Newspaper Page Text
THE OEOBQIAIM’S MAGAZINE, PAGE
“The Gates of Silence”
By Meta Stmmms, Author of "Hushed Up"
. TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
With a little sound that was almost j
animal in its satisfaction. Remington hao .
gone over to the fire that roared up th<
great open chimne' a fragrant fire or
peat-stacks and driftwood. The pla\ ot
its blue and vi<»le t flames fascinated him
as though he wore a child. Ho held out
his dead hands to their glow, and felt
his ay el ids smart with the moisture the
pain of their returning life brought to hk
’ eyes.
Only One Thought.
It almost seemed as though the sigh
of the fire the glow of warmth that
wrapped about him in the air of the com
fortabie kitchen had banished for th<
instant all other thoughts from his mind
He hardly seemed aware of the girl a u
she moved swiftly about the kitchen. Ret
ting out meat and a loaf all the foot,
that the larder could afford on the table
behind him. As for her. it was plain tha*
she kept her eyes averted from the figure
of shame at the Are As she went about
her task her lips were forming words "It
isn’t possible it isn’t possible”’ The
tears ran down her cheeks and she was
not aware of them
"Betty!” She turned to see the man
beside her looking at her with those eyes
bo familiar and yet so strange eyes that
held an odd. half-furtive, half ashameo
look—a look that seemed to pierce through
the stupor that for the last few seconds
had held her, for. with a broken cry, she
put out her hands.
"Oh, my dear, my dear! Oh. my bitter
ly wronged Jack! I never knew or guessed
what the truth was” with a self-con
temptuous gesture that comprehended all
of the cozy kitchen, with the glory of flrp
light playing on copper and crockery, the
coarse, white-covered table, and the
rough, plentiful food "And J came here
with*your aunt —to live your life. Jack, to
walk step by step with you in your
agony. Oh, the irony of it!”
Rimington made a movement as though
to take her in hi?» arms, then shrinking!)
drew back. It was a movement that
spoke more eloquent h’ than words, and
the girl answered it by another In a
moment she was against his breast, her
face upturned to his, her lips seeking his
The Are-glow on her face show’ed the
man the love-light In her eyes that he
had often dreamed of, and never, even in
dreams, had hoped to see. Then, ah
quickly, she drew away from him.
"Selfish woman that I am to satisfy
my own hunger first when you are starv
ing!”
She drew him to the big. old-fashioned
settee beside the fire, waiting on him as
she would have waited upon a child, cut
ting up food, choosing dainty portions,
mindful of the danger of the long, cruel
fast hat he was breaking, talking to him
all the while In a low voice as she might
have spoken to a child, wrapping him
about with the glow of her love, so that
to this man. who for months past had
not heard the sound of a woman's voice,
this low-ceilinged kitchen was trans
formed into the threshold of paradise
He refused to drink, though slw urged
him to thke a little spirits and water
for its medicinal sake
"No; J shall need all the few wits that
are left me, darling. ' he told her. *‘For
lam only the veriest bird of passage here
Has the cottage been searched yet ."’
"No.” The girl looked at him with
troubled eyes "I don't understand We
had not even heard that you had es
caped ”
Her frightened senses leaped to the
thought of a trap, and she. read a con
firmation of her fears In the man's ryes
"That means they’ve been waiting for
me to make for the cottage.” Rimington
said, In his roughened voice, that seemed
to harp grown rusty through long dis
service. ”1 mustn't stay a minute. No,
no, darling -for your own sake, as well as
mine Wherever I am taken and It
seems inevitable that 1 will be taken
It must not be here Where is my
aunt?"
"She Is In her room, Jack," Betty said
“No, If you must go, best not wake her
She is a little strange a little worried
She ought never to have come But about
your clothes. Jack If I had only thought
of It, If I had only guessed, we ought to
have had a change for you here '
"But how could, you guess'.’"
