Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 29, 1912, EXTRA, Image 5

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THE OtEORQIAMS MAGAZINE PAGE “The Gates of Silence” By Meta Simmins, Author of “Hushed Up” TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. 4t this moment she was thinking of hing ln particular—her mind was too 110 " *,l too grief-sodden for consecutive ,tunn ® t '. she h(u j her hours of bravery ’"d'her hours of grief-stricken cowardice ‘’ bli , morning had seemed one of the " This morning she had broken down 18 div Edith had wr,tten to her ~ the Tst ne«s she had of her since the death fiittle Phil; a letter written in a mo ° nt O s madness—a letter accusing her "’elf of preposterous things. Poor, broken 6earted Edith, who for the second time had fled from her husband ’ s hous «> fled in I, preservation, as Mrs. Marlowe, the housekeeper, had hinted to Betty when th e 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 c f her lover condemned, innocent man as he was, to die for another’s sin had dwarfed all her grief; only this morning S he had been vouchsafed a glimpse into ‘hat awful world of pain and fear in which Edith Barrington had lived during those long weeks. Und 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 Miss Betty—that's what the master is in these days,” Mrs. Mar lowe had whispered, telling Betty the ,tery 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 not very far from his distracted wife. "It was I who betrayed your lover to . he police, Betty—to eave myself. It Is on my head that his blood will be. Fer gus me. Betty, If ever you can—l was msd with fear." getty had broken down badly over that letter— badly. Now she seemed past grief M S he stood by the window, words re peating themselves meanlnglessly and maddeningly, as detached phrases will ’in suoh momenta—the haunting words of Keats' ghostly ballad, "... tho’ the eedge is withered from the lake and no •birds sing.” Desolate and dreary to a degree, this outlook on the ruined garden, the scat tering yellowed leaves, the dashed rosea that would yet linger till the frosts came, the leaden stretch of the river. Desolate and haunting the words of the poet re peated themselves In her brain —“And this !» 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 her there 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 door opened and a 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 no electric light In the Croft drawing room—the long room paneled 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 day- when houses were built by men with love and care, and beautified by- them that they might leave a goodly heritage for their children, not run up at cut throat risks by some jerry-builder speculator. "Sir George has come home, miss," the maid said, as she set out the tea table. "He asked me to say- 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 herself out tea, though she knew her father's coming might be long delayed. She leaned back in her chair, looking at the fire that was very grateful on this afternoon of 1 chill October The light of wax candles and the blaze of the leaping fire 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 and silver drawn near the Are, and the graceful, listless figure of the girl who sat beside it. But Betty Lumsden, glttlng there, saw nothing of beauty or charm; the eyes of her imagination were fixed on a prison "ell. where a man and his watchers wait ed for death: her own body- was cold with ’ho actual physical cold that was chilling the blood of the man she loved In his desolate prison. Her ears were deaf to |p soft hiss and crackle of the logs on •he hearth; another sound echoed there, 'imwnlng all others—the creak of the car penter s saw, the thud of the hammer, the stealthy, subdued noises of the men who built a scaffold. H hat what! Not begun tea yet?” r George bustled into the room, bang mg the door behind him, bringing with ini, as he usually did, an atmosphere discord and unrest. He started for ward toward the table by the fire, and ' nfe broke Into a torrent of abuse. Betty Chastened. 1 on my word—the hot cakes not even sight of the fire! Is that your or that girl's? She’s next door to a and you’re not much better. What’s meaning of It? What’s the meaning “Just Say" HORLICK’S It Means Original and Genuine HALTED MILK * The Food-drink for All Ages, More healthful than Tea or Coffee, grees with the weakest digestion, elicious, invigorating and nutritious. H'Mtec. grain, powder form. <-#• 'unch prepared in a miaute. iake no substnu.e. Ask for HORLICK’S. Others are imitations. of this moping and mooning about the house the day long? Where's your pride, girl—where's your pride?" 