Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN’S MAGAZINE PAGE
“Initials Only” * By Anna Katherine Green
A Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Tinies
(Copyright- 1911, Street & Smith.)
(Copyright, 1911, by Dodd. Mead & Co.)
TODAY'S INSTALLMENT.
h had a sinister look, and George, who
brave enough under all ordinary cir
cumstances, was glad that his companion
wore a badge and carried a whistle. He
was also relieved when he caught sight
of the burly form of a policeman in the
low of one of the doorways. Yet the
houses he saw before him were not so
ver\ different from those they had al-
n \ p.r-sed. His uneasiness could not
have sprung from them. They hail even
ar. air of positive respectability, as though
tn d'ded by industrious workmen. Then,
wl;.t was it which made the dose com
i ir • nship of a member of the police so
Hi- -mmoniy welcome? Was it a certain
. < i of solitariness which clung to the
, or was it the sudden appearance
here and there of strangely gliding figures,
u h no sooner loomed up against the
si a > perspective, v than they disappeared
<g.i n In some doorway?
• There’s a meeting on tonight, of the
Associated Brotherhood of the Awl, the
Plane and the Trowel (whatever that
means), and it is the speaker we want to
see; the man who is to address them
promptly at 10 o’clock. T>o you object to
meetings?”
"Is this a secret one ”’
■■lt wasn't advertised.”
• Are we carpenters or masons that we
car count »>n admittance?”
“I am a carpenter. Don't you think
v , ran he a mason for the occasion?”
. doubt it, but—”
■ Hush’ 1 must speak to this man.”
• :porge stood back, and a few words
passed between Sweetwater and a
A ;tdowy figure which seemed to hav*
sprung up out of the sidewalk
•Balked at the outset.” were the en
(•»ura«ging words with which the detective
rejoined George. “It seems that a pass
word is necessary, arid my friend has
b».pn unable to get it. Wil! the speaker
pass <>ut this way.”' he in juired of lb.
shadowv figure still lingering in t'neir
rear.
He didn't gj in by it: yet I believe I
he's safe enough inside,” was the mul
ti red answer.
Sweetvva‘er had n<- relish for disap
pointments of this character, but it was i
rot long before he straightened up and
a'lowed himself to exchange a «few more
words with this mysterious person. These
appeared to be of a more encouraging na
ture than the last, for it was n< t long
before the detective returned with re- I
newed alacrity to George, and. wheeling!
him about, began to re’.ru c his steps to
thr corner.
Ar* we going back'.’ Are y«.u going to
1 give up the job?” George ,asked.
? ‘‘No. we’re going to take him from the
F real. There's a break in the fence —Oh,
we’ll uo v» ry well. Trust me.”
J Georg* laughed. He was growing ex
cited. but not altogether agreeably so. lie
say< that he has seen moments of more
pleasant anticipation. Evidently, my
■ good husband is not cut out tor detective j
werk.
Where they went under this officer's j
giiMiancr. he can not t:!!. Tin tortuous
t •’L'h of alleys through which he now
felt himself led was dark as tin nether
i his unaccustomed eyes. There
was snow under his feet and now and
thru lip brushed against some obtruding
object. <»i stumbled against a low fence;
b’: 1 be\ond these slight miscalculations
'•a ’ - <«wh part, he was a mere au
u>:;i;ti<.n in the hands of his eager guide,
at <: ■ ii;\ beoamt his own man again when
IDA suddenly stepped inn at open yard
ati<' i < could discern plainly before him
the dark walls of a building pointed out
!• Swretwa.or as their probable destina-
Y< ■ even hero they encountered
"Me impediment which prohibited a close
au;>i <>aeh. wall or slud cut off their
| *.«w of the building s lower story; and
ir.'-Lgb somewhat startled at being left
■ in- ’-rem-miously alone after just a whis
pered word of encouragement from the
e\♦•r-ready detective, George could quite
an b-rs-and the necessity which that per
>"t mu<t fee! for a quiet reconnoitering
‘•f the sun<mndings bif-.n- the two of
th* m ventured further ff ward in their |
iy hazardous undertaking. Vet thej
experien* e was none too pleasing to
‘"■ rg '. and lie was very glad to hear |
Sweetwater's whisper again a; his * ar, !
and io feel himself rescue*! from the pool!
lush in which he him been bft to '
fctard.
