Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN’S MAGAZINE PAGE
“Initials Only” > By Anna Katherine Green
A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Tinies
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
(Copyright. 1911, Street & Smith )
(Copyright, 1911, by Dodd, Mead & Co.)
But we began to doubt if others agreed
with him. when on passing out we were
stopped in the lobby by this same de
tective, who had something to say to
George, and drew' him quickly aside.
“What does he want?” I asked, as soon
as George had returned to my side.
“He wants me to stand ready to obey
any summons the police may send me.”
“Then they still suspect Brotherson?”
“They must.”
My head rose a trifle as I glanced up
at George.
“Then v.e are not altogether out of it?”
1 emphasized, complacently.
He smiled —which hardly seemed a
pj-opos. Why does George sometimes
smile when 1 am in my most serious
moods.
As we stepped out of the hotel. George
gave my arm a pinch which served
to direct my attention to an elderly gen
tleman who was just alighting from a
taxicab at the curb. He moved heavily
and with some appearance of pain, but
from the crowd collected on the sidewalk
many of whom nudged each other as
he passed, he was evidently a person of
some importance, and as he disappeared
within the hotel entrance. I asked George
w ho this kind-faced, bright-eyed old gen
tleman could be.
He appeared to know, for he told me
at once that he was Detective Gryce: a
man who had growta old in solving just
such baffling problems as these
He gave up work some n e aap. I
have been told,” my husband went on;
• but evidently a great case still has its
allurement for him. The trail here must
be a very blind one for them to call him
in. I wish we had not left so soon. It
would have been quite an experience to
see him at work.”
“I doubt if you would have been given
the opportunity. I noticed that we were
slightly de trop toward the
wouldn’t have minded that: not on
my own account, that is. it might not
have been pleasant for you However,
the office is waiting. Come, let me put
you on the car.”
That night i bided his coming w ith an
impatience 1 could not control. He was
late, of course, but when he <!:<! appear,
I almost forgot our usual greeting in my
hurry ■ ask him if he had seen the
evening papers.
"No. ' he grumbled, as he hung up his
overcoat. “Been pushed about ail day.
No time for anything.”
“Then let me tell you
Hot he would have dinner firs:.
However, a little later we had a com
fortable chat. Mr. Gryce had made a dis
covery, and the papers were full of it.
It was one which gave me a small tri
umph over George. The suggestion he
had laughed at was not so entirely fool
ish as he had been pleased to consider it.
But he let me tell the story of that day.
without any further reference to myself.
The opinion had become quite general
with thus- best acquainted with the de
tails of this affair, that the mystery was
one of those abnormal ones for which no
solution would ever be found, when the
aged detective showed himself in. the
building and was taken to the room,
where an inspector of police awaited him.
Their greeting was cordial, and the lines
on tiie latter’s face relaxed a little as he
mot the still bright eye of the man upon
whose instinct ami judgment so much
reliance had always been place*!.
“This is very good of you.” he began,
glancing down at the aged detective's
bundled up legs, and gently pushing a
chair toward him. “I know that it was
a great deal to ask. but we’re at our
wits’ end. and so I telephoned. It's the
niost ’nexphcabJe -There! you have heard
that phrase before. But clews- there
are absolutely none. That is. we have
not been able tn find any. Perhaps you
can. At least that is what we hope. I've
known you more than once to succeed
where others have failed.”
The elderly man thus addressed, glanc
ed down al his legs, now propped up on
a stool which someone had brought him.
and smiled, with the pathos of the old
who sees the interests of a lifetime slip
ring gradually away.
1 am not what I was. I can no longer
get down on my hands and knees to pick
up threads from the nap of a rug. or
soy out a spot of blood in the crimson
woof < f a carpet.”
“You shall have Sweetwater here to do
the active work for you. What wr want
<»f you is Ho- directing mind the infalli
ble instinct h’s a c;ase in a thousand.
Gryce We've never had anything just
like u You’ve never had anything at
all like it. It will make you young
again.”
* The old man's eye' shot tire and un
consciously one foot slipped to lite floor.
Then li. bethought himself and painfully
lifted it back again.
“What are the points? What’s the dif
ficulty?” he a.* ke<l. "A woman has been
shot—”
"No. not shot, stabbed. We thought
she had been shot, for that was intelli
gible and involved no impossibilities. But
T’rs Heath ami Webster, under the eye
of the Chailoners’ own physician, have
made an examination of the wound an
official one. thorough and quite final so
far as they are concerned, and they de
clare that no bullet is to be found in the
body. As tly wound extends no further
than the heart, this settles one great
point, at least.”
