Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 02, 1913, Image 5

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® ® The Manicure Lad y © © A NEWPORT STYLE By WILLIAM F. KIRK. Fully) Described by Olivette 4 { T ^ EN'T to some trotting races up I to the county fair last week,” said the Manicure Lady. "I had a awful good time, George. It didn’t seem like going to them running races where the betting ring is the whole thing, and where a lot of foxy book makers used to take away the money of a unrespecting public. The kind of racing I seen was the cleanest I have saw for a good many years." “I like the runners," said the Head Barber. ‘‘There is more action every way to a running race. And there Is the chance to win a few dollars, kiddo.” “Yes. and there is the chance to lose a few dollars, too," said the Mani cure Lady. “I am awful glad that kind of racing is stopped. I know that it made an honest bookmaker or tout go out and do some real work for a living, but think of the blessing that the stop ping of races was to thousands of fam ilies. Think of all the heads of fami lies that comes home now with their week’s pay and hands it over to buy shoes for the baby instead of losing it the way they used to. I tell you, George, you will never know how much misery was caused by racing the way it was ran the last few years it lasted* In the city.” There was a lot of money won, too,” argued the Head Barber. "I remember one time I had $2 on Sailor Boy, one of Father Bill Daly’s horses. I won two hundred dollars, and gave the wife half of it. The bettors didn’t always lose, kiddo.” “None of them ever won anything in the long run,” declared the Manicure Lady. “Gambling money ain’t no good, George. I know lots of men that makes bets wins money, because somebody has got to win the same as a lot has got to lose. But the money that you win gambling ain’t thought of respectful by you. You won it easy and easy It goes. When a man works hard all day chop ping wood for 12 he Is liable to look at the $2 a long time before he buys a pint of wine with it. But when he wins $2 on a horse or in a game of dice, the first things he thinks of is wine and women, and goodness knows that much money won’t go far in a swell cafe except for a tip to the hat boy. No. George, gambling ain’t lawful, and It ain’t good no matter how you figure it!” “You sure have got a awful moral, streak on this morning,’’ said the Head Barber. “I never thought you would get so sour oft a little gambling. You won four dollars from me last week when I bet you on the Crackers, and I notice you took It without giving me no lecture ou the evils of gambling.” “I wasn’t speaking about the pleasure of gambling and winning,’’ said the Manicure Lady. "I was thinking about the awful misery that Is caused when folks loses their money. And I want to tell you, George, I was sorry to take that four dollars, because I was afraid your wife might need It. I made up my mind then that I would never gamble again, George, unless you want to bet four more on Mobile against Atlanta. I'll take the Crackers, so as to give you a chance to get your money back.” The Question of Winter and Spring By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: In the office where I am em ployed I come in contact with quite a few men, and one of them, a widower, has asked me to mar ry him. I am a young girl eighteen years of age and have a very nice home, good parents, and belong to a nice, respectable family. I know my parents would not like me to marry this man. as he is 45 years of age. I told him that, and he wants me to elope with him. Now, I think If I did that the neighbors would have a very bad opinion of me, and then I know my mother and father would worry about me if I were to run Away. When he came in the office one day he caught me talkin| to his son, who is 23 years of age, and he was furious and said I should marry him at once. He has plenty of money and can give me everything I like, but I do not love him—but like him. I think, as he nays, tl\at after we are married I shall learn to love him. Do you think I will? He is very good to me and says he will always love me. He is nice looking and dresses nicely. He said I should tell my mother, and if she says yes, ivhy, then we’ll have a church wedding, but if not, that we will be married anyhow, but not have a wedding. Please, Miss Fairfax, what should i do? SUE. S O he is very good to you and says that he will always love you— little Sue—of the wistful heart? Well, what do you suppose he would be and what would you expect him to say—when he is trying to get you to marry him, pray tell? He certainly isn’t going to be bad to you and tell you that he is only going to love you while the honey moon lasts, is he? At That Picnic. Not if he’s really trying to get you for a wife. Deceitful—do I mean that he is that? Not the least little bit in the world do I mean that—but whisper—the MOTHER SO POORLY Could Hardly Care for Children. Finds Health in Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound. lovlna Center, N. Y.