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JTHE GFORGIANS MAGAZINE, PAGE— L T T e A . e R R R “The Long Way ’Round, and the Short’” st comoo “‘"i“ff',;":;“ifi,w,éfmwfi,‘,\,FEEET,i\,,KW.LEXi 7 x-fl - : .‘Ah,‘.‘ - 6 : ~ 5 P A & "o} b R i l,yw';,m,fl . & t’ i Y " " g N R‘ » d‘) UR o 0L ‘\‘Q"\\ nly .0\ }y/-’ ) (M= “" ] "I_:‘:lr ' f! PHE, W o ?f’i\ BN T //m\\ ' ';:lr 4[ I A ‘ LONG 4-,(» 4 "o\ AN 60 NG ,;/—‘r_—;l -". ,%"\‘ 3el ::/bl e’ {“};’:fi:{;’“‘ TR ig P #i 2 |27 AR W 2 : 34~9§f‘ it oy OUND /-»*w ; “‘ A:;:" 4 . /o’( ;|. /9 .N"i[:”,;- &eR o® l:‘agf 4(‘ ‘/{‘ . 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( k e ; i g7B T 2 z ‘V;' A & t"‘ ) s ,/,f( R%9 v?\ It o A= B AR N == =y 3.0 z N 2 |\>~ I&£ i {= ,"M / ,A‘:‘ \..\ ¥ ,471' -l —IR 4 = 8 AR l<‘ J’»/ (&Y i 4{%‘7.,.—(% TR N N f‘lj 7/“"\\“ .7 3 % -'_,.(.7”7 7\ 3 A,y}:\;;;:/.r : e _})l > . ' 32 SNV Al .\3\ ¥ ("\l:fl{\i’,‘b:f 0= »"7,/"" -y AST) o NG KA & 9 AL D LB S BN s 0 2T, ‘\"t/'_._:_.;fl <Q)3S W > e //‘l‘ B = - 150 &7 2 # /A= 2 N\ F9&~ 7y & NEERy. |, °AO (882 & 910 ¥ e AN has two ways of getting to a wedding—the long and the short of D it; one's the ‘“‘long way ‘round,” and it takes him years—on his stubby legs—to get there. His Man and his Girl waded the long grass together when he wore a gingham shirt and a pair of home made breeches held by a single 'spender, and she nad dimples in her knees and wore a hat with a loose loop of straw a-floppin’ up and down and little aprons that tied in a sagging bow behind. They played to geiher—and the years wore by—and they worked together—and birth o Little Bobbie’'s Pa @ 4'S Unkel Jabez calm to see us last P nite, he caim all the way from oaver in Connetickut, he is a old, skinny Yankee & his face looked jest like a thunder cloud the first part of the eevning. Pa didn't notis it at first, beekaus it was Pa's birthday & he had been cele brating with sum of his friends. Frendship is a grate thing, Unkel Ja bez. sed Pa. Wine, song and frendship three of the greatest gifts to mortal man. Am | not rite? I doant agree with you, sed Unkel Ja bez. Wine is a mocker, frends will dee sert you, & song is for the lite-hedded What rite have peepul got to sing wen they cud be reeding the Scripter? he sed. 1 never heer anybody singing, he sed to Pa, without reelin§ like braking sumthing on his hed. &1 am thankful that wine nevver passed my lips. I am sorry, sed Pa, keekaus 1 was going to offer you sum on this happy oc- What to Use and Avoid on Faces That Perspire Skin, to be healthy, must breathe. It also must ?erspire—-mufl expel, through the pores, its share of the body's waste material. Creams and powders clog the pores, interfering both with elimination and breathing, especially during the heated period. If more women ungder stood this, there would be fewer self ruined complexions. If they would use ordinary mercolized wax instead of cos metics, they would have natural, healthy complexions. This remarkabie substanee actually absorbs a bad skin, also unclogging the pores. Result: The fresher, vounger under-skin is per mitted to breathe and to show itself. An exquisite new complexion gradually reeps out, one free from any appear arce of artificiality. Get an ounce of mercolized wax at your druggist's and try it. Apply nightly like cold cream, for 2 week or so, washing it off morn- To eradicate wrinkles, here's a mar velously effective treatment which also acts naturally and harmlessly. Dissolve 1 ocunce powdered saxolite in IT pt. witch haze]l and use as a wash lotion.— ADVERTISEMENT. | g - ~ Great Joys Are Not Rented Out on Long Leases—So Make the Most of a Short Tenancy By WILLIAM F. KIRK. cashun My wife & child do not drink it, & 1 hate to drink alone. You will have to drink alone so far as 1 am concerned, sed Unkel Jabez. 1 have too much common sense to dull my brane with wine. Well, sed Pa, then I will bring you a nice soft drink, & see how you like it, sed Pa. ‘This is a new temperans drink, it ils called velvet, 1 suppose beeckaus it fs so smooth. 