Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 20, 1912, FINAL 2, Image 13

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    THE ,QE O RGIAM’S MAGAZINE, PAGE
“Initials Only” * By Anna Kathetine Green
A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times
(Copyright. 1911, Street & Smith.)
(Copyright, 1911, by Dodd, Head & Co.)
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
'x< use me, I had rather not. I am
aware that they were bitter and should
b , . . cause of great regret. I was angry
wbP , 1 wrote them.”
■ That is evident. But the cause of
v , anger is not so clear, Mr. Brother*
', n Miss Chailoner was a woman of
; fr character, qr such was the univer
fa! opinion of her friends. What could
s :; ave done to a gentleman like your
self t. draw forth such a tirade?”
■•You ask that?”
• I am obliged to. There is mystery
surrounding her death —the kind of mys-
t , ; , which demands perfect frankness on
tl,. part of all who were near her on that
evening, or whose relations to her were
m any way peculiar. You acknowledge
a: your friendship was of such a guard
ed nature that it surprised you greatly
u, hear it recognized. Yet you could
write her a letter of this nature. Why?”
■Because —" the word came glibly; but
• ~■ next one was long in following. "Be
. ause." he repeated, letting the fire of
strong feeling disturb for a moment
'■is .lignified reserve. “1 offered myself to
Miss ChaltoDW, and she dismissed me
with great disdain.”
■Ah! and so you thought a threat was
due her?”
"A threat?”
"These words contain a threat, do they
not
"They may. 1 was hardly master of
myself at the time. I may have ex
pressed myself in an unfortunate man
ner.” '
“Read tlie words. Mr. Brotherson. 1
really must insist that you do so.”
There was no hesitancy now. Rising,
he leaned over the table and read the
few words the other had spread out for
his perusal. Then he slowly rose to his
full height, as he answered, with some
slight display of compunction:
"I remember it perfectly now. It is
not a letter to be proud of. I hope—”,
‘‘Pray finish, Mr. Brotherson.”
"That you are not seeking to establish
a connection between this letter and her
violent death?”
"Letters of this sort are often very
mischievous, Mr. Brotherson. The harsh
ness with which this is written might
easily arouse emotions of a most un
happy nature in the breast of a woman
as sensitive as Miss Chailoner.”
"Pardon me. Dr. Heath; I can not flat
ter myself so far. You overrate my in
fluence with the lady you name.”
“You believe, then, that she was sin
cere In her rejection of your addresses?”
A start, too slight to be noted by any
one but the watchful Sweetwater, showed
that this question had gone home. But
the self-poise and mentral control of this
man were perfect, and in an instant he
was facing the coroner again, with a
dignity which gave no clew to the dis
turbance into which his thought had just
been thrown. Nor was this disturbance
apparent in his tones when he made his
reply; ,
“I have never allowed myself to think
otherwise. I have seen no reason why I
shotlid. The suggestion -you would convey
by such a question is hardly welcome,
now. I pray you to be careful in your
judgment of such a woman's impulses.
They often spring from sources not to
be sounded even by her dearest friends."
lust; but how cold! Dr. Heath, eye
ing him with admiration rather than
sympathy, hesitated how to proceed: while
Sweetwater, peering up from his papers,
sought in vain for some evidence of the
bereaved lover in the impressive but
wholly dispassionate figure of him who
had just spoken. Had pride got the bet
ter of his heart? Or had that organ al
ways been subordinate to the will in
this man of instincts so varying that at
one time he impresed you simply as a
typical gentleman of leisure, at another
as no more than a fiery agitator with
powers absorbed by, if not limited to the
'■ause he advocated; and again—and this
seemed the most contradictory of all —
just the ardent inventor, living in a tene
ment, with Science for his goddess and
work always under his hand? As the
young detective weighed these possibili
ties and marveled over the contradictions
they offered, he forgot the papers now ly
ing quit under his hand. He was too
interested to remember his own part—
something which could not often be said
of Sweetwater.
