Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 13, 1912, EXTRA 1, Image 7

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THE Q&OR>CMAMS magaziwe PAGE BROADWAY JONES Based on George M. Cohen's Play N oiv Running in New York . Thrilling Story of “The Great Whit. * Way." 3y BERTRAND BABCOCK. TODAY’S INSTALLMENT. (Cocvr ght, 1912. by George M. Cohan.) ! went to an opening night at one th „ heaters and sat In the gallery. I hengt t a pa>r of ready-made shoes. I ate mv mpa i s at a 40 cent table d’hote and 5 cent cigars, just trying to get It all. but I couldn't. I simply All my good resolutions simply ' to sma . every time I took a look at ...v 1 knew I could have the Xgs 1 wanted. They were there-and- I took them —that s all. The " ' _J ht i was broke I bet I walked and back every night—if you measure the carpet by the mile.” -poor old man!” said Wallace. Tm , orrow for you. but you’ve been a fool.” not strange. Broadway had been called a fool so often tn h |s short life—behind his back, but hl’ hearing, nevertheless—that he mv any attention to this charac terization by Bob, if. indeed, he heard it a '.thought so much and worried so much. .Jackson continued, "that I didn't da's trust myself alone. I had the w( .|r .st ideas!” In spite of the gravl- ' tv of the situation Jackson broke into a laugh as he added: "Do you know. Bob, that 1- at this moment—am a member— of the Salvation Army?” Wallace almost jumped to his feet in his amazement, and then settled back into his chair. “What!” he roared. “On the level,” said Jackson, quickly. I v ent over to Newark and Joined it three months ago.” "What was the idea?" ‘I thought that it would be a good way to forget my troubles. I played the bass drum for two nights and couldn’t stand it any longer. Oh, you can’t realize what I've been through. Bob! I’ve made a bluff and pretended to be happy all along, but •here have been times when I have ac ) ally started for that old Brooklyn bridge. I didn't care about the money that I’d spent; all I worried about was tie fact of running In debt day In and day out. with no chance of ever paying." "But your uncle? He's a rich man—did you ever try him?” \ grim, sardonic look appeared on the face of the youth, which made him seem more years than his 25. "Yes, he’s been tried and found guilty,” he answered. “I wrote and told him that I was short of ready cash, and asked him to loan me SIO,OOO. He sent me a pack age of gum and a note saying: ‘Chew this and forget your troubles.’ He Is in Europe now—been there all summer. That old fellow’s worth $2,000,000 If he's worth a nickel.” "Stingy,” suggested Wallace. PRETTY MEAN. “He’s so mean,” returned Broadway, “that every time he’s asked to drink, he takes a cigar—and he does not smoke, either: saves them up and puts ’em in boxes and gives ’em to his, friends for Christmas. While all this time—since I was broke I've been going It on credit. For tip money and ready cash, I’ve sold the French car and pawned those dia mond rings I had. This is my roll." Broadway took a single bill from his pocket. It was a SIOO bill. "That’s every cent I have out of all I had, and, of course, that isn’t chewing gum money on Broad way ” "Why didn’t you confide In me?” T dldn’ have the courage to confide in any one,” resumed Broadway, his words now coming In a torrent. “All I did was to hope that some miracle would happen to set things right. All I’ve been think ing about was money, how to get It and SPEAKS FOR HER MOTHER North Carolina Lady Writes Interesting Letter Relat ing Her Mother's Ex perience. ’»»lorevflle, m. an lnt«i*»ting from tht» pl**,. «„ M. Bowman writes M follows: "My .other was weak anti run down, Mid **’ !n *>®d for nine woeks. She war n ■' able to do any of her work. Some lady told her about Cardul. «*• woman’s tonic. She derided to try \ * »nd, after taking three bofttso. was to do all of her household work. lo ” publish this letter If you '■•h. as It would be a greet pleasure r ™* to know that T have been of M ’ »o eotne eufferlng woman.” ” twat way to relieve womanly o,r •«. pains, headache, backache. *' C " Is to help nature by taking Candul. •rd!!! has not only been found of assistance in relieving the most • e rou ß caßes womanly trouble, but a ' «!so proven Itself an Idea! tttMurh-building tonic for weak, tired. ««rvous women. Is successful, because It Is t^ 1 ,? ** ,n dredientu that act ef ' on the womanly constitution, up health and strength In a manner it la strictly a wom •“dldne— prepared exclusively for •omen. Fl ft v years’ suecess tn relieving n ' Bf r,a ' n ’ **f other weak and all- t k <>rn * n I* a good reason to believe •Trdui should help you, too. Writ, to: Ladies' Advtnory Dept. ’• Mr’S Medicine Co.. Chattanooga, uu, Kok S .