Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 30, 1913, Image 4

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* t ! * 9 f * BEHIND CLOSED DOORS By ANNA KATHARINE GREEN One of the Greatest Mystery Stories Ever Written opyrlght, 1913, by Anna Green.) Katharine TO DAY’S INSTALLMENT. “And this letter?” asked Dr. Came ron In a voice he strove In vain to keep calm. . “Was but begun The girl only saw the line ‘My beloved D . a very proper beginning If she were writing to her future husband.” "Very,” returned the doctor. But the suppressed sarcasm In his voice told and haughty woman who had accepted his attentions, but who had never loved him or seemed to ask his love, added their weight to his conviction. He could perceive now that her thoughts and in terest had been elsewhere. He laughed to himself with an Immeasurable bitter- ness as he remembered how he had characterised by such terms as noble self control, dignified reserve and lady like hauteur, the chill, studied manner he now saw to be the expression of In difference If not actual distaste. Arid he had come fo his very wedding day The Mistakes of Jennie By HAL coffman Being a Series of Chapters in the Life of a Southern Girl m the Big City By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. THAT IS HER PRIVILEGE. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a foreigner, aged 21, and deepiy in love with an American girl of 17 years. I call to see her two or three times a week and she seem?* to like it very much, but her parents wish me to come over oftener than that and take her out for good times and other places of amusement. She says she loves me, but tells me the good times she has with other boys In my absence. I told her to stop going out with other boys, and she promised me net to do so. Friends have told me she still goes out w r ith other boys, and this is very displeasing to me. A WOOING LOVER. She is not engaged to you, and therefore not bound to obey you. I am afraid, being only 17 and friv olous. she loves a good time more than she lovey you. She will outgrow all that In time, and you must be patient Kneeling Before a Fire He Saw a Woman. the detective all he wanted to know “But it looked as if it were not to her future husband,” continued that worthy, gravely “And finding that she bad no intimate friend whose name be gan with D , I began to feel as sured that my original surmise was true and that there was a .third party in the case to whose influence Miss Greto- rex's disappearance was due. I, there fore, added to the precautions already taken such others as my own judg ment suggested, causing a description of her person and clothing to be sent to many quarters usually omitted by the authorities. Besides doing this 1 had her various haunts searched and her friends examined. A detective was even sent to this office, sir. and conversed with you a half hour day before yes terday without your suspecting his er rand But all was of no avail till this morning This morning word was brought me that a person answering the description 1 had sent out had taken dinner at a certain restaurant and af terward gone to the C Hotel, where ghe was to be found in room No. 153. In half an hour I was there and in five minutes more I had seen her.” NOT EXACT. "And was; was she ” stammered the doctor. “I have said she was like the original of that picture," remarked Mr. Gryce “But I can not swear she is Miss Gret- orex. Her face was that of the miss ing heiress, but her clothing, while an swering in a general way to the descrip tion of what Miss Gretorex wore on leaving home, still shows points of dif ference which an old hand like my self can not but take note of. As for instance, the description reads: 'A dress of fine blue cloth trimmed with rows of black braid,' while this woman's dress is of blue cloth Indeed, but not fine and not trimmed with black braid. Besides she has a watch on and Miss Gretorex, as we know, left hers behind her. Yet,” he went on, as if in answer to Dr. Cam eron's sudden look of relief—though how he could see if I can not say, for he was looking In quite a contrary di rection—“clothes are alterable and faces not so much so. Though I do not pro fess to explain the discrepancies I have mentioned, I fully believe the woman in room 153 of the C Hotel is the lady we seek: but that we may be sure of It I have come for you.” "But,” cried the doctor with