Newspaper Page Text
TnlE OEOROtIAhTS MAGAZINE PAGE
i “The Gates of Silence”
A M eta Stmnuns, Author of "Hushed Up
TODAY'S INSTALLMENT.
v -nomen' she was thinking of '
nothing in particular her mind was too
stunned. to. grief-sodden for consecutive |
ught. she had her hours of bravery
and her hours of grief-stricken cowardice
this morning had seemed one of the
latter This morning she had broken down
bad!' Edith had written to her—the
first news she had of her since the death
of little Phil; a letter written in a mo
ment of madness—a letter accusing her
self of preposterous things Poor, broken
hearted Edith. Who for the second time
had tied from her husband s house, fled in
self-preservation, as Mrs Marlowe, the
housekeeper, had hinted to Betty when
the girl had gone up to Princes Gate the
day after the child's death.
What was the awful curse under which
they lay. Edith and herself, the girl won
dered for a moment, dully The tragedy
of her lover condemned, innocent man as
he was. to die for another's sin had
dwarfed all her grief, only this morning
she had been vouchsafed a glimpse into
that awful world of pain and fear In
which Edith Barrington had lived during
those long weeks
And now the end of everything had
come Tony knew the truth; Tony had ,
repudiated her—cast awful Insults at her
In the presence of her dead child and the •
doctors
•A madman. Miss Betty that's what
the master is in these days.” Mrs Mar- '
lowe had whispered, telling Betty the
story: and Betty, as she had read Edith's
Incoherent letter that bore a London post
mark. but gave no clew to her where
abouts. had thought that madness was I
not very far from his distracted wife. <
"It was I who betrayed your lover to 1
the police, Batty—to save myself. It Is I
on my head that his blood will be. For
give me. Betty. If ever you can—l was I
msd with fear.”
Pettv had broken down badly over tliai
letter- badly Now she seemed past grief ,
as she stood by the window, words re
lating themselves meanir.gl'ssly and .’
maddeningly, as detached phrases win i
In such moments the haunting words of (
Keats' ghostly ballad. *' tho the
sedge Is withered from the lake and no *
birds sing "
Desolate and drear' to a degree, this '
outlook on the ruined garden, the scat- i
taring yellowed leaves, the dashed roses <
that would yet linger till the frosts came, t
the leaden stretch of the river Desolate
end haunting the words of the poet re ,
peated themselves In her brain "And <
this Is why I sojourn here alone <
tho' the sedge Is withered from the lake <
and no birds sing ' Nor ever would for
her. Betty told herself For Iter there I
would be no return of the time of the ,
singing birds—no springtime of hope ■
would bloom afresh for her but always •
In her heart would be the time of win
ter-black, desolate winter
The drawing room d.jor opened and al
maid came Into the room
At the sound of her entrance Betty
turned hastily from the window and took
up a book, pretending to read while the
servant moved deftly about the room with
the noiseless movements of the highly
trained, drawing the long curtains and
shutting out the sight of the weeping
skies, lighting the candles in the silver '
sconce on the penciled walls There was
nn electric light in tho Croft drawing 1
room —the long room pan»'h <1 in dark, wood
which dated back to those days when
it had been a farm house set about by
riverside meadows, inaccessible in times
of flood, dating back to a da\ when
houses were built by men with love and
care, and beautified by them that they
might leave, a goodlx heritage for their
children, not run up at cut throat risks
by some jerry builder speculator
'"Sir Georgp has come home, miss, the
maid said, as she set out the tea table.
“He asked me to a\ that he would be
down directly.”
When the servant left the room Betty
took her seat by the tea table, but she
made no effort to pour luuself out lea.
though she knew her fathers coming
might be long delaxed She leaned bac k
In her chair, looking at the fire that
wa« very grateful <4l this afternoon of
chill October 'The light of wax candles
and the blaze of the leaping fir** shed a
soft radiance across the room, investing
with added charm the rare old furni
ture. the soft tones of faded rosebud
chintz, the low tea table with its glit
tering burden of china ami silver drawn
near the fire, and the graceful listless
figure of ho girl who sat beside it.