—"For six re I have not had a« good health as I have now. 1 was very young w’hen my first baby was born and my health was very bad aft er th£t. I was not regular and I had pains in my back and was bo poorly that I could hardly take care of my tw'o chil dren. I doctored with several doc tors, but got no er. They told me there was no without an operation. I have 1 Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable .pound and it has helped me won- ully. I do most of my own work and take care of my children. 1 mmend your remedies to all suf- lg women."—MRS. WILLARD A. iHAM, care of ELSWORTH TTLE, Bovina Center, N. Y -dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Cora id, made from native root* and s, contains no narcotics or harm- Irugs and to-day holds the record ieing the most successful remedy know for woman’s ills. If you I such a medicine why don’t you it? you have the slightest doubt Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ipound will help you, write to la E. Plnkham Medicine Co. (con- ntlal) Lynn, Mass., for advice, r letter will be opened, read and *ered by a woman, and held In it confidence. other day at the picnic do you re member how very, very hungry you were, and how you wished that the chocolate cake had five layers Instead of three—when you saw old Aunt Su san take it out of the basket? The chicken looked so good, too— didn’t it?—all nice and brown and fiaky, and, dear me, who made those delicious little cakes, all sugar and 3plce—that was before luncheon. After luncheon you were thirsty— awful thirsty, and you wouldn’t have rraded a good cold glass of lemonade for all the chocolate cakes in the world and ten dozen frosted cookies, would you? You weren’t deceitful about it at all, were you—you were Just hungry—« before luncheon. That’s the way with a nice, amiable looking man—some times. Before marriage he’s hungry—and be talks like a hungry man; perhaps after the honeymoon he may not quite a'gree with his own opinion of you— just now. Did you never stop to think of that? You’re 18 and he’s 45—a bad bal ance in the bank of years. I'rft afraid. It would be all right if you loved the man, but you say you do not. 1 And then that little affair of the son—it looks as if the gentleman was a bit disposed to be jealous—if he's so furious to see you talking to his own son before you marry him what would he be to see you talking to anybody’s son on earth after you are married? What sort of a girl are you, any how? The time has gone by when girls marry just to be married—It doesn’t pay any more—it never did pay, for that matter. Only women arc just beginning to find that out. You are not in love with this man —the only thing you can find to say in his favor is that he has plenty of money and can give you everything you want—can he? Will he? Is everything you want to be bought at a shop, like a pound of steak and paid for—like a doctors’ visit? I don’t believe It—I can’t be lieve It . Ought to Count. Why, the very day after you mar ried this man you might meet the one you could really love—what then? Sense—prudence—principle, oh. yes, these things all ought to count—In such a case—but are you sure they would count—in your own particular one? Cleverer women than you have thrown their lives away In just such a bargain as this. Don't you do It. little Sun—dont' you think of doing Money and position and fine clothes seem to count a whole lot more than they do—old Mother Nature doesn’t listen to them one minute. Wait till you fall In love, Sue, and they marry—and be happy—if it's only for a month or so—be happy for once — and laugh at the grim old world. You’ve found the secret of it all in that one month—after all. Boost.. An Atlanta lawyer U held respon sible for this: “Boost, and the world boosts -with you, Knock and you’re on the shelf, For the world gets sick pf the one who’ll kick, And wishes he’d kick himself. ‘ Boost when the sun is shining, Boost when it starts to rain; If you happen to fall, don’t He tnere and bawl, But get up and boost again. “Boost for your own advancement. Boost for the things sublime, For the chap that’s found on the top most round Is the booster every time.” In Baltimore. Justice Mandanzehl’s commitment of Jim Roye. colored, to the house of cor rection may be lacking in legal essen tials, but his spelling is not open to criticism by those who admire pictur esqueness and originalty. When he com- mtted Roye on the charge