Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 01, 1912, HOME, Image 8

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TOE GEORGIAN’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. I The crowd doted again ana hid the words, and as Rlmlngton went forward he felt a touch on his arm, and turned quickly. The man who had brushed against him at the platform barrier stood beside him and spoke, clvlly enough, rais ing his hat. •'Mr. Rlmlngton?” Rlmlngton nodded curtly; the man’s manner was perfectly respectful, yet there Was something In it that he resent ed. “What do you want?” he asked. “I arrest you on a charge of murder,” he said, and added, in answer tn Riming ton’s startled look, “The murder of Mr. J. J. Fltzstephen on the night of August the 15th.” Mr. Saxe Has a Visitor. The offices where the various compa nies of which Mr Paul Saxe wa* the pre Biding genluß were housed were the most palatial in that place of palatial offices Chichester House The board room and ' the various clerical departments were ( models of business appointment it was only in the private room of Mr Saxe him self that luxury ceased and a note of severity was struck The highly polished top of the great double desk that nceti pfed the center nf the room carried, be sides the telephone and a formidable row of electric bells, only a glass Inkstand of plain deeitm and a blotting pad whose virginal whiteness was seldom soiled, save by the inevitable deposit of Ixindon smuts. a.nd a couple of leather easy chairs and a revolving bookcase completed the furniture of the apartment Mr Saxe allowed himself one luxury however— the top of the bookcase was always adorned by a vase of dowers This afternoon Miss Tremlett, his ste nographer—whose privilege and office it wae to renew this dail' with the flowers aent in by the city florist with whom a standing order was lodged when, her employer, coming late in the office after lunch, she answered his bell, was sur | prised and pained to co her handiwork , superseded by a huge bunch of American j Beauty roses Mr Sax*. who was courteous to all | women, even his clerks though the mor* | gensitlme among them were wont to com I plain that his rourtesx had an under sting of insolence in it - apologized /or • the change “It was tno bad to have to disturb your beautiful flowers." he said. In his silken voice. "But these are more beautiful still Don’t you think so? I saw them, and I could not resist them Their per faction of form and color reminds me of the beautiful woman His exes, with their curious amber lights, moved from the flowers nnd rested on the typist’s face and Miss who was ginger-haired, thirty-five, and very plain, crimsoned violently It is hard to know what < olor .• he might have turned could she haxe r ;<• the thought in ner employer’s mind as be regarded her with gentle Intentness “If I were g woman, and as Plain as i you." he was saying to himself “I would go out Into that Brixton buck garden of yours and strangle myself with my mother’s clothes line .’’ Meeting Miss Tremlett’s modest eyes, he smiled i < arsuringl.v and inquired if she were readx for work “Not that work does not seem an out rage on such i day. ’ he continued pleas- I antly. looking out through the window ' whore the sunshine lay golden on the op posite houses. This is a day for the river, not Old Bn-ad street for a pile cushions In a punt moored in a cool back water " The caressing tones «>f his voice called up such, a picture that the tx pint's lean fingers trembled as the\ held the pencil poised oxer her note book Another Picture. Paul Saxe’s lips parted over his white teeth in a dnnmx sndh He, too, «rw a picture: yet. <>ddly enough, not such as might have been imagined from his words the picture of a cell at R**xv street police Station, where a trapped man waited,-eat ing his heart out “Well, we must pax for our holidays, when xx o have them, he said, with a sudden note in Ids voice that struck on the ears of the listening girl n< so strange, so almost cruel, tl at she glanced up sharply. as w* have to pax for all pleas ant thing - r or later ‘Gentle men' ” He struck into the dotation of a letter unceremonu'.i a n.i for an hour n-> sounds xx er* Iward n the room but the rhythm of his detating voice and the dull scratch <d Miss Tremlett‘s thing pencil. The whistle of the speaking tube on the wall behind his table made Saxe frown It was a law of r . THt that he must not be disturbed sax. for the gravest cause when hr w.c- dictating his corresponds nee H. unhooked ti e tube, and as he listened the si rewd ex as of the wat l.mg Miss Tremlett saw a change Nadine Face Powder {ln Gret’Ti /io*» t f >/</».) Makes the Complcxion Beautiful Soft and Velvet) / \ ’* l >ure > / \ Harmless j jA/own /.’