1 shall drink a lettel wine, sed Pa, & you can drink this harm-less velvet. Then Pa gave his unkel a grate big glass of it. Wen Jabez drank it he smacked his lips. . T'll bet that tastes like moar, sed Pa Then he helped his unkel to another glass. ' That is the stuff to drink, he sed to Pa. 1 hate to see you drinking wine As 1 sed bheefoar, wine is a mocker, Why doant you content yourself with slipping a harmless. cooling drink like ‘this. 1t reeminds me of the nectar the old Greek gods must have drunk, he sed It maiks me see crimson sunsets & splashing fountains, he sed to Pa. Gim me another dipper full, he sed. So Pa filled the big glass & his unkel went rite to it. That is simply grand, he sed. It is such a innocent drink, it 'maiks me feel like a child aggenn. How deer to my hart are the seens of my childhood, he sed, wen fond recollekshun pree-sents them to view. Jabez was ‘singing the words 1 thought you dident beeleeve in sing lnf. sed Pa luve to sing the old songs, sed Un ’kel Jabez O the moth & the flame Played a game one day The game of a woman's heart, & the moth never knew as she flew so close | That the lite was the lite of shaim, | So she fluttered away, gimme an other drink of velvet, sed Unkel Jabez & Pa filled his glass agen Then Unkel Jabgz sang M'l‘d swamps & alligators roamed my weary way, It was thare that 1 met the creole gurl On the lake of Ppnchy-trane Then Unkel Jabez went to set down & neerly sat down on the floor Gimme more soft velvet, se sed to Pa No, sed Pa, that was shampane & stout you was drinking. It is intox-icating & then Unkel Jabez sed I duant care & went to sleep. days piled up—and they dreamed together—and all 'a sudden these two who had tramped the same trail for Youth’s whole lifetime clasped their hands tighter and drifted into sweethearting. And the wedding— the end of a long chumship that reither could remember the begin ning of, with candles and the deep boom of the organ and the golden throated peal of bells—put the loop of gole about two youngsters whom vears had already welded into one. AND THE OTHER-—is a short cut to the same thing, and though I ought to pull a long face and say this never works out right—l don’t dast—becanse when T count up all I know of the two ways of Dan's i Snap Shots BY LILIAN LAUFERTY. MAIDEN MEDITATIONS. 1t rains on just and unjust alike, unless they know enough to come in out of it The man who can make nothing clse can be depended upon to make a fool of himself. And when he does it he gets on the principle that what ever is worth doing is worth doing well “'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all”—but it costs more. Congratulate a bride and groom a vear after the ceremony unless their faces show that they will soon be congratulating themselves on an un linking ceremony. All Made Clear. Wonderful! That was the verdict of the Chinese mandarin’'s eight little wives on their English lady guest. Forgetting manners in their curfosity, they examined her halr, her teeth, her clothing; but it was her feet that par ticularly attracted these dainty little women of the stunted feet. “Why, you can run and walk the same as a man!"' exclaimed one as she tim idly touched the lady's boot “*Of course!" answered the guest, amused “And can you swim and ride and hunt as well as a man, too?’ inquired an other. “IVhy, ves."” “You must be as strong as a man?’ suggested a bright-eyed little wife with awe. “1 am,” answered the guest. ““And you would not allow your hus band to beat you?" “Certainly I would not!" The eight little ladies of China looked at each other with meaning glances, and with longing eves at their guest. ° *Ah!" said the eldest. “*Now we know why the white man never has more than lonv wife. He is afraid!"’ | Conceit. “1 wouldn't marry the best man on carth.” ""\\’ell, 1 haven’'t proposed yet, have 12 ® Household Suggestions @ L e e Dissolve a lump of soda in a little hot water and add to it the blue water. This prevents the blue from settling in the clothes, and makes them beautifully white. To remove rings:-from a finget swollen by their tightness, dip the finger in ice-cold soapsuds. To drive away crickets put ordi nary snuff into the chinks of a fire place. To prevent milk from turning sour drop into it a piece of loaf sugar. A good hint for those who do their own paperhanging is to apply the paste to the wall instead of to the paper. Amateurs will find it much easier to Up-to-Date Jokes A lawyer was arguing a case before a certain judge between whom and him self there was no love lost. The judge listened for a while with ill-concealed impatience, and then burst out with: “Tut, tut, Mr. Walker, you have your points of law all upside down!" “l don't doubt that they seem so te your honor,” replied Mr. Walker, ‘‘but vou'll think differently when your honor {s reversed.” - - - She looked at him doubtfully after the proposal. “The man I marry.’” she said, “must be both brave and brainy.” “Well,”” he declared. I think 1 can lay just claim to being both.” “T admit you are brave,’’ she replied, “for you saved my life when our boat upset the other day: but that wasn’t brainy, was it?" “It certainly was,’”” he retorted. *1 upset the boat on purpose.” ® romance-building I find just as many “they lived happy ever afters” jotted to the credit of ome as the other. Dan doesn’t waste on the short cut. A Man and a Maid may meet on the tip-top of a wave of the Sea-of-Life, swimming hard and fancy-free, strangers utterly, he never dreaming that her sweet face, finished and grown, was atop of the earth; she never getting in the span of her youtt even a rumor that his clean face, with steady eyes and big mouth, was bobbing round somewhere in the waste of water. Face to face on the shouldering wave ONE DAY—and the NEXT they’re married. The Long Way 'Round And The Short Cut! --\X7IT. RRINKLETY. match the pattern, and the paper is less liable to tear by following this method, besides saving time and trouble. A simple method of making iron work proof against rust is to heat it until it is almost red-hot, and then brush it over with linseed oil This makes a varnish which, unlike ordi nary paint or enamel, does not chip off. When frying steak do not cook one side first, then turn over and fry the other. Just harden for a second or two on one side, and then turn over and start frying the other, and you will find your steak juizy. Vegetable and fruit stains on the fingers can be removed by dipping the fingers in very strong tea for a few minutes and then washing them in clear, warm water. e . s e e e =et . W A W 4 i 1 "SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. 2 NN L 4 /=~ 27 RN ;; g ”'”‘;J.‘a‘!’.fi‘» A) — ""/ A .)"u./)' tr{ f"‘%’;— 7 SR RTS e e e & R \\""" o R S Re L ) U 04 1A s N e e Aap ISN 2g 777 GOy R TN RVR N T T R R A «%r' e 7—. ll i A 1 BR Bl BAeeITRR R R R ST R 2% 4 v . S BN [y N 3 b Oy i e ;:"' , io s k‘ ;l k[ 301 ifas¥eine, WA P Anik i IH' i,E)UE E A ) | % OV i " 4 BSI b i / 5 Lo 4l RSTSoveAp < 4 BRUAL A AR S LPARAS L AN T DY Rgl LR e Syt TIR FY PLEL e B PLIAC T DSRC Jepaigiaaa e o E 4 R SR R AR AT et gvl A% T 55, Mfifi&;k&%qm f T, R e AR R 4 £ TN T o 3 Rl ; e oy Bt o 20 S LIRS 1374 PEACHTREE ROAD - - - - ATLANTA THE SOUTH'S MOST BEAUTIFUL SCHOOL DISTINCTIVE FEATURES. 1. Boarding Department limited. $lOO.OOO in Grounds and Buildings 2. New School Building, modern in equipment, with provision for open air classrooms 3. Courses in Domestic Science and Physical Training a part of regular cur riculum. 4. Départments: Kindergarten, Primary, Academic, College-Preparatory, Music, Art, Expression Thirty-seventh Session begins SEPTEMBER 10, 1814 Write for illustrated catalogue “'B."” L. D. and EMMA B. SCOTT, Princlpals. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. { { . [:(]x & College | .’B‘”‘\s‘ vl 5 ".m& B *; o o TR Sl gk e o BRSO o LS A B M g KAt Sl 13 11 1 S 3 “ R 111 and e N y .-‘:‘.‘,\‘ 7 \3 B '%""‘3"] ‘Hr‘_;". .’.', 2 ‘ .‘ _';v.*fl“ : R ‘,. .;_l:.v. ‘R &. i Lk RS\l iAT i A 2 SR Ei‘.’