Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 10, 1912, HOME, Image 8

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THE OrEOimiAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE “Initials Only V By Anna Katherine Green J Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. | (Copyright, 1911. Street & Smith.) (Copyright, 1911, h\ Dodd. Mead & Co.) | •'Then they will bear bring turnrd! over again I want to he witness <»f the operation ’ “Where will you see Mies Clarke?” “Wherever she pleases—only I can t walk far ” "I think I know the place. You shall have the use of this elevator It has not been runn ng since last night, or it would he full of curious people all the time, hustling to got a glimpse of this place But they 11 put a man on for you.” •‘Very good manage it as you will 111 wait here till \ <u’r» reach Explain yourself to th?* ladx Tell her I'm an old and rheumatic invalid who has been used to asking his own questions I’ll not trou ble her much But there is one point she must make clear to me.’’ Sweetwater did not presume t » ask | what point, but l e hoped to be fully en lightened when ti «- time < ano And he was Mr. Gryce had undertaken j to educate him for this w«-rk. and never I missed the opportunity of giving him a ■ lesson. The three met in a private sitting i room on an upper floor, the detectives cn- * tering first and the lady coming in soon after. As her quiet figure appeared in the doorway. Sweetwater stole a glam e at "Mr. Gry< e. He was not looking her wax. • ■ of course; he never looked directly at j anybody, but he formed his impressions j for all that, and Sweetwa’er was anxious i to make sure of these impn s ;ons. There was no doubting them in this instance Miss Clarke was not a woman* to rouse an unfavorable opinion in any man’s mind. Os slight, almost frail build she had that peculiar animation which goes with a speaking eye ami a widely sym pathetic nature Without any substai. tial claims to beauty her expression was so womanly and so sweet that she was invariably < ailed lox elx Mr. Gryce was engaged at the moment In shifting his cane from tl < right hand to the left, but his manner was never ' more encouraging or his smile more be nevolent “Panion me.” he apologized, with one , of his old-fashioned bows "I'm sorry to trouble you after all the distress you must have been under this morning But thert l is something 1 u - b • s;<> < ially t ask you in regard to the dreadful occur | pence in which you played so kind a pari. i You were the first to peach tin- prostrate L woman, I bel!ev< “Yes. The boys jump* i qj and ran to ward her. but they were frightened by her looks and left it for me to put nix hands [ under her and try ’ , pf l >.,,, “Did you rr.anag- it ‘ ’ *T succeeded in getting her head into my lap, nothing more,” , "And sat so? "For some little time That Is. it seemed long th<a.gh 1 believe it was not more than a minute l»» f.uc .wo men came i runn rg from the nip- •Han*--' gallerx. One ! thinks so fast at such a time and feels L so much. “You knew she was dead, tl.en "1 felt her to be ’ “H'>w felt “! was sun J never questioned ii " “You have seen women in a faint ' “Yes. man - tin.' • "What made th* different ' Why should you believe Miss Chafloner dead simply because she lax still and apparent ly lifeless ” “I can not tell you. Possibly death tells its own story 1 only know how I felt ’ “Perhaps theta was another reason 0 Perhaps, const mush or unconsciously, you laid your palm upon her heart ”’ , Miss Clarke started, and h»r sweet face, showed a moment s perplexity "Did I?” she queried, musingly Then with a sudden a< < .-ss of feeling. "I may have done so indeed. I believe I did My arms were around her; it would not have been an unnatural action.” “No; a very natural one. I should say Can not you tell me p>- itlvcly whether you did this or not’.”’ MRS.GREAWS AWFUL EXPERIENCE During Change of Life—How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound Made Her a Well Woman. . _ Natick, Mass. “I cannot express) what I went through (hiring the change one day of the wonderful cures mad'- by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-; pound and decided to try it, and it has made me a well woman. My neighbors and friends declare it has worked a mir acle for me. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-' table Compound is worth its weight in' gold for women during this perodof life. If it will help others you may publish my letter.”