Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 10, 1912, HOME, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE GEORGIAN'S MAQAZIME' PAGE “The Gates of Silence” A *r C. E ‘ 'S’£R> AND WITH A THRILLING POR- '■**'» Al LIFE BEHIND PRISON BARS. Sv META SIM MINS A..*Hcr of Hushed Up." TODAY S . \ '’EXT As the* • u xrr ; Mrs. Barr £ ■"'!■.' re- ' viva! U ««s • »rn • :h<-' after-iinn*- .-- -■ wn-- Warring:-’’' ,= • - ■ < >-:i.- the rough st u.■..-?< < re« as he smoked. and E" v *ang r played to hl*n Tonight. :•■■ ■: < *Aigr’red « :ri ■;se, h> i gave the ni*r • • . hi."er serv-- coffee in the hou-joir. Edith ven? .r*,; a p* •■?*>! ' <>h. Tuns why nor the studi** 4 I hair that room o f mine at night ‘ And I think u < harmlngly < nzj. h* •aid. taking het arm ’Besides. I wan' you to play for tnr and Gilbertson tells me that jour p.m<» Las been tuned, while. as you know rhe st id«<» piano is abom inably on' of tune Had 1 known the man Mas coming today I would have had i< seen to." Edith for a moment was rendered speechless This remark, so seeming!:, innocent, was like a boh from the blue Like a woman in a dream, she went be- ' fore her husband into the boudoir, and Anthony Barrington, < ■ he turned away from her t<< shut the door, smiled to Ivin •elf a strange, bitter smib On the Staircase. The gilt hands of tin t rench ’ lock on ♦he mantelpiece met ben« th. the nulling face of the cuplds and a chime rang out and mingled with ti e sound of -music. Mrs Barrington dropped her hands with a discordant crash on the keys “Tony, it’s 12 o’clock: I can play no more She looked across at him with dazed •yes Anthony Harrington rose from his seat by the fire and wen’ across t<> the piano at which he had kept his wife a prisoner during the evening “I am afraid I’ve been a selfish brute. Edith, he said, “but it's been a delight ful evening She stood up and laid her hand on his arm,-his own closed over it. “1 haven't had such a laze for months, and now I must get tq work." “To work! ’ she asked, wondering!.' Barrington nodded “.lust letters Then I’ll go to bed My dear. I hope you will not sit up reading, or any such non sen. c “1 wen t, indeed.’’ she answered, with weary emphasis ' I am half asleep al ready Good night, Tony, boy.’’ “Good night " Barrington drew het into his arms and kissed her ’’Tien, without any further con versa t ion. he left the room Edith followed him to the door and watched him down the eorridot But he did not look around Then, with a breath of relief, she went back into the room and locked the door With swift, un steady steps she passed into the Im d room and lucked that door also I nless het husband returned unexpectedly, she knew herself free from interrupth n. for she had declined the offices of any temporary | Afb-: /'"T v v~y|i X&-&3 ' ~~ tnttptkgSjL.X^^— 2 r A F \ I F JuF* ANTY \ *5 P Klw \ 1 jjjJ' \-" Aj * XUtfTtt HTiTT __ _ Anty Drudge Talks to a Woman Who Hasn’t Tried the New Way of Washing. Anty T)rudg> ’Aon poor unfortunate victim of the old time washday habit! Why won’t you wash in tho pels-Naptha way. ami strike off the chains that bind you ’o the steaming washboiler and the all-day hard rub-rub on the washboard '" If you really believed what we say about Fels-Naptha you would use it, wo jldn't you ? But you think that it’s too easy — impossible. Many men are wealthy to-day be cause the majority thought the same thing about the telephone. To you boiling seems necessary to thorough cleansing. With soaps of the old sort it is. The clothes must be boiled in order to get the dirt out by rubbing. Incidentally much of it gets rubbed in. Fels-Naptha separates the dirt from the fabric in cool or lukewarm water. Once separated it is easily rinsed away. But you must remember that Fels-Naptha is made to be used in cool or lukewarm water, summer or winter. Get Fels-Naptha to-day and follow directions on red and green wrapper. 