Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 04, 1912, HOME, Image 8

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THE GEO BQIAWTS -MAGAZIiE PAGE “Initials Only” * By Anna Katherine Green .1 Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times TODAY 'S INSTAI.I.MEXT • (Copyright. T»11. Strem Srni’i • (Copyright. H«ll. b> I Ab A * “Not yet Mr Han waiting for the . • > • was the t-r« • • • “ • lying on one <f V. btg • .«.•«•» ~•• which e foil ’ • you a j-lin. ful. It’s :err? * ' • s • dead Order ? Spell. I don ’ kn- \ v. . ■ • • r •■».<<• d We were ,;r •r a ’ ' • . • rv-. | up a narr> w stain .a • open to ver? f f'\\ That logi t A ( to e ti.-n* U; us with a x :rr’T g» tn?, whi Jr 1 bard 1\ think w« i ■ iw’i narrow h 1 fi: • b\ • I : i <<i re sponding t«> those we had non* fr*>m bp- I low At the fartht *’ *m- h» p > js» <; ;.nd.j beckoning us to his suit. pointed arrows the lobbj into the large writin •-.* room, which occupied ’ • better part of the mezzanine floor We saw pent star • • titudes of grief and disma? about a couch. ’ one end of which i> was visible to UK nt the moment. The doctor had just j® toward him and <\tr; ' ■ hr: forward; In anxious • •xpertai ?••! I rem* mt 'r tie face of one gnn haired • • ■ m <i. 1 ■■■■ > . j never forget a lie i’. ’ i t > 1( • ; faiher I ab» r. 1 knew be i-> I • Ih r i face, even her form w * • : i r«-i % •den from us. hut as we wait bed (I lav. I often th- ;c u.- ui it I earth . • i Flosity i a sin en liinVem- : ■ • in ' the whole gi up ana • • ftnt a startling picture j.;< • i '■ . •. If to our raze Miss Chailoner w.. ;iei< n..> .:t upon | the < ouch She bad «;n > . ; • • i i»e , from dinr.vi. m i r v. ? : ix« j satin, relieved a the breast I ; l.irx* ■ bouquet of scarlet ; in * ttia I n - i tion this adornment I' cause’.! w<- wj.it! first met and dr< w mir eves ai ! th* « \.-s i of every one about I• •• thomr the i.c ♦>. ' now quite revealed, w mid to hav ; the greater attractiuT, Hut the . ewa . evident and one nil to lx* v- • • ile doctof was point a- it tin . p i’ias ‘ in horror and with awful m fining and | though we could not I.< ar l i a• i n «<•: knew almost instinctively, both ft < in Lisi attitude and the cries that bur.- front the lips of those about him that tn. i thing more than broken ;• ». !■ ami <ih I ordered laces lad met I • ■ it bl . : was tiier< slow!) • r . n tl . heart—which f"! -on <• t * . » ~i . - ■ caped all ev< s til! now Mian Chailoner was dea«i i t from un suspected <lise.i-. . but fr-.m th'* violent attack of some mur • • w ip«.n \s the rcalizatns oft! s bra hl fr« | .ri le I emoti- ?.s •v. i. j ■ - i. ■ ■ ! f i-an . . f grief. I turned a qU'-ticHng lek up a’ Georg s fam It was fixed With a . •: pos.- 1 uo trouble n r ■ ! “I Knew the Man.” Yet he made no • tfort to d< i.un Mr. Slater when that gentleman, i t bi u renewed excitement, hastily hit us lb was not the man to ru h into u .•! ;:• Impulsively, and not even the pr< •’ • of murder cc»uld rhai >'. h v > "I want to fee) sure of my -elf.” he ex plained. “Can you l< ar Hie . o u of waiting around a liitb- lot ■ • ' m I mustn't forget, that vii taint*.l jus* now HORLICK’S It Means Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. M<?re healthful than Tea or Coffee. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutritious. Rich milk, malted grain, powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. fake no substitute. AskforllOßLlCK’S. WT Others are imitations. I UNIVERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS • STONE MOUNTAIN, GA. \ s’.' Tlf ' I; ■ nation in thehteh’rinatitu. tb,n /nV,,,, -- .... Haniiao-ie il’.ists.-.-’ . ■ . ( J SANDY BFAVER, Principal. Box 53 STONE MOUNTAIN, CA Y A High Grade institution For Young Women. X 1 "‘“ /s’ ' -2? ;'h ■ s'n ■ , the mos t section of / _ ' V dt " 11 "> tne t -Hl•.-.'during the forty years of it* 5 i/' ,y ■ ,•■ ' ,l .ci’ll., o. Oily two . rls t,o F J I la.M O, ,<iy u- ■ < n >1 > two I,sins. I■. ,-ry l.<ui.». Tl>r ~— *2 x • . " 1 ■mi”, h.iil Ln.