Newspaper Page Text
GREEN NEEDLES
By Mae Foster Jay |
Copyright, by W. A. Wilde Ce
WNU Bervice
s
SYNOPSIS
Mary, daughter of a self made mil-
Honaire, 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, and about which she must
know nothing. She is a graduated
engineer. Her father humors her. As
“M. Brown" Mary secures a position
as engineer with the Paradise Valley
Project, a deyelopment concern. She
18 engaged by letter.
CHAPTER ll—Continued
e
Mary Brown went slowly back
through the narrow corridor to her
section. She settled herself with as
much awe, with as much a thrilling to
newness and mystery and adventure
as if it were her first trip abroad.
And in a se—se, it was. Always be
fore she had been the daughter of the
rich David Brown. Now she was plain
Mary Brown, herself. A different per
son. Her pulses quickened with ex
citement, eagerness.
Mary Brown, herself, had entered
upon her career,
She adventured back to the parlor
car. Every one seemed to be trying to
find out all about one person, & very
fair young man with an engaging per
sonality. He was slight of build, im
maculate of dress, with a scrubbed
and tubbed look. His features were
finely molded. His mouth had been
fashioned to pleasant lines by a smile
that came easily. Deep-blue eyes, com
panions to the mouth in their humor
ous slant on life, challenged one to
guess whether they were the eyes of
a dreamer or a hard-headed business
man. The sort of man to make instant
appeal.
And yet the first words she heard
him utter antagonized Mary Brown.
“Money talks!” he was laughing as
she appeared in the doorway. “It's
the sine qua non of all our endeavors,
of our successes. Withont it our
dreams must end just as dreams, not
a8 achievement. And is it hard to get?
I know! I've pleaded, begged, coaxed,
cajoled, demanded, and threatened in
the interest of this scheme of mine,
Amazing, how hard it is to convince
moneyed interests that you have a
good thing, but,” whimsically, “per
haps that's why they're moneyed.
Now—"
He broke off to spring to his feet. He
alone had noticed Mary entering the
car. There were no vacant chairs,
“Will you sit here?’ he asked with
his intriguing smile,
But it was lost on Mary.
“Thank you. I'm going outside,”
she replied, indifferently.
The door banged behind her, shut
ting out further conversation.
“A spell-binder,” she diagnosed the
fair young man. *“Selling himself and
heaven knows what else by the magic
of his personality. 1 wish dad could
see him work!”
Then she turned her back upon the
guileless-looking individual who so un
consciously had courted her disfavor.
Just another person whose god was
money !
Mary realized she was hungry; it
was dinper time. She hurried back,
tidied herself a bit, and went forward
to the diner.
When she returned to her section
the seat across from her was occu
pled—by the fair young man! He
arose as she hesitated by her seat.
*“l've been wondering who my neigh
bor was,” he said pleasantly., "My
name i{s Denis Craig. [ hope I'm not
to be in your way here.”
Mary acknowledged the introduction
by no more than a suspicion of a nod.
If she had deigned him a glance, she
would have seen the blue eyes darken
mischievously. “I can see that I'm
not going to be in your way, however.
Something tells me I'm practically not
here at all.”
“At least,” Mary couldn’t keep back,
“it ought to make a nice change for
you. It must be—fatiguing—to be
hero-worshiped. 1 always feel sorry
for movie idols, golf pros, baseball
stars, presidents—"
She hesitated, not knowing just
where to catalogue him.
“In some places,” he supplied ban
teringly, *“1 have the reputation of be
ing a professional swindler.”
“How interesting! And your line,
from scraps [ overheard, may be oil
stock or real estate.”
*Good guess!” he laughed. *lt's real
estate. Would you be interested?”