But Betty Lumsden, sitting there, saw
nothing of beaut' or < harm, the eyes of
her imagination were fixed on a prison
cell, where a man and his watchers wait
ed for death het own body was cold with
The actual physical cold that was chilling
the blood of the man she loved in his
desolate prison. Iler ears were deaf to
the soft l iss and crackle of the logs on
the hearth., another sound echoed there,
drowning all others—the creak of the car
penter s saw. the thud of the hammer, the
stealthy, xubd’irl noises of the men who
built a scaffold.
“What what’ Not begun tea yet””
Sir Georg, bustled into the room, bang- '
ing the behind him, bringing with;
him. as he usually did, an atmosphere’
of discord and unrest He started for- |
ward toward the table by the fire, and ’
a' once broke into a torrent of abuse
Betty Chastened.
" Pon my word the hot cakes not even i
set within sight of the fire’ Is that your
fault or that girl's ' She's next door to a 1
fool and you're not much better What's,
the •),. aning of t? \\ at's , . aning j
ig Just Say”
HORLICK’S
It Means
Original and Genuine
MALTED MILK
The Food-drink for All Ages.
More healthful than Tea or Coflee.
Agrees with the weakest digestion.
Delicious, invigorating and nutritious.
LT milk ’ tr -h f - grain, powder form.
lunch prepared in a minute
lake no substnu.e. Ask for HORLICK’S.
. Others are imitations. ,
'of this moping and mooning about the
1 house the day long 0 Where’s your pride,
girl where's your pride?”
He lifted as he spoke the brass cake
! stand so roughly’ that one of the plates.
I insecurely set. slipped, and its contents
fell scattering Qver the rug Sir George
swore and rang the hell. Betty’ started
up. Just for a moment the brutal injus
tice of his words bad held her dumb; he
had never said so much to her before
since the day he had told her of what he
had done -the public denial of her en
gagement which he had inserted in the
papers. But now she saw that evidently
he had been drinking, as he had slipped
into the habit of doing these last weeks —
not enough for a stranger to notice, per
haps. but sufficient to make him violent
and irritable and less master of his tem
per than ever.
“Father, say nothing to Fairchild when
she comes in You mustn't swear at the
servants It's horrible I— I forbid it.”
Sir George, utterly taken aback by this
unexpected attitude on the part of his
daughter, actually did stand silent when
the maid entered He stared at Betty
while she gave her orders, his shifty eyes
filled with amazement, his cheeks deepen
ing from red to angry purple.
But as the door closed behind the maid
he found voice
“You forbid?” he cried shrilly. “You'*
How dare you speak so to your father,
miss? Is it not enough that you have
brought public disgrace and shame on his
name without your adding insolence?”
“Public disgrace and shame?” Betty’s
sea grey eyes rested calmly on his face,
but there was no calmness in her heart
It beat furiously, so furiously that in
stinctively she raised her band to her
breast as though to still it. “Expain
yourself, please father.” she said quietly.
That he should speak so to her after —
after it was hard to keep silent, bitterly
hard at that moment while injustice
choked her; while she thought of all that
had been sacrificed for this man's sake
for this man's honor! Honor! At this
moment Betty Lumsden felt almost hatred
for her father.
Betty's Defiance.
“Explain myself” Don’t come your fine
tragedy airs over me. my girl I mean
your shameless conduct in openly associa
ing yourself with witn a felon.
for her farther.
“Father”' There was something in the
one sharply-uttered word that silenced
oven this choleric man. his nerves
twitching and upset, his mental outlook
obscured by the fumes of drink—of some
thing more deadly than drink.
How dare you speak so? You. of all
men' You!” Her look, her voice, her sud
denly outflung hand, all cried aloud an ac
cusation none Hie less terrible that it was
clothed in a definite form of words.