-mry Course lea I- \to ,'ue 't hl '' •“* to Physie.a Development. Catalog on ro- *' W ‘ VAN HOCSE r President, Rome, Ga. ATLANTA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY GEORGE F PAYNE, PH. G. 38 EdnewnnH Ave Atlanta. Go. i 'Y< I < . . bear it; much bctt»*r than j I could <> ai going to Adela s in my pres »n stab <: min» Don’t you think the I mart v«• saw had .-cmcthing s o do with ' ft. Don’t you be. ••ve“- Hush* Eet i II ‘vn rather than talk •at .a?' tin > saying over there? Cai. . ’o \nd I •an not l>«ar to look Yet p d<m’» want to go away. It’s all so | dreadful “It s c>-vil.-i. Such a b.-au’.ful girl' i Laura I must leave you for a moment Du i« i mind?’’ i c d nund; but he was qone before I otdd tike back my word. Aicr.e. I ' fe t the tragedy much more thar hen he was wth me. Instead of watching, as l had hitherto done, every movement In the j room opposite. I drew back aqamst the wall and h d my eyes, watting feverishly ! or George’s return. J Hr came, when l.e did come, in Home I tsie and with vert.iin mari;s ol in- i f r* a m-c .. -.t.’ n. I aura, aid h» “Slater sas< that we 1 maj' j o -ihly be uanled and proposes that we stay 1■ r« ail nk’ht I ' ive tele ld.on« d Adel i and b a .- mad*- H ail right jat horn. Will \o i • <»mr to your room? • This is no place for Nothing 'oiild Lavr p’rased me hel per: t" l»r mar a* .I ■r( not the direct ob server of prorr(:<;ings 10 which Wo I OOk su srerct an interest! I .-hewed my grat | itudr by following < ’.rorgr immediately libit 1 rt old not go with-it casting an other glanrr ;:t tl.o tragic seme I was bavin;; A stir w t ' rptiblr there and I I w:ix just In tit- •' to Hh cause A I all. « ■ ■ i I from ib.e d»i»'< H n of t!>- masii Jans’ gal- . Ilery. ar I from th» manner of all pts- nt. ! as w il :i.s from the v.h Kper<<l comment j of nr < . I. 'nd. I rrc.j.. izrd in him the | ! special official for whom ail had been | ; w i Iti ng “Arc jmu going io tell him ’” w:. m> ; qu» stion to «;• .rgr as w» made pur va> ! I down to ibo lobby “That depends. First. I am going to j j'-re you s» tiled in a room quite remoti i froiu t his business.” “I sb dl not like that “ , • I know, my dear, but if i> best. ’ I could not gain -ay this Vrvrrthvless yfter the first few min- 1 I’ll* ■ of teliii. I found it very lonesome ■ j upstairs. The pirturt which crowded ; I upon rm of the various groups of »jx- i • it'd w ldl> gesticulaUng men and women through which we hud passed on our v.av up. minglc'l thenasclvrs with the I ' l»’t n iiormi ot the « ene In the writing room, with its fl* eting vision of yon th | and b< auty lying pulseless in sudden • I'-aii. I < .ml.I not •• o. | i the one with- | - "ut feeling th" immediate impress of the • ohwr. and if b\ * han< < they b«.»tji yn-ldvd | for an in-i.in* to that earlier seem- if a deflate str. (i. with its solitary lamp shinim, down on the crou< hed figure of a tntn washing hi- .shaking hands in a dri.'i of fallen snow, they nnmedi atrly r i died back with a force an«l cleur- ill th* greater for the momentary I wo-- still sttnggling with these fan- | | ci. w.i t: ’ • : ofirnrd ar.d George ’•••mo it: Tlh-u was news in his tm<- .1 I rusht d I- meet him. •Tell ml -tell.” I hegf’.’d H«- tried to smile al my eagern. sa, but , i the attenipt was ghastly ’I ve been listening and looking. said Ihr and this is all I have learned. .Miss ( halloinT .bed t t from a stroi.. or from • lis.-ase of any k ml, but from a wound in ■ hing th* l.ait No one saw the iitt.iek.- « r even th« .piM’uaoh- or <lv ij-an it "t tht pet son nfllctiiig thi ; wound If he was killed by a pistol v hot it v*.is »t a di liiD' • . and altm*<t ■»v. i th. h.-nds of th* pi i sons sitting at 11.- tab!, wo saw there. Hut the doc- . in.'s sham Ho-ir l:eads .1 ihr word pis ; ‘"I sh"l. IB(\ refuse Io explain! th.m el\. • or to . xor»ss any, opinion] .until the wound Las been probed. Thi ■ I .* • . a;, going to do at once, and when t I tluu question is <!