Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 03, 1913, Image 10

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T'.rrv -v ^ f ■ *T HE •SViT THE TRIPLE TIE A Story for Baseball Fans That Will Interest Ecety LoCcr of the National Game $250 in Prizes for Best Solution of “The Triple Tie” stole third on the :<1 .and fltole home, •, on the third ball \ T°L Trlpl rh< Installments of the gr^at ba,sehall rrtyst.ery Tie” and now you have a fair idea* ot the y of the offer The Georgian makes—how you may win ig out the solution of the myitery as nearly as its ail- Mitchell, has done as you can. * •11 has written the last chapter, but his copy is sealed at the American National Bank. When all but. this final en printed, The Georgian readers will be asked to submit tent Judges, none of them connected with this newspaper, f what the grand denouement should be. To the person who most closely approximates Mr. Mitch ell’s final chapter $100 will be awarded. Other prices, making the total prize list $250, also will be distributed. Here is the list of the awards: * 4 »* * $100 by w thor, A. H Mr. M up in a vi chapter ha to three cc their versi No. 1 $100 No. 2 $50 No. 3 $25 No. 4 $15 Nos. 5 to 16, each 5 Read fourteenth installment of the great mystery story and yoil will not need to be urged to read the succeeding chaptors. The story will grip you. As you read, try to follow the author’s channel of thought and when the time comes for .you to sit down and write that final chapter, be ready to win one of the big cash prizes in The Georgian’s great offer. , flrgt hall pitched, I second bail pitch w inning tho gam< I piti bad - It is impossible to describe the scenes of wild excitement tlust- J-Swed this daring piece of base-run I mng. Crowd* surged on the grounds] and made a rush for Kelly to shak his hand, slap him on the hack off Carry him off th*' field on their shouty[. defs. if possible, hut the yoiwig guickly arose from his succesi fl{de to he plate and, ran to quibhoute, where he was safe tt] jae noisy de'rnonstraMohn. ^ , The scouts remained in the gyn titand watching th<- familiar sfffttta that followed the winning of a, close game by the home team. T’atsy Don ovan, the Red Sox scout, declared hjmaelf right then and there. "That kid is in a clasi* Jjy himself, ha said. “No man ever lived that is as fast on the bases 'as that k|d lA Garrett P. Serviss Writes on Secrets of the Sphinx; i - - the Tunnels of Death By GARRETT P. SERVISS. of the Sphinx, the oldest ^ifzzle in the world, is i i Xjf once jbhre the subject of inves- vtigation. NoJ long ago it was reported that a lit,tlV temple, dedicated to the 'sun, ancT^pposed to be ..about ei^ht "‘houaand, years old, JitA been foiitu) cofic$L|fed in the huge’ bead Of the P crouyWnif Htpne Whlc*h pi : uni r ' - (’01111105 ,'h«N|. daA#a .the'i . • '’You’re rlght^Ra i«yJ’ $PPKf £lA®-PP°lnted, and the S Murray, dtp fda^urg rM enigmatical aa ^iver 4>J$fe man • .TvVV^hb^-iwilf The work that!* no\ adyfliTdV tm whnt done by explefers.^onHista of In ijSft',Wg ••flSfjlfcues fortifhlca^jMions by $*rof^Hsor Relsner, i f-.tiiiirh ril^sepd <ro>*mUng Harvard] University. am telegrftjK," •„ ithAmortuary \e * Wl *. Lie- W..A at Jg u0uall y , ' e Pyn ivatlo n agcl By A. H. C. MITCHELL. Copyright, 1913, by International News Service. TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. “What’s the use?" declared Bill Smith “We've Rot a pretty good hall club here in Atlanta and stand a good chance of winning the Southern League pennant. This kid will win a lot of ball names for us. and I'm go ing to hang on to him " Thus, It seemed. Gordon Kelly was bound to be a fixture in Atlanta, but Boon after Smith delivered his ulti matum things happened that altered the aspect of the situation, and there came a complete change in the life of the young man who had created such a profound sensation In the baseball world, all ending in a climax that bad no parallel In the history of the national game. Still in Ignorance. It is not the purpose of this narra tive to chronicle in detail every base ball move of Gordon Kelly in the days