a frown, “if there is a third party, as you say—“ "Hark!” said Mr. Gryce, “the car riage" And he arose in a w’ay that admitted of no dispute. What Has Gone Before. It is the wedding day of Dr Walter Cameron. He is to be married at 8 o'clock that evening to Genevieve Gretorex, a beautiful society girl. At 4 o'clock 1 >r. Cameron is called upon in his office by Kbenezer Gryce. a member of the Scotland Yard detec tive force. He astounds Dr. Cameron by telling him that Miss Gryce has been missing for several days. Gryce ays that the girl's mother requested his services in the hunt for her daughter, and showed him a note in which Miss Gretorex declared she would be back in time for the cere mony. Dr. Cameron is greatly dis tressed Gryce is continuing his story concerning his Interview with Mrs. Gretorex. Now go on with the story. he objected. “But it must be done,” quoth the other; then as the girl came out, he added, “if she is the patient you seek, her parents will be only too grateful to you for your attention.” Dr. Cameron frowned, subdued his natural feelings and fallowed in the wake of the detective, %ho had al ready stepped across the threshold. The room or rather the alcovt thus entered was dim and for a moment he saw nothing but the bed . that together with a wardrobe took up most of the space before him. But in another in stant he had observed the thin streak of light made by the separation of the twm heavy curtains that hung between him and the apartment beyond, and walking quickly up to it, he looked through. without suspecting the truth; had bought his presents and fitted up his house for a bride that had actually left her home and resorted to the most mis erable of subterfuges to escape him. It was enough to crush all gentleness out of him, to make of a once generous and amiable man a cynic and a misanthropis His working features showed his feel ings, his clenched hand his determina tion. If It was as he feared, and Miss Gretorex should be found by him In hid ing. instead of in her father’s home dressing for a ceremony to which a thousand guests had been invited, he would flee the city, leave the country, and with It the derision of his enemies, and the no less unacceptable sympathy of his friends. In his imagination he was already half across the ocean, when the carriage came to a standstill. Look ing up, he saw they were before the hotel ami the character of his thoughts changed. “What time is it?” he asked abruptly. "Just five minutes to six." Not Much Time. Shook His Head. him. Dr. Cameron at once ran down. There was a change in the detective’s manner which he could not but notice. “It is as I said,” remarked hB. Mr. Gryce laughed—he did sometimes —and hastened toward the street door. "We have no time to lose,” he affirmed. She Had a Visitor. “You have not, perhaps.” exclaimed his companion, energetically. “But my | duty is hero; Miss Gretorex looks as if ' she needed a friend, and if it is true that her mind is affected ” "Hark!!’ cried the other in his short- j est, sharpest accents. “Five minutes l ago I might perhaps have agreed with ' yo(i, but since then I have heard some thing w’hlch changes my mind. Sir," he asserted, “since I saw the lady three * hours ago she has had a visitor, a gen- ! tleman. She received him in her room; i YOU ARE NOT ENGAGED. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 19 and deeply in love with a girl one year mv junior. I am with her every' other night. On the night she Is not with me she Is with some other man. which makes me feel bad, as I love the young lady dearly. If I remon strate with her about this matter she says it Is none of my affair. Do you think she i« true to me? CARL. I think she Is having w r hat every girl of her age regards as “a good time,” and as she is not engaged to you or to any, she can not be accused of being untrue to any man. Don't And fault unless she has given you the right. DON’T TAKE HIM SERIOUSLY. Dear Miss Fairfax: Please tell me how I should punis'h a young man who really thinks a great deal of me (as all his friends hsve told me), but who said to me In a joking manner that hi# friend liked me and thought I was just fine, but he is trying to tell him that I am not as fine as he thinks I am. I am a very good looking young lady and have many admirers, but like him the best of all. as he treats me fine when he takes me out. This young man Is* a critic