.U jf V.-a ' W iWrn f'leai.a. WkA»j~ V 1 I ** e Sl ’* l, 'elvety Y*’< "2# «JL / appearance re \ Vr ■ J Ila until pow \ ' 9 <iet :■ washed oti V ■ rd by a new prove s Piet ent? • unburn and return of dwcolota-ions The im teasing popularity is wonderful White, Heth, I‘inh, Brunetti By toilet counters or mail. Price 50 ire < -ATIONAL TOILET COMPANY. /-uo. /«„. rrpnamaSi I MjK B «d at H< rue or •’ IMnltartuin B<v>» ' Ma - I«ei >rt« DM B M WOU LI, KT 24-N Victor Sanitarium. «,. —HWs* 1 1 '■ —■"■'■ - ■ ■ - CHICHESTER S PILLS BlHr IM t Bill Ml A I • dlt a, A»k J ohs Htuy.l.i j v /e\ '<A, f»U ,, lU ;V >' ,r • > . • . OLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHLRE | come over his face, it flushed a little, then paled ■‘Yes yes most certainly I will see her at once." He dismissed Miss Tremlett summarily, and as she went *';» by the door hading to the clerks’ office she heard the private door of Saxe's room open and a clerk an nounce, ’Miss TjiniMm. sir' So it was r woman who had caused tha’ phenomenon, a flush nn Paul Saxe s olive cheek’ Rnd-halred Miss Tremlett, hurry Ing back tn her place in the big. airy room which all day long throbbed and vibrated with the click of 20 typewriters wondered a little sourly if It were Mias Lumsden whn was like an American Beautx rose and knew the bubble of a dream had burst "Miss Lumsden!” Saxe la Hurt. There was very little of the rose about the girl whom Paul Sax* went forward tn greet hand outstretched, concern in voice and look As she stood there, in th* center of the bare city office. Betty | Lumsden looked almost plain. h*f eyes I were red and swollen with weeping, her colorless lips were drawn with pain Saxe frit a sense of outrage as he looked nt her. How dare ehr look like this how dare she? "Mr Saxe., you have heard what has happened?" She made nn prefens* nt acknowledging his greeting, though she sank Intn the chair he offered her The action was me chanical she felt as though her shak ing limbs must give hr-neath her "What " a startled note beat in Paul Saxr'R voice H* had not seen Rettx Lumsden since her illness He had heard nothing of her recovery--almost as arrange and Inexplicable as the seizure Itself had been. “What has happened. Miss Betty'’" The girl made an effort to speak, hut for a moment no words escaped audibly from her white lips She fumbled with a paper that she held, and handed it to h i ni r “He has been arrested —Mr. Rlmlngton has been arrested so happened 1 that night In Tempest street —In that j house where you and I were—” "Hush!” Ar Saxe took the paper his i hand closed over herfi for a s econd, warn- Ingly His eyes searched the paper for | the brief facts that were no nows to him. I But, as his eyes caught sight of two or throe linos of blurred print in the stop press column, a change came over his ex prespion. ESCAPE FROM BRIXTON PRISON. It Is understood that the man Le vasseur, und*r remand for the mur der of J. J. Fitzstephen, broke out of Jail th'a morning. The face Paul Saxo turned tn the wait ing gttl was as ghastly as Betty’s own "Impossible"' ho muttered "Impossi ble!” And io him. as to a terrified wom an In the little telephone room of the house by the river, there came a sudden vision of Edmond r>ovasseur. ns nf a ter ror in ambush n hidden, wounded, mad dened beast, crouching to spring. An Apoeal. "But It isn't imp > sihle' ’ Betty cried, with a little hysterical catch In her voice “It has happened Mr Saxe only 1 can save him only you ran help me to do it I have come to appeal to \ou for that lm| p, ’’ "Mx Lear Miss Hotly, you kn<»w al ready that I am at your service in all wavs, but aren't you taking an unneces- IshtUx gloornlv view of the cas*’.’ Mr. Rim ! ingtnn has b. en arrested, but what nf that? It is p< sihh* and probably only a hi th; freak on the [-art of our facetiously minded police, and in a day or two vou ami he will be laughing over the matter”' Laughing what xvhs laughter 0 That was the question Betty Lumsden's sea gray eyes seemed to ask him; even in his • >wn ears his tone did not ring with any sound of conviction. To the girl his words carried nbsnlute Insincerity. “Is it tn take ton grave r view of the ease?" she asked, quickly I don't think so 1 can’t think that you do either, Mr Saxt You know, as I know’, that vre must work to save him now without delax because becaus* he will raise no xoice to save himself he will remain silent to Shield me." "To shield you?" "Yes’ Beii\ made a w’earx little gest ure "l.et tis he frank, Mr Saxe he knows what you know that I was in Tempest street that night, am! he thinks that that 1 was responsible for what hap pened there!" "hat utter tolly ’ ' Saxe cried, rising I to hlsjfeet nod crossing to the door lead- I mg to the clerk s office, w inch he opened : sharply ami mnselesslx He vax’c a ;ap;<i glance up ami down the wide, sunlit, empty corridor, then closed the door again with a decisive Jerk that set the patent lock in action Why. Miss Betty it is as clear as daylight that this man Levas seur” lie paused Betty had raised her eyes to bis face, and \vhat he read there silenced the ins!ne«rity on his lips Her Question. ”ls It such folly?" she asked, quickly "Mr Sax* please be quite candid with, me What really happened that night i* it true, this awful conviction that has come to me did some hideous madness * come over me did 1 kill the man?” ■Miss Betty' My dear girl’ Why should so extraordinary an idea come into \ our head you, the least morbid of wom- It was an evasion, and singularly un skillful 'xasim.. from a man <if Payl Sax. ability Betty s eyes grexx sudden iy hopeless "Then st is true she whispered Then what is trm .’" he asked, will fully misunderstanding "That Rlmlngton come, where Is x*»ur faith Mr Saxe. y< u kr -w xvhat I mean. > u g* ' me out of 'he house that night - lam convinced of that My memory has ■oiayt I me a cruel trick hut my instinct ■ I the an t fail me Only you know what happ* ned before lack blundered in • r. n »■ I‘id 1 kill the man in n x mad- Mx d»ar Mms Belty. it I were to .-ay | ' x ■ - xx hat then'’ ' Il > . held here with a compelling j ■ dr.-w near, r to her and Instir.o- i • ...x s|-.. r.-. •«» her feet every line of ’• ’• • ’• et I i\ showing the re- i ’ ’-ar « ■ v . .qy. d hPI I ,e “ ,he " ! | Be Continued tn Next Issue. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kino You Have Always Bought Be " e eSy ll ’ ttigna- uro or The Right Road to Health By Annette Kellermann IP/zy Girls Have Headaches, and How tn Prevent Them > ■ ... -- u - - . ..... ------ -. r .. > H’ EADA<'HF,S aren't romantic any more. They us. <1 to be. In olrt-fash ionerl novels the heroine always took refuge in heartache or the vapors or some other slight ailment when she needed sympathy, and the distracted hero rush'd around wildly bemoaning his Angelina's sufferings. Nowadays he would offer a pill or powder and sugiyst a change of diet, while her catty friends hiss that fatal word ‘'liar!" a word which utterly de stroys ail romance. But what the headache has lost in poetry, ft has gained jn importance. H.ada.hes are danger signals and only foolish people can afford to over look the warning they sound. A Warning. If you are a girl who has constant headaches that means that nature is calling your attention to something wrong, usually something that you can remedy- yourself if you will go at it intelligently I don't pretend to be a doctor, but I've ured many a headache, not my own. either. I can’t afford to have headaches. They are luxuries for the v-.ry rich, who have time to lie around and complain. I can't. When you have a headache It is very generally a case of over-fatigue. Sometimes you have overburdened your stomach, sometimes your mind, again yon have allowed yourself to overdo nervously or you have expected too much of yourself and have not had sufficient good food or good air. One Is about as important as the other. Perfect rest will usually cure a headache. How lucky the person who can take a complete rest for half an hour. x (•no of the greatest luxuries in the world Is quiet. It ought to be easy to got, but it isn't. Pew women van li“ down for an hour’s complete rest dur ing th.