■'The approach is not all that •• «u be j
t"!. - ' remarked the detective ar ’bey i
entorr.i what appeared to be a low slvil.
"The broken hoard has been put back ar*’ ;
Sf i ■■ "ly nailed in place, and if I am not i
'er\ much mistaken there Is a fellow st a- |
■ "tied in the yard who will want the]
: pass word too. IBooks shady to me. I'll
•a\« something to tell the chief when I;
But we! Wh.-lt are we going to d*> if
1 ati not get in front or rear?”
! ‘We re going to wait right here in the
■ es catching; a glimpse of our man
s ’ • • otnes out." returned the detective.
awing George towar<ls a low w ind* I
? ' ' ‘Mlooking H*e yard lw had described as j
'a:el)e<|. "He will have to pass direct- I
mder fhi- window on his way to the
Swc.twater went on to explain.
d I an only raise it but the noise i
1 give us away 1 can’t do that.”
' l’»Thaps it swings on hinges,” sng
‘•sto<i George, "it looks like that sort <>f
a window’."
i’ should well! it does. We re in |
ure.;' hb'k. sir. But before I pull it open.
r* iidx-r that from the moment 1 un
it. everything said or done hero "an
I "aid in the ad-joining yard. So no
■'. /s and no unnecessary movements i
vou bear him con ing. as sooilu- or
••it certainly will, fall carefully i*>
i knees and lean out just far enough
b a glimpse of him before he steps]
!1 Hom the porch If he stops to light
s ' 'gar otp to pass n h w words with >
"f Hie men be will lea.ve behind. I
!l| ay get a plain enough view of his
' figure, to i«lentify him Th»* light i
burning low’ in that rear hall, but it |
' • If it does not- if you can't see i
•’ if you do. don't.hang out of the
w more than a second. Duck af’vi
'irst look. 1 don't want to he caughi ;
- job with no better opport unit? for ,
than we have here’* Can you re
all that?"
■ : gc pinched his arm encouragingly 1
'•'■eetw’ater. with an amuf-d grunt.
• t.latrhe<i the window and pulled it ,
e "pen.
brie slept hew tn. imperceptible save
sensation of dayip It gave, and
: ht blaze It diffused through the
■ ! olarged by this haze, the building
were wet to watch rose in magmtied I
i
proportions at their left. The yard be
tween. piled high in the center with snow
heaps or other heaps covered with snow,
could not have been more than 40 feet
square. The w’imldw from which they
peered, was half-way down this yard, so
that a comparatively short distance sepa
rated them from the porch where George
had been told to look for the man he was
expected to identify. All was dark there
at present, but he could hear from time
to time some sounds of restless move
ment. as the guard posted inside shifted
in his narrow quarters, or struck *his be- i
numbed feet together.
Bait what came to them fronj above ■
was more interesting than anything tc
be ju-ard *»i s»< n bel«»w \ man s \«»i< » .
raised to a wonderful pitch by the pas- |
sion of oratory , had burst the barriers of
the clos< *1 hall in that towering third j
st(>\ and was carrying its lale to other ;
ears than those within. Had it been!
summer and the windows <u en. botji <
George and Sweetwater might rave heard I
every word; for li; tones were egeep- i
tionally rich arid penetrating, and the '
speaker intent only on the impression he
was endeavorit g to make upon lii« audi
ence. That h» la*l fmt mistaken his
power in this direction was evinced by
the applause which rose from time to
time from innumerable hands ami feet.
But this uproar would be speedily si
lenced, and the mellow voice ring out
again, clear and commanding'. What
could the subj ct lie to ro. se such en
thusiasm in th.. As / elated Brotherhood
of the Awl. the Plane and the Trowel.’
I here was a moaiert when <>ur l:s oning
friends expected to be enlightered. A
shutter was thrown back in one of those
upper windows, a. . the window hurriedly
raised, during which words t. ok the place
> I < einds. and ti cy heard ereugh to whet
th.eir appetite for more But only that.
