Newspaper Page Text
THE. GEORGIAN'S MAGAZINE PAGE
Daysey Mayme
and Her Folks
By FRANCES L. GARSIDE.
the perfidy of friends.
Daysey mayme appleton has
a Most Intimate Friend. Os
course, she had many friends,
but S he had only one Most Intimate
friend.
Every girl who Is a real girl has one
yost Intimate Friend. It is the girl to
Ljotn she confides her Fondest Hopes
an( j Secret Ambitions. Others may
j>i n k her commonplace and uninter
esting, hut the Most Intimate Friend
Knows that she has Ideals, and that she
)s planning to some day become Fa
mous.
The Most Intimate Friend is the one
ff ho shares pillow secrets, a route by
w hich all the family skeletons reach
the world at large.
Daysey Mayme Appleton trusted her
yost Intimate Friend with her Dearest
Secret.
The Most Intimate Friend told it, and
laughed behind Daysey Mayme’s back!
That night Daysey Mayme discoursed
oti Friendship to her family.
"There is no one in this world,” she
ga id, bitterly, "whom one can trust.
Every one is false. Every one is a
traitor. Every one is a Judas at heart.
I never intend to have another friend
&s long as I live. Never again will I
trust any one."
Aunt Marla Appleton said nothing.
She had tasted the bitterness of losing
her lover the day before that set for
her wedding. He had eloped with het
best friend! But she felt that her an
guish was nothing compared with that
of Daysey Mayme.
So she put her experience In a buck
et and listened with tender sympathy to
Daysey Mayme.
Lysander John had had friends who
robbed him both of his money and
good name, and he listened with scorn
to Daysey Maymi's tale of woe.
As she grew more eloquent and her
tears fell faster his scorn grew to such
enormous size that he left the room.
But Aunt Marie Appleton, having the
heart of a woman, knew that the great
est sorrow’s of life are those that come
to Youth, and she comforted Daysey
Mayme.
"Life Is so sad and dark," moaned
her niece, “that I will be better out of
It The future le more than I can bear,
and I Intend to kill myself.”
Aunt Maria Appleton agreed that life
11 ead, ah’s me! and then, knowing the
heart of a maid, produced a box of
chocolates which she always kept on
band for just such Dark Days.
No, Daysey Mayme couldn’t eat any.
They would choke her, she said, reach
ing: for one. She splattered it wit a
tears, but it tasted good, and she ate
another.
"It is such a Comfort," she said, when
reaching for the third, "to pour out
one’s soul to one like you!
"Os course, you never experienced
grief as great as mine, or you could
not go on living."
And Aunt I nrta passed the candy.
OBEYING THI 3r”TOR.
Salesman: “Shirt, sir? Mi. i have
n negligee or a stiff front?’’
Customer: "Negligee, please. The
lector said I must avoid starchy
things.”
BROTHER HURRIES
FROM THE WEST
To See Sister, Thinking She
Would Die, But He
Helped Her to Re-
cover.
TMhvffle, Tenn.—"l was passing
hfotjg-h the critical stage of life."
wrltss Mrs. Kate K. Weaver, of 1715
Cockrlll street, this city, "and for three
years and nine months, to the day, 1
' ,as In a serious condition. I could not
w *lk alone across the floor, 1 was so
"My brother came from Dallas,
to see me. thinking 1 was going
’ die. But he gave me the money to
’V stx bottles of Cardul, the woman's
°”* n . and T began to improve' with the
**"”nd bottle The six bottles made me
’’d. strong and hearty.
/Since getting well I have been to
We my brother In Dallas.
"Have talked to several of my lady
fr* e hds, and now they are taking Car
my daughter for one, and it is
Piping her. She is 27 years old, and I
nearly 51. Cardui helped us all.
f certainly do not know how
false Cardul high enough. You may
Publish this letter If you wish, for Car-
certainly saved my life, and I can
n °t say too much for it.
’ shall always recommend your
"onderful medicine.”
'’du! Is good for young and old. 1!
“Sts but Ijttle to try, and may mean s
to you.
’t a bottle of Cardul today.
Cv o , B Write to: Ladies’ Advisory Dept
fen."'hooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga
...[‘■/‘T Special Instructions, and 1,4
ok. "Home Treatment f
sent in plain wrapper, on reuuest.
