Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 30, 1912, EXTRA, Image 5

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THE QEOBQIAMS MAGAZHNE PAGE “Initials Only” * Ihi 11 it//<> Mystery Story ot Modern Times ■ nvright, 1911, Street & Smith.) ( C,. : ght, 1911, by Dodd, Mead & Co.) TODAY’S INSTALLMENT XT an outburst of wrath which made (1 , ngar ring, Orlando lifted his fist fl . nswer this appeal ‘in his own fierce f }l ?' froni his own side of the door, i . impulse paused at fulfillment, ' a , . let his arm fall again in a rush ( . ... -hatred which it would have pained , . u enemy, even little Doris, to wit ,\< it reached his side, the knock came again. r aas too much. With an oath, Orlando rfi for his key. But before fitting it I, . . luck, he cast a look behind him was in plain sight, filling the el space from floor to roof. A sin „„ g from a stranger’s eye, and its tl i errret would be a secret no g,i He must not run such a risk. I;,; .;, he answered this call, he must u !( - curtain he had rigged up against .>o ! gencies as these. Me had hut , ~i a cord and a veil would fall be hls treasure, concealing it as ef :..|]\ as an Eastern bride is concealed behind her yashmak. s apping to the wail, he dr<-w that cord. • . with an impatient sigh, returned to the door. f \t.oiher ouict but insistent knock gnptf<l hint. 4 • ! .» fury t < w. but v. th a vague sense ( f : ei which gave an aspect of fare v ;li> one quick glance he cast about o . v. •II l;c(twn spot he fitted the key in p , b i;. and -steed ready to turn it. a; .d. younname and your husi- T la s..outed, in loud com:, ai d. Teil ihem or lie meant to say. “cr I .... i turn this key.” Rut something witiiii Id the threat. He knew that it v . ' i.e! ; -h in the utterance: that he id rot uairy it out. He would have i <)|h u tiie door nov.. response ur no ■ ■■iit.nst. Speak’.” was Hie word with \ H he lit : bed his <c tnand. A fn :l knock. Pull . a pistol from his pocket with I . left hand, he turned the key with bn right. Ti.e < • ( ’emaired unopened. ■ ’.»| i. g sluwlx buck. I’.e stat t« d at its • i.i, i. .•(. h' ;i;d. : fei a mom* nt, ib.en.be up Guietly. almost courteously: But the command passed unheeded: the latch was not raised, and uniy the slight- •st tap was heard. With a bound he reached forwa.d and I i d i. » doo. op; l Then a grtat sl- i c •upon lin and«a rigidity as of t >• grave seized and stiffened his power s I ; me. * Th< mar confronting him from the <lat\u<?s w;*s >w cel water. Man Within and Man Without. 'i hist::.it of silence, during \.h.’(li the » \ i men • ytd each other: then. Swcet t.. \. 11, an.ln ,! cal smile direct! d to- 5 . i ti •• pistol lightly remarked: Mr ’’balloner and other men at the •i-> ri arc acquainted with my purpose and await my return, i have come-*-” lien he • •'< a glowing look at the huge curtain At Fountains & Elsewhere Ask for HORLICK'S The Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Fooddrink for All Ages. At restaurants, hotels, and fountains. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Don’t travel without it. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Take no imitation. Just say “HORLICK’S.” | Not in Any Milk Trust THE MENTER CO. Q AT R ch'ffonwaist mo AO Thursday and Friday • 1U REGULAR VALUE IS $3.50 <J This is a very dainty and attractive waist of chiffon over pretty white net and inserted lace. Shadow lace r yoke, collar and sleeves. Sleeves and high collar piped with chiffon. Set-in sleeves. Three tucks on shoulders. Ju® Front is handsomely em- X* 1 ■ -WJ» broidered with silk. This f wYfes’-*. KUXI comes in three colors: Co z' ■ tit! F* TWS penhagen, navy blue and / x? . brown. Extremely pretty ''' ’Mzdn and is a bargain any day at tfrl a S 3 -5 - jgMkUXj Special Sale Thursday and Friday *rV' $2.48 <f Owning nearly 100 stores we sell all clothing for men, women and children at very low prices. Divide your bill into weekly payments. THE MENTER CO. SUCCESSOR TO MENTER • ROSENBLOOM CO. 71! Whitehall Street First Stairway Next to J. M. High Co. cutting off the greater -portion of the illy lit interior "to offer you my services, Mr. Brotherson. I have no other motive for this intrusion than to be of use. lam deeplj interested in your invention, to