of “Passing bad money Vargrence and habiteral des- torvence of the peace and not insaen,” he may have offended against the prin ciples of law. but he performed a liter ary feat that would have created envy In the mind of Dogberry. Won’t Stop. Prattle Go his wife)—You don’t seem to have the courage of your convictions. Mrs. Prattle—I should like to know how you come to that conclusion? Prattle—You say it’s no use talking, ana then you talk for hours. ***** w if v : ' . p S3 SK * is* I t, te. The Newport craze In bathing suits is for the slit skirtgarment, and if you see some excuse for the split skirt of the hobble type, where the cut comes at the ankle in order to enable the wearer to walk, perhaps you can also figure out a cut In a knee-length skirt that the wearer mayswlm. Here we picture the prettiest example of the new fashion freak we have seen. Black mohair forms the . bloomers that are banded in at the knee andfastened at the side with round white buttons. The same materi al is used for the one-piece top garment, which is caught around the waist in a fashion borrowed from the bathrobe. For this belt and bow and for the trimming of the suit hercules braid two inches wide Is used, and to outline neck, sleeves and skirt cut high at the sides a half-inch braid Is used. / Bands of this narrow braid bold the two apron-like parts of the skirt together and strap the sleeves, which are cut in a bishop's mitre line to match the skirt. The home dress maker may copy this suit for about two dollars. For late bathing days. ** THE TUNNEL GREATEST STORY OF ITS KIND SINCE JULES VERNE (From th« Herman of Bernhard K©nermann— Oermnn T«r«i*o Copyrighted, 1918. bj A Finrhtr Verlag. iterlin. EngtUh translation and latfun by * • • • The Caged Bird By LOUISE HEILGERS. • • • • S HE had never thought to own any thing so beautiful. For so long had her cage hung empty on the wall that she had given up all hope of ever finding a tenant for it; and then, suddenly, one morn ing. this beautiful bird had dashed into her life, with plumage of scar let and orange and green, and with sapphires for eyes The sunlight upon its feathers dazzled her. When It poured out its* heart in song it \$is all the sunlight dancing upon the earth. Never before had she been so happy. Color in Her Cheeks. A little color crept Into her pale cheeks; bhe took pains over her hair, she sewed lace frills or. to the collar and cuffs of her plain blue gown. The young man over the- way who had at first taken little interest in her began to think about her as quite good looking. % It was, by the w r ay, shortly after the advent of the young man over the way that the empty cage in the house opposite had found its brilliant ten ant. But so simple was the little owner that she never connected the rainbc .v bird with the way the young man from over the way looked at her, or the way in which he held her hand, nor yet the way in w’hich (presently, not just at first, of course) he kissed her. Love that has been properly in troduced takes at least a fortnight to become thoroughly acquainted. She not only dimly noted that it was whenever they were together, she and the young man over the way lhat the bird teemed to sing th»‘ loud est. the notes thrilling from its throat as the golden fire flowers fall from the sky through rockets And whenever the bird sang, she forgot the four white-washed walls (on which hung cheap-colored prints from Illustrated papers and a few faded portraits of the landlady’s relations) which framed her life, and was transported Mraightway into a tropical foreat, full of magic sights and sounds, where of nights a big white moon floated over feathery tree tops, and where by days gorgeous butterflies rested on flowers white as snow and scented a.«« are orange groves. She forgot the lonely lot of the unloved that had been hers for so long. She remembered only her lover’s kises upon her lips. This foolish love of ours. How it spring-cleans this old gray world, making it a garden of evergreens where Adam and his mate may for ever meet. The young man over the way had lived there for about six months when he suddenly made up h1s mind to move. Girls Plentiful. Girls are plentiful, and he had no mind to tie himself legally to one; besides, he had never cared much for brown hair. And there was a dash ing-looking blonde in the boarding house where a friend of ms lived. He might as well go there for a time. H • wiis tired of living in diggings any way. besides Laura was beginning to be a bit of a nuisance. Dash it, one might almost think that she ex pected him co marry her. * * * It was just after ho moved that th* scarlet and orange and green bird with >»app.iire eyes flew away. She hau no Knowledge that she had eft. the cage door