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THE TRIPLE TIE
A Story for Baseball Fans That Will Interest
Every Lover of the National Came
$250 in Prizes for Best Solution
of “The Triple Tie”
Y OU read the first thirteen Installments of the groat baseball mystery
etory of "The Triple Tie” and now you have a fair Idea of the
simplicity of the offer The Georgian make*—how you may win
$100 by working out the solution of the mystery as nearly aa Its au
thor, A. H. C. Mitchell, has done as you can.
Mr. Mitchell has written the isst chapter, but his copy Is sealed
up In a vault at the American National Bank. When all but this final
chapter has been printed, The Georgian readers will be asked to submit
to three competent Judges, none of them connected with this newspaper,
their version of what the grand denouement should be.
To the person who most olosely approximates Mr. Mitch
ell's final chapter $100 will be swarded. Other prizes, making
the total prize list $250, also will be distributed.
Here Is the list of the awards:
No. 1 $100
No. 2 $50
No. 3 $25
No. 4 $16
Nos. 5 to 16, eaoh 5
Read fourteenth installment of the great mystery story and you will
not need to be urged to read the succeeding chapters. The story will
grip you. As you read, try to follow the author’s ohannel 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.
By A. H. C. MITCHELL.
Copyright, 1913, by International News
Service.
TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT.
“What's the use?” declared Bill
Smith. We've got a pretty good ball
club here In Atlanta and stand a
good chance of winning the Southern
League pennant. This kid will win a
lot of ball games 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
soon 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
had 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 a brand pf 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 tell 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 her
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 aU
most wholly to the financial pages,
with Just enough general news to
keep him Informed on the topics of
the day 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 baae
ball excitement, strife and
tumult that seethed and ed
died and whirled around the person
of Gordon Kelly in the ten days 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.
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Atlanta became for the moment the
center 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
the fastest trains. These men were
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 ar'je 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 Gord* - Velly had
"broken up” the first th k w rtlfampion-
shlp games of ball with his bat —
won them, in other words, with his
piece of ash—aw well as saved a game
by one of the most sensational catch
es ever seen on a ball field. Every
thing that had been said and printed
about him was true He was a phe
nomenal ball 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 be secured by his
club at any cost. 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 hurry
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 the time
of which we 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
their first breath. Bill 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 National-*',
ofTered more than you fellows want
to cough up for the kid three weeks
ago."
"Name your price, then,” shouted
the scouts in chorus.
Bill Smith waved his hand airily.
"The kid is not for sale,” he said.
As though working in unison (which
they were not), the scouts rushed to
the nearest telegraph office and wired
long dlspntchej' to their bosses, the
club owners, detailing the facts in
the case and imploring them, if they
wanted this man, Gordon Kelly, they
must come to Atlanta by first train
and do their own bidding. Then they
all went out to the ball park in a
body and with their own eyes saw
Gordon Kelly do this remarkable
thing
With the score a tie at 3—3 in the
last half of the tenth, and both pitch-
: i'M working like demons, Kelly went
i to bat with two out. He laid down
; a bunt and beat It out, stole second on
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first ball pitched, stole third on the
second ball pitched and etole home,
winning the game, on the ihird ball
pitched.
It is Impossible to deecrlbe the
scenes of wild excitement that fol
lowed this daring piece of base-run
ning Crowds surged on the grounds
and made a rush for Kelly to shake
his hand, slap him on the back or
carry him off the field on their shoul
ders, if possible, but the young man
quickly arose from his successful
slide to he plate and ran to the
clubhouse, where he was safe from-
the noisy demonstration.
The scouts remained In the grand
stand watching the familiar scenes
that followed the winning of a close
game by the home tram. Patsy Don
ovan, the Red Sox scout, declared
himself right then and there
"That kid is In a class by himself,
he said "No man ever lived that
is as fast on the bases as that kid
Is.”
"You’re right. Patsy,” spoke up Billy
Murray, the Pittsburg club’s gum
shoe man ”Ty Cobh wily have to
play second fiddle to that boy when
he gets in the big leagues. I wish
Pittsburg had him I think I’ll send
another telegram."
But there was no need of further
telegrams The magnates were al
ready on their way to Atlanta. All
afternoon dispatches had been drib
bling In to President Callaway and
BUI Smith from the big moguls. They
all read pretty much the same. One
will do to quote It said:
"Am on my way to Atlanta. Don'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
had registered at the hotels and more
were known 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
ing the services of the phenomenal
Gordon Kelly for his own club, but It
so happened that four of them made
the trip on the same train. They
had expressed the utmost surprise at
meeting each other and there was
considerable dissembling for a brief
period, but the truth quickly came out
and they laughed heartily, although
secretly chagrined at the turn of
affairs
"This reminds me of the old days
of the National League, Barney,” ob
served President Ebbets, of the
Brooklyn club "Remember how we
used to gumshoe around when we
held our meetings in order to throw
the reporters off our trail?”
