Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 07, 1912, FINAL, Image 8

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THE OEOBOIAWTS MAGAZUME PAGE “The Gates of Silence” U"~ By Meta Stmmins, Author oj "Hushed Up TODAY'S INSTALLMENT. With the outside Kang slso there was less Intimacy of assaciation than nni"nr those convicts «1.0 worked tn tti* prison itself, at tailoring or mailbag making. <>r in the bakeries and cook houses II sometimes seemed to Rimlngton that all the slyest, most crooked natures > otigre gated in those workshops tlie men who, possessing intelligence rather than tins: cal strength, had used ft for outwitting their fellow-men Tl»r<- in the very prison itself they were using it for the same purpose: it was amazing to him to find how all the vigilance of the warders was outwitted There was more than one Code in existence by which conversation could W carried on under the warder’s eyes, the most wonderful ingenuity had gone to the construction of a cit her al phabet that enabled the prison news to circulate with the completeness and ve racity of a newspaper While he was amazed at its cleverness, a sense of honor uncommonly rare .n a prisoner, since prison air Is fatal to the blossom of Straightforwardness and truth, made Rlmington shrink from participating In it, as he would almost have been forced to participate had be remained Inside With the outside gang conversation of a sort was permitted, but its nature was not such as to render him anxious to pursue it. If It was not coarse and bes tlal. it was sad and heartrending Some times he wondered if the stories told him could possibly be true, thev were so strange, so heartrending He learned In time that many an unknown Francois Villon plied his merry art of picturesque imagination In that gloom' place Thoughts of Betty. In the meantime, of the outside world he heard nothing He was not forgotten —in the bitterest moments he could not bring himself to believe that Hetty had not forgotten him vet Bui after her who was there, tn remember or to care” He did not know If his uncle had died, as he was supposed to be on the point of dying His aunt, the strange, enigmatical little lady who. In her most Intimate mo. ments. had always seemed so singularly aloof, had been silent nil through She had never cared much for him. lie knew that—Toby had been her favorite Now he supposed she execrated him in her heart, whtte-souled little Puritan that she was Then, all unexpectedly, the silence was broken. He was Informed that he was permitted tn have a visitor. With his heart in his mouth, wondering by what chance this unusual concession had been made —for hfs time of probation was not yet over, dreading he hardly knew what he marched to the visitors' room and CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought The Midsummer Issue of FACTS I has just been pub lished. If you are interested in the best kind of advertising FACTS will be inter esting to you. FACTS will be sent you FREE upon re quest. Please use business letterhead. Address FACTS, 225 Fifth Ave., New York. I' I UNIVERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS STONE MOUNTAIN, GA. ISttALF ■•W.CDUpm. , iWjg .SMaWWr ? UNIVERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS ’.B a regular school where boys are taught and not just compelled to attend c lasses. A school fashioned after the old style system of tutoring where in dividual instruction is given each student , where the finer attributes of a gentleman, not taught by books, are inculcated; where a sound, healthy Ixxiy is developed coincident with a broad, quick mind. A school where boys are transformed into men equipped, mentally and physically to take up 1 Life’s duties or given a firm foundation on which to build their education in the higher institu | tions of learning. This is done by limiting the students to 96; one instructor for every ten boys. More than Twenty percent, of the student body, each year, are brothers of former students. Give u.» 4i boy: tee’ll irive you a man. Handsome illustrated catalog and information furnished. Address SANDY BEAVER. Principal. Box 53 STONE MOUNTAIN, CA. I (olteg eO % A High Grade Inititution Tor Young Women. 1 Beaut.fully located near the Mountains, in the most healthful section of 2 the South—not a deal hin the College during the forty years of *e» •y - eA slt *nce. 1 v, ‘ r y convenience of modern home. Only two girb -a 1 41 a riH.rn with large stndy bet ween every two rooms. Every building re-nforced * mcrete, absolutely fire-proof, thoroughly modern. |L , 1 • acres in grounds and campus. Faculty chosen from finest American and European Universities. Full Literary Course lea i ir gtuA.B. dcRr.M ; unexcelled ad\antay s in Music. Art. Fjtpree 4g-VCT\ W h " n - a”ct.t.or» to Fry .., al Development. Catalog on re- . wl que.