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SPARE THEM
The late Mrs. Schuyler van Rens
selaer of New York once was asked
by a “society girl” whether she
should “go in" for settlement work
among the city poor, which she ad
mitted she disliked. “In heaven’s
name, don't 1" Airs. Van Rensselaer re
plied. “People who live in the tene
ments have enough to bear without
suffering your condescension 1" —Bos-
ton Globe.
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answered Senator Sorghum, “the
folks out home demand charts and
figures. What they want is a dia
gram.’’
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OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION
Send stamp. _
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PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff -Stop* Hair Falling
^9 Impart* Color and
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66c and SI.OO at Druggist*.
gyMwH 1 • m Wks., Patenogna, N Y.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO —‘ideal for use in
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^gWTTTTgnm^v
in ■ H » I Tar
GREEN
NEEDLES
by
Mae Foster Jay
Copyright
by W A. Wilde Co.
WNU Service.
SYNOPSIS
Mary, daughter of a self made mil
lionaire, obsessed with the idea that
her personality is obscured by the fact
that she is the child of the “rich
David Brown," determines to make her
way in life unaided. She has a million
dollars, which she Insists her father
invest in the “wildest dream" imag
inable.
CHAPTER I—Continued
—2—
“Dad 1” There were tears in her
voice. “You started poor! You had
your chance! 1 want mine! Has any
thing in life meant more to you than
working up to success?"
“No." David Brown’s voice was
husky with memories. Working up.
The glorious fight of achievement; of
amassing for his wife, from an in
herited few thousands, the fortune her
share of which his youngest daughter
now insouclantly was tossing to him,
a gold ball and chain; these things
had been his life.
"If it’s the thing you really want.
Mary, I won't bother you even with
my opinion of it. I won’t let your for
tune bother you I'll try to put It
■where it will ao some good. Only,
daughter, since you Insist on going out
to learn the sting of poverty, there
must be no ettremes—no spectacular
heroics. You must remember that I'm
still your father. I refer to emer
gencies of sickness, accidents—any
thing in which your own funds might
not be adequate.”
“Don't, be a sil, darling!" as she
rumpled the heavy shock of hair. “I'm
not disinheriting you, or leaving rea
son behind."
“Behind? You're going to let your
first job take you—-quite away from
home> then?"
“You hadn't thought of that?”
He smiled ruefully. "I suppose I
had jumped to the natural conclusion
that you’d just take some job close
at hand until some nice chap came
along—and then you’d settle down
right near me, like the other girls, and
live happily ever after—”
“Dad! A prince for me?” Mary's
lips twisted. '‘Hasn’t it ever occurred
to you that I'm absolutely shut off
from romance? That any little shm>-
girl has more beaux than I? The ones
I might have had have been fortune
hunters- —and the ones I might have
wanted have run because I m the rich
David Brown’s daughter. They mustn't
fall in love with a rich girl—at least
until their pocketbooks are as fat
as hers. That’s another thing money
can’t buy—romance. Maybe that’ll
come, too, when I'm penniless." And
she finished the subject with a ges
ture.
“I want to go west; before it's all
leveled and terraced and landscape
gardened. I want to have a share in
the development projects of our own
country.”
He slgla<l. “1 don’t blame you.
Well, there Aas a young fellow from
the west In our bank the other day.
He had a mighty interesting proposi
tion. We may loan him money. He's
coming back in a month or so with
more information. I could get you—”
“Oh, nol You mustn't get me a
thing! Don't you see? That would be
pull from the start. I want to land
my own job—as my classmates are
having to do.”
“So be it. Well, I’ll let you know
what I do with your money—”
“Horrors, no! Hold up your right
hand. Now swear you won’t so much
as remind me I ever had it. I want to
forget it. I want to he what I’m going
to seem to be. Penniless.”
He humored her. “I swear.”
"And now I must run. 1 promised
Eve I’d help her entertain the nurses
from the American hospital."
Presently David Brown stepped out
upon the veranda to watch the always
thrilling spectacle of Mary’s depar
ture. Mary drove her own car, a long
low roadster. LiKe a boy, she drove.
