Newspaper Page Text
THE GEOUQIAM’S MAGAZINE, PAGE
“The Gates of Silence'*
Rv Meta Stmmins, Author of " Hushed If"
TODAY'S INSTALLMENT.
Perhaps the old man would have dealt
the blow his hand wae upraised tn deal,
the blow the r-hild cried out arainst.
joining her voice to the moaning on the
bed. had not rhe tinkling of the shop heli
sounded, and a cn -ip the stairs an
Bounced the arrival <<f the woman who
came for daily work Dodging him th*--
gnomelike child ran down to greet her
<Dd Jex. calling het back and bidding
the woman conie upstairs to stay with
the Invalid, went downstairs into the shop
to telephone to Paul Saxe
Paul Saxe was an earl' riser, perhaps
because he had lived so long in conn
tries where men rise early to get th*
better of the nun. and this morning he
was already engaged with hie private cor
respondence. in his own room at the pa
latial offices in Chichester House, full
half an hour before the meanest of his
clerks was timed to put In an appear
aace. when the message of the proprip
tor of the Toby Jug came through t<>
him across rhe w ires
This morning, despite the pleasant
freshness of the atmosphere, the financier
looked a little jaded There were shad
ow’e about his eyes and a certain tense
look about the lips which so often
smiled His tone as he answered Sam
uel Jex s call was far from pacific. If he
could have seen the look on the face
of the man who spoke he might, diplomat
ist as he was. have spoken differently
**Wb*t** that Jenny ill? Well, what
the miachief do you ring me up to tell
me that for* 1 Is she ever anything else"
If— w
Even over the wires Jex knew what (
the conclusion of that broken sentence
w<s. and he answered it
“She is.” he said. “Dying She’s asked
to see you. sir; otherwise I would not .
have troubled <"an't last more'n a cou
ple of hours, the doctor tells me'”
“What?" The receiver shook in Paul
Saxe's hand To the man listening in the
darkened shop 1n Westminster that one (
word seemed like a shout of triumph ”1 |
am sorry tn hear that very sudden,
surely* Do you think there is any good <
purpose tn be gained by my’ coming o "
“She asked for you, sir. A dying worn i
an s whim, maybe, but 1 couldn’t refuse
te send fnr you
“Well —if It won t disturb her. or create
a scene. I’ll come You’)] undertake
there will be no scene. Jex?”
“I’ll undertake that, sir “
A Common Error.
fFhat held Paul Saxe’s ears, usuallv so
sensitive to even change of tone, that
he could not discern th* scorn and malice j
that spoke tn the old man's quavering
vpice? Clever as he was. he had fallen ,
Into the error, than which none Is more
fatal, of forgetting that no enemy is so
mean as to h*» altogether despised
“AH right I'll be with you as soon as (
I ran '
Saxe rang «>tT gnd hung up the receiver
He leaned his elbows on the table and
s<t staring into space Jennie dying
Jennie. the woman tie had tied like a
millstone, around his neck In a moment of
boyish folly' Then, the one barrier hr
feared between him and his desire that
barrier he had schemed to remove had
been broken down by a stronger, more
efficient hand than his Jennie a curious
look passed over his fare What a beau
tiful animal she had been what a help to
him in those shady games he had played
during the first years of their married
life Had any man ever had such a tie
coy * Her absolute stupidity, her Inalien
able faith in him. had rendered her su
preme Xnd she was dying Well, a
good job. too for herself, he meant, as
well as (or him She had only been a
misery to herself If It were not for
the confounded child, it was the best
thing ’hat could happen
Still, the child could easily be disposed
nf She was only a child and knew noth
Ing and Jex's tongue was effectually
sealed Paul Saxe's eyes grew hard and
bright as he sat there, as his eyes were
BEAUTIFUL HANDS
AND ARMS
A FAMOUS BEAUTY GIVES
HER SECRET TO THE
WORLD
A Fr«e Proscription You Can Prepare
At Your Own Home.
M»ny women take perfect care of
thedr face and clothes, yet neglect their
hands Rough, red hands- are almost
as unattractive as ill-kept teeth.
It is a simple, easy matter to keep
your hands smooth and beautiful The
following prescription, which you can
compound at your own home, is famous
for the marvellous, instantaneous re
sult it gives
Get from your druggist one o'unct of
Kuhn; Compound. Put it in a tWo
ounce bottle, add quarte> of an ounce
Os witch hazel, fl'i with water and
shake well
You will be surprised at the result
when applied to your ham'- arm* or
neck Blemishes of i.vf>y kind disap
pear as if bx mage kh-s. tan.
rough skin, coarse pons, x iei.-l Instant-*
ly 10 this application This Is the pri
vate prescription of a m mmts Parisian
beauty
WJl.' - - -'J
HRdPSY usuallv gives mi relief
lintirji Rn<l n oon removes all swelling and
** short breath. Trial treatment sent Free
Or.H H. Green * Sons. Box O, Atlanta. Ga
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wont tn be when he dreamed (he dreams
whose materialization had made him the
man he was.