A sudden change came over Sir George’s
face It paled, and the immediate tran
sition from angry purple to mottled
whiteness was startling. His eyes met
those of the girl, standing up there,
straight and slim In her white gown, with
a frightened stare.
Betty turned away quickly. There was
something In his aspect that she could not
bear to see; looking into that suddenly
whitened face, those sobered eyes, was
like looking into an open wound.
“Oh. I don t know," she said, listlessly.
“Only please try not to speak so to me
again I can not hear it. You must
know and if you don't, 1 toll you now
and beg you never to forget it—that the
man y mi have spoken of as a felon is the
man I love An innocent man a man—”
Her voice broke. Without another word
she turned and ran blindly out of the
rtorn. Sir- George Lumsden, standing on
the hearthrug beside the untouched tea
table, stared after her as she went, his
lips twitching under the thick white
moustache.
What can she know 0 ” he muttered to
himself. “What can she know'*'
I'pstairs In her bedroom Betty turned
the krv in the lock and flung herself face
downwards on the little white bed under
the picture of the Good Shepherd, whose
sheltering arms and outstretched hand
seemed to mock her sense of absolute
a ba ndonmont.
It was . II so useless Ro utterly useless
H * thing she had done! That was the
burden of tier sobbing cry as she lay
there, her face buried in the pillows.
What was to bo the end of it? After
all, had hei silence saved her father ma
terially ‘ From public shame and expos
ure. perhaps, yes; but at that moment the
girl was Inclined to undervalue the pain
that public infamy brought It was the
standing condemned at the tribunal of
one’s own conscience which mattered,
which brought suffering and shame that
nothing could assuage,
".lack! <‘h. my dear, my dear’" she
whispered, her hands close against her
breast “Afterward, when there is per
fect understanding, will you know and
forgive'."’
Won Out.
Her mind, utterly worn out by grh f
and suffering, revolved aimlessly always
around this central thought of the silence
which Paul Saxe had enjoined on her
the silence be had rendered imperative
by those words whispered to her on the
day of Rimington’s arrest in that spartan*
!\ furnished private office in Chichester
I House, where the great bouquet of Ameri-
I can Beauty roses had struck so incon -
* gruous a note.
\\ hat an ugly coll the whole thing was!
Hetty, too inexporience<i in business, too
i utterly a child in all matters concerning
’ H.e law. could only listen horror-stricken
while Paul Saxe had explained to her the
j net in w hich she was caught
Not herself alone, nor Jack Rimington,
w**re overshadowed by that death which
I had come suddenly and unknown to the
.gly money spider in Tempest street,
i Her own father, Edith, her sister these
*tw.) were involved, as Saxe had shown
1 tier with merciless clearness
Lying Hmte in the little bhm-and white
ii'Ciho'.m, she reconstructed the scene.
“It s a hateful thing to have to tell you.
I Miss Be’ty, but your father has done a
; i ' fool.sh thing If he had only spoken
| nie. 1 wmild haw helped him gladly,
willing!'. a hundred times over, for your
’ sake Bui a gambler must take risks,
and tie took an ugly one”
A very ugly risk indeed, for Sir George,
deeply involved in debt his capital whit
Hed away or sunk in wildcat invest
ments tl at so far y ielded only promises
had borrowed heavily from Fltzstephen,
i Hie monex lender That had in itself
, been a foolish thing n> It was amaz
! ng even to Betty, knowing little of
'-i; h things as she did. that a man so
- ute should t.axr le~r to a men In he.
taker s insolvent position until Saxe had
i wb spered those few words into her ear
“Your father had forged my name a>
security. Betty, and that very day Fitz
i stephen had found the forqery out!”
To Be Continued in Next Issue
The Making of a Pretty Girl i 3
No. 5.-—HOIV to Combat the Terrors of Sunburn and Freckles
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer.