She had a boy’s virility. She’d forge
out her success like a boy. She'd sur
mount her obstacles. But—a collie
came to thrust its slender nose into
Brown's hand. “But won’t she be sur
prised when she discovers what her
obstacles are, old man? The precious
infant thinks she can go out and du
plicate her dad’s fight. Well, nobody
spoiled her dad’s adventure by telling
him what lay around the next corner.
We’ll leave the girl to run her own
true line, eh, boy?"
CHAPTER II
Miss Mary Has a Job.
It was a day in early fall when
David Brown returned from the New
York banking house with which he
was identified to his home on the Hud
son, to find the place in a state of
wild confusion.
“What's up, Henry?” he asked.
“Miss Mary has a job, sir.”
As the daughter of her father. Mary
might have stepped from the class-
PEMBROKE JOURNAL
room into a position to which it would
have taken her years to work up:
without any entering wedge, just as
one of the hundreds of Mary Browns
tn the world, it had taken several
months.
Looking quizzically into the'drawing
room where chairs were occupied by
trunk trays and boxes,- David Brown
asked a white-capped maid, “Moving
day, Anna?"
"Miss Mary has £ job,. sir. She's
determined to take only one trunk,
and there were things we had to sort
out of her other twelve."
Brown went on up the stairs.
"Oh, dad! Dad darling!" A starry
eyed vision in pink silk negligee leaped
a rugged range of putts and boots, a
shimmering sea of satin, and landed
with her arms about her father,
whirled him about several times, and
climaxed her released feelings by a
whirlwind tap dance. “Shake a foot,
dad 1 It's to celebrate!”
David Brown watched the slippered
feet for a moment, then matched her
steps, "Just to show you that sixty
years haven't got me down! From
conversation I overheard as I came up
the stairs, you have a job. Where
Is it?”
“It's in California. Paradise Val
ley—"
“Paradise—"
“Good, isn't it, that name?"
“Yes. Yes. But who is the pro
moter. or the development company?
What rating?”
“Goodness, 1 don't know. I’ll have
to take a chance. This is the only job
open In the world."
“What do you know about the
project?"
Mary laughed. “You'd be surprised.
I received a eheap-lookiug little maga
zine in the mails one day a while ago,
and opened It to find myself invited to
invest in a home for my old age in the
most ideal home site in the world—
Paradise Valley. Invited to come and
pioneer de luxe. For scenery, the
magazine assured me, the place has
the Alps backed right off the map. It
aims to attract the moneyed, dad,
since no house can cost less than ten
thousand—or was it one hundred fhou
sand? That idea, anyhow. I figured
it would require considerable develop
ment work to create a place like that
—at least it sounds like a big order—
so I applied as a pioneer of progress,
and this morning had orders to report
for duty."
Mary picked up the momentous doc
ument. Paradise Valley, she read the
heading—and again her father repeat
ed lier words. Mary paused, but he
motioned her to go on. For reasons
of his own he kept silent. If he told
her certain things he might have told
her, what good would it do? No good.
Iler first project would go “Hooey” be
fore she ever set out for it.
"October 20, 1913," Mary read on.
'then, for reasons of her own, she
skipped the rest of the heading—dad
.. ould Just worry the more, the lamb,
and everything would be all right—
and read the body of the letter. It
was brief enough.
“We can put you to work. Report
at once. Salary S9O and Held ex
penses.
“JOHN STARK.
“Engineer in Chief."
“1 can live on that!" Mary hastened
to assure her fatb'r before he had
time to remonstrate.
But lie agreed with her. “Yes. It’s
about one-fourth of what your pin
money allowance has been, but you
can live on It. Well, this sounds like
rather an interesting adventure. Be
sides, 1 know Stark well. He makes
it easier for me to let you go, daugh
ter. He’s—the right sort. One of the
old-timers."
Mary wrecked his collar with a bear
hug. “I knew you’d be for It.”
He glanced about the room. “I’ve no
ticed a few evidences that you were
assuming my consent Well, in the
circumstances, why wouldn't it be a
good idea for the poor working girl to
accept a lift part of the way? I’m
going as far as New Orleans, leaving
at midnight."
•That will be great, dad I”
“Can you be ready?”