••. idc-d. I mat frel it my duty to speak and may ask you to support my story “I will tell what I saw.” said 1 Aej ? go.-d. ’That is all ■ Uiat will be I t «'*iuit.-.i \\ e are strangers to the par- ties concerm d. .md only speak from a i i>S'- "I .iti'-t >'•. It may he that our !si'-r\ will make no impr. ssion. and fh.it 'w < si ail be dismi st (1 with but few I lhanks Hut that is nothing to us If tile woman has been murdered, he is the I 1 .*’< • \\ ilh si;eh a eouviction in my |i;ii. d, there ■ n be no doubt as j,» m\ ■ ' << i y.' To Be Continued tn Next issue. The of a Pretty Girl • Hh v Some Grow Fat and Others Don't By MARGARET HUBBARD AYER. ASHION Xpert? tell uh that th. . reign of tin- thin woman is over, ■ ■■id tl-at the new styles will favor > fatter si.-:- i. but I don't believe it. - You max t .oi th- ial sister all you 1..-, but she aUI go right on trying to >'• thin I. w women are contented . ■ ■ looks, anyhow, but no tat ■ otnan lilo-. to think that she has lost b nder pr>.portion o . l-'nt Is awk- •x; ; 1. anti, w hat is m .ch more, it is ... I.IJ i wlil MMEF/ // x Ai7/ -.. s a':--' S/ YrrfT77 v x. ■ X Sleeping this way produces the double chin. aging Evi n the very fat girl of four teen looks oldet than she is. Mnnj n girl inherits a tendency to il< li. .iii'-t ... sin- inherited brow n and curly hair. If fat runs in your family it 1- hard to overcome it. and a con tinual fight lia to be kept up against tin increase - in weight. Ordinarily the woman who is too fat enjoys good food, but some people who iiu- II l>\ eat Very little; w ben they do lilt. However, they always choose just tlK.se foods which make flesh. Then they like liquids, soda water, plenty of watei uith meals, ice cream, and half watery foods. The amount ol’ fluid oni-hikes has much to do with increas ing th'- w< Ight. and I suppose one thing c\cry woman knows by nun is that alcohol in any form promotes a false apj.tite and aids in storing up fat in the tissue-, of the body. The Apple Womun. I once knew .i <l»-ai oiil apple woman who w.i< exceediri;: fy stout You Wo’ttld liflve thought to look at her that sit- d long pas-'ed thi age when her p< rsonul ippear.inee was the slightest enist qinneo to her. Hut. dear old Mary was still -somewhat vain and hir tub-like figuri worried her. I knew that ■he got plenty of exercise, -.nd nsked hi .' wlu'i she ale and drank. “Nothing at all! Nothing at nil!'' she is ure.l mo. “I don't <it ■ nough to keep a bird alive, and I never drink anything inn t"a " “Anil how much tea do ton drink. Macy.'.'" “Oh. sure, Iwenty-two tw'i-nty-t liree cups a day." Well, tin re was the secret of Mary's fat. and she leitainl) never suspected tluu the teapot which simmered all day long on the stove had ddne so much to milk, her lose her slender shape. Almost esor\ woman who is too fat has sonn sori of a little hud liabit slitinierfng in thi background likw Mary s t.-apot Something site never -its).. . t ■ bus helped to make her fat. and it's only after jmteh cross-ques tioning that yon can hind out what it There ire all kinds of bad habits Low Siummer I Excursion Rafes I CINCINNATI, $19.50 hOUISVILLE, SIB.OO | CHICAGO, - $30.00 I KmLLE ~ ST.9O | iickets on Sale Daily, Good I to October 31st, Returning I Citv Ticket Ottice.4 Peachtree | ES - HAD TETTER FORTEN YEARS; TWO ROXES TETTERI.NE CURED’ 1!r Lew Wren, of Chicago, writes us' .. I spier. .i tor ;< n years witli I ’ .1 ' • rs in m arly every slate I tn t.’e I num Laving tailed to cure him. I A irmiii.st iviommended Tetti-rme to : ■ tht a box I: gave hlnj ' . at 1 file s' -nd box etTeeti-i! a coni- ; • ' li” Ti tn rine at all druggists or I ma:' I ' •“ irom the Shuptriue Cum- | /<■ ■ that tend to make one grow fat. First of all, then- is a dumpy way of sit ting as when one falls to pie'ces o.ver the top of her stays and slumps in at the waist just as much as her steel armor will tillbw. Now, if you want to keqp your figure, you cannot afford to slump/at all, but should cultivate a good s’raight backbone and hold your