®?. e * •netrucilsns. and M r i. f ! n . me Treatment for Worn .’l. n wrapper, on request ' Advertisement ) where to get It, and Bob, last night at that dinner table I sat there looking at Mrs. Gerard and thinking of her millions and wondering what she’d do If I told my story-drying my best to pluck up enough courage to take her into my con fidence and ask her to help me. I didn’t stop to think of what I was doing, but I must have been staring at her fully ten minutes when a waiter handed me a note.” Then Jackson told Wallace of the pass age of the notes and how in the end she had proposed to him. He thought at first that he must have had some dim sort of idea of marrying the woman because he had leaped at her proposal as a hungry man at two cents In a stranger’s hand. She had seemed an angel descending from heaven in a cloud of gold dust and dia monds. She was a rescuer whom the EeautlFP’ Scaring aid made to appear “And you said ‘Yes?’ ’’ said Wallace, af ter the other had told of the final note with its proposal of marriage from the wo man. NOT ENOUGH. 'But I didn’t put it In writing,” said Broadway, quickly, while Wallace laugh ed; "I just got up and shouted 'Yes!' ” M allace paced up and down In great agitation, now that the secret was out and he really comprehended why Broad way was to marry Mrs. Gerard. "This is awful!” he exclaimed: “you must go to work. You've got the mak ings of a business man in you.” “If I went to work I wouldn’t have the makings of a cigarette with what I could earn.” Wallace thought a moment while he tapped the table with his forefinger. "I could get you a job in our advertis ing company,” he said; “I might be able to have you started at $5,000 a year.” Broadway laughed. The white light had scared him and his standards were en tirely out of place with the frugal world, or even the world of real endeavor and adequate returns. “Will you tell me,” he demanded, “what good $5,000 a year is in New York? What on earth could a man do with $5,000 a year? I owe ten times that amount right now." "I've got about SIO,OOO. I’ll lend you that,” volunteered Wallace, in his feeling of panic that Broadway must be saved from the withering talons of Mrs. Gerard at the cost of even his own savings. “I'd never be able to pay you back,” was the way Jackson met this offer, "and, be sides, old boy, even If you loaned me enough to pay all I owe, I'd still be In debt. What's the odds whether I owe it to you or the other fellow? I’d never get square with the world.” MAKING EXCUSES. “But you can’t do this thing. Jack son,” pleaded the other. "It Isn’t right. You mean to tell me that you’d do such a mean, contemptible, despicable thing as to deliberately marry a woman for her money?” There was a flash of anger in Broad way’s eye, mingled with a desire to justi fy himself. "Who says Tm marrying her for her money?" he said aggressively. "Oh, pshaw!” exclaimed, Wallace. “You know very well you don't love the woman.” Into the tones of Broadway there came a queer rvalue. There was a combining of the delight of a precocious child In some sophistry which he doesn’t know is one and a sort of humorous belief on the surface of things that he was Justifying himself. “I don’t know anything of the kind,” he returned. "If you were in trouble, wouldn’t you love some one who came forward and helped you out of it? Be sides, it's too late now, anyway; the en gagement's been announced.” "You’ll lose every- friend you ever had in the world”—Bob went at the attack again. "People with money never lose their friends,” said Jackson, shortly. Wallace paused In his walk. “I know one you’ll lose,” he said. "You?" A THREAT. “Yes, and unless you tell me within the next twenty-four hours that you’ve reconsidered this matter and that you’re going to fight It out In a real way, I’ll never speak to you again as long as you live!” "Do you mean that?” Broadway saw that there was a possibility that he had not counted on. for at this stage of his career it must be confessed that he was decidedly callow. “You bet I mean it,” said the other, sternly. "There are other things In the world besides money. Is it getting me anything giving you this advice? It won’t put a dollar in or out of my pocket whether you marry this woman or not. You’re nothing to ■me except a friend and a pal, but I don’t want to see you do something that you’ll be sorry for the rest of your life. I’m sorry you're In trouble and there isn't anything that I won't do to help you. I’ll go to the limit for you for all I've got, but if you don't give up the Idea of this marriage don't ever expect the friendship of a man who has any decency or self respect. That’s all I’ve got to say. Now I’m going.” Wallace picked up his hat and started for the door. For one long moment, Broadway Jones stood motionless, ing the friend of many nights if not days to pass out of his life. Then there stirred deep within him the germ of that some thing that was one day to make him a man. But its movement was very feeble, for at this time It was very far from the dominating force In this