MOST of the pretty girls have
been wearing those fetching
turnup hats this summer. or
those nice little bonnets that shade
one'g forehead but never keep the sun
off one's nose, find consequently the
summer girl Is beginning to worry
about her tanned skin and very large
assortment of freckles.
Added to these troubles there are
various skin afflictions which gener
ally arise from th» extraordinary col
lection of things eaten to coax the
summer appetite.
A girl will eat quite rationally all
during the winter but as soon as sum
mer comes she must depart from her
sensible menu and develop the must
outlandish combinations, washed down
with quantities of iced tea or iced
coffee. One is as bad as the other.
Shun greasy food in summer as you
would the plague Iced tea is a very
strong stimulant, and iced coffee Is
completely indigestible. especially if
taken with cream.
In winter If you have eaten not
wisely hut too well, you may be able
to avoid the consequences, but In hot
weather they are sure to show quite
plainly In your face; in disfiguring
blotch's and eczema if there Is the
‘lightest tendency to that trouble.
In the latter case, and indeed where
there is any trouble with the skin,
don't eat salt meat or pork in any
form Instead of drinking soda water
by the quantity and then wondering
why you have no appetite for (upper
take lemonade. Avoid fish. torA and
eat all the fresh vegetables that you
can get.
A Good Ointment.
For eruption of the skin generally,
especially when it is scaley. use zinc
ointment, which can be had at any
drug store. Five cents worth will do
to see if it agrees with you. Many of !
ihe skin foods and creams are excel
lent for this trouble. Sometimes it is
necessary to soften the skin before ap
plying 1 hem. Wash the save very care
fully with a good brand soap and a
clean cloth. Rinse it thoroughly and
then apply cloths wrung out In very
hot water. The water must be Just
as hot as you can stand It. Lay these
cloths over the face and let them stay
on for ten minutes at least, changing
just as soon as the cloths get cool
After the skin i= thoroughly softened
apply your cream, and the result will
be much more satisfactory than the
ordinary application.
This treatment should he given at
night. In the morning wipe off the re
maining cream with a soft cloth. Where
there are blackheads the complexion
brush should be used, but do not use it
w here there are scales and pimples and
sores. Wait until these have healed.
The best way to prevent sunburn; is to
cover the face with a light coat of
cream before going out. Any good
cream will do, but there are many
which come especially for this purpose.
Five drops of glycerine to one ounce
of rose water is the ordinary prepara
tion called glycerine and rose water.
You can use plain distilled water if you
want to make the lotion cheaper. Dab
this on the face and then wipe it off in
about five minutes. It often happens
that glycerine does not agree with the
skin.. This can only be found out
through experience, however.
Where the face is very red from sun
burn and slightly swollen, make a paste
of buttermilk and cornstarch and spread
it over the face. Personally 1 dislike
the odor of buttermilk except for drink
ing, and wa m milk and cornstarch are
almost as good and certainly much
pleasanter to use Leave the paste on
until dry and wash off with more milk.
A Milk Face-Bath.
A famous beauty, not an actress, al
ways used milk to bathe her face in.
She is inclined to freckle, and insisted
that she would be a sight if It hadn't
been for the milk treatment. I think
she could have done the same amount
of good at less expense by using soft
water, rain water preferably, and a
small bit of borax or a few drops of
b. nzotn in the wash basin.
A good preventive for sunburn and
freckles Is found in quince seed. Take
two draems of quince seeds; bruise
them and boil them In n pint of water
for ten minutes, and then strain. When
the jelly has cooled use it on face and
hands before going In the sun. This
cream is especially nice because it can
be rubbed right In to the skin and does
not show.