shoulders back naturally, not stiffly, but so that you are never sitting in a round-shouldered position. I have seen so many girls of eighteen or nineteen whose shoulders were round, whose backs Already looked old just because they do not sit up straight When sitting at a desk or sewing table, when you are reading or wiiting, place your ehair sufficiently far from the table to allow you to sit well back in the chair, and then bend torn .rd from the hips. This’position i-- ri . fly- more restful than the hollow chest ami round-shouldered one, and it is just a matter of habit to get ac customed to it. There are all kinds of braces-sold now which hold the shoulders back and ke p one from getting a broad and round-shoulder, d back. They are good tor the fat woman, because they remind her to hold herself correctly, which will make her look taller and less dumpy. Tlte same kind of a brace is made by the English army officers of three handkerchiefs. Knot the ends of two of Hie handkerchiefs together, slip these over the arms and around the shoulders. Now pass the third hand kerchief across the hack rind under the two arm-circles, and have some one Up-to-Date Jokes A tierman gentlerhan at breakfast ‘ one morning said to the servant: “Did I come home very drunk last night, ■ Gretchen?” • Her reply was “Oh. Lor. sir. yes! Why. you kissed the missis!” , 1 I.'lm>: lies—Say, old boy . are yell fond , of moving- pictures? Ills 1-1 lend Well, 1 should say so. <'hortles--Then come round to our house next Tuesday and give us a hand. We're moving that day." .lanes i-iim. downtown the other , morning with a somewhat bruised and ■swollen forehead. His friend Briggs view'd tlie contusion with interest, and asked: How did it happen, old man?” c'pllided with the hat rack last night." said Jones, shortly. "Accidentally?” asked Briggs. No. Briggs.” replicl Jones, sweetly. I have i very reason to suspect that it aV icm-'l nu- purposely . The barbel's shop was well patron -. walked a slialiby strai:. • r ■'Good-morning, sir!" called the bar-- I her. doubtfully. "Good-morning!' replied the strang . '-r ' .My good man. will you shave one side of my face for a dime?" The barber winked at his waiting I customers "Certainly," he replied. | "Takp a seat, please.” Presently it was the shabby Strang er's tarn to occupy the seat of honor. ! Now. which side shall 1 shave?” asked I th. barber, as he waved the lathering • brush in the ait. "Th - outside'' replied the shabby : stranger, meekly . C ASTOR IA lor Infants and Children. I The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the y/V’/FT"7~“ ' | Signature oi Form the habit of sleeping with your chin up and you will avoid the dreaded double or triple chin. knot this together,' drawing the shoul ders back by pulling the handkerchiefs which bind them. Another bad habit which the stout woman easily falls into is that of go ing around with her head bent down so •that she soon has two or even three chins. Chin straps for reducing the eh.n are sold everywhere nowadays, or one can make them of a piece of linen cut about three inches wide, with tapes at the end. The linen should pass un der the chin and tie over the head, and press the flabby part of the chin in, as • well as holding the mouth shut while • sleeping. The Way to Sleep. ! Young people often lose the pretty r contour of the face because they sleep 1 with their mouths open, while the wom an who is inclined to be fat if she will form the habit of sleeping with • her head up, instead of bent very far 1 down, or with such a chin strap to hold the mouth shut and the chin up will i not acquire the dreaded double or triple ' chin. 1 Another bad habit is for the fat ’ woman to consider herself fat: the r minute she fays “I am too fat to run r upstairs, too fat to walk much," that ’ is Just the time to begin work to de t crease one’s flesh; to walk and run up 1 and down stalls as much as possible, 1 for indolence invariably accompanies ■’ the fat woman, and that is the most 