-L 1 Jf'* A * W* VAN HOOSE, President, Rome, Ga. found himself face to face with his aunt This was a part of the kingdom of si s lente he had never visited, this "inter y view room." Rimlngton glanced round it curioi;-lj as he entered, and took -<• with a comprehensive glance and at. tu r telligence quickened by these starved t mouths during which small things were I great He saw a small, bare room di- - vided by iron railings Into three portions '. and having two doors—the door from his own world by which he entered and the < door by which the visitor from the other i world enters The visitor's door led Into a f section of the room divided from the rest I I by iron bars running from floor to ceiling; s beyond this was a space about three feet e wide, where the warder stood, and be i yond that, behind another railing, a space s whore he himself stood 1 Mrs Rimlngton was in mourning Her sombre dress, in which every detail 1 seemed exaggerated—the crepe heavier and deeper, the veil longer and more vol s umlnous, the lawn cuffs and collar wider r and more snowy than ever he had seen before told Rlmington. without words. f that his uncle was dead. Ho stood star e Ing stupidly at the little figure that 1 seemed to make the desolation of the bare I room complete, and said no word. Speech does not come readily to a man after i months of Imprisonment at Bilmouth. 4 It was the woman who broke the silence 1 I first She threw back her veil with the imperious little gesture Rimlngton re membered. and turned to the warder "Who Is this man" she demanded in 1 her small, clear voice, that was like the 1 rote of a fairy flute. Rimlngton had often - laughingly told her "It is my nephew, ' John Rlmington* that 1 wish to see.” A Great Change. "This is John Rimlngton," the warder I said, civilly enough The question caused i him no surprise, he was too well accus t tomed to the change that prison works In i a man's looks, to the leveling influence of prison dress and discipline, that speed ’ ily brings Into line the prince and the < peasant I But to Rimlngton the question was a I shock and an awakening. He realized . now us he had hardly realized before, that he was In no way different in ap pearance from those other shaven clowns among whom his days were, passed. .’ "Yes. It Is I. aunt," he said, and his r very voice was (hanged, the hesitating ? voice of one who seldom speaks. Even more than the physical change in the i man before her, this change of voice from < the gay. pleasant tones she knew to a < low-pitched servility hurt the woman t staring at him with wide eyes behind the t bars of the cage. t "Oh, Jack I didn’t know—l never guessed," she said, falteringly I He could see that her small face was gray and pinched, that the large brown eyes seemed almost too big for the tiny face out of which they looked Under the widow’s bonnet the plentiful brown hair had turned almost white. If the months had brought change to John Rim lngton, they had not spared Deborah Rim lngton. "Your uncle is dead. Jack," she said. “He died the day after you got your re prieve The doctor thought perhaps it was the excitement of the home secre tary’s letter but I knew better David ■ had been dying for weeks and the Hord gave him his release He was glad to , go. Jack—and well prepared to meet his Maker. That is what few of us can say." To Be Continued in Next Issue. Low Summer Excursion Rates CINCINNATI, $19.50 LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO CHICAGO, - $30.00 KNOXVILLE - $7.90 Tickets on Sale Daily, flood to October 31st, Returning City Ticket Office,4 Peachtree “The Queen of Senses” Easily Deceived; Optical Illusions Read Below For Key to Diagrams y B S#s 8 C —® — ® \1 \| V V 1/ 1/ ""kV A II J I I I I I (3) ArA ' © IBS ® (?) @ n 88888 zSs, 88888 88888 ® 88888 I © , (B) ’ NO. I—“ Seeingl—“Seeing we do not see;" illusions in fa miliar objects realized by inversion. No. 2—• Making the oblique lines appear not continu ous; Zullner’s illusion. No. 3 —The illusion of sub divided space, “D” seeming higher than it is broad, "E" broader than it Is high. No. 4—Cubes that seem first one way up and then the other; a diagram that changes while looked at. No. s—An effect of irradi ation, circles which at a distance look like hexagons. No. 6 —Converging visual axes; a bird that enters the cage when the diagram is held near the eyes. No. 7 An illusion of motion; an oblique line that oscillates when the diagram is moved vertically. No. B—Color produced by movement; white spirals fringed with ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN * By Beatrice Fairfax I HAVE YOU NO FAITH? Dear Miss Fairfax; I have known a young man for the past ten months and I love him dearly. One night his friend escorted me home and he told me his friend was trying to keep me on the string. I told my friend about this and he said it was a falsehood. M. D. T. a. It means just this, my dear: If you entertain such a poor opinion of your first friend's intentions that any one can turn you against him. then your heart is not badly involved. If you love him, you believe in him. It seems to me you certainly owe him some faith. REFUSE HIM. AND STICK TO IT. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am eighteen and am corre sponding with a man of thirty-two. About two months ago he came to see me, after not seeing me for two or three years. He proposed to me the first time and I, refused. He didn't take any heed, but came a second time with an engagement ring Since then he came many times, bringing various gifts. Now. I really don’t know what to do. as he does not pay any attention to my refusals. He lives out of town and earns a nice living. My par ents leave the matter in my hands after giving him their consent to marrv me. He is an’uncle of mine. A WORRIED GIRL. Your course is plain. Refuse him and stick to it. These are not the days when a girl must marry against Nadinola Talcum gWILL PLEASE THE MOST EXACTING There’s None Better Contains More Antiseptics Sets free just enough oxygen to keep the skin white, soft, smooth and healthy. Nadinola Talcum Powder is composed entirely of sanative ingredients Soft a.« velvet Guarantttd By toilet counters or by mail 25 cents . NA7IO.VAL TOILET COMPANY. Pori, Tmr. colors when rotated, the colors varying with the rate of rotation of the disc and the amount of exhaustion of the retina. No. 9 —Making the lines A and B ap pear of different length. No. 10—Seeing something that does not exist; imaginary lines produced by mov ing the head with the eyes fixed on the point where two lines intersect. No. 11—A circle that appears larger if surrounded by a circle larger than itself, and smaller if a smaller circle is shown concentrically within it. No. 12—A vanishing trick; a white line that flickers and disappears when the dot is gazed at steadily. No. 13—An effect of contrast: white lines that seem darker at the points of intersection than where they are bordered on each side by black squares. * her will, and the ties of kinship alone should be a barrier. 1 wonder at your parents for sanctioning such a union. DON'T ACT IN HASTE. Dear Miss Fairfax: T am in love with a young man who is eight years my senior. Aft er keeping company with him for four years I found him out walking with another young lady whom 1 very much dislike, as I have heard several remarks about her charac ter that were not very nice. Now. do you think it would be proper to mention this matter to him or to wait until lie mentions it to me? AVOftRIED. In the fl-st place, do you know that the stories you have heard about the other girl are based on fact? Up-to-Date Jokes A youth of about eighteen was walk ing along the promenade leading to the pier, when al! of a sudden he slip ped and fell into the water, and. finding he couldn't swim, he shouted at the top of his voice. "Help, help! I can't swim!” An old gentleman standing close by remarked: "Now's your time to learn, young fellow." Blink (the wholesaler) Well, how many orders did you get yesterday? Gink (the salesman)—l got two orders in one shop. Blink —What were they” Gink—One was to get out and the | other was to stay out, Fogg has said the meanest things any man was ever capable of saying When Mrs. F. left him alone in the house the other evening she remarked; You won't be lonely, dear?" No," he replied "I shan't miss you at all. The parrot, you know, is here." Belle —But do you think you and Jack are suited to each other? Nell—Oh, perfectly! Our tastes are ' quite similar 1 don't "care very much 11 for him. and he doesn’t care very much for me. j "What's become of that fellow Twee i dlee "Oh. he opened a shop." "Doing well?" No doing time. He was caught in | It is a serious thing to repeat gossip. Don't do it. The man owes you no apology, for he is not bound to you by any ties of en gagement. But it seems to me. my dear, that after going with jou for four years h< should be thinking of an engagement Is he monopolizing you as a pastime'.’ SHE IS A SENSIBLE GIRL. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am in love with a girl two years my senior and have kept company with her for the last year and a half. Up to the present time I have found her to be a. very good friend,, yet I suspect she does not love me. I have treated her as the best of lovers treat their dear ones, yet T do not see why the love 1 have for het is not reciprocated. When leaving her after a night's enjoyment, she has a very peculiar way of bidding me good-night. As she has several other fellow ac quaintances. 