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;_;Ege__ry PSR (R s I'reat for You—Read “THE G‘ODDESS” » Then See It in Motion Picl‘ur;Sr __
' M AR AT 2 ) b it Men See It in Motion Pictures J
THE GEORGIANS MAGAZINE, PAGE—
THE GODDESS
- )
By Gouverneur Morris
and g
Charles W. Goddard.
\
(Copyright. 1915, by Star Company.)
“‘. 7 OU’LL hide in the woods at
first,” sald Celestia. ‘“Do
you see that star? Follow
it for half an hour—then you'll wake
up. But you will remember that you
have murdered an innocent person.
There will be blood on your hand to
remind you. If there was another or
others who set you on to do this thing,
you can report to them that the thing
has been done.”
Then Mrs, Gunsdort hurried down
the steps of the platform, round the
main lne of rails, glancing furtively
about her, and disappeared into the
night and the forest.
Celestia dined all alone that night,
and went to bed soon after, utterly ex.
hausted, after locking the door of the
observation car and of her own state-
Toom for the first time in her life,
At midnight a locomotive was at
tached to the snow-white train and it
was drawn slowly on its way deeper
into the heart of the North Woods.
Soon after the train had started
Professor Stilliter. entered Celestia's
car from his own, and, after plying
a well-oiled pass key, stood prying
down at the darkness where she lay.
Presently he touched the button of
an electric torch, and her face shone
brightly in the oircle of mpdiance.
Then with his free hand Professor
Stilliter began to make caressing
passes over the smooth, white fore
head, up and down and across and
across, never touching {it, but always
80 close that his hand had a sensa
tion of warmth,
After a while Celestia passed from
natural to hypnotic sleep; her eyes
opened partially and had no expres
sion in them.
" “To-morrow, Celectia dear,” whis-
Concerning Parents
and the Child
The Vital Need of Obedience to Those Who Are in
Authority, -
By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE
WATER.
(Copyright, 1915, by Star Company.)
ERHAPS I am hopelessly old-sash-
P foned and behing the times, but 1
believe in the implicit obedience of
& child to a parent,
I am aware that were I to utter this
Statement in the presence of many mod
ern parents 1 would be greeted with'
humerous protests, and perhaps some
Bevere reproofs. Yet, In spite of this
fact, I still maintain that if a parent
does not know what is good for a child
better than that child does himself, he
or she Is not fit to be a parent.
“But surely you would reason a thing
out with the dear little one, wouldn't
you?' some one asks.
Not until after he had obeyed the com
mand given him. The “Don’t do that,
dear!” should be heeded first. After
that, explanation may come.
The average American child is outra
geously spolled. If one doubts this let
one watch him for a while.
“The doctor says my little girl must
have an alcohol rubbing each morning.
But how am I to geve It to her? She
simgly says she won't have It, and that
end® 1"
To my way of thinking, that ought to
begih it. If the mother has not es
tablislsd the habit of obedience In an
S-yvear-odd daughter, Mis time that she
do so. To be sure, is
:“;:»:dm‘% ter In beginning tn-.. she
'"&?:.‘r‘.nc. do not realize that If
All Babies Destined
to Great Achievement
To be m Is to be great. For '*-n1
o) every tir man Iy
"y , fant. And for ths
& v reason every one
) should remember that
- whatever Is done to
‘ " B aid the mother, to re
| lieve her of distressed
during ber trying
. .‘ . A\ montls, will surely be
of marked benefit o
~ ‘ the child
K 3 Among the sterling
alds Is & splendid ex
& ternal remedy known
as “Mother's Friend.™
. 1t s what Is calied an
) smbroation. It san
plie s b . sCien, Rentiy
rubbed It y 3 r wn hand guided by
) - mind it Mmakes the mMmusciss
i X r ¢ naturaliy and
the v the nerves s » that
they adjust themaeives Lo the proce f
expansion to that pain from this sourcs
i a s Y ated Women who use
. s ¥ nd refer Lo the absances
¢ g sickness, they are relleved
{ s 2 a nor distressss. al
Appre v sappears and those i»
¢ \ ' » fdg=ts” no longer dis
Lt ant 1 " we namaed
fthie ¥ (3ot & hottle day
ot ar it Then At once write |
" mont eptertaining and instru~*'yve
Sook f - tners Ad
few i fle gulntor C % la
ma ity Atiants,. ia
This hook «xplains the physical action
of "M Pries ells why It on
fose gt the mustiss and re
Jieves plus Stra It alsc contaling
letters of ox tenes from many happy
mot ! such & handy Jittle
| — - . - Al onece rero
nise & gt wha ! had Aiways wisd
od 1 read plaln facts Ad i herself
he honk 1 mallad fres 1o any addresy
Write for 1L today
pered Professor Stilliter, “when your
work is done, when you have spoken
to the people, you are to go back to
that heaven from which you came.