"Dr. Heath s a reliable man and one
of «»ur ablest coroners.”
Ges. There can be no question as to
the truth, of his report. You know the
victim?. Her ramp I mean, and the
character she bore?”
Nadine Face Powder
(In Green Bones Only. )
Makes the Complexion Beautiful
Soft and Velvety
L 'ttSC' ' \ ,s P ure »
/ I Hartnli
• v •"* I
j?- -,,4 '-yA?/N ■. Money Ba.-k if Nol
j Entirely Pleased.
WThe son, velvety
appearance re
mains until pow
der is washed off.
Purified by a new
process. Prevents
sunburn and return of discolorations.
The increasing popularity is wonderful.
White, flesh, Pint, Rrunette. By
toilet counters or mail. Price 50 cents.
NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY. Paris. Ten*
“Yes; so much was told me on my wav
down.”
"A fine girl, unspoiled by riches and
seeming independence. Happy, too. to all
appearance, or we should be more ready
1 to consider the possibility of suicide.”
“Suicide by stabbing calls for a weapon.
Yet none has been found. I hear.”
’ “None"
“Yet she was killed that way?"
1 “Undoubtedly, and by a long and very
narr< w blade, larger than a needle but
not so large as rhe ordinary stiletto."
"Stabbed while by herself, or what you
may call by herself? She had no com
panion near her?”
1 “None, if we can believe the four mem
bers of the Parrish family who were seat
ed at the other end of the room.”
'And do you believe them?”
L “Would a whole family lie and need
lessly? They never knew’ the woman
father, maiden aurt am! two boys, clear
j eyed, jolly young chaps Vhom even tire
‘ horror of this tragedy, perpetrated as it
1 were under their very nose, can not make
serious for more .than a passing moment.”
1 “It wouldn’t seem so.”
“Yet they swear up and down that no
body :Tossed the room toward Miss Chal
•iloner?”
" ! “So they tell me.”
1 I “She fell just a few feet from the desk
‘ • where she had been writing. No word, no
■ j cry. just a collapse and sudden fall. In
! olden days they would l ave said, struck
Iby o bolt from heaven But it was a
I bolt which drew’ bleed; not much blood.
1 i I hear, but sufficient to end life almost
’ • instantly. She never looked up or spoke
[again. What do you make of it, Gryce?”
"It’s a tough one. and I'm not ready
•i to venture an opinion yet. I should like
• i to see the dt sk you speak of. and the spot
1 I where she fell.”
1 ' A young fellow' who had been hever-
1 i ing in the background at or.ee stepped
' ; forward. lie was the plain faced detective
i who had spoken to George.
' [ “Will you take my arm. sir?”
: Mr. Gryce’s w hole face brightened. This
' Sweetwater, as they called him. was. I
’ have since understood, one of bis pro
-1 I teges. and more or less of a favorite.
Have you had a chance at this thing?”
[he asked. “Been over the ground—-stud
i led the affair carefully 0 ”
■ i “Yes, sir: they were good enough to
’ [ allow it.”
. : “Very wed. ther. you’re in a position
’i to pioneer me. You’ve seen it all and
■ | won t be in a hurry.”
| "No; I'm .at the end of my rope. I
; j haven't an idea, sir.”
• “Well, well: that's honest. at al!
! events.” Then, as he slowly rose with
others careful assistance. “There’s no
I crime without its clew. The thing is to
recognize that clew when seen But I'm
in no position to make promises. Old
days don't return for the asking."
Nevertheless, he loked ten years y oung
er than when he came in. or so thought
those who knew him.
The mezzanine was guarded from all
i visitors save such as had' official sanction.
’ Consequently, the two remained quite un
interrupted while they moved about the
. place in quiet consultation. Others had
preceded them; had examined the plain
little desk and found nothing: had paced
t off ihe distances; had looked with longing
f and inquiring eyes at the elevator cage
’ I and the open archway leading to the lit
’ i tie staircase and the musicians’ gallery.
J The locale was what he wanted, and he
• got it. Whether he got anything else
•it would be impossible to say from his
i manner as he finally sank into a chair
by one of the openings, and looked down
'j on the lobby below It was full of peo
' : pie coming and going on all sorts of busi-
| ness. and presently he drew’ back, and,
'i leanig on Sweetwater's arm, asked him
| a few questions.