and criti cises everything that comes in his path. I want to teach him a good lesson, hut don’t know' how to go about It. N. A. G, "We don’t want girls that flirt.” J He likes to tease you, and will con- Eoom 153. T HE ride was comparatively a si lent one. Mr. Gryce, never much of a talker except when he had an object In view, found sufficient oc cupation for himself in looking out of ! the window, while Dr. Cameron, was in; too perturbed a condition of mind to i risk speech even if the confused na ture of his thoughts had allowed it j He was suffering from the first real blow his pride had ever received. for he knew’ now that it was his pride that ; had been hurt and not his heart. hlA pride which was so great that at th< very thought of humiliation his whole future became clouded. He a betrayed „ver! He an outraged bridegroom! It —as an intolerable thought and yet he could not escape from It. For now that he had turned his back upon , that part of the city which had held his hopes, and was en route with a detec tive to an obscure hotel down town, he knew as well as if he had already recognized her that he was going to see there Genevieve Gretorex. The utter sinking at his heart assured him of it. The thousand and one mem ories of his acquaintance with the cold Loss of Power 35 and vital force follow k>« of f\+*h of 2 emaciation These coma from Impov* « eriahed blood. Dr. Pierce’* | Golden Medical Discovery enlivens a torpid liver—enriches the blood —stops the waste of strength and tissue and builds up healthy flesh —to the proper body weight. As an appe tizing. restorative tonic, it sets* to work all the processes of diges ion and nutrition, rouses every organ into natural action, and brings back health and strength. “Late! If fate should be so unex pectedly propitious as to prove your sur mise wrong, and I should wish to get back to St. Nicholas Place by eight.” “No,” said the detective “It has taken us Just eighty minutes to come down, and it will take us just eighty minutes to go back. That will give us ten minutes for what you want to do here and leave you a full half hour in which to change your coat and don a white necktie—all that I see you need to do before taking your part In the an tic! p&ted ceremony.” “You calculate without delays.” “I see no cause for any." “You cannot always prevent them. I should not wish to be late if the bride is not,” he somewhat sarcastically sug gested. The detective did not seem to fear any such result. As they were alighting from the car riage the physician's thoughts seemed to take another turn He glanced at his companion, and though he did not meet his eye something which very few could boast of ever doing—he seemed satisfied with his scrutiny, for he re marked: 'You have meant to show me a kind ness. Mr. Gryce.” The detective did not contradict him. At the entrance of the hotel Dr. Came ron again addressed him. "You have promised she shall not see me.” "I will keep my word.’’ “Give as little cause for scandal as you can." he said. They went up stairs. Mr. Gryce shrugged his shoulders. “Trust me," was his laconic rejoin der. They went up stairs, quietly passed down a hall or two and stopped in a dark passage. “Walt,” enjoined the detective: and he stepped up to a girl that was loiter ing in the vicinity. A few’ words settled his business and she came rapidly forward, stepped by the doctor and opened a door near by with a key she toook from her pocket. “Room 162 happens to be a very con venient one for our purpose,” whispered Mr. Gryce, as the girl passed in and left them a minute alone. “It has its main door and has this other and but tile used one. opening into an alcove vith curtains. The girl is gone to see f the lady wishes anything She will Ve.ve the door ajar when she conies A pathetic sight greeted him. Kneel ing before a fire, whose leaping flames seemed neither to lend warmth to her icy cheek nor comfort to her miserable heart, he saw a woman; whose list less eyes, fixed upon a paper that was consuming on the hearth, saw noth ing beyond, seemingly in this world or the world to come. Rut apparent as was her misery, the doctor saw in that first glance but two things, her face and her form. Both were unmistak able. They w r ere those of Genevieve Gretorex. 