Now that you are beginning to doubt
your divine nature, your useftlness is
over.
“But the heaven to which you are
going is not what you think, my bless
ing! It will be a heaven on earth. I
shall be in it with you. To-morrow
we are to be married. Say that you
are glad.”
Celestia’s lipe parted, and in a voice
cold and without emotion she said, “I
am glad.”
“You will say that you wish to go
for an automobile ride in the forest.
At b o'clock there will be a motor
ready and waiting. You will enter
this, refusing to be accompanied by
anyone, and you will do exactly what
the driver tells you. I had planned
our elopement for to-night, but there
was a difficulty about the license.”
He bent over her as if to kiss her,
but something at the very last mo
ment seemed to restrain him.
“Sleep now, darling,” he said; “the
other sleep, the sleep of nature that
makes us all over again between
days.”
He tiptoed out, closed the door of
her stateroom behind. him, locked it,
turned and received a smashing blow
in the face. He gave a grunt of fear
and pain and heard his ereglasses
smash to pieces as they hit the floor of
the car,
For a long time he had been in the
babit of carrying two spare pairs in
leather cases, one in each of his
waistcoat pockets: he now reached for
one of these and it was knocked from
his hand as he strove to ward another
blow from his face—after the blow
had landed. 3
Guarding his face and head with
one upturned arm and elbow, and
breathing fast with fear and excite
ment, Professor Stilliter sought and
found the door of the passage that
led to the other end of the car, and
succeeded in placing it between him
self and his assailant. Then groping
with both hands, and in his blindness
A 4 mere baby Is taught that “Mother
knows best,”” there need seldom be the
threatening and punishing process we
have discussed so much. It Is easy to
teach the baby to understand that
“No-no"” means “No-no,” and not *1
don’t want you to do that and I heally
hope you won't, but I don't know how
under the sun to prevent it.”" Are we to
allow youngsters to be small Savages un
til they have attained so-called years
of discretion and then expect them to do
Just what is right.
The Value of Obedience
From the Young.
Long ago I heard a rtory of the man
with a trick dog that, he boasted, al
ways obeyed his commands. To fllus
trate this, he called the Jdog.
“Here, Towser!" he ordered, “come
and give me your paw!"
The dog looked at him for a moment,
then turned his back upon him and
crawled under a table at the farther
most corner of the room.
“Well,"” sald the man, “then §° under
the table! I will be obeyed!”
The obedlence of many children re
minds me of this tale.
“Please, dear,” the mother says, “sit
quietly at the table until the rest of
us have finished--that's a good Ilittle
girl! 1 know you will @o that to please
mother.” |
The 4-year-old promptly wriggles from
her chair to her feet. 1 want to get
down and play!” she insists, vocifer
ously. ;
““There, there, dear!” the mother says. |
“Run on and play then.”
As the child grows older and wants to.
break rules of various kinds, are those
who make them going to stand quietly
aside and allow her to have her own
‘wu? If sO, alas for her character.