“I'll save you exertion by saying I
haven’'t money enough to buy the fence
around it, let alone the orange ranch,
Statue of Liberty, Masonic Temple or
Golden Gate. Oh, Mrs. Cady!” Mary
sprang up with a sudden change of
manner as the fatherly farmer and his
wife stopped across the aisie. *“ls this
your section? How nice! May I drop
over for a little chat with you?” And
she seated herself beside the pair at
whose table she had been placed in
the diner.
But unfortunately Denis Craig had
warmed to them, too, and they to him.
“Well now, ain’t this nice, being
neighbors, us four? Come over and
join us, Mr. Craig. You've met Miss
Brown, of course?”
The blue eyes twinkled wickedly.
“To be exact, 1 believe Miss Brown
has met me, but I have not yet had
the pleasure of meeting her. Thanks.
1 won’t joint you just now. 1 want to
find the perter.”
*“lt won't do you any good,” Mary
said. “My father tried to get me a
whole section—but the train is toe
crowded.”
*Still, it won't do any harm to try,"
lightly. “Every man has his price,
they say."
“You may discover,” Mary did not
try to disguise her scorn, “that money
isn't everything.”
Denis Craig looked surprised at this
sudden burst of strong feeling, but the
amusement deepened in his eyes.
He went on down the corridor.
Mary kept the conversation away from
nice young men, thus snubbing her
own ridiculous curiosity as to this par
ticular one who presently returned
and began gathering up his luggage,
“I—ll don’t quite see how you—man
aged!” Mary said.
His blue eyes were dancing. “I just
raised the ante.”
He followed the porter down the aisle
to the undesirable berth just over the
wheels—for which he had just paid
a premium,
Mary Brown, as she retired, felt un
comfortably as {if she literally had
trodden on the toes of this man. Why
had she been so rude as to do sc?
Why had she even been Interested
enough to. do so?
CHAPTER 111
Stranded Without Funds.
“Pa, you step over to the depot and
get me some posteards to send the
children.”
“Now, Ma, why didn't you speak of
it when the train first stopped? They
ain’t time now, Besides, what do the
girls care for a collection of post
offices—"
“Pa, this is a border town. You
might pick up something wild!"
“T'll go!” offered Mary Brown, break
ing away from the couple with whom
she had been strolling, the next morn
ing, up and down the station platform
in El Paso.
She hurried to the booth wnere
souvenir cards were on exhibition.
Yes, here was a wild one. A gory
bull-fight in Juarez.
“B-oa-rd!" Vaguely at first the call
tapped on Mary's consciousness. Grad
ually she realized what she was hear
ing, and dashed toward the nearest
gate. She pushed at it, almost knock
ing herself down. It did not open.
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Together They Ran Across the In
tervening Tracks.
She looked for a fastening; found
none. The train was moving. She
pulled at the gate, pushed at the gate,
yvanked at the gate. It would not
budge. She made frantic gestures at
the departing train,
Now some one was leaping over the
railing of the observation car, running
toward her.
“This 18 an exit, not an entrance,”
Denis Cralg was explaining. "It opens
only from the outside in. Here—" and
he pushed it open, seized Mary by the
arm, and together they ran across the
intervening tracks—to stop shortly
with that sense of foolishness one ex
periemces only after he has set off
down the rails after a departed train.
“We're—we're left!”
“Does sort of look that way] doesn’t
it?' smiled the engaging young man,
“But don't look so dismayed. There’s
another train in a few hours. [l'll wire
the conductor to put off our luggage
at the next stop. Then we'll take a
taxi and do the town. Be rather fun
to go across the border and prowl
around Juarez, don't you think?’
She wanted ridiculously, overwhelm
ingly, to say yes. But an unusual per
versity seized her. The intriguing
young man was so cocksure! He took
it absolutely for granted that she'd
trust herself to him. Let him dis
cover there was one person in the
world immune to that engaging per
sonality.
Cool as a long slim icicle she in
formed him, “1 wouldn’'t think of
troubling you further. And—l can
send my own telegram—"
She gave a startled cry. In her
hands were three souvenir posteards
—nothing else,
“My bag!” she gasped. "I—l must
have left it at the magazine stalll”
She was off on the run, Denis Craig
beside her.