Suddenly ’he tinkle of the telephone bell
aroused him from his thoughts He put
• ■nt his hand, answered the call a little
absently Then, as he listened, a strange
look came over his face and he cried an
angry »iuestion into the instrument a
question that received no ar«uer, for the
message that had come tinkling over the
wires was this
“The rich man Raid tn his soul. 'Thou
hast much qooda >a‘d up for many years:
eat dr‘nk and be merry.’ Rut God said
tn him —are you listening. Paul Saxe? —
'Thou fool, this nlqht thy soul shall be
required of thee!’ “
Thumbs Down.
Very few women had boon able to
gain admission to the Old Bailey this
morning, where, as one of the more pic
turesquely phrased journals had put it.
“the gladiatorial combat of ancient Rente
was tn be reproduced with the principal
court for the arena, and the nerve-tin
gling sight of a man fighting with all his
powers of mind and body for his life for
spectacle
Seldom had a case created so much uni
versa I interest as this had done, nn arti
ficial Interest skillfully fanned by adroit
journalism, but a genuine, palpitating in
terest that spread through every class
The personality of the accused, his poai
'tinn in life, his almost utter absence of
defense aa displayed at the Inquiry. In
themselves were stimulants tn public fu
riosity. without the sensational facts of
the wrongfully accused man with the
faked jewel, his amazing escape from
Brixton jail, and hi- still more amazing
death at the house of Anthony Barring
ton. the artist, who had shot him as he
was making his escape from his house in
Princes Gate. where he had perpetrated
a peculiarly daring robbery’ of a large sum
in hank notes
Amateur criminal Investigation had not
been slow tn see a more than usually'
strange coincidence in the dramatic death
nf the man first accused of this murder
in the house of a relative by marriage of
the woman m whom the prisoner of to
day's trial was now believed to have been
engaged The fact of the engagement
had been flatly contradicted In the press
by the lady's father. Sir George Lums
den. But where Is there smoke without
a Are? And the world still wondered
No, so the police, who. at the Inquest on
Levasseur, had exonerated Mr Barring
ton from all blame.
A CURIOUS CROWD.
Such women as. by dint of the patience
of their sex and the subtlety of their
latent savagery, had managed to secure
seats in the raised tier of benc hes bore a
curious look on their faces a look not al
together pleasant, of brooding, of halt
tearful expectancy, and appeared full of a
nervous irritabil”•- that found its vent in
open antagonism of each other
The alert, unabashed cheerfulness of
one woman, with a large, flat face, out
of which rose, with a determined air of
making the most of itself, a small, peaked
nose, who had settled herself In the cen
tei of a row with an opera glass, a tin
of sandwiches, ahd a pocket flask, was
something of an exception.
“You'd better left those spy glasses al
home, a sour-looklng little man to her
right said, contemptuously. “You'll get
Into trouble if you try to use them here.
The large fared woman's companion
drew a little breath as she leaned forward
and looked down She was tall and slight,
and very heavily veiled, the large-faced
woman, who was given to such general
izings. had already set her down as a su
perior lady’s maid out of a situation, for
her gloves were shabby and her coat and
skirt showed signs of hard wear What
she did not see was. how the dark eyes
behind the veil dilated al the sight of
the man who from his place in the dock
looked straight before him. lithe, erect,
and. save for a certain pallor, as little
like a man who came into that place
with th* shame and stigma of the magis
terial inquiry upon his shoulders, with
its verdict and committal, that seehied
to make of this further trial a tragic
farce, as might he.
“Not a ghost of a chanep the man's
touche<l In his head," the veile<l woman
heard some one whisper behind her. and
her hands clenched lightly together as
”he looked steadfastly at Rimington he
bind the disfiguring veil
“Never you mind, father." she said
with exasperating good humor, turning
on the speaker, who had bachelor writ
ten on every line of his sallow face; “I’ll
bear my town trouble when the time
comes.”