-‘_’-*‘ffr poeeirne Coiie | Lll P Oet aadt % D et e Dot o | A Stanidard College for Women | Ideally located; most modern Con servatory: best equipment; splendid j yealth recora; most beautiful campus Offers full courses in Liberal Arts and | Sciences, Expression, Painting, Do | mestic Science and Music l ("ox College has seventy-two years of illustrious histor Write to-day | for catalog and book of views. Ad oy COX COLLEGE,CoIIege Park, Ga. | SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. _ “THE IBLAND OF DR. MOREAU” By H. G. WELLS. (Copyright, 1506, by Stone & Kimball.) The Reversion of the Beast Folk. N this way I became one among the I Beast People in the island cf Doctor Moreau. When T awoke, it was dark about me. My arm ached in its bandages. I sat up, wondering at first where I might be. 1 heard coarse voices talking outside. Then I saw that my barricade had gone and that the opening of the hut stood clear. My revolver was still in my hand. | heard something breathing, saw something crouched together close beside me. I heid my breath, trying to see what it was., It began to move slowly, interminably. Then some taing soft and warin and moist passed across my hand. All my muscles con tracted. [ snatched my hand away. A cry of alarm began and was stifled in my throat. Then | just realized what had happened sufficiently to stay my fingers on the revolver. “Who is that?” I said, in a hoarse whisper, the revolver still pointed. *“l—Master."” “Who are you?” “They say there is no Master now. But I know, I know. [ carried ihe bodies into the sea, O Walker in the Sea! the bodies of those you slew. 1 am your slave, Master.” “*Are you the one I met on the beach?” 1 asked. “The same, Master.” The Thing was evidently faithful enough, for it might have fallen upon me as I slept. *lt is well,” I said, ex tending my hand for another licking Kiss. I bhegan to realize what its presence meant, and the tide of my courage flowed. “Where are the others?” 1 asked. “They are mad; they are fools,” said the Dog-man. “Even now they talk together beyond there. They say, ‘The Master is dead. The Other with the Whip is dead. That Other wiho walked in the Sea is as we are. We have no Master, no Whips, no House of Pain, any more. There is an end. We love the Law, and will keep ii; but there is no Pain, no Master, no Whips forever again.’ So they say. But 1 know, Master; I know.” 1 felt in the darkness and patted the Dog-man’s head. "It is well,” | said again. “Presently you will slay them all,” said the Dog-man. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES - College - FOR YOUNG WOMEN This is the oldest chartered college for young women in America. It i{s as modern in purpose and well equipped in point of comforts as it is old in years. Situated in the delightful, healthful hills of Central Georgia, where outdoor récre ation can be enjoyed the year around. Schools in Literature, Lan guages, Sclence, Art and Mu gic under direction of capabls masters, Home influences, athletic and soclal features that de velop the broad view of life under safe conditions. Terms remarkabiy low. Catalog and information upon request. C. R. JENKINS, President, Macon, Ga. R S ———— TTTRT 5 AR T AAR T SRS 3T. TH D ¥ | A I T S A_ Lt > g J s vile of r~ 54 X 4 BRENAU GRstrviion. Uoh ISR P CONSERVATOR )8 : . . A R " Four Year A.B. course of standard grade. Special courses FSK S SR )\ in Music, Art, Expression and Domestic Science. Admis- WoF AV O] sion upon certificate Preparatory courses for students as 3 ady =% WWRBR oung as 14 years. Fall term begins September 15 A 1 A g )!NN_Q;., y Location is famed as health resort, high altitude, bracing SR e .hf“g’% & but mild climate. % g WS NOSREA R Outdoor sports and recreationsand 'mnni;lnteresfing social B fl”‘?