I I "Who were the first to rush in here
, after the F’arHshes gave the alarm?"
"t.)ne < r two of the musicians from the.
t , end of the ball. They bad just finished
, i their program and were preparing to leave
I the gallery. Natural!' they reached her
first.”
“Good! Their names?"
i "Mark Sowerby and Claus Hennerberg.
Honest Germans men who have played
I here for years."
“Ard wl. ‘ followed them? Who came
next on the scene?”
“Some people from the lobby ’They
heard the di.-turbance and rushed up pell
. mell. But not one of these touched her.
( Later her father came."
“Who did touch her.' Anybody, before
the father came in?"
"Yes; Miss Clarke, the middle aged lady
. ‘ with the Parrishes. She had run inward
. | Miss Challoner as soon as she heard her
: I fal. and was silting there with the dead
girl’s head in her lap when the musi-
; clans showed themselves."
"I suppose she has been carefully ques
tioned?"
“Very. 1 should say."
“And she speaks of no weapon?"
"No. Neither she nor any one else at
that moment suspected murder or even
i a violent death. All thought it a natural
one sudden, but the result of some secret
i disease."
"Father and all?”
“Yes.”
• "But the blood? Surely there must
‘ have hern some show of blood?"
1 I “They say not. No one noticed any.
Not till the doctor came her doctor, who
I was happily in his office in this building
'I He saw the drops, and uttered the first
suggestion of murder."
"How long after was this” Is there
any one who has ventured to make
! an estimate of the number of minutes
which elapsed from the time she fell,
' to the moment when the doctor first
‘ raised the. cry of murder?"
' “Yes. Mr. Slater, the assistant mana
ger, who was in the lobby at the time,
: says that ten minutes at least must have
"Ten minutes and no blood! The
weapon must still have been there Some
weapon with a short and inconspicuous
handle. 1 think they said there were
; c owers over and around ti e place where
f it struck'.’”
Yes: great big scarlet ones. Nobody
notice«i nobody looked. A panic like that
I stems to paralyze people.”
| “Ten minutes' I must see every one
who approached her during those ten
I minutes. I!v< » 1 oiw-. Sweetwater, and I
must talk with Miss Clarke.”
“You will like her You will believe
r every word she says
, No d-mbt All the more reason why I
must see her Sweetwater, some one
drew that weapon nut. Effects still have
’ their < auses. notwithstanding the new
B cult. The question is. Who? We must
leave no stone unturned to find that out "
‘ "The stones have all been turned over
’ once."
"By you?”
“Not altogether by me
' To Be Continued »n Next Issue.
For Day and Evening Wear
<; «Jii. / w % ' yV, swFB
'ir./ ' ;? g
W a Wit I o
W w 'M. Wf AirW • & k*;
1B j JKII 1 Ute
h « Jlt wl * hHI ' -A •■’HKK
Wf HMB II wO f •
IB wiwS
B j|ln ? ■HL’ • I i
in- iwdi
t 5) A
a \\\ /wWa : ? //
On lhe left i- shown a frock for
a country house. It is carried out
in a self-colored voile, the skirt
being slightly draped and the blouse
trimmed with the very popular
Robespierre collar. The sleeves are
tong and finish at the wrist with
ruffles similar to the collar.
In the eerier: is shown a pleas
ing suggestion for those who are
the happy possessors of good lace.
Tlje gown is fashioned of heavy
ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN v By Beatrice Fairfax I
GET A NEW PLACE.
Dear Miss Eairfax:
I am 41 years old and in love
with a young man 24 years old.
and am employed by his parents.
He used to talk to me lovingly,
and since a new girl came in the
house his love has gone. He is my
first love. I vrv both night and
day. ANNIE.
It is a pity your first love ‘-itould
have proven such a disappointment,
but no surprise considering the differ
ence in your ages
My dear woman, ho is too young 1
for you. Get a new place, and if he
is out of your sight, I am quite sure he
soon will be out of your mind. Don’t
waste any more emotions on the af
fa i r.
WHY NOT TELL HER?
Dear Miss Eairfax:
I am tv.ent.x years old. I have
just been introduced to a young
lady who is a year younger, and is
keeping steady company with an
other fellow. She has told me she
loves me; but she still allows this
fellow to call twice a week, and
invites me nights that he is- not
there. I love her dearly.
