Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 24, 1912, EXTRA, Image 5

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THE GEO&QIAN’S MAGAZINE, PAGE “Initials Only” * By Anna Katherine Green A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times (Copyright, 1911, Street & Smith.) (Copyright, 1911. by Dodd, Mead & Co.) TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. 'Xo, Mr. Gryce; nothing new. It's the same old business. But, if what I sus pect is true, this same old business offers ,pportunities for some very interesting and unusual effort. You're not satisfied nith the coroner’s verdict in the Chal oner ease?” I'm satisfied with nothing that leaves all ends dangling. Suicide was not proved. It seemed the only presump tion possible, but it was not proved. There was no blood-stain on that cutter point.” Nor any evidence that it had ever been there." "No. I'm not proud of the chain which lacks a link where it should be strongest.” We shall never supply that link.” 'I quite agree with you.” "That chain we must throw away.” 'And forge another?" Sweetwater approached and sat down. "Yes; I believe we can do it; yet I have only one indisputable fact for a starter. That is why I want you to tell me whether I'm growing daft or simply adventurous. Mr Gryce, 1 don’t trust Brotherson. He has pulled the wool over Dr. Heath's eyes and almost over those of Mr. Chal loner But he can't pull it over mine. Though he should tell a story ten times more plausible than the one with which he has satisfied the coroner's jury, I would still listen to him with more mis giving than confidence. Yet I have caught him in no misstatement, and /his eye is steadier than my own. Perhaps it is sim ply a deeply rooted antipathy on my part, r the rage one feels at finding he has >laced his finger on the wrong man. (gain it may be —” What. Sweetwater?” "A well-founded distrust. Mr. Gryce, I'm going to ask you a question." Ask away. Ask fifty if you want to." "No; the one may involve fifty, but it s big enough in itself to hold our atten tion for a while. Did you ever hear of a ?ase before, that in some of its details sa- similar to this?” "No, it stands alone. That's why it is •o puzzling.” "You forget. The wealth, beauty and social consequence of the present victim has blinded you to the strong resemblance which her case bears to one you know, MRS. MELHORN ENTHUSIASTIC Over the Good Results Ob- tained From the Use of Cardui, the Woman’s Tonic. John*. Ala., —In a letter frmn thia tewn. Mrs. M. Melhorn says: '1 was tn rery bad health last year, and did not recover as quickly as I should. T ached aJI over, and wouM often have * headache for a whole week at the time. I would almost go erasy. I was "•eak. and felt so tired, I could hardly “elk across the room. My doctor oald I would never get WB II without an operation, bnt I decided ,n try Cardui, the woman’s tonic. I have only taken four bottles, and I eel Hke a new woman, already. 1 recommend Cardui for young and old, and would not gtve it for any other kind of medicine " Headache is one of the moot common 'imptoms of womanly trouble. Back sehe. sideache, nervousness, sleepless n" Ra weak, tired feeling, are others If you have any of those symptoms, n n t neglect them—do as Mrs. Melhorn advises— take Cardui, the woman’s ton- She knows what it will do, for It made her well, after she had tried other treatments In vain. erdul Is purely vegetable, gentle- ,inR; woman's tonice, that has been cessfully used for more than 50 years, ' "’lll help you. just as It helped h usands of other women in this time. ’l'e Cardui a trial. <■>?!,?? Write to: readies' Advisory Dept., r, , ,an p°ga Medicine Co., Chattanooga „„„■ t for Special Inatructlone, and S - book, -Home Treatment for Wom- B «nt in plain wrapper, on request (Advertisement.) WILTON JELLICO COAL $4.75 Per Ton SEPTEMBER DELIVERY lhe Jellico Coal Co. 82 Peachtree Street Both Phones 3668 in which the sufferer had none of the worldly advantages of Miss Chailoner. 