Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN’S MAGAZINE' PAGE
“Initials Only By Anna Katherine Green
J Thrilling Mystery Story of Modern Times
(Copyright. 1911. Street * Smith.)
(Copyright, 1911, by Dodd, Moad * Co)
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
The man who lived here war not only
a student. a« was evinced by a long wall
full of books, but he was an art lover.
• musician, an inventor and an athlete
80 much could be learned from the most
cursory glance A more careful one
picked up other facts fully as Martling
and impressive The books were choice;
rhe invention to all appearance a prac
tical one. the art of a high order and
the music, such as was in view, of a
character of which the nicest f asr* need
not i>e ashamed
George began to feel quite conscious of
the intrusion of which they had been
guilty. and was amazed at the east with
which the dvte< the carried himself in
the presence of such manifestations of
culture and good, hard work He was try
ing to recall the exact appearance of ’be
figure he had seen stooping in the **nowy
Afreet two nights before, when he found
himself staring at the occupant of the
room, who had taken up his stand be
fore them an 1 was regarding them while
the> were regarding the room
He had thrown aside his hat and rid
himself of his overcoat, and the fearless
ness of hie aspect seemed to daunt the
hither’-* dauntless Sweet r ater. who for
the first time in his life perhaps, hunted
in vain for words with which to start
conversation
Had he made an awful mistake? Was
this Mr Dunn what h»* seemed, an un
known and careful genius, battling with
grear odds in his honesi struggle to give
the world something of value in return
for whAt it had given him'’ The quick, ■
almost deprecatory glance he eyirted at |
George betrayed his dismay; a dismay •
which George had begun to shares, not
withstanding his growing belief that the ,
mar s face was nut wholly unknown to
him ♦ ven if he could not recognize it as
the one he had seen outside the Cler
mont
"You seem to have forgotten your er
rand.“ came In quiet, if not good-natured. |
sarcasm from their patiently waiting host
"It’s the room.’ muttered Sweetwater,
with an attempt at his old-time ease
which was not as fully succeasfuj as usual ,
"What an all-fired genius you must be. 1
never saw the like And in a tenement I
house, too’ You ought to be in one of I
those big new studio buildings In New 1
York where artists be and everything you I
see it beautiful You’d appreciate it, you 1
would "
The detective started, George started, at
the gleam which answered him from a
gwOk
I/ * y i3|
I 01
Trallffik’W DRUDGE vXx)
gmfflEtfSk /
Phfr I _■!
wfflmF
w iraraX?!!-*
Anty Drudge Talks to an Indignant
Woman.
Mr». Toffiai “Just gaze at that skirt! Looks like a piece
of Swiss cheese. Full of holes. My washwoman
must use quick lime instead of soap.”
Anty <>-Mdcs-‘*Why don’t you wash at home ?”
Afrit. Topflar— "At home, indeed! Why. a you know,
I live in an apartment. Boil clothes on a gas range?
Most likely land In the hospital.”
Anty Drvdg«—''Why, dear, use Fels-Naptha and you
don't have to boil the clothes. Lukewarm or cool
water is all that’s needed winter or summer. And I’ll
guarantee your clothes will never again be freckled
with holes.”
No sensible woman wants to do more
work than is necessary to accomplish the
best results.
And yet —
There are women who take a full day
to do the weekly wash when it can he done
in half the time and far better.
Is this because they don’t know the
Fels-Naptha way?
Or is the reason that they arc so gov
erned by habit that they hesitate to try a
new method?
I he Fels-Naptha way is so easy, so
simple. Full directions are on the
red and green wrapper.
very uncommon eye It was a temporary
flash, however, and quickl\ veiled, and
the tone in which this Dunn now spoke
was anything but an encouraging one.
r *‘l thought you were desirous of join-
I ing a socialistic fraternity.” said he. “a
true aspirant for such honors does not
care for beautiful tilings unless all can
have them# I prefer my tenement. How
i is it with you. friends?’
; Sweetwater found some sort of a reply,
though the thing which this man now
did must have startled him. as it cer
tainly did George They were so grouped
that a table quite full of anomalous
objects stood at the hack of their host,
and consequently quite beyond their own
reach As Sv. oet water began to speak,
he whom he had addressed by the name
of Dunn drew a pistol from hi* breast
pocket and laid it down barrel toward
them on this table top. Then he looked
up courteously enough and listened till
Sweetwater was done
/ T» ry handsome man. but one not
to be trifled with in the slightest degree.