1 difficult thing to overcome. Body massage, if one can obtain it. would help reduce the weight, and face 1 massage will do much toward dispers t ing the fatty tissue that disfigures the 1 youthful face. i But, alas! the fat woman does not 1 care about strenuous exercise, and i much prefers applying medicated soaps 5 or trying to melt down fat at the s Turkish bath, or by spasmodic hard f work encased in rubber garments un f cler a sweater. i Os course, the more you exercise the ' more you will perspire and the sooner - you will melt down your fat, --Tie ; trouble is that few women are willing ? to keep it up long enough to feel the good results. An excellent movement for reducing the waist and abdomen is the follow ing: Valuable Exercises. t Die flat on the back, preferably on I the hard floor; extend the legs stiffly. , then raise first one leg, then the other, stiffening all the muscles and getting some action in the muscles of the waist, which with the fat woman are usually unite weak and flaccid. After repeating this exercise several times, bring both legs together to a position as nearly as possible at right angles with the body. The woman who will roll <m a hard floor a hundred times night and mom- • ing will soon find her flesh melting ! away, but it isn’t a comfortable way ! pf doing it. I Skipping the rope; usually considered quite a childish game, will also reduce flesh, but if there is anything the mat ter with the heart, it is not. advisable to try it. Riding, tennis playing, bicycling and ■ especially swimming all will reduce weight. The woman who wants to get thin must never take nap. - ? in the daytime, and she should not sleep more than seven hours at night. This applies, of course, only to the fat woman of robust constitution. Dr. Arnold Lorrand advises abstain ing from meat entirely, in order to re i duee flesh, or to eat very little, if any iof it. w hile for the rest of the diet. : almost every woman knows those Starchy; sugary and fat-forming foods which she shouldn’t eat, and which she generally adores. The ideal weight for women of vari ous heights is about as follows: 5 feet 1 inch. weight 120 pounds. 5 feet 2 inches, weight 126 pounds. I 5 feet 3 inches, weight 133 pounds, i 5 feet 4 inches, weight 136 pounds. 5 feet 5 inches, weight 142 pounds. I 5 feet 6 inches, weight 145 pounds. 5 feet 7 inches, weight 149 pounds. 5 feet 8 inches, weight 155 pounds. , 5 feet 9 inches, weight 162 pounds. I 5 feet 10 inches, weight 169 pounds. 5 feet 11 inches, weight 174 pounds. B fket w-ioht 178 pounds, ! < The Manicure Lady @ By William F. Kirk WILFRED and me and Sister Mayme Was to a swell party the other night,” said the Manicure Lady. “It was gave by a artist that has just opened a new sttidio. the same as the studio that I was telling you about a ft'w weeks ago. We had a grand time.” “I think you are wrong in going to studio parties,” said the Head Barber. ' I have told you that before, and you know when 1 tell you anything. I mean it.” ’ I can take care ot myself without any bone-headed barber telling me where to get off,” said Manicure Lady, frigidly. “This artist was a per fect gent. The pnly thing I didn’t like about the party was one of his lady guests. 1 think she must be one of them ladies that is all the time look ing for adventures. I think they call them adventuresses, or some name like that. She hadn't no more -than seen Wilfred when she started making eyes at him, because she had heard the poor kid telling that he was a poet, and I guess she thought that poets makes a lot of dough. Goodness knows they don t, George; but as long as she thought so I suppose that ain’t neither here or there, but to get on with my story. “The mintue Wilfred noticed that this blond beputy' was shining up to him he swelled up like one of them poisoned puppies that you read about in the story books. 