But the hag was not there. “Some
one has picked it up, of course,” said
Craig when the clerk had made a
thorough search.
“But—my money ! My ticket! Every
thing! If 1 was at sea before—l'm
sunk now!”
TG BE CONTINUBED.
PEMBROKE JOURNAL
H About:
OWEe out:
Silerius’ Third Wife
Minding Your Business
American Waste
©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
WW’W
By ED HOWE
SO FAR as my reading goes no one
has ever more candidly, intelligent-
Iy or fairly discussed the relations of
married couples than Silerius, who
lived near the time of the most famous
outrage on women recorded in history:
that suffered by Sabine women who
were carried off by invading soldiers
Some authorities claim Silerius him
self was a general in the conguering
army concerned, and that a screaming
Sabine woman was delivered at his
tent as his part of the loot.
As near as can_ be learned from the
vague history of that time this wom
an, so violently courted, became the
third wife of Silerius; and although
carried from her own country to a
strange one by a conqueror, with no
other preliminary than being suddenly
seized by rough invaders, she was so
capable in looking after her own in
terests that her abductor later married
her; indeed, she became prominent
and respected in the inhospitable city
in which her husband lived.
In his memoirs Silerius gives the im:
pression that' his third wife pleased
him more than any of the others, to
two of whom he was married with
elaborate ceremonies, and after very
sentimental courtship. In writing of
his experiences with women, Silerius
tells in a rather amusing way of the
gentle and cunning arts his third wife
exercised in bending him to her will,
and I get the impression that she loved
him more sincerely than any of the
wives he acquired in a more conven
tional way.
- * *
What part of your attention do you
give to your own business? Say you
are merchant, lawyer, doctor, mechan
ie, farmer, What per cent of your en
thusiasm goes to your business, and
what per cent to politics, vacations,
elubs, automobiling, radio, moving pic
tures, welfare work, social affairs?
Many a good business has been
wrecked by its head man neglecting
it for other things. It is charged tha.
one of the most notable of American
commercial enterprises is on the rocks
becauw its head, in receipt of an enor
mous salary, neglected it for outside
activities. The same principle ap
plies to those occupying fifteen, twenty
or forty-dollar-a-week jobs, Very few
Americans mind their own business.
- - *
A doctor connected with the govern
ment says that 71 per cent of the hos
pital cases now heing cared for by th}(-,
government were not cases that in any
way could be traced to the great war;
that the Veterans’ Disability act was
the greatest steal ever put over on
the American people.
Here is another startling illustra
tion of the waste and dishonesty in
American public affairs; in this case,
in relieving twenty-nine men honestly
entitled to relief, the politicians, re
lieved seventy-one not entitled to it.
The figures hold in everything else
in American public affairs. I have no
doubt that for every twenty-nine dol
lars the government necessarily spends
in its operation seventy-one dollars
are wantonly and villainously wasted.
The only way for the government to
properly balance the bhudget is to cut
off 71 per cent of taxes alrendy levied,
and wasted, instead of adding new
burdens.
*» s s
I do not know just when, but some
of these days | intend to confess 1 am
as tired of my writing as others are.
and no longer hold on to the coat tails
of the drunken world in attempts to
better it,
And in my final notice | think I shall
pay the people who have dismissed
me a good many compliments, Mil
lions of them are admirable, My final
message to them will he: “Keep the
few good things you have accom
plished, and try to accomplish a few
more, All the comforts and pleasures
we have came as a result of men sue
ceeding in doing a little better.”
- - -
When | know what women expect
of men, I am willing to grant it. Just
how much attention from men do
wortnen decide is proper? | have been
in doubt at times. . . There is in
my town a woman who is very striet;
she promptly resents the slightest fa
miliarity from men, and frequently
talks indignantly of their boldness.