1 He lifted as he spoke the brass cake . stand so roughly that one of the plates. nsacurely set, slipped, and its contents fell scattering over the rug. Sir George ’ swore and rang the bell. Betty started i up. Just for a moment the brutal Injus t ce of his words had 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 i and Irritable and less master of his tem i per than ever. i Father, say nothing to Fairchild when she comes in. You mustn't swear at the servants. It's horrible. I—l forbid it." Sir George, utterly taken aback by this unexpected attitude on the part of his daughter, actually did stand* silent when i 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 i 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 I name without your adding insolence?” "Public disgrace and shame?” Betty's 1 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 hand to her i breast as though to still It. "Expain i yourself, please father,” she said quietly. That he should speak so to her after— aHer—it was hard to keep silent, bitterly i hard at that moment while injustice choked her; while she thought of all that i had been sacrificed for this man’s sake— i for this man's honor! Honor! At this moment Betty Lumsden felt almost hatred i 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 assocla ing yourself with—with a felon.” for her farther. "Father!” There was something In the one sharply-uttered word that silenced i even this choleric man, his nerves twitching and upset, his mental outlook i 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 the 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 whltenees 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 bear it. You must know —and if you don’t, I tell you now and beg you never to forget it—that the man you 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 room 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?" he muttered to himself. "What can she know?" Upstairs In her bedroom Betty turned the key 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 abandonment. It was all so useless —so utterly useless —the thing she had done! That was the burden of her sobbing cry as she lay there, her face buried in the pillows. What was to be the end of it? After all. had her 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. “Jack! Oh, 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 grief and suffering, revolved aimlessly always' around this central thought of the silence which Paul Saxe had enjoined on her— the silence he had rendered imperative by those words whispered to her on the day of Rlmington's arrest in that spartan ly furnished private office in Chichester House, where the great bouquet of Ameri can Beauty roses had struck so Incon gruous a note. What an ugly coll the whole thing was! Betty, too inexperienced in business, too utterly a child in all matters concerning the law, could only listen horror-stricken while Paul Saxe had explained to her the net In which she was caught Not herself alone, nor Jack Rimlngton. were overshadowed by that death w-hlch bad come suddenly ami unknown to the ugly money spider in Tempest street. Her own father. Edith, her sister—these two were involved, as Baxe had shown her with merciless clearness. Lying there in the little blue-and-white bedroom, she reconstructed the scene. "It's a hateful thing to have to tell you. Miss Betty, but your father has done a very foolish thing If he had only spoken to me, I would have helped him gladly, willingly, a hundred times over, for your sake. But a gambler must take risks, and he took an ugly one”— A very ugly risk, Indeed, for Sir George, deeply involved in debt—his capital whit tled away or sunk In wildcat invest ments that so far yielded only promises -had borrowed heavily from Fltzstephen, the money lender That had In itself been a foolish thing to do. It was amaz ing even to Betty, knowing little of such things as she did. that a man so astute should have lent U> a. men in h«r. father's Insolvent position until Saxe had whispered those few words into her ear: "Your father had forged my name as security. Betty, and that very day Fltz stephen had found the forgery out!” To Be Continued in Next Issue. The Making of a Pretty Girl & No. $. —How 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 I one’s forehead but never keep the sun off one’s nose, and 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- I ally arise from the 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 i mer comes she must depart from her ■ sensible menu and develop the most outlandish combinations, washed down 1 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 I taken with cream. In winter If you have eaten not wisely but 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 > blotches and eczema if there is the . slightest 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 I ' why you have no appetite for supper • take lemonade. Avoid fish, too, 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 i ointment, which can be had at any i drug store. Five cents worth will do to see If it agrees with you. Many of the skin foods and creams are excel lent for this trouble. Sometimes it is . necessary to soften the skin before ap- I plying them. Wash the face very care fully with a good brand soap and a . elean 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 1 Just as soon as the cloths get cool. After the skin is thoroughly softened apply your cream, and the result will be much more satisfactory than the • ordinary application. This treatment should be 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 • where 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 it 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 thi 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 I dislike the odor of buttermilk except for drink ing. and warm milk and cornstarch are 1 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 benzoin 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 boll them In a 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 for light freckles, but when 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 1 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 after the appllca- ( tion rub on a good cream. To protect yourself from freckling < still further, use a solution of epsom ; salts 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 1 powder. 