Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 13, 1912, EXTRA 2, Image 5

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THE OtEOBQIAM’S MAGAZINE PAGE BROADWAY JONES Based on George M. Cohen's Play Now Running in New York « Thrilling Story of -The Great White Way.” , By BERTRAND BABCOCK. TODAY ’S installment. Tl ,e other walked to the window and out in the street. A sharp fea t7re.i man was ringing repeatedly the .•bell of h house opposite. Each time t ,'. P servant appeared she seemed to 7, her head and to be telling him * . person he sought wasn't at u , just as persistently the man e a b , his ringing. This for a mo broke the mood of Broadway Jones, s a creditor, or worse still, ./'“employee of some “rough house col agencj'.’’ That same thing would him. Broadway Jones. His “ ,'.,,.11 r ven if he should retreat to a fXnislwr oom house, would be rung like it H<* turned back to Wallace. ■ j It wasn’t for all those debts—all those bills I owe." he said. •You don't know the exact amount? You haven’t added them up?" asked Wai lace . why, I—haven’t had time. I’ve been too busy." what?" came from Bob sardoni callt then, as the other begged off from any third degree, as he was still nerv ous from the night before," Bob added: • Where are the bills? I'll go over them." Broadway was only too glad to have him'do so. and he showed Wallace where they were in his desk in the adjoining ro ,, n , He left his friend gasping at the totals of some of them, while he himself Kfn t to the telephone in the room they had been occupying. A fervor of econo ti y was upon him. He would discharge the cook, he would discharge the butler. Rut. first of all. he must find out what the dinner of the night before had cost. He got Speary’s on the phone, and the l ead cashier at once. It would be looked up for him immediately, the cashier as sured him. If lie would hold the wire. Broadway put the instrument down on the table while he stood waiting. Ran kin entered quietly. In his sudden de sire to economize, Jackson turned to him abruptly. "Rankin, you’d better look around for a new job.'' The butler's face fell abruptly. "Pick ings" had been good with him in the ex travagant household financed by the spendthrift. READY FOR ANYTHING. "Hasn't my services been satisfactory?” Rankin faltered out. “Oh, yes: but I expect to do a lot As traveling," returned Jackson. “I expect to locate in Japan, and I've got to have «ome one who understands the language." From deepest despair, the face of the butler changed instantly to delight and hope. "I speak Japanese very well, sir." he said. "I was in service with two of them for more than five years, and in case you are thinking of China. I’m also —” At this moment the telephone bell rang, sparing Broadway the necessity of an swering his butler.' He put the receiver tn his ear. “What'a that?" said he. “Yes —what's that again? What? Twenty-three hun dred and twenty-three dollars. The what? The vintage? What vintage? Is that so? —Oh, not at all; It would be all the same to me If you said twenty-three thousand. Yes: thanks. Good-bye." A VOID IMPURE MILK for Infants and Invalids Get HORLICK’S It means the Original and Genuine MALTED MILK “(Meu Jmttaticn? The Food-Drink for all Age* Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form, forinfanta, invalids and growing children. Pu renutrition,upbuilding the whole body. Invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. More healthful than tea or coffee. Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S HORLICK’S Contain Pure Milk JELLICO LUMP $4.75 PIEDMONT GOAL CO. Both Phones M. 3648 SUPERIOR SERVICE via NEW ORLEANS to Louisiana. Texas, Old and New Mexico, Arizona and California Winter Tourist Excursion Fares On Sale Daily November Ist to April 30th, 1913. Liberal Stopovers. Final Limit May 30. 