For a moment he took her in his arms,
laid his face against her cheek. Then,
with a little cry, she started apart from
him
"What's that?” she said, in a sharp
whisper,
Rimington stood rigid, listening To
him the silence seemed unbroken save
for the loud ticking of a white-faced
clock on the mantelpiece; it brought back
to him ugly memories of another mo
ment of tension when he had stood wait
ing while about him the air vibrated with
the voices of many clocks, and once again
he had a feeling of silence itself ts a
tangible thing that, like himself, watched
and waited
The girl tip-toed to the door and bent
her ‘head against it. The • long, sough
ing breath of the wind through its ill
hung hinges, was tlm only xuind she
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I heard, and yet before she could almost
I have sworn she had heard the peculiar
brush of the cinder pa h about the house
i as under a cautious, light-stepping foot.
“If 1 lad a coat, he said, "anything
that would hide this ” And as he spoke,
quietly and unexpectedly the door of the
inner room opened and Mrs. Rimington
came In.
She gave no outcry at the sight of Jack.
Only her white fate flushed faintly, a
flush that died, leaving it deathly pale.
On the Scent.
'lt’s you!” she said, under her breath
"It came to me as 1 slept that you would
<■« hip tonight!”
To Rimington in the old days she had
always seemed strange ami unearthly;
this woman Tonight there was that ini
her look and manner that seemed to lift
her altogether above the plane of ordi
nary things Her eyes regarded Riming
ton with a fanatical Igiht. He did not
wonder now that Betty had called her
st range.
"I'm just going, he said. "Betty will
explain- th«\ are probably only waiting
to run me to earth here. I can't wait."
"Nor can you go in those clothes." Mrs
Rimington said, quietly. "Go into my
room; there are clothes there your un
cle’s clothes.”
"< >h, quick. Jack; quick!” Betty said,
seeing that he hesitated. "I'm frightened.
Fear lies in wall behind every boulder
on the moor tonight.”
She pushed him Into the inner room,
and almost immediately Mrs Rimington
came out and closed the door
The women looked at each other in si
lence. Then Mrs. Rimington withdrew
her gave to the fire
The wind was rising or was it the
wind? It seemed to the waiting girl
that the air was full of whispering voices.
Outside a tendril of the creeper, loosened
by the wind, tapped at the pane; the in
termittent noise came sullenly to them
through the Intervening shutter.
"Betty!” The door of the Inner room
had opened, and Rimington came out.
The women, turning, saw that he was
still In his convict garb. He silenced
their surprise by a lifted hand "Betty,
It’s too late I hear them. They must
have tracked me here. 'They're sur
rounding the house
He could say no more lie caught
her In his arms and drew her toward him,
holding her close In a long, silent em
brace.
"Jack you mustn't go there's a hiding
place here. They dare not ”
He silenced her by a passionate kiss on
the lips
<>n the bolted door came the sound of
a heavy knock.
Jack -Jack!”
Betty Lumsden's face was white and
her Ups trembled; only her ryes were
bright and steadfast, the eyes of one
! whose coinage knows no surrender.
After that moment of passionate strain
ing of her to himself. Rimington strove
to put the girl from him, but she clung
to him with a desperation that gave her
i i strange strength, her body a dead weight
against his own.
, "Dear, you must let me go. Betty.
' we’ve got to face this, and resistance
I i will make, things worse Let me go.” hr
whispered, almost roughly. Her (dinging
arms about him seemed to intensify hor
| ribly the trapped sensation that enveloped
hkn They were like the clinging liga
ments of the weeds that drag the fool
hard) swimmer dwon and down Into the
treacherous pool.
"No, no You mustn’t let yourself be
seen. There is a hiding place in my
room.”
Now he hardly heard her whispered
words His ears were strained to catch
the sounds from without. For a moment
silence Then the knocking continued.
Hr could hear the tramping of feet and
angry hands at work on the casement
window The door shook stoutly-built
and barred as it was, going bai’k to the
i days when Bilmouth Jail and its inhabi
tants were a menace to the moor dwell
era* yet it was not to be thought that
it could offer nian.v minutes' opposition to
the determined men without. Rimington
experienced a shrinking cowardice bred
of those long months in prison, from the
thought of those men who. when the door
gave, wmuld rush in, their blood heated
by resistance.
, The knocking at the door continued.