I'ho shutter wa.- speedily restored to place
and the window again closed. A v. ise
precaution, or so thought (lentgo if thej
wished to keep their doubtful proceed
ings secret.
A tirade against the riel ami a loud
call to battle could be glecned from the
few sentences they I.nd i aid. But Its
virulence and pointed attack was not
that of the s eond'Ti' i <it lu.pouue or
business agent, inti of a mar whose in
tellect and culture rang in every lone,
land informed each sentence.
Sweetwater, in whom satisfaction was
| fast taking the place if impatience and
l regret, pushed 'he window to before ask
ing George this question:
"Did you hear the voice of the man
wi.ose action attracted ycur attention out
side the Clermcn: ?"
"No.”
"Did you n< te j.:. t n< w the large
| shadow dancing on th( (ailing above the
i speaker's head?”
"Yes, but I could judge nothing from
that."
“Well, he’s a rum one. I shan't open
this window again till he gives signs of
reaching the end <»f his speech. It’s too
cold.”
But almost immediately he gave a
start and, pressing George’s arm, ap
peared to lister. n< t to the speech, which
was no longer audible, but to something
much nearer a step or movement in the
j adjoining yard. At least, so George in
: terpreted the quick turn which this im
petuous detective made, and the pains he
I took to direct ( purge’s attention to the
walk running under the window beneath
which tlmy crouched. Some one was
stealing down upon the house at their
hit. from the alley beyond. A big man.
whose shoulder brushed the window as
hf v ent by. i o*orge felt his hand seized
again and press* ;:s this happened, and
before he had rovowr* d from this excite
ment. exnerienceil another quick pressure
and s;ill another, as one. two. three
additional figures went slipping by. 'Then
his hand was suddenly dropp *l. for a
<•’s ! a«i shot up from tlie door where the
sentinel stood guard, followed by a loud
s im, and the » ise of a shooting bolt,
whirl , pi*claiming as it did that the in
vaders were not friends, but enemies to
th** cause which was being vaunted above,
s* excited Sweetwater tit.it he pulled the
window wide open and took a bold look
out. George followed his example and
this was what they saw:
Three men were standing Hat against
the fence leading from the shed directly
to the porch. The fourth was erouch
| ii ■ Hldi' the l.atti •. and in another mo
lim nt they he .rd h .- fist descend upon
; the. door ins k* in away to reuse the
I echoes. Meantime, the voice in the au-
I dience hall above had ceased, and there
I could be heard instead the scramble of
I hurrying feet and the noise of overturn-
I Ing benches. Then a window few tip and
I a voice called down:
“Who's that? What do you want down
I there?'’
But before an answei ' ould lie shouted
I back, this man was drawn fiercely inside.
a ' n( j the scramble was renewed, ami< I
j which George heard Sweetwaters whis
I per at his ear:
••Il's the policb. The chief lias got
ahead of me Was that the man were
'after the vne who shouted down?''
“N". Neither was he the speaker. The
voices are very different "
•‘M'e want the speaker If the boys
him. we'le all right: but if they]
id, n't wait. I must make the matt'
sure."
i And with a bound be vaulted throng
lili" window, whistling in a peculiar wa •
Geonc, thus» left quite alone.. had the
pleasure of seeing ’’is sole protector mix ,
with the boy s. as lie called them, and |
I ultimately crowd in with them through '
• the door which ha«l finally been opened '
• for their admittance Then came a wait. <
j then the quiet reappearance of the
i detective alone and in n<» wrv amiable
mood.
"Well?” inquire*! George, somewhat]
I breathlessly “Do you want me? 'They ;
I don’t seem t<> be coming out."
To Be Continued in Next Issue
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Beauty Secrets of Fpotlight Favorites
Eyebrows and Fyelashes as ,4 ids to Good Looks
SMB te.
BK 'IHI '£©■■
\
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1 vv V G9 a; AK y ' /
MISS AMY WEBB.
(A Ziegfeld beauty in tin "Winsonv- Widow" f'o >
By AMY WEBB.
WHEN 1 was a little girl it wor
ried me greatly because my
eyebrows and eyelashes were
so very’ light and so faint that they
were barely perceptible.