Meantime, the coroner had collected
bis thoughts. With an apology for the
extremely personal nature of his inquiry,
ie asked Mr. Brotherson if he would ob
giving him some further details
s acquaintanceship with Miss Chal-
n "r: where he first met tier and under
circumstances their friendship had
developed.
at all,’' was the ready reply. “I
1 '■« i "tiling to conceal in the matter. I
wi'-h that her Lather was present
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that he might listen to the recital of my
acquaintanceship with his daughter. He
might possibly understand her better and
regard with more leniency the presump
tion into which I was led by my ig
norance of the pride inherent in great
families.”
“Your wish can Very easily be grati
fied. returned the official, pressing an
electric button on his desk. "Mr. Chai
loner is in the adjoining room." Then,
as the door communicating with the room
he had mentioned swung ajar and stood
so, Dr. Heath added, without apparent
consejousnes of the dramatic character of
this episode, "You will not need to raise
your voice beyond its natural pitch. He
can hear perfectly from where he sits.’
"Thank you. I am glad to speak in
his presence,” came tn undisturbed self
possession from this not easily surprised
witness. "I shall relate the facts exactly
as they occurred, adding nothing and con
cealing nothing. If I mistook my posi
tion, or Miss Chailoner’s position, it is
not for me to apologize. I never hid my
business from her, nor the moderate ex
tent of my fortune. If she knew me at
all, she knew me for what I am; a man
of the people who glories in work and
who has risen by it to a position some
what unique in this city. I feel no lack
of equality even with such a woman as
Miss Chailoner.”
A most unnecessary preamble, no doubt,
and of doubtful efficacy in smoothing his
way to a correct understanding with the
deeply bereaved father. But he looked
so handsome as he thus asserted him
self and made so much of his inches and
the noble noise of his head—though cold
of eye ami always cold of manner—that
those who saw, as well as heard him, for
gave this display of egotism in consid
eration of its honesty and the dignity it
■ imparted to his person.
■'l first met Miss Challoner in the Berk
shires. he began, after a moment of
’ quiet listening for any possible sound
1 from the other room. “I had been on the
tramp, and had stopped at one of the
! great hotels for a seven days' rest. I
will acknowledge that 1 chose this spot
at the instigation of a relative who knew
1 my tastes and how perfectly they might
be gratified there. That I should mingle
with the guests may not have been in his
thought, any more thgn it was in mine at
the beginning of my stay. The panorama
of beauty spread out before me on every
side was sufficient in itself for my enjoy
-1 ment, and might have continued so to the
end if my attention had not been very
forcibly drawn on one memorable morn
ing to a young lady—Miss Challoner— by
the very earnest look she gave me as I
was crossing the office from one veranda
to another. I must insist on this look,
eVen if it shock the delicacy of my lis
teners. for without the interest it awak
, ened in me, I might not have noticed
l the blush with which she turned aside to
. join her friends on the veranda. It was
. an overwhelming blush which could not
have sprung from any slight embarrass
ment, and, though I hate the preten
> sions of those egotists who see in a
i woman’s smile more than it by right con
vels, I could not help being moved by this
; display of feeling in one so gifted with
[ eevry grace and attribute of the perfect
• woman. With less caution than I usually
display, I approached the desk where she
■ I had been standing, anj, meeting the eyes
of the clerk, asked the young lady’s
, name. He gave it, and i waited for me
to express the surprise he expected it to
evoke. But I felt none and showed none.
l Other feelings seized me. I had heard
, of this gracious woman from many
sources, in my life among the suffering
’ masses of New York, and now that I had
seen her and found her to be not only my
’ ideal of personal loveliness but seemingly
approachable and not uninterested in my
self, I allowed my fancy to soar and my
heart to become touched. A fact which
i the clerk now confided to me naturally
t deepened the impression. Miss Challoner
h4d seen my name in the guest-book and
1 asked to have me pointed out to her.
Perhaps she had heard my name spoken
i in the same quarter where I had heard
. hers. We have never exchanged confi
. donees on the subject, and I can not say.
I can only give you my reason for the
interest I felt in Miss Challoner and why
I forgot, in the glamour of this episode.