"Open In the -name o/ the law! We are
In search of John Rimington, a convict
escaped from Bilmouth Jail, and have
reason to know that he is here!"
! Against his will. Rimington felt him
self driven back against the door of the
( Inner room It was all the matter of a
breathing space, before the loud voice of
, the besieging officer had died on the wait
, ing silence of the room he found himself
i in the bare little cell-like room that was
Bett.x's bed chamber, and heard her
frenzied whisper telling him of the hid
ing place her wit had remembered.
Then he was alone, and he heard her
i clear voice in the kitchen answering the
inquiries without, speaking reasoning!) to
I Mrs. Rimington. who all this time had
uttered xiu sound, made no movement,
but loud like a figure carved out of
black sioue. 100 l Ing down Into the heart
of the fire with bright, enigmatic eyes.
To Be Continued in Next Issue.
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. I
EVERY woman gets worried when
the first wrinkle makes Its ap- |
pearanee. She may ho quite he
roic about it. am! say that she likes
linos In the face because they give so
much character to the appearance, and
all that. Hut you and I know that she
has had an awful light with herself be- I
fore she comes out with that beautiful I
fairj tale about character. It's the
same fight that will bo repeated again |
w hen a little tuft of gray hairs can no I
longer be covered up from view.
There are all kinds of wrinkles, some i
of them really do denote character, and
they often appear on the face of the
girl of twenty Just between her brows
as a sign of thoughtful concentration.
That kind < f a girl never knows site
has them for years to come, for she is
not the kind of girl who looks very
closely at the mirror.
Every wrinkle In the face is formed
from muscular contraction and is an
indication of temperament and the
habitual expression of the individual.
Every wrinkle tells its special story
and there are many of them that apeak
of fine and beautiful attributes.
Tlie girl with the horizontal lines
across her forehead tries hard to do
right and is over-conscientious. Short
lines at the corners of the mouth run
ning upward appear in the face of the
woman who has borne her sorrows
cheerfully and who has been helped by
faith and a resigned spirit.
Lines around the eyes, when they
point upward, tell the story of a mirth
ful, happy disposition, just as those
that droop the other way toll of concen
trated effort when accompanied by deep
lines In the brow.
You can easily tell the woman who
loves to gossip by the drooping lines of
the mouth, and if she is a great talker
there will be lines near tile lower cheek
which run down under the chin.
A forehead that Is criss-crossed by
many little lines in the pniddle of the
brow shows that small frets and wor
ries take up much of Hint person's time.
What No Woman Likes.
No matter what the lines indicate, no
woman likes to see a wrinkle in her
face, and I have heard tell that men are
not exactly crazy about them, either.
Probably you have noticed that the
i average man's face doesn't wrinkle as
quickly as a woman's does; that is be
cause the man who shaves gives hia
face a daily sort of massage treatment,
which stimulates the circulation and
keeps wrinkles away, while the woman
does nothing but bathe her face in a
half-hearted way. or treat it with cream
when she happens to think about it.
I'rlction will keep the face free of
wrinkles better than anything else, and
will eradicate the first hairline wrin
kles when they come.
Tlie woman who knows site has a
tendency to frown all the time may
possibly need eyeglasses, for eye strain
of any kind is bound to create wrin
kles around the eyes. If the eyes are
not strained, she should make a deter
mined effort to break her habit of
frowning, ami site will aid In the work
by wearing a little piece of court plas
ter over her brow whenever she can
conveniently do so.
Get the stiff kind of court plaster.
© Beyond All Explaining ©
By Beatrice Fairfax
"A woman's heart is a very queer
thing on the whole. It falls in love
in the most unaccountable way with
the most unaccountable man.”—J.
G. Holland.
lAi'K writes the following letter:
"1 am eighteen and am keeping
company with a girl the same age. 1
don't care much about her. but she
loves me. 1 am keeping company with
other girls, but as she cares so much
for me 1 feel sorry for her and don't
know what to do."
Her heart seems to have fallen in
love in the most unaccountable way
with the most unaccountable man. If
she were asked to give an explanation
of that love she couldn't give it.
He say s he doesn't care much for her.