open the night be fore. But when she crept, wan faced, to the wicker bars the next morning the cage was empty; the bird had flown away. (Copyright*!, 1913. by International News Barrio*.). TO-DAY’S INSTALLMENT. There was not a sound now but the faint ticking of the valves on their oxygen generators in the helmets. Al lan groaned as he picked his way over the field of the dead staring up at him in the lantern light with hor ribly distorted faces. These were the vanguard of that awful army of de spair that had staggered through the smoking ruin with Rives. Rives was not among them, but suddenly out of the dense smoke a man appeared and dropped at Allan’s feet. He wore only a tattered pair of trousers. Allan quickly flashed the light in his face. It was not Rives. With Lefevre’s help tney carried him still breathing feebly, back to the train. Two doctors took him in hand, and in a few minutes they had brought him to a consciousness of his sur roundings. Under the further stimu lus of a drink of brandy he was able to talk a little. His first statement, in broken English, which showed that he was a French Canadian, was th *t the Virgin had saved him. Lofevre began questioning him. gently but swiftly, in his own tongue. He said that he had been uncon scious at least once before. He had been revived by a Current of fresh air blowing across his face. He had tried to get out of the tunnel and found that the smoke was too thick. He was trying to wmrk his way back to the fresh air when they had found him. He did not understand that In the smoke he had turned completely around again. Allan muttered an eager exclama tion. “That means that the ventilating plant Is making headway against the smoke,” he cried. "There’s a change for some of the others! Ask him if he heard anything of any others.” “Yes," replied the rescued, eagerly; “I heard somebody laughing severa. times.” “What! Laughing?” exclaimed Le- fevre. “Yes,” was the solemn reply. “Poor chap!” murmured Allan, when this was translated. “It’s a wonder he didn’t hear more than that.” Push on in Smoke. But Lefevre was not wholly inclined to accept this explanation. He ques tioned Renard—that is the man’s name—in detail and finally told Allan that he was convinced that the Ca nadian had heard human voices. “Then let us go in, in God’s name!” cried Allan. “Volunteers from the doctors!” There was a unanimous response. Allan chose the first (wo and with Le fevre set out into the smoke again. It was a terrible march, picking their way along the corpse-strewn track over blocked timbers and fragments of rock. Someone was falling con stantly, for the smoke w'as like a heavy yellow wall against the glasset of the helmets. Once, after a stum ble, Allan felt a terrific pain shoot from his right ankle up his leg, but paid no heed. Suddenly they were stopped dead In their tracks. From somewhere ahead of them out of the thick yel low-black vapor came peal upon pe-il of shrill, unearthlv laughter. For a space no man breathed and one of the doctors swiftly crossed himself. As suddenly as it began it ended, and to the four It seemed for a few mo ments that no human lips could have made the ghastly sounds that echoed and rattled up and down the smoke- filled galleries Then Allan began pushing swiftly* on and others stumbled after him as If afraid to be left *alone. In another minute or two they came upon a small substation, and the terrible laughter pealed forth again. Allan put his shoulder to the door and pushed It 111 anil entered, Lefevre and the doctors at his heels. A ventilating tube entered the sta tion, and around the opening four men were writhing and squirming and occasionally from one of the smitten came a shriek of the horrible laughter that had startled them in (he gallery. The whistling sound that came to the ears of the rescuers told them that the ventilating plant was working with Increased power and this had kept the four alive. In the station, so close that they bumped into it in their contortions, was an oxygen generator, unused. A1 Ifour were foreign laborers. When they saw the smoke helmets of the rescue party, they screamed with terror and crouched In a far comer of the room. I One of the doctors managed to make some MOM out of th-- gib berish, and gathered that they be lieved themselves in hell and had taken the rescuers for demons. When Allan and the others approached they sprang at them in the madness I of terror and fought until they were overpowered and bound. Allan gave an order and they were hurried back to the train as swiftly as possible. One W’as dead before that goal wap roAChed and none of the other three ever recovered hla reason. Allan Collapses. As he staggered Into the car with the last of the four. Allan collapsed in the