"T should f«y I rlid, Charlie," re
plied Barney Dreyfuss. of Pittsburg,
"but T will say we were never able
to fool the reporters. 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 nil about these young placers.”
"There Isn't any dope on him." said
Dreyfus* "All T know is what my
scout says about him. I think they
have all gone crazy. I’ll tell you the
truth, Charlie. I won’t offer a cent
for him until T’ve seen him play.”
"That’s my idea, too," returned Eb
bets, "I think we are all on a wild
goose chase, "but now that I’m started
I’m going to see this thing through.”
Most Extraordinary.
President Hemphill, of the New
York Giants, and President Miner, of
the Washington club, were the other
two baseball magnates in the party.
Hemphill ppoke up:
"McGraw tells me 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 nay there has,” exclaimed
Dreyfuss. 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 Pitteburg club’s president was
known to be a great collector of news
paper clippings relating to ball play
ers. He opened his valise and dis
played to the eyes of his astonished
companions a bundle of folded clip
pings the size of three bricks. They
all related to Gordon Kelly.
"Mind you,” he said, "this fellow
never was heard of before March 1,
a little over six weeks ago. It is
the most extraordinary thing that
has ever happened in baseball in all
the years I have been connected
with the game. Another extraor
dinary thing, and don’t you forget it.
is the fact that we four club presi
dents are on our way to Atlanta,
each with the purpose of buying the
release of thts one ball player. I have
known of one club owner going out
of town to sign a ball player, but
never before In the history of the
game have four of them taken a trip
to land the same man.
Little else was talked of but Gor
don Kelly for the remainder of the
trip.
In Now York on business connect
ed with the American League, B. JB.
Johnson, president of that organiza
tion and known as the "Czar of Base
ball." was seated in the office of
President Frank Farrell of the New
York American League club, when
I the latter opened and read a tele-
! gram. He passed the dispatch ‘o
! Johnson and told a clerk to look up
I trains for Atlanta. The telegram was
from the New York club's chief
| scout.
Yes, this Gordon Kelly must be a
: wonder.” said Johnson, handing back
j *he message. "Comiskey was telling
me Just before I left Chlopgo that he
I had heard about him and was going
to send a man down there to get
him. Evidently the scouts have all
failed. Are you going to Atlanta?”
To be Continued To-morrow.
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Garrett P. Serviss Writes on Secrets of the Sphinx;
the Tunnels of Death
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
T HE secret of the Sphinx, the
oldest puzzle in the world, is
once more the subject of Inves
tigation. Not long ago it was reported
that a little temple, dedicated to the
sun, and supposed to be about eight
thousand years old, had been found
concealed in the huge head of the
crouching stone figure which for un
counted centuries has defied the
abrading sandstorms of Egypt; but
this 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
"Father of History," Herodotus, is
disappointed, and the Sphinx remains
as enigmatical as ever.
The work that is now actually be
ing done by explorers consists of ex
cavations by Professor Reisner, rep
resenting Harvard University, among
the mortuary temples associated with
what Is usually called the Third Pyra
mid, or the Pyramid of Myoerlnos, of
other excavations by* Dr. Borchardt,
the German archaeologist, in the rear
of the 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 Curious Extract.
But the Sphinx was also connected
with the great Pyramid, or Pyramid
of Cheops, by similar concealed ways.
Long ago it became known that a
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
26 years ago:
"In the tomb behind the Sphinx,
from the mouth of a mummy pit 80
feet deep, the echoes, prolonged, of a
gun fired In the heart of the pyramid
were heard, while the gun fired at
the base of the pyramid was hardly
audible. This fact proves a hidden
labyrinth beneath the tableland.”
This recalls the legend of Queen
Nitocrts, "the beautiful one with the
rosy cheeks,” who, according to the
stories that Herodotus heard, avenged
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 she had constructed. At the
height of the revelry she had the
gates of passages connecting with the
Nile thrown open, and all her guests
were drowned. Herodotus also aays
that she enlarged the Pyramid of
Mycerines. The Arabs yet to-day
have a legend that the spirit of Ni-
toorls haunts this pyramid in the
form of a beautiful woman who lures
men away into the desert, where they
go mad and perish.
Is Undermined.