\ We parents owe duties to other peo
ple, too, as well as to our children. Nol
‘man is Justified In Imposing upon his
friends & pet—no matter how dear—that
Is going to be a nuisance to everybody
with whom he comes Into contact. Nor
has a parent any r\g: to allow his
child to be so disobed ,80 unruly, as
to make other ”?“ uncomfortable. |
In one home there are two amall
boys who, In slang parlance, “own the
place.” They are welcome to llt, out
n’d:'n d:gu-. There ‘i- no ylcuun’ 'i.n
visting 10-f or! mother. -
!tnuovfn that I.Em:. kind to curb
youthful spirits, and her sons rum up
and down -uln‘ throygh halls and
\dnvlnwml. Al thelr own sweet will
They a Interrupt her an she chats
‘wm\ ohoc:u' \m(oflun:: \mn', n“:( inov~
ng what is before » ppen to
m’u. her first call at this home.
‘I ealied there once,” & sweet womer
told me. “1I may fl' there again, but
it will not be until those two \amall
rascals are oid enough to have some
m.Yn?"o'u.uomthrl. If thay
.
have not yet learned %: be quiet when
older [-00’{0 want 1o talk, to speak cour
teously 1o the person who greets them
courteously —~when will they learn?
“The, ha carefree little grea.
tares, thats GA “the fond mother
pleads "Tha{ can be young but ones.
The same thing might be sald of the
playful small Myera. But we do not
care 1o have l'".n“nmbnl n our draw
ing rooms or At our tables
| insist that the «i.lr has some In.
allenable rights. One of thoss s that at
e Rt oo o BT
xflnu to Authority #o other I
that he be l?M o h: the best not
lur'urllx‘;l of which 'h“y':&'
t s only I lnnv 1o 1o
others that ohe learns govern obe's
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Freddie the Ferret Smashes Prof. Stilliter i : TS o
ashes Prof. Stilliter in the Face
Why [ Married a
Second Time
The Man Who Really Fell in Love at Middle Age
Tells His Story.
By DOROTHY DIX. |
“I!(ARRIED a 4 second time, said
the Contented Looking Man, “for
\ the best and happlest reason in
the world—because I rell wildly, madly,
passionately, romantically in love with
& woman with a love such as no boy
is capable of experiencing.
“l was one of the Innumerable wvie
tims of early marriage. When | was
nothing but an immature, undeveloped
boy, my fancy was caught by a pretty
lttle pink and white and gold girl,
with rosy cheeks and baby blue eyes
and yellow curls.
“We had the same taste In ice cream
soda, and our steps matched in dancing,
and from these great and unmistakable
evidences of mutual sympathy, we de
clded that we were created for each
other, and had been mysterionsly
brought together by an All-Wise Prov
idence,
“It Is one of the greatest blessings of
poverty that most boys haven't enough
money to marry their first sweetheart,
and by the time they have accumu
lated the wherewithal to go to house
keeping on they have recovered com
pletely from their attack of calf love,
and so they are save® from wrecking
their lives on the rocks of a youthful
marriage.
“Unhappily for me, | was an orphan
and had come Into a large fortune on
my twenty-first birthday, so there was
nothing to stand in the way of my in
dulging In any kind of fatal folly to
which 1 feit Inclined, and before 1 was
two-and-twenty [ had done my best
to ruin my lfe by making an utterly
unsultable marriage.
A Girl of Limitations,
“Understand me, 1 am saying nothing
against my Witle child-wife -God rest
ber soul In whatever heaven she in
habits. She was as she was made, &
#ood, dear, sweet little doll baby, a lit-
Ue girl who staymd 16 to the end of
the chapler, whose interests In the
world were bound by bher own little
circle, and whose aspirations never
reached higher than pink candle shades
or & new hat
~ "She never grew up, and | 414 grow
up. That was our cruel misfortune.
She stayed Just where she was when
\n were married, and | went on study-
Ing, reading, Marning from books and
men, getting the bigger and the broader
outiook on life-a milllon new inter
ests developing for me every hour of
the day.
“1 tried to take my wife with me. |
would talk to her of my hopes, and
plans, and aspirations, but she 4 not
understand and would complain that the
things that | was ambitioys to do would
take me away from home and that we
were so comfortable as we were.
