Newspaper Page Text
Harrison Fisher Fiist
in Portraying Beauty
Tbe artistry of a Krencli peasant
maid who concealed her scantiness
of hair with some ribbon was the
odd inspiration that caused Harrison
Fisher to draw the first of his long
series of magazine covers idealizing
the beauty of young feminine Ameri¬
ca. He was known ns the “father of
a thousand pretty girls," but he nev¬
er married.
Reared in Brooklyn, schooled at
the Mark Hopkins institute In San
Francisco, widely traveled in Eng¬
land and on the continent, Fisher
knew the girl of the New York draw¬
ing room and of the western plains.
He was born during the Garfleld
Arthur period; he saw the fashion¬
able world in coaches behind teams
and in the side saddle; on bicycles,
and in linen dusters, goggles and
flowing motor veils and then in lim¬
ousines. He felt the wild pulsation
of the Spanish war, and lived through
the World war well into an exciting
period of readjustment. He knew
Victorian England, and the England
of Edward and George,
Fisher portrayed rather than inter¬
preted. Thousands of drawings and
illustrations that flowed from the
point of his pen have been, for an
interesting generation, far closer to
the American home than the famed
treasures hanging in museums
abroad.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Your local dealer carries Ferry’s
Pure Bred Vegetable Seeds. Now
only 5 cents a package. Adv.
Precious Volume
A cook book contstins the em¬
balmed records of endless delight.
To keep clean and healthy take Or.
Pierce’s Pleasant stomach.—Adv. Pellets. They regulate
liver, bowels and
Naturally
Many a man has something worth
being conceited about—and he is.
IS Fast 45
and “Low” and Upset
Look for Add Stomach
HERE ARE THE SIGNS:
Nervousness Frequent Headaches
Neuralgia Feeling of Weakness
Indigestion Sleeplessness
Loss of Appetite Mouth Acidity
Nausea Sour Stomach
Autointoxication :
WHAT TO DO FOR ITs j
TAKE Phillips’ —2 Milk teaspoonfuls of Mag¬ of
nesia in a glass of water
every morning when you
^hiuTps get up. Take another
1 teaspoonful 30 minutes
^<r after before eating. you go And to bed. another
OR —Take the new
Hi Tablets Phillips’ Milk of tablet Magnesia
— one for
each rected teaspoonful above. as di¬
If you have Acid Stomach, don’t
■worry about it. Follow the simple
directions given above. This small
dosage of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia
acts at once to neutralize the acids
that cause headache, stomach pains
and other distress. Try it. You’ll
feel like a new person.
But—be careful you get REAL
milk of magnesia when you buy—
genuine nesia. See PHILLIPS’ that the Milk of “PHIL¬ Mag¬
name
LIPS’ ” is on the label.
ALSO IN TABLET FORM
Each tiny tablet is the
equivalent of Genuine of Phillips’ a teaspoonful Milk
of Magnesia.
MEMBER N.R.A.
Phillips’ Milk of M-agnesia
Sounds Like It
“She treats her husband like a
mandolin.”
“What do you mean?”
“She is always picking on him.”—
Brooklyn Eagle.
Smooth Off Ugly
Freckles, Blackheads
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Here is an inexpensive, that quicker hag
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tonight. No massag¬
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try using Mentholatum
night and morning.
MENTHOLATUM
The
SILVER
FLUTE
By Lida Larrimore
©, Macrae-Smith Company
WNU Service.
CHAPTER X—Continued
—19—
“Sometimes I think be will,” Bar¬
bara wrote to Bruce. “Wouldn't that
he lovely? But sometimes 1 don’t
know. It's a very distracting feeling,
like being in a lion's cage and not
knowing whether the lion will chew
your head off or not. But I think he
will more than 1 think he won't. Only
l wish he would decide. I’d feel the
same way about the lion. . . .”
And then it was decided. Stephen
came home one evening looking tired
and pleased and a little uneasy as
well. He had presents for the children
and some very important news.
“I saw Aunt Josephine," he said,
when the boisterous welcome had sub¬
sided and the presents had been ad¬
mired.
“Our Aunt Josephine?” The color
paled from Barbara’s face. Her eyes
were wide and startled.
“Is she a crotchety old lady?”
Stephen asked, pretending to be puz¬
zled.
Barbara nodded.
“Does she wear diamond ear drops
and black silk dresses and white net
collars with points that stick up un¬
der her ears?’’
Barbara nodded again.
“Does she live in a house with urns
and elm trees on the lawn and car¬
pets with roses inside?’’ .