‘f 4 cvents. Fightnationalaororities withihigh ideals. Patron " ‘al_L,u.fi vimep o i age from 30 stares. Expense about $350.00 per year. Com- EESIL S i el plete storyin catalog and several bulletins free upon request. ¥ e e AT TTN T Address : [ ESes ! BRENAU, Box 16 Cainesville, Ga. 1 ol e N TR The Geatest School in the South Kol =B 4 et distin oy, AR AP IS ' . g\]xislh ed % bS\ i BOw B school. fi’\ 'g' Stand %‘ B ards and et R BARNESVILLE, GA. [Titions 2 ::1 Best social and moral tone. i I Solid and therough work. : " ¥ More than a hundred sons of Gordon alumni TP S cnrolled this year. T ; University and college professors testify that 3 "‘:'v:f»'v their best prepared pupils and honor men come T B from Gordon. e Athletic stars in many of the Southern uni o S versities are old Gordon athletes. 3y ‘ K Military department conducted by active offi- B [ cer detailed by U. 8. War Department, whihe B ranks Gordon in Class A. Honor graduates re- L S ceive commissions in U. 8. Army. Four of last L _Jeiefaed scnior class now lieutenants in Philippines, and e S two in the navy. : S Certificates admit to the highest universities - = and colleges. AFs e Health record unequaled and proverbial. A We do not tolerate the idle or vicious. Write today for free catalogue. Fog nded 1852 E. T. HOLMES, Pres., Barnesville, Ga. “Presently,” 1 answered, ‘I will slay them all—after certain days and certain things have come to pass. Every one of them save those you spare, every one of them shall be slain.” “What the Master wishes to kill, the Master kills"” said the Dog-man, with a certain satisfaction in bh!s voice. “And that their sins may grow,” 1 eaid, “let them live in their folly until their time is ripe. Let them not know that I am the Master.” “The Master's will 1s sweet,” sald the Dog-man, with the ready tact of his canine blood. “But one has sinned,” sald I. “Him I will kill, whenever I may meet him. When I say to you, ‘That is he, see that vou fall upon him. And now 1 will go to the men and women who are assembled together.” For a moment the opening of ths hut was blackened by the exit of the Dog-man. Then I followed and stood up, almost in the exact spot where I had been when I had heard Moreau and his staghound pursuing me. But now it was night, and all the mias matic ravine about me was black: and bevond, instead of a green, sunlit slope, 1 saw a red fire, before which hunched, grotesque figures moved to and fro. Farther were the thick trees, a bank of darkness, fringed above with the black lace of the upper branches. The moon was just riding up on the edge of the ravine, and, like a bar across its face, drove the spire of vapor that was forever streaming from the fumaroles of the Island. “Walk by me,” said I, nerving my self; and side by side we walked down the narrow way, taking little heed of the dim Things that peered at us out of the huts. None about the fire attempted to salute me. Most of them disregarded me, ostentationsly. I looked round for the Hyena-swine, but he was rot there. Altogether, perhaps twenty of the Beast Folk squatted, staring into the fire or talking to one an other. “He is dead, he is dead! the Master is dead!” said the voice of the Ape man to the right of mex “The Hous2 of Pain—there is no House of Pain!"” “He is not dead,” said I, in a loud voice. “Even now he watches us!” This startled them. Twenty pairs of eyes regarded me. (To Be Continued To-morrow.) SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES =TT Sk o RAT A [ s - RO R AR e e ‘sa:\.iajri&fiifl’ e e e RN e L e $ Military School The Youngest Military Schpol in the United States. | Yet it will be full grown in| Sep tember. The $lOO,OOO invesited in this institution gives it modern buildings equipped with electric lights, steam heat, shower;s on every floor, swimming pool, \etc. Every modern comfort and the very highest aims to make Iteal men of boys 12 to 21 years of age. Tuition complete $355 except uniforms, which are supplied 'gy. local merchants at low prices. - Located in the healthful Pied mont section, where climatic con ditions are ideal. Thorough in struction, 16 units required for graduation. Athletics encouraged. Write for full particulars. A.S. FORD, President, Salisbury, N. C.