—Mrs. Marion Sweet Crea tor, No. 1 Jefferson St., Natick, Mass. Change of Life is one of the most critical periods of a woman’s existence. ' Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known t< so successfully carry women through this tryingperiod ns Lydia E. Pinkham s’ Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. confi dential Lynn, Mass. Yonr letter will opened, read and answered by a uud in,;..! ,U -.iie.i Whudtu.. I "Yes. I did I had forgotten it. but I remember now’.” And the glance she cast bin;, while not meeting his eye, showed •hat she understood the importance of the admission. “I know,” she said, "what ' you arc going to ask me now. Did I f< « I anything there hut the flowers and tulle? No, Mr. Gryce. I did not. ‘There was no poniard in the wound.” Air Gry.-e felt around, found a < hair and sank into it. "You are a truthful woman," said he. "And.” he added more slowly, “com posed enough in character 1 should judge not to have made any mistake on this very vital point.” ”1 think so. Mr. Gryce. I was in a state •if excitement, of course. but the woman was a stranger to me. and my feelings were not unduly agitated." "Sweetwater, we can let my suggestion go in regard to th< sc ten minutes 1 spoke of The time is narrowed down to one, and in that one. Miss Clarke was the only person to touch her." "The "id? one.' echoed the holy , catch ing perhaps the slight rising sound of j query in his voice. ”1 will trouble you no further ” So said the old detective, thoughtfully. Sweetwater, help me out of this ” His •y* was dull and his manner betrayed > xi.a istpu. But vigor returned to him 1 Kef' r« lie had well reached the door, and I I e showed some of bls old spirit as he. thanked Miss Clarke and turned to take* the elevator. "But Yme' possibility remains,” he con fided to Sweetwater, as they stood waiting jat •the eh viHor door. "Miss Chailoner i died from a stab j’hc next minute she was in this l.olx’s arms. No weapon pro , truth d from the wound, nor was an' - found on <>r near her in the mezzanine What follows I .’ She struck the blow her self, and the strength of purpose which led her to do this gave her the additional foi'e to pull the weapon out and fling it from h<-r ft di<: net fall upon the floor arouiai her; therefor*, jt flew through one of tliose opening into the lobby, and there it either will be. or has been found ” Ii was this statement, otherwise word ed. which gave me my triumph over George. The Red Cloak. \\ ha' fpsidts* Speak up. Sweetwa ter.” "Non* Hvery man, woman and boy <-onnecied xvith the hotel has been ques tioned; many of them routed out of their beds for ihe purpose, but not one of them picked up anything from the floor of th*- lobby, <>r know- of any one who did.” “There now remain the guests.” “And after them pardon me, Mr Gryce the general public which rushed in rather promiscuously lasi night.” ”1 know it; it's a task, but it must be carried through Put up bulletins, pub lish your wants in the papers do any thing. only gain your end.” A bulletin was put up. Some hour:, later Sweetwater re-entered th*- room. and. approaching Air. Gryce w it h a smile, blurted out : “'rhe bulletin is a great go I think— ■ ' • "urse. ’ <-an not L>e aurr thrft it’s -"ing t" do the business. Ivo walched exerx one who stopped to read it. Many show* ■ interest and many emotion. She st .-ms to have had a troop of friends. But embarrassment' Only one showed that. I thought you would like to know ICmbarra• smentHumph! a man ’” \< . a woman, a lady, sir. one <»t the transients 1 found out in a jiffy all they could tel! me about her.” A woman' \\ e didn’t expect that. W here is she.’ Still in the lobby ”” < sir She took lb.*' elevator while 1 was talking with Ike clerk.” Tlier* - nothing in it. You mistook her expr* s. <>n.” I don t nk so. I had notic ed her when she tame into the lobby. She was talking !• her daughter, who was with her, ami looked natural ami happy. But no s<»op.er had she seen and Fead that bulletin, than the blood shot up intt» Her face ami her manner became furtive c.nd h.i'-fx There vas no mistaking the ■ ihejeist >ip Almost before I could point her out. she had seized her daugh- A‘i by the arm and hurried her toward 'he elevator I wanted Io follow her, but \on max prefer to make your own in 'iiilries Her room is on the seventh floor, number 71:: and her name is W’atkins. I Mrs Ht rate Watkins, of Nashville.” Mi Gryce nodded thoughtfully, but i made no immediate effort to rise. “Is that al! you know about her?” ho asked. A• s this is the first time she has stopped at this hotel. She came yester day Took a room indefinitely. Seems all right: hut she did blush, sir. I never saw its beat in a young girl ” <’all th.- desk Say that I'm to be told, :i Airs Watkins of Nashville, rings up • airing the next ten W'e'll give 'VI • bril- to lake ■-• ine .o '- n It she ’ails to make any move, I’ll make my own approaches,” But be returned almost instantly. “Mrs W atkins has just telephoned down that she is going to to leave, sir.” “To leave '” The old man struggled to his feet. “No. I you sax : Seven stories,” be ‘dghed But as he turned with a hobble, he stopped "There are difficulties in the way of this interview, he remarked. \ blush is mu much t<. g n upon. I’m afraid we shall hax< to i.