- day, and only when they are really ill will the household realize Bq® fl 43® * i V | JI jA-A’ u MW ■ w . TJ \ \ » W ' . ■ <a \\ IL \\ I 3k K /La all wins 8 BRR I ,Xn Ml ■■ // Ji Exercise for curing headache caused by congestion at the base of the Brain. that mother or sister can not be dis turbed for telephone messages or tn ask advice about trivial things or to be ,-y mpathized with th’e inquiry How do you feel, dear" How You Feel. W hen you have a headache, all you feel is that one more effort at con versation, om more noise, even that es a well loved vie e, will drive you fran tic This Is merely byway of saying that quiet and rest are not as easily ob fained, even if one belongs to the stay at-home class of w omen. Summer headaches generally arise from over ating. clogging of the intes tines, heat and eyestrains. l-’cw people ate willing to admit to eyestrain because they hate never real ized before that their ey< s might be im perfectly focused. V visit to the oculist will settle that and sufferers from chronic headache shouldn't neglect this If the headache s due to eyestrain from tile heat and glare, try this treat ment. What to Do. I.oe- n the clothing lie down if pos sible . .«e the eyes. Place the fingers it the outer corner of the eye. Press t o n gently into the flesh and with a n-ary movement press against the eyeb.i.l. Move |i>» fingers gently anti fitm". over the eyeballs and then un der them keep the eyes closed is long as you tar. ano relax the muscles Deep breathing will usually cure an ■rlinarv heartache Slow rhythmic bi’fitlMng It -ii.-nld b<". fount vti. s nt lx as vou inhale, hold the /liulE i® 1 I 1 1 MK \i Mr Tl B 1 > J, MISS ANNETTE KELLERMANN. Other poses in silhouette by Clara de Beers, of the Winter Garden. breath for the same number of counts, then exhale with equal deliberation and again counting. Os course, you don't count out loud, as that would ex haust your supply of breath. Repeat this exercise until some relief is felt. Sometimes a headache will be caused by congestion at the base of the brain. As a matter of fact, all headaches are caused by congestion of some kind. This particular kind of headache, the one which is accompanied by a tight, strained feeling at the back of the neck, can be helped by working®the no k w ith the hands. <>f course, if you can get some one else to do this for you. so much the better. If not. place the hands on the neck as illustrated in the picture and knead the back of the Do Vou Know That In area the United States of America exceeds 3.000,000 square miles. As many as 57.000 persons of Scot tish nationality left Scottish ports last year. Tokio. in Japan, has a population of nearly 2,000,000. and almost 500.000 houses. In Saxony- the government gives a me lal for long and faithful service in any employment The dew that is annually deposited on the surface -f tr.< earth in this country is equal tv about five inch's of i am. Miss Keller ma nn declares that headaches aren't romantic any more. ‘ ‘ But what the headache has lost in poetry it has gained in impor tance” she says. "H ea d are danger sig nals and only foolish people overlook them. ”H e ad aches are luxuries for the very rich, who have time to lie around and complain. ‘‘H ea d aches can come from over- fatigue, your stomach, bad air, and sometimes your mind. ” • If the headache is due to eyestrain use the execise with the fingers as shown above. neok, working around the spinal col umn and using a good deal of force. Another way to overcome a head ache is to exercise the feet. Slip off your shoes if you possibly can, even while sitting at your desk or type writer. stretch the muscles of the legs, flex the muscles of toes and ankles. Drawing the toes in. turning the an kles, all this helps to equalize the cir culation and will cure a headache that is accompanied by cold feet and hands. No matter w hat you do, don't neglect a headache. It comes as a warning that you have been neglecting some or gan or overdoing it in some way. Don't eat when vonr head aches, but drink plenty of pure water with a little lemon juice if you like, unless the pain is caused by lack of food, but mostly it's the other way about. “Just Say” HORLICK’S It Means Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. More healthful than Tea or Coffee. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutritious. Rich milk, malted grain, powder form. \ quick lunch prepared in a minute 'ake no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S i WT Others are imitations. c& Would Love Ask It? o?