At any rate, the rock tableland on
which the pyramids stand is under
mined with many chambers and con
necting passages, some of which are
now being uncovered. Professor Reis-
ner’e work is concerned specially with
a vast burial ground, lying west of
the Great Pyramid, where, It is be
lieved, members of the Egyptian no
bility were interred during the period
of the kings called "the pyramid
builders." One of the accompanying
photographs shows a gigantic stone
sarcophagus being raised from an ex
cavation in this ground.
But what was the part that the
. Why Not Say So?
By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER
Here is shown the removal of a huge stone sarcophagus from one of
the subterranean tunnels recently discovered, and below is an illustration
of how Queen Nictocris trapped her enemies in one of the underground
passages by inviting them there to a banquet, during which she had gates
connecting the tunnels* to the Nile thrown open, drowning the feasters.
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 Cambyses,
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
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
clusive rights or the representation
and performance of "Within the Law"
In all languages.
By MARVIN DANA from the
Play by BAYARD VEILLER.
TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT.
"Why, this is Mary calling," he
muttered
"Mary!" Briggs cried. His usual
vacuity of expression was cast off
like a mask and alarm twisted hi?
features. Then, in the next instant, a
crafty triumph gleamed from his eyes.
"Yes; she’s on,” Garson Interrupted
a moment later as the tapping ceased
for a little. He translated in a loud
whisper as the Irregular ticking noise
sounded again:
"I shall be there at the house al
most at once. I am sending this mes
sage from the drug store around the
corner. Have someone open the door
for me immediately.
"She’s coming over.” Griggs cried
incredulously.
"No, I'll stop her.” Garson declared
firmly.
"Right! Stop her,” Chicago Red
vouchsafed.
But, when, after tapping a few
words, the forger paused for the^re
ply, no sound came.
"She don’t answer,” he exclaimed,
greatly disconcerted. He tried again,
still without result. At that, he hung
up the receiver with a groan. “She’s
gone—"
"On her way already,” Griggs sug
gested, and there was none to doubt It
was so.
"What’s she coming here for?” Gar
son exclaimed harshly. "This ain’t
no place for her! Why. if anything
should go wrong now—”
He Drew Out a Small Torch.
But Griggs interrupted him with
his us*ual breezy cheerfulness of man
ner.
"Oh. nothing can go wrong now, old
top. I’ll let her in " He drew a small
torch from the skirt-pocket of his
coat and crossed to the hall door, as
Garson nodded assent.
"God! Why did she have to come?”
Garson. muttered, filled with forebod
ings "If anything ftoould go wrong
now!” ’
Ho turned back toward the door
Just as it opened, and Mary darted
into the room, with Griggs following.
"What do you want here?” he de
manded. with peremptory savagene?*
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 their scheme. Mary moved with a
lissome grace like that of some wild
creature, but as she halted opposite
the man who had given her back the
life she would have thrown away,
there was only tender pleading In her
voice, though her words were an ar
raignment.
"Joe, you lied to me."
"That can be settled later,” the man
snapped. His Jaw was thrust forward
obstinately, and his clear eyes spar
kled defiantly.
"You are fools, all of you!” Mary
cried. Her eyes darkened and dis
tended with fear. They darted from
Garson to the other three men, a d
back again in rebuke. "Yes, fools!”'
This Is burglary. I can’t protect you
If you are caught. How* can I? Oil,
come!” She held out her hands plead
ingly toward Garson, and her voice
dropped to beseeching. "Joe, Joe. you
must get away* from this house at
once, all of you. Joe. make them go.”
“We Are Here New.”
"It’s too late,’’ was the stern an
swer. There was no leart relaxation
in the stubborn lines of his face.
“We’re here now, and we’ll stay till
the business is done.”
Mary went a step forward. The
cloak she was wearing was thrown
back by her gesture of appeal so that
those watching saw the snowy slope
of the shoulders and the quick rise
and fall of the gently curving bosom
The beautiful face within the framing
scarf was colorless with a great fear,
save only the crimson lips, of which
the bow was bent tremulously as she
spoke her prayer.
"Jo?, for my **ake!”
But the man was inexorable. He
had set himself to this thing, and
even the urging of the one person n
the world for whom he most cared
was powerless against his resolve.
"I can’t quit now until we’ve got
what we came here after,” he de
clared roughly*.
Of a sudden, the girl made shift to
employ another sort of supplication.
"But there are reasons." She said,
faltering. A certain embarrassment
swept her, and the ivory of her
cheeks bloomed rosily. "I—I can’t
have you rob this house, this par
ticular house of all the world.” Her
eyes leaped from the still obdurate
face of the forger to the group of
three back of him. Her voice was
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 see this through,"
he said, doggedly*.
"But, Joe ”
"It’s settled, I tell you.”
In the man’s emphasis the. girl
realized at last the inefficacy of her
efforts to combat his will. She seemed
to droop visibly before their eyes.