In the same breath he says he is keep
ing company with her.
The element of gratitude enters into
the love of women in a greater degree
than any woman will admit. In her
deep humility she is pleased that any
lord of creation should deign to look
upon her. a humility that is greatly en
couraged by the lord of» creation.
She gets an exalted idea of a young
man's intelligence, his ability and su
periority
In like proportion she exaggerates her
own unworthiness Naturally, to make
a great idol of him, she must make a
! more insignificant worshiper of herself
If he put her on the pedestal in the
first dots when he wus attracted by
her. she goon climbs down In the hu-
I utility of her love and puts him there.
He thinks it is his rightful place
| He has no qualm- about his rights to
■the perch to which het love has ex
jalted him.
11. get- so .o customed to the Im ens.
I she burns at bls shrine that It no
j longei has any . xlstence in his
; thoughts, and he begins to sniff a lord
ly nose to get whiffs from the incense
I ot hi r girls are burning
Gives Him Pedestal
Having mad. humility hei first blun-
| del slu adds the second one of show -
I ing him that she C \R|-;s
\\ Ith jealous eye she notes that lord
i ly nos.' of Ills in ex Ideiil en.my merit of
pin se. n 1 arising front in inn tied
.bx otio r women Then instead of rl«
jinn tiom lu-i Knees and walking scorn-
The Making of a Pretty Girl
Hon- to Prevent and Bight Wrinkles
// P
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Vwfif W
C - ® “““■“vJ
A pretty face shows no disfiguring wrinkles.
and if this is not possible sew a small
piece of court plaster or stick it on to a
piece of cardboard, gluing the cardboard
to the back of the plaster, not to the
sticky side. St retell thes kin over the
wrinkle with the fingers so that it is
perfectly smooth, paste on your plas
ter, which should hold the skin stretch
ed. This treatment is only a reminder
to stop frowning. It can also be used
at the side of the eyes to Xeep erows
feet away.
Where there are many wrinkles on
the brow stretch the skin smooth and
paste adhesive plaster over it, and keep
it on all night if possible. Adhesive
plaster may also be used over the
wrinkles from nose to mouth. Before
taking the plaster off wet it thoroughly
with very warm water, or steam it, and
it will come off easily.
The Treatment.
\\ here there are many very fine lines,
a good thing to do is to treat wrinkles
in thef oilowing manner:
fully away, she bows her head to the
ground at his feet and wails.
"She cares so much for me," writes
Jack, "that I am sorry for her."
If she were a wise little maid, she
would have kept Jack guessing that she
cared for him at all. and then he would
> have been sorry for himself.
1 She would have kept him on his
■ knees, an attitude that is good for the
i soul and salvation of any man.
She would have remained on her ped
estal. taking care that her eyes always
looked over her lover's head, as if seek
ing a greater man than he can ever
i hope to be.
Should Have Kept Him There.
By refusing to confess her own lovt
1 she would have retained his.
But now that she has lost his love I
•question if she has lost as valuable a
■ possession as Jink" thinks.
A tickle and half-hearted lover means
1 a more tickle husband who is heartless.
Old-fashioned women have away of
giving comfort to a girl in such an un
happy plight that Is not without a s ine
1 foundation They tell her it is better to
find out a man during the courtship
than Vi make that discovery after mar
t tinge.
If "Jack" will tell this girl what he
has told me: That though he has been
going with her steadily, and thereby
fostering her love for him. he cares
i nothing tor her.
If he will tell her this, I am sure she
■ will be glad she has been given such a
' fortunate escape.
Love like "Jack's” love isn't worth a
. sigh.
Up-to-Date Jokes
'ou re rath. r a young man to be
1. ft in chatg. of an apothecary's shop,”
" I<l 're : issy old c- ntleman ll ,xe
. Xou any diploma
■« by er no. sir. 'r. plied the sb,op.
. man; but we have a preparation of
eur own that's Just as good
Mr». Noopop <'i.ar..c what do v.m
ilvnk ' Had's- just sent us a Juki check
for our new baby' Wasn't that g
of him"
Ml N•u Op I should -ax so! I d
j write at on. . and thank him for his
I contr butt 'll to tm fr. Sh heir fund.