1 don't think they have any serious intentions with her ai all. Even at that. 1 see her more often than these other fellows. In fact. I see her regularly two times a week. E. ('. R. If she did not care for you she w ould not give you so much of her time. There is encouragement for you in that 1 am of the opinion that in refrain ing from showing love for you she is a particularly sensible young woman. It will be soon enough for her to show her love when you have told her of yours. Don't expect it a moment sooner. • /T FOUNT*. NS, HOTELS, OR ELSEWHERE Get the Original and Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK "Officii ata The Food Drink for All Ages tICH MILK. MALT GRAIN EXTRACT, IN POWDER Not in any Milk Trust gNt”' Insist on “HORLICK’S” i Take m pdvkttge home Daysey May me and Her Folks By Frances L. Garside AN ARGUMENT THAT APPEALED. Mrs, lysander john ap- PLETON, in her capacity os First Standard Bearer for the Equal Suffrage Party, never loses an opportunity to make an appeal for the cause of Equality and Justice. She sprinkles argument with her sea soning of meats and potatoes in her kitchen; she serves arguments with greetings in her parlor, and she py.eses them over the counter to the butcher and the baker. She has found recently to her dis tress. that members of the Home Mis sionary society of her church are very lukewarm on the question of suffrage. This great lack of progression has ap pealed to her as strongly as the lack of funds to keep the church going The ladies held a rummage sale, at which they sold things they didn’t want to other sisters, who likewise didn’t want them; they gave dinners and suppers and fairs and bazaars. They gave a concert, at which Day sey May me Appleton sang, "by re quest." her effort resulting in consid erable grumbling, because she did not give the name of the person making the reqliest. so that the audience might have known where to place the blame. They solicited funds in and out of season, and still the deficit remained. It was while the ladies were in a J&vwik i ANTY .jj ‘ V \ j r>z/Ff drudge \ £ Little Mary Recites for Anty Drudge. Anly Drudge —‘‘Now say it again, Dearie. It’s every word true.” Little Mory —“See my nice, new party frock, . So clean and fresh and bright. Anty washed it with Fels-Naptha; That’s why it is so white.” Just a few of the thousands of unsolicited testimonials regarding Fels-Naptha soap: So Much Less Work. accomplished the task my husband "Through Mrs. Dr. Robinson. I invariably says Fels-Naptha did it." learned first of your naptha soap and dILY Johnstown, a. must admit 1 tried it without much hope of success, but I was surprised at „ Boon so Housekeepers. the result. The following week I tried Never before in my experience as a it on a large washing and was delighted housekeeper have I felt called upon to beyond measure. 1 will use no other write my thanks to any of the ;>umer as long as I can get Fels-Naptha. 1 tell ous firms who have Aids to House even’ lady about it that I come in con- keepers’ on the market, but since I tact with, for I feel it is a duty I owe first used Fels-Naptha soap I nave been every working sister. I laughingly told filled with gratitude to the person who a gentleman that a man did not lox e gave to housekeepers this great labor his wife if he did not provide her with saving soap. 1 have sung its praises Fels-Naptha soap. My family says 1 until my friends think it is really quite am half crazy about it. but 1 have to a joke, because for everything my much less work, so much more time fcr answer is Vse Fels-Naptha soap.’ I other things and so much less fatigued xvant to thank you for the great com when my washing is done that I feel I fort and pleasure its use has brought epnnot speak too highly of Fels-Naptha to me a/.d 1 say sincerely that you have soap or speak of it too often. All my introduced an article which will be a neighbois will endorse every word I boon to the housekeeper have written and I could write pages.“ Mrs. Emmictt, Dayton, Ohio. Mrs. J. B. MaGinnts, f..™ r\tt San Antonio. Texas. .. ery S P ot Ctme Off - I never before wrote a testimon’a! Clothes Whiter Than Ever Before. for anything, but my sense of wha. is I have been using Fels-Naptha Tu? >OU .i h ' S soap for almost six months and con- ’‘\ ‘ r an p ? 'v >r T v 4 s.der it the or.lv soap for dining room. splendri soap - Pels A aptha. kitchen and linndEy. My siher and JL f °." r stov . e P‘r® glass never looked so bright and beau- . T ’' le tiful as !t does since using Fels-Naptha ‘"t h*”” “' > “ n t d .»»