Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 25, 1912, FINAL 1, Image 9

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THE MAGAZINE PAGE “htials Only” * By Anna Katherine Green A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times . ...right, lift), Street & Smith.) ... '.ght, 1911, by Dodd, Mead & Co.) jDAY’S installment. t first fact to startle us as we made ,a\ up through the crowd which f rails and staircases was this: A 1 r had been found and, though he had f . forbidden to make more than a cur , xamination of the body till the ’", rer came, he had not hesitated to de after his first look that the wound n ,,t been made by a bullet but by • sharp and slender weapon thrust f „ n p by a powerful hand. (You mark . t Mr. Gryce.) As this seemed impos .. face of the fact that.the door had l.rpn found buttoned on the inside, we did T . give much credit to his opinion and an our work under the obvious theory ,f ar. accidental discharge of some gun one of the windows across the court. B ||,e ioctor was nearer right than we ? When the coroner came to look !f . . th< matter, he discovered that the was not only too small to have riade by the ordinary bullet, but ,i a : pere was no bullet to be found in t)ie wmtan's body or anywhere else. Her l lf: , : rhail been reached by a thrust and r ,,. y a shot from a gun. Mr. Gryce, bar, you not heard a startling repetl of this report in a case nearer at hati? But to go back. This discovery, so jgjortant if true, was as yet—that is, at If time of our entering the room—lim j.d to Jhe off-hand declaration of an ir- r spm:sible physician, but the possibility i involved was of so astonishing a na are that it influenced us unconsciously n our investigation and led us almost .mmediately into a consideration of the difficulties attending an entrance into, as well as an escape from, a room situated as this was. ■Up three flights from the court, with no communication with the adjoining rooms saze through a door guarded on both sides by heavy pieces of furniture no one person could handle, the hall door buttoned on the inside, and the fire es cape s<me 15 feet to the left, this room of dealt appeared to be as removed from the atproach of a murderous outsider as the slot in the writing room of the Cler tnontwhere Miss Chailoner fell. herwlse, the place presented the greaest contrast possible to that scene of plendor and comfort. I had not en terei the Clermont at that time, and no smj comparison could have struck my mid. But I have thought of it since, an you, with your experience, will not fit! it difficult to picture the'room where :U poor woman lived and worked Bare oils, with just a newspaper illustration pined up here and there, a bed —tragi- elly occupied at this moment—a kitchen nve on which a boiler, half-filled with teaming clothes still bubbled and foamed an old bureau, a large pine wardrobe ■ gainst an inner door which we later ■ :r.c n have been locked for months, and Im key lost—some chairs—and most pro t' inrrd of all, because of its position di- ■ before the window, a pine bench I tea wash tub of the old sort. ——■—2^ —-> v * * ~ a S£ % & A <%* wjy 5A 7) '’fff ' »S®\ A iRRbII Anty Drudge on Washboiler Dangers. A7>\s Carrie New— “Isn’t it too bad about Mrs. Blank’s little boy? He fell in a steaming washboiler and was scalded.” Arty Drudge— “Yes, it is a pity. Why women will boil clothes, when it is not only dangerous but a useless nuisance, I can’t see. I must tell Mrs. Blank how much easier and better she can wash her clothes with Fels-Naptha in cool or lukewarm water without boiling. ” Have yon the once-a-week backache? Do yon know what causes it? Simply long, continued bending and straightening over a washboard. But yon cannot afford to have a wash erwoman or send clothes to a laundry. What are yon going to do? Do your washing the Fels-Naptha way and P els-Naptha will loosen the dirt so that a rew light nibs will take it out easily. No boiling needed —only cool «luke warm water, winter or summer. Full directions on the red and green wrapper. "As it was here the woman fell, thia tub naturally received the closest exam ination. A board projected from its fur ther side, whither it had evidently been pushed by the weight of her falling body; and from Its top hung a wet cloth, mark ing with its lugubrious drip on the boards beneath the first heavy moments of si lence which is the natural accompani ment of so serious a survey. On the floor to the right lay a half used cake of soap just as it had slipped from her hand The window was closed, for the temperature was at the freezing point, but it had been found up. and it was put up now to show the height at which it had then stood As we all took our look at the house wall opposite, a sound of shouting