that followed his sensational debut. He continued his phenomenal work in the exhibition games and the interest in him increased by heaps and bounds. An enterprising cigar manufacturer put o brand of cigars on the market named after him. He could have been elected Mayor of the city if there had been an election and he had consented to run for the of fice. A community will stop at noth ing in connection with a baseball idol. Nor is it the intention to chronicle here all that took place between Gor don Kelly and Mildred Deery. That young woman remained in blissful Ignorance of the young man’s occupa tion. He could not summon up enough courage to toll her. Mildred was at that particular age in a young woman’s career when she had no in clination to read the newspapers. The news of the day for her con sisted of the social activities of lior friends. Baseball was about the last thing In the world that she and her friends would care to talk about. As far as her father was concerned, his newspaper reading was confined al most wholly to the financial pages, with Just enough general news to kd»p him informed on the topics of th^ilay. He passed over the sporting pages of the newspapers without even glancing at them. He was so en grossed in his business affairs that he had no time for play. And so it was that no member of the Deery family knew of Gordon Kelly’s con nection with baseball. But the family were soon to know and the knowledge of it. or rather the circumstance connected with it. came as a distinct shock to at least one member of the household. CHAPTER XV. W HO will ever forget the base ball excitement, strife and tumult that seethed and ed died and whirled around the person of Gordon Kelly in the ten dtiys fol lowing the opening of the Southern League championship baseball sea son on April 10? Never was any thing like it before and perhaps never again will similar scenes be enacted. KODAKS "The Bret FinUhlrto and Enlarg ing That C*n Bo Produced.” Lttsimaii KCuw and com plete ntock »ran tour suppUan. i_v. lcc for out-of-town cue to mars. Send for Catalog and Price Llat. A. K. HAWKES CO. K U ° F D A" 14 Whitehall St. I ' : EEJ OEPT. , Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta became for the moment the renter of the baseball map, the foun tain head of the baseball universe. Three days after the pennant race began half a score and more of big league scouts the flnetooth combs of baseball .started for Atlanta by ; ■ fastest t rains. These met) * ere employed by the clubs of New York. Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Pitts burg, and so on, to rake the country from end to end In search of base ball talent to strengthen the clubs of their employers, for a big league club must never stand still; it must be constantly looking for new material to take the places of the men who have outlived their usefulness. Base ball goes at top speed all the time. There must be no laggards. Those whose baseball lamps have burned out must step aside and make way for new and fresh-filled baseball lamps. The reason for the sudden appear ance In Atlanta of these baseball scouts was because Gordon Kelly had “broken up” the first thre champion ship games of ball with his bat — won them, in other words, with his piece of ash—as well as saved a game by one of the most sensational catch es ever seen on a hail field. Every thing that had been said and printed about him was true. He was m phe nomenal hall player. There was not the slightest question about it. The magnate who had pooh-poohed his ability suddenly woke up to the fact that down in Atlanta was a baseball marvel who must ho secured by his club at any ctyBt. He was only one of a dozen other big league club own ers who came to the same opinion at the same time. Hence the iliilry- ing of their scouts to Atlanta to make terms for this world-beater. Too Big for Scouts. The usual mode of procedure for a baseball scout is to approach a town in gumshoes. He endeavors to con ceal his presence, and, figuratively putting on false whiskers, he sits in the grandstand and leisurely sizes up the man he