(Advertisement >
The Forest, by Edwme Noye, Like Pieces of a Dream, Says Nell Brinkley
Copyright, 1912, by Star Publishing Co. J
, ..VAX (T W® hEa J® t
Here in the little green book is a woodsman—and his wife—a sweet, white dryad from the heart of a silver-birch and the wild god—Pan.
HERE I have in my two hands, while I sit and dream of
long old myths, while I see half-shapen pictures of
white wood nymphs, while I scent in my nostrils
the deep, strong smell of the forest and the sweet, wet odor
of gray and green moss, while I writhe in my old hankering
for the greenwood and a little brown house in its deeps;
here, while I drift in wakened, lovely dreams, I hold in my
two hands a little green book. All green and gold, it is like
its name. And its name is "THE FOREST.” Could you or
I, who love the wind in the. trees, and the green tree boles,
the secret places and the hope for secret adventure, find
th green and gold of a little thin book with the mystic
name, “THE FOREST,” on its back without dipping into the
tale between its white petal-leaves? And when you do, you
will dip into a dream!
Under the name, "THE FOREST," is a tiny oak leaf and
BROADWAY JONES By Bertrand Babcock
Based on George M. Cohan’s Play Now
Running In New York.
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
After Pembroke and John had left the
office, the judge walked up to Jackson
and put both hands upon his shoulders.
"I'd give ten years of my life, sonny,
rather than miss that," he said fer
vently. _ . „.
Broadway was looking at Josie, She
tried to speak several times and it was
manifest that she was laboring under
some great internal stress, when finally
she managed to get out just: „
"It was —simply—wonderful."
Then in the train of her multitude of
duties she went out Into the plant.
The judge was quick to think of the
effect upon the men of the factory of the
"i’ll tell Higgins Pembroke has gone
about his business,” he . said. "Hell
spread the news in a jiffy."
Ami he left Wallace and Jackson to
g "Well, what do you think of it. Wal
lace asked, half jovially and half ear
" itroadwav felt himself very near to the
end of his mental resources and the re
serves whirl, would have been greater If
he had had business training.
"It’s a good plot, but how are we going
to play it?” he said dubiously.
"Why it’s the biggest cinch in the
world " returned Wallace enthusiastically.
■T-U bet you that If this plant showed the
profit they say it did last year-
ringing of the. telephone upon the
ancestral "esk of the Jones family cut
my governor. I guess” he ex
-I>lained to Broadway, as he put the re
his ear "I called him up
into the telephone: "Hello-Hello
„o strict!; business -Say, governor,
J cun get a two hundred thousand dollar
contract from the J"nes Pepsin people.
TP.o'ro going in heavy, I hear. 1 can
, ! s.-. this rigid away What do you
.ink ' New owners take possession today
•n ev’re all right I've them U P
Weil will VOU let me use my own Judg-
, ■’.bout that'.’-Thanks. J think 11l
mike I splendid deal.” He looked up to
1 ... In.'kson—"No. I wont be back
win k at .la k n rnor . wlll y ou
UnU "X authorizing me to use
my' own judgment and go ahead7-AII
ri --Whm’'ar'’ > '”t> going to do'.’” asked
~ . iw.v as Bob left the Instrument.
practical advertising soul of Wal
, „ hJ.i been aroused. The possibilities
' ' i.ei.- Pepsin always with good adver
ting appealed 'h-roughly to him, and
then, too, he foresees that he would spend
much time in Jonesville.. This latter con
tingency was not at all displeasing.
"I’m going to show Pembroke that
we’re not bluffing,” Wallace explained.
"I’m going back tomorrow and cover New
York for a starter.”
But the future of the situation was not
so apparent to Jackson.
"Two hundred thousand?” he lamented.
"Where's It coming from? What are you
going to do—ruin me?”
A SOFT DEAL.
"I'll draw the contract," went on Wal
lace. “You'll have a year to pay for it.
You’ll be the biggest advertised article In
America a month from now. Say, will
you give me all you make over a million
in the next two years, if I give you this
advertising free?”
"I should say I will."
"Shake hands with your partner. This
will be the quickest, softest and first im
portant money I've ever made.”
"Do you mean it?” asked Broadway.
"You bet I mean it.”
The hand of Broadway was placed on
the arm of Wallace.
“Bob, I never felt so happy in all my
life,” said Broadway.
Into their consciousness the fat voice
of Sammy thrust itself. Thej- had not
seen him enter.
"Mrs. Gerard to see Mr. Jones,” he an
nounced.