“I can be ready in five minutes.”
• ••••* *
The trip to New Orleans In the pri
vate car with its splendid appoint
ments, its valet and maid service, was
without thrill or excitement, being as
familiar as bread and butter. Adven
ture began when she went aboard the
pullman on the westbound train at
New Orleans.
“Surely you’ll at least take a com
partment I” her father had urged.
“Ridiculous! I could live for a week
on the extra fare.”
“I’ll stake you to it as a going-away
present.”
Mary drew herself up primly. “Sir
I can accept no favors from benevo
lent elderly gentleman — however
sweet.”
But when they entered the pullman
to find the seat opposite Mary’s res
ervation occupied by a man's hat and
bag, again David Brown remonstrated.
But Mary was adamant. “This will be
Just fun, dad! I'm out to rub elbows
with the world. How start better than
by treading on the toes of the man in
upper six?”
The porter’s “All aboard!” came
quickly, and Mary stood in the vesti
bule to wave good-by.
Just as if he hadn’t been father and
mother and so close a friend that het
going created an ache deep within
him; just as if he didn’t worry over
her safety, secretly, David Brown
waved back to her. The modern girl
hates scenes, and he knew it. He
could be a good sport in the moder*
way.
TO BE CONTINUED
Most Northerly Postoffice
The most northerly post office os
.his continent is at Barrow, Alaska.
GEORGIA NEWS
Happenings Over'
The State
Three hundred thousand dollars in
customs duty on sugar imports have
been collected at Brunswick so far
this year.
According to information received
in Valdosta, government work on the
airport for that municipality will be
resumed May 1.
The date for the annual convention
of the Georgia Press Association at
Savannah has been advanced from
July 25 to June 20-26.
The new Fort Benning incinerator,
fine of the first projects begun under
the PWA grant, has been finished and
turned over to the fort quartermaster.
J. Sid Tiller, Atlanta, was re-elected
president of the Georgia Federation
of Labor at Rome, at the closing ses
sion of the annual state convention.
, Major Richard B. Trimble, now sta
tioned at Fort Riley, Kans., will be
transferred to the United States cav
alry unit of the University of Georgia.
President Roosevelt recently sent
the senate the names of Roy R. Pow
ell to be postmaster at Arlington, and
Robert E. Walker to be postmaster
at Roberta.
Information has been received at the
infantry school at Fort Benning as
to the reserve officers training corps
camp which is to be held at that post
this summer,
Sara Souther, of Gray, a student in
the University of Georgia School of
Home Economics, has received honor
,able mention in a nation-wide costume |
designing contest.
J. P. Knight, Atlanta, and W. T.
Maddox, Rome, have been selected as
the University of Georgia’s candidales
for the Lewis H. Beck Foundation
scholarship for this year.
The state highway board recently
announced that contracts for approx
imately one million dollars of state
and federal paving and bridge con-
Tracts will be let May 10.
A house bill to authorize a prelim
inary examination of the Ogeechee
river with a view to controlling its
floods has been approved by the com
merce committee of the United States
senate.
Subsistence homestead projects may
be launched in seven different land
:areas in Georgia, it was recently an- I
nounced in Savannah by Philip Welt
■ner, chancellor of the University Sys
tem of Georgia.
Washington, D. C., authorities an- i
nounce that Georgia farmers had been ■
given $8,004,886.87 in rental and ben- |
efit payments up to April 1, 1034, for
reducing their acreage in cotton, to
bacco and wheat.
A replica of the winter council
house of Indians recently uncovered ,
in mound excavations around Macon,
will be placed on display at the Ger- ;
gia booth in the Century of Progress :
Exposition in Chicago.
A plan to effect economics in oper
ation of Bibb county superior court
by using one set of jurors for both
criminal and civil divisions has been
put in effect in Macon without any de
lay in court procedure.
Opposition to a state sales tax was
definitely affirmed by the Georgia
Federation of Labor when that body
met in annual convention recently at
Rome approved a resolution opposing
a sales tax for Georgia.
Announcement has been made in ,
Columbus of the twelfth annual j
spring horse show of the twenty-ninth
’infantry school which will take place !
on May 11-12 in Campbell King I
horseshoe bowl at Fort Benning.