came up from below A dozen children were sliding on barrel staves down a slope of heaped up sonw. They had been engaged in this sport all the afternoon and were our witnesses later that no one had made a hazardous es cape by means of the ladder of the fire escape, running, as I have said, at an almost unattainable distance toward the left. Os her own child, w-hose cries had roused the neighbors, nothing was to be seen. Ihe woman tn the extreme rear had carried it off to her room; but when we came to see it later, no doubt was felt by any of us that- this child was too young to talk connectedly, nor did I ever hear that ft ever said anything which could In any way guide investigation. And that Is as far as we ever got, The coroner’s jury brought in a verdict of death by means of a stab from some unknown weapon in the hands of a person also unknown, but no weapon was ever found, nor was it ever settled how the attack could have been made or the mur derer escape under the conditions de scribed The woman was poor, her friends few, and the case seemingly Inexplica ble. So after creating some excitement by its peculiarities, it fell of its own weight. But I remembered it, and in many a spare hour have tried to see my way through the r.o-thoroughfare it pre sented But quite in vain. Today, the road is as blind as ever, but"—here Sweetwater's face sharpened and his eyes burned as lie leaned closer and closer to the older detective "but this second case, so unlike the firs) in non-essentials but so exactly like it in just those points which make the mystery, has dropped a thread from its tangled skein into my hand, which may yet lead us to the heart of both. Can you guess have you guessed —what this thread is? But how could you, without the one clew I have not given you? Mr. Gryce, the tenement where this occurred is the same I visited the other night in search of Mr. Broth erson. And the man characterized at that time by the janitor as the best, the quietest and mast respectable tenant In the whole building, and the one you re member whose window opened directly opposite the spot where this woman lay dead, was Mr. Dunn himself, or. in other words, our late redoubtable witness, Or lando Brotherson." To Be Continued in Next Issue. Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites A Simple Method of Caring For the Complexion By PEGGY DANA. MOST women admit that there is nothing quite so good as mas sage for keeping the face young, the complexion clear and the skin in good condition. But the trouble is. who has time to have regular massage treatment? Cer tainly no gitl who has her living to make, w hether she is on the stage or in an office. Then there is the constant question of expense. A good massage treatment costs from JI to $3. accord ing to the time and amount and quality of the creams and lotions used. Few of us have that to spend on beauty culture and so we have to try other and less expensive ways of retaining our looks. The woman on the stage thinks more of her appearance because it is a real asset. The girl who makes a good, pretty stage picture is sure of a job. and the one who looks ugly must search for another position. That is why even very young actresses begin to take care of their looks, and also why it is worth while finding out how they do it. Five minutes dally massage keeps my complexion in good condition, and 1 am perfectly willing to tell you how I do it. though, after you have found out. you will think it the most simple thing in the world. No Water. To bpgin with, then. I never use water on my face at all. That is because I have to travel a good deal —or. rather, I did have to before I was in this play— and the water in the different cities, and even in the different hotels, varies so much, and is often so hard and bad for the skin, that 1 gave up using it on my face. 1 get a good, soft and almost fluid cold cream and use a very simple lotion that I make myself. This is made of the great, big cucumbers that one can get just now for almost nothing Peel the cucumber, being very careful that you get all the green and yellow parts off. Take out the feeds as well, and then mash the pulp up and add a little water, just enough to cover. Put this in a saucepan on the stove, and after it has come to a boil set it back on the stove to simmer until the water Is all absorbed. Take the mixture off the stove and strain it through a fine piece of muslin. Add about four times the amount of rose water, or if you want to have a cheaper preparation use just plain boiled water. This is the foundation of the best bleach and lotion for the face. In win ter time I add a few drops of glycerine, but I prefer it without in summer, as the glycerine is so sticky. But I must go back to my treatment. Having