>• ? now melted and soap, and the clothes, table linen, etc., j ™ n „ * h r ’J ” ,rS s" Y rt of cr< ‘°: are whiter than ever before." hl ? h k B P a >''« d Katharinr Harman ' out on the floor and washboards It Owing Mills, Md. ' mu’. " r ‘ P ?“ s r ant « n,a ( °, n otucrw.se clean root. We had sup- Fels-Naptha Don’t Injure the Clothes. AA th2 HnJ’anrt t 0 h l? “ . , to SOI ape the floor and washboards and On account of the illness of mjf I then re-varnish and pa:nt. as we had washwoman. 1 had a chance to give j tried soaps in vain and other th-ngs j-'els-Napt'na soap a thorough test and too.—to remove the unsightly black L wish to say that lam more than spattered stain. Imagine my surprise pleased. It don’t injure the clothes in un d delight when my girl applied the least. It just makes the dirt lei go | Fels-Naptha soap. Kverv spot cam* and leaves them clean and white as off and tiiew<<*lwas as clean as new snow. Several highly advetfised and I appreciate the value of such a house! labor-saving soaps have come under hold friend, and gladly commend it'io my notice, but none seems to fill the an housekeepers who want a good bill like Fels Naptha. My husband just thing. Mbs. M. D McKee asked me if 1 was trying to make a Grand Rapids Mich, name for myself as a washwoman. 1 said no but with Fels-Naptha soap I Only Soap He Could Use 1 wt. b h ! ndependent 01 “ *«hwomau u ■■ t , nK , he contjnent , ast ’ Rum _ Mbs. G. N. Stroud. Louisville. Ky. wMh b “ tr i i " i n i ona in ine wash loom with Fels-Naptha Soap Did It. private soap box. I asked him if ordi- tsoap MIO u. rary soap was not goo(j eno , h sos there are so many worthless soaps him and he replied that crossing (especially of the laundry variety) on through aikali country Fels-Naptha the market now that 1 feel it is a duty was the only kind that"could be used to you, and it certainly is a pleasure to without cracking the ha-ds or face tel! you how highly we appreciate and he advised me to never travel with- Fels-Naptha I have used the soap out it. My wife uses Fels-Naptha since first introduced to us by one of soap for washinar and other domestic your agents, nearly five years ago and purposes and told me last evening that feet safe in saying that it is superior to it was the most satisfactory soap sh» any upon the market to-day When had ever used we have an unusually large washing Victor Kauermamr. and comment upon how nicely 1 hpve Washington. D C. Fels-Naptha comes in a red and green w iapper. AUGUST EXCURSIONS 5,000 Mile Circle Tour By Rail and Steamer Grand collection of travel features, vis- agara Falls, all expenses paid onlv »’,A iting . ineinnati. l-etroit Buffalo. Niagara Special Pullman train leaves“ uian a Falls, loronto .’anaua, Tlmusaml Islan.D, gust 17th. Steamer tripe on Lakes Mbany. ~<■« Y m-k. R stun, and steamer ami Ontario, Hudson i ver ami Xflant n to Savannah W . pa . all living expense ... .an Kxeiusive use < f in for nineteen .lavs fur onl> 7.0 Same lure, i tgh class The ofri.dL’t -?u tour without Boston, and in. luding Wash- a record of ,'a, r „I °t<'' «’>'b .og'.jn and Baltimore, with steamet to I ked I; t,, r •> r,,,, , « I '<“adv S?,' v an .^ h ’ « f h leen -xpenses paid. Information from J RMcFariana lonlt I.». One week tn < ana.la and Ni IU 2 Peachtree. Atlanta, Ga. ,nana « • . mood of despair that Mrs. Lysander John saw an opening to make one more . argument in favor of equal suffrage. . "We would have an additional and i never-falling way to make meiwy," . said, at a meeting of the Finance Com mittee, "if we had the Power of the Ballot.” The ladies, having heard so much of i the Power of the Ballot, looked bored. ! “We had the right of suffrage in the state I came from.” resumed Mrs. Ap pleton, "and when occasion demanded it, we registered, and then sold our votes to the highest bidder. Ah, those were palmy days!” There was an Awful Silence. Then a roar of protest. Would Sister Apple ton. they said, with scorn, suggest that women fight for the ballot that they ■ Sell Their Votes? Would she so far forget the Sanctity of Womanhood as > to hint at such a vile proceeding? t Would she demean Her Own Sex by approving, nay, pointing the way, to Corruption? The roar grew in volume and strength till Mrs. Appleton. freightened at the storm she had evoked, slipped out a side door and went home. Nothing Like Knowing. But. alas, it is said that the leaven she dropped is beginning to work. 1 “How much," at least three dozen • debt-burdened church working women f asked their husbands that night, "do these low-down unscrupulous office i seekers pay for votes?”