“Not two years after we were mar
ried | faced the ghastly fact that | had
made the mast terrible of all mis
takes, that | was bound for life to a
woman with whom | had not one sin-
Mo thought In common, & woman whe
onld no more he & companion 1o me
than eould the Drasden statustte upon
the manteipiece. Worse still, | kbew
With deadiy certainty that my boyish
faney for her had fickered out, and In
the light of my manhood's knowledgs
1 a hev
RS, ket by e
went through years of this hid
eous mockery of keeping up the pre
l tense of sentiment and happy home and
husband, and all the balance of the
‘domestic drama, and then my child-wife
died just as the gold in her hair was
turning to ashes.
i “I was left a middle-aged man who
‘m drunk deeply of a bitter eup. I
was sadly wise In matters of senti
'ment, and cynically suspiclous of the
vagaries of the human heart, and if
¥ou had told me that I should ever mar
ry agaln 1 should have laughed you to
scorn. 1 had tried it.© Never again!
anlda. 1 should have sald, ‘T am too
old for romance. That belongs to boy
hood, to sweet one-and-twenty, not the
cautious forties.'
“And then the One Wman came along,
and I went down before her like ripe
grain before the sickle, .1 Was the
man, mature, knowing all that | need-!
ed, all that T wanted, my tastes
formed, my ideals crystallized, and
when I found the woman who embndled‘
my every desire, I knew there could be
no mistakes, no disappointments, no dis
{llustoning.
“And 1 found out that a boy's love is
A 8 water unto wine compared to a
man's love; that a boy's passion is the
shadow of a flame to the comhm-‘
tion of a man's; that a boy's romance
is pale and colorless to the pomp and
splendor of the romance with which
the mature man crowns his love. |
“A boy's love! A child's faney! I
tell you it is this love of the middle
aged man that strikes the out of
men's souls, M.” the grace u"'&«,a. this
came to nha and that is why I married
& second time ™
Scaring the Scarer.
The near-sighted professor was walk
ing along a lonely road at twilight, when
out of the hedge jumped & menacing Ng.
ure, with a sturdy stick.
“Nan, then!" commanded the foot
n% h:roflt oupl"ydmr.pau:b‘s e
our on, re pro
fesmor, w«vw-mwhn( s
“Stow that! Where's yer sparkler
l-drnr m-"efl" " oni
“I'm rea v sorry,” rep
::o of \zu’wm I don’t quite fol-
Yohee more, will yer cough up the
, And cut all that eackle or f’!l wt?
A the footpad finished his remark
with a m...fi'-. -wm“‘ of his stick.
My m-gny listen.” sald the
professor, in duruuan. “1 must
confess my total Inabiiity to gather any
coherent idea from the !r:fuomlry re
merks you have Impart There i»
mhhuuksny irreconcilable in the
vocabularies with which we are endeav.
uhg 1o make our Meas intelligibie M‘
to the other. You will P-Mon”?c it
suggest that synchronigation pure
is equally indispensable with...”
“gu the fm.c‘::‘m vanished into
the gatheting "
He Lost His Job.
A weli-to-do Heottlsh lady one day
Mid o her gardener:
“Man Tammas, [ wonder you don't
TR o A e
war complets " e
.."G.o: \bo‘:\q} nsuur that ever
had a wils
'%r Hight, m e right"
mwt “but ri 03:.1 keep his
whnn of he gt ] -"h""
Tame BExcuse,
‘John, did you get that spool of
!h-\,‘ 1 nakied you buy ™
“Nu, my . wml-r-m
husy mou‘. it that | for
ot o gt
By GOUVERNEUR MORRIS and CIIARLES GODDARD
Are You Fond of
Yourself?
Pride of the Right Sort Is Far from the Vulgarism
: of Snobbery,
’ By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. !
| RIDE is génerally considered as
| [ & rather contemptible thing. It
is, uniess it has the right foun
’d-tioa. To be proud of the buw]
with which a clean-ilving line of an
cestors has dowered You, or to be
proud of the wealth with which a hard
fisted grandfather has invested you—
any of these is Indeed & contemptible
form of pride, |
But this pride I should scarcely call
wotthy of the name—it Is rather con
temptibly stupld snobbery, and, heaven
help us, most of us are all too likely
to be snobs of just this unintelligent
sort. ‘
That we are snobs of this sort some
of us calmly know, and some of us
stupidly don’t. Bomeo f us find amuse
ment in our own Instinct of exclusive
ness, and others take it so solemnly
that we are hopelessly fmpeded by It
With a temperate exclusiveness temper
ed by a sense of humor and based on a
knowledge of human frality I have no
fault to find.