-sort to the shadow business and that is your work, m t mine But here the door op,-m... ami a boy brought in a lim which had been left at the desk It related to (he very mat ter then engaging M em. ..nd tan thus * I see that informal ton is desired as ’o whether any person was seen to stoop ! to the lobby floor last night at or shortly after the critical moment of Miss CT.al i loner's full in the half story above I |< an give such information 1 was m the lobby at the time. an<! In the height of the confusion following this alarming in eiden’. 1 remember seeing a lady one jof the w arrivals (there were several coming in at the timei stoop quickly down an. ph k up something from the floor I ’bought nothing of It at the time, ami so paid little attention to her ap- I pearam t’ I can only recall the smiden- • • -- with which she sioopeti ami the color a tl.c ■hmk she wor<*. It was red, ami th. whole garment xvas voluminous. If p “i " ' further particulars though in truth. I haw m- more to giw. you can find me in room HI .. iIY A M ELKOY T! i should simplify our ’ask w.t ■ Mr Gryee's comment, as he • < ~nde<! the i.oti over to Sweetwater ■ ,) a> •n. u f the lady, now : t ’ ; • p ai. 1 of •, parture. can be iden- * ; E.i •> If she .an. 1 an ready to meet j To Be Continued in Next issue. of life before I tried Lydia F. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I was in such a nervous condition 1 could nut keep still. My limbs were cold, i 1 had creepy sensa | tions, and 1 could not sleep nights. 1 was finally told by two physicians that I also had a tumor. 1 read I Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites Advice to the Woman Who Is Getting Fat By FLORENCE GARDNER. nightmare or my life is the ; dread of getting fat. Oh. yes, thanks, I know I’m quite thin now. but the fear of becom ing fat and failing in large billows over myself must have begun in my cradle dajs, for I don't remember a timre when I didn't think the worst kind of punish ment in the world would be |o weigh 150 pounds. I've put the weight up to 200 now. be cause I know there are lots of worn n who weigh 150 pounds and look alii right. But I hope the time will never come when I weigh more than 130. There’s nothing about reducing weight that I don't know. I’ve studied the question as seriously as if I were training for the human skeleton at the circus, and I've fiever let any' sugges tion as to how to get thin escape me. I have a whole scrap book on the subject. I know that I don't need to take my own advice vet, but 1 may some day. so f am preparing to reduce a double chin long befmc I've got one, and to deduct pounds from my weight while I am still in tlie thin category. Just this afternoon 1 rode in a I-'ifth avenue 'bus with one of those women whom I fear to resemble some day. She was not very tall--about my height, and 1 don’t think she was very old, either, though that is one thing you can never tell about fat people. When they are all puffed out they have neither lines nor expression to their face, so that they look 25 or 15, and all thg years in between. Well, thl women had two daughters, who sat beside her. One was evidently fourteen and the other was eighteen, and both were beginning to resemble mamma. Mamma sat in her seat like an enormous feather bed tied in the middle, with a pair of fancy yellow shoes attached to one end. The shoes dangled about two inches above the floor, and I am perfectly certain that mamma had not seen them for several years, and probably had said good-bye to her waist line before she was twen ty. She had five double chins—l count- f •il them and her necklace, at least the 1 front part of it, was completely hidden 1 from view by the large fold of flesh ' that hung over it. I A Family of Chins. H' r eldest daughter already had one ! double chin, and the little girl, who was quite puffy In appearance, had already i good-sized dent under her chin, which is the first promise of what is to be. j My eyes were riveted on that fat , lady. who. by the wax. was encased in the most t-xpensive of lingerie dresses. It must have taken a terrible tug to get her Into it, but probably the fat chil dren helped. As I sat there, worrying , myself sick like that, I suddenly came to the lonelusion that the two girls were what the boys call "chumps.” ' I’here they sat next to mamma, with ' her terrible example always before tluon. Probably when she's at home 1 s|p groans and grunts and has heat prostration in the summertime, and nervous . hills in the winter, and heaves . when she goes upstairs, and comes ■ down as if an Invisible derrick was slowly aiding her to descend; yet these girls have not th” sense to say. "We won't be like mamma." If I were one of those girls I'd make up my mind to avoid fat, if I had to be as heroic as Joan of Are. or a lady aviator. 