From sheer shock Johnson fell back
into the arms of Wallace, and the lat
ter, grave as he knew the situation to
A SPLENDID FOOD TOO
SELDOM SERVED
In the average American house
hold Macaroni is far too seldom
served. Il is such a splendid food
and one that is so well liked that
it should be served at one meal
every day. Let it take the place
of potatoes. Macaroni has as
great a food value as potatoes and is
ever so much more easily digested.
Faust Macaroni is made from richly
glutinous. American grown Durum
wheat. It is every bit as finely •fla
vored and tenderly succulent as the im
ported varieties and you can be posi
tive it Is cb-an and pure- made by
Americans in spotless, sunshiny kitch
ens.
Your grocer can supply you with Faust
Macaroni—in sealed packages s<: ami lOe
Write for free Book of Recipes.
MAULL BROS ,
St. Louis, Mo.
under the tiny oak leaf—a name—a winsome and delicious
sort of name—of the twenty-year-old girl who wrote "THE
FOREST.” And it is EDWINE NOTE.
And it stirred my fancy with its sheer, sweet beauty;
made forgotten and never known music pipe through my
mind; made forest spirits dance for hie; made all my old
loves of Greek RabT& walk for me.
My red grate fire seems made of brush and sticks be
hind a sheltering rock; my books and deep chair fade; the
walls draw stealthily away ; great trees loom round me, and
the shadows seem to be black forest glades. And I hold the
little thin green book between my hands and wonder how
people of a dreantt can be so real.
"Sylvan” comes homeward through the forest in a gale.
The night, the gale, the pale sunset, the woodman's name,
are pieces of a dream —but yet, in the clamor of the wind he
be for his friend, could not restrain his
laughter;
"Tell her to wait a few minutes,” Wal
lace directed when he was able.
"The gentleman wants to see you first,,
sir,” Sammy said to Broadway.
The latter was now on his feet with
a stricken look upon his unhappy features.
"What gentleman?” he asked.
"Mr. Rankin,” said Sammy.
Broadway instructed Sammy to let
Rankin in, but under no pretext what
soever to permit the woman to get by
him at the door.
"Where the deuce did she come from?”
he asked Wallace. "How the deuce did
she know I was here?”
Rankin entered in a quite respectable
way, yet a keen observer might have
noted that something had happened to
L
Famous “Pint of Cough
Syrup” Receipt
No Better Remedy at Any Price.
Fully Guaranteed.
Mak« a plain syrup by mixing one
pint of granulated sugar and Vi pint of
warm water and stir for two minutes.
Put ounces of pure Pines (fifty
cents’ worth) in a pint bottle, and fill it
up with the Sugar Syrup. This gives
you a family supply of the best cough
syrup at a saving of $2. It never spoils.
Take a teaspoonful every one, two or
three hours. *
The effectiveness of this simple remedy
is surprising. It seems to take hold in
stantly, ana will, usually stop the most
obstinate cough in 24 hours. It tones
up the jaded appetite and is just laxa
tive enough to.be helpful in a cough,
and has a pleasing taste. Also excellent
for bronchial trouble, throat tickle, sore
lungs and asthma, and an unequalcd
remedy for whooping cough and croup.
This recipe for making cough remedy
with Piner and Sugar S'vrup (or
strained honev) is a prime favorite in
thousands of homes in the United States
and Panada. The plan has been imita
ted,. though never successfully. Ts you
try it, use only genuine Piner, which is
the most valuable concentrated com
pound of Norway white pine extract, and
is rich in guaiacol and all the natural
healing nine elements. Other prepara
tions will not work in this recipe.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction,
or.money promptly refunded, goes with
: this recipe. . Your druggist has Pincx,
i or will get it for you. If not. send to
I The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
worries for the purple fruit of the plum tree by his door!
And so we love him —for he's blood and bones and heart!
Behind his veil of dream he is a lusty mortal.
Here in the little green book is a woodsman and his
wife —a little, bashful child, a sweet, white dryad from the
heart of a silver birch—the Gale —and Pan—the wild god—
Pan! Here, too, the Kobolds of the tree roots peer at you.
Plain witchery there is in this thin green book; it is a
stealthy finger that stirs the deeps of the pool of <lr-.ims
and the bubbles rise to your head. Yet, through the h. z. of
mystic unreality a real tale throbs; there is warm, human
love, and human fire —and food and deep, warm bed!
The little green book, "THE FOREST,” by EDWINE
NOYE, is good to have and good to know—for it sets ;<>ur
heart a-dreaming and a-singing, too.