Both recognized this fact, and George,
for one. began to edge toward the door
I feci easier.'* remarked the giant,
swelling out his chest He was unusual
ly tall, as well as unusually muscular.
I never like to carry arms; but some
times It Is unavoidable Damn It. what
hands” He was looking at his own.
which certainly showed soil “Will yon
pardon me? he pleasantly apologized,
stepping toward a washstand and plung
ing his hands into the basin I can not
think with dirt on me like that Humph,
hey! did y< u speak?”
He turned quickly on George who had
certainly uttered an ejaculation, but re
ceiving no reply, went on w’ith his task,
completing it with a care and a disre
gard of their presence which showed him
up in still another light.
| But even his hardihood showed shock
I when, upon turning around with a brisk,
i Now I'm ready to talk,” he encountered
again the clear eye of Sweetwater. For,
lln the person of this none too welcome
Intruder, he saw a very different man
from lhe one upon whom he had just
turned his back with so little ceremony ;
and there appeared to be no good reason
I for the change He had not noted In
| hit preoccupation bow George, at sight
of his stooping figure, had made a sudden
significant movement, and, If he had, the
pulling of a necktie straight, would have
i meant nothing to him. But to Kweetwa
! ter It meant everything, and it was in
the tone of one fully at ease with him-
I self that he now dryly remarked:
"Mr. Brotherson. If you feel quite clean,
| and if you have sufficiently warmed your
iself, I would suggest that we start at
I once, unless you prefer to have me share
this room with you until the morning.”
To Be Continued in Next Issue.
Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites
A Test Tor Vanity as Well as For the Complexion
( \jwßL__ /
MISS ZANA CURZON.
(One of the beauties in Ziegfeld's "Follies of 1912” Company.)
By ZANA CURZON.
IF you can wear apple green without
looking like a fright, you may be
pretty sure you have a good com
plexion,
Apple green is the test of beauty, so
far as skin and coloring go.
I had an apple green dress once, and
it was a perfect tragedy, for a whil'e,
at least.
1 can say truthfully that apple green
is the most unbecoming color in the
world, unless you are one in a thou
sand. and have a clear, white skin, and
faint rose-colored cheeks, and look like
the apple blossom which ought to hang
on the apple green bough.
This famous dress was presented to
me by a relative, one of the kind who
gives you the things that are popular
at the moment, or that somebody else
tells her would make appropriate gifts.
I didn’t want a green dress, because I
don't care for that color anyhow, and
my heart ww.s set on a fur collar. But
what can you do? You have to take
what you get, though in some future
existence I hope we will be allowed to
choose our own gifts.
A Fright in Green.
The green dress came to stay, and
not long afterward the giver paid us a
visit. Naturally it was expected of me
that 1 should wear the gown she had
bought me, and I sacrificed myself and
my vanity on the altar ,of gratitude and
wore the green dress for the first time,
though I had had it for several months
and usually wear anything at once
Well, in that dress 1 simply looked a
fright. Billow’s of green chiffon and
greener taffeta threw their ghostlike
shadows and reflections on my face,
and if I ever had any illusions about
being a pretty girl I lost them on the
minute.
You have seen those plants that
spring up tn the darkness of the cellar,
potato shoots and pale, pathetic-look
ing onion sprouts. I looked like across
between those vegetables and the
greenery-yellowry picture of a futurist
painter.
I could have cried, only that would
have made my nose red. and I thought
things were bad enough already.
My heart was filled with rage at the
giver of this dreadful frock, which
showed up every one of the carefully
hidden imperfections of my complexion
and which even seemed to kill the color
of my hair and eyes.
1 marched down Into the sitting room
where the family were waiting for me
like an indignant tragedy queen going
to the scaffold. Families do not spare
your feelings, and I can tell you that by
the end of dinner 1 was doing every
thing in the world to control my temper
and my tears.
They called he ' ghosty” and “green
face" and n ade all kinds of unpleasant
remarks about my sallow-looking com
plexion. and 1 was glad when dinner
was over, and I could escape to my
room.
I tore off the wretched green dress
and settled down to have a good cry.
There was a knock on the door, and
the old cousin who had given me the
frock came in. She was .all sympathy
and sweetness, and remarked:
"Well, my dear, I hope that you will
profit by this little lesson.”
"Lesson” What lesson can there be
in making me look perfectly hideous?"
I sobbed.