1 the aims and purposes of a not unambi
„ tious life and the distance which the
world and the so-called aristocratic class
put between a woman of her wealth arfd
• standing and a simple worker like myself.
"1 must bq pardoned. She had smiled
upon me once, .and she smiled again.
1 Days before we were formally presented,
T caught her softened look turned my
1 way. as we passed each other in hall or
corridor. We were friends, or so it ap
peared to me, before ever a word passed
1 between us, and when fortune favored us
s and we were duly introduced, our minds
met in a strange sympathy which made
’ this one interview a memorable one to
me. Unhappily, as 1 then considered it.
’ this was my last day at the hotel, and
• our conversation, interrupted frequently
-by passing acquaintances, was never re
i smned. I exchanged a few words with
1 her byway of good-by but nothing more.
I came to New York, and she remained
i in Lenox. A month after and she too
[ came to New York."
To Be Continued in Next Issue.
Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites
How to Have and Keep Pretty Eyes
By MARTHA WELLINGTON.
IF the new baby has nice eyes, the
family predict that it will be a
beauty, and a good pair of eyes is
the only claim that many famous wom
en- have to real pulchritude.
With our subways, our electric light,
our constant use of the eyes in reading
magazines and papers everywhere and
at all times, I often wonder whether our
great-grandchildren won’t be born with
spectacles, and I rather think they will
unless we learn how to avoid eye strain.
When you think of what a tremendous
amount of work is required of the
eyes, and how wonderfully they re
spond, you feel that they are really de
serving of better treatment than that
which they get.
I am sure that the vast amount of
electric light which we use is to some
extent responsible for the gaunt and
hollow eyes which even the younger so.
clety women can not escape after a
couple Os seasons, for electric light is
not only much harder on the eyes, but
it i§ much more unbecoming than the
soft glow of the lamps or candles of
our forefathers.
On the other hand, of course, if it is
properly focused, it saves the sight,
for the strain of seeing an object in a
poor light is tremendous, and is one of
the reasons why so many people have
to wear glasses at a very early age.
fhildren begin at school to read and
study by a poor light, for not all of the
schools have adequate lighting as yet,
but parents are even more at fault, for I
the child does its home work as best
it can, and by any light tiiat will serve,
so that it gets the idea very early in
life that the eye will stand for any
kind of treatment.
A Test.
If you want to know what a strain
electric light is on the eyes, stand be
hind the footlights in the spotlight.
That is the place which so many stage
aspirants hope to attain, and most of
them would be willing to sacrifice their
good sight to get there.
I believe in taking care of my eyes,
and if the time ever comes when the
spotlight glows for me alone 1 shall be
fible to face it With strong eyes at
least.
I have made up a lot of rules for my
self, and I try to follow them as well
as I can. In the first place, I never
read in a rocking chair; the movement
of the rocker requires a constant re
adjustment of the sight, and it is a
strain on the eyes.
I never read in bed, either, even if
the light falls straight on the book and
not in my eyes, because this is one of
the surest ways of straining the sight.
I rest my eyes when traveling, and
even in the cars 1 avoid reading if pos
sible.
Os course, when one is up late at
night the eyes ihvariably show it, and
I try and relieve them by bathing them
with a little salt and water. I always
have an eye-cup. which must be washed
out thoroughly before it is used, as it
should be absolutely clean. Into this
cup I pour the salt, water, which should
be about as silty as tears, or tlie ocean.
I hold the cup firmly to my eye so the
water car. not escape, put my head back
and open my eyes. This is not only i
very refreshing, but it cleans the eyes
out, removes every particle of dust
that may have gotten in them and is
ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN" « By Beatrice Fairfax |
ASK HIM TO CALL.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am eighteen, and very milch in
love with a young man one year
my senior. I have known him for
eight months, bbl in'that time I
have only spoken to him about a
dozen times, and only on business
matters. L. C.
"It is your privilege to ask him to
call, and I w»uld advise you to con
sider him more carefully before you let
your heart get away from you.