1 guess in the next hour after he made the flash he must have recited about seventy of his worst young poems. Don't you see, George? He was trying to make a hit with .her and con her into giving him a little dough, but he was waiting for a good chance to approach her, and all the time she was playing the same sys tem. I had more than one good laugh before the two of them found out that there wasn’t a quarter between them, and probably wouldn't be for some time to come. Wilfred was telling me on the way home that in the old days poets used to have patrons and patron esses. He said that any time a poet was on his uppers he would go and dig up some rich old guy or guyess and tell him the facts in the case are these;’ 1 think it was a pretty good system at that, George. Barbers and manicure girls can make enough to B MllllllllHlfagL /> U X i> _J< ri- .i 'i|f,' ; i i itTffuri l '?? / |M / in IM How One Washerwoman Was Converted to the Fels-Naptha Way. Ant>i Dimclge— ‘Why, bless my soul! Mrs. Old School, the washerwoman has seen the light at last and has adopted the Fels-Naptha way of washing.” Grocer's Boy—“ She was forced to it, Anty Drudge. Mrs. Millionaire, her best customer, told her that if she didn’t use Fels-Naptha she’d take her washing away. Was tired, she said, of having her clothes come back all yellow and some with streaks of dirt still in them.” A generation or so ago, if a woman had an errand she walked—she had to, there was no other way. Later she could do it in half the time by riding. Now she can do it almost instantly, by telephone. I hat’s Progress, and Progress is made possible Ly science. I’cls-Naptha is science applied to the washday problem, and it’s results are just wonderful. I'ormcily washday was a time of sick ening odors, back-breaking labor, a disor dered house and the severest test on the clothes. I his was necessary. 1 here was no other way. Ihe Pcls-Naptha washday—the scientific washday—isn’t a washday at all in the old sense; merely an incident in the routine of household duties. And li directions on the red and green wrapper are followed, the result is certain. get 'by. but poets is awfui helple creatures. At least, Wilfred is. H had to nick the old gent’s bank roll f-. four bits to make this studio party the I am telling you about.” “Studios don’t make no *hit wh me." said the Head Barber. “You ain’t classy enough to und. i stand them,” said the Manicure La<A “If you want to enjoy a studio y.> ought to have one of. them artist, tempers, or whatever they call it.” Do You Know— The title of the white house. Was’ ington, was strangely bestowed. Soo after it was built it was proposed t call It The Palace, but this was on posed on democratic grounds. Congres then determined that it should be calk the executive mansion. It b.-cam known as the white house becaus. when rebuilt after the British soldier had partly destroyed it, it was paint, white to hide the traqps of smoke an flame upon the trails. For some time in Vienna street sav ings banks have been in vogue wii considerable success. These saving banks are an adaptation of the pennx in-the-slot machine. Any one passin wishing to deposit a small sum dro; his money into the slot. Instead of re ceiving bonbons or chocolate in retun he gets a ticket for the coin deposit. The tickets are later honored on pre c entation at a government departmen Encouraged by the success of t’n Vienna experiment, the people of Par are to introduce the same system ini their streets. A lightship has just been placed commission in Germany that is pro vided with a complete equipment of th most modern devices for aiding an warning mariners. In place of the 01.. fashioned mast-beacons, the vessel ca ries a single powerful electric light si on' top of a hollow mast or shat through which the light can be reacho in stormy weather. The lightship If wireless telegraph and fog and subnn rine signals. Diesel oil engines run . dynamo, and \ two large accumulate batteries store the eldctric current f<> emergency use. The new vessel is ir, feet long and 25 feet wide. It will b stationed near the shallows at th mouth of the River Elbe.