wastrel. But in the end the nameless thing that was his better self conquered his bitter self pride. In an instant he had sprung to ward Wallace and taken his arm. Wal lace stopped quickly and expectantly. “Don't go, old man, like that," said Jackson, almost brokenly. "Give me a chance to think." “All right—thtnk.” Wallace put an em phasis upon this word that conveyed the idea very clearly that Jackson wasn’t usually a thinker. "It’s about time that you began to think." Broadway thought while slowly a par tial light dawned, a partial awakening came, but so slight that It needed just a breath of adversity to waft him to his former state of mind. "You know I never looked at It that way before,” he said at last, his fingers in his hair, as he struggled with his "thinking.” Then, after another long in terval. he went on: "I guess it would be a pretty shabby thing to do at that. You're not sore on me, Bob. are you?” A HARD STRUGGLE. Although Wallace had some dim idea of the big struggle now going on in the mind and heart ot Broadway Jones, he wasn’t ready to relent in the slightest just yet. "I've said my say; you’ve heard my opinion.” be said concisely Continued In Next Issue. A Pleasant Voice Aids Beauty, Says Miss Ferguson ~~r? / wk \ Ofc \ v i 1 i # / i IF & fIMWMIWWBI V < < a ask . A HBaMKv K- *“’-4 IT ’ ’Do, ' t ITT" s s2'~" MULtm • * ■A*'’-'- ■ ■■■>.’ ■ i'V i! W z~\ / Miss Elsie Ferguson, a Klaw & Erlanger star, who believes in women cultivating all their charms. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. (( 7 T is every woman’s duty to help I make her w-orld as beautiful as she can,” mused Miss Ferguson, looking over her green and white drawing room where she has put her ideas into practice. "Most women think that they have accomplished that end when they have spent a large part of each day in beautifying themselves. “That is a beginning of course,” laughed the young star, "but they for get that beauty is not merely a ques tion of clothes and that the most ex quisite creation can’t make up for the lack of other charms, a beautiful voice for instance. "I should make it almost a criminal offense for a woman to have a hideous speaking voice. There is absolutely no excuse for it, because any voice can be made reasonably pleasant and agree able unless there is an absolute physi cal defect In the physical formation. “I think that I was most fortunate in getting Mlle. Jeanne Faure to help me with my speaking voice and when I decided to sing the part of Eva in the coming production, it was she who vouched for my vocal ability and de veloped ft. “Few women seem to pay any atten tion to their daughters' speaking voices and certainly the younger generation enunciates so badly and uses such a meager variety of words that the Do You Know— Throughout the world the total num ber of Roman Catholics is estimated at 264,500,000. the will of J. W. Hutton, who was known as a fisherman and an enthusi astic hunter, who died at Jersey re cently, it was ordered that his ashes be strewn upon the Hackensack river, along the banks of which he used to fish as a lad. A friend went to the banks of the Hackensack the other night and there carried out the dead man's request. Mrs. A. D. Winship, a student at the University of Wisconsin, can claim the distinction of being the oldest "college girl” in the world. She entered upon her college career two years ago at the age of 78, and looks forward to tak ing her degree in 1914. Almost as long as she can remember, her ambition was to go to college and "do things.” but her desire was thwarted time and again At the present time she is deriving the greatest pleasure from her belated col lege days, and enters into the life of the university with as. keen a zest as that of any girl graduate. The walking stick of General Booth used on the last walk he ever took has a little history of its own. At a meet ing in Paris some time ago a notorious Russian anarchist was converted by the General's eloquence, and soon after the latter’s return tot England he re ceived from his convert a piece of string, with the request that a not might be tied in it to show the length of the walking stick the general usually carried. The string was knotted ac cordingly and return to Paris, and a little later this stick arrived In Lon don. a present from th>> grateful on, vert and the work of his own hands young girls and boys who have had good educations find it simpler to talk in the expressive slang of the day and pay very little attention to English as It should be spoken. "Children should be taught to speak carefully and to pronounce every word distinctly. There should be breath enough behind the voice to support it and make it carry w’ithout straining the vocal chords and there should be the constant reminder at home that it is worth while having a pleasant voice even if one never expects to sing. “Girls reiterate the same adjectives, time after time, because they have no choice of words. For Instance: ‘lsn’t it lovely?’ a pet phrase used with equal enthusiasm about a baby, a new hat, a box of candy, a magnificent view o% a beefsteak. “How can one increase one's vocabu lary? Why, by reading, of course, and by committing such pieces, of verse or poetry, to memory as /ippeal espe- TWO WOMEN TESTIFY What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound Did For Their Health—Their own Statements Follow. New Moorefield, Ohio.--"I take great pleasure in thanking you for what your V egetable Compound has done for me. I had bearing down pains, was dizzy and weak, had pains in lower back and could not be upon my feet long enough to get a meal. As long as ] laid on my back 1 would feel better, but when I would get up those bearing ■ i Me- iown pains would come back, and the doctor said I had female trouble. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was the only medicine that helped me and I Save been growing stronger ever since I commenced to take it. I hope it will I help other suffering women as it has me. ■ You can use this letter.”—Mrs. Cassie j Lloyd, New Moorefield, Clark Co.,Ohio, i Head What This Woman Says: South Williamstown, Mass. “ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cer tainly has done a great deal forme. Be fore taking it I suffered with backache and pains in my side. I was very irreg ular and I had a bad female weakness, •specially after periods. I was always tired, so I thought I would try your med icine. After taking one bottlC of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 1 felt so much better that I got another and now I am a well woman. •! wish more women would take your medicine. I have told my friends about it.”- Mrs. Robert Box 45, South Williams town, Mass. j daily to the imaginatiqp and are par ticularly fine examples of the English language. “The quality of the voice is cul tivated by listening and paying atten tion to one’s own tones and learning to discriminate between beautiful and ugly sounds. Few people take the trou ble to speak in a pleasing voice. Voice culture is one of the much neglected parts of the average girl's education. The woman can be really charming who has not an agreeable speaking voice.” The Quickest, Simplest Cough Cure Fanlly and Cheaply Made at Home. Saves You $2. This recipe makes a pint of cough syrup—enough to last a family a long tune. You couldn’t buy as much or as good cough syrup for $2.50. Simple as it is, it gives almost instant relief and usually stops the most obsti nate cough in 24 hours. Tins is partly due to the fact that it is slightly laxa tive, stimulates the appetite and has an excellent tonic effect. It is pleasant to take—children like it. An excellent rem edy, too, for whooping cough, croup, sore lungs, asthma, throat troubles, etc. Mix one pint of granulated sugar with % pint of warm water, and stir for 2 minutes. Put 2% ounces of Pinex (fifty cents’ worth) in a pint bottle, and add the Sugar Syrup. It keeps perfectly. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. Pine is one of the oldest and best known remedial agents for the throat membranes. Pinex is the most valuable concentrated compound of Norway white pine extract, and is rich in guaiacol and all the other natural healing elements. Other preparations will not work ia this formula. The prompt results from this recipe have endeared it to thousands of house wives in the United States and Canada, which explains why the plan has been imitated often, but never successfully. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will get it for vou. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. WILTON JELLiCO COAL $5.00 Per Ton The Jellico Coal Co. 82 Peachtree Street foth Phones 3668 Daysey May me and Her Folks By Frances L. Garside WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS. WHEN two women meet for the first time they have a hard time getting acquainted until some mention is made of HAIR. Then they clasp hands over a mutual woe, and swim right out together. Even the Perfidy of Man is not full of conversational possibilities. The sympathy that develops over this topic is so well understood by the wom en that a hair switch waved by a wom an on a train as a signal of distress will bring other women flying to her aid. It is more potent than a lodge pin worn by a man. Daysey Mayme Appleton had been in troduced to a very distinguished wom an. She was one who grappled with the unseen and mysterious, and who used words of so many syllables that one of them, if put in,a chopping bowl and chopped up, would furnish the or dinary mortal with words for a week’s conversation Daysey Mayme was on mental tip toe. She brought up every subject of which she knew nothing, and the High Brow Eady tossed the ball back by talking of things so lofty that they made Daysey Mayme’s eyes blink. Daysey Mayme