the development of which 1 have already lent some aid. and can bring to th\ test you propose a sympathetic help which you could hardly find in any other person liv ing." The silence which settled down at the completion of these words had a weight which made tiiat of the previous moment stem light and all athrob with sound. Ihe man within had not yet caught his breath: the man without held his. in an | anxiety which had little to do with the direction of the weapon, into which he looked Then an owl hooted far away in the forest, and Orlando, slowly lowering his arm. asked in an oddly constrained tone: How long have you been in town?" The answer cut clean through any lin gering hope he may have had. l-.xei since the day your brother was told the story of his great misfortune." Ah. still at your old tricks! I thought had quit that business as unprofit- kr.ow. I never expect quick re- ns. He w-ho Judds on for a rise some times reaps unlooked-for profits " I he arm and sis. of Orlando Brothersor ached to hurl i|. • ff j„ w hack int() th< heart of the midnight woods. But they remained quiescent and lie spoke instead: 1 have bui'.-d the business. You will never resuscitate it thro ugh me." bweei water > !..|e,i. There was no mirth ■ n ms smile i .....v, diu-e was lightness ’ll ins tope as iu- said ■ I .. I,el 1 ,el us Ro bat h to tiie matter in io,, neei. a m Iper; where are you going to find one if v ( , . ( ] on - t takt . nle? -- A grow ! froi , Bi <>therson’s set lips. - ex er i'-id he I. ok< <; , ~.-e dangerous than io the one bur ini -am following this oaring repetiti. a ..f tie detective's ouf iag..ous reque.-i. |t i; as he h((W '• gat was >h< ce ..pposlng him from me Othtr side of ti e threshold, he was swayed by las . . ;a | admiiation of pluek n the physi,.; w.;.k. and lost his threatening at": : .|,.. .mly assume one w iei r-weetwuur rcretly found it even l aider to tr.eei ur. a 1.. : " the Stinging re . n ark fie f , e ard vni him. D? you i " ,1 * ” b- n ' » p- cu officer here ano arresl me ;p «.( q •••• Mr. Bsr ; . y vt; understand me as* h’lle as I'am st understand so.- Uu:, / ,U •’ s ;I ’-' -■ ■ -in society and. I may add. m th- p-: i merit whose inter ests I 'serve, the ,i e in me two men ‘ >nu you know p ’seabiy well- the detect whose methous. only indifferenUx ck ver show that ue has very much t*<» * lea. ii. of the other the workman ac-I * ■ ' d r and saw, but with rome knowledge :<o of higher mathe matics and tbe principles upon which great mechanical nventions depend, you know little, ami must imagine much. 1 v..is playing the gawky when I helped i you in the old hou v c *n Brooklyn. I was interested in your airship -Oh. I recog i nized it for what if was, n< twithstand-rr; its oddity ami lack of ostensible mean*- flying but 1 was not caught in the shiri of its idea: the idea by which you ; doubtless exp?c(. ami with very good rea- ' I. on too, to revolutionize the .science of ■ av»ftn. But since then I' .e been think j ity; ii oxer, and am filled with your i <»wn hope - that either 1 must have a hand , in the finishing ami sailing of the one you have yourself constructed, or go to | work myself on the hints you have un consciously given me, ami make a car of 1 my own.” Audacity often succeeds wl.ere subtlier means fail. Orlando, with a curious twist of his strong lip. took jold of the detec •ive’s arm and drew him in, shutting and locking the door carefully behind him. ■■.\ow,” said he, “you shall teil me what you think you have discovered, to make an\ ideas of your own available in the ’ manufacture of a superior self-propelling | airship.” To Be Continued in Next Issue Two Fashionable Evening Gowns —— —— — - , ... ... . . X 'AX A— J|K> j T A MshSfil Vl---’ > J feL. ifflHnHiUHB y■ ’' XwWW - -- <.aa.- -.iF'’ ■■ - ■ -•■=l ■ . A flrr IwS WWW r o -is., iWI - s IBHI ■•a”' 7 ' w ]I Hr ■'-'WH wHIWtaSWhT W-''-/ ■Wow "wWwkfe’ fcl J VWy : i I ■ fl - WIWwl i . I■■ W Greek Draper.cs—Embroidery and fur here combine to decorate a gracefully draped evening gown which is composed of chiffon over ivory lace. ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN * By Beatrice Fairfax I HIS AFFLICTION NO BAR. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am nineteen and became ac quainted wit'n a man of milly-tour, with whom I fell in love. He is at present employed In a large office and gets a fair salary, but his right hand is amputated. 1 think the world of him. All my friends tease me and asl; why such a good looking girl should fall in love with a man who is af flicted like this. 1 am the hist born child, also the only girl in the family, and my parents are strongly against my meeting him. WORRIED. If he has lost a hand, but has a whole heart, a clean record and « nrlght mind, hie affliction should be no bar. If your parents’ objections are based solely 6ft his crippled condition, they are neither fair nor charitable. But make sure they have no other objec tions before you beg for their blessing and .approval. MADE YOUR OWN DIAGNOSIS. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a girl twenty-two years , old and for the past eight months have been going with a mart about seven years my senior. All during this time he has made love to me says he loves me. and only me, bet ter than anything else in the world. He also knows that 1 love him. Right after he JXs been to see me 1 And he attends the “club” a good deal. Sometimes he goes as long as ten days without calling me up. or asking to come out. He acts as though he Is ashamed of something. Then when he comes back he says that he has been thinking of me all the time and that 1 am the only one he loves. He has never asked me to marry him. Some time ago I had intended FULL OF SCASS What could be more pitiful than the condition told of in this letter from A 11, Avery, Waterloo. N. Y : We have been using your Tetterlne. It’s the best on earth for skin ail ments. Mrs. S. C. Hart was a sight to see. Her face was a mass of scabs. Tetterlne has cured it. Cured by Tetterine Tetterlne cures eczema, letter.- ground itch, ringworm and all skin troubles. Its effect Is magical. 60c at druggists or by mall. SHUPTRINE CO., SAVANNAH, GA I Advt. > CHICHESTER S PILLS TBK IHiMSND BHANU. A ! kl-rkes-ler's Sluoid IlreudZAX t ill* in Red aid Veld <netalllc\vj Xx wn L o< * % - sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/ pH Wfß Take ee ether. Bur es ro,r ** I / ~ IT Prw’* l - AekferCtfl-Crteß-TEBm IX. rs »•*■«"• "BANIS I'lt f s,p» “* jT BP ’ e,r ’ kn ' J<n ‘’NKt.Srtert.A'.wrrißrlUf.le SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I k A I Opium, Whiskey end Drug Habit** treated 111 |at Home or at Sanitarium Rook on subject I &J| I Free. PR B. M. WOOLLEY, 24-N. Victor UHHWiSanitarium, Atlanta, Georgia. Velvet and Lace—Carried out in old-rose velvet and lace over a iinon and satin foundation. This makes a most attractive ciemi-toilet. taking a tittle trip, but s.i-il lie wis'md me not to go. for he ves afraid I would forget him —1 didn’t go. Do you think it possible tn H I lot him know I love him too mm i, and he thinks he can come buck just any time? ■BABY TRIXIE.” Toll have tot him see that you ran too much for him. His love for you can not excuse his attitude: If he is ashamed of “some- Do Y ou Know— . There are only 70 known specimens of the eggs of the extinct great auk, one of which was sold in 1905 for $2,000. A gallon of good quality milk con tains twenty ounces of nutritious and digestible dry matter. The simplest form of divorce in tit.' world is that practiced by the Flute tribe of Indians in Nevada. All that a "buck” or a ’’squaw" has to do when either wants a separation is to tender to the other party the sum of $35. That is all that is necessary as evidence of dissatisfaction, and the tender is rarely refused. Why the offer is exactly that amount van not be learned. It is one of the unexplained and unwritten laws ot the tribe. The death has just occurred at Red ding. Cal. of a man named John Broad hurst. who lived for two months with out a stomach and never knew it was missing. Broadhurst, who was an en gine driver, was taken to the hospital suffering from a malignant growth. Through an operation his stomach was removed, and, not to discourage the pa tient, the surgeons did not inform him , of the nature of the operation. Signor Crott,a, the station master at Sirignano, near Naples, speculated one franc at a weekly lottery, and now finds himself in consequence the lucky win ner of SIOO,OOO. On learning the good