Nevertheless, she disposed her rusty
net s.arf adroiflv ovet th* glasses before
she turned with aggressive determination
to make conversation with her feminine
neighbor to the left
“It's one of the biggest eases as has
bln before the publie for years, bar none,
she said dogmatically Tore young fol
ier they say as his tongues tied h\
some secret obligation that there s a
woman in the case but bless vou 1 was
at the magisterial inquiry I've took an
interest in the ease from the first tnv
usband avlng bin clerk to that there
Pitzstephen w en e was in a ver' smAII
way of business indee<i. and It’s my own
belief e s as guilty
The rest of her statement of opinion
was drowned by the hum of excitement,
'•'ternly repressed, that spread over ’he
teeming ’iers of seats as Jack Rimington.
. (•(•used of the lempest street murder
entered the dock
Had she been closer to the man in the
• i '< k. whose fa.'p was now turned directly
[ toward her as he looked at the judge.
who was just taking bis seat, had she
I been able to summon courage enough to,
i raise the veil that blurred her sight, she
would have seen a very considerable dif
ference In the man below from the man |
wh<> had so resolutely and steadfastly gon*? j
i through ihe ordeal of the magisterial In- :
( ini?' at which she had also been present. I
* feu weeks ag<> There was a certain
deadening m Rimington s eyes, a harden
”g of th*- whole f;*<r. that one who knew
him instinctively, who loved him. for In
stance. ; t s anothvi woman sitting in the
1 body ot the court loved him. would have
. I**-* K «|uick to notice Like the majority
|of the spectators Rimington had formed
his own judgment as to the outcome of
|th s trial which, not yet begun, might
*nd toda' • ’ drag <»ut its slow length
of pain f*»t another week It rang in hi''
ears even while he gave out his plea
‘Not guiltv' m a Hear, firm voice
W * find him guilty ' That w ould he
’T* verdict ’he lut*' W'hq. with ’heir
harassed looking foremar were
him furtiveiv Returning their scrutiny
vuh g dPlibera’icri ’h?’ h»--'’igh*
' ,v re ountenar-f they
h*s mind, he told himself th a*
* ar'mg a- their ph’siognom' mig b ’ be
I ’he r ’ ,, mds w ere mim’’ *! to wiro ♦ p
I man
Continued Tomnrrew.
The Making of a Pretty Girl
Xo. 2. —Flat-Chestedness, Weak Lungs, and the Remedy
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer.
ACL you pretty Kiris know that
beauty la founded on K'tod health
and if there’s one special thins
that Rood health depends on it is a
.good pair of lungs.
( believe In many kinds of good toi
let preparations and face creams and in
lota of beauty treatments but first and
foremost. I believe in plain health
When I was a little girl i was sup
p.'Sed tn have weak lungs and possible
tendency toward consumption. Cor six
years most of my time was spent de
veloping lung power and strength and.
while it's vulgar th brag. I don't be
lieve there's a better pair of feminine
lungs In town than mine, and they were
manufactured by hard work. I exer
cised every day for three hours under
different doctors and physical culture
Instructors, developing lung power and
straightening out a crooked back.
Besides that. I had a regular gymna
sium apparatus in the house with a fin»
trapeze, and was, constantly encourages]
to exercise in the evening after my
regular work for the day was over. I
was made to breathe right by an old
doctor, who could be very severe and
insisted on respectful attention and
strict obedience. About ten times a
day I had to go to the open window sand
do my breathing exercise. For a long
time these exercises had to he counted
by tiie clock—first two, then three, then
fits minutes—and some grown person
superintended them, holding a hot and
irritating hand unon my diaphragm.
Girls Who Stoop Over
Books Need to Develop.
A child Is soon taught how to breathe
and instantly feels the good effects of
fresh air. Put your hands around the
child's lower ribs, holding very loosely,
of course, and make It expand its < host
and ribs and fill Its lungs if you will
do this systematically two or three
times a day. treating the thing as a
sort of game, the child will soon join in
the fun and learn tn bieatne property
be.ore it has got Into bad habits of
breathing. These bad habits are gen
erally acquired in the first school years.
Frequently a child stoops over its
hooks, because there is something the
matter with its eyesight, or else be
cause the bench or desk Is not properly
adjusted to the pupil's height.
Girls who stoop over their books soon
acquire bent shoulders and the chest
gets no chance to develop properly. More
and more school teachers are paying
attention to this question of the proper
height of the child's desk, and when
there Is much studying to be done at
home the parents ought to see to it
♦ hat the desk or table at. tvhich the
work is done is of the correct height,
so the child doesn't have to bend over.
The bent little pupil develops into a
girl with a weak chest, and she is the
one who is writing me about
pale cheeks, hollows under her eyes,
hollow cheeks and other so-called com
plexion ills which have really nothing
to do with the complexion at all, but
are caused by Improper lung develop
ment.
