hear much, very much. I wilt make your name a thing of Infamy throughout the length and breadth of England. The man you call your husband will not dare to raise his head. Your child will be branded.” She shuddered in. his grip and he re ' leased her. so that she staggered back , wards. j “You must do your worst," she said, "for I can do nothing " i "You can bring th r.ght man to jus tice.” he repeated. “You have money and I influence- set me free and you are free also.” He cast an ugly word in her teeth. “Woman, don't you see that but for you I wouldn’t be here? If you had sent me 'he money you promised I would not have been in Tempest street that night." Edith Barrington turned on him. her eyes alight with the fierce courage of a creature brought to bay. “I was as helpless then as I am now," she cried. “I had no money. I have no money now. 1 have no means of find ing the murderer —" He interrupted her with a singular catch in his throat. "No?” he murmured, very distinctly. “Perhaps not. But what of your sister Betty--what of her. eh*"' The Veil Is Lifted. .Jack Rimington read his aunts s let ter through for the second time; then, folding it with mechanical neatness, laid it on the table beside his plate. Mrs. Ames, the landlady, bringing in the breakfast tray at that moment was star tled into words at the sight of his face. “My! you do look fagged out. sir.” she said, with the unction that drops from the lips of women of a certain type at the very thought of illness or misfortune. “No bad noos, I hope?” “No unexpectedly bad news." Ritping ton said. "My uncle, who is always something of an invalid, is somewhat worse.” “And you'll be going down to see the old gentleman. 1 should suppose?” the old body hastened to say. “And a good thing, too. It’s fair! ybeat me why a young gentleman like you should keep himself mewed and moped up in -London at this time of the year.” To Be Continued Tomorrow “THE HAIRS OF YOUR HEAD ARE NUMBERED” There is a great deal of truth in the old saying. Roots die, vitality gives out. The hair begins to turn grey. This is particularly unfortunate as we are all living in an age when to LOOK young means to fill the YOUNG and IMPORTANT positions. Old fogies go to the background. If you should begin to chalk down every day of your life, the exact number of hairs that turn grey, you would be surprised and soon learn that ‘‘The Grey Hairs of Pre mature Old Age” come on very quickly, if you neglect them. Begin to count, and Use HAY’S HAIR HEALTH SI.tXI and 50c at Drug Stores or direct upon receipt of price and dealer's name. Send 10c for trial bottle. Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED -BY JACOBS’ PHARMACY. & Freaks of Fashion THE TELESCOPE PARASOL—SOME THING NEW, PRETTY AND USEFUL By OLIVETTE. WHEN will the stout woman cotne into her own again? Eveiything is made for the thin woman. Skirts, which were to have been wider, so fashion authorities in Paris Informed us, are becoming even more contracted, all new articles of furniture are designed for the slight persons, and here comes an umbrella that will make the stout woman look positively grotesque by comparison, for it is the last word in attenuated struc ture. It is the telescope umbrella. An ingenious device allows it to be pulled out into a long, tightly rolled walking stick or pushed back into one of the Empress Eugenie umbrellas of white silk lined in rose color. A Smart Adjunct. It is another of those fanciful acces sories which make the up-to-date woman look smart while helping to raise the average cost of living. If you can't afford this passing freak in the way of sun shades, go to the nearest Japanese store and buv a paper umbrella. I hen you will be following in the fashionable footsteps of society women in Newport, who affect these sunshades with plain white frocks for morning and with the all-prevailing white serge suit in the afternoon. Only please remember that the paper parasol is sufficiently variegated in color and weeds a white or dull-toned frock to set It off. If it’s carried with some of our vivid colored frocks it looks too much like a conflagration. No costume seems quite complete nowadays without the tiny corsage bouquet of flowers; .lever imitations rather than the real thing. The old fashioned bouquet has a paper frill and is made of odd little blossoms that ought to grow In old-time gardens. This novelty has brought forward a great number of clever women who. with cleft fingers, muslins and paints, make these tiny' bunches of flowers, which sell at prices more substantial than one would think. This is the best season to think about next autumn's wardrobe, as it is the great time of bargains. White materials are going for a Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. LOOKS LIKE A PEACEFUL DISSO LUTION. Dear Miss Eairfax: I am 20 and met a young man last May and I loved him; but my love is fading away because he has bad habits and likes dancing very much. I do not like to go to dances with him. When I do not go with him he does not call on me. M. G. You say that your love is fading away? Then why do you object when he doesn't call on you? It seems to inc your troubles are reaching a painless dissolution. I would not call dancing a bad habit unless it is indulged in to excess. But if he has bad habits more serious that's a different story. Let the affair terminate, which it seems about to do. IT CERTAINLY SHOULD. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am eighteen and for the past six months have been going out with a young man three years my senior. Re cently I have heard of his past, which is not very much to his credit. Ought this make any difference with me, as I love him. but my parents object? L. M. S. Usually, 1 urge that no heed be paid to gossip, unless that gossip is well founded. But the opposition of your parents to the young man indicates there must be some foundation to the stories you have heard against him. Let their wishes control you; that Is always the safest, and particularly so in this Instance. TELL HER SO. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am eighteen and in love with a.girl of the same age. 1 was introduced to another girl and the former girl is un der the impression that I love the latter giri. Kindly advise me what to do to clear up this matter, as I dearly love the former girl. H. H. B. Tell her so. If she doubts you, prove your love. You can do this by being devoted to her and ignoring the other girl. A Literary Refusal. Yes, when I proposed to that liter ary girl she used one of those editorial forms. Said a rejection did not 'nec essarily imply a lack nf merit.' etc.” "You seem hopeful.” "No wonder. The form concluded by saying: 'And although compelled to reject your present efforts, would be pleased to hear from you again.’” Q IS Iwp JI IwKF '4 x ' ' wsßlt !HSI t \HI .. -. ISBk ■fjmw / ' •Gi WmMM!"' r yd* d ■ K -< A B—MMlil v IHBI , nSH’g’s ’■ i Bp'" song, and if you have strength of mind enough to contemplate the idea of buying furs for next winter, when the thermometer is in the nineties, you will never get .them as cheap again. Furs go right along up in prices every year, and dear pussy’s coat dyed and disguised as mink is worth a small fortune in cold weather. During the dog days pussy’s fur isn't so valuable and all other furs are cheaper, too. So now's the time to buy. A Bargain. The other day 1 saw a summer bar gain—a lawn dress bought ready made for a little more than a dollar. The clever girl who bought it had add ed several bits of insertion on sleeves and yoke and she had embroidered it in cross-stiteh besides, making a really stunning frock of her bargain. These touches, the addition of a smart sash and a frilled collar make your bar gain counter purchase an individual frock and stamp it with your person ality at a very small cost, too. TIZ--for Sore Feet Tired, Aching, Swollen, Smelly, Sweaty Feet? Corns, Callouses or Bunions, Frost Bite and Chilblains? UseTIZ. It Is Sure, Quick and Certain. Send for FREE Trial Package of TIZ Today. - f f/> Z ‘ *3 I rH- ' wM'-ZwSWy .. . ■■ ■. ’/G I './* rw A 1 I / zTI itvW.G / / <rT^ Le j ; ? Every one who la troubled with sore, sweaty or tender feet--swollen feet— smelly feet, corns, callouses or bunions, frost bite or chilblains can quickly make their feet well now. Here is Instant re lief and a lasting, permanent remedy —it’s called TIZ. TIZ makes sore feet well, and swollen feet are quickly reduced to their normal size. Thousands of ladies have been able to wear shoes a full size smaller with perfect comfort. It’s the only foot remedy ever made which acts on the principle of drawing out all the poisonous exudations which cause sore feet Powders and other rem- One of the new ideas in sashes is silk, with two wide loops, but no ends. The belt fastens in the back and the bow is put on at a decided slant, also in the back. A new fichu is made of three rows of fine muslin with scalloped edges, finished off with a narrow Igce edging. A large bouquet of violets in natural shades was embroidered on the front of a lace bodice, and partly over the ribbon belt which went with it. This was a French model and the flowers looked as if they had just been stuck into the wearer's girdle. The latest thing in collars shows two deep points at the back of a very high and tightly boned collar. Quite a boon to the girl with the long, slen der neck who wants to hide an ugly line behind the ears or at the back of the neck. The Medici collar or ruff of-, lace standing out from a V-shaped opening at the throat is pretty and most becoming, as it softens the hard line of the ordinary half low, half high collar. e.lles merely clog up '.he pores TIZ cleanses them out and keeps them .-lean. It works right off. You will feel better the very first time it's used. Use it a week and you can forget you ever had sore feet. There is nothing on earth that can compare with It TIZ, 2o cents a box. sold everywhere, and recommended by all drug stores, de partment anti general stores. Write to day to Waiter Luther Dodge & Co., 1223 South Wabash avenue Chicago. 