I must have looked like an animated
question mark, for nothing makes the I
face look so inquisitive, not to say fool
ish, as extremely light and faint eye
brows, and while it’s all right in a child,
it becomes very distressing as one
gets older.
So one day, in real despair. I set to
work and clipped such meager eye
brows as I had and cut them off com
pletely. Then I got a little girl friend
. to cut off my eyelashes, too, because 1
had read somewhere that that would
make them grow.
Nobody noticed that anything espe
cial had happened to my appearance
until it suddenly dawned upon the fam
ily at the supper table that 1 had lost
my already slender claims to good
looks, and that they had been sacri
ficed upon the altar of early vanity.
What is the use of remembering past
scoldings! I got a very good one, which
I remember to this day. Also my
eyelashes did not come in for a long
time, and finally 1 had to be taken to a
doctor, and salve was applied every
night to make the hair grow. Some
times the salve got into my eyes and
made them smart, and at all events the
performance made an indelible impres
sion on my memory, so 1 have come to
think nice eyebrows and eyelashes quite
invaluable to good looks.
A Great Help.
As clipping them proved perfectly
useless, in my ease, I doubt if it is of
any use it nil, though 1 know it is fre
quently recommended. However, if the
eyebrows are too scant, a little vase
line will generally make them grow,
and so will hair tonic if you use it
regularly.
Many people would have beautiful
eyebrow s if they only took a little.care
of them, ami I often wonder why it Is
that girls who want to be pretty don't
pay more attention to this very impor
tant feature
Iti the fiist place, there are the eye
brows. which lopk dirty and untidy,
because there are tiny particles of dan
iruff in them. 1 think this can be all
removed if the eyebrows are scrubbed
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Another thing that I find most un
pleasant to look at are the wild-look
ing eyebrows which one sees even on
young girls. These look as if they
need brushing and combing, sometimes
even braiding; they are so wild Jook-
I ing and coarse.
No one Ims to be inflicted with eye
brows like this. The coarse hairs can
be pulled out and the eyebrows trained
into better behavior by brushing' them
once a day with a tiny brush dipped in
olive oil or eocoanut .oil. Brushing is
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Keduced Illustration---Actual Size 8 3-4x7 inches office.
I very good fer the eyebrows, and one
can give them a nice shape and make
[ them look neat and prettily arched
simply by using a brush and a little
oil. •
Tile long, straight, arvhlcss, narrow
and delicately pencilled eyebrow was
the old ideal, but the modern eyebrow,
at least the one which our modern art
ists like Christy. Gibson. James Mont
gomery Flagg and Hutt draw on their
pretty gitis.'is not the straight kind,
but the highly arched brow. If you can
make yot evebrows look as if they
were very far away from your ey'es the
eye will look larger and the face more
t elined.
When the eyebrows are very scant, .t
is usually a sign of poor health, except
in red-hai ed persons. These scant
eyebrows can be strengthened by con
stant brushing, and they can be made
to look darker by combing them with
soapy water and letting the soap dry
on them.
A great many p"ople have eyebrows
that m et over the bridge of the nose
This is supposed to tie the sign of a
jealous or melancholy disposition 1
Supp se if you can’t change your dis
position it woultl be no ha m to take
au ay the guide post ami pull out those
quite, superfluous ha it s.
Eyebrows can Im trimmed into ai
rhost any shape Vith a little ten-eent
pair of tweezers, and there is no reason
why one should allow tht m to grow
across the nose or to scatter, as they
sometimes do. right in the middle of
the arch.
V< y few girls have the npncilled
eyebrow whii h is supposed to be such
a natural beauty. More of them have
eyebtows that are made with a pencil,
and look it. It is really not necessary
to color the eyebrows artificially, unless
thy ate absolutely white, or flax blonde
then they can sometimes be dark
en'd by blushing them with sttot.g,
black tea. I.et the tea got Just as dark
as possible, have eyebrows clean and
free from gt 'ase, and brush the tea
over them.
Massaging the eyebrows, pinching
them and kneading the flesh beneath
with the forefingers and thumb will
often stimulate the growth and is an
other way of making the line shapely.
I think that many girls make a great
mistake when they pencil an otherwise
fine line of eyebrow, making it darker
and thicker. These thick lines not only
look artificial, but they take away from
the refinement of the face and make it
look coarse and heavy.