aisle. He had been thirty-six hours' without sleep and under a strain such as no man had ever borne before. The doctors quickly revived him, but when he insisted »hat he must push on again, in spite bf their protests, one gray haired physician persuaded him to take a “stimulant and rest for a few min utes." Inside of a minute he had passed into a deep sleep that lasted several hours. Lefevre and two of the doctors made two sorties in .the meantime and got past the station where the crazy men had been found, but they were driven back by smoke. When Allan woke he was under the impression that he had not been asleep, and no on«’ disillusioned him. He immediately donned his smoke hel met, and with the indefatigable Le fevre and a fresh doctor another at tempt was made. The smoke still moved down on them like a living foe, groping its way along the walls, creeping through cross-galleries, filling the stations, silent, opaque, and resistless. But the ventilator had been sucking it out and forcing in millions of cubic yards of fresh pure air. and It seemed to grow thinn*r, little by little, as they advanced. It was slow and terrible work. They dimed over and through .wrecked trails, ripped up ties and WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE The story opens with Rives, who Is In' 1 charge of the technical work ings of the great tunnel from America to Germany, on e>ne ..f the tunnel trains, with Baermann, an engineer, in charge of- Main -station No 4 They ate traveling at the rate of 118 miles an hour. Rive* is in love with Maude Allan, wife of Mackendrick Allan^ whose mind firpt conceived the great tunnel scheme. After going about 250 miles under the Atlantic Ocean Rives gets out of the train. Suddenly thfe tanner *eetn* to burst. There is a frightful explosion. Men are flung to death and Rives is badly wounded. Ho staggers through the blinding smoke, . realizing that. About 3.000 men have probably perished. He and other survivors get to Station No. 1 Rives finds Baermann holding at bay a wild mob of frantic nu n wlu» want to climb on a work train, somebody shoots Baermann,. and the train slides out. The scene Is then changed to the roof of qie Hotel Atlantic. The greatest financiers of the country are gathered there at a summons from (’ H. Lloyd. “The Money King." John Rives addresses them, and Introduces Al lan. Mrs Allan and Maude Lloyd, daughter of the financier, arc also pres ent. Allan tells the company of his project for a tunnel 3.100 miles long. The financiers agree to back him. Allan and Rives want him to take charge of the actual work. Rives accepts. Rives goes to the Park Chib to meet Wit- terstelner. a financier. At Columbus Circle news of the great project is being flashed on a screen. Thousands are watching it. Mrs Allan becomes a lonely and neglected woman and 1s much thrown In the company of Rives. Sydney Wolf, the money power of two continents, plots against Allan and Kiv. Mrs Allan has her suspicions aroused aa to the friendsship between her husband and Ethel Lloyd. Rives and Mrs Allan let the wine qj Jovn g.t to their’ heads and. before they know It, they confess their love for each other Tun nel City’s Inhabitants learn something has gone wrong m the lower workings of the great bore An explosion and fire have occurred in the tunnel, and when the workers hear of it definitely they become a raging mob. surging about the entrance of the bore Mrs. Allan Is warned not to leave her home while the excitement Is at its height. But she and her child go forth They meet a mob of women, frenzied by the disaster, who stone them to death. Rives was missing in the tunnel and Allun, his wife child, dearest friend ami 5.000 other lives gone, gave In despair. Rot he rbsolves fn Vmiquor not be subdued, by the great project. Gathering a relief train together he hurries into the tunnel. Near the end he comes to a pile of dead bodies. Now Go On With the Story. broken timbers. And the dead were everywhere. They were some two miles past* the little sub-station when Allan stopped suddenly and held up his hand. "Listen!” he exclaimed in a low voice. "I think I heard a call.” The others stopped as they were bidden. For more than a minute stoned intently, but there was no sound but the faint whirr of some distant ventilator and the drip-drip of water. “I’m sure I heard it,” Insisted the chief as Lefevre shook his head. “I’ll give a yell now and everybody listen ” He hallooed up to the tunnel and Ms voice died away in the distance. Then faint, but clear, as a voice sounds from far away over the water at night, came an answering hall. Found. “By God. there’s someone up the gallery!" exclaimed Lefevre and plunged on. The three dashed ahead, slipping and stumbling, and occasion ally