The farm credit administration re
ports that the Columbia S. C„ federal
land bank had made loans totaling
$13,802,965 In Georgia for refinancing
farmers’ indebtedness between last
■June 1 and March 31 of this year.
The annual state convention of the
American Legion, the Forty and Eight,
■the Disabled American. Veterans and
‘the Veterans of Foreign Wars will all
combine in a statewide, meeting to be
.held on June 7,8, 9,’ in Savannah,
designated as Veterans’ Week.
A plan under which ’ selected Geor
gia school teachers edn obtain addi
tional training, attending college while
■still drawing their pay,' lias been made
public in Savannah by Chancellor
Philip Weltner of the Georgia Uni
versity system.
The Georgia Bar Association, at Its .
meeting in May, will be asked to
sponsor legislation creating a judicial [
council of fourteen, comprised of
judges, lawyers and laymen, to direct
judicial practice in the state and pro
vide nominees for vacancies on the
supreme court, the court of appeals
and the superior courts.
The Moraine Box Company, a Mich
igan firm, has purchased a site at
Chatsworth and has begun building
plans. It is said that the payroll and
.other expenditures will amount to at
least a thousand dollars daily and that
forty men will be employed at the
start.
St. Clair Gibbs, Atlanta lawyer, has .
been elected chairman of an organ!- ,
zation of Atlanta property owners
formed to fight condemnation of their
property to make way for the five
million dollar government housing
project for Atlanta.
Sauces Lend Variety and
Flavor to Many Dishes
A discriminating taste in foods
Is a sign of the epicure. In the
United States we are beginning to
lose this nicety of discrimination.
We have become so accustomed to
mixing all sorts of ingredients to
gether in order to get something
new and different, that our appreci
ation of what constitutes congenial
ity of ingredients Is getting dimmed.
There can be Ml-chosen mixtures
which make dishes almost unpalat
able, yet which persons hesitate to
say they don’t like, lest they appear
to be out of tune with modern ideas
of culinary* art. There Is a notice
able presence of finesse in combina
tions of ingredients which distin
guished the dishes of the famous old
time cliefs. A cultivated taste in
foods, one which makes the epicure,
is quite another thing from the un
cultivated appetite which considers
odd mixtures constitute fine menus.
There is no reason why ingredients
which do not form unwholesome
chemical combinations should not be
put together in the cause of variety
in dishes, as far as a digestible diet
is concerned. It is rather the knowl
edge of what form happy combina
tions of ingredients, as well as
wholesome ones, which distinguishes
the fine chef from the mediocre one
of today, as of yore. One of the
main tests is in the use and the com
bination of flavorings, seasonings, of
herbs, pungent and sweet, and the
quantity of each needed to supply
delicacy or zest to dishes.
Another tost of the good cook Is
the sauces she makes. In these the
variety of Ingredients Is often large,
and they* must be congenial. The
use of different sauces at different
times on the same foods lends as
much variety to a dish as do com
binations of ingredients in the dish
Itself. There are sweet and tart
sauces, and sour-sweet sauces. There
are bread sauces and fruit sauees.
There are piquant sauces and coat
ing sauces. There are sauces for
fish, meat and fowl, for eggs, for
puddings, and ices.
A good sauce and one appropriate
to the food is “the making” of many
delicious dishes of very inexpensive
foundations. The meat used in mak
ing soup can be transformed into a
main dish to satisfy an exacting ap
petite, if a good bechamel sauce Is
poured over it. Lobster or oyster
sauce will supply* a rather flavorless
boiled fish, such as haddock or cod,
with just the right taste to make it
worthy to be set before guests. Cab
bage becomes a dish for an epicure
when it is shredded, boiled a few
minutes in many* times its bulk of
rapidly bubbling hot water, drained
well and mixed with hollandaise
sauce.