One day I learned, from the private
talk of the women, that a friend of
mine had gqueezed her hand, and that
she was very mad about it. Later,
when | was in her company, the name
of the hold wreteh came ap, and 1 felt
that she wonld vigorously denounce
him. She didn't know 1 had heard of
the affront offered her, but | was cer
tain she would express a very unfa
vorahle opinion, knowing she was very
striet. . And this was what she
zaid: *“He is the most entertaining
man I ever met in my life.”
- - -
1 have long wondered that the doe
trine called Communism has persisted
through so many centuries, although
avery reasonably inteligent man ac
knowledges it Is foolish and imprae
tieal. 1 think the explanation is we
are all natural Communists. Children
impose on parents, and everybody else, |
until broken of it. Some children im- 1‘
pose on parents until fourteen, eight
*en or twenty-one-two-three-four years
ld: some continue to believe (n
NMommunism long after they hewve
‘amilies of their own. and trouble witk
he police
GEORGIA NEWS
Happenings Over
The State
t Two new business firms at Roberta
‘Einclude a cabinet shop and a lum
ber plant.
l Work has been started on an addi
tional 100-patient dormitory at the
iMilledgeville state hospital to accom
' modate female patients,
George W. Andrews, Secretary of
Georgia Baptist Sunday school work
t for 30 years, dropped dead at his home
in Atlanta recently.
; The Gainesville & Northwestern
railroad property was bid in at Gaines
- ville recently by the Garson Iron &
' Steel Co., of Norfolk, Va., for $30,400.
! The first 40-car trainload of Cuban
ipineapples for the United States for
this season came into the Valdosta
terminals of the Southern railway re
| cently.
] More than 100 relatives and friends
gathered at the home of Mr, and Mrs.
' B. 8. Muse at Carrollton recently to
icelebrate the 99th birthday of Mrs.
Susan A. Hamrick.
J. A. McFarland, Dalton attorney,
has purchased the Dalton News, a
weekly mewspaper. R. E. Hamilton
has been named editor and Keith
I Gregory, associate editor,
An increase in the shipping busi
i ness during April was recorded at the
. Savannah harbor, 102 vessels enter=-
ing there, as compared with 96 for
the same month last year.
The Cobb county commisioners of
roads and revenues have appointed
' the following to the board of tax as
- gessors: A. P. Jones, chairman; J. H.
Morgan, and Edgar Allgood.
Work of enlarging and modernizing
the Athens airport will begin within
the next few days with 256 FERA work
~ers employed, Mrs. Frank Camstra,
county administrator, announces.
Mrs. Caroline Miller, of Baxley,
Georgia’'s newest author, 18 to be
awarded the Pulitzer prize for the best
\American novel of the year. Her
- book is entitled “Lamb in His Bosom.”
| Lamar Nicholson, son of Judge J.
| R. Nicholson, judge of the court of
' ordinary of Oglethorpe county, is the
' second candidate to announce for the
j unexpired term of his father.
| L. A. Everett and J. 0. Maddox have
completed rebuilding the cotton gin
! at MeDonough formerly owned by the
. Luella Gin & Warehouse Company that
was destroyed by fire several weeks
ago.
| Subsistence komstead projects may
be launched in sgeven different land
areas of Georgia, it was said recently
at Savannah by Dr. Philip Weltner, of
Atlanta, chancellor of the University
System of Georgia.
Forty cans of small mouth bhass
weighing from one-quarter to one
half pound each were recently delive
ered at Blue Ridge to be placed in
Blue Ridge Lake. The fish were sent
from the state fish hatchery at Sum
- merville,
~ Governor Eugene Talmadge recently
' promised a large delegation of Bartow,
Gordon and Murray county eitizens
that he would aid them in getting
- Route 61 from Cartergville north
through Chatsworth paved to the
Tennessee line.