1 i.a A* any rate, she < ould satisfy her- ’•eU - to Levasseur s condition and offer the provisions of wine and biscuits i ;t . : was made nightly for ,her comfort, lapped al the door of the man’s hid r.g place ’Eon r.d, are you t! • re? Open the door!" Almost Exhausted. \ shadow <>f my self is here.’’ came the .ui'ucr. as Levasseur turned the key and came ■ . He looked around the room wolfishly 'lien darted toward the tray by Edith's bed, where the wine and bis cuits were. i am starving, he said “I ain’t speak s<> loud,’’ whispered Edith. "My husband may return at any mo ment.” Levasseur turned to her. his mouth working, a mocking light in his eyes. 4 By love! ’ he mumbled. with hi® mouth full I was uncomfortable In that cup board. my dear Edith, but I’d undergo it all again to hear what I heard to day Edith’s fair flushed a dull red. and evi dently something of shame touched the man who watched her, for he spoke not unkindly. ‘Well, there there! You had a pretty rough time- I m sorry 1 11 go into the other room and stretch my limbs a bit. I When the house is quiet I'm going to sneak out If I were you I’d let my hair down or something, and put on a dressing gown It would look better should the worthy Barrington return." He went out of the bed room and clost d the door behind him Mrs Rarrington sat down She was too exhausted to follow out the suggestion the man had made. Eor the moment she could not even think. She was simply a creature of aching limbs, oppressed by an immense weight of weariness, her mental vision blocked by a great black wall of sea r Presently however, mechanically she commenced to strip off her jewels. About a half hour afterward, alarmed by the absolute silent e in the next room, she went in. The room was in darkness. With trem ulous fingers she groped for the switch, her eyes searching the room anxiously for the man. She saw where he had flung himself, full length, on the lounge which flanked the fire, and fear stirred in her heart lest, perhaps, he might have killed himself and be a body of death from which there was no deliverance. But the man was not dead—he was asleep. The shaded light showed his upturned face i as peaceful as a child's. W ith a swift shudder of remembrance. Mis Barrington turned away. Ii was only about 1 30. too early for him to attempt to escape. Let him have his sleep out. She sat down beside him to watch, as a shipwrecked traveler might watch by a corpse he could not bury for sheer fear lest the birds of prey should tear it tn pieces before his eyes. Continued Tomorrow. By OLIVETTE. <T>HIS. is a new autumn model, the | slip-ovgi dress which has neith er button' no: button holes, nor hooka nor eyes, nor clasps nor buckles The dress is made of one piece with a girdle or sash effect, very low down near ttie knees, like the dress of a very small child. It is Monsieur Paul Poiret's idea of a practical fall costume. Every time Poiret jets out ant w costume he bids the fashion world Stop! Look! Listen! Eor he has a weird and wonderful imagination, and hie marvelous creations ate usually more adapted to the beauties' of the Arabian Nights than to our every-day public. Poiret, who is one of the leading French dressmakers, inhabits a lovely house in Paris, with a wonderful and exotic looking garden. The house looks like a very elaborate setting for the first act of a comic opera, and the ►•autiful young women who act as ifashion models In the Poiret estabiisn ment are the picked beauties of the manikin world. The fashion season really begins in Paris when Poiret opens his salons foi the promenade of the manikins, and no empress, stage or real, ever trailed down marble steps over soft -and rich carpets with more utter dis regard to the sumptuous clothes she etas wearing than do the gorgeous 'creature- who show off Poiret's fall and spring fashions A Regal Sight They usually enter one by one, sweeping in regally, wearing priceless fur coats over some new creation in evening gowns. The audience sits in hushed and awe-stricken circle. The manikin never deigns to look at the humble figures of admiring women, usually from America. She brushes past them, like an out raged empress, and only when ladies from distant cities flutter the leaves of I their check books, or carelessly drop a big letter of credit at her feet will the manikin pause and let theiyi admire the gown or wrap for a few short and blissful moments. Having completed the pwmenade of the salons, the