Again Barbara nodded.
“Then I guess it was your Aunt
Josephine,” Stephen said with a smile.
“What did she say?” the children
chorused and then were very still.
“She said you’ve been badly brought
up." Stephen looked at Barbara, at
Kit and Gay and Jamie. “She said you
had no idea of gratitude. She said 1
was either very brave or utterly a
; fool.”
I “But why, Uncle Stephen?” Bar¬
bara’s hands clasped each other
tightly.
“Because,” Stephen told them, “I
asked her if I might keep you.”
“You mean we're to live with you?”
Gay asked, ready to bounce on the
sofa springs.
“Yes,” he answered, rumpling her
bright brown curls.
“All of us?” That was Kit, a flush
In his thin dark cheeks, tils hazel eyes
very bright,
j “All “‘Chips,’ of you.” too?” Jamie asked,
i pre¬
paring to let out a whoop.
“What would we do without
•Chips’?”
The whoop was worthy of a feath¬
ered brave on tiie warpath. It broke
the breathless suspense. The children
fell upon Stephen with joyous shouts,
j The springs of the old red sofa creaked
in a threatening way. The windows
rattled. The coals seemed to dance In
the grate,
“Aunt Josephine was right,” Stephen
said when he had emerged, somewhat
rumpled, from the lusty strangling em¬
braces. “You’re a tribe of little sav
ages. You have no proper respect
for your elders.”
"Do you want us to be respectful?”
Barbara asked, watching the perform
ance with a happy shine in her eyes.
“I like little savages.”
Stephen had surrendered himself to
the charms of the four Thornes.
CHAPTER XI
Annt Edith did not button her lips
when Stephen told her he had decided
to’ keep the children. He was accepting
t grave responsibility, she said. Bear¬
ing children was not an obligation to
be so lightly assumed. It was neither
wise nor necessary. The children's rel¬
atives were able and willing to care
for them. Had he considered the pos¬
sible complications?
“Complications?” Stephen asked. “I
want the children. They want to stay.
It all seems fairly simple.”
“Of course they want to stay. Has
It occurred to you that Barbara might
have known in advance that you could
! give them every luxury and ad¬
vantage?”
Stephen halted midway between the
canopied bed and a chaise-longue up¬
holstered in mauve brocade.
“You mean,” he asked, “has it oc¬
curred to me that she might have
looked up my financial rating?”
“Exactly.”
1 Stephen laughed.
“She doesn’t know there are such
things,” he said.
“I'm not so sure.” The laugh did
not improve the state of Aunt Edith’s
mind.
“I am,” Stephen said curtly.
“It’s possible that she might have.”
j He needn’t he so touchy, she thought.
She was thinking only of him. It
would be disturbing for her, of course,
to have the children here. But it
would be worse for Stephen. Why
hadn’t he married Emily? She would
have been willing to endure the little
professor. That would have been a
dignified arrangement, at least. Poor
Stephen! Why couldn’t the children
have stayed where they belonged?
“Not Babbie,” Stephen said. “She’s
an impulsive child. She came to me
because there was no one else. She
thought only of keeping the children
together.”
“She Isn’t a child.” The expression
a Stephen’s eyes alarmed Aunt Edith.
CLEVELAND COURIER
“I was married,” she sals with great
dignity, “when I was Just past eight¬
een.”
“She’s a very dear little girl.”
“Really, Stephen—”
“She sees people so clearly,” Stephen
said, thinking of Barbara, wanting to
defend her. “She knows it Is best
for the children to let them grow up
together. She’s right about It, too.
Babble trusts me. I can’t let her
down. She’s so small and plucky and
helpless."
His voice was gentle. Aunt Edith
looked up.
“You're in love with her, Stephen,”
she said. She had not meant to put
the thought into words. But Stephen
exasperated her beyond endurance, be¬
ing so foolish about the girl.
“That’s absurd!” Stephen frowned,
his brows drawn down over Ms angry
eyes.
“It has happened before.” It was
true, she thought. Stephen had not
escaped. Forty, she had heard, was
a very dangerous age.
“Do you think that?” he asked,
looking at her from under darkly
scowling brows.
“I do, Indeed.” No use contradict¬
ing herself, Aunt Edith thought.
“There must be some reason why you
should want to keep these children,
a reason other than kindness and a
desire to make them happy.”
“You haven’t a high opinion of me,
have you, Aunt Edith?" Stephen asked
quietly. “You make me feel as though
I had taken advantage of the confi¬
dence of a child.”