1913. Four Daily Trains for Houston and North Texas Points. I wo Daily Through Trams to California Leave NEW ORLEANS 11:30 a. m„ and 11:45 p. m. Through Standard and Tourist Sleeping’ Cars. Electric Block Signals. Oil Burning Locomotives. Call or write for full particulars 0 P BARTLETT. Genl. Agt. R. 0 BEAN. T. P. A. 1901 First Avenue, 121 Peachtree Street. Birmingham, Ain. Atlanta. Ga. Jackson put up the receiver and for a moment stumbled blindly about the room. The result of his folly of the night before was not confined to his engagement to the elderly Mrs. Gerard alone. "Twenty-three, twenty-three—and the butler speaks Japanese,” he mumbled to himself. “I can’t win a bet.” His eye caught tile exposed leaf of his desk diary. "And it's the thirteenth of the month, too. I'll never forgjt this day.” I'or the first time, since he had learned that his dinner of the night before had added just $2,323 to his indebtedness to the world, he became conscious of the fact that Rankin was still in the room, watch ing him in a sort of dumb wonder. Broad way pulled himself together. "You pay the chief a month's salary and let him go," he directed to the butler. I ell him 1 don t like his cooking ativ more.” "Shall 1 engage a new man, sir?" asked Rankin. Jones’ answer was imended to be de eisive as to bo,h tlle butler and the cook. No, 1 won’t need any," he said. “Didn't I just tell you that I expected to locate in Egypt?” Rankin smiled again. But as he was determined this time to leave his master no loophole of escape he took care to walk toward the door as he answered: “Egypt! Oh, what a delightful coun try, sir. i lived there for two years. I'll be of service to you. I'm sure, on the en tire trip. I'll tell the chef sir." But Jackson bad forgot! n tin- butler long before he had passed through th door. "Twenty-three twenty-three." mut tered Broadway, as he opened the door of the room in which Wallace was deep in a mass of bills, with rumpled .hair, try ing to add the many small items that made up the large whole. Wallace looked lip with a frown as Jones stood on the rug before the door. Broadway hastened to give his information. "When you get that total. Bob," he said, "just add twenty-three hundred and twenty-three dollars to it." "What’s that for?” Wallace asked sharply. "Vintage—whatever that is," said Jackson in a dry tone. A series of bitter reflections from Wal lace on a combination of $2,323 worth of "vintage” with a spendthrift and an el derly widow had driven Broadway from thp room where Bob sat at the desk. He was walking uneasily up ami down in his "drawing room"—he called It that be cause of sundry operations with works performed there- when Rankin entered with the card of a visitor who much de sired to see Jackson. name Peter Pembroke told him nothing, but as Ran kin was quite positive that Pembroke was a man of some importance Broadway di rected that he be shown in. A moment later a florid man with white hair, carefully dressed in a well-fitting morning suit and carrying the latest thing in English headwear, strode briskly in. “Ah, Mr. Jones, I'm Mr.' Pembroke.” he said, and then waited, as though he ex pected that the mere name would product an effect. He seemed slightly disap- 1 pointed when Jones merely said: “Sit right down. Mr. Pembroke. Make yourself right at home." The elderly, though keen-faced and alert, man took a chair. “Os course you expected me," he re sumed with a return of his air of expecta tion. Broadway felt a sudden tug of tear at his heart. Perhaps this might be the first of bis creditors to run him. “Expected you?” repeated Jackson dully, while he waited for the other to produce a bill or a court order. But his caller did nothing of the sort. His manner w’as still easy and friendly. He resumed: “Why, yes. Didn't Mr. Spotswood wire you that I'd call?” Then, as he saw that the name did not awaken any mem ory in Jackson, he added: "Judge Spots wood, attorney at law. Jonesville, Conn." AN OLD FRIEND. Relieved to find that the man was ap parently not a creditor. Jones exclaimed: “Oh, you mean old Judge Spotswood, of Jonesville! Sure. I know him. 1 know his whole family well. Why, he did not wire me.” Then he remembered the telegram which Rankin had brought to him. but which he had slipped Into his pocket. He brought it out. "Now. what do you think of that? 1 forgot to open it." Broadway had hardly begun to read the first words of the telegram when the other arrested his attention by saying in a warm tone: "You have my deepest sympathy, Mr. Jones. I knew your uncle well. A fine, able man.” Continued In Next Issue. CASTOR IA For Infant* and Children. Ths Kind You Have Always Bought “Dress Simply If You Want to Look Young/* Says Pretty Juliette Day foolish as for a girl to think that a Jk complexion is improved by a coat of 'whitewash.' fc"' * A*\ Ir seis the little woman tin- danger of F Wf growing fat. all oth rs, she I { '"J afford won "idea.