71 is look as he fell back revealed the truth. The detective who was close at his side took his arm without a word and turned toward the door. But Dr. Cameron, moved perhaps! by some vague memory of the despair he had seen, turned round again to the cur tain and allowed himself one other glance. His face softened as he looked and he involuntarily raised his hand to the curtain as if moved by some un controllable impulse to enter, w’hen he felt his companion’s firm clasp close around hi* arm, and yielding to that kindly but Inexorable will, be wheeled about and followed Mr. Gryce out of the room. “So there Is no mistake?” Inquired the detective. The doctor shook his head. Mr. Gryce softly closed and locked the door out of which they had come. Giving the key to the girl, who was not far off, he remarked, “It is not the person w’e seek," and quietly led the way toward the stairs. But here Dr Cameron stopped him. “What are you going to do?” asked he. “Ride to St. Nicholas Place as fast as I can.” “And whal do you expect me to do?” The detective opened out his hands French fashion. “I have no further control over your movements,” he ob served. Dr. Cameron still held him back. “Mr. Gryce," said he, “have you seen tills young lady yourself?" “Certainly, before I went for you to identify her.” "You noticed how pale she was, then, how unhappy.” “I did not think so.” “She Is the living picture of de spair." Mr. Gryce’s hand that was sliding up and down the stair rail suddenly stopped * “Your emotions make you exagger ate," he declared. "It is scarcely three hours since I saw her, and she struck me then as looking not only well, but full of bloom and hopefulness ” The Detective Looks. they talked a full hour, and when he went out he stepped up to the girl we ^ nue to tease you as long as.you let saw upstairs, and—summon up your him. courage, sir, if you love her—said that | Don’t take him seriously; that may he was coming back again at 9 o’clock; cure him. But It may please you to that he would bring a clergyman with j know that men never tease a girl thev him; that, in short, he expected to mar- j do not , ike very VPry much ry the lady this very evening in the room in which he had Just left her, and wished it put in readiness for the | purpose. He told the same story to the ! clerk downstair#, and ” “His name- what was the villain’s j The Bright Side. Mrs. Knoall was greatly puzzled— ENNIE started In to work at the new place Mon day morning. In the meantime, Jennie had tried to figure out how she was going to keep up the payments on her clothes. Her salary was now $5 a week and the weekly payment she had to make was #1.50. That, with home to live on. So Jennie resolved to keep ou looking for another job every spare minute she could find. Tom came over to .Tenni’s house once in awhile now, in the evenings. Sometimes Jennie was home hut more often she wasn’t, and Tom would sit and talk with Jennie’s boarding housekeeper. That kind old lady was broken hearted the way Jennie acted and asked Tom if there wasn’t anything he could do to show Jennie how wrong it was Jo act the .way she did. Tom didn’t see what he could do- he bad asked her to marry him and she had refused him, but he told Jennie’s old friend that if there ever WAS anything he could do to help, to let him know. There was a young man that Jennie often used to flirt with on the car, and one noon time, when she was on her way to a place to look for a job she had heard about, she met the young man go ing into the same building she was. When she went Into the place to inquire of the manager for a job, who should be the manager but the same young man that she had flirted with on the car. When Jennie asked him for a job, his curt answer was. “No, we don't want girls that flirt with strange men, we let the other firms hire that kind.” —HAL COFFMAN. (To Be Continued.) Do You Know Thai— -i she happened to meet Mr. Newlywed name, or didn t he leave any name? j one morninff as he was rushin J g to Quick! let me knew roy whole disgrace j catch his train, and ventured, with at once.” her usual solicitude for other folks’ "He left a card, and the name on it is affairs, to hope that Mrs. Newlywed one you may know.” ' | wasn ’t having trouble with her ser- And the detective handed over to his 1 van * s - companion a visiting card on which was inscribed— DR. JULIUS MOLES WORTH. “Molesworth!” repeated the other in a tone of Incredulous amazement. “Im possible! Some one has made use ol his card.” An AmXzing Thought. "You think so?” “I know so. She