Never Too Late to Learn
To Breathe Right.
Fortunately, it Is never too late to
learn to breathe right. Whether you
are seven or seventy this is your op
portunity 1 know several deal old
ladies who practice their dally breath
ing exercises as religiously as they
learned to do so in the lest few years
say their prayers, and who have only
with great benefit to their health The
I
simplest breathing exercise Is simply
to stand erect, preferably before the
i open window, with aims extended in
front and hands <lasped; loosen the
hands, separate and sweep the arms
I backward, w hile inhaling a very deep
■ | breath. Xow throw the arms back
! ward as far as possible, holding the
, breath; swing the arms forward and
exhale. Keep this up for five minutes.
A pair of light dumbbells will help
' the girl with the weak chest providing
1 she practices with them regularly. But
that is the whole trouble If you start
out to develop yotlt lungs, y ou can not
make a violent effort one day and then
rest for a week or two Patient sys
tematic work is necessary and it
1 should really be continued tn modera
tion for the rest of one's natural life,
ft one wishes to keep In trim
. Never do your exercises in tight
clothes, and In using the dumbbells
1 stand vers straight, the chest out.
i shoulders back, raise the arms above
the head, lower them to the shoulders,
, I extend the arms out level w ith the
I shoulders and swing the aim- and
dumbbells backward. sideways anrl
Advice to the Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
YOU ARE A VERY FOOLISH GIRL.
Dear Miss Halifax:
I am seventeen. and recently
bream*, acquainted with a young
man about four years my senior 1
have not met him more than six
times and he has accused me of
sending him mail without a sign.t
--| tore and he has called me down in
a very sarcastic manner I dearly
love him. Shall I ignore him or
pax him ih> same attentions as be
fore ’ He ai is as if he doesn't car*
sot mo EDITH
You love a min whom you have seen
only six times and who .m ouses you of
a very contemptible thing
My dea>- young woman, vou don't
> know what love ie*
V •'< must r* A * er this man again
1— m fit® hin And v n*j nYU?t put hlni
out of vour mind That he was ever
■in * our hear’ I dmjbt. fm t r*fus* to
I ente’-tam the thought tha’ any woman
I holds her love »o cheaplv
/' /A
9// '-A WTOI
Mi m xf
■r f f 1 If! A
- I ibo
;; i ' -
■ v..
-■ ■ I '2&Sl' • v ® ■ IMWI
i wL'aMMgi
the girl with the flat chest
down movements of the arms with the
dumbbells are ail good for the girl
with the dellrate chest, and they are
too well known to be described.
These exercises should be practiced
fifteen minutes in a room where the
air is good. or. better still, out of doors.
Don't get overfatigued at first, and
do arm and shoulder exercise rather
than taking long and exhaustive walks,
especially In summer time. The girl
with the weak chest shouldn't let her
self get overfatigued, and she should
he careful to select as nourishing a
diet as possible. An egg beaten up in
milk and taken during the forenoon t
and again in the afternoon will put
roses into pale cheeks more success
fully than the best kind of rouge.
Harden Throat by Bathing
It With Cold Water.
An-thet thing I should advise the
girl with the weak chest to start ’n
is strengthening and hardening her
throat. She can massage it with a
skin food if she likes, but bathing it in
< old w ater after the morning bath, and
going without a < ollar right into cold
weather will fortify he,r against win
ter colds. A- the cooler days i ome use
cold water to snraj or sponge th
throat with, and don't wear furs.
\\ *ar a very warm coat if necessary. [
QUIT CALLING ON HER.
Deal Miss Ealrfax:
I know a girl several years
tny senior, and since a year ago.
the time 1 first met her. she has
showed me great attention. Al
though she ney ep told me she loved
me. she gave me many proofs of it.
I do not love her and never tried
to make hoi think so but seeing
that the thing would never end
this way. I beg you to advise me
how to let her know my feelings
without hurting her. E. a.
Perhaps you imagine she loves you.
mon older and wiser than y*>u have
frequently deceived themselves that
way
Don ’ tel! her you don't love her;
tha’ would only humiliate her A bet
te* way is to avoid ,-*eing her Don’
cal! on her. Absent yourself from
ria-. »« whe'-e ■ ou w "o’d like!" meet tier ;
and she will toon see that vou ire in :
different so he:
but it's too warm today to talk to you <
about furs and winter clothing. Learn
to breathe now, and by the time winter j
comes you won't be In the class with '
the other girls whose chests are weak j
_—
THIS WOMAN'S
TROUBLES GONE
Temble Cramps, Dizzy Spells
Nervousness, Misery—Her
Story of How She Got
Well Again,
Hindsboro, Ill.— “Yourremedies have
relieved me of ail my troubles. J would
have such bearing down misery and
cramps and such tveak, nervous, dizzy
spells that I would have to go tn bed.