1 allude to—” "Wait! the washerwoman in Hicks street! Sweetwater, what have you got up your sleeve? You do mean that Brook lyn washerwoman, don't you?" "The same. The department may have forgotten it, but I haven't. Mr. Gryce. there s a startling similarity in the two cases if you study the essential features only. Startling, I assure you." "Yes. you are right there. But what if there is? We were no more successful In solving that case than we have been in solving this. Yet you look and act like a hound which has struck a hot scent.” The young man smoothed his features with an embarrassed laugh. "I shall never learn,” said he, "not to give tongue till the hunt is fairly started. If you will excuse me. we’ll first make sure of the similarity 1 lyive mentioned. Then 111 explain myself. I have some notes here, made at the time it was de cided to drop the Hicks street case as a wholly inexplicable one. As you know. I never can bear to say 'die,' and 1 some times keep such notes as a possible help in case any such unfinished matter should come up again. Shall 1 read them?” “Do. Twenty years ago it would not have been necessary. I should have re membered every detail of an affair so puzzling. But my memory is no longer entirely reliable. So fire away, my boy, though I hardly see your purpose or what real bearing the affair in Hicks street has upon the Clermont one. A poor washerwoman and the wealthy Miss Chal loner! True, they were not unlike in their end.” "The connection will come later,” smiled the young detective, with that strange softening of. his features which made one at times forget his extreme plainness. "I'm sure you will not con sider the time lost if J ask you to con sider the comparison I am about to make, if -only as a curiosity in criminal annals.” And he read: “ 'On the afternoon of December 4, 1910, the strong and persistent screaming of a young child in one of the rooms of a rear tenement in Hicks street, Brook lyn, drew the attention of some of the inmates and led them, after several in effectual efforts to gain an entrance, to the breaking in of the door which had been fastened on the inside by an old fashioned door button. " ‘The tenant whom all knew for an honest, hard-working woman, had not infrequently fastened her door in this manner. In order to safeguard her child who was abnormally active and had a | way of rattling the door open when it was not thus secured. But she had never refused to open before, and the ■hild’s cries were pitiful. " 'This was no longer a matter of won , der, when, the door having been wrenched I from its hinges, they all rushed in. Across a tub of steaming clothes lifted upon a bench in the open window, they saw the body of this good woman, lying Inert and seemingly dead; the frightened child tug ging at her skirts. She was of a robust make, fleshy and fair, and had always been considered a model of health and energy, but at the sight of her helpless figure, thus stricken while at work, the one cry was ‘A stroke!’ till she had been lifted off and laid upon the floor. Then i some discoloration in the water at the ! bottom of the tub led to a closer exami- I nation of her body, and the discovery of a bullet hole in her breast directly over j the heart. " 'As she had been standing with face l towards the window, all crowded that I way to see where the shot had come from. | As they were on the fourth story it could | not have come from the court upon which i the room looked. It could only have come from the front tenement, towering up be j fore them some twenty feet away. A sin gle window of the innumerable ones con fronting them stood open, and this was the one directly opposite. “ 'Nobody was to be seen there or in the room beyond, but during the excite ment. one man ran off to call the police and another to hunt up the janitor and ask who occupied this room. ” 'His reply threw them all into con fusion. The tenant of that room was the best, the quietest and most respectable man in either building “ 'Then he must be simply careless and the shot an accidental one. A rush was made for the stairs and soon the whole building was in an uproar. But when this especial room was reached, it was found locked and on the door a paper pinned up, on which these words were written- Gone to New York. Will be back at 6:30! Words that recalled a circumstance to the janitor. He had seen the gentleman go out an hour before. This terminated all inquiry in this direction, though some few of the excited throng were for battering down this door just as they had the other one. But they were overruled by the janitor, who saw no use in such wholesale destruction, and presently the arrival of the police restored order and limited the inquiry to the rear building, where it un doubtedly belonged.' "Mr. Gryce” (here