~ Approval of the action taken by the
board of review of the lumber code
authority in restoring the differen
tial of $2 per 1,000 feet was officially
voiced at the meeting of the Roofers
Manufactuers’ Association fn Colum
bus recently.
Fellow newspaper comrades from all
~ever the state and friends from Heard
and other northwest Georgia counties
gathered at Franklin recently to cel
ebrate the 50th anniversary of P. T.
McCutcheon, ag owner and editor of
the News and Banner, local newspa
per.
A four and a half foot iguana, a
reptile that is not indigenous to Geor
gia, was recently found dead on the
Lawrenceville highway, near Atlanta,
by two farmers. It is said that these
reptiles live only in the tropics, in
Mexico, Central and South America.
It is thought to have heen the proper
ty of some car- ival show.
Due to lower tax agsessment valua
tions of realty, personal property, and
decrease in receipts from business li
censes, fines and fees during the past
four years Columbus must get along on
$271,407.29 less revenue for all pur=-
poses in 1924 than four years ago,
according to figures compiled by City
Manager Morton for information of the
city commission.
The Georgia Power Company, hold
er of street car franchises In several
Georgia cities, is gradually substitut
ing buses or relinquishing the fran
chise altogether due to unprofitable
operation of street car systems.
Representative Homer Parker of
Georgia has announced that the coast
guard had ordered the revenue cut
ter C(GB-4, now at Fort Lauderdals,
Fla., to proceed to the Georgia coast
for patrol duty under the direction
of the Georgia game and fish commis
sion,
OF OLD PALACE
Historic Home of Sun King
Restored.
Restoration of the palace of Ver
sailles, from the great chateau to
the charming Marie Antoinette vil
lage on the grounds, has been eriti
cized by a member of the French
academy. The work, carried on with
funds donated by John D, Rocke
feller, Ir., Is too thorough, says the
critic, and while it has saved the
palace of palaces from falling into
ruin, everything looks too new. The
French ministry of fine arts and the
historic monuments commission,
however, approve the restoration.
While the palace of Versailles is
generally conceded to be the ultimate
in royal residences, and the yard
stick by which magnifieence is meas
ured, it may also be sald to repre
sent an Eighteenth century Publie
Works administration project, ae
cording to a bulletin from the Na
tional Geographic society. “One of
the reasons given by Louis XIV for
the construction of the great cha
teau and Its vast park was that it
would give employment to some 30,-
000 workmen for several years.”
Built for reasons of state, Ver
sailles soon became the setting of a
court so dazzling that many of the
French nobility closed their great
chateaux in the country and came
to take up quarters in a palace that
could shelter nearly 10,000 persons.
And near the palaee, Louis built the
Grand Trianon, a glorified marble
bungalow,
Left to ruin after France became
a republic, Versailles was partially
restored by Napoleon I five years
after he had installed 2,000 of his
veterans In the central wing of the
palace. But the greater part of the
work of transforming Versailles into
3 museum was done by Louis
Philippe, being completed in 1837.
[ts adaptation into a museum of
social and political history has heen
natural and tasteful. 'The great
sentral wing, which is nearly half a
mile in length, now houses a unique
rollection of paintings, sculptures,
carvings and objets d'art, The
palace itself was huilt principally by
Mansard around the hunting lodge
of Louis XIII. In reversal of the
Isual sequence, the palace was built
ind then the little town grew up.
But a year after the removal of
Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette to
Paris by the mob, the town was so
lesolate that a Russian traveler
rould scarcely get a wretched meal.
The salons and apartments of
Louis XTIV and his successors form
v stimulating background for the
maginative person who wishes to
mrn back the clock to the days of
he Sun king and relive the glit
~spring fever”
~ time is here
«»sand what does it mean to you?
JUST THIS: if you feel listless, run-down,
appetite dull, with a weak, let-down feeling
...perhaps mnervous and worn out...why not
make an effort to “snap out” of this condition? ‘
Try toming up your appetite . .. increasing your
red-blood-cells .. . the best way to be happy.