It actually has an instructive wvalue
to the exciuded and compels them to
cultivate powers and manners that will
take them inside the paling of worth
while soclety. Exciusiveness implies the
survival of the fittest. It is necessary
to hungtan society. With the sort of
pride that makes one dainty and exclu
sive and Insistent on good manners,
one can find no more fault than with
that which makes one insist on cating
with a fork instend of with a knife or
on kéeping one’'s hands clean and
smooth,
Being proud of yourself means first
of all not being ashamed of yourself
To fail In having your soul and mind
and body as clean and well ordered as
cireumstances will permit would be a
matter of which one should be horribly,
ashamed. But In order to be proud
of yourgelf you wmust bend cireum
stances to your will and be & little
cleaner and neater and finer and strong
er than they seem to permit.
Making the most of yourself is scarce.
iy & cause for pride-you have to make
& bt more of yoursel than the material
warrants. There Is no necessity for
looking down on the people beneath
you-—the thing you have to do is to
look up, quite unenviously, at the peo
ple above you and very calmly to pro
cond to reach and pass them.
It is very esay 1o make sxcuses for
yourself. But how can any of us be
proud of the person we have to sxpiain
and make allowatces for? You may
well be proud of yourself if at the end
of & day you know you have seised
on every opportuntity that fitted across
your vision and i you know that you
have held yourself rigidly to a standard
o high that you had to strain every
nerve and muscle to reach It
The very moment that you have just
canse lo be prowd of yourself you are
likely to Be most humble about what
you have yet 1o accomplish, uw
pride s actuafly of royal Hneage and iy
auite unsshamed of fallure, sinee it
means to bulld on failure to ®yroean,
True pride exacts sverything of fiseif
and nething of the world, but It never
permils the world te drag it down o
lmu it It Is dever ashamed of s be
it 4 pever falls o e
Es°oßo 304 Suter, falle ‘e resagaise
nothing and whither you are going ev
erything. It is quite ready to lend a
hand to fellow travelers and quite un
wiling to yield one jot of its staunch
climb upward to any temptation. |
You can't be proud of youtself uniess
you are climbing, but that pride J¢ a
purely personal matter between you and
your goul and should be Inflicted on no
one else. It should mean excluding no
human being from your sympathy, but
every unworthy thing from your plan
of life. When you can look yourself
straight in the eyes and tell yourself,
“I did my best and 1 criticized no on.‘
else because his best did not happen to
be mine,” then you may indeed be
proud of yourself. ‘
What He Didn't Know.
A retired Irish major sold his horses
and sarriage and bought a motor car,
but instead of engaging a chauffeur he
determined to send his old coaclkynan
to & Dublin firm of engineers for a
course of lessons,
“You will ®o through a two months’
training.” he explained to Pat, as he
handsd him a chegk for his exgpeises,
“during which time you wil make your«
self thoroughly famillar with the en
gine and ail its works."’ |
“Yes, sor,” was Pat's rrrly
“You will note every wheel and crank,
and learn what they are fur and what
they have to do, so that when you re
turn you will be equgl to any emer
gency.”
“I will, sor,” sald Pat, and, having
stowed the cheque away in his trousers
pocket, he took his departure
In two months' time he returned,
with the conqueror's look In his eye
“Well, Pat, have you succeeded
“1 have, sor.”
“And you know everything about a
motor ™’
“1 know all, sor, from the big lamp
in front to the littie number behind
except for one thing.,” the new chauf
feur added: “it's like this, sor, 1 don't
quite understand yet what makes the
bieased thing move without horses.”
The Umbrella.