A man may be an angel in an ac
quaintance that consists of half a
dozen business talks, whose angelic
characteristics would not survive a
closer relationship; and I beg of you.
don’t let him know that you entertain
more than a -passing interest.
THEN SEE NO MORE OF HIM.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am a stenographer of seven
teen, and have known for the last
fourteen months a young salesman
two years my senior, and ioVe him
very dearly. He in turn is always
nice to me when alone, but when in
company he acts, toward me as if
he does not care for me in the
least, and flirts with other girls and
always tries to make me jealous,
because he knows well enough that
I care for him. Sometimes I just
think I hate him for that reason,
and then again he talks to me in a
nice way, and we make up. This
has been-going on for quite a long
time, and I am getting sick at
heart. The more I see of him the
more 1 care for him, kithough I
know- he is mean and is not worth
my love. 8. B.
You are making a serious blunder in
letting your heart run off with your
better judgment.
Don’t see him any more. You will be
surprised how quickly you will forget
him. And your peace of mind will more
than compensate you for the few heart
•pangs it will cost to give him up.
HE SHOULDN'T, BUT HE DOES.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am engaged to a young man.
I am sorry now. He really isn't a
man. This man has no more con
ception of the cost of living than a
child. Ho had not thought of the
future at all-only love. He is only
making a small salary and saves
Zry/all « -; *’tWMhL.
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iPr ° \ y/Wlfe-v W ’ SMrZ
Lr f S I / ■Ktetoss.’' > ".aW- '
MISS MARTHA WELLINGTON.
(One of the Ziegfeld's beauties in "The Winsome Widow" Company.)
one, of the best ways to keep the eyes
bright and clear.
Sometimes when I asu very tired and
my eye- show ft, as they always do at
once. 1 get a basin of ice water with a
little bit of perfume added to it. Then
I take a small bit of the ice. wrap it in
a piece of soft linen and rub the skin
under the eye and just over it with the
ice. You have to rub very quickly, and
don't leave the ice on too long in any
one place. It is likely to be quite sting
ing. After- you have done this for a lit
tle while, treating both eyes, mb on a
little cream, or. better still, buttermilk
if you can get it, and pinch the skin
around the eyes until it becomes quite
red. I think this treatment will take
away those dark circles under the eyes,
and will also relieve puffiness, which is
so Unpleasant and disfiguring.
Relieving- the Strain.
Sohiatimes when the eyes are very
tired you can make them feel better by
pinching the muscles along the eye
brow; this seems to relieve the strain
for some reason or other, and especially
if you can get some one els to do it, is
quite an excellent thing.
I never wear veils with great big dots
or figures which interfere with tin
sight, because I think they are lespim- !
slble for much of tlie eye troubles of
iv omen. |
very little (two or three hundred a
year). Now that we are engaged
lie is very small about tilings. He
has always been more or less
cheap, but f didn't mind, but now it
rubs the wrong way. Should a man
of this type and no higher ambi
tions gain the love of a girl who
lias always been, used to every*
DO YOU KnOVV-
Twelve million gallons of beer are
annually consumed in Italy.
As many as- 442 rocks and shoals
were discovered last year on the high
seas.
A piece of camphor burnt over a
candle will effectually drive away
winged pests.
There are more than ten and a half
million women above the age of 21 in
England and Wales.
The precise weight of an English
ounce was fixed by Henry 111. who de
creed that it should weigh 640 grains of
dry wheat.
A strange custom prevails among the
Indians of Alaska. When a difference
arises between two of them and a
friendly settlement seems impossible,
one them threatens the other with
dishonor. He executes his threat by
tearing up a certain number of his own
blankets. The only way his antagonist
can get even with him is by tearing up
a greater number of his own. The one
who destroys the most blankets is re
garded as having won the fight.
The postoffice department of the
I'nited States is, according to Mr. Has
kin, by far the largest postal institu
tion in the, world. Its 1100,0011 employees
handle more than 15,000,000,000 “pieces
of mail’’ each year, which is one-third
of the aggregate postal business of all
the civilized nations. The American
postoffice handles more than 800,000
letters every hour of the 24 every day
in the year; it issues and redeems daily
more than 250,P00 money orders; It reg
isters daily more than 115,000 letters
and parcels, and it handles thousands
of tons of second and third and fourth
class matter every hour.