Sweetwater laid by his notes that he might address the old gentleman more directly), "I was with the boys when they made their first of ficial Investigation. This Is whj- you can rely upon the facts as here given. I followed the investigation closely and missed nothing which could in any way throw light on the case. It was a mys terious one from the first, and lost noth ing by further Inquiry into the details. To Be Continued in Next Issue. Help for the Crippled 8 Children ft Club Feet. Disease® of the Spine , and Hip Joints, Paralysis and other afflictions succeesfully wfflßT treated. Established 38 years, iV frJvJ Write today for illustrated cat- V [JF alog, J HAL National Surgical Institute, 72 S. Pryer St. Attests, Go. Eczema and Ringworm Cured. Tetterine Is the only "dead sure" cure for eczema. It is a fragrant, soothing, healing antisentic, which never fails. It is equally effective in the cure of ring worm and all other violent skin and scalp diseases. Ask your druggist for Tetterine. if he hasn’t it, send 50c to the Shuptrine Co., Savannah, Ga. The Ten Ages of Beauty No. 6—The Byron Giri Illustration from Good Housekeeping for September. * \ / .X x xr t v f -y', v -' - f \ . .' ’to r ' \’W " j ™ s .ypU'-'A •a/ /. i •&/ <> AX >< I ; / wO 7 - V 4 c This picture, by Nell Brinkley, is reproduced by permission and accompanies an article by Octave Uzanne, entitled “The Story of Furs and Muffs.’’ Bv MARGARET HFBBARD AYER. THE most wonderful thing about girls is the remarkable way in which they can adapt them selves to a new type or style of beauty. About every twenty years. In modern times, the popular type of beauty seems to change, and straightway the girls model themselves after that particular type. Some years ago—about fifteen, to be accurate —the streets were thronged with Gibson girls; they were tall and stately, and for the most part blond, but where Is the Gibson girl today? You don't see her. The girl of today Is small and svelt. with big inquisitive eyes and a little nose that curls up, and a full-lipped mouth that turns up at the corners, and bunches of curls over each ear, and she peers at you from under such a reminiscent little hat that you know you are quite familiar with her, for, of course, she is the Brinkley girl. Almost a hundred years ago the fem- Daysey May me and Her Folks By Frances L. Garside A LITERARY TRIUMPH. Mrs, lysander john apple ton had all the seriousness and importance of the drummer of a country band. It seemed in some vague way to Ly sander John that she looked larger. He had the feeling that he was in the pres ence of a woman who, mentally and physically, wore larger sizes than she wore when he left the house that morn ing. There was a note of triumph about her; a spirit of achievement that he could not define, yet could not deny. "Well?” he said, tn a man's way. "Well, what?” she said, In the pro voking way of all w omen. He had asked a question. He felt Do You KnOW- Over 150,000 native troops are in cluded in the Indian army. In England and Wales the average death rate per thousand head of the population is fifteen; in Germany it is just over eighteen, and in Russia thir ty-one and a half. Fortune tellers in England are liable to be punished as rogues and vaga bonds by acts of parliament passed in 1743 and 1824. Turnip seeds have been known to be dormant for seven years through being planted too deep, and after that time to sprout. The steward of a Chicago hotel has invented a machine which will wash and dry 18.000 dishes or plates in an hour. The best rubber gloves for the use of electricians are tested to resist a current of 10.000 volts. As many as three million tulips have ben grown in a single field In the Lincolnshire fens, inine world was going wild over Lord Byron’s poems, and no matter what they looked like, or how nature really made them, somehow, with the extraor dinary adaptability of the sex. they transformed themselves into living portraits of the poet's heroines. Lord Byron, though he utterly dis dained such things, started innumer able fashions, some for men, but most of them for women. One of them we still have with us —the Byron collar— which is fashionable again this year, hut in those days there w erp mantles a la Byron, curls named after the fa mous man, thick and gorgeous mate rials which had his sanction and bore his name. All Lord Byron had to do was to