"Several, as you will find.' she re
turned. "I have been noticing for some
time that you were thinking too much
about your looks, and so 1 decided to
show you that you greatly exaggerate
them You have nice eyes, and hair,
and good features, but. like a great
many girls, you think that your com
plexion is good because you covet ovet
its defects with a little jtowder. which,
by the way, is perfectly noticeable to
every body
The Lesson.
"If you were really pretty, you would
have thi first gloat principle of beauty,
which is health That shows in a good
l oaiphxlon, uttd then vou would be able
U" wc.u that given dre-t unit look Uhv
the apple blossom which should grow
with it.”
"But what can I do about it?”
"1 am going to tell you," said the
old cousin. “We shall have a little
secret together, and some day we will
astonish the family. You will begin by
giving away that box of candy that you
have on your table, and I will send up a
dish of fruit for you instead. Before
breakfast I want you to drink a great
Do You Know—
The oldest newspaper in the world
was one named The Wochenblatt,
which was published tn Gruningen, a
small town of some 1,200 inhabitants,
in the Canton of Zurick, in Switzer
land. It was the only newspaper in the
place, and was at one and the same
time the organ of the Liberal-Conser
vatives and the Social-Democrats.
Pages one and two belonged to the
Liberals and pages three and four to
the Socialists, and the two parties
abused one another heartily in its
pages.
A new’ club appealing to lovers of
dumb animals is in the course of for
mation in Mayfair, under the patron
age of many well known people. A
novel departure will be the dogs’ cloak
room, consisting of premises, with at
tendants. which will be utilized for the
purpose of taking charge of members’
dogs when visiting the club. Boarding
the animals at the club will be one of
the features, and there will be a cater
ing section where dogs can have their
meals.
'The boundary line between Canada
and the United States is marked with
posts at mile intervals for a great
part of its length. Cairns * earth
inounds. and timber posts are also
used and through the forests and
swamps a line, a rtq wide, clear of
trees and underweed, has been cut.
Across the lake artificial islands sup
port the calms, which rise about
eight feet above the high-water mark.
The Russian royal special train is the
heaviest and most luxurious in Europe.
When it was constructed it was devised
to stand a charge of dynamite, and it
can not be taken fast over most of the
European lines, because their rails are
too light. The train contains a small
chapel, with an icon of peculiar sanc
tity, a library, bath rooms, drawing
room, dining room and bed rooms.
A curious ceremony which takes place
at Whitsuntide is that which is enacted
in the parish church schools at St.
Ives, Huntingdonshire. The custom
dates back to 1675, when Dr. Robert
Wilde left money for the purpose. He
directed that the minister and church
wardens should purchase six Bibles,
that the minister should preach a ser
mon. and lots be cast for the Bibles.
The surveyors for the transcontinen
tal railway in Australia made use of
camels. The chief surveyor indicated
the trail for those who followed by at
taching a heavy chain to his camel
and letting the chain drag on the
ground.
The Women's Trade Union leagub of
New York announces that it has ap
pointed a committee to consider the ad
visability of a state-wide campaign in
favor of a 54-hour working week for
women
Rene Forachler, who is a prisoner in
Paris, probably holds the record for the
number of burglaries committed by a
man aged only 25. He has admitted
being the perpetrator of 205 big jobs.
Cartoons wer.- originally large chalk
drawings, made as studies preparatory
to oil paintings: they formerly had no
satirical meaning.
Switzerland is to put the ban on all
artificial wines and ciders, beginning
next year.
Switzerland consumes about 5,000,-
vuu bottles of mineral waters f>ach year.
big glass of hot water —drink It in little
sips, and start in as soon as you get up.
which is about three-quarters of an
hour before breakfast. If you don’t
like the taste, you can squeeze in the
juice of a bit of lemon.
"I don't want you to drink either cof
fee or tea for breakfast. You are really
a little too thin, so I am going to have
malted' milk for you, and then you must
avoid meat at breakfast, which includes
ham and bacon.
"I want you to make your luncb al
most entirely of vegetables. Eat two
and three helpings of salad, if neces
sary, but get plenty of fresh green
things. If you are hungry in the aft
ernoon, instead of drinking tea or soda
water, drink lemonade. You must go
without desserts at dinner unless there
are stewed prunes or apricots or other
fruits, and every night before you go
to sleep I want you to drink the juice
>f two oranges and one lemon. Squeeze
it out into a glass and take it as a re
freshing tonic.
The Fresh Air Cure.