“A child? Well, ready, Stephen—”
“Do you think that, Aunt Edith?"
“I have known you for some time,
my dear,” Aunt Edith said. “I can’t
think that you would completely disor¬
ganize your life unless there was a
reason.”
There was a reason, of course. lie
might have told Aunt Edith that he
had loved Barbara’s mother. But he
did not want to tell her. He was
tired of explanations. He said “Good
night” and walked out of the room.
Aunt Edith sat in the puffy arm¬
chair, thinking, rippling the cards with
a sound like a lingering sigh. Then
she pushed back the card table and
walked across the room to her desk.
When she returned to the chair, she
spread out on the table a variety of
tourist catalogues and time-tables and
folders. With a small gold pencil she
traced a leisurely journey across the
continent. She made notations and
added rows of figures. At intervals,
she unbuttoned her lips to sigh.
Stephen told Natalie the story the
next afternoon. She sat beside the
library fire when he returned from
the office. He suspected that Aunt
Edith had sent for Natalie and had
told her the distressing news. What
did Natalie think about it all? Was
he In for another unpleasant inter¬
view?
He found, to his great relief, that
he wasn’t. Natalie smiled at him
lazily, the smoke from her cigarette
curling in rings above her sleek dark
head.
“Where are the children?" Stephen
asked.
“Bob took them to the zoo,” she an¬
swered. “They ought to be back
pretty soon.”
“May I have some tea?”
“You look tired, Stephen. Was Aunt
Edith very unpleasant?”
“Bather,” he said, returning her
lazy smile.
“There was an old woman who lived
in a shoe,” Natalie teased affection¬
ately. “Poor, poor Stephen!”
Stephen relaxed in a soft deep chair.
He needed to talk to someone. Netalie
was intelligent. She saw things clear¬
ly, he thought.
He felt soothed and rested. The
fire, the gathering twilight invited con¬
fidences.
“Aunt Edith thinks I’m in love with
Barbara," Stephen said, breaking a
comfortable silence.
Natalie looked at him, an amused
little smile curving the corners of her
lips but she said nothing.
“She thinks," Stephen continued,
“that I could have no other possible
reason for wanting to keep the chil¬
dren. It makes me feel as though I
have taken advantage of a child.”
“A child, Stephen? Barbara lg
eighteen.” Natalie remembered that,
at eighteen, she hadn’t considered her¬
self a child.
“Of course In some ways she isn’t,”
Stephen admitted, his eyes troubled
and grave. “She’s never had time to
be really young. Aunt Edith shouldn’t
leap to conclusions, though. Babbie
thinks I’m a nice old man, I think
she’s a dear little girl. Anything else
Is absurd.”
“Are you in love with her, Stephen?”
Natalie asked quietly.
He told her the story, then. He told
her about the Barbara he had loved a
very long time ago.
“So you see,” he said when he had
finished, “if you and Aunt Edith must
have one, there is a reason why I can’t
let the children go.”
“A very good reason,” Natalie said
gently. It was strange to think that
Stephen, always so quiet and reserved,
should have been capable of romance.
“It isn't only that,” Stephen added,
a little embarrassed at having told the
story, “It’s the children themselves.
They're nice youngsters. They’ll keep
me from getting too stodgy. I like
having a family, although It is dis¬
tracting at times.”
“Poor Stephen!” Natalie crossed
swiftly to his chair, rumpled his hair
in a lazy caress, lightly kissed his
cheek. “I’m for you and the chil¬
dren,” she said. “I have just discov¬
ered that you are rather a dear.”
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Small but Powerful Engine
A new kind of 12-cylinder engine Is
only 16 inches high, and therefore can
be fitted beneath the floor of k motor
bus as a space saver.
On tiie
Funny
Side
THE DECEIVER
A little boy surprised bis parents
by refusing to be scared into being
good.
“It’s no use telling me the angels
will write down in their books if I’m
naughty,” he said. “I might as well
tell you they think up in heaven that
I’m dead.”
“But why should they think that?’
“Because I haven’t said my prayers
for two weeks."
Important
He had been warned off golf for
six months owing to the state of his
health. At the end of that period he
presented himself for medical exami¬
nation.
“Heart’s good," said the medical
man. briefly.
“Well, doctor,” said the patient
persuasively, “what about clubs?”—
Vancouver Province.
Hero Worship
“Are you a hero worshiper?”
‘I am," answeied Senator Sorghum.
“Are you sad when a hero disap¬
points yon?”