When 1 go automoblling or to the
seashote, I wear large colored goggles;
they may be disfiguring, but I'd rathet
be disfigured with them for a few hours
than suffer ftom the effects of wind an I
tlie stronger reflection of sunlight on
the sand. 1 also carry a parasol lined
with green, and try to' keep my com
plexion in such shape that I can stand
tlie green color. That is a great test,
you know, if you look well under a
green parasol, or under a green awning
through which the light is reflected, you
don't have to worry about your skin,
for few people come out of this trying
ordeal without appearing to be frights
of the first water.
And, speaking of green, don’t let any
( ne ever persuade you to wear anything
of that shade, when you are going on an
ocean trip. I think people who are sea
sick ought to dress in pink; that is real
ly the only becoming color for that
woe-begone condition.
But, of course, if you traveled dressed
in pink, people would think you were
crazy, whereas you would only be try
ing to spare your fellow creatures the
painful sight cf the seasick pers )n
dressed in i garment of the same color.
For tiiat leason, 1 don’t like green
veils at tlie seashore, though 1 know
itiiey are the be-t f<u the eyes; gray and
brown are almost equally good, and
I much more effective.
thing of a refined nature with ex
travagant taste?
DISA PP< HNTED.
A man of the nature you describe
should not ask any woman to marry
him. But men like him marry every
day.
Witli the opinion you entertain of
him, you are doing both him and your
self an injustice by marrying him. If
you marry him, disliking him in the
way you do, you can not claim to be
any better than he is.
A TOPICAL FABLE.
The f’hlnese empire, now In a state
of chaos, is. according to Mr. lan <'.
Hannah, little more than a gigantic
bit of bluff. It looks very big and
terrible, but in reality it is all outward
show, and the great empire is at the
mercy of its first determined oppo
nent. In his book on “Eastern Asia,”
Mr. Hannah compares it to the donkey
in the ancient fable.
A monkey, the fable runs, was cap
tured by a tiger.
“Oh, spare me!” cried the monkey.
“I am thin and my flesh does not
■ taste good. Bftt 1 know where there
is a tine, fat donkey.”
The tiger consented to spare the
monkey’s life on condition that he lead
■ him to where the donkey was tied.
When the donkey saw them coming
, he was terribly frightened, but he
tried to appear cairn and bawled in a
masterful tone:
“Monkey, you used to bring me two
tigers. Why only one today?”
• • The tiger did a record hustle back
to the jungle.
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Make Rain Your Choice
Ey Beatrice Fairfax
"It ain't no use to grumble and com
plain ;
It’s just as cheap and easy to re
joice;
When God sorts out the weather and
sends rain,
Why, rain's my choice."
—James Whitcomb Kiley.
I F there is any one quality thal will
help girls more than any other in
traveling the long road that
stretches before them, it is philosophy.
And by that I mean an effort to do
one's best, and, when that best fails, to
recognize the failure as the very best
thing that could have happened.
I want them to know that everything
is for the best. I .want them, when
they desire sunshine, to know that rain
was more needed or it wouldn’t have
rained.
I want them to realize, when all theii
little plans go awry, it means their
plans were not for the best.
I - want them to feel, when today's
hopes arc shattered, that it is better it
happened today than if it happened to
morrow.
I want them to know that it means
a. valuable experience, that will go far
toward making tomorrow’s efforts suc
cessful.
When the young women who read
this were little girls they sobbed wildly
over a broken doll. A few years later
they shed tears because it rained on a
nicnlc. The tears only made the de
pression and saturation worse, and
’idn’t scatter a cloud, but they shed
I'.em, nevertheless.
If they have not learned that it is as
futile to complain of the more serious
troubles of later years, they have spent
all their time with their eyes off the
book.
If they were still in school and had
been as slow in learning how to do a
sum, they would be sent to the foot of
the class in disgrace.