You need a tonie—not just a so-called tonic. ~
but a tonic that will tone up your blood. S.B.S. is
specially designed to do this for you. Unlers your
case i 8 exceptional you ghould improve as your
oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin increases.
At all drug stores in two convenient sizes. The |
larger size is more economical, @ Tbes.s.B. Co. l
Inthe Spring-take S.S.S.
OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION
Send Stamp.
Box 85 « « - - - . Merriam, Kansas,
PEAR: (Clay, Whippoorwill, New Era $2 I
fron $2.10. Ninety day Velvet beans sl.lO,
iood seed. H. B. Brady, Davisboro, (;::.)
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VNU—T 1984 |
tering epoch of the Louis. The orig
fnal furniture and pietures were
lust, but the walls, ceilings, paneling
and stucco still reveal the elabo
rate Louis Quatorze. Fhe rooms
given over to the Historical museum,
founded by IL.ouls Philippe and dedi
cated to “all the glories of France,”
contain a collection of pictures and
sculpture retelling the history of
France through its famous charac
ters, battles, and events,
The park and terraees alone cover
an area of about six square miles.
Although the playground for the
plutocrats of the day, Versallles has
been a stage for more sertons act
ing. The *“Tennis Court” oath of the
fighting National Assembly was taken
here in 1789, and here in 1782 the
new United States of America had
been formally recognized by Great
Britain. On September 19, 1870, the
vietorious Germans, bands playing
the “Marseillaise,” entered Versailles,
In January, 1871, King WilHam, sur
rounded by representatives of all the
reigning families of Germany, mem
bers of his family, his generals, and
his ministers, here established the
new German empire. And in the
same Galeries des Glaces In 1918 a
defeated German nation signed the
Versailles treaty,
Raven a Tease
Harry, a talking raven at the Lon
don zoo. is frequently suspected of
deliberately teasing passersby. Not
infrequently a man passing by Har
ry’s cage will look around in embar
rassment and annoyance upon hear
ing a deep, husky voice say: “You're
1 rescal”
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T o ee o 55 )5 O G K v
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Clothing Salesmen; $7.95; sell direct from
factory to wearer, washable Sanforized
shrunk summer suits. Expert workman
ship; $1.60 commission. Free sample book.
Tom Larned Clothing Co,, Nashville, Tenn,
FORMULAS TFOR Cheese (hips, Inks,
Paints, Shoe i‘gh.\-h, Soaps, Olntments,
Negro Hair Straightener, Skin Bleach. 3
for Koc. Joe Sye, 2712 Geimer,Detroit,Mich,
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l
s
: BENNE SEED, 40¢c PER POUND
' Five pounds, $1.60 prepaid
H., ¥. STEEDLY - - - « BAMBERG, S, O.
‘[ Peanut Seed. Spanish, runners, Virginla;
| bunch in hull 4¢ per pound, cash with or
der., No orders filled for less than 50 lbs,
F. 0. B, FARMERS GIN (0., Edison, Ga,
PURE SHAMPOO
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For personal use or re-sale at big profit.
‘We supply pure concentrated ingredients
of a Nationally Advertised Shampoo.
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ences. Six monthsg supply $5.00 rmetlmb::.
URETEED (Purety Guarantee
Lhomtory, Bloomfleld,’N. ’J., Dept. X
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| R T S A
STOCK and POULTRY
Medicines are Reliable
@ Blackman’s Medicated Lick-
A-Brik
»
® Blackman’s Stock Powder
® Blackman’s Cow Tonic
@ Blackman’s Char-Med-Sal
5 (for Hgl!cfl
@ Blackman’s Poultry Tablets
’
© Blackman’s Poultry Powder
Highest Quality ~ Lowest Price
Satisfaction Guaranteed or
your money back.
BUY FROM YOUR DEALER
BLACKMAN STOCK MEDICINE CO.
Chattanooga, Tenn.