tidings Crotta’s first task was to tele ! graph to the directorate of the state railways liis resignation. He is a mar ried 'nan. and has a daughter who Is a local schoolmistress t’rotta is also , setting apart a sum tor masses on be half of his dead aunt, whose gnost. he avows, appeared to him in the early' hours one Sunday morning, bidding him gamble on four numbers which she re vealed to him. all of which eventually proved lucky ones. , CASTOR IA Ter Infants and Children. | The Kind You Havi Always Bought : i si’XrX 11. '■> . H' he demands your love and I maims no offer of marriage in return. I he i ■ not trustworthy. [ 1 can not suggest that you break tin 1 engagement since none exists, but |1 co | ugg i*. that you put him out of lyour'heart and mind. YOUR COUSIN IS WRONG. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am infatuated with a young lady. One evening 1 invited her to go to a place of amusement with ■ me and she refused. I decided to go a'one. an I when I arrived she was there with another gentleman. I think she loves me very much. In fact, 1 know she does, as a cousin of mine who lives next door to her told me so. But every time I ask iter to go out with me she refuses, and if any other felldw asks her > i- goes with him. GERALD M. Your good sense should tell you your cousin is no authority. The girl does not care for you! Begin your siege to her heart with'that in mind. If she continues to refuse your at- I tentions w ithdraw them for a while. That may awaken her interest in you. AND THEN. WHAT? Dear Miss Fairfax: , I am a young nian.of 19 and deep ly in love with a young lady who is six years my senior. When w< are together she seems very aJTec tionate, but I have reasons to be lieve she cares lor others. When I question her site seems grieved and denies the charge. We also differ in religious matters. I am afraid if 1 give in now 1 will always have to. K. E. L. You do not believe her word, anu happiness Is never founded on a doubt. You an afraid "if you give In now you will always have to." If you loved her as a man should love a woman, such a fear would never enter your mind. The man who "gives in" to his , w ife is tile man w ho, nine times out of ten. saves money, prospers, ambition ami gets somewhere. You arc not in love; you think you are. Hut there is a difference, TOO YOUNG TO KNOW. Dear Miss Fairfax: Don't you think a girl of sev enteen. with a knowledge of good sense, is quite old enough to re ceive ttie attentions of young gen tlemen ? GERA I,DINE. Many girls have been wooed and won at seventeen, and life-long happi ness resulted. But many, many more have made the tragic discovery that their judgment at seventeen was not as mature as they believed Geraldine is very young—too young to act against thf advice of her pa | rents. Her wisdom may be beyond dis pute, but the experience of Iter parents is of greater worth. Foi all Geraldine’s years of seventeen. I would abbreviate [the wisdom of tin ages to two words; ' "Go slow. Worthy of Emulation By Beatrice Fairfax WE are told from childhood up that we must learn from our elders. Heaven help us If we . online our les sons in life to instructions from those whose years are more, for we will miss the more valuable teachings of child hood. Notice the little children in their play. One has a doll’s go-cart; if it has three wheels or four makes no dif ference to the happiness of the owner. Another has a battered doll, another the remnants of a china toy tea set. and another drags a discarded starch box. which is to be the banquet table, They do not throw these precious be longings away and stare sourly and enviously at a child who has been fa vored with more. The knowledge that the child in the next yard has a new doll that cries and winks, area) little table and chairs, and a complete set of dishes, makes their joy none the less. They “play like" their erippled doll has its full complement of arms and legs. If a cup must serve also as a cream pitcher their powers of imagina tion see the cream pitcher on the table. Given powers of iraag *ri a poet may well envy, they behold with the eye of the mind all that their little hearts de sire and are happy. A Valuable Lesson. They “play like” the kitchen aprons they drape