All these suggestions are helpful Re
light freckles, but w hen It comes to the
really deep kind one must try some
thing much stronger. Peroxide of hy
drogen will bleach freckles if the solu
tion Is strong enough. The trouble is
that it usually Isn't. One gets a small
bottle that has been lying around the
shop for ever so long and Is so surprised
when It has no effect. Get a strong so
lution and apply the peroxide with a
paint brush or a bit of cotton on the
end of a match Just touch the freckle;
don't wet the rest of the skin, as it is
very strong and will sting and burn ' If
the skin Is Irritated aftet the applica
tion rub on a good cream
To protect yourself from freckling
still further, use a solution of epsom
aaits and water. Make this as strong
as you like. It will leave a light pow
der on the skin, which is perfectly
harmless and Is often used as liquid
powder
Friction will help you to banish frec
kles. as it will always stimulate the
circulation. When you are washing
your face at night after using the face
brush, massage the face in this way.
'Have ready this lotion, which is easily
made Take four teaspoonsful of fine
oatmeal ('over it with water and boil
lit. Add mon water as needed When
the oatmeal is quite done, strain and
I let it cool. Now put ‘ t the Juice of i
~ L , C;
- JIB
.Or 1
• ii I ■■
i ■ Wwjir'
I bm
io
A SUMMER GIRL.
two lemons. Apply this to the face,
patting it on. Now wet the hands in
cold water and massage the face vigor
ously. Always use the upward and out.
ward movements, and when using this
oatmeal lotion pat tho face verj" vigor
ously. Puff out the cheeks, slap your
self juat as quickly and as lightly as
you can. Use a quick little tapping
movement over the forehead, one linger
at a time, using the index, middle and
fourth fingers in succession’. After you
Advice to the Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax
WOULD YOU FOftCE HIS LOVE?
Dear Miss Fait fax:
There is a young; man who calls
to see me very often. I know he
likes me as tar as friendship is
concerned, but how can I find if lie
really cares for me, as I care a
great deal for him? I’. S. P.
It happens sometimes that love is of
a slow growth, and when it is the sen
timent is the more vigorous.
He calls often; he is interested in
you. In time I am sure this interest
will develop into love, but don't try to
force it.
On the contrary. let him see that if
he is interested in you or not is a mat
ter of the greatest indifference.
YOUR FOLKS ARE RIGHT.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am nineteen and am deeplx in
love with a man of eighteen, who
is still in school. My folks object
to our marriage ver;, much, which
makes my life miserable. Do you
think I will do right in marrying
him aYiyway? LONGING
A girl of nineteen is so much more
mature than a boy of eighteen that
there exists what is equal to a diff- i -
ence of five or six years in their ages.
He i.s too young to marr\. and being
WAJL
, v
THE HAIR OF YOUR YOUTH
“Rich, glossy, luxuriant fncinating hail
of vouth.’
Why should you not keep it so -continue
to have it plenty of soft youthful-looking
hair, to dress in the many styles most be
coming to you —that keep you looking
young, attractive —that please you and
your admirers too.
Don’t let the grey hairs in they’ll make
you look old—lose your charm and fresh
ness. Besides others notice them at once
and comment on them too.
KEEP THE HAIR OF YOUR YOUTH
USE HAY’S HAIR HEALTH
tl 0(1 and 50c .1/ I)'t Storrs o> durrt ution sect
if finer and drain name. Send 10. far trial
httla. —f* Ai/« Hay Specialties Co., Neitark, A*. J
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are through, wash off the remaining
oatmeal, or, if > >u like, let it remain on
all night.
To refreshen the skin on a warm day,
get. a dish or basin, fill it with cold
water in which there are a few pieces
of ice, acid several drops of camphor,
bathe the face in this until your tem
perature is lowered. Better still, if you
cajt apply cracked ice in a folded ban
dage under the < bin and at the sides of
the face.
still in school, should confine his pres
ent interests to his books. If you really
have his interests at heart you will re
fuse him, though he asks you every
day. Your parents are right. You
owe them respect to their wishes.
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We control completely the usual'
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sleep. Patients unable to visit Sani-i
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home. References: The Mayor of
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. any Citizen of Lebanon. Write for
Free Booklet No. 2. Address
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F. J. SANDERS, Mgr.. Lebanon, Tennessee
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91 Peachtree St.