“Yes. But I don’t hold him per¬
sonally responsible. I realize that 1
made him up largely out of my own
imagination.”—Washington Star.
Only One Way to Go
“How did you know business was
going to get better?”
“By a very simple process of rea
soning,” answered Senator Sorghum,
“all the experts were saying it
couldn’t get any worse.”
VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
Assistant—A man who is getting
too tall has written to find out if
there ts anything that will make him
short.
Editor—Tei! him to try matri¬
mony.
Disappointed in Mother
“Mummie, you can’t be nearly sc
pretty as nurse.”
“Don’t you think so, dear?”
“No. We’ve been in the park for
an hour and not a single soldier has
tried to kiss you.”—London Humor
1st.
Should Carry a Rabbit’s Foot
Mrs. X (arriving home)—I’ve been
making a round of calls, and I’ve
been so unfortunate.
Mr. X—What, everybody out?
Mrs. X—No, everybody in.—Lon¬
don Opinion.
They’re AH the Same
Mrs. Newed—Matilda, our new
cook, says she put her very heart in¬
to her cooking.
Mr. Newed—Then she must have
been very heavy hearted when she
made this cake.—Chelsea Record.
Licked at the Start
“Bill’s only books are women’s
looks.”
“It’s hard to earn a bachelor’s de
gree that way.”—Argosy.
No Self-Starter
Boss—Would you care if I gave
you only $15 a week to start?
Gaga Gertie—Huh, I couldn’t even
start caring for that!
/EVERYWHERE
G E 0 R GIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
Valdosta mattress factory has been
sold to D. C. Tyson of Thomasville.
Postmaster General Farley will vis¬
it Savannah on Washington's birth¬
day.
Building permits in Valdosta for
the mouth of January reached a total
of $12,600.
Cam Young has been confirmed by
the United States senate as postmas¬
ter at Valdosta.
The Georgia division of Kiwanis In¬
ternational recently held its annual
midwinter session at Thomaston.
Among the evidence of thrift and
advancement in Savannah is the re¬
building of the plant of Swift & Co.
Sea Island Beach has been selected
as the place of meeting for the 1934
convention of the Georgia Bar Asso¬
ciation.
The seventh annual convention of
the Georgia Scholastic Press Asso¬
ciation will be held in Athens on the
fourth of May.
Atlanta newspapers state that dur¬
ing the year 1933 2.407 people out
of every 10,000 were injured in auto¬
mobile accidents.
The administration building of Nor¬
man Junior College in Norman Park
was recently destroyed by fire; es¬
timated loss $50,000.
A drive for raising funds for a Co¬
lumbus porch at Warm Springs has
been started in that city by James W.
Woodruff, general chairman.
J. Pierpont Morgan’s yacht, the Cor¬
sair, recently returned to the port at
Brunswick from a cruise to the Pa¬
cific islands of Cocos and Galapagos.
The yacht Lucinda, built by the
MacDonnell Boat Works for Will Car¬
negie, of Pittsburgh, and Sewells
Point, Fla., was launched at St. Marys
recently.
Dr. Spright Dowell, president of
Mercer University, Macon, is asking
the government to set aside a fund
of five thousand dollars to aid col¬
lege students.
The orphans’ home at Macon and
an orphans’ home in Arcadia, Fla.,
were made beneficiaries in the will
of the late Thomas Murdock McIntosh
of Thomasville.
A registration of 5,550 students in
thirty-one accredited negro high
schools in Georgia last year is shown
in the annual report of the registrar
of the University of Georgia.
The Savannah city government has
decided against endorsing a million
dollar bond issue for construction of
municipal terminals and other mar¬
keting facilities on the river front.
Fifteen thousand pounds of dyna¬
mite were used to blast 55,000 tons
from a granite mountain at the Rock
Spring quarries of the Consolidated
Quarries Corporation, near Lithonia.
Reductions in rates for commercial
customers of the Georgia Power com¬
pany were ordered recently by the
Georgia public service commisssion
and were accepted by the power com¬
pany.
South Georgia farmers are busily
breaking the sod of their fields pre.
paratory for the planting season.
Planting of this year’s crops will be¬
gin in earnest about the middle of
March.
Builders’ supply dealers of the Val¬
dosta district, working under the NRA
code, at a recent conference held in
Valdosta, completed plans for carry¬
ing into effect all the provision of
the code.
The naval stores interests in Sa¬
vannah has gone on record as being
opposed to the suggestion that the
naval stores year be made to end with
the calendar year rather than March
the first.