around their waist- are long vtlvet trains; they "play like" the crackers they serve on their broken dishes are ice cream and cake, and they "play like" everything broken and old is whole and new. and their ability to "play like" this from morning' to night has a lesson more valuable than we could learn from the oldest and wisest seer. We must learn from childhood to cover defects with tiie beauties of imagination. We must learn when compelled to wear a suit a season too long to "play like" it is new; we must “play like" everything old and worn and sordid ts beautiful and just what we likf. We must be children again, and find the power of happiness lies not in material possessions but in the possession of an optimistic imagination ■There ts no other way to be happy. The wise man, with his brow plowed deep with many years of thinking and his volumes of reading weighty and numerous, can turn to no page, can Perfectly Safe To Wash Fine Dress Goods. SaUsucrman to Customer—" Yes ma’am, this batme Is much the prettier and finer of the two. But if I were you, I would take the percale—it’s heavier and will stand the boiling and rubbing of the ‘wash’ better.” Anty Drudge —“ Look here, young lady, where have yoo been these past 15 years? Don’t you know that with Fels-Naptha, there is no such thing as ‘boiling and rubbing of the waah r —to wear fine fabrics to ahredsT You take that batiste. It’ll wear longer waehed with Feis-Naptha the Fels-Naptha way than the heavy percale will washed the old-fashioned way,” You’ve heard a woman say: “ This waist has worn terribly. I’ve only washed it a couple of times and it’s falling to pieces.” Clothes cost too much nowadays to be worn out in the wash, —to be boiled and scalded until the life is gone out of the fabric —and then rubbed to shreds on the washboard. ou must use the soap that preserves the fabrics — Eels-Naptha. Use it the Eels-Naptha way —in cool or lukewarm water, with no hard rubbing, ou 11 get through the day’s wash in one half the time and with much less effort. And your clothes will look whiter and fresher than you ever saw them before, f ollow the directions on the red and green wrapper. Use any time of year. » point to no experience, that teaches the lesson of happiness more plainly than the child playing wstb a clothes pin dressed up as a doll. The child "plays like.” It l» a little philosopher. If you would be happy, you must not let the years rob you of that spirit of philosophy, which was your divine heritage when you came Into this world. You must “play like” your material possessions are all that’ you want. Yon mint not gaze sourly at the man or woman who ha.- more, but, must, turn an optimistic imagination on what is yours. Be Like Them. You Tnust “play like" your disap pointments are gratifications: you must "play like" the scars and scratches and defacements of possessions more pre cious than toy sets and dolls do not exist, and all that is given in your hands is perfect and complete. if you are wealthy, or if you *»• poor; if you have little or if Vou have nothing, you will not be happy if you let the years rob you of this childhood power of Imagery Nothlnggis just as we want it. but we can make it so if we “play .like” it is. It is al! the philosophy of the ages condensed into ,tvvo little word*, among the first words that childish lips learn to litter: "Play like." * THE BARGAIN SALE. •Many months had passed since first he met the sweet, sweet girl. He loved her dearly, but he was woefully shy. and his suit made but slow progress Finally It was the lady who decided to improve the shining hour and add a trifle to the pace of the proceedings. T" m ike up her mind was to act. and the very next time the young man called she pointed to the rose that adorned his buttonhole. "I’ll give you a kiss for that rose." she blurted out. A crimson, guilty flush overspread the young man's face, like the light if the setting sun. . There was. however, no hesitation on his part, and h< clinched the bargain in good old style. Then he grabbed his cap and proceeded to rush from the room In double-quick time "And where are you going?" she ask ed. in great surprise. "Oh.” he answered, trenjulously. “I'm just off to the florist's, to buy up his stock of roses!”