1 Friction will help you to banish free- I kies, as it will always stimulate the circulation. When you are washing your face at night after using the face I brush, massage the face In this way: Have ready this lotion, which is easily I made. Take four teaspoonsful of fine oatmeal. Cover It with water and boll ■ It. /Xdd more water as needed. When ' the oatmeal Is quite done, strain and let It cool. Now put In the juice of 4 \\ x al? z~ till ,W I I A t HWwmIB ■' Uk ft JS M , i bo! nil I If ‘ v UM I I I Ugg SHI I Sil! I Willi Kw OK I I tai || a I w M - ; Sit A SUMMER GIRL. two lemons. Apply this to the face, patting it on. Now wet tho 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 the face very vigor ously. Puff out the cheeks, slap your- i self just as quickly and as lightly as I you can. Use a quick little tapping movement over the forehead, one finger < at a time, using the index, middle and i fourth fingers in succession. After you I Advice to the Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax WOULD YOU FORCE HIS LOVE? Dear Miss Fairfax: There is a young' man who calls to see me very often. 1 know he likes me as far as friendship is concerned, but how can I find if he really cares for me, as I care a great deal for him? IT. 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: 1 am nineteen and am deeply in love with a man of eighteen, who is still in school. My folks object to our marriage very much, which makes my life miserable. Do you think I will do right in marrying him anyway? LONGIN.G. A girl of nineteen is so much more mature than a boy of eighteen that there exists what is equal to a differ ence of five or six years in their ages. He is too young to marry, and being << g® THE HAIR OF YOUR YOUTH “Rich, flossy, luxuriant facinating hail of youth.’ 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 ll 00 and 50c at Draff Stores or direct upon receipt if price and dealer's name. Send 10c for trial kettle. —I’hilo Has Specialties Co.. Newark, N. J C'OR SALE AND RECOMMENDED E 'COBS’ PH'KRMACY. are through, wash off the remaining oatmeal, or, if j ,u like, let it remain on all night. To rdfreshen 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, add several drops of camphor, bathe the face in this until your tem perature is lowered. Better still, if you can apply cracked ice in a folded ban dage under the chin 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. morphine I Liquor and Tobacco Addictions Cured Within Ten Days by Our New Painless Methcd. Only Sanitarium in the World Giving Unconditional Guarantee. Our guarantee means something. Not one dollar need be paid, until a satis factory pure has been effected. We control completely the usual withdrawal symptoms. No extreme nervousness, aching limbs, or loss of sleep. Patients unable to visit Sani ■ tariuin can be treated privately at : home. References: 'Die Mayor of • our City, the President of any Bank, or . any Citizen of Lebanon, Write for : Free Booklet No. 2. Address CUMBERLAND SANITARIUM F. J. SANDERS, Mgr., Lebanon, Tennessee -DIXIE. y tip T EYE GLASSES ‘ Do you know that few Opti cians understand adjusting and frame fitting? Do you know that I a poor-fitting frame will do the eyes as much harm as poor lenses? You want your frames as well as your lenses right; then come to us, as we understand every part of the Optical busi ness. Twenty years experience In testing the eyes and filling Ocu lists’ prescriptions. HINES OPTICAL COMPANY 91 Peachtree St. ! Between Montgomery and Alcazar Theaters 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 me & toald me that yure idea of beeing 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 A- she toald me that he made enuff mutiny to go to Europe every year. You doant say so, sed Pa. Dear me. Pa sed, that is singular. I knew a lawyer onst, Pa sed. that made enuff mutiny to go to the South Sea Islands & stay there. I doant reemember jest how lie got the munny, sed Pa, but ho 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 iflean munny that is earned by honest law yers. by the sweat of thare clients’ brows. Why doant you let littel Bob bie 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 ease made & provided, he can do it. If he wud like to stop going tn swimming at the old swimming hole A- lern to draw up a foreclosure complaint in wich a widow & 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 mud’, about lawyers as Missus Blackstone, the wife of one. 1 ought to know sumthing about lawyers, sed Pa. I get a lot of letters from them. A- beesides, sed Pa, wen I was a yung boy I used to be a ste- Do