cleaned off my face thoroughly, I wash it with this cucumber lotion, using just g little on a dab of cotton. Then I apply some more cream, as lam sure mv face is quite c-ean now and that all the impurities are washed away. Massage. At almost any drug store you can get a small cup of glass with a rub ber ball at the end. They are called suction cups, and they come in almost all sizes. I have them in fofir sizes, one for my face, one for my neck, one for the eyes and one for the forehead. Place the cup over that portion ‘of the face that you wish to massage and press the bulb. A very little of the flesh is taken up in the cup. Pass the One Who Wooes the Muses By Beatrice Fairfax "Listen, darling, to love’s refrain: Don't let my pleading be in vain. How I long to caress, and call you dear, And am happy only when you are near. Think of my sad and lonely life: How I miss the care of a loving wife. No one to watch for my coming home. When night draws near and work is done; No little babies to romp on the floor And laugh with delight as I enter the door; N<> one to greet me with heart and hand— A lonely life has the bachelor man. Listen, darling, to Love's refrain Don't let my pleading be in vain. That some day you will cheer this life, And promise to be my own sweet wife." IN these words B. C. tries to express his love for a girl he wants to mar ry. “J have been corresponding with her for some time.” he writes, "and want to marry her. hut am too bashful to propose Would she say Yes' after reading that poem?" Now, that Is a question that only the girl herself can answer. Love comes in many disguises, and If it comes in Its familiar form, or dressed like a harlequin, it makes little difference to L- - ■■-■■■■■ i ■■■■■ ■ i i. ffwtect Ifcuiyctf! *T FOUNTAINS. HOTELS. OR ELSCWHCRK Get the Original and Genuine HORLIGK’S MALTED MILK au I heFood DrinkforAllAges UCH MILK. MALT CHAIN EXTRACT. IN POWDER Not in any Milk Trust HF Insist on “HORLICK’S” fake ■ packnge home ft. A \ / / \ WHHMBr * / / > id j \ i 'Ari MISS PEGGY DANA. (One of the beauties in Ziegfeld's “Follies of 1912" Company 1 .) cup rapidly over the face or neck, and you will have the same sensation as well as the same results as you would get from regular massage. 1 don't say that hand massage is not better still, but one can not always get it, and next to that my method is the best. I always work my little suction cup up ward, no matter on what part of the face I am working, and I am especially careful when •! work around the eyes. Every girl's eyes get tired looking, no matter what her age is, and there is nothing that annoys the would-be beauty as those dark rings under the eyes. I find that in a few minutes with the cup will make the blood circulate and, of course, that is the cause of the trouble. Treating the Eyes. Before working on the eye, you should be very- careful that the eyelids are covered with cold cream and then, of course, you must be sure that none of this is allowed to get into the eye. Close the eye and with your smallest cup, which shouldn't be larger than a ten-cent piece, massage very gently over the eyelid and then under it. Work from the Inner corner of the eyelid out toward the corner of the eye and then up to.the temples. It will do no harm if you try«this way of beautifying every day as long as you don't pull the skin. If your cups are] small enough, this is impossible. The the woman who is waiting for it. So it is Love, that Is all she asks B. C. has spent many hours, no doubt, on this poem. If he bad spent less, and written simply, “I love you; will you be my wife?" the appeal would have been just as eloquent and just as con vincing But I am glad he. spent the time in this way. It will show the girl that time is no object when finding favor In her eyes is at stake. Neither is any effort wasted that is spent in pleasing her. He wrote that poem by the sweat of his brow, and a picture of him hunting for words that rhymed, and pursuing that hunt labo riously and without complaint, makes a vision that will always stand out, bright and glorified. In her memory. There may he those who will take such a poem apart and dissect it. find ing much that is wrong with rhyme and meter. But never among that num ber is there over found the woman to whom such a poem is addressed. If a woman is a college graduate, and has a learning that makes Minerva en vious. and receives a letter which says "I luv you,” she sees no fault with cap italization or spelling. She may be a poetess, world-conceded, and will find no fault with the meter of a poem like that which heads this article. That Is, If it is addressed to HE. Love is a disarming little god. when he comes all carping and criticising end. A. B. A . who receives a love let ter. is as oblivious to the blunders it contains as though he, or she, were still engaged in wrestling with the A B <"s of the primer. He 1 to Uci- man who tuts put tUI g.’