1 would not eat fat-building things. 1 wouldn't drink water with my meals, and I'd give up potatoes and bread and beans and peas and corn and starchy puddings, and eating meats more titan once a day. Yon see, I know all about it. for 1 will never, never be fat. I weigh my- Do You Know— Dr. Alexl Carrel, a young French scientist now connected with the Rockefeller institute of Xew York, has Just demonstrated ■ that the heart can , < xist and develop w ithout the body. Hi- most recent experiments were > made with chickens' hearts, and in i one case he succeeded in maintaining such a heart alive—and beating nor mally for more than three months. i Cape Town newspapers state that the latest tiling in til/- sartorial line is trousers for oxen. This method of clothing beasts of burden is not due to any accession of style in South Africa, the garments having become i a net r'ssity to protect the animals from ' the tsetse flies, which are a torment ■ and often a fatal en<Any. \ bathing bicycle for- life-saving, 1 which has attracted attention at Xew Brighton, lies flat in the water and is . worked by pedals which operate the , propeller The apparatus, which ob- ■ tains a good speed, is unsinkable. [ Traveling postofticcs have proved a ■ gt.at success in Canada, where they f go round from farm to farm, prepared to sc, stamps, register letters, or Issue , postal and inonex orders. 1 Bistnuth and niekel-steel both have ' | the curious property of expanding ' when thex cool instead of contracting. . like other metals. . In Indin the natives, when brewing i-[tea. fKkiuentlj use a silver ball filled with the leaves through which the boil- 1 | ing xx ater max flow . • - All blood cells of a human being r have their origin in the red marrow of ■ the bones, whence they make their wax into g. m ral circulation I’our adjoining municipalities in the French district of Dijon each have one 1 j of four brothers as mayo: , Th< a\erag< annual output of the Id I: i ’.lltb. > tOPS. - - m< "lie • un foieign x.-itors •is it'koned at J.t',t>oo,ooo a year. ' <♦ I I I ■ ■'/ ■ it I - Ii t i ii ii I i I ’ , . u . I MISS FLORENCE GARDNER. ( A Ziegfeld beauty in “The Winsome Widow” company.) self one,- a week, even in summertime, when 1 get steadily thinner from danc ing. I think dancing is an excellent way to reduce, especially if you take very little liquid refreshment; but you can’t ask fat people to dance. In the first place they look funny when they’re trying, and then they are also laay. they don't like to exert themselves. Os course, people get fat because they are lazy and even all the methods I know about won't help you reduce un less you are very determined and se vere with yourself. One Remedy. When I find I am gaining more than a pound or two in a year, I rush to the Turkish bath to melt myself down, and that is where you see the most ridicu lous display of feminine inconsistency. A woman will spend two dollars for her bath and massage. She will stand he roic pummeling, and. stay in the hot box until she is almost parboiled; then she'll come out and have herself weighed, say to the patient attendant. “Lizzie, isn’t it grand? I've lost three-quarters of a pound. Oh, dear. Ido feel so faint, though. Just be a good girl and order me a nice little snack of something to eat—let me see, this is the. day they have spare ribs at the restuarant; of HER CONDITION QUITE CRITICAL Suffered From Terrible Train of Symptoms. Thinks Fatal Oufc come Was Avoided bv • Timely Use of Cardui. - Columbia. S. C. —In a letter from this city. Miss Carrie Meetze stays: "I was a perfect wreck, from sickness. I had pains in my right side. weak, fainting spells, dizziness; then numb and cold feelings. 'At times my feet were so swollen I could not walk a step. "I also had backache, headache, was nervous, appetite good at times, more often not. and my kidneys troubled me. "A friend advised me to give Cardui, the woman's tonic, a trial. J did so, and front the very first it helped me.' “At the end of two months the swell ing in my feet had gone ♦>wn, and I was relieved from all the pains. "1 continued taking Cardui. and now I do almost ail my housework. "I am willing for you to publish what I write, for the good of other women, for 1 am -ure that Cardui saved me from the grave." The symptoms described in the above letter are proof that this lady was suf. faring from womanly trouble, and her eUr. shows that she took tile right medicine for her trouble, namely: Car dui. the woman's tonic. If you suffer as she did. do as she did. tak. Cardui, and it will surely do for you what it did for her. Why not ? X B Write to: Ladies Advisory Hept.. 1 ' .ittaiwog.i Medicine Co Chattanooga. I enti . for Special Instructions, and 64- pago book. 