admire some famous lady and straightway every girl in town tried to look as much like her as possible. Being a famous heart-breaker, he kept changing the fashions in beauty all the time, but out of all these tragic love affairs and ideals there developed the Byron girl, whose pictures you see here —a born flirt, beautiful, daring, co quettish, made to walk upon the hearts that if she didn't want to answer it made no difference to him. He didn't want to know, anyway. Seeing that he no longer cared to know, she became anxious to tell. "1 was elected." she said, in tones of triumph. Lysander John is so accustomed to his wife's election as a member of lodges and clubs and other organiza tions that he looked bored. Her news was of no interest. "To the Women's Press club!" with her voice in high G. Then Lysander John woke up. "But you can’t be a member of THAT club,” he said. "You have never worked on a newspaper; you have never writ ten a book. Why,” his voice increas ing with indignation at what he be lieved must have been a fraudulent claim, “you have never written ANY THING." "I have, too" she exclaimed, bristling for a fight. "Who are you to question my literary achievements'.’" “But you haven't written a THING; you can't write!" persisted Lysander John. His wife smiled, and her smile was one of cold scorn. It was the smile of the winner just before he produces the winning card. “I told them what I had written,’ she said, "and they elected me unani mously.” "But —but —” She knew what he was trying to ask. "I told them," she continued, "that I once wrote a recipe in a friend's cook book.” ” DR- WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM Opsum and Whisky .k... u, 7 'ears' experience shows •gHBatSg4£4|RHIKaL these diseases are curable Patients also treated at their f-tS homes Consultation confidential. A book on the sub- EgaI BNMbIMMHBmI I""' D . R B H "’GOLLEY & SON., No 2 A Vie. mmi -num tor b*ntt*rliun. Atlanta. Ga. of men, and the great-grandmother of the Brinkley girl today. She wore side curls a la Byron, and adapted modern Greek garments, which do not resemble classic Greek clothes in the least, to her needs, as soon as she heard tlyit her idol had de termined to fight for the independence of Greece. Indeed, the Byron girl had a fright ful time changing her wardrobe to suit the passing fancy of the poet. One moment she wanted to look Spanish and again the Italian beauties set the example. Probably in her heart of hearts, though she mourned the great poet in tensely. she was rather glad to settle down to early Victorian prose, after his death. NERVOUS DESPONDENT WOMEN Find Relief in Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound —Their Own Statements So Testify. Platea, Pa. — “When I wrote to you first I was troubled with female weak- ness and backache, and was so nervous that I would cry at the least noise, it would startle me so. I began to take Ly dia E. Pinkham’s remedies, and 1 don’t have any more cry ing spells. I sleep sound and my ner vousness is better. I will recommend ! 1..111 ' a../ your medicines to all suffering women.” —Mrs. Mary Halstead, Platea, Pa., Box 98. Here is the report of another genuine case, which still further shows that Ly dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound may be relied upon. Walcott, N. Dakota. — ‘‘l had inflam mation which caused pain in my side, and my back ached all the time. I was so blue that I felt like crying if any one even spoke to me. I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I began to gain right away. I continued its use and now I am a well woman.” -Mrs. Amelia Dahl, Walcott, N. Dakota. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. :: A Privilege Usurped :: By Beatrice Fairfax STRAIGHTFORWARD DISCUSSIONS OF LEAP YEAR PROPOSALS. 4 4 UT though I loved you well, 1 woo'd you not; And yet. good faith, I wish'd myself a man: Or that we women had men's privilege Os speaking first.’’ —Shakespeare. M. G. R. writes: "This being Leap Year. I proposed to a young man with whom 1 had been ac quainted for a long time and whom I dearly love. He accepted me and seem ed to love me. "Later 1 found that my dearest girl friend had ptoposed to that same young man and he had accepted her also. I am not pretty or stylish, and my friend is both, but I love him in away of which she is not capable at all. Do you think that he was joking with her. oi with me?” With both of you. my dear! What in your vision is a serious thing has prob ably become to him the rarest of jok< s. If he accepted you, of course, he ac cepted the othei girl. It might prove an embarras.