*. tixla poem By all m*ana ■end ft tt Kb» girt, in her acceptance, makes a single complete hap piness will never result from raatavytug her. Eor the git! who loves a man M a man should be loved to make their fu ture happiness secure thinks he is a genius. If his genius finds expression in rhyme, then neither Milton. nor Burns, nor Longfellow, not any others whom the world has honored can com pare with him. cups, by the way, should not cost more than a quarter. Anything that will make the blood circulate right under the skin of the face will make the cheeks rosy, and with my treatment there is no need for rouge or any of the other substitutes for natural color that ate so easily de tectable. My secret of beauty, I am thankful to say, is not a very tiring one, be cause I have neither time nor patience to waste. Indeed, I atn short on both. But I do like to look well—who doesn't? Don’t Poison Baby. pORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child must have ■ PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce sleep, and A FEW PROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, laudanum and morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium. Druggists are prohibited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling them 4 poison.” The definition of u narcotic” is; “A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, hut which in, poisonou s doses produces stupor, coma, convul si ons and death. ” The taste and smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, and sold under the names of “ Drops,” “ Cordials,” “ Soothing Syrups,” etc. You should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know of what it is composed. CASTORIA DOES NOT CON TAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Letters from Prominent Physicians £ ~~ addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. IbXoJ ® r - J’ Hinsdale, of Chicago, 111., says: "I use your Castoria and Sa z ! advise its use in all families where there are children." Dr. Alexander E. Mlntle, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "I have frequently 'SiSSCim prescribed your Castoria and have found it a reliable and pleasant rem- edy for children." BlffijjSS I Or. Agnes V. Swetland, of Omaha, Nebr., says: “Your Castoria is. Mk the hef ' t remedy in the world for children and the only one I use and ISSSr' recommend.” ' alcohol .1 per’cent' Dr - J ' A ' McClellan, of Buffalo, N. Y., Bays: "I have frequently prescribed I?; -1 - ' AVegelablePff paralion for As your Castoria f° r children and always got good results. In fact I uss n slnulaiingrhcFoorfant/Retjula Castoria for own children.” OpgS *HieSinmadisand Bowels d r - Alien, of St. Louis, Mo m says: "I heartily endorse your Cas« jEw&aS KWWfWBOTWiiiin t° r i a - I have frequently prescribed it In my medical practice, and have always found it to do all that Is claimed for it.” vy-r-'-y. nw'V «. ji r ‘ GliddPn ’ °* st - Paul. Minn., says: "My experience as a pras* rromotesDlgesnonLJifflfit ; tltioner with your Castoria has been highly satisfactory, and I consider it la C neSSandßesLContatasnellher an excellent remedy for the young.” IB \ P OTNi» h rnTi r r toal Dr ’ H ' D ’ Bpnner ’ of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have used your Cas- K* - nAKimic. torla as a purgative In the eases of children for years past with the most JtKporohlDrSAMUELmxmjl happy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy.” |Og< Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria Is a splen- Iff. I did iemcd y for children, known the world over. I use it in my practice IK ft I and have no hesitancy ia recommending it for the complaints of infants ( and children." l’ c o Mwj£r. J Dr ' J ' J - Macke y. of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I consider your Castoria an Bp* WHiyiftTimr. / : excellent preparation for children, being composed of reliable medicines A perfect Remedy forCmslipa and Pleasant to the taste. A good remedy for all disturbances of the L'jjap-* Hon. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea digestive organs.” jgS genuine CASTORIA ALWAYS he Simile signature oir j Beara the Signature of BWt The Centavr Compact, f / f / Bjeeg ?’EW YOWK. /'T/ The Kind You Have Always Bought Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over 30 Years. Woman Falls in Love First Fat She Kn.rU's If 'hat She Is Doing and the Man Doesn't By ADA PATTERSON. WHEN a woman said recently that woman is the first to fall in love, there was a stir of sur prise and interest in the men’s camp. Amused silence in the women's. The women had known it all the time. But they hadn't chosen to take the men into their confidence in the matter. They never will so choose, not. at least, in the case of the men in whom they have a special interest, those men who are trying to win them —trying. A man wonders blindly when he will marry. He may spare himself the trouble of guessing. He will marry when the girl who has made up her mind to marry him chooses A few dreamy eyed persons still talk about fate and in fancy see a grave faced woman spinning and weaving the web of their future. Bosh! A man's fate is determined by quite a different per son, a woman not grave of face but merry, who weaves his future—not by a spindle, but with a peffumed fan. Some one dimly feeling this truth long ago voiced it by naming the girl he was to marry a man's "fate.” She is his "fate” because she has resolved to marry him. What he wishes is a matter of little moment. He must change his wishes and she sees to it that he does. A woman fails in love first because she has keener perceptions than man's Despite all the slanders of all the men of all the ages, women know what they want and know ft sooner than a man does. When they meet the man they would like for a husband, the fact is quickly apparent to them, though not to the men. A woman has a livelier imagina tion than a man has. If, when a man has twice danced with a girl, it were suggested to him that lie picture iter as his wife, would laugh at the per son who suggested it and cal! him an idiot. The girl who. with such seeming indifference, floats about the room in his inns, not only lias a mental picture of herself as the mistress of their home, but has already furnished all the down stairs rooms and decided what flowers shall grow on the lawn. Therein is the explanation for what has been falsely termed woman's fickleness. Woman is not fickle. She loves truly and ardently for a while, but grows tired of waiting for the slow creature with cumbersome mental pro cesses to overtake her. In the love race, woman is like the hare, man like the fabled tortoise, except that in Cu pid's uncertain country the tortoise does not always overtake the hare. Many a man loves a girl because he is too slow witted to catch up with her before her quickly bom love for him self has turned to scorn for his slow wit. Women, taught that it is immodest to reveal their love until it is asked, have become in that respect, mistresses of dissimulation. In the drama of love all women are actresses. Every girl is a Bernhardt and the man with whom she is in love, her blundering, cumber some minded audience. The man watching, interested, puzzled, wonders what al! her airs and graces, her odd little humors, her alternate smiles and gravity are about. If he finds out in time he will become her proud and happy husband. If she becomes impa tient with his dullness, and her interest centers in another and cleverer man, he will mourn her “flickleness.” A girl of sixteen is grown up and has long gowns and dresses and cupola piled hair like her mother's. A boy of sixteen is still shy as a rabbit, and is wondering at the strange pranks his up-and-down star's voice plays him. So with their falling in love, the girl ar rives long before him. She meets a man and thereafter his face floats between her and her moth er's features. The echoes of his voice are louder in her ears than of her fa ther's tone.s bidding her bring him the evening paper. She knows what this means—the first age of love. She be gins at once to hide it from every one but herself, and usually succeeds, while the man later discovens that she is “a very nice little girl, indeed, with a tak ing way." Taking. Indeed, for she has taken him, but he loses his appetite, grows moon-eyed and preoccupied, talks sentiment and is poor company until every one knows he is in love and with whom—every one save himself Finally the scales fall from his eyes and he proposes, and if her pride that has grown while she hid her love, and her disgust with his slow moving intel lect, have not conquered his “fate" be comes his. If not, some other and quicker man wins her. A woman who has happily married a man of deliberate speech and slow con clusions, said she was so piqued by his beginning a proposal one night and leaving it unfinished for a. week, that she nearly ran away with a man whom she disliked. A tactful mother left the college professor alone with her daughter and told the man with the eloping intent that her daughter was “engaged.” When she went back to the parlor she saw her words were proph etic. The easy going suitor had cap tured his “fate” while nearly losing it. Women know this, all women and Bernard Shaw. If they love at all, they love first. If they don’t Iqve first they do not love. They only permit them selves to be won.