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* Little Bobbie’s Pa *
By William F. Kirk
WHAT do you think little Bobbie
ought to study this summer
wile he is having his vaca
shun? sed Ma to Pa last nite. You
remember how I asked him to go down
to the office & be a office boy. sed Ma,
& how you laffed at rne & toald me
that yure idea of oeeing no worker |
was beeing a office boy. So I thought
maybe that it wud be kind of nice for
Bobbie to study law this summer. You
know that luvly woman, Missus Black
stone. that was up to the house las*
nite. Her husband is a lawyer & she
toald me that he made enuff munny to
go to Europe every year.
You doant say so, sed Pa. Dear me,
Pa sed, that is singular. 1 knew a
lawyer onst. Pa sed. that made enuff
munny to go to the South Sea Islands
& stay there. I doant reemember jest
how he got the munny, Jeu Pa, out ne
was certainly no piker; I think he got
away with four or five hundred thou
sand dollars.
You are too fresh, sed Ma. I doant
mean that kind of munny. I mean
munny that is earned by honest law
yers. by the sweat of thare clients’
brows. Why doant you let littel Bob
ble go & study law with Missus Black
stone's husband?
He can if he wants to, sed Pa. If he
wants to spend these hot days lerning
about the statute in such case made &
provided, he can do it. If he wud like
to stop going in swimming at the old
swimming hole & lern to draw up a
foreclosure complaint in wich a widow
Al- her nine children is the ten defend
ants, Pa sed, he can go rite down to
Blackstone's offis tomorrow.
But you must remember, sed Ma to
Pa, that you doant know as much about
lawyers as Missus Blackstone, the wife
of one.
I ought to know sumthing about
lawyers, sed Pa. I get a lot of letters
from them. & beesides, sed Pa. wen
I was a yung boy 1 used to be a ste-
Do You Know—
During the past thirty years over
3.000,000 oxen have been received at
the Lindon cattle markets from Amer
ica.
Twin wireless telegraph stations to
bring London and New York into direct
communication are under construction.
From deep water in the Atlantic to
deep water in the Pacific the Panama
Canal will be fifty miles in length.
In the United Kingdom there are
372 persons to the square mile; in
Canada the proportion Is two,
one quart of honey represents to
bees a flight of JR.00(1 miles between
the hive and the flowers.
No fewer than sixty-three airmen
were killed in 1911, of whom seven
were Englishmen.
Low Summer
Excursion Rates
CINCINNATI, $19.50
LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO
I CHICAGO, - $30.00
I j KNOXVILLE - $7.90
I Tickets on Sale Daily, Good
to October 31st, Returning
I City Ticket Office, 4 Peachtree
V) 1S AFtIA AAH t studied al ,hE Uni '
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ATLANTA, GA
13 " 4 >’r-a< htree road. Just beyond Ansley Pail.
t.ljil NltS AND Bl 11.1 UNGS; private park; beautiful!} shaded and lands
affording privacy of ttie eountrv.
BiII.DINGS Boarding department (llrnltedl. one of the most beautiful >
in the entire oit} New Academic building a model of school constrt
lighting, ventilation, heating, with open-air class rooms, gymnasiums. aunt"
ritun, etc 'renins courts and other outdoor gam -s.
DEI'AHTM ENTS Kindergarten, primary, academic, college preparatory. • ’
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ME I HODS Small classes, last year 235 pupils and 18 teachers, allowing
teacher for everv 13 pupils
A' 'I 'ESSIBII.IT Y Three tar lines, Peachtree, West Peachtree and Bit'
lines: 20 minutes from center of city.
r’P.i iTEPTION Special police officer at 2:30 and 1.30 to protect student- c “ '
ting on and off cars.
t’ATAI.tHU E and views on request; thirty-fifth year begins September 1-
I.I.KWELLYN I' AND EMMA B SCOTT,
I ’rinelpals
I hone Ivy 647.
SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
largest Phurmac} School South Drug store in the college Free b”
tug »20 book expenses. Large new budding and equipment, three lab " •
Demand Lu out graduates exceeds supple ball Session begins Oct-
Write for catalogue. Address
■ vv. B. FREEMAN, Sec,, 81 buckle *t.. Atlanta, Ga. 1
nograffer in a law offis & I uspr
study law, too. I used to make out d?
vorce paipers. etc., sed Pa.
I doant quite beleeve that, sed Ma
You doant. doant you? sed Pa. \y f .
this Is the way the divorce palpei-.
went. Slate of Wisconsin, Count; ~f
Wisconsin. John Dingbrt. uh. ■
I versus Mario *>lngbat. d»frrilant. t? s
plaintiff in the above entitled aeksh m
thru his attorney, alleges that t./.-h
parties to the above entitled acks' ■
are & have been residents of the ;,b ,■>'
naimed state and count.'" for ate- L
ten years. The plaintiff further alleg..-
that the defendant has been guilt',
cruel and inhuman treatment to tb/s
plaintiff, such as banging him on •i
--bean with boulders * talking
time he is reading, all to the g>>:„
mental & fizzical anguish of this .. a | P
tiff.
Oh. Keep stilt, sed Ma to Pn. | t
seems to me laitly, she sed, that vm,
newer cum hoam without having a
awful braking out around the mouth
Can't you talk about two mlnnlts &
then let me have a few moments of
conversashun? sed Ma. The question
still Is, sed Ma. do you want Bobby to
study law? Do you want him to be a
lawyer?
I doant think he wud maik nnuff
munny beeing a lawyer in New York,
sed Pa. Colleckshuns is aw ful bad.
Nadine Face Powder
(In Boxes Only. )
Makes the Complexion Beautiful
t Soft and Velvety
It is Pure,
Harmless
Monty Back if A'j,
Entirely Pleased.
The soft, velvety
appearance re
mains until pow
der is washed off.
Purified by a new
process. Prevent;
unburn and return of discolorations.
The increasing popularity is wonderful
White, Fleth, Pink, Brunette. By
toilet counters or mail. Price 50 cents.
NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY. Parb, T m
CHICHESTER S PILLS
z-CTV . Tn K DIAMOND HRAXn A
/JlJrjjMl •’'•""’"ABrnnd/AX
*** S «tE& ? 1 in ar, J Oold fnet»ll!c\V7
ft iL 0 '?- ’“led with Blue Ribbon. V/
*7 AW ?• •"■•e- B ".' "f yonr V
/ rar A,| (for<>irt.cires-TEBs
DIAMOND BRAND PILLS.
fe ye’f knownns Best. Safest, Al.av, Relinnfw
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
I 2 ■ Opium. VThJskoy and Doit Habit treat-
I fig feanitArlum Book oa
autoed Fyw. DJLB.IL WOOLLIY.
24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. i»a
TETTERINE FOR POISON OAK
J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.
Dear Sir; 1 inclose 50 cents in stamps
for a box of Tetterine. I have poison <>ak
on rne again, and Tetterine is all that ever
has cured it. Please hurry it on to yours
respectfully, M. E. HAMLETT.
Montalba, Tex.. May 21, 1908.
Tetterine 50c, at your druggist, or b"
mall from manufacturers. The Shuptr r-
Company, Savannah. Ga.
HOTELS AND RESORTS.
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J
GRAND ''ATLANTIC HOTEL
Virginia ave., near Beach and Steel I’ier,
Open surroundings. Capacity 500. Hot anl
cold sea water baths. Large rooms, sect
ern exposure. Elevator to street level, spa
cious porches, etc. Special week rates;
52.50 up daily. Booklet. Coaches meet
trains. COOPER & LEETS
:HLWTICCirY.f
Leatline Pc sori House of |
| O JOSIAH WNITf » SONS COMPANY
J