beautiful model goes back to the head of the imposing stair way, and, as if too tired to bear the burden of her costly fun she lets the cloak fall upon the floor and goes forth to repeat her walk in the costume worn beneath it. With the same magnificent disregard for the value of these priceless man tles each beautiful girl throws off her wrap and the pile at the foot of the stairs becomes a mound of satin, sable and ermine. Fifty thousand dollars lay in a heap on the floor when I last saw the promenade of the models. It was an impressive sijht, for the eusiomers who had hesitated to order while the furs were still on the shoul ders of the proud manikins swooped down upon the pile, and soon every coat and wrap had found its buyer. An American. it was Paul Poiret whose admiration for the Russian ballet with its vivid Oriental coloring swung last year's fashions to the extreme of gorgeous Oriental luxury and riotous color. There is legend to the fact that Mr. Poiret is an American. At all events, he is a shrewd business man. who hides good, sound business sense behind a brown beard and an inscrutable pair of eyes. Poiret realizes that this is to be a season where the practical idea will prevail over the fantastic. Efficiency is the great word of the day among womenkind. Not that we have all become efficient, but it's a great thing to talk about, so the new i Poiret model boasts' of all those inno vations whiefi the efficient modern woman considers necessary. ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN * * By Beatrice Fairfax WHERE IS YOUR PRIDE? Dear Miss Fairfax: I am nineteen and deeply in love with a young man one year my senior. He also declared his love for me until three weeks ago. when he took me to a ball and danced with other girls and I was obliged to come home with his brother. He has treated me very coldly since, and the other evening I went to the theater with his brother and since then he has not even spoken to me. and 1 am nearly heartbroken MARY. Just make up your mind that your heart is not broken, that when It bteaks It will be for some manlt man who is worth while. You can not do anything but try to forget this man You certainly ate laying up trouble for yourself if you go on loving him. Will you tr\ to re member that, my dear? THE GIRL IS RIGHT. l>ear Miss Fairfax T am a young man and in love with a girl about my age. I am not as yet in a position to ask for her hand. She persists In going out with other young men. As I am of a very Jealous nature, it makes me very angry. 1 have asked her not to go with other young men, but she replies that I have no right to ask this of her. Y. <>. 1.. D. The girl is right, if you love her, j ask her to marry you. An engagement •will give vou the privilege of treating I her like the Jealous tyrant I think you I are. But if she should write me. and describe sou ns you have described I yourself. I would urge her to retuse you. What Dame Fashion Is Offering A Corsetless Dress /Z / / J - AmSMB: ■ \\ V / \j/l Vi \ A * r—l ."■•“'-'W WIW W") ' T .. W .TSnkjKSi g t 1 ■ WZrAr x-~ B' fl I WWW AMrMI: 1 \ i iW^ 4 "^ f - Zz i fitly i B H IS / 1 1 BBL. jF****w®b H 1 -I ) i ! M ' WBI i i I i I L~~" - J j PRETTY AND SENSIBLE. This practical dress requires no cor set. There’s been a ban on corsets for some time. It has neither hooks tier eyes, nor anything that can come undone or un tied. It is made like a middy blouse, with kimono sleeves, slit at the side to show an undersleeve of soft chiffon. The frock itself is of changeable satin, in blues, blacks and greens, with braid BY TRYING ANOTHER PLAN. Dear Miss Fa irfa X: I am fifteen and in love ' with a young man of seventeen. I have written him. but have received no answer. How can I gain his love? LILLIAN. Don't try to force his love. If he ig nores you, you must ignore him. You made a mistake by writing to him, a mistake I hope you will not repeat. A gill always stands a better chance of winning a man if her attitude is one of indifference. THE FICKLENESS OF MAN. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am desperately in love with a young girl and we go to the moving picture shows quite regularly. I think she knows how much 1 love her. but I do not think she loves me. although she never said so. Would you advise me to ask her if she loves me or find mother girl .’ c. P. If you loved her as desperately as you claim, you would not dream of "finding another girl.” The only way to learn if she loves you is to ask her. Beautify the Complexion @IN TEN DAYS Nadinola CREAM The Unequaled Beautifier USED AND ENDORSED BY THOUSANDS Guaranteed to remove tan, freckles, pimples, liver-spots, etc. Extreme cases twenty days. Rids pores and tissues of impurities. Leaves the skin cleat, soft, healt'hy. Iwo sizes, 50c. and SI.OO. By toilet counters or mail. tVAT/OAAZ. TOILET COMPANY. Parn. Tm. trimming of the same in lighter shades of blue and green. It ought to make an excellent dress for the woman with a slim figure or a good lounging robe, or house gown for the matron who disdains corsets in the house. At all events, it shows an in teresting innovation and can be adapted in many ways for the autumn wardrobe. And don't lose any time about it. cither. And don't. I insist, expect any nice girl to tell a man she loves him until, he has asked her to marry him. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought HAD TETTER FORTEN YEARS; TWO BOXES TETTERINE CURED Mr I.ev Wren, of Chicago. writes us that he had suffered for ten years with tetter, many doctors in nearly every state tn the I'nion having failed to cure him A driin:'. st recon.met.ded Tetterine to him and .< bought .1 box. It gave him relief, and the second box effected a com plete .'lire i'ett' rn:.- at all druggists or by mail for 50c from the Shuptrlne Com pany, Savannah, Ga. ••• (IO V-’hHM Mid Dr £ Dabft treat* ' ! M “ t* l »t How* or HanJUrtuM. Hook oa * kuUact Fraa. DU B. U WOOLLEY, 24-N Victor a. . . 3 ... 4 Q ATLANTA TO PENSACOLA AND RETURN via The WEST POINT ROUTE Tickets on sale every Thursday up to and including August 22. 1912. Return limit ten days. Sleeping cars, dining cars, coaches. Call at Ticket Offices: Fourth Natlona' Bank Bldg, and Terminal Station. Always Too Young to Boast By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. T OVE is exactly like war in this — a that a soldier, though he lias escaped three weeks complete on Saturday night, may, nevertheless, be shot through his heart on Sunday morning.”— Lawrenve Sterne. IT is not an uncommon thing for those on w hom Cupid has spent no arrows to boast that they are in vulnerable. They are always too young to make I that boast. Too young when the years have bowed their shoulders and pow dered their heads. It is no distinction to have escaped. To be incapable of emotion is so sim ilar to a mummy existence that those who have reached years of maturity and have never been "shot through the heart” have reason to be alarmed about themselves. There is something lacking—sympa thy, tenderness, charity, tolerance, hope, faith or the power to dream. Nothing to Boast Os. Such a one should not boast. It is rather a matter to be regretted and remedied. It indicates a sickness of the most sacred of the emotions. It indicates a lack of ability to love; a coldness that makes love turn away. Neither is it to one's credit to have loved only once. The heart doesn't die with humilia tion at its first mistake. It lives to make another, and another, and that which is sometimes regarded as a "mistake” turns out to he the most beneficial and needful of experiences. The mistake lies iri carefully cover- WARNING TO USERS OF SO-CALLED SUPERFLUOUS HAIR “CORES” Every woman must realize that even when a soft fuzz is removed by these •o-called superfluous hair "cures," which stimulate the growth after each removal, that it will only be a question of time before she will have to resort to the use of the razor, because even tually the hair will become so coarse that no preparation will be strong enough to remove it without ruining the skin. Why take the risk of disfigurement by using these unknown and uncertain means for removing superfluous hair, when there is such a safe method as DeMiracle—the one perfected, nnn poisonous and harmless depilatory that dissolves hair, thereby taking the vi tality out of it, consequently