111., for a free trial package of TIZ by return mail, and enjoj the real f‘ ot relief you no-ver folt before. Daysey Mayme and Her Folks By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. ALTHOUGH Daysey Mayme Apple ton does not know her A B C’s better than she knows The Wrongs of Her Sex. she can not truth fully say that she hates all the men. She finds that in the last ten years she has loved fully fifty of that de tested sex. and that because of disap pointment in gaining their love she has sighed regularly for the cold thumb. Because of this perpetual softening of a heart that Justice to her sex de mands should be adamantine, she has been accused of being lukewarm in demanding the ballot. “It is not so bad to be a woman," she said in her defense. “If a woman will go about it right she can get what she wants from the men without throwing rocks at them. "There’s my father, Lysander John Appleton. Kin Commissioner General of the United States! He eats what we set out for him. He puts on the clothes we buy and lay put for him. , "He reads the magazines we choose to take. He may make decisions in his capacity as Kin Commissioner General that startle the world with their dar ing, bbt my mother and 1 promptlj' overrule him In kin decisions at home. "He votes the way we decide. In his untamed (which is the unmarried) state, he had convictions of his own. He has none now of wjiich we disap prove. "He roars because of the freak styles In women’s millinery and dress, and pays the bills for whatever clothes we choose to buy. "He derides the fashion of false hair, and in his capacity as Kin Commis sioner Genera! has decided thqt rights of hospitality may be denied a woman kin who wears any, yet I pride my- Enough for a family of six in a 5c package. A delightful, 'S. J® nourishing dish at little cost Gi ve your family a dish of Macarosi f|W’ often —they’ll enjoy it —it's good for ■J them —full of wholesome nourishment —and it costs so little. But be sure you serve 4 FAUST BRAND £ Cut Macaroni made from rich Durum wheat in a /> sanitary factory under the strictest of P nre f°°d regulations. Faust Brand Macaroni is cut in uniform pieces so it cooks evenly—it can’t become jjimmi soggy with water as the long pieces so often do. Get asc package from " -| your grocer and give | 1 1 I the family a treat. . ] Would you like acopy SBy of our book of re- ' '■cipes ? Sent free on ; T request. ’’ ■ MAULL BROS. St. Louis, Mo. WESLEYAN COLLEGE MACON, GEORGIA One of the Greatest Schools for Women in the South Wesleyan College is the oldest real college for women in the world; has a great body of alumnae, and students from the choice homes of the South. It is situated in the most beautiful residential section of Macon, the second healthiest city in the world. Its buildings are large and well equipped, its fac ulty the best of trained men and women. Its Conservatory is the greatest in the South. Schools of Art and Expression the best, and a magnificent new Gymnasium has just been completed. Wesleyan is characterized by an atmos phere of religion and refinement. The utmost care is taken of the students. For catalogue write to REV. C. R. JENKINS, President. Dr. E. G. Griffin’s DeMlmoX 241-2 Whitehall Street. Over Brown & Alien’s Drug Store. Lowest Prices—Best Work. $5 Set ot Teeth $5.00 XfSgKffiuUfari. Sfa’-aePs Impressions—Teeth Same Day. x aSWECTnP*-'~ established ;■? years Crowns, $3.00 Bridge Work, $4.00 GRAND CANADIAN TOUR McFarland’s Seventh Annual Tour offers one solid week of travel through seven states and Canada, covering 2,500 miles, including 600 miles by water, vis iting Cincinnati, Detroit, Buffalo, Niaga ra Falls and Toronto. Canada A select and limited party leaves Atlanta, Ga.. Julv 8 in a special Pullman train through self 1 wear more jute than any woman I know, and he pays the bills. "The women give lectures at which men are roasted, and my father buys tickets to hear himself abused. "When away from home he gives elephantine roars against the practice of using face paint and powder, but these elephantine roars become as faint as mouse squeals when he sits oppo site the faces of his wife and daughter at home "He writes articles and gives lec tures on the pernicious effects of wear ing t>. corset, illustrated with pictures of feminine forms wasting away like an hour-glass, and here Daysey Mayme began to giggle. "All men approve.” she went on—then tee-hee-hee, another giggle, "and some day, this is all they will get for their protest: "In the centuries to come, when this country has long been buried, and it is forgotten that we ever existed, some new race will spring up, and”—her gig gle became a scream at the possibility of it—“archaeologists will dig into the ground for relics of the race of today, just as archaeologists these days dig for traces of people of a former exist ence. And they will dig into ash piles," here her mirth almost overcame her, "and how will they explain the corset they find there? “They will decide, after looking it over solemnly and wisely.” she said, with a conviction savoring of the sweetness of revenge, “that it is An Article of Wearing Apparel of Prehis toric MAN! "And that is all the men will ever get out of this fight they are making on the corset! Oh. it is not so bad to be a woman!" to Toronto without change $55 pays every necessary expense for the tour High-class .matures are guaranteed. Many ahead' booked. Names furnished. Send for free picture of Niagara Falls and full information to J. F. McFarland. Man ager 41'.j Peachtree st.. Atlanta. Ga., Phone Main 4608-J.