was beyond her depth I and began to flounder. She started something about the fundamentalism of all superconsciousness, when she saw that the High Brow Eady was losing her hair. "Your hair—” she began, but got no further. The High Brow Lady did all the talk ing thereafter, and within five minutes' had told Daysey Mayme that her soul'sj longing was for more hair. Her hair was like bristles in a dry climate, and came uncurled in a damp: climate, anil was sticky before washing, | and slid all over her head after it wasq washed, and men hated false hair, but; would they look at a woman with a,j INCREASING THE PLEASURES' OF THE TABLE Do you have variety enougw in the food you serve on your table? Or is there a sameness to your meals that becomes monotonous? Try this change for one dinner each week. Gust out all meat and serve in its place a steaming dish of Faust Spaghetti. It is tender and finely flavored—contains all the nour ishing elements of meat in a much more easily digested form. This Spaghetti dinner will make a pleasant change for the family l — enjoy it. Write for our Book of Recipes—we’ll mail you, one free. Your grocer sells Faust Spaghetti, 5c and 10c a package. MAULL BROS. f St. Louis, Mo. Southern California affoiHs jnore opportunities than any I other area in the world. WHY? Because it has proven its possibilities in a thousand! ways. The pioneer work is done. The chances to follow proven lines are unlimited. The es sentials ate: Climate, hjmd, water, power, transportation, | and markets. Southern^CaiHoruia has them aH. You Will Want To Know AH About This Marvelous Country THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY NUMBER OF THE LOS ANGELES “EXAMINER” will be issued WED NESDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1912, and will be the greatest edition of its kind ever published, giving you every possi ble information about oiis famous land. It will tell you about its farming possibilities, its potri- I try, its fruits, its walnuts, its oil production, its beet sugar I industries, its live stodk, its cotton, and, in fact, anything | and everything you may wish to know about Los Angeles | and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis. The information v/ill be accurately and entertainingly set forth, and aporopaaatefy illustrated. The pronperrtnff <tf tb« Panama Canal t«ma an rtw» ww of the I warM on this region. ThU special edition vlty'b» mailed to any address tn the United States | or Mexiro for Fifteen Cents *pet copy. I As the edition is Itmltejfi, and so as not to dlMippohit anyone, an early request with remittance is !d*'si’‘abla. Hemember that some <rf your friends ruay not see this announce in ent. Uae the coupon below and see that they a copy. Loa Angeles "Examiner," < / ’ Los Amfeles, Cal. ] Enclosed please find cents, for which you will' please send the Nintfa Anniversary number of your paper to / the following names; ! Name — Street < < City. State !; Name Street < City........L. State < Los Angeles Examiner LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA „,.te=x:--=S- i.iti,"in jjc==g;agc=====g=?=-' L.W*' ! 1 y "JT - —f~ -JS.l?.**.? <n ‘im » .i.iu n-.ii.ii head like a peeled onion, and once when she got up to talk of “The Higher Reaflm of Womanhood” before an au dience of 5,000 she felt that she was losing a switch, and pretended to faint, and left the platform, and she didn’t cane, for her hair was more to her than elevating women, anyway, and all she remembered of Pike’s Peak was that she lost her back comb there, and when asked to write of her Impressions of Itaily couldn’t because her only impres sion was that her hair never acted so awrful before, and did Daysey Mayme think she would look better with her hailr light or dark, etc., etc., till the hour came for parting, when Daysey Mayme walked away with her brain so filled w&h hair it was tit for a bird nest. “There Isn't a famous woman living,” she wrote in her dairy that night, "who wnuldn’t be glad to trade her fame fora xwad of hair.” Then she went to bed, and dreamed that all the great women the world has ewer known were sliding from their pedestals by means of a hair ropo. No indigestion in Cottolene doughnuts | ; Cottolene heats to a higher tem perature than either butter, or lard, without burning or smoking. The high temperature of the fat hardens the albumen, forming a thin crust or coating, which pre vents the food from becoming fat soaked. The use of Cottolene saves half the time in frying. Cottolene is a vegetable oil shortening—as healthful as olive oil—easily digested—makes food rich and crisp, but never greasy. Cottolene is absolutely pure and clean in its origin, its manufac ture, and method of packing. It is never sold in bulk always in air-tight tin pails which protect it from dirt, dust and odors of the grocery. Pur chase a pail of Cottolene from your grocer today. THE N. K FAIRBANK COMPANY