stopping to shout again. Nearly always they heard the answering shout and nearer each time. It was close at hand, but they seemed unable to get closer, and finally It began to die away. “We’ve gone past him!” cried Allan, suddenly. “Rut we. couldn’t,” protested his aide. “We must have.” Allan Insisted. “I know—he was In one of the cross galleries!” They scrambled back through the darkness and began searching the cross galleries At the second one back* they were greeted with a per fect storm of fresh air. Into this they turned, and halfway up they came upon a strange spectacle. A ventilator opened in the little gallery, and against the wall was a generator still pouring out oxygen. By the side of It sat a bald-headed old man. A few locks of white hair still streamed from his bare, white scalp. Hi* face was yellowed and seamed Into the dim lantern light. He seemed terribly emaciated and with ered, but he looked up w’lth a smile that showed remarkably young and sound, white teeth. Lying with his head in his lap was the body of a gigantic negro, his blue lips drawn back in a sardonic grin. “I knew you’d come, old man,” wheezed the withered one, reaching up a hand as If for help to rise. "I knew you’d come.” And then Allan knew him. “Rlvea—Rives!” he gasped, between a shout and sob. The next Instant his arms were around the pitiful bundle and he had lifted It to Its feet. The negro’s head slid off and struck d flat stone with a hollow thump Rives, or what had been Rives, clung to Allan’s coat with one hand, and with the other he pointed down, while Allan held him close In a strong grip. “I’m all right, Mac, old man," he said, feebly, and smiled again. “But that nigger—that nigger took n lot out of me, and—he died after all Too bad!” The Strike. Hives lay between life and death In the hospital, and for the first time In years Allan himself was In direct charge at Tunnel City. The work of rescue was over, the bodies of the dead had been recovered. The Inst train had come out of the tun nel. hut the far galleries were still choked with debris; but in all the great maelstrom of Industry scarcely a wheel stirred. Allan and his staff of engineers wrought like maniacs and strove by example and heroic endurance to stem the tide that was setting in against them. It w’as vain. The armies of tollers stood Idle and numb and ooksd on. They and their wrlves stood in long rows on the terraced descent, sullen and still. The greut lighting plants, the pumps and ven tilator system were all operated by engineers, who dropped by the Fide of their work and slept In broken naps. Hordes of curiosity seekers from New York and Philadelphia added to the confusion and the difficulty of the problem. Allan doubled the rail road fare, but even this did not head them off. For four weeks Allan and his staff strove night and day, and at last they began to make headway; but still there was* no sign from the laborers. At last the final spark of the fire had been quenched, the smoke disappeared and the fragments of the shattered driller were removed. Then the heart of the explosion was exposed. The theory that a pocket of highly explosive gas had been dis charged by a blast was proved cor rect. They found a chamber some hun dred and fifty feet Jn depth, about a thousand jeypt wide, and more than half a mile long. It was perfectly dry, and Its sides, ceilings and floor were composed of a new mineral called "submarium,” of which they had found traces in the boring. ft was light and crumbly, not unlike chalk, .and had been discovered to be rich in radium. In '.ts length the chamber followed roughly the line of the tunel and meant a saving of a half-mile of boring; but the work was at a stand still. More than that, the disaffection spread to. other tunnel cities, and at the end of the first month after the explqslon the tunnel work was com pletely paralyzed. The Conference. Then Allan seriously bestirred him self. He sent for the leaders of the unions and held a conference with them In the famous room at the ad ministration building. “What do you men want?” he de manded. Nobody seemed able to answer him to the point. “We never had a strike before.” he went on, half angrily. “What's the matter now? You know’, and most of Joy of a Bachelor; Son By FRANCES L. GARSIDE T HEY were flustered and flurried, and looked, . lit sptte of their wrfnkled faces and gray hairs, like so many little girls who had es caped from their nurses, and had met to make confessions of their griefs. So great was the resemblance to lit tle girls, it seemed Incongruous when one lifted a grandchild to her lap and another adjusted her glasses and got out her knitting. “This,” said the one with the grand child, “was brought to me last week. My daughter sent ffiur children to me while she went on a trip. She said they would keep me from getting lone some.” “I never have a moment’s quiet,** said the w’eak voice of another old Woman. “I have four married daugh ters and they are always sending tnelr children to me, sometimes six at a time to keep me from getting lone some.” “It would be nice,” she added pa thetically, “to have a chance to get lonesome sometimes.’’ There was a silence. All the little old women were thinking of the Busies. Billies. Johnnies and Lizzies that were always being unloaded on dear grandmother, giving her no chance- to rest. * A timid woman who felt that unless they were careful they would show dis loyalty to their daughters, tried to change the subject by asking the oth ers if they liked her dress. It was a soft, delicate gray. "I wanted one that color,” sputtered another little woman who rocked vio lently to express her Indignation, “but my daughter made me get black. She said it would make over better for her when I was gone.” “1 live with a bachelor son," from the little old woman In gray, “and he lets me do as I like.” Old women do not cry- They have learned the futility of tears. But they sighed, and several who lived with daughters paused in their knitting to wipe the moisture from their glasses. “When I take up a broom,” resumed the woman who lives with a bachelor son, “no one says 'Don’t do that; you are too old for such work!’ No one screams to me to let the maid do it when. I want to beat up a cake, and when I want to stay at home my son never tells me I will become an old fogy unless I go out more, and when I want to go out no one tells me it is too hot or cold for one of my age, or that one of my years should never go alone. “I never hear anything about my age from my bachelor son. He lets me do as I please. My daughters complain because 1 work, and they say I am too old to keep house and should live with one of them, but he doesn’t think I am too old. He Just keeps still, and lets your men have sense enough to know, me wait on Mm. and that Is what I that we didn’t try to kill their mates. ! They know that >hey are Retting at T ^ e ,l mffe Wo double and triple the pay of ordinary labor, because they run this very risk —and this Is the first time the risk has become a reality. The first time —and the work is nearly half fin ished!” No one said anything for a moment, and at last an American delegate leaned forward in his chair. "I'll tell you what It Is, Mac,” he •aid slowly ’ They’re scared.” “Scared!" echoed the chief, con temptuously. “There is not one chance In a million that anything like this can happen again. It was the one thing that we could not guard agalnpt, and we never pretended that wo could. We can tell when wo aru approaching known gases and other known dangers. You men know that we trapped a bigger gas pocket than this before we came up to Main Sta tion 3, but no one even got a whiff of gas. Now’ what are the chances f there being two such pockets of un known gas in the path of the boring?" The leaders looked at each oth^” and at the floor and shrugged their shoulders. “Well?” snapped Allan, Impatiently The American took up the reply again. "O’ course, we know w’hat you say In right, boss,” he said, “but It’s dif ferent with a lot o’ the men. You know it’s just the. Idea of being caught flown there under the ocean with no way out—that's what gets 'em.” To Be Continued To-morrow. women looked wistfully oman in gray. None of them had bachelor sons to fuss over, and knew none of the feeling of a sec ond honeymoon that comes to a little old woman in fluttering around and ministering to a son who never suggests nor rebukes nor Interferes as long as he Is made comfortable. They sighed. It must he nice to have an easy-going son stand between a mother and her overly-sollcitous daugh ters. * They sighed again. And the sigh grew in intensity and volume till it swept the little old women like so many withered autumn leaves before a gust of wind, fluttering and skurrying right out of the room. And it was well. For, a moment later, the voices of many daughters arose on the air: “I wonder where mother Is so long. She Is too old to stay away like this.” —FRANCES L GARSIDE. Loss of Power “ and vital fare* follow lota of fleth or 5 emaciation. The** come from irapov- “ erithed blood. Dr. Pierce’s | Golden Medical Discovery *— enlivens a torpid liver—enriehee th* blood .top. the waste of strength and! “ ttenue and builds up healthy fleeh—to ~ the proper body weight. As an appe- ™ tizing, restorative tonic, it .eta to “ work all the proeea.ee of digestion “ and nutrition, rou.ee .very organ Into ™ natural artion. and brings back health •- and strength. 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