"I have arranged with the cook that
she should have a large jar of pre
served apricots stewed without sugar,
ready for you to eat whenever you
want, and you oan often make your
lunch off this fruit, graham bread and
salad.
"You stay in the house too much,
reading foolish novels and eating can
dy. and if you really want to lay
claims to beauty, you will to have
more out-of-door exercise.”
She seemed so interested in my wel
fare. and Indeed I was so disappointed
about my looks that I would have done
almost anything. So it wasn’t difficult
for me to obe.v orders, and follow out
her instructions, even when -Ijer visit
was over and she went home.
We had arranged that she should
come back to spend a week with us in
two months. She arrived just before
dinner time, but I did not go down to
see her, but waited until all the family
had gathered together at the table.
I stood before the mirror fastening up
the apple green dress, and this time I
was riot only happy but grateful, for
the dress was immensely becoming, and
showed up the fresh pink color in my
cheeks and the clear white skin which
I had acquired by strictly following out
my cousin’s rules for diet.
I made a triumphant entry into ttje
dining room, and I felt amply repaid by
the compliments I received for the
work and drudgery of two months of
exercise, careful dieting and self-sacri
flee.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that has
been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. H. Fletcher for over
30 years—the genuine Castoria. We respectfully call the attention of fathers and
mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in
black. When the wrapper is removed the same signature appears on both sides
of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria for their little ones in the
past years need no warning against counterfeits and imitations, but our present
duty is to call the attention of the younger generation to the great danger of intro
ducing into their families spurious medicines.
, It is to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the
nefarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitutes, or what should
more properly be termed. conterfeits, for medicinal preparations not only for
adults, but worse yet, for children’s medicines. It therefore devolves on the mother
to scrutinize closely what she gives her child. Adults can do that for themselves
but the child has to rely on the mother’s watchfulness.
Wf?,— _ Jj Letters from Prominent Druggists
.<=— addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
KKwScvb wJtSI I Central Drug Co., of Detroit, Mich., says: “We consider your Castoria
Kc‘2 1 ’’ 2 • —---- ,a 1 claßi distinct from patent medicines and commend it”
Christy Drug Stores, of Pittsburg. Pa., say: ‘‘We have sold your
BKh r* HL 8 Kastoria f° r s 0 many years with such satisfactory results that we cannot
" i 0 v RjW q M refrain from saying a good word for it vh®u we get a chance.”
l Jacob Bros., of Philadelphia, Pa., say: “We take pleasure in recon-
; mending Fletcher’s Castoria as one of the oldest and best of the prepar*-
Hus f ALfOIIO ITpeR^NT 31 tl01 ” ° f the k * nd ” POn th ® ,narket -”
AVegelable Preparation for As IIeM & McCann ’ of Kansas City, Mo., say: “Your Castoria always gives
sim '^ t ' n $'heFoortamlßcdi'ia ® a ’ ia f a "tlon. We have no substitute for it and only sell ‘The Kind You
jjßhg tingtlieSionracltsaidßowelsof Have Alwa Y® Bought,’ the original.”
EiijtksF. -M,— — 7116 Voe E* , li Bros., of Minneapolis, Minn., say: “We wish to say that w*
have at 811 tlEles a larse demand for Fletcher’s Castoria. at all of our three
~-r.‘ ——„ stores and that it gives universe! satisfaction to our trade.”
*TolW)tCSlJldpßuon,Chferfi!l- Polk Miller Drug Co., of Richmond, Va., says: “Your Castoria is one of
n^m 5 ! Mm^h^ On,aiß vr C ' tt 'T • the most 6atl sfactory preparations we have ever handled. It seems to
jS® / “ tlsfy completely the public demand for such an article and is steadily
■gT*. w Ml JIAKCPTIC. . creating a growing sale by its merit.”
■jffi'Ji ju^ana remedy demanded by the public and while our shelves are thorough’*
JbMlrSaUit- I equipped with the best of drugs and proprietary articles, there are le»
k ,f any whlch have the unceasing sale that your Castoria has.”
/fr'Y’^ I *** I M ‘ C ‘ D ° W ’ Ot Clnclunatl > Ohl0 ’ says: “When people in increasing num-
QfSMiujgr. ) bera Purchase a remedy and continue buying it for years; when it passe*
the fad or experimenral stage and becomes a household necessity, then
rt'U;®’ Aperfecf Remedy forConsfipa-i it can be said its worth has been firmly established. We can and do
tion. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea: gladly offer this kind of commondation to Fletcher's Castoria.”