NELL BRINKLEY. I
Rankin’s point of view. He seemed more
assured and less like a parasite. But
this was manifest only in a number of
small facial and physicial details which
Wallace and Broadway, keen on their
own affairs, did not notice.
“Mrs. Gerard’s here, sir." said Rankin.
“I know,” returned Broadway, "where
did she come from?”
“She didn't say.” explained Rankin.
"Got to the hotel five minutes ago—came
Cottolene makes a rich, crisp crust, . Pie Crust
without the suggestion of greasiness.
Cottolene-mate pie is digestible too. And— /
f Cottolene is more economical than butter or lard,
f because you use one-third less. Moreover, Cottolene costa -B’)
rag no more than lard. ~
f Cottolene
I*.- Here is a recipe for one of the most delicious jW ®
pastry dishes you ever ate—Grape Fruit Pie
made with Cottolene: jgU
CRUST
1 cupful of sifted flour % cupful Cottoletu ‘
3 teaspoonfull ice water A pinch of salt
W filling laMßrTp!
W.V., % cupful of tugar Juice of medium- & -
2 rounding teaspoon- sized grape fruit IV «
full of corn starch 2 even teaspoonfuh \f A 4 /t X. jP / .
Juice of '/ 2 le m on Cottolem V IF \
Yolks of 2 eggs Grated rind of >/ 2 Y I Nk W ’
1 cupful boiling water lemon 1 I
Made only by \ J »
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY \
I fi I IT va 1J /
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to the room and demanded to He brought
to you. I couldn’t help it, sir."
In a great agony of fear Broadway
paced up and down the floor.
"What am I going to do? We re got
to get her away from here. We've got
to get her out of town,” he complained.
"Take it on the. run,” advised Wallace.
“Go on! I’ll get rid of her some way.'
Continued In Next Issue.
Advice to the
Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
YOU CANNOT PREVENT THAT.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am seventeen and in love with
a girl the same age. I take her to
dances and other places of amuse
ment every chance I get. When I
call on her I go right up to her
house. Her father and mother seem
pleased with me when I call. There
is another man, who lives near her,
and every night she comes homes he
meets her on the street and talks
to her for a half hour. I do not
know what he speaks about, but I
think he is trying to fall in love
with her. X. Y. Z.
You can not prevent others from
loving her. But you can, I am
confident, prevent her from giving her
love to another by winning it first.
Go in and win! You show yourself
to be the better man by calling at her
house instead of meeting her on the
streets.
THAT IS IMPOSSIBLE.
■ Dear Miss Failfax:
1 am engaged to a young man
three years my senior, and love,
him dearly, and know my love is
reciprocated. The only thing that
is keeping me from marrying him. is
that he has some very bad habits,
of which 1 do rot like to consult
him. and yet 1 feel tha: I must tr<
and break him of them without
hurting his feelings. X. Y’. Z.
A surgeon must use the knife in tii
operation. If this man hi: had !-übrt a .
your fear that you miy hurt l.i.s feel
ings slipyltt not prevent you f-.cn sip
plying "the renraly.
I)o not marry him with tin hope of
reforming him afterward. I.it the
reform emfie’ ilr t. .-.nd mr 1 : . i:.- t' al
it is syre.
n ■no -1 ■■■■ «w*” xys—s
CRITICAL TIME
OFWOWSUFE
From 40 to 50 Years of Age.
How It May Be Passed
in Safety.
Odd, Va.“l am enjoying better
health than I have for 20 years, and I
believe I can safely
say now that I am a
well woman. I was
reared on a farm and
had all kindsof heavy
work to do which
caused the troubles
that came on me la
ter. For five years
during the Change of
I Life I was no>t able
to lift a pail of wa
ter. I had hemor-
' L A
A
rhages which would last for weeks and I
was not able to sit up in bed. I suffered
a great deal with my back and was so
nervous I could scarcely sleep at night,
and 1 did not do any housework for three
years.
“Now I can do as much work as
any woman of my age in the county,
thanks to the benefit I have received
from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I recommend your remedies
to all suffering women.’’—Mrs. Martha
L. Holloway, Odd, Va.
No other medicine for woman’s ills ha;
received such wide-spread and unquali
fied endorsement We know of no othei
medicine which has such a record of
success as has ' Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound. For more than 30
years it has been the standard remedy
for woman’s ills.
Ts you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound will help you, write
to Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co.
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad
vice, Your letter w ill he opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.