- she i- t ill." a” A' ? aWaK "W Miss I'.i.v ~- sli n a.- a nil!.o' wan. / *''' '■ w ’ u th<- plum blossom, so ~ 11 ' :i ' '' '" i " 1 *’ x >'<>uu. W" ..s-me.i me t 'at ,-i- ' * y Uils - l! ■ d' I'oSl'il on e d If. i, ill .Atv " wav- of keeping t'lln. and w ill Benin lite B| moment she thinks it necessary. ' • ||ca. “There .<!•♦• i u<hh! main dis.ohitn- uS® '*<■' tages to being little." said Miss Day. Hi . v I "and om ol tiu-ui is that you always w a Tfc W - .WFnWv iW- W cA., Jwh*" >' q \ vHRHBKk bKBbIi i \ By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. /F ISS JULIETTE DAY is a tiny JJy I little pei .- m. with very largi am tiofis. We shall see her soon as Miss Plum Blossom in "The Yellow Jacket," by Harry lienrimo. Now she is rehearsing day and night, but she manages to look well and very happy, despite ger strenuou work. She is the ■sort of a little girl that is bound to be called cunning, or. worse still, cute. I know she abominates both adjectives, and is quite English in he denunciation of them. Still, she is lit tie, so I asked Iter to give a void of advice to other girls who neter can grow up. beyond four feet eight inches or five feet“at the most. Miss Day has a cunning little face - dear me. there’s that wretched adjec tive again—and really big blue eyes. And this Is what she thinks about other little women: “The little woman lias one advantage over the big one," said Miss Day, and as she sat in a big chair, her feet barely touched the ground. “Little women stay youngei longer than big "women do. If a little woman is clever, she need never look old at all, provid ing she takes care of herself, and of course there isn't so much to take care of as there is of the six-footer. "I don’t believe I shall ever grow taller, though tin y -u< you do go on growing until you are twenty-one. Still I rather think 1 shall be a "shorty" all my life so I’ve had to study the ques tion seriouslv. Will Hide Her Light. "Hi re are some of the things I have decided on: "A little woman must never wear frocks that are overtrimmed. She <• in not afford to look like a fashioiiabi I A ■ Opium, Whiskey end Drug Habit* treated A A Hat Home or at Sanitarium. Rook on * bi*ct M HFrn >. DR B. m. WOOLLEY. 24-N. Victor i mMcSkum Sanitarium, Atlanta. Georgia. CHICHESTER S PILLS B THE DIAMOND BRAND. • Ludl'.«l Ask your for /?\ ‘ h’s-K r « IHowion JTlrnn<l/Z\ I 111, in K.,1 usd Hold l-.xns. seolM with Blue R.l t„, n . W late no other. B„ y „ r , X/ J’r»«el«t. AsKfcrri!l.<’ln H.TFTfK DIAMOND BRAND lULIAfMhfc y-1-5, nown a, Be»t.Safest, Alwey, Reliable OLD BY DRCGGISTS EVERYWHERE ITCHING FILES Every sufferer from itching piles should road these Words from H. Hood, of Bellnire. Mich . who was Cured by T'etterine For sixteen years I had been a suf ferer from Itching piles. I got a box of Tetterine and less than half a box made a complete cure. Tri terinc gives instant relief to all shot tli'-.-u*-. i- L.t - ' ■/.• 11 i, I «•! t or, ringworm, ground il' h, rt« It h.r th*, right medici nal • pialitic-' to get at th« cause anti to rrlictr III' <fl• • I G’*t it toihix 'l’cftct ne 50c at drug pats or by mail. SHUPTRINE CO, SAVANNAH GA • \<lv I 1 MISS JULIETTE DAY, LEADING '."OMAN WITH THE “YELLOW JACK ET” COMPANY. lamp shade, because if she does she will , hide her light beneath it and be ; eclipsed. “She must never wear large patterns ami wide stripes. "She must never wear too many col ors. fiir if site in pretty the jumble of f colors detracts from her looks, and bet i face i- too sm <ll to stand the rivalry > of loud colors. "She must never wear big hats. A little face under a very big hat can’t be seen, in the first place, ami the back . view is apt to look ridiculous. It looks as If the big hat were i tinning off with tlie girl. •Sue must never carry very large 1 handbags or reticules, and all her dress accessories must be in proportion to her size. "If she w ants to look y oung she must dress simply, no matter what age she , is. The little woman can afford to dress girlishly when she is past middle age. but when she is young she must not imitate the foolish customs or fasli ( ions of the older women. I "I see a great many girls who think I because they are very little that they can use make-up on the street without its being detected. Even powder makes the face look older, ami nothing is so Do You Know— i l‘enny-in-the-slot milk is the latest . | det eloptm nt of the principle in Lon- I { don. At W ood Green an enterprising [ i milkman has an automatic machine t ' attached to his front door, and house- I wives are able to obtain their pints > and half pints at the minimum of in convenience. 