Little things can be very trying st
times, Mr. Fowler thought, when, one
wet nmrn!n: he coud not find his
umbrella. Like many married men, he
beliaved In the maxim, "“"When In
trouble blame your wife” "1 say, Ei
len,”" bhe shouted, "what on earth has
happened 1o my new umbrella? |
brought It home last night, and now
it's gone, and of course itU's raining fu
rious'y!’ ‘Why, it's scarcely raining
at all™" sald his wife. “But last night it
was simply q.-vnrlv’ when the viear left
and so 1 lent hMm your umbrella'”
“What an asinine (Ling to do! | shall
never see It again row 8o | may as
wall buy another to-day!” “How can
you be so wicked, Adoiphus? As If the
viear would stoop to floa,m’ your ume
bredla ™ "mx:’;- to stealing it be hang
od? | borrowed It from Bim & couple of
monthe ago'’
. —————————— - —
|- . %
Pt ol R ot AL T
a 2
& - 4T
Collede-Connorvatory
Po pom .-
ot .m...rm-..-:.&- -
Be na s
!w«c ey mux " ~’flm:‘m
oy ey e A o
-
P L ey m::n“:.k‘:';.’“‘“
FOTim brame sepeson 108 Asssgn
BRENAU, Box 16, Gaisesville, Ga,
THE GODDESS—the Serial Beautiful—
written by two famous authors and presented
by the Hearst newspapers in collaboration
with the renowned Vitagraph Players under
the direction of Mr. Ralph Ince. |
oo eeel e ok dok oo
Miss Anita Stewart as the Goddess.
Te e o Jhedk o o
Mr. Earl Williams as Tommy Barelay.
LB ek o o ol o
Be sure to read each installment eareful
ly, and then see the characters and the thrill
ings incidents spring to life in the motion pie
tures.
bumping from side to side of the
brightly lighted passage, he turned
and fled.
Meanwhile Freddie the Ferret
picked up the broken pleces of Pro
fessor Stilliter's glasses and threw
them away, Perceiving the leather
case containing the second pair lying
where it had fallen, he picked it up,
and, after a moment's hesitation,
opened it, slipped the glasses into his,
pocket (he thought there might be a
reward offered for them), snapped the
heavy case shut, and laid it in a prom-
Inent position on the center table.
Then he began to wonder what ev
erything was all about, anyway. He
‘himself had no business in the obser
vation car without invitation; but he
had an excellent excuse. He had al
most missed the train, had just man
aged to swing on to the rear car, and,
since he was one to whom no simple
lock offered any difficulty, had let
himself in.
He had been on the point of pass
ing through the train to his own
quarters forward when it had seemed
o *\l/i ’
= s
NS 7579 723
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£ il 1§ : W L
oy A : NATHE N’
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8. Courses in Domestie Science and Physioal ining & part of reguiar carvieubum.
4 Derarunents. Kindergarien, Primary. Aesdemie, &ol’w.“mm
Thirty «ighth Sesston bagine SEFTEMBER 14 1918
U rtee loer (ustrated caiaings N Lo Doand ENMMA B BOOTT, Prinsipale.
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’;fl;_:g».,’ Letters m
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| M| No Pre
I\ ffi{&*# Depotutss Dmu %
}\%( 5&‘;“ / ‘ Por Cataleg and Bullotin of Views
v F. M GAINES D b, LL. D ,
to him that it would be a glorious
thing to stand guard all night befors
Celestia’s door llke one of these
knights of old of whom he had just
been reading in a book, which, ao
cording to Freddie's judgment, was
half glory and balf animosity,
There was only one light burning
very low in the observation car, Fred
die turned this out and started to
stand guard In front of Celestia’s door,
After a while he moved farther off and
sat guard, and then slept guarg.
Then he heard something moving,
and, without thinking, for he was still
half asleep, attacked that thing, and
as he would have said himself, “made
a monkey of It.”
(Watch for the next instaliment of
this wonderful serial in to-meorrow's
Georgian.)
(See “The Goddess” in motion pio
ture at Alamo No. 2 theater on Twes
days.)