Do you advise me to try and give
her u... < \ ir her from the otiter
fellow? She is not sure that I
ntr for her as I say, or she would
give him up. HAROLD.
If you love her and want her for your |
wife, you must tell her so. Mind
reading solves no problems of love.
She has a right to receive the atten
tions of other men if she is not en
gaged to you.
IT IS WITHIN YOUR RIGHTS.
Dear Miss Eairfax:
1 am a girl eighteen years of ‘
age. and have gone with a young
man two years my senior for the
last six months.
Would it be right or wrong for
me to go with other young men of
my acquaintance? While my
friend does not exactly object to
this, he seems to think it is un
derstood that I should go with no
one else but him. ANXIOUS.
You have the right to go with other
men since no engagement exists. The
man is unfair. If lie wants a mo
nopoly of your time, he should ask
you to marly him and gain the right
of monopoly. It is a mistake for a
girl to devote all her time to one when
that one is r v a. p .ssing acquaint
a nee.
IF YOU DOUBT HIM. DISMISS HIM.
Dear Miss Eairfax:
1 am eighteen, and have been
keeping steady company with a 1
young man eight" years my senior.
He Mas to come Wednesday even
ing. but he never came. A friend
of mine met him, and she said he
•’talked” about me. I asked him,
and he denied it.
If you were me. what would you
do? He said he was going to mar
ry me, as I was the only girl he
loved. E. V. K.
The moment, a girl begins to dis
trust a man. that moment should see
liie end of their relationship, whether
satin with a V-shaped neck and en
circled at the waist with a single
line of pearls. The skirt opens
slightly at the left hand to reveal
a gold-shod foot. At a time when
that relationship be lover or friend. If
you are satisfied that he has been
slandered, forget what you heard about
him. In a case like this much depends
on the veracity of your friend.
TIME WILL AID YOU.
Dear Miss Eairfax:
During iny school vacation I re
turned t. my home town. Daytona,
Ela. While there most of my tim
Up-to-Date Jokes
An old farmer was noted for boast
ing about the products of his farm, »o
one day a neighbor, thinking to take a
rise out of him, sent his man to ask if
ho could have the loan of his cross-cut
s iw to cut a turnip up. so as to get it in
the (art.
lit was not quite sure. however, that
he bad had the beat <»f it when Ire re
ceived the following reply:
"You should have had the saw with
pleasure, but I have just got it fast in
a potato.”
A certain town in i «• North produces
bright boys. The other da\ on- of them
asked his teacher, "I Tow much brains
has a hog in h;s head?”
Sht replied: "Science has not deter
mined that. Thoma <.”
"Well, 1 have,” said the boy.
"It would take a philosopher to tel!
that.” responded the teacher; "but you
may tell.”
"A hog's head full'.” rejoined the
grinning urchin.
A teacher had been telling a little
boy the story of the disobedient lamb
that had been eaten by the wolf
"You set-," said she. "had the lamb
been obedient and a'ay«d in :.»<• fold,
it would not have been eaten by the
wolf, would it?”
"No. ma’am,” said the boy promptly;
“it would have been eat. n by us.”
“My dear.” said .Mrs. Strongmind, "I
want you to accompany me to the town
hall tomorrow evening.”
"What for - .”’ queried the meek and •
lowly other half of the combine.
"I am to lecture on th** I) irk Side of I
.Married Life.’ ” explained Mrs. S. and j
1 want yon to sit on the platform and !
pose as one of th'- illustrations.”
A young Englishman at a party most
ly composed of Scotsmen n.a<!< several :
attempts to crack a ,i- ke. and, failing to
evoke a smile from h s < onr a niops, he
became angry, and exclaimed;
"Why. it would take a gimlet to put a
joke into the heads of you Scotsmen!”
One of them replied: "Aye, but the
gimlet wud need t;« be tna.r pointed
than thae jokes.”
"But. Mabel, on what grounds does
your father object to me?”
"On any grounds within a mile of
our house.”
la-t-suiuuu r and early-autumn vis
its biing with them the necessity
for furbishing up our wardrobes
this model anil the other designs
illustr tted on this page should
prove of assistance.
on the right is a walking cos
tume Navy blue is the color
chosen, cut with a plain skirt, the
bodice being decorated with a cir
cular turn-down collar of white
lawn: large white buttons and but
tonholes outlined in white.