wants. If such a one as this came into Atlanta at tVio time of which wo write, he was quickly smoked out. It was no time for mys terious baseball diplomacy. It was a case of acting quickly or lose out to a rival club. But the scouts found out immedi ately that the matter was altogether too big for them to handle. They reached the limit they felt empowered to offer for Gordon Kelly almost in ' u lr ftrat bPttth. Rill Smith laughed raucously at them singly, in pairs, and en masse. “Why, you pikers,” he said with a snort, •Gaffney and Stallings, of the poor old tail-end Boston Nationals, offered more than you fellow* want to cough up for the kid three weeks ago.” “Name your price, then,” shouted the scouts in chorus. Bill Smith waved his .h4,b^ ttirily. “The kid is not fdr sale,” he Said. As though working in unison (whiclj they were not), the Bcouts rushed *'t'o the nearest telegraph office and'wifevf long dispatcher to their bosses, tho club owners, detailing the facts. In, the case and Imploring ttysm wanted this man, Gordon Kell must come to ^Atlanta by first drain and do their own bidding. Then they all went out to the ball jpark in a body atid with their own cycs* vt s;»\v Gordon Kelly db* this remarkable thing. . -'5. With the score a tie at 3-?~3 in Abet last half of the tenth, and both pitch ers working like demons, Kelly went,, to bat with two out. He laid dowu 1 a hunt and beat it out, stole sccot)d on ,, , , ___ | ahradinjr. s*i1dwtornh». of* Egyptt but tjiis is now denied. It is not the first time that similar reports of strange discoveries in the body of the Sphinx have been spread abroad, but invariably the expected revelation of a secret which was kept even from the ears of the inquisitive “Lather of History,” Herodotus, Is Sphfnx remains Jtver. * now actually ,be~ rs.Tonsist^ of ex- pYptions by J*rof^8H<ir Rejsnor, rep- Jj University, among tjnp mortuary temples associated with •»w hat lfl usually called the Third Pyra mid. or the Pyramid of Myceribo*. of other excavations by pr. Bernhardt. tKe German atchaefclog*^ itr rAar oi\he Sphinx, where a number of un derground passages have • been dis covered. Both of these explorations indicate some connection between the Sphinx and the Pramid of Mycerinos. A CuriouB Extract. But the Sphinx was also connected with the great Pyramid, or Pyramid ! of Cheops, by similar concealed ways, j Ix»ng ago it became known that a j system of labyrinthine passages ex isted between the Sphinx and the Great Pyramid. This is shown by a curious extract from an old manu script, quoted by Mr. E. L. Wilson 25 years ago: “In the tomb behind the Sphinx, from the mouth of a mummy pit 80 feet deep, the echoes, prolonged, of a plfiy second^ BA/ gets 1 Pli tttburg aftnfherju- * -^-7, ... ... - But there TvafCprr *»i fitf*t..... t*U-gr irr*A. The. pjady orJ their* vuay • W Atlanta^ lArtl VrWrnoA. dlsf’.ttbeig'fc.'gl bejuJKIflb- h!1ng in';Jo preSjdVnf CallaAvloPand ,B1!I Smtttafrorir 1b% big moguls. They all read pretty much^-tne same. One will do to quote. It-.said: “Am on my way to ’Atlanta., Eion't do anything on Gordon Kelly matter until you see me.” *» . Club Presidents Come. Next day the advance guard of the major league club presidents arrived in town. Next morning eight more hod registered at the hotels and more were knoyvn to he on the way. When they left their home cities each mag nate was under the impression that he was the only major league club president that was going to Atlanta for the particular purpose of secur- j ing the services of the phenomenal | G.rrtnn Kelly fnr hi. own club, but It L un flrpd ln the heart of the pyramld so happened that four of. them made . . , v the trip on th. satnp train. They I vVere beard, while the gun fired at had express'd the utmost purprlee at ! the base of the pyramid waa hardly meeting each other and then was audible. This fact proves a hidden considerable dissembling for a brief labyrinth beneath the tableland." period, but the truth quickly came out i This recalls the legend of Queen and they laughed heartily, although Nitocris, “the beautiful one with the secretly