'Die Abbe Mario Costa, an eccentric priest of Genoa, lias just died while undergoing treatment at the sanita rium of Ambi, near Lugano. By acci dent it was discovered that his long black coat was lined with Italian hank notes to the value of $3,000. Eor 1911-12 the estimated n ival ex | endituri of Great Britain is $220,392,- [ 500. that of the United States of America $ 130,584..171. ami that of Ger many $1 In. 031. 788. <»ut of the 2i'.o(H<.oo«-o<ld acres which comprise Ireland, nearly ■ ne-seveiith Can barren, being mountain, turf, bog ■ lor marsh. 'I v , . Xeaily ~ii.iiiiu .s,,uth African win I idols lie unclfhmd In two -peiiul ‘ nin;, rooms In Woolaich ilmk yard. I need a footstool.” Here she swung her ■ f< et to show that she could not reach the floor. i "You don’t know how uncomfortable this position is. and we small women often suffer agony because we can't f touch our feet to the ground, and chairs are so high. "Then th-re's another thing. No matter how pretty a little woman is. she is really lost in the crowd, and is , less noticed than the tall gills of five . feet six and up. , "If you .ire short, the best tiling to ! do is to realize it and suit yourself and your ways and clothes to your height. "Don't swagger around and make long steps and swing your arms, or try i to be mannish: it’s perLctly ridiculous, and everybody, is bound to think so, though they may call it ‘smart' for a while. ' "Tile little woman can lounge,' but I she can not 'sprawl/ and /she has to ' make up her mind that heroic gestures and big motions of the body are not for her. "She can not whirl her arms about, land even when she is ’sufl ragett ing' ■ from the tail of a cart, or upon a soap ] box, she gets more attention —results II if she remains perfectly qui t. using no ,! gestures at all." Is your husband eioss? An irritable, fault-finding disposition is often dm to a disordered stomach. A man with good digestion is nearly always good naturrd. A great many hav< been pm manently cured of stomach ttoubb by I taking Chamberlain's Tablets. Eor sale by all dealers. (Advt.) Seaboard Establishes New Sleeping Car Line Be tween Atlanta and Ports mouth Norfolk. Efft i five Sunday, November 3, Sea board Air Line Railway established a new sleeping car line on trains Nos. 38 and 41 between Atlanta and Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va. This sleeper leaves Atlanta on the 8:55 p. in. train, and returning, arrives At lanta on the 6:10 a. m. train. This is an additional sleepei for these trains and besides furnishing through sleeping car service for the comfort of passenger between Atlanta and Nor folk, it Increases the facilities for tak ing can of passengers desiring sleeping car accommodations, traveling between Atlanta and points In North and South < ’arolina. —— —— ~ WASHINGTON AND RE TURN $19.35. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. On sale November 8-14. Re i turn limit December 1. “Fair Lillie’s smiles were full of wiles. And won my heart completely. I lazied in the sunshine Os her friendship given sweetly. But when she found 'twas time I had To spend, instead of money. The contents of my cup of joy Were changed to gall from honey. Though once tny wit had made a hit And roused her girlish glee.* Her mirth refused to be enthused, She laughed not with, but at me.” THOMAS F..” the author of this unhappy little poem, adds a postscript in which he sug gests that his sad experience has un doubtedly been the experience of other poor but honest ehaps. Also that “though capable of sitting up alone with his dead,” he wishes for the sake of other men that this little "obituary to his love so Lillian" be published. The request of poor Thomas is grant ed in the hope that its publication will do more than‘warn other men against Lillies: That it may make him realize when he sees the poem in black and white what a very poor poet he is. With litis ..