Mrs. Georgie Sheldon
is justly famous as a writer of American love stories of quality.
Her books are to be found in a million homes of the rich and poor alike, for this appeal to the heart knows no class—it’s universal.
Folks have said:—“I wonder what makes the Georgie Sheldon books so popular?” If you have never read any of her splendid novels, just select one at random. After reading it, you won’t ask any questions—you’ll know why ten million copies have been sold.
Send for catalogue of the S. & S. novels, arranged by author, which contains Mrs. Sheldon’s complete works. PRICE 15c. PER COPY.
Street & Smith, Publishers
NEW YORK
THE STRENGTH OF LOVE.
CHAPTER I.
RIVALS IN LOVE.
When Dallas Bain and Royall Sherwood, with the dashing young widow, Mrs. Fleming, drove down the village street in their fine landau that summer afternoon, Daisie Bell stood on the steps of her aunt’s cottage, plucking the purple wistaria blooms from the vines above her head, and the picture she made in her youth and grace stayed in both the men’s hearts till they died.
Just a slip of a girl—perhaps seventeen or eighteen—gowned very simply, in white, with lavender ribbons at throat and waist; but her figure was grace and symmetry itself; and her face—well, men have died for faces less fair than hers, with its dusk-violet eyes, blue in the light, black in the shade, under the fringed curtain of jetty lashes that contrasted so vividly with the living gold of her hair as it swept in loose waves over her shoulders.