It Is worth while for a hotnemaker
^Two things I wanted-
“...and it was all so simple when I found out lay My
trouble. My physician said I buri no organic disease, K I
but I did have what is so commonly and truthfully Jl
called a low percentage of hemo-gio-bin in the blood, rijKw&■ JI
“The reasonableness of one of the S.S.S. ads caused
me to think that S.S.S. Tonic was just what I needed AjjM|
for my let-down feeling, pimply skin and low resist-
ance. 1 wanted more strength and a clear skin. ■HHro vt&v' I
“It didn’t take S.S.S. very long to get my blood
back up to normal—and as my strength and energy \ X z -
returned iny skin cleared up.”
If your condition suggests a tonic of this kind, try -XL s .
S.S.S. It is not ji^st a so-called tonic but a tonic spe
cially designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and
also having the mineral elements so very, very neccs- V , ■ ,
sary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin - .. ,
of the blood. I , , \
S.S.S. value has been proven by generations of use, • round ig
ns well as by modern scientific appraisal. Sold by all out mV '
drug stores.. .in two convenient sizes.. .the larger is J p wH
. more economical. © The S.S.S. Co. trouble J
\ *, Jr
CUT ME OUT ।
I e/pring E)eauty I
BARGAIN 1
/ J ET'S get acquainted. Here is our anniversary bargain I
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EC new customers and give them this bargain introductory I
X offer at less than factory cost! Fine toiletries since 1873.
■ Tested, pure, and proven. One trial makes a life-long
' ' friend-You can havcallsixfull size packages for only SI.OO. ■
CD FACE POWDER TUBE ROUGE
Il Equal to finest imported pow- VtA New, smart, pure, safe! “It’s B
der. Perfectly blended into V-'A different —a splendid improve
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size SI.OO box in this offer. stage star. Full 50c size given.
। A HAND LOTION CLEANSING
IZZI "Your hand lotion is truly ejoed. CREAM I
kVa Dries quickly ;no grease. Makes ah j . ... - .
hands beautifully silky and I All a good cream should lx- . Geta I
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14 oz. 50g size. J dirtLeavesskinsoft;greaseless |
Big 4 oz. 75c jar.
. LORATONE BEAUTY SOAP l
All-Purpose Cream ™” need ’ s a |
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l ALL SIX FOR ONLY SI.OO l
I a BW A S This introductory Spring Bargain Offer expires in 3 I
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I LORD & AMES, Inc. 360 No. Michigan Ava. CHICAGO, ILL
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NAME
L ADDRESS TOWN STATE.
■BEBB BMQBi MMBD BMB» BMK3Ba BBBRSBB ■mw BXHOI BBSOnB USZM BXCQM
to study flavors and seasonings of
her own combining, and to make
sauces in variety, if she would suc
cessfr—y supply a note of difference
to her menus. 2'-
©, 801 l Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Everyone a Criminal
There is bo such thing as a born
criminal, according to Judge Amedee
Monet, of Montreal. “The only dif
ference between the average citizen
and the prisoner in the dock,” he
says, “Is that the latter has been
caught. Otherwise, everyone is a
criminal In some way or another.”
HOW SHE LOST 14
POMS OF FAT
FOR 85 CEOS
“I used one jar of Kruschcn and re
duced 14 lbs. and just feel tine. Was
bothered before with gas pains but after
taking Kruschen they
never bothered me. *
Mrs. R— t Deer River,
Minn.
Don’t stay fat aud
unattractive —not when
it’s so easy and safe to
get rid of double chins,
ugly hip-fat and unbe
coming plumpness on
lipper arms —at the
same time build up strength and in
crease vitality—feel younger and keep
free from headaches, indigestion, acid
ity, fatigue and shortness of breath.
Just take a half tcaspoonful of Krus
chen Salts first thing every morning in
a glass of hot water. If not joyfully
satisfied with results of one 85 cent jar
(lasts 4 weeks) money back from any
drugstore the world over. But make
sure you get Kruschen—the SATE way
to reduce.
Do you lack PEP ?
Are you all in, tired and run down?
tfIHTERSMITH’s
F Tonic
Will rid you of
and build you up. Used for 65 years for Chills,
Fever, Malaria and
A General Tonic
50c and SI.OO At AU Druggists
WNU—7 18 —34
When Music Helps
“My daughter’s music lessons are
a fortune to me.”
"How is that?"
“They enable me to buy the neigh
bors’ houses at half price.”