chagrined at the turn of rosy cheeks,” who, according to the affairs. stories that Herodotus heard, avenged “This reminds me of the old days | the murder of her husband, the king. by inviting all who had been impli cated in the assassination to a ban quet, held in a great underground hall, which ahe had constructed. At the height of. the revelry she had the gatps of passages connecting with the Nile thrown open, and all her guests were drowned. Herodotus also says that she enlarged the Pyramid of Myeerines. The Arabs yet to-day have a legend that the spirit of Ni tocris haunts this pyramid in the form of a beautiful woman who lures men away into tho desert, where they go mad and perish. Is Undermined. At any rate, the rock tableland on which the pyramids stand is under mined wTth many chambers and con necting passages, some of which are now being uncovered. Professor Rels- ner’s work is concerned specially with a vast burial ground, lying w'est of the Great Pyramid, where, it is be of the National League, Barney.” oh served President Ebbets, of the Brooklyn club. "Remember how we used to gumshoe around w’heri W'e held our meetings in order to throw tho reporters off our trail?” “I should my I did. Charlie,” re plied Barney preyfuss. of Pittsburg, “but I will say w$ were never able to fool the reporter*. They always had all the news,-though I never could understand where they got it.” ■ “What’s your dope on this fellow Gordon Kelly;* Barney? You always know all about these young players.” “There isn’t any dope on him,” said Dreyfu*s. “AH I know is what my scout says about him. I think they have all gone crazy. I’ll tell you the truth, Charde, I won’t offer a cept 'for him until I’ve seen him play.”. “That’s my idea, too ” returned Eb- hets, “I think we are all on a wild goose chase, “hut now that I’m started I’m going to .«ee this thing through.” Most Extraordinary. President Hemphill, of the Nnw ; 1'fved. members of the Egyptian no- , * , , , bllity were Interred during the period York Giants, and President Miner, of of the kings called "the pyramid tho Washington club, were the other builders." One of the accompanying Why Not Say So? By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER photographs shows a gigantic stone sarcophagus being raised from an ex cavation in this ground. But what was the part that the Copyright, 1913, by the H. K. Fly Com pany. The play “Within the Law” is copyrighted by Mr. Veiller and this novelization of it is published by his permission. The American Play Com pany is the sole proprietor of the ex elusive rights of t and performance of in all languages. representation “Within the Law” two baseball magnates In the party. Hemphill rpoke up: “McGraw tells mo that from private sources of information he is con vinced that this Kelly is an excep tional player. A lot of stuff has been printed about him in the newspapers.” I should say there has.” exclaimed Drey fuss. They were in the observa tion car. Dreyfuss reached behind him and touched a -button and when the porter appeared he said: “Get my grip in lower 7.” The PitU'burg club’s president was known to be a great collector of news paper clippings rolnting to ball play ers. He opened his valise and dis- 1 played to the eyes of his astonished! companions a bundle of folded clip- «4dngs the size of three bricks. They fill related to Gordon Kelly Mind you,” he said, never was heard of before a little over six weeks the most extraordinary thing ••W'Mr.Mflits” ( %' ,# Mary ^allfn^," • tie has ever happened in baseball lur-aCT mi itterecl' V “M|i.ry!” Briggs cried, pis usual vacuity qf expression was 9ast off qilke t .mask-.find Marjn• twisted. feature^. (Then, in Hie next iflstantj a tlrafty^Hunfph gleAmdd fronvhis eyear. • “Yes/ she\s orf,” Garson interrupted a, moment later qs jhe tapping ceased .'for a Hi translated jj^a. loud wh-lspor-a^tbe irregular ticking noise '90undf<yagaln; i r' ; “I shall be there at the house al*y r -mo6t at brtce. l am sending this mes- cd with tho V in or! oft n Leagu>. B>*H J <fc a g e frotii* the‘drug store around the Johnson, president of that