First, bathe face very thoroughly,
then cover it with . leant and massage
quickly, using the tapping movement
that is to say. slap your face in very
gentle, quick taps. Ruh the cream all
off with a damp cloth, dry the face and
apply a mixture made of equal parts
white of egg and cologne spirits. Put
it on the face quite thick and let it
remain on for half an hour; then Wash
off with warm water, massage again
quickly and finish off with a hath of
very cold water.
Many lines are formed in the face
simply because it is allowed to droop,
that is because the spirit behind It is
not buoyant, brave and cheerful. And
many wrinkles can never be taken out
at all, even with the most heroic treat
ment. unless the spirit changes, and the
individual resolves that life is not as
doleful and miserable an experience as
she appears to think it.
The mouth that droops, for instance,
will droop right on. though the most
expensive wrinkle eradicator is used
upon it. But without resorting to any
treatment at all. you can make the cor
ners of your mouth turn up by willing
them to do so, and by taking a more
cheerful and optimistic point of view.
Very frequently wrinkles are the re
sult of ill health pnd a run-down con
dition of the system and anaemia. This
is especially so of girls between 18 and
25. who should not have any wrinkles
at all under ordinary circumstances. It
is useless to apply wrinkle foods unless
you are going to build up the body,
give it good food, exercise and plenty
of fresh air.
The skin of the weman who does not
get plenty of good air wrinkles quickly
and at an early age. Women who sleep
in badly ventilated rooms show the ef
fect in a dead, lusterless skin, of In
flexible quality, which lines very easily.
Many unpleasant wrinkles are due
simply to tricks and mannerisms, for
grown-ups make faces just as children
do. Headaches also cause wrinkles, and
naturally the cause of these wrinkles
must no removed before anything is
done to the skin itself.
FRECKLES
•
Don't Hide Them With a Veil: Remove
Them With the New Drug.
An eminent skin specialist recently
discovered a new drug, othine —double
strength —which is so uniformly suc
cessful in removing freckles and giv
ing a clear, beautiful complexion that
it is sold by Jacobs' Pharmacy under
an absolute guarantee to refund the
monev if it fails.
Don't hide your freckles under a veil;
get an ounce of othine and remove
them. Even the first night's use will
show a wonderful improvement. some
l of the lighter freckles vanishing en
tirely. it is absolutely harmless, and
can not injure the most tender skin.
Be sure ask Jacobs' Pharmacy for
the double strength othine: it is this
that la sold on ti>.- money back guaran
tee.
TETTERINE CURES ECZEMA
Hav nesvllle, Ala. April 2«, Il'Oft.
J T Slmptrine. Savannah. Ga.
I‘ear Sir. Please semi ae another box
of voir Tetterine I got a box about
| three weeks ago for niv wife's arm She
has e. zema from wrist to elbow nml that
. box i got l.as nearly cured It, and she
fmnks one box m. re will cure her arm
, w.ll I have tried everything I could get
hold es and nothing did any good
Yours truly. T ItYAlgs
.'l'c all drugg st- oi b\ mail from manu
facturer The Shuptnne Company. Sa
I vannali, <la ...
© © The Manicure Lady ® ©
Bv William F. Kirk
follow that just went out
I was a swell fellow,” said the
Manicure Lady. "Dili you no
tice hitn, George?”
‘Not particularly,” said the Head
Barber, “except that he was big and
husky enough to look like a white hope.
Why?”
“I want to tell you about that chap,"
said the Manicure Lady. "He Is the
first real gentleman that ha» been in
here this week; and about the third or
fourth gentleman 1 have met since
goodness knows when.
"I wish there was more men like him
in the world, George. He told me all
about himself in a quiet sort of way
when he sat down. I seen front the
bashful way he acted that he wasn't
used to having his nails did. It seems
he is a iron worker, and has saved up a
thousand dollars. He is going to be
married today, and he told me that he
had had his hands fixed up by
anybody except himself and some soap
and hot water. He said that the girl
he is going to marry has the most soft
and beautiful white hands he ever saw,
and he explained to me the best he
could that he wanted-to have his hands
look at least half way good when the
preacher was doing his duty.