-alization may coins the mor imp >: tant one: That he has been wasting his time. He waste.' \ . .table ime m making love when he had no financial re sources: he wasted mo <• ti ne in writ ing a poem about it. Nov, that he has baa tm- experience of having “lazied in the sunshine of her friendship." and knows the bitterness of being laughed at, instcid of with, lie should put the incident out of mind and go to work. He ma\ resent this, and claim he is working now. I have hi: own poem to p’.'ove tim: i ■ i; i't. for “when she found 'twas time ' bad io Spend, instead of money." tells a tale of idlem ss; of love making whe:i i.ae should be at work, of I.laying in the sunt him of a. girl's friendship when on. should be working in the sunshine sent from above. No wonder she 1.r.-gh d at. instiad of with him. Ev "y i;i • “hon'd laugh at tho man who doe n't m ike effort to turn lie' t' in into money. Am! the augli .-Dcni’il hut ■ < noiigh of contempt in it. to waken tin manhood in him. and send alm hustling. He says lie is capable of sitting up DRUDffp 'wS I / I L Anty Drudge as a Teacher. A nty Drudyr -' ‘There is a sum that is as true as 24-2=4.” Mrs. Savticurk “But you have forgotten to subtract several things, professor.” Ant j Drudge—“l know, my dear. When you use lels-Naptha soap you can subtract hot fires, hard d bbing, yellow-white clothes, steam-soaked homes on Mondays, sickness result ing from iiot water wash ing and many other disagreeable things.” Your clothes —your health —your strength —so much depends upon the soap you use, that you can’t be too careful in choosing. It you do the wash in the old-fashioned way —with soaps 1 nat require boiling water and much hard rubbing, you can’t blame the clothes for wearing out so quicklj. And it’s natural that the exertion should rax your strength and that the steaming soapy suds should *stufT up” your head and ruin your skin. But Eels-Naptha requires no boiling water, no hard rubbing. And it contains nothing harmful to the finest fabrics. It is the one soap that will make your clothes look best and wear longest, and that will get you through a whole day’s wash before noon. I'els-Naptha is a wonder-worker at housecleaning—makes the floors white and brightens up the paints. Eollow the directions on the red and green u runner. Ise any time of year."" Lillie s Smiles By Beatrice Fairfax alone with his own dead. If he can do that all through life he will show a spirit of courage, of unselfishness, and of self-reliance that few men display. The world is full of women who "sit up alone with their own dead" and make no moan, and no one know s it, but it is the natural tendency of a man to call attention to his woe and demand that the world pause while it gazes with sol emn eyes at his sorrow. Thomas Is letting a little incident make him morbid. He has no dead to sit up with beyond the dead that exist in such moments of poetic frenzy as he is experiencing. But he has the living to deal with, and life to face. And tiiat life will never amount to much if he is content rvith having more time to spend than money, and sitting around writing poor poetry about it. THE POINT OF VIEW. Tlie editor was glad—yea, very glatf. And he showed it. His countenance glowed with generous gleams of glad ness, and from his throbbing throat poured peans of praise. The somnolent staff (Cries of “No! No!”) startled out of its slumbers, huddled itself in a corner and anx iously hazarded reasons for the strange behavior of its chief. The office cat sprang from its couch of mildewed manuscripts and bristled bravely. And a bloated ' 'uebottle. suddenly ceasing to buzz, fell with a fatal flop on the junior sub-editor. Joy and consternation! But where fore joy? Why consternation? Where fore doth tin- mighty man rejoice at heart ? He lias just devoured the following paragraph: "We learn from our foreign corre spondent that Mr. O’MacPunn and Mr. A. de Virse, the famous poets and hu morists, have been captured by brig ands in the Balkans. A $20,000 ran om is Hi uianded and should this not. be forthcoming the chief of the gang the notorious Boilinoilo —threatens the usual alternative. Up to date the ransom iias not been paid, and the out look is regarded as very black." And this is the cause of the editor's gladness and, from an editorial point of view, his gladness is justified!