retarding and preventing an increased growth? Don't be deceived by the imitator and Impostor who resorts to copying cer tain phrases of the DeMiracle adver tising to Inveigle you into using a worthless, poisonous concoction, the continued use of which will produce eczema or other serious skin diseases. When a faker tries to deceive and delude you by alluring and impossible claims, tell him that DeMiracle Chem ical Company will forfeit Five Thou sand Dollar? if it can be proven that any so-called superfluous hair "cure” ever eradicated one single growth of superfluous hair. Insist on proof w’hen a claim Is made that such a prepara tion is “indorsed by the medical pro fession:’’ To substantiate our claim that De- Mifacle is the only depilatory that ha| n'K y° u want big game or only a big /N rest, take a mile high vacation tn Ao Colorado. AHR You can divide your time as you please, I'j'Cs d multiply your ability to enjoy, add to your happiness, and subtract your worries. lil ' igjcy The sum total of such a vacation is be yond calculation. < .... ' .1 SSET- ■ WJB ' Wk' W|||lp A trip to Colorado is but a few hours V ' , of pleasant traveling if you go via the Frisco Short Cut to Colorado 1 h« Kansas City-Florida Special is equipped for the comfort and convenience of Colorado vacationists. I Splendid electric lighted Pullman, Jacksonville, Atlanta, Birmingham and j Memphis to Kansas City and Colorado without change. Modern electric / lighted chair cars and hied Harvey dining cars. I A vtesta.n in Colorado is an economy Railroad fares are very low. Hotel and Boarding House ratee are reasonable. SeuU for beautiful book on 0010- II rado and full information about low fares ~ .. | A. P. MATTHEWS, District Passenger Agent I 6 North Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga. ing one s heart with frost, an ~, making the boast that it is in\. able. There never was a heart f., r , so watched, so guarded and s<. sentineled that there was not opening by which love could ?nr r chcse. Sympathy, pitj. pride, vanity, who can say which one will point weakness in the fortress'.’ There is some mode of entry in . hardest heart, if there were n<>' •-> , would he a dreary place in why - > . live. So don’t boast that Time has left heart whole. Rather regret It ,ir. remedy it while the remedy still h<s in your hands. Do You Know- New Zealand honey, exceeding ten .■■■>, pounds in weight, has been Impono.j into Great Britain during the past ti<- cal year. Canada's mineral products in nn“ year have increased in value by no le-. than $15,000,000. Murder by poisoning in Europe ■ at one time punishable by boiling - death. Nearly one-half of the people nf Denmark live exclusively by agtieul ture. ever been indorsed by reputable physi cians, surgeons, dermatologists, medi cal journals, prominent magazines and newspapers, we will send copies of ’he testimonials on request. The mere fact that fake-dangerous preparations are short-lived should alone be sufficient warning to avoid the use of any depilatory but that of proven merit. DeMiracle has stood the test of time. It was the largest selling de pilatory ten years ago and more of it has been sold each year since than the combined sales of the nostrums. All reliable dealers sell and recom mend DeMiracle, knowing it to be the best and safest depilatory. Some un principled ones will tell you they can not procure it so that they may more easily Influence you to purchase their own or possibly some other dangerous, worthless substitute under another la bel for a few cents more profit. To protect you from just such Imposition, if your dealer will not supply you. mall us J 1.00 .and we will send you. all charges paid, in plain, sealed wrapper, a SI.OO bottle of DeMiracle, and we will make you a present of a full-size jar of DeMiracle Cream. If you care to. give us rhe name of the dealer who tries tn sell you a "just as good” imitation or substitute. Write for free booklet, which will be mailed sealed in plain envelone. P-- Miracle Chemical Company, Dept IS Park Ave.. 129th and 130th Sts.. New York. You can always procure De- Miracle without argument in Atlanta from Chamberlin-Johnson-Dußose.