organiza- huge stone sarcophagus from one of ’ boiow ?s an iTlusfration Here is shown tfye removu-l of ; tha subterranean tunneis recently discovered, and of how Queen Niotocris trapped her enemies in one dr the underground passages by inviting them there to a banquet, during which she had gates connecting the tunnel* to the Nile thrown open, drowning the-feagters. Sphinx played in the stupendous as semblage of structures collected to gether on this rocky platform? That question remains unanswered. Why did the great conqueror Cainbyses. nearly 2,500 years ago. mutilate the face of the Sphinx? Did its counte nance express its purpose, and did he wish to destroy its supposed influ ence? The Arab name for the Sphinx is “The Father of Horror.” Is that a mere play of Oriental imagination, or does it commemorate some all but forgotten tradition? The excavations of the next few years may yet give us light on the age-old questions that this gigantic figure, cut out of the solid rock, sug gests to every thoughtful onlooker. WITHIN THE LAW Adventure, Intrigue and Love “tin*, felipjv, ore March t. the years I have been ^connected with the game. Another extraor dinary thing, and don’t yog forget*u, facts in. the fact that we four clyK.jtfaiir , If they. ,d ent9 •‘ m ‘ °n our way to * A flan PL’ illy,*tb*y*' ei ‘ ch ' v,tk the purpose of biHAng the rst ira^q release of this on- ball player, f known of one club owner tfotng* rtu? of town to sign a ball pitoyer,*but-- never before in tho ^Istory'p-qf-/ th*.* gome have four of them taken* u ip ,to land the same man. * Little else was talked of.Jfcjit, kr6i*- fc (Jon Kelly for the remaihdSf’ <Jif.nj8 trip. 4 * * 'u* • u In New York on business cdfotefctv LOW SOMMER RATES .1 \ CHICAGO . . $30 CINCINNATI . . $19.50 LOUISVILLE $18 INDIANAPOLIS $22.80 KNOXVILLE $7.90 CORRESPONDING RATES TO MANY OTHER POINTS Tickets on Sale Daily-Good Returning October 31 Best Service to North and Northwest - Lv. Atlanta 7:12 A. M. and 5:10 P. M, Dally - % ‘ ■ Through Sleeping and Dining Cars ET OFFICE 4 1 tion and known as the “CzS.r of Base, •bnlj." was seated in Qie pfflee of i’tcsident Frank Farrell* 4 6f 'the New YoiKf'WhW'iM (• »>■»»M >earf r ne‘i'H?lirtS. wfrtfa the IWtwff* bpfnOd feadP a tVle- ! gram. He. ipas»od tNf * dfipH*ctf 'e l .Iphmunn and told n clerk/fb v l00k up | wins for Atlanta The telegram wht ■ from the New York club’s chief I >*'*- j % a. . • — “Yes/this Gordon Kelly must’be a Y • >Mer.” jylJolrnson..hapdJpg ba j tho message. Co mis Key was telling j.rut jusk/bejurt' l tefr^Chtgyro that he had neav.i tt^out m 1 m«andiVva9 going J to send tv man do\up tl^re to g^t j niVh. Kv^oontly Hie scouts nave all j >gled, U> Atlanta?'’ r To bt, C*nWnt«#d To-tnorrow. --.x ^ 111. Ljii. " !ii Wonderful giiickly all Kamrua pg^ixom any cause . apM*. Minre. Q^r ’nrtul- rlfputTjali; ln.etu..) yet Uwy OCf no/ denjmM- -‘i* wul ytovo uns to STu r BatlsTScljon. PEACHTREE STREET Any Guaahli- or Ilk zast 2&c P~Jugtf By MARVIN DANA from the Play by BAYARD VEILLER. ; TQ r p f \y’g TNSTAI,LitENT. T-orri-r. Have someone open the door for me Immediately. , “SJhe's coming over," Griggs cried ijtcr*dulously. - , i’ll stop heri” tlarson declared firmly. "Itight! Stop her,” Chicago Red vouchsafed. But, when', after tapping a few .words, the forger paused for the Ve- Pp', nq . *q\ltld cafn'e. “Sha ,^oik't twew.er," he exclaimed, gr»atl# diaconcerted. He tried again, s<ill without result. At that, he hung up.thfe receiver with a groan. *'9he'e gj'Ee—”* ' V' 1 - " ("On'hVr waY’already," GHggs'sugS g«Ste4.,.fh^ 'tlieiV'it-lis h^np to doijbljt, "■‘Whfit’s she kdrrrtnit here for?” ffnr- son exclairMed harshly. "This ain’t no place for her! Why. if anything should- go wrong now—’’ He Drew Out a Small Torch. But, ^rlg.