“I guess I am a good deal of a demo
crat, George, but I certainly liked the
way that man sat there, with his big
strong paws full of little scars from
the kind of work he did. I have held a
lot of hands since I broke into this
profession, and ■'the most of them
weren’t kind of hands I would like to
hold courting on a sofa. This chap's
hands could have broken mine in two
with a single twist, but he was as
gentle as a kid, and he never said a
word to mo that he wouldn't have said
to his sister. If there was more men
like that getting their nails did, the
manicure girls would be more happy."
“Did he tip you?" asked the cynical
Head Barber.
"He certainly did, Georg.-," said the
Manicure Lady, "and he was a pertect
dear, too, the way he went about it.
When I was al] through he asked me
how much, and I told him 50 cents, and
he gave me a dollar note. Then he
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The increasing popularity is wonderful.
White, Flesh, Pink, Brunette. By
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:i f Avail yourself of the com-
forts in traveling by using
the
jfc? NWorkCentral Lines
hour —"The Water-Level Route"
New York, Boston
a K'nra Falls, Buffalo, Rochester,
Syracuse,L tica, Albany,Worcester
• '' MB . • \ f 1
' £ * -M a n d otherpoints East
F‘ ve fast through trains daily,
including the
L ; V I] 20th Century Limited
Ai. ' F m.L iibmi .i.wmi,
J- caves Arrives Arrives
Cincinnatl New York Boston
3:00 p.m. 9:25 a.m. 11:50 a.m.
gSj[ * *
Other Good Trains
mmhAiHIII I ■||l|it<" , diill’"’U« Leave Arrive Arrive
I X t Cincinnati New York Boston
IBBiM llii Si
l i | Trains from the South make
' good connections in same
J depot with these trains.
SSUE&K Ask us for a copy of our "Guide to
W New York City.” It contains valuable
I J and lnterest 'ng information about the
IhlhK nRV Metropolis sent free on request.
■HkoH
Full particulars regarding this
V'/-aRI service and any assistance in
planning your trip will be
jL IJk f ‘ J tfiadh furnished on applied-
FA’’. •. tion to fr]
E f - SMITH
Atlanta,
mL[) , s st>|u|||| ~
EgCfe OPIUM i«t WBISKI
trMtad. oi , Bc°j™i , M' Ca ;?
.Cl *- XM “ Cfrnbl*. put*-’, • ? hl ”»
£■4 juiutlon rnrttdentu; ALk VrJi Monas, dots.
&JB***r-»*k WOOLLEV t BM |. ulnU »
said, 'I hope you won't be offended it
I ask you to keep the change. This is
my wedding day ano I'm celebrating.’
t’an you beat that. George, for New
York? He tipped me and hoped I
wouldn't be offended!”
"He looked like a regular guy all
| right,” said the Head Barber. " Thein
iron workers is mostly pretty tough cit- ,
izens in a fight, but that kind of men is
always good to women.”
"I know it.” replied the Manicure
Lady. "It must take a awful brave
man to stand two hundred feet up in
the air balanced on a steel beam.”
"You bet.” said the Hear Barber, "but
if lie is going to be married he will be
farther up in the air than lie ever was
in his working hours.”
Do You Know—
More than a million tiny globules of
fat are contained in a drop of milk.
Today the population of San Fran
cisco is half a million; in 1858 it was
40,000.
Billingsgate Market. London, has in
one year received nearly 200.(|o0 tons of
fish, about one-tjtird of which arrived
by water.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature oi
j Low__Summ_er |
Excursion Rates
:l CINCINNATI, $19.501
LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO
CHICAGO, - $30.00
KNOXVILLE - $7.90
1—
Tickets on Sale Daily, flood
to October 31st, Returning
City Ticket Off ice, 4 Peachtree
Soft and Velvety
It is Pure,
Harmless
I Money Back if Not
I Entirely Pleased.
The sott, telvety
appearance re
mains until pow
der is washed off.
Purified by a new
process. Prevents
of discolorations.