<3 By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. HT AM a young girl of twenty," I writes one who signs herself by the expressive title of "Red Head," and in love with a young fel low. and quite sure it is reciprocated. The only objection is. that I have red hair. "Would you advise me to bleach or dye my hair?" Though the game of love is the old est in the world, there seems to be many who do not understand its rules. There, for instance, is the girl, who thinks that by changing her 'appear ance she could win the prize. If she has watched others plav with eyes that understand she has seen gir s attempt all the tricks of which dye and paint anl hypocrisy are master, and lose that on which they staked their hopes and reputation for wisdom to win. Occasionally she may have seen a girl so make herself over in character and looks that she carries off that for which she played, but no joy went with her. No woman can win a man wdth de ceit and keep him in faith. If a man is so weak-minded he can be won by a false curl, that which passes on the markets of matrimony for his LOVE can not be kept, though his wife wear false curls that would fill a bushel basket. My dear Red Head, if your hair wert blue or pink you should not bleach or dye it. You are as the Lord made you; don't imagine you can improve on’ His handiwork with hair dye. If your lover objects to your red hair his love isn’t strong enough to outlast its first spell of sickness. If he prefers a blonde or a brunette, it is only a question, of time w-hen he will tell you you are only an imitation, and hunt up one whom he thinks is the real Famous Red Heads. The most faYnous beauties in the world had red hair. The women who have had the most to do with making this old world's history had hair the color of yours. If ' j® *T(F Y ou are a true f°N° wcr °f Isaac Jjg| jO Walton, stop chasing the almighty ss||| W; 1 dollar, and, for a short while, take up the pursuit of happiness along the ST jfJ 6,000 miles of trout streams in Colorado, ajaMß where the climate makes men over in a Wsl fortnight. • “x *<•,». J! \ MIL Jl -i A trip to Colorado is but a few hours - / ' z of pleasant traveling if you go via the Frisco Short Cut to Colorado The Kansas City-Florida Special is equipped for the comfort and convenience of Colorado vacationist*. ("T 5 Splendid electric lighted Pullman, Jacksonville, Atlanta, Birmingham and I \ Memphis to Kansas City and Colorado without change. Modern electric j I lighted chair cars and Fred Harvey dining cars. \l A vacation in Colorado is an economy. Railroad fares are very low. Hotel l| ar.cl Boarding House rates are reasonable. Sefd for beautiful book on Colo -7 rado and full information about low fares. A. P. MATTHEWS, District Passenger Agent j 6 North Pryor St., Atlanta. Ga. 1 J'j fA DOG ON GOOD COAL Best Grade Lump $4.75 High Grade Lump $4.50 High Grade Nut - $4.25 Until July 15th, and for Cash Only THOMAS & HARVILL 53 E. HUNTER ST. Phones: Bell 2336 M. Atlanta 803 411 DECATUR ST. Atlanta Phone 933 [Fo RESALE ' "TJ il| Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar, IMMEDIATE 08 Roadßinder .> t Metal Preservative Paints, DELIVERY Roofing Paint and Shingle Stain. _________________ li_l Atlanta Gas Light Co. Red hair cenotes character. The woman who possesses it has a will; she has Intelligence; she is not dead to all emotions. She may be a. mistress of hatred, but she is also a mistress of love. No woman loves more unselfishly, more devotedly, than the woman whose hair is red. It is an unusual color, and a color to be glad about and proud of. It is a color that usually means an abundance. Ail red-haired women have a great deal of hair. No red-haired woman stands accused of wearing switches and 'rats.” She who has red hair has reason to rejoice., instead of to complain. If her lover doesn’t know all this, then he is not the sort of lover worth having. And in this connection let me say to all girls: The man whose attentions are not attracted unless one has hair that is false, or dyed, or bleached, is so weakened in intellect thut even- mo ment spent in his company is a crimi nal waste of time. Hf ; is not yvorth while. No man is worth while who prefers the imitation to the real: who encourages the gro tesque. and unnatural; who prefers deceit to truth. My dear girts, with hair and without it, of hair of gold or black or red: Put a high value on yourselves! Don’t so overestimate the worth of the love you seek that you under estimate your own attractions and your own value. If the man you love doesn't love the color of your hair, have none of him. Look at him through the clear eyes of Good Sense, and you will observe that this connoisseur of hair perhaps has very little of his own, and the little he has is coarse and of an ugly’ color. He is not a paragon of physical per fection. Don’t accept with bowed head his demand that you be one. STUART’S BUCHU AND JUNIPER COMPOUND CURES KIDNE* AND BLADDER TROUBLES