Pride is what keeps many a pupil at
the head of her class.
The same kind of pride should be ap
plied to learning the lessons of later
years.
‘‘l have learned.” a girl should be
able to say, "that complaining does no
good whatever, and, therefore, I never
complain."
Complaints of circumstances, envi
ronments, unkind friends and cooled
off lovers never accomplish any
changes.
The thing to do is to go right ahead,
doing what one knows is right, and
then let it rain or shine. What mat
ters'? If sunshine, all the better. If
rain, “then rain’s my choice,” and the
spirit of meeting it bravely gets one
through It quicker and with less dam
age.
For there is damage, just as material
and lasting as if one left a fine garment
out In tlie rain.,
The damage in complaining (tn walk
ing through the rain with a grumble)
is that it grows more and more difficult
to laugh.
The corners of the mouth droop as if
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one were always on the point of taking
a bitter pill.
The' spirits are affected and the
health suffers, and when the health suf
fers there is a lack of luster in the eyes
an<l the checks grow pale, and I have
known girls to complain so much that
this pallor became a saffron hue.
Every one shuns girls like these, for
through so much complaining they not
only forget how to laugh, but they
check the laughter in others.
And finally they become friendless.
And there never was a worse fate than
to become friendless.
And all of this tragedy originated in
a failure to learn the greatest lesson to
be learned In life; and that lesson, my
dears, is just this:
THE FUTILITY OF THE WHINE.
DOING HER BEST.
Ida —But maybe he was bashful. You
should have thrown out some hint tha;
a kiss would not be objectionable.
May —I did everything possible.' I
told him I had such a sore throit tiiat
I couldn’t scream, no matter what hap
pened.
BALD FACTS.
“Whom did she marry?”
“My impression is that it was a coat
of-arms and a bad case of gout.”
40 h a Woman’s
Gtonous Prime
When a woman realizes that her
youth is slipping by! Almost 40!
She' looks back and sees that first
white hair over her ear. She jerked it
out. and laughed! Then she remem
bers combing her hair each morning
and carefully looking and picking out
two or three glistening white threads.
And the, next year! The white hairs
pulled out one day were replaced by
twice as many the next. And she drift
ed on.
Are you Just drifting toward gray
haired old age at 40, the age that
should be the glorious prime of a wo
man's life?
We wish you would get our booklet
"•■’harm" and read it. (At any of our
stores, or sent by mail upon request.)
It explains why you can safely use Rob
innairc's Hair Dye. It is not an ordi
nary vulgar bleach or artificial color
ing. We should have named it a Re
storative. because it is a pure, scientific
compound that simply restores the hair
to its own original color and beautiful,
healthy Condition. If you have bift a few
white hairs, don’t pull diem out. Re
store them to their original vigorous
color, and at the same time put your
hair in a healthy condition and stop its
fading. The hair responds quickly to
the proper care and treatment, and tlie
woman who wants to keep its beauti
ful color and tine texture can do so.
Roblnnaire Hair Dye is made in our
own laboratory, and we personally
guarantee it td be absolutely pure and
harmless. Non-stlcky, and does not
stain skin or scalp. Use it immediate
ly if your hair is lading and losing vi
tality. Trial size, 25c; postpaid. 30c;
regular large size, 75c, postpaid, 90c.
Prepared for light, medium and dark
bftwn and black hair. For sale by all
Jacobs' Pharmacy Stores and druggists
generally.
(Advertisement.)
TETTERINE CURES ECZEMA
HayneFvttte. Ala.. April 26. 190?.
J. T. Shuptrtne. Savannah. <Ja.
bear Sir: Please send me another Imx of your Tet
torinc. I got a box abnnt three week* ago for my wife’ 9
arm She hm eczema from wrtat t«- elbow and that box
I got has nearly cured It, and she think* one box more
will cure lier arm well. I have tried everything I could
get hold of and nothing did any good.
Yours truly. T. RY.kP S
50«* all dniggtata. <»r i/y mail from manufacturer. The
Shuptllne Company. Savannah, <la.