-ment of riches if be regarded the proposals seriously, hut he doesn't And no man will. When a « >man asks a man to marry her. she steps out of her own province, and is ver.c likely to be misjudged and misunderstood. She offeis her heart and hand to a man. He beeotm > the hunted when every custom, right and tradition have made him the hunter. If he went to the woods to kill a doer and the deer chased him for the pur poses and desire of being killed hunting would become a huge joke. Courtship, though a mon delicate matter than going into the v. >ods with a gun. alike loses il rest and ils joe if the gill becomes the pursuer. It I a jump from the .-acred to the profan -. Designed as the rai -I of ill joc . it l„-- comes the rarest of all jokes. Women have argued since the woi id was young that they snould hue. tlic piivilege of proposal, and there is much to prove their contention. In the fi'st place, no man knows what is good for him. When he is very young no one expects wisdom, and the older he grows the less he displays. When lie is old and needs a nurse to care for him, be picks out a wife who mak's a good dummy on which to display pretty clothes. Not one man in twenty’ has good marrying sense. The women claim that if they could be the choosers there would be more happy marriages. That is a question time may settle hut the time is not now. Surely, the writer of this letter knows that no one person j-an change an es- For Home Decoration • <4 ♦K* -M .. • ?-.«■ tea-'d® I - * ' T iWillS fy/jr? I ' - » •; >.i* V > These Beautiful Pictures Moll . -fe I, 'X'? '■ -'W'S - ~ x- --i At Less Than Half Their Value Choice of four subjects, attractively framed, in two sizes: 16x24 75 C an d o coupons. 20x28 89 c pvd 2 coupons. See Premium Coupon on Page 2 of this issue. The Atlanta Georgian Premium Room 20 East Alabama St. tablished order of things and expect anything but chaos to result. The fact that it is Leap Year will make no change in human nature. Leap Year will never be recognized seriously so long as only the women regard it in that light. They may begin in January and propose till December, but so long as man irgards the year as a joke year, designed to placate the women, the propose will receive less serious at tention than an invitation to dine. There is only one ihing left forth!« girl to do: She must break the “en gagement.'’ Thai, under the circumstances, will be i as> She ian tell him she knows of his perfidy, and ask tor the return of her irig. 1 am taking it for granted that sin oi>." veil all the little niceties of court:.liip, ami gave him one. Then. 1 beg, with tiie ring in her pos- Sission. ■h- will wear it as a reminder of her foil- . if ever again she feels that she must ask a man to marry her, let her tub the ring to invoke tiie mem ory of > he humiliation her first proposal cost her. When the light man comes along let him do tiie proposing. I'he men are very jealous of their lights, and the right of eourship is one they will never surrender. * It’ i ;i I i-tits to -in ;i man. let her study his d:; s and c dikes. Let her k’i'e him tii'.i \ in ju.-t such amounts his na' i. cr.i \. ..ind ad minister it so d'-licateiy h c lesn't know it is flattery. Lot her appo:i| to Ills sr.pi Hor wisdom m ill things, and win him by tact and subtloty a ;>o| 1 proposal of marriage is like a km ek-do'vn blow compared with the thousand other mean- nature h i- provided ,-veiy woman for winning tiie man siie loves. ■ ■■■■ar—•■r-.WT' .«. ■ rw w I ■■ ■ m JMI ■ ■ ■ _ . j. I ..... - ■- FEED THE FAMILY LETTER AT LESS COST. Those AnieiT.ii housewives wiio know lhe hi. li food value and lhe easy digestibility of i'aiist Spagheill often serve this dele-table dish, in many homes "Spaghetti X'lghl” is a weekly institution and usually finds a. bigger circle around the table than any other night. Cl tie leu 1 Spaghetti Book of lU-eip-s and know huv; many delight ful v.,iy:- in which this nourishing food • .in scrv-d. We ll send a copy free. Faust Spaghetti is equal in tender ness and 11 ivor to the finest imported— and it is certain to he clean and fresh. Ask "our grocer for a package of Faust Spaghetti—sc and 10c. MAULL BROS., St. Louis, Mo.