You Kno.w—- During the past thirty years over 000,000 oxen have been received at the London 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 i Canada the proportion is two. One quart of honey represents to ; bees a flight of 48.000 miles between Hie hive and the flowers. I No fewer than sixty-three airmen were killed in 1911, of whom seven were Englishmen. fMMMBBHSBBMKmaaaSraiKKHi Low Summer ; Excursion Rates CINCINNATI, $19.50 LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO CHICAGO, - $30.00 KNOXVILLE • $7.90 I Tickets on Sale Daily, Good to October 31st, Returning | City Ticket Office, 4 Peachtree ■ m*. _M./aaa»<*. ~wj g FjIHFI * £ f studied at tlle u "'- « 114 ala a &MB gsaS 3 a wsi, I 01 Georgia tLyggK S &Slg * Blunder the most fav- Sin mt& CT al iM ora ble environment a 1 K ® M rof college life means " ••• Ivwl •• wW efficient preparation for a lucrative position. Send for catalog to Dean S. C. BENIDICT, M. D„ Athens, Ga. WASHINGTON SEMINARY ATLANTA. GA. NEW LOCATION —1374 Peachtree road, just beyond Ansley Park. GROUNDS AND BOLDINGS; private park, beautifully shaded and landscaped, affording privacy of the country. BUILDINGS Boarding department (limited), one of the most beautiful homes In the entire city New Academic building a model of school construction tr. lighting, ventilation, heating, with open-air class rooms, gymnasiums, audito rium, etc. Tennis courts and other outdoor games. DEPARTMENTS Kindergarten, primary, academic, college preparatory, domes tic science, physical culture, piano, pipe organ, voice, violin, art, expression. METHODS Small classes: last year 235 pupils and 18 teachers, allowing one teacher for every 13 pnplls. ACCESSIBILITY Three car lines, Peachtree, West Peachtree and Buckhead lines; 20 minutes from center of city. PROTECTION Special police officer at 2:30 and 1:30 to protect students get ting on and off cars. CATALOGUE and views on request; thirty-fifth year begins September 12. LLEWELLYN D. AND EMMA B. SCOTT, Principals. Phone Ivy 647. SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Largest Pharmacy School South. Drug store in the college Free books sav ing S2O book expenses. Large new building and equipment, three laboratories Demand for our graduates exceeds supply. Fall Session begins October Ist Write for catalogue. Address ■ —————— w. B. FREEMAN, Sec., 81 Luckle At., Atlanta, Ga.— —• nograffer in a law offis & I used to ■ study law, too. I used to make out di vorce paipers, etc., sed Pa. I doant quite beleeve that, sed Ma. You doant, doant you? sed Pa. Well, this is the way the divorce palperg went, State of Wisconsin, County of Wisconsin. John Dingbat. plaintiff. I versus Marie fMnahat defendant. The plaintiff in the above entitled ackshun, thru his attorney, alleges that both parties to the above entitled ackshun are A- have been residents of the above naimed state and county for a term of ten years. The plaintiff further alleges ' that the defendant has been guilty of cruel and Inhuman treatment to this plaintiff, such as banging him on the bean with boulders & talking all the time he is reading, all to the grate • mental A- lizzical anguish of this plain ; tiff. ' Oh. keep still, sed Ma to Pa. It seems to me laitly, she sed, that you newer cum hoam without having a awful braking out around the mouth. i 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? 1 doant think he wud maik enuff : munny beeing a lawyer in New York, sed Pa. Colleckshuns is awful bad. Nadine Face Powder (In Green Doxes Only. ) Makes the Complexion Beautiful ® Soft and Velvety It is Pure, Harmless Money Rack if Nm Entirely Eleaicd. The soft, velvet, appearance re mains until pow der is washed off. Purified by a nen process. Prevents unburn and return of discolorations. The increasing popularity is wonderful. ITA/fz, Eleih, Pink, Brunette. By toilet counters or mail. Price 50 cents. NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY. Tint CHICHESTER S PILLS f;* ---*-I Bl* ln Bed and Oold n>etall,c\^) t’T' s '» l 'd u ’’l‘h Blue Ribbon. Vy T?j ’jig A ,k ® other. Buy of your V I / sis Aik GrCHI-OItES.TFR’B Is. H brani> pilTSJsm 1 Rr y fiars Beat,Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE rymmakia I & fl ■ Opium. Whiskey and Dnif Habit treat* 1 K ed at Home or at Sanitarium. Book oa AwfWMw Mblect Tree Dll. B. M. WOeLUBT. 24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga. TETTERINE FOR POISON OAK J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Dear Sir. I inclose 50 cents in stamps for a box of Tetterine I have poison oak on me again, and Tetterlne is al! that ever has cured it. Please hurry it on to yours respectfully, M. E. HAMLETT. Montalba, Tex., May 21, 1008. Tetterlne 50c, at your druggist, or by mail from manufacturers. The Shuptrine Company, Savannah, Ga. ••• HOTELS AND RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. GRAND ATLANTIC HOTEL. Virginia ave . near Beach and Steel Pier, Open surroundings. Capacity 500. Hot and cold sea water baths. Large rooms, south ern exposure Elevator to street level, spa cious porches, etc Special week rates; 12 50 up daily. Booklet. Coaches meet trains. COOPER & LEEDS. 1 rfite WwJ | HIJIKnCC/TY.y Leudiiio Rcserl House of the World | IQSIAH WMITf I SONS COMPANY | I