Her head sank on her breast. Her
voice was husky as she tried to
speak.
"Then ” She broke off with a
gesture of despair, and turned away
toward the door by which she had
entered.
To Be Continued To-morrow.
I T is evident from the novels of the ?
eighteenth century that, in their day.
when a man was courting a girl, zhe j
when a man wascourtlng girl, she i
was supposed to be a shy, timid and re- j
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 a
sturdy oak.
It is not necessary at this stage of
the world's history to call 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 fall to ^ note that
modern girls are not the shrinking white
rabbits of the periods of Clarissa Har-
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 tji$lr worth in the
estimation of their husbands if they are
chary of their caresses and niggardly
In their expressions of affeotion.
"One should not let a husband be 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 assure<fly: "She loves me!”
Must he not consider her either very
shallow in heart or very coarse in 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 not care for her husband or
that he is not the man she believed
him to be, then, a* the die is cast, she
must stand bi v/er 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
But if a woman Is married to a good,
kind, considerate husband, and loves
him as she should love him to become
his wife, w^iy 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
in 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 we 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 in all hu
man Intercourse. The mothfer 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 repress the word of appreciation
for faithful duty. I do not say that
one need go out of one’s way and
praise at all times; but when 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?* An£ 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 worth
while to mention to his life partner
that he appreciated herr nor that he felt
any affeotion for her. But when the
poor woman, worn out and old from
years of unremitting toil, lay dying,
the husband crept to the side of her
bed and whispered in her ear, “I love
you.” At the strange words the neav?
lids lifted and an expression of aston
ishment leaped into the. sunken eyes.
Then the stiffening lips < moved. “Why
didn't you tell me so before?” they
whispered.
Why, indeed? Marriage takes all the
love that one can muster coupled with
strong philosophy and common sense to
make it a success. If the love Is there,
fqr 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 that
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 muck of by one he
loves is & rare specimen. Bald one
husband in speaking of hla -wife:
"When, as I sit reading, she peases
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 doe*. In this rukhfa*
age of ours w« make too little of the
love-truths we might speak. The words
are lies and travesties of the eplrlt le
not back of them; but. If 1t le—say sol
If I would utter a word of warning
ta any young wife tt would be to
urge her not to be forever wondering
le she 1« as muoh In love as ehe onoe
was. If she loves her husband as muoh
as he loves her, If he and she.are.grow
ing closer together or drifting apart
Self-analysis In marriage 1b fatal.
Ona 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, dears It Is the
only 3hing I can say to help yotx Then
all the troubles will go. To love a man
vehemently, they say. It Is woman’s
greatest curse. It Isn't; It l> the great
est blessing of God on her.”
Second Chance.
Theft- was a slightly angry gleam In
Dr. Pope's eye as he walked Into th«
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 oase as
I have mentioned, how much morphine,’*
he inquired, "should be administered
to the sufferer?”
"Eight grains,” responded the girt
The doctor, beyond raising one eye
brow, made no comment, and oontinued
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 doo-
tor. "The man’s dead!"
SEABOARD PUTS ON
LOW RATE TO RICH
MOND. .
$16.70 from Atlanta, «ti aala Jttna
7, $. Through trains, steel Pull
mans and dining cars, unegoalled
service. City Ticket Office, $8
Peachtree.
Superfluous
Hair Truths
Dejflliraefe
If you use a simple toilet prepara
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If You Value Yoar Face
use De Miracle, the one safe, perfected
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result in permanent disfigurement or
cost you many dollars because it will
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control of hair growths that have
been stimulated by the use of such
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Only Guaranteed Hair Remover
Others advertise “Guaranteed,” but i
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only depilatory that has a binding
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profit If your dealer will not supply
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formation how to determine which
depilatories *are harmful and worth
less sent in plain, sealed envelope.
New truths In next advt.
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Sold and Recommended by
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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
Tbe'Cheapest in~the End CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
' Thence a joyous sea voyage. Vying with up-to-date hotels, the ships In
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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 meala and berth on ship
New York. $38.25 Baltimore . .$29.25
Boston.... 42.25 Philadelphia 34.05
Proportionately low fores from other points.
For all details, berth reservations, eto., ask the nearest Ticket Agent.
Warbbn H. Fooq, District Passenger Agent
Cot. Peachtree and Marietta Sts., Atlanta, Ga.
PLATES Mad«
Sam e
Day
Dcllv«r«d
DR. E.G. GRIFFIN’S
GVTE CITY DENTAL ROOMS
24| Whitehall Street
OOver Brown A Allen’sj
Gold Crown? $4—Bridge Work $4
All Work Guaranteed
•nnM
i M 1101 M