^s interrupted, him with h<rt brcsay-cl^eerfulHess of man ner. MOh, nothing can go wrong now. old top. I’ll lei.Jiar jit*" drew a small tdrch from ‘the ■ skirt-pocket of his coat and crossed to the hart door, n£ Garson nodded assent. “God! Why did she have to come?” Garson muttered, filled with forebod ings. “If anything should go wrong now! ’* He turned back toward the door Just as it opened, and Mary darted into the room, with Griggs following. “What do you want litre?” he de manded. with peremptory savagenes’s in his voice, which was a tone he had never hitherto used in addressing her Mary went swiftly to face Garson where he stood by the desk, while Griggs joined the other two men, who stood shuffling about uneasily by the fireplace, at .a, loss over this intrusion on the!£j^’ c HMv > > Mary mewed-wivh**- lissofne grace like that of some wild creaturo, but as sty- h«jl,t*d the man who jh^d hy shaken with a great dread as she called out to them. “Boys, let’s get, away! Please, oh, please! Joe, for God’s sake!” Her tone was a sob. Her- anguish of fear did not swerve Garson from his purpose. "I’m going to 9ee this through,” he said, doggedly. “But, Joe ’’ ^ “It’s settled, I tell you.” In the man’s emphasis the girl realized at last the inefficaey of her efforts to combat his will. She seem/d to droop visibly before their eyes. Her head sank on her breast. Her Voice was husky as she tried to •speak. -- “TJien ’’ She .broke off with a gesture of despair, and turned away obstinately,-* ancMlla ec 4 )e*ur tyc« spurt kled defiantly., * * * ra , h \t L - “You are fdo|s',/aH*bf tfotHf^rMaay*. cried. Her eyes .-»darkenecl>andi tead^d. with f«ar.j parson ,,tp ilie.' 6.Q: □ier..Hirr- jier. Hirea ineu >y ! ^ buiiq. sr; 1 cant protect, vmvj I T is evident from the novels of the eighteenth century that, ln their day, when a man was courting a girl, she when a man wascourtlng a girl, she was supposed to be a shy, timid and re tiring maiden, shrinking from him, dreading his approach and evading his presence whenever it was possible for her to do so. After marriage she be came a clinging vine, and the man n sturdy oak. It is not necessary at this stage of the world’s history **11 attention to the fact that few wives are now of the helpless variety, and that the sturdy- oak-and-vine fiction is quite out of fash ion. Even without Bernard Shaw’s sa tires we could not fail to note that modern gii^s are not the shrinking white rabbits of the periods of Giarissa Mar lowe and Pamela. What Must He Think? Yet even now, in this day when wom an looks man squarely in the eyes and meets him on a common ground, there is among some wives a strange idea that they Increase their worth ln the estimation of their husbands if they are chary of their caresses and niggardly in their expressions of affection. “One should not let a husband he too sure of one,” asserted a matron. “I would never think of offering to kiss James unless he first kissed me, nor would I say to him outright. 'I love you,’ unless he asked me if I still loved him. It is to keep a man in some doubt as to his wife’s real sentiment toward him.” ^ Yet she had been married for five years! I could not help wondering what a man must think of the woman who would live with him as his wife for a half-decade and of whom he could not yet say assuredly: .“She loves me!” Must he not consider her either very shallow In heart or very coarse ln na ture? If one were not sure that one loved a man, and were not willing to have him equally sure that one did, one would hardly wish to marry him. If, after marriage, an awful awak ening comes, and a woman finds that she does rtot' care for her husband or that he is not the man she believed him to be, then, as the die is cast, she must stand by her agreement—unless the man’s character be so evil as to justify her in leaving him. Such a union means misery, and it takes all of a de cent woman’s courage and ingenuity to keep the world from guessing how wretched she is. It’s a Poor Rule. But if a woman is married to a good, kind, considerate husband, and loves him as she should love him to become his wife, why not tell him that she does? Would she not want him to tell her of his affection—and is it not a poor rule that does not work both ways ln this day when Pamela and Clarissa Harlowe are fashionable no longer? 