'Hom.' Treatment for ’Aom in, sent m plain wrapper, on request. course. I’m afraid they are fattening, but I have just reduced, so I can af ford to eat something. And oh, Liz zie, there’s some sweet potatoes au gratin, and a little pattie, and I do love macaroni so, and just a Httle,blt of pud ding, and a bottle of beer. Beer is so strengthening, and I feel the need of it.” And Lizzie laughs in the sleeve of her bathing suit, if it has any, and winks at me, and says. "Can you beat it?" That's how they get thin at Turkish baths. It costs them two dollars to reduce, and about two and a half to put the weight back again, via the res taurant, so it is cheaper to stay at home. Must Be Careful. If you are going to take the Turkish bath treatment you want to be very careful not to counteract the good the bath does you by an enormous supper. With a weekly Turkish bath, care ful diet and exercise, I think that even the fat lady in the bus could bring herself down to something like nor mal proportions. The minute I get a double chin, this is what I am going to do. I shall wear the highest and tightest of collars, because that will > remind me to- keep my neck stretched up. Whenever I have time I will stretch my neck as if I were a goose, and raise , my chin as near to the sky as I can get it. Then I’ll turn my head very slowly first to one side and then to the other, stretching and lifting the neck, and I shall cultivate the haughtiest and top-loftiest expression, not because 1 i feel that way, but because I refuse to admit the existence of more than one chin. i Up-to-Date Jokes It was Sunday afternoon, and the curate, calling unexpectedly to visit a member of his flock, found him qut—in two senses. The gentleman’s young son came to the door and announced his father’s, absence. "He's gone to the golf club,” said he. casually, and then, reading, perhaps, some shade of disapproval in the parson's eyes, he extenuated thus: "He’s not gone to play golf, you know, not on a Sunday; only to drink beer and have a game of cards.” Having thus cleared his father's character, he shut the door on the dumfounded cleric. Sitting on the beach, the little boy watched a very fat bather disporting herself in the surf. He knew nothing of tidbs, and he did not notice that each succeeding wave came a little closer to his feet. At last an extra, big wave washed over his shoetops. "Please stop,” he yelled to the fair, fat bather; "stop jumpin’ up and down, else you’ll drown met" The Shipwrecked Aeronaut —I sup pose you farmers have plenty to do now ? The Farmer—Alius did. First, it was them bicycles, then the motor cars got to breakin’ down, and now you airo nutty fellers come tioppin’ down fill over the land. Yes. 1 haltdly get time to look after the crops. “Tommy, I'm going to punish you sevei ely." "What for, pa?” "Now. don’t try thab innocence game, I know all the bad things you've done today." "No. you don’t, pa. You don’t know 1 hid the strap you lick me with" "Why should I be placed under the lash like this because my name is fairly well known?" asked a prominent man who was undergoing a stiff cross-ex amination. "Because." retorted the counsel, "a men*who is in the public eye must al ways be under 'he lash.” | What Do You Say? By Beatrice Fairfax (( book is a quotation; and y v every house is a quotation out of ajl forests and mines and stone quarries; and every man is a quotation from all his ancestors.”— Emerson. I would like to have my girls read that carefully, and then consider It. If every one of you is a quotation from all your ancestors, what is it you say? . If a girl is flippant, does she realize that her flippancy makes others wonder what kind of a mother she has? If she is careless in attire, and has loose strings hanging where strings should not be, does she think that she is a. quotation from her ancestors, a quotation that tells the world her mother is a very untidy woman? If she is loud In dress and boisterous in speech, does she know that she is a quotation that says her mother talks always in a shrill scream? If Emerson is right, and it is hoped, for the sake of many mothers, that he isn't, many girls are quotations that arouse no interest to learn more of the book. I refer to the girl who laughs in a shrill calliope screech. I refer to the girl with buttons off, and a collar that is soiled. I refer to the girl who regards a quick impudence as brilliant repartee, and who would not, refrain from say