Worms.Co«Milsi<ms.l’everish
nessawlLoss of Sleep. genuine CASTORIA always
r* 0 o“ Facsimile Signature of -<• ft. *ci- J
■pt —// £eM ‘ 4ll6
THfCeNT.M'R COMPAKX, S J H XL
BScc NEW YORK. | Z P
The Kind You Have Always BouglH
Exac, Copy of Wrapper. | n |J se p Qr £Q YeHES.
▼m® centaur comramv, nrw voms*. citv
:: , Making a Man Over :•
By Beatrice Fairfax
"Some pray to marry the man they
love;
My prayer will somewhat vary;
I humbly pray to heaven above
That I love the man I marry."
Rose Pastor Stokes.
—:
A GEORGIA girl writes.
"I am seventeen and deeply in
love with a man three years my
senior. My mother likes him, although
she says he will never make a man of
himself, and wouldn’t like to have me
marry him. I would like to marry him
because we agree, and I believe if we
were parted our hearts would break.
Hr is the only child in the family and
his parents have spoiled him. I would
like to know how I can break him of
this so that my mother can like him in
all his ways."
My dear, you are praying to marry
the man you love. With the task be
fore you of making him over, you will
have great need of praying 'to love the
man you marry.
Your mother says he will never make
a man of himself. If her judgment is
biased, or not, this remains true and of
importance: She is looking at him
with eyes, that seek her daughter’s hap
piness, and no woman was ever happy
as the wife of a man who failed to
make a man of himself.
After love comes to a woman she
loses what we will call “ambition for
herself.” She grows ambitious for her
husband, and will make any sacrifice,
undergo any privation, to further his
chances. If he has a talent, she will
deny herself necessities to provide him
with the means to cultivate it, and in
numberless times when a man arrives
at the top it was with the aid of a
meek little woman the world never
hears about.
If he is content with the mediocre,
if he has no thought of the future be
yond rent day, and is never prepared
for that, her discouraged hopes find
new life in her children. She becomes
ambitious for them, and many a woman
has been to Gethsemane twice because
of the heritage of worthlessness her
children received from their father.
Your lover lacks every quality which
a man should need to make a man of
himself, and, in addition, is hopelessly
spoiled. He can never be a man be
cause he will always be a baby, and
he will always be a babj- because his
parents have always carried him.
My dear, the task you would under
take is heavy beyond your strength.
You would like to marry him because
you agree. How long would you agree
if he treated you as a spoiled child
treats his mother! Would y our , w
outlive the blows with which a spoiuT
child meets caresses?
You believe if you were parted yon.
heart would break. Your heart r
sure, would suffer many a pang, but i
he is the selfish product of weak par
tai raising, he won’t feel badly i ong '
If you married him. yours would
ways be a heavy burden, the i OT *
dusty roads. It would mean a life i
unappreciated self-denial, and I ant s'
anxious for your happiness. Little Gfri
I hope you will wait just a little hr
longer.
When you are a little older, and hay.
looked about.you a little more, you w m
know that the most helpless,
hopeless, most heavily burdened trav.
elers on life’s highway are the womei
who married men with the hope of re
forming them.
Up-to-Date JokeTj
Little Mary’s father had denied her s
pleasure which she had confidently ex
pected to enjoy. That night, when sh»
said he/ prayers at her mother's knee,
she concluded with this petition:
"And please don’t give my papa anr
more children. He don’t know how t«
treat those he's got now."
Landlady—You believe in mustard
plasters, doctor?
M. D.— Rather! I always order them
for patients who call me out in ths
middle of the night when there’s noth-
Ing the matter with ’em.
Miss Homeleigh—Perhaps you wont
believe it. but a strange man tried t»
kiss me once.
Miss Cutting—Really? Well. hs’J
have been a strange man if he’d tried
to kiss you twice!
Mary—l’m positive Fred loves me and
intends to make me his wife.
Helen—Why? Has he proposed yeti
Mary—No; but he dislikes mothef
more every time he sees her
First Horseman—Pulling, is he? Why
don’t you try riding him on the curb!
Second Horseman —Ride him on thi
curb? Good heavens. I can't scarcely)
ride ’im in the middle of the road!
Manager—Where’s the living skeles
ton, Joe? It’s his turn to go on
General Utility Boy—He went an#
slipped while he was washing his hands,
and went down the pipe