1 once heard an able sermon on the two words: “Say so!” The preacher claimed that if there is a worthy sen timent—such as gratitude, friendship, appreciation, love—which w T e feel toward a fellow-being, it is our duty to “say so.” Many of us mention the uncom fortable or disagreeable sentiments that come into our hearts and minds—then why not mention the pleasant ones to those who have a right to know them? This principle holds good ln all hu man intercourse. The mother who re proves a child for wrongdoing should surely sometimes notice his efforts to ward improvement; the employer who condemns a lack of interest on the part of his employee should not feel that he must rept.^i‘4£fl# for faithful duty.- 1'*tp xot ‘tirt-y that one need go out of one’s w«-y land praise at all times; bii.f’ tvJ5en the. feel ing of gratitude ,or of appreciation is so strong that the expression of it leaps to the lips, why not let it pass those- lips? And if in other relationships be sides marriage this scheme holds good, surely between husband and wife it should not be ignored. Some of us remember some verses written years ago that told of the hard-working and conscientious wife of a farmer who never thought It worih while to mention to his life partner that he appreciated her nor that he fell any affection for her. But when tha poor woman, worn out and old from years of unremitting toil, lay dying, the husband crept to the side of her bed and w'hlspercd in her ea’r, “I love you.” At the strange words the heavy lids lifted and an expression, of aston ishment leaped into the sunken eyes. Then the stiffening lips movaA. “Why didn’t you tell me so before?” they whispered. Why, Indeed? Marriage takes all the loves that one can muster coupled with strong philosophy and common sense to make it a success. If the love is there, for pity’s sake why not say so? Why should any woman hesitate to tell the man who has chosen her and whom she has chosen out of all the world tha* she does love him? Why should she hesitate to attest by word and deed that he Is dear to her? The man who does not like to be petted and made much of by one he loves is a rare specimen. Bald one husband in speaking of his wife: “When, as I sit reading, she passea her hand, over my hair, or when she, of her own accord, lifts her faoe to me for a kiss, it means' more to me than if she were to allow me to talk out my devotion to her for hours at a time.” Why Not Say So! Of course it does. In this rushing age of ours we make too little of the love-truths we might speak. The words are lies and travesties of the spirit is not hack of them; but, if it Is—say so! If I would utter a word of warning to* any young wife It would be to urge her not to be forever wondering is she is as much In love as she onoe was, If she loves her husband as much as he loves her. if he and she are grow ing closer together or drifting apart. Self-analysis in marriage Is fatal. One 'of Locke’s heroines gives to an unhappy woman a bit of advice that It would be well for all -wives to remem ber: “Love your husband, dear; it is the orrly thing I can say to help you. Then all the troubles will go. To love & man vehemently, they say, it is woman’s greatest curse. It isn’t; it Is the great est blessing of God on her.” No Second Chance. There was a slightly angry gleam in Dr. Pope’s eye as he walked into the lecture room, where about forty young women were assembled, undergoing a course of instruction for nursing. At great length the learned doctor had expounded the Imaginary illness of an imaginary patient, when he suddenly paused to ask a few questions of his listeners. “Now, Miss Denny, in such a case as I have mentioned, how much morphine,” he inquired, “should be administered to the sufferer?” “Eight grains,” responded the girl. The doctor, beyond raising one eye brow, made no comment, and continued asking other members of the class ques tions. But suddenly a horrible realization flashed upon the girl. “Doctor,” she said, “I wish to cor rect the answer I made a moment ago. I should have said that one-eighth of a grain instead of eight grains.” “Too late!” sternly remarked the doc tor. “The man’s dead!” ’SEABOARD PUTS ON LOW RATE TO RICH MOND. $16.70 from Atlanta, on saJa Jvn* 17, 8. Through trains, steel Pull mans and dining cars, unexcelled : service. City. Ticket Office, 88 i Peachtree. "Joe, vCii tied %c tne’- r* 'If “That can he aettffht (at*8-.’’ tVmtnr* . , , , „ . „. . k . mapped His ■ , *‘ e door by " hlch she ha<S AhtHlWItAlv ..Anri JlUi sues GllteicU. To Be Continued To-morrow. Superfluous Hair Truths _C* XUf back agairTIn .reb. This is ‘burglary. _ , if you are ■fraught.' 'Ml?* tome!** She hal’d‘ot!t A 1ierGfai4<1s-‘in'c.ld^ ingly toward Gars /tt/l and *;her dropped to beseeching. y Jo«, JftKfJyflti* must get away from this_ house at once, all of you. Joe. make “the in go.” “We Are Here New.” •'It’s too laje,” tl# stern an swer. T'h'ere was. 1 tfn‘ len-'t ‘relaxation in the stubborn incs of his face. “We're here now*, and we’ll stay till the business' is doife’”* ‘ * * ~ Mary went' a 5tre¥> fcfrwntd. The cloak she was Wearing: ‘thhouftirf -not only lose money, but you take’the back by her *.««.* .ff »* rav8 risk of * <rraanent ai8flsttr *- of the’ shoulders a fit! ^d’lclf 3, Vise' * ’ i * “S > ■ ’ I and fall of the gently curving bb^om, The beautiful face witjup, iae, «carf was qolorless with a great fear Jcie. fdr bftv «:ike Bfif i the ’ mfth Irfrfch&ifWi** ftr had set himself' to thi# tStlttg.* TK'rft. even the urging of the one person n the world for whom he rrmat careAi Vas powefless against his resOlrb. *T can’t quit now until »•<?!&•* w*hat we c^me here after/’J, ti?- clared roughly. . % . * ‘ . . Of q ^tidden, the girl ma^e s^i'ft tjp. ( employ another sort of suffplmation* "But there a r re reasons. ' faltering. -* •.¥ i erftharra eAhVitt swept' her. and •toe* tvory* • cheeks bloomed rosily. “It—I can’t have you rob this house, this par ticular house of all the world.” H* r eyes leaped from the still obdurate face of the forger to the group of three back of him. Her voice was BeSfRiraefe The Cheapest in the End #If you use a simple toilet prepara tion and It proves to be worthless, you only lose money. When you use a questionable depilatory, however, it is a very serious matter because you If Yoa Value Your Face use De Miracle, the one safe, perfected , hair remover of proven merit. Re member. tho injury caused by the use of doubtful hair removers will either result in permanent disfigurement or cost you many dollars because it will take mGnths or possibly years to gain .’’control of hair growths that have been stimulated by the use of such preparations. Happy Hours Away from Home A pleasant rail ride to-the port of Savannah, Ga. Through trains, large, easy and well-ventilated coaches, parlor and sleeping cars, via CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY Thence a joyous sea voyage. Vying with up-to-date hotels, the ships in this service are equipped with state-rooms de luxe, cold and hot, salt and fresh, tub and shower baths. Table d’hote service furnishes choicest delicacies of northern and southern markets. Best table waters. Through tickets to Eastern resorts. ROUND-TRIP FARES FROM ATLANTA Including meals and berth on ship New York.$38.25 Baltimore . .$29.25 Boston.... 42.25 Philadelphia 34.05 Proportionately low fares from other points. For all details, berth reservations, etc., ask the nearest Ticket Agent. Warrkv II. Foaa. District Passenger Agent Cor. Peachtree and Marietta Sts., Atlanta, Ga. Only Guaranteed Hair Remover Others advertise “Guaranteed,” but j give no guarantee. De Miracle is the only depilatory that has a binding guarantee in each package. Avoid permanent disfigurement by refusing substitutes offered by dishonest deal ers merely for a few cents more profit. If ypur dealer will not supply you, send $1.00 direct. Free in formation how to determine yrhich i depilatories are harmful and worth- j (less sent in plain, sealed envelope. New truths in next advt. j Miracle Chemical Co., New York Sold and Recommended by Chamberlin-Johnson-DuBose Co. PLATES Made and ftaHvered Same Day DR. E.G. GRIFFIN’S 24| CUE Cm? DENTAL ROOM/) Whitehall Street (Over Brown <1 Allen's) Gold Crowns S4---Bridge Work {4 All Work Guaranteed Heart C-B Phone M 1703 Sundtyi W