For myself, I cultivate my eyebrows
with a tiny little brush dipped in glyc
erine and rosewater, half and half I
would no more think of going on the
street without brushing my eyebrows
than I would go out with rny hair un
tidy: or my shoes not polished, for 1
believe that the eyebrow has so much
to do with making the face pleasing
and attractive, and especially in mak
ing one look tidy and well dressed.
The Manicure Lady > b
Uy William F. Kirk
"POETS HAS GOT TO LIVE SOME
HOW.”
j(TSI’RE had a great time last night,
I George," said the Manicure
Lady. "I didn’t know that any
body could have so good a. time in this
h ie' big selfish town I was up to see
Mister and Mrs. Mcßeth and I didn't
get home at all. It *vas raining when
the party broke up, and they wouldn't
let me go home at all if I had wanted to
go. w hich I didn't. There was a sweet
little girl there named Gibson, from
Detroit, and between Mister Mcßeth's
recitations and the rest of the conver
sation everything passed away' lovely.
I guess if father had been there he
would have passed away as lovely as
everything."
"Folks don't have many good times
in New York.” said the Head Barber.
"There is too much of the downtown
stuff and too little of the old gathering
around-the-table stuff. I was enter
tained myself night before last up at a
home in Harlem, and every minute I
was there, looking at my up-state host
and his wife. I was thinking how little
real friendship gets a chance to get out
among New York people In general
The town is too big, kiddo, and that’s
all there is to it.”
"Wilfred was there, too, last night,”
said the Manicure Lady. "Poor brother
was In fine fetter.”
"In fine what?” asked the Head
Barber.
"In fine fetter," replied the Manicure
Lady.
"You mean in fine fettle,” corrected
the Head Barber. "You ought to go to
a finishing school with some of the tip
money that you get."
"Never mind what I mean!" snapped
tile Manicure Lady “Some of these
days, George, you are going to prompt
me once too often, and you will be sor
ry. 1 know a barber once that spoke
out of his turn to a manicure girl and
got a orange stick through the lobe of
his ear. It made him look like one of
them Fiji Islanders. You know they
always have wooden pegs in their ears
or their nose."
"When you try' that on me be careful
that your judgment of distance is
good," said the Head Barber. "I don’t
want to hit a lady."
"Well. I wouldn’t probably do noth
ing like that," replied the Manicure
Lady. "But. as I was saying, Wilfred
was there, too, and he had the time of'
his life. There wasn't no place for him '
to stay all night so he had to go home,
but he stuck until the last dog was
hung, you can bet your life on that. We
had a swell midnight lunch, and the
way he went to that would remind you
of a whale swallowing a prophet. An
other reason that he stuck around, be-•
sides the good eats, was that he had.
all the chance in the world to recite his
poems. He must have recited twenty
of them. Some of them was worse than
others."
"If I had a home I wouldn't entertain
poets," said the Head Barber. "They
recite too much."
"But you oughtn’t to say’ that*'
George." answered the Manicure Lady.
"Poets has got to live somehow.”
A CHANGE OF TONE.
Von Blumer (roaring w'tth rage)—•
Who told you to put trfat paper on the
wrfll?
Decorator —-Your wife. sir.
Von Blumer—Pretty, isn’t it?
"NO-BODY LOVES A BALD MAN-
Every day we tee YOUNG men ano
women, who have grown prematurely grey.
They immediately fall into the "Old
Age ’ clais, became grey halrt are «e
closely associated WITH OLD AGE.
It is extremely discomforting and humil
iating to be bald —to be grey when the
years do not justify it. The girls laugh al
the young men so marred —the young men
soon learns to discriminate between natu
ral hair in its full bloom of health and
NATURAL COIOR, and shabby look
'ng and faded hair.
Give nature a chance. If she is encour
aged, stimulated, assisted, she will give
you a head of hair that you will be proud of.
Give it to her. Use
HAY'S HAIR HEALTH
SI.OO and 50c at Drug Stores or direct upon re
ceipt of price and dealer’s name. Send 10c for
: r n.l Lo»t| P —pl l. p. r*- m ».
FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDEC
BY JACOBS’ PHARMACY.