’ was spent with the girl dearest to
i me. Some of the town boys, who
were envious of me. did their best
to put me in a*false light. They
suceeeded in doing so as far as her
mother is concerned. The conse
quence is that I am not ailoweil to
visit at her house anv more.
WILLIAM H. I’.. JR.
This is unfortunate, but so long as
the girl remains true you have no cause
foi worry. Conduct yourself in such
a wa\ tfie iiiotl.i i will be convinced she
has been unjust to you. No pleading,
no argument, no intervention of friends,
will help you as much as your own
good conduct.
PLANS FOR DIFFERENT MEN.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I apt a gill of seventeen and
have been keeping company with a
young man on< year my senior Os
late he has not come to see or even
write to me. What his reasons
.-ne I do not know. Mj sister says
1 act too solemn toward fellows
anil thinks 1 should Jolly them
more . ANXIOUS.
There an- somt men who can be won
in only one waj by flatteiy. But their
Int* lligen ’e is such that th* girl who
perjures herself to win such a prize
doesn’t win much. 1 think a better
plan is to be jus? natural. B* 1 unaf
fected. just as you would bo in your
own family, and I am sure the right
man will some day come along.
If this rii.in do* -n’t ear* enough f<>r
you to explain his coolness it is up
to vou to c'-asc- eating for him.
THE COMB’S MORNING STORY
You know the story the comb tells.
It's a very discouraging story, too.
Day by day, a few more strands are add
-1 ed, of hair that is turning grey, losing its
; vitality, its strength and its health.
Grey hair is as unbecoming as old age.
I Natural pride should have its own say.
You wish to look young and it is your
DU TY to appear so. You can’t even LOOK
j young if the silver threads begin to show.
| Bea “Young Woman” in looks, always.
The grey hairs belong to the chaperon and
j to the grandmother. /
Slay out of the grandmother class, until
your years justify it, by using
HAY’S HAIR HEALTH
$1 and 50c al Drug Store* or direct upon
receipt of price and dealer's name Send 10c for
trial bottle.- Philo Hay Spec. Co. Newark, N. J
FOR {>ALt AND HuCOMMENDLD
BY JACOBS' PHARMACY.
Daysey May me and Her Folks
Ry Frances L. Garside
I know the funniest s>tory,”
( J bubbled Daysey Mayme Ap
pleton at dinner last night.
“It’s about that woman who used to
live across the street, and you will just
split your shies laughing when you
hear it.”
I.ysandei John smiled in anticipa
tion of the feast of mirth. Mrs. Apple
ton laughed in sympathy, and Chaun
cey Devere, after the manner of all
brothers, looked skeptical. He had
seen his sister stroll into the Joke
Kingdom before.
"t>h. it's too funny," gurgled his sis
ter. "You know she”—titters, giggles
and a hysterical scream.
If one were to put all the sound
Do You Know—
Despite the wonderful advance of ex
ploration in various parts of the world,
the Royal Geographical society of Lon
don has recently declared that no few
er than 20.0*10.1)00 square miles of the
earth jet remain unexplored. Africa
has the largest unexplored area, nearly
6,500.000 square miles: while North
America contains no fewer than 1,500,-
000 square miles of virgin territory.
"The largest continuous stretch of unex
plored country is in Liberia. Africa.
Y’lie tract consists of tfbout 20,000 miles,
all of which is within 200 miles of the
sea. Regions adjoining the Congo, the
basin of the Upper Nile, parts of Mo
rocco. Abyssinia and Somaliland have
yet to be surveyed, mapped out and
commercially exploited.
The most remarkable packet ever
sent by post an authority at Mt. Mar
tln's-le-Grand told an interviewer, was
a Suffragist. It was Just after a new
regulation had been put into force
whereby living animals can be accept
ed for delivery, when a lady went Into
a branch postoffiee in i.ondon and
told the clerk she wanted to be taken
to an equally well know.n cabinet min
ister. The lady was referred to a dis
trict messentier, but she refused, and
was conducted to th* l address by-an
express messenger and duly signed for.
It is stated that she did not get farther
than the vestibule.
A Russian smuggler was shot recent
ly by Cossacks just as he was crossing
the Austrian boundary, not far from
Cz.ernowitz. The body fell across the
frontier, the head in Russian territory,
the trunk on the strip of neutral ground
which forms the frontier, and the legs
in Austria. No one is competent to
deal with the removal of the body, as it
fell In different countries. It was still
lying at the time of writing, unburied,
the head guarded by Cossacks, the rest
by Austrian gendarmes.