Some days I could hardly stay up long
enough to get a meal.
‘ The doctor’s medicine did m- no good
i so I changed to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound and got, good results
from the first bottle. I kept on taking ■
it and used the Sanative Wash with it. i
i until I was well again. I think every i
I woman who suffers as I have, could take
no better medicine.”—Mrs. Qharles >
Mattison, Box 58, Hindsboro, 111.
Testimony of Trained Nurse.
Cathlamet. Wash.— I
“ I am a nurse and
when I do much lift-:
ing 1 have a female
weakness, but I take
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com- j
pound and I cannot
say enough in praise I
of it. I always rec- j
ommend it for fe
male troubles. ’’
Mrs. Elva Rarber Edwards, Box 54,
Cathlamet. Wash.
The makers of Lydia E Pinkham's |
Vegetable Compound have thousands of
such letters as thos c shove- th»v tell the
truth, else they cauld not h?v= been ob
■ tamed for lave or money. This medicine
:is no stranger—it has stood the test for i
years.
Daysey May me and Her Folks
The Tender Heart of Daysey Mavme
By Frances L. Garside.
DAYSEY MAYME heard a faint
rustle in her waste paper bas
ket this morning. whilS sitting
at her desk engaged in writing
learned articles <>n "The High Cost of
Living."
She emptied out t-he paper, and found
cuddled in one corner a tiny little
mouse.
There are women who have mouse
nerve:-, and who would hate screamed
in fright. This is what Mayme
would have done had there been a man
present to protect her. As there wasn’t
a man in sight, she picked up the mouse
in her hands.
It was such a Dear,- Soft.- Little
Thing. Its eyes looked so Bright and
Appealing. Her Tender Heart was
touched.
She couldn't kill such a Dear Little
Thing. Neither could she let it live
and infest the house.
Ah. she knew what to do! Putting
th- Dear Little Thing in a paper bag.
she went to the corner grocery. While
the grocer was doing up her order, she
opened the bag. and let the mouse out
She watched it scamper to a hole ir
the wall and disappear with joy and
i hanksgi vine.
She had done more ’han save its life!
By taking it to th? grocery store she
I |
Indianapolis !
or
Chicago
are most conveniently reached byway of Cin
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NewYorkGaital Lines
Big Four Route
Parlor Cars, Case Dining Cars, Electric-lighted
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Tickets, reservations, time of trains and further
information, gladly furnished by applying to
E. E. SMITH. Traveling Passenger Agent
Atlanta, Ga.
Wesleyan College
Macon, Georgia
One of the Greatest Schools for Women In the South.
p OR PARENTS desiring a most healthful school in a warm hnd delightf"’
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. REV. C. R. JENKINS,
<1 nr»—in« I iiiuwgwMßigawawawww—e——n»a—w»■
mn BS NGH ARS ASHEVILLE, N. C ) han prepared Boys for College eod
n r, COL F BINGHAM I hood for llf» years. Our <lr»d.j.te«
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H ri Gain of 19 pounds tprm of «»ntranr« our Climate. Fare and Car®
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WOOXXBY a SOS. Ko. UA vu-tor Attsata. •=>
had opened to its little feet the g>> -
of the Promised Land; a land > - •
abounds in dried fruit® and ehees®
' ountry that is sprinkled with
crumbs and sugar, and that promise
rare and delightful excursions into'. c ,
dy counters, and pleasing inroads ■
presetvo jars.
"I have such a Tender Heart!" rr’is----
Daysey Mayme on the way horn.
GETTING MORE FOOD VALUE
FOR, LESS MONEY
When you consider the high fn-d
value of Faust Spaghetti and th.-,
delicious dishes it makes, flip < o r
seems ridiculously low. Don't "oi
think yon should sprve it mipA
more often? If will mean a -on.
siderable saving in your hoiß--
hold expenses and a sure driight
to your family.
Faus* Spaghetti i ? made from Am<= -
lean Durum wheat, by Arne’- in
clean American fa-lory. se rl
in dust, dir' and damp-proof pa-kat =
io keep it clean and wholesome nn
reaches you You: grocer sells f. :
Spaghetti in 5c a-nd Ific pa, kaer’
MAULL BROS..
St. Louis. Mo.