Representative Parker, Democrat,
Georgia, says the secretary of war
has approved a plan to make a pre¬
liminary examination of the Ogeechee
river with the view to controlling its
flood waters.
Plans for a three-day conference,
February 20, 21 and 22, with admin¬
istrative problems of agriculture in
the university system, were drawn
up at a meeting recently of the sys¬
tem held in Athens.
Hardaway Construction Company,
of Columbus, Ga., with the low esti¬
mate of $167,882.37, won the contract
for paving six miles of road, four be¬
tween South Jacksonville and Bayard,
in Duval county, Florida.
At a recent meeting of Atlanta re¬
tail drug code authority, complete
instructions were presented for mak¬
ing assessments against all drug
stores. These .instructions were sent
with the approval of the NRA.
The Hebrew Commercial Alliance,
with 74 members in south Georgia,
held its 4th annual meeting at Fitz¬
gerald recently. The organization is
principally a co-operative banking or¬
ganization.
The Decatur city commission, be¬
set by factional difficulties in ex¬
ecutive session, voted down a reso¬
lution which would have provided for
a recall election on February 23, and
instructed a committee to continue
its comparative study of a list of cit¬
izens requesting the election and the
record of registered voters.
CRAWLING SUBMARINE
Sea-bed exploration should be sim¬
plified by the use of a new type of
submarine, recently tested in New
York. Tliis small craft can crawl
about the ocean bed. and has a hatch
through which a diver can leave or
enter it.
Ferry’s Seeds are sold only in fresh
dated packages. When you buy Fer¬
ry’s Seeds you are sure of the finest
quality available. Adv.
Tiny Radio Set
Dino de Corbertaldo, a youth living
at Treviso, Italy, lias a certificate as¬
suring him that his radio set, with
which lie can get half-a-dozen sta¬
tions, is the smallest in the world. It
will fit comfortably into a nutshell—
and the nut is not a coconut!
Doctors have always whose recognized the
value of the laxative dose can
be measured, and whose action can
be thus regulated to suit individual
need.
The public, too, is fast returning
to have the learned use of liquid that laxatives. properly People
liquid laxative a brings pre¬
pared without discomfort a perfect
movement any
at the time, or after.
The dose of a liquid laxative can
be varied to suit the needs of the
individual. The action can thus be
regulated. It forms no habit; you
need not take a “double dose” a day
or two later. Nor will a mild liquid
laxative irritate the kidneys.
The wrong cathartic may often do
more harm than good.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a
prescription, action and is is based perfectly safe.
Its laxative on senna
—a natural laxative. The bowels will
not become dependent on this form
of help. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin
is at all druggists. Member N. R. A.
MercolizedWax
TV \y
fceeps $kh i Young
Absorb blemishes and discolorations using
particles Mercolized of Wax aged daily skin as directed. freed Invisible and all
are
defects such as blackheads, tan, freckles and
fully large clear, pores velvety disappear. and Skin soft—face is then beauti¬ looks
so
years hidden younger. beauty. Mercolized At all leading Wax brings druggists. out
your
A Three Days’ Cough
Is Your Danger Signal
Don’t let them get a strangle
hold. Fight germs quickly. Creo
mulsion combines 7 major helps in
one. Powerful but harmless. Pleas¬
ant to take. No narcotics. Your
own druggist is authorized to refund
your money on the spot if your
cough or cold is not relieved by
Creomulsion. (adv.)
GIRL TO WOMAN
Mrs. Hester Cason of
2429 Wolf St., Brunswick,
Ga., said: “When I was a
young rundown girl growing, I Dr. be¬
came but
Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip¬
tion soon had me feeling
fine and I developed nat¬ I
urally. After I married
again relied upon it to
keep up ’my strength irritable dur¬
ing expectancy. I became nervous, bottles
and weary, would feel so weak. Three
of the Prescription was all I had to take.”
New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00.
Tired.. Nervous
Wife
Wins Back
TIER Pep!
raw nerves
■F-L were soothed.
She banished that
g^s; iUIIIB1l | HI I l “dead tired” feel
* j n g \y on new youth¬
ful color—restful nights, active days—all clogging be¬
cause she rid her system of bowel -
wastes that were sapping her vitality. HR Tab¬
lets (Nature’s Remedy) —the mild, safe, all
vegetable laxative—worked the transformation.
Try it for constipation, biliousness, bead
arhf»<? Hirrv snells.
colas. bee how re¬
freshed you feel.
25 At all druggists’—
cents.
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ITCHING
Wherever it occurs and whatever
the cause, relieve it at once with
Resinol