ing a witty thing because it might hurt some one, but would, rather, say it the quicker. I refer to the girl who uses slang herself, and regards slang talk In a young man as the height of brilliant conversation. I refer to the girl who parades her "bertu” in her talk with other girls as though he were a paragon of all vir tues, and she the most Irresistible of her sex to secure him. I refer to the girl who tells her se crets to other girls, and never confides in her mother. I refer to the girl who demands one standard of behavior for her brother, and is lax in the standard by which she measures the young man who courts her. t Parents and Home Last. I refer to the girl who makes her obligations to her parents and her home come the last in her little world; who places the friends met away from home above those she left there; who slights the love of those who have done the most for her for the attention of those who would do the least. I refer to the girl who contrasts the flattery of her friends with the kindly ’criticism of her parents and counts the former as of greateY value. If Emerson is right, and his admirers . say he is never wrong, there are many —■""SEE NATIONAL SURGICAL INSTITUTE For the Treatment of N’i DEFORMITIES V A\ established ’874. A | Give the deformed /¥■ children a chance. / / |\v \ 'Zc Sendustheir ■ \ ;/\| names, we can / | I \ help them. This Institue Treats Club Feet, Dis eases of the Spine, Hip Joints, Paraly sis, etc. Send for illustrated catalog. 72 South Pryor Street. Atlanta, Ga. Eczema and Ringworm Cured. Tetterlne is the only “dead sure” cure for eczema. It is a fragrant, soothing, healing antiseptic, which never tails. It is equally effective in the cure of ring- I worm and all other violent skin and scalp diseases. Ask your druggist for Tetterlne. If he hasn't it, send 50c to the Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga. B Northern Lakes The lake resorts in the West and / / '/'/ North are particularly attractive. The clear invigorating air added to boating, bathing Zx and fishing will do much to upbuild you physically. / ' W e have on sale daily, round trip tickets at low fares and with long return limits and will be glad to give you full information. Following are the round trip rates from Atlanta to some of the principal resorts: Charlevoix ---- - - $36.55 Mackinac Island .. . .$38.65 Chautauqua Lake Points 34.30 Marquette 46.15 Chicago-v 30.00 Milwaukee 32.00 Detroit 30.00 Put-in-Bay 28.00 Duluth 48.00 Petoskey 36.55 THE ATTRACTIVE WAY TO ALL THE'RESORTS ON THE Great Lakes, Canadian Lakes and in the West ig'SWTg CITY TICKET OFFICE 4 Peachtree Street phones ; t-iiM n a in 7 ?088 | girls who should sit down and candid ly write what they are as quotations, of their ancestors. If they are frank, and desire to be just, they will confess that as quota tions from their ancestors they have permitted themselves to become badly garbled. They will admit they are not quota tions from their ancestors, because they have permitted false standards, foolish customs, lax discipline and parental indulgence to so twist and turn them that the original sentiment is distorted or wholly lost. Being just, and desirous to qpote their ancestors to their credit, they xvill continue this self-analysis till it be comes self-reform. One who finds a quotation that pleases wants to know more of the book. It is my hope that every girl will so impress others by her modesty, in telligence and neatness that those who know her will long to also know her mother. AND SHE WAS RIGHT. TOO. Two ladies, while taking their morn ing walk, were met by an old gipsy woman, who said: “Pretty ladies, I will show you your future husbands’ faces in a bucket of water for the small sum of one shill ing.” The ladies at once gave the old wom an the shilling and went Into a room and looked anxiously Into the bucket ot water, but only saw their own reflec tions. “We only see our own faces,” said the ladies. “Well, they will be your husbands’ when you are married,” was the cool . reply. GETTING MORE FOOD VALUE FOR LESS MONEY. When you consider the high food value of Faust Spaghetti and the delicious dishes it makes, the cost ' seems ridiculously low. Don’t you think you should serve it much more often? It will mean a con . siderahle saving in your house hold expenses and a sure delight to your family. » Faust Spaghetti is made from Amer ican Durum wheat, by Americans, in i clean American factory. W> seal it up in dust, dirt and damp-proof package to keep it clean and wholesome until L reaches you. Your grocer sells Faus. Spaghetti in 5c and 10c packages. MAULL BROS., St. Louis, Mo. WILTON JELLICO I COAL $4.75 Per Ton | SEPTEMBER DELIVERY I The Jellico Coal Co. I 82 Peachtree Street I Both Phones 3668 1