could never have become entangled with him. He is a graduate of the Medical School and is Mr. Newlywed. "Oh, no!” said “We’ve got three!” Then he dashed off, leaving Mrs. Knoall gasping. Three servants, in- jdeed! Why, it was common knowl- ! edge in Suburbville that the Newly- j weds were anything but rich. How I on earth, then, could they afford to keep three servants? Mrs. Knoall felt ; forc ed to call on the bride that aft ernoon to make investigations. On his return home in the evening Mr. Newly wed was greeted with this j question: "John, what ever made you tell Mrs. all right in a professional way. but he I e ^L S nt ^ rn ‘ n8 that W6 ke6D is on the Health Board, and confines his practice to charity patients in the Ward. She could never have even met him.” “It is not always safe to say whom a woman may or may not meet.” "She would never have been attracted to him if she had. Molesworth is one of the most eccentric of men." And Dr. 'Cameron drew up his fine figure in a way that was sufficiently significant. Mr. Gryce smiled and shook his head. "I>»t us make ourselves sure of the matter,” said he. And, leading the way hack to the office, he asked a descrip tion of the owner of the card. “A peculiar looking person,” answered the clerk. “Medium-sized, but with a face that me^hs business. His hair is dark and he wears no beard. He has a pleasant smile, but his frown makes you feel as if you wanted to stand from un der. His clothes—” But Dr. Cameron had already drawn the detective to the door. “Let us get away from here,” he cried. John smiled. “Well, don’t we, my dear?” he asked. “It seems to me that we al ways have one going, one coming and one here!” The largest proportion of suicides in European countries is to be found in Germany. There are over 850 licensed employ ment agencies in London. There are nine thousand cells in a square foot of honeycomb. Diamonds were first discovered South Africa in 1857. in • Wine is sometimes made from po tatoes. Africa is three times larger than Europe. KODAKS | ”Th* B#*t Finishing sad Kulsra- lag That Can B« Pradiiaad.” Eastman Films and ron- pints stock amateur supplies „ Ice for out-of-town customer*. Band for Catalog and Prlea LI at. A. K. HAWKES CO. H D ° E D A K 14 Whltthall St.. Atlanta. Ga« To Be Continued To-morrow. Not Slow, A reverend gentleman was address ing a school class recently, and was C^nvtnythlnr else be “Just u f*o4” to take I Dr. Cameron flushed scarlet and drew “It is a sneaking Di«c« of business." “Go and look for yourself,” suggested the doctor. “If I am any reader of countenances it is a wretched woman we leave in yonder.” Mr. Gryce paused no longer. Gliding swiftly back, he procured the key once more, took a glance for himself and came out troubled. “I don’t understand it,” bis look seemed to say to the unconscious key as he handed it back for the second time to the obliging chambermaid. The girl may have surprised that look. At all events, she ventured upon a word or two that seemed to move the de- I tective strangely. He gave the key another glance, asked a question or two and then hurried away to the office by another stair than that which was j guarded by Dr. Cameron's tall figure. He was gone five minutes and the doc- I tor was beginning to lose control over his patience when the detective ap- bttiuu.. MJMi iuuuU beckoned to 1 trying to enforce the doctrine that the hearts of the little ones were sin ful and needed regulating. Taking out his watch and holding it up he said: "Now, here is my watch; suppose it doesn’t keep good time—now goes too fast, and now O oes slow. What shall I do with it?” “Sell it!” shouted a small young ster. • OCEAN VI ElW HOTEL PABLO BEACH. FLA. 10-honr ride from Atlanta, 17 miles from Jacksonville, Fla. Most accessible asd best beach resort for Atlantans or Geor gians. American plan. Reasonable rates. 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We will send it post-paid upon the return of the coupon together with $1.9.5—our introductory price if, after trying the lCli-KI^T for 30 days, you are not delighted with it, return it and we will return th*' 95 Don t let the coupon get lost. Send it NOW coupon get a ki a u u « II ■ sum Weatern Merchandise Sc Supply Co., 326 W. Madiaon St., Chicago., III. Enclosed is money order for $1.95. Please send the ICE-KIST CRANK LESS FREEZER for 30 days' trial. Name. .. Address. naiRHiiaa ..Ex. th .4