A novel scheme of taxation has been
introduced into Dodg* City, Kans. The
authorities have decided that every
man and woman wanting to dance must
first take out a dancing license. The
revenue derived from the issue of these
licenses, which will cost sl, and hold
good for a year, will be devoted to
town improvements.
Blitter may be kept cool In hot
weather by filling a basin with cold
water, and putting rhe butter on a plate
on the top of the basin.
Sea water contains silver In consid
erable quantities, and it is often found
deposited on the copper sheathing of
ships,
Holland has a special law preventing
striking among railway employees.
Germany has a plan for giving it -
doctors one day's rest In seven.
Made Her Well Woman
Mis. W. P. Valentine, of Camden, N I
J., says: 1 suffered with pains in my
back and side, sick headaches, no ap
petite, was tired and nervous all the
time Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound made me a well woman and
I wish other suffering women would
avail themselves of this valuable rem
edy.”
For nearly forty years Lydia E.
Pinkhams Vegetable Compound has
been the standard remedy for female I
ills, and no sick woman does herself
justice who will not try this famous
medicine, made from roots and herbs.
DU A ° ( '
UnHH KKg ' the most fav-
1F orable environment
< nntlrmw saz:
for a lucrative position. Send lor catalog to
Dean S. C. BENIDICT, M. D„ Athens, Ga.
■ SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY 1
I Largest F’harmacy School South. Drug store in the college Free books sav- I
jing S2O book expenses. Large new building and equipment, three laboratories I
■Demand for our graduates exceeds supply. Fall Session begins October Ist I I
|\\ rite for catalogue. Address
v - B. FREEMAN, Sec., 81 Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga *
FOR SALE
Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar,
IMMEDIATE Creosote, Road Binder,
Metal Preservative Paints,
DELIVERS Roofing Paint and
Shingle Stain.
|| AtSanta Gas Light Co. Phone 4945 "
’ notes in a chopping bowl, and chop
them up, each note screaming all the
while, the sound would be very much
like Dayaey Mayme's laugh. It is a 8
! cross between the triumphant shouts
of the cannibals about to roast a mis
sionary and the wails of the mission
ary so soon to be eaten.
< >n» never knew when hearing Day
i sry Mayme Appleton if one should run
1 from her or to her. All girls laugh the
> same.
"You know”—she went on, the gale
having temporarily subsided—"who I
s mean,” looking to her mother. .
Mrs. Appleton didn't know, but
I smiled encouragingly.
"Oh, you do, too." said Daysey Mhy
me with some impatience. "She, al
ways wore so many sidecombs, and
had a white dress trimmed with blue.”
Mrs. Appleton named a dozen women
who wore sidecombs and had white
dresses trimmed in blue, her daugh- I
ter's anger growing with every name.
"Her father died," said Daysey May
me, trying to jog her mother's mem
ory. "and they had a, dog. and you
know who I mean just as well as can
he. but you won't try to remember.”
There were squalls ahead. Chaimoey
Devore’s skeptical smile changed to q
one of conviction, and Lysander Sohn
began to look worried.
"Never mind the womante narne/’
lie said, “tell tho story without ig.”
"I can’t.” sobbed his daughter. "The
joke was all about her name, and no
one is trying to help me, and .‘there's
no use in me trying to tell it lor ever
try to be funny any more. All the.
magazines say a. girl shoul-4 try to
• amuse her family, and I’d like..to know
how she can when her folks are stupid
i as mine.”
More sobs and more tears.
Then she flounced out. of the room tn
a temper and the last sound she heard
> was her brother’s laugh.
I He. alone, of all the family, hud a
i sense of humor.
CASTOR IA
Tor Infant* and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears tha XTV z / y^ 11 '""
Bignaturo of
'
Low Summer
—.— 4
Excursion Rates
ll■’ - - -
CINCINNATI, $19.50
LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO
1 CHICAGO, - $30.00
KNOXVILLE - $7.90
—. — I
Tickets on Sale Daily, flood
to October 31 st, Returning J
City Ticket Office. 4 Peachtree j
■■■ J ■■ ■
CHICHESTER S PILLS
,* In Btrd and Gold
sc * ,e ‘l Hl«n Ribboa.
r) ''JIJ A ako Do Hoy of your V
I X rs BK*S»
" SOI 0 BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
3 Btai S ” * Swltertum Hook o«
uhltct Im DU. a M. WtIAUJCT.
24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga_