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Winston Churchill's Most Famous Novel
-••••? +••$• 4-«+ 4.94. 4-«4.
The Inside of the Cup” a Human Document
(FROM HEARST’S MAGAZINE FOR NOVEMBER)
The Struggle of a Young Clergyman to Reconcile His Calling with Con
dition of Modern Day Religion, Told with Convincing Detail.
“The Inside of the Cup,” Win
ston Churchill’s latest and most
wonderful novel, now running in
HEARST’S MAGAZINE, has set
a high mark for modern fiction. It
deals with a subject of universal
interest— the struggle of a young
clergyman with modern condi
tions.
Mr. Churchill’s story,illustrated
by James Montgomery Flagg, is
only one feature in the November
number of compelling interest.
The following excerpts deal
with the Rev. Hodder’s meeting
with Alison Parr in the tenement
district.
Previous to this, Hodder has
become intimate with Elder Parr,
her father, a lonely millionaire.
He hears Alison attack the hypoc
risy of the church and of the men
who support it. Her attack de
cides him to leave. He pays one
more visit to St. Johns and a suf
fering woman, whose family has
been ruined by Parr, attacks him.
He decides to work in the tene
ments.
r OU know Miss Parr, I be-
Y lleve,” the old gentleman
said.
Hodder took her hand. He had often
tried to Imagine his feelings if he
should meet her again: what he should
do and say—what would be their foot
ing. And now he had no time to pre
pare . . .
“It is so strange,” she said, with
that note of wonder at life in her voice
which he recalled so well, "that I
should have come across Mr. Bentley
here after so many years. How many
years. Mr. Bentley?”
"Ah, my dear,” he protested, “my
measurements would not be yours.”
It is better for both of us not to
say,” Alison declared, laughingly.
You know Mr. Bentley?” asked
Hodder, astonished.
"He was a very dear friend of my
mother’s, although I used to appropri
ate him when he came to our house,
it was when we lived in Ransome
•. rr, ages ago. But I don't think Mr.
Bentley has grown a bit older.”
He is one of the few who have
found the s, ‘ of youth,” said the
rector.
But the old gentleman ’’id moved
off into the path—or perhaps it would
be more accurate to say that he was
carried off by the swarm which clus
tered around him, two smaller ones
tugging at his hand, and all Intent
upon arriving at - the soda water pa
vilion near the entrance. They had
followed him with their eyes, and they
saw him turn around and smile at
them, helplessly. Alison presented a
perplexing face to Hodder.
"Does he bring them here—or you?”
she asked.
’T’—lie hesitated "Mr. Bentley has
dor;.? this every Saturday afternoon for
years,” he said, “I am merely one of
them."
Restraint Falls On Them.
.She looked at him quickly. They
had started to follow, in the cool path
b-neath the forest trees. Restraint
fell upon them, brought about by the
memory of he intimacy of their for
rirr meeting, further complicated on
Hodder's part by his new attitude to
ward her father, and his finding her in
1 c unpany, of all persons, of Mr.
Bentley Unuttered queries pressed
on the minds of both.
"T; ! mo about Mr. Bentley.” she
Hodder hesitated.
He was so well known, and he used
to go to St. John’s.
"Yes, he used to go to St. John's."
“What happened to him —do you
know? The reason he stopped coming
to our house was some misunderstand
ing with my father, of course. I am
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‘rthbound, Tuesday, November 28,1912.
Dally thereafter. . -.x.. no
JNO. L. MEEK R - L - BAYLOR,
A. G. P.'A., Atlanta, Ga. ' P- A., Atlanta, Ga.
positive my mother never changed her
feelings toward him.”
Ruined By Her Father.
"I can only tell you what he has
told me, which is all I know —authori-
tatively,” Hodder replied. How could
he say to her that her father had ruin
ed Mr. Bentley? Indeed, with a woman
of her fearlessness and honesty—and
above all, her intuition—he felt the cru
elty of his position keenly. Hodder did
not relish half truths; and he felt that,
however scant his intercourse In the
future might be with Alison Parr, he
would have liked to have kept it on
that basis of frankness In which It had
be£un. But the exact stage of disil
lusionment she had reached in regard
to her father was unknown to him, and
he feared that a further revelation
might posibly sever the already pre
carious tie between father and daugh
ter.
He recounted, ' therefore, that Mr.
Bentley had failed; and how he had
before that given much of his estate
away In charity, how he had been un
able to keep his pew in St. Johns, and
had retired to the house In Dalton
street.
For some moments after he had fin
ished Alison did not reply.
"What is his number in Dalton
street?” she asked.
Hodder Informed! her.
He could not read in her face wheth
er she suspected that he could have
told her more. And in spite of an in
ordinate. human Joy tn being again In
her presence, his desire to hide from
her that which had taken place within
him, and the inability he felt to read
his future, were instinctive: the more
so because of the very spontaneity they
had achieved at their first meeting.
As a man, he shrank from confessing
to her, however Indirectly, the fact that
she herself was so vital an element In
his disillusionment.
"My father told me before he left
that you were to take a cruise with
him on the yacht he has chartered.”
"He wrote me from New York—l
was unable to go,” Hodder said slowly.
He felt her gaze upon him, but reso
lutely refused to meet it. . . . They
walked on In silence until they came
to the more open spaces near the edge
of the park, thronged that Saturday
evening by crowds which had sought
the city's breathing space. Perfect
trees cast long fantastic shadows across
the lawns, fountains flung up rain
bows from the midst of lakes; chil
dren of the tenements darted hither
and thither, rolled and romped on the
grass; family parties picnicked every
where, and a very babel of tongues
greeted the ear —the language of Eu
rope from Sweden to Italy.
Suddenly an exclamation from her
aroused and thrilled him.
"Isn't it wonderful how happy they
are, and with what simple pleasures
they are satisfied. I often come over
here on Saturdays and Sundays, just to
talk to them.”
"Give me a little time.” he begged,
"and perhaps Til get over my preju
dices. The worst of them, at any rate.
You are helping me to do so." He
tried to speak lightly, but his tone was
more serious In the next sentence. It
seems to me personally that you have
given proof of a concern for your fel
low creatures.”
Her color grew deeper, her manner
changed.
"That gives me the opportunity to
say something I have hoped to say.
ever since I saw you. I hoped I should
see you again.”
"You are not going away soon? he
said. , .
The -words were spoken Before he
grasped their significance.
"Not at once. I don't know how long
I shall stay,” she answered hurriedly,
intent upon what was in her mind I
have thought a groat deal about what 1
said to you that afternoon, and I find it
more than ever difficult to excuso my
self. I shan’t attempt to. I merely
mean to ask you to forgive me."
Nothing to Forgive.
"There is nothing to forgive.” he as
sured her, under the Influence of the
feeling she had aroused.
“It’s nice of you to say so. and to
m gmMra ottogiajt ctptowu cthtrum*, tovembek i«, igra.
take It as you did—nicer than I can
express. I am afraid I shall never
learn to appreciate that there may be
other points of view to life than my
own. And I should- have realized and
empathized with the difficulties of your
position, and that you were doing the
best under the circumstances."
"No,” he exclaimed, “don’t say that!
Your other Instinct was the truer one,
if indeed you have really changed it—
I don’t believe you have.” He smiled at
her again. "You didn’t hurt my feel
ings; you did me a service. I told you
so at the time, and I meant It. And,
more than that, I understood.”
"You understood?”—
"You were not criticising me; you
were—what shall I say?—merely try
ing to iron out some of the Inconsis
tencies of life. Well, you helped me to
Iron out some of the inconsistencies of
my own. lam profoundly grateful.”
She gazed at him, puzzled. But he
did not, he could not, enlighten her.
Some day she would discover -what he
meant.
“If so, I am glad," she said, in a low
voice.
They were standing In the midst of
the crowd that thronged around the
pavilion. An urchin caught hold of the
rector’s coat.
“Here he is! Say, Mr. Hodder, ain’t
you goln' to have any sody?”
“Certainly we are,” he replied, re
turning Alison’s faint smile. ... In
the confusion that followed he caught
Q. glimpse of her talking to Mr. Bent
ley; and later, after he had taken her
hand, his eyes folio-wed her figure
wending its way in the evening light
through the groups toward Park street
and he saw above the tree tops the red
tiled roof of the great house In which
she was living, alone.
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an 4 32*4 Peachtree St.
BLOOD POISON
Piles and Rectal Diseases.
CURED TO STAY CURED.
By a true specialist
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or make no charge and I will make nty
terms within your reach. I cure Vari
cocele, Hydrocele, Kidney, Bladder
and Prostatic troubles, Piles, Rupture,
Stricture, Rheumatism, Nervous De
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the shortest time possible If you
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and examination. Hours, Ba. m. to 7
p. m. Sundays, 9 to 1.
DR. J. D. HUGHES, Specialist.
Opposite Third National Bank.
H'/ 2 North Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
MANY SUFFERERS RELIEVED OF PAIN
AND SICKNESS BY “TRY-NEW-LIFE”
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THESE WERE CURED-READ WHAT THEY SAY
Mr. Frank L. Prouty, president of
the Prouty Livery Company, at 141-145
Larned street, is known to hundreds of
old residents of Detroit, and his word is
good with them. Two years ago Mr.
Prouty was seized with locomotor
ataxia, and in spite of all that good
doctors could do grew gradually worse
until it seemed that there was no hope
for him.
Then he heard of "Try-New-Life”
and the wonders that It has worked all
over the country. He took an instru
ment to his house and began treating
himself morning and evening. Here is
what he writes about it:
Detroit, Oct. 24, ’l2.
Hamilton-Beach Sales Co.,
Detroit, Michigan.
Gentlemen:
I want to tell you that my doctor
says that the “Try-New-Lifo” instru
ment 1 bought of you is what has stop
ped the progress of locomotor ataxia,
from which I had suffered for two
years. If it had not been for “Try-
New-Life" I would now be dead.
It has stopped the pains in my stom
ach, it has taken away the numbness
from my feet, and I can now walk and
attend to business. I am very sure now
that I will get well.
I was in very bad condition when I
got the instrument. I suffered great
pain, I was very nervous, and my legs
and feet were swollen and almost pur
ple. Worst of all, the disease was gain
ing on me, and I could not sleep.
From the very first treatment the
pain was eased, and that night 1 slept
five hours without wakening—some
thing I had not done before in many
months. Now, after using the instru
ment a few weeks, I am very much bet
ter and am sure of getting well; and
RHEUMATISM RELIEVED WITH “TRY-NEW-LIFE”
Rheumatic pains, of whatever kind,
are positively benefited and relieved by
“Try-New-Llfe,” the wonderful little
scientific instrument at the offices of
the Hamilton-Beach Sarles Company.
No. 4 Adams avenue, West, corner of
Woodward.
Rheumatism Is perhaps the most
common complaint in this city, where
the air is always moist. Especially in
the last few weeks has there been
much suffering from it.
And the number of sufferers who
have come Into the Hamilton-Beach of
fices, their faces lined with pain and
their bodies drawn into attitudes of
agony, and who have gone out smiling
is almost beyond belief.
You who have this affliction, tako no
man’s word for it, but come and see for
yourself that your pain can be taken
away. No matter what kind of rheu
matism you have —for there are many
kinds —the effect is the same, every
time.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• REGULAR HOURS OF THE •
• “TRY-NEW-LIFE” OFFICES •
• The “Try-New-Life” demonstra- ®
• ting and sale parlor is located on •
• the fifth floor of the J. M. High •
• Company's store. •
• Anc| is open every day from 8:30 »
• a. m. till 6 p. m., with competent •
• attendants on duty at all times. •
••••••»•••••••••••••••••••
J. M. HIGH COMPANY, - Atlanta, Ga.
. LADIES ESPECIALLY
ARE INVITED TO CALL
Ladies especially are Invited to
visit the office of "Try-New-Life.”
Skilled lady attendants will wait on
them. Most treatments can be given
with all the clothing on, but there is
the utmost privacy if it is desirable
to remove any of the clothing. If
you are not as well as you should be,
“Try-New-Life” will help you. Come
and see.
my doctor agrees that it was “Try-
New-Life” that stopped the disease.
Yours very truly,
(Signed) FRANK PROUTY.
Rheumatism of Nine
Years Relieved
“In all the nine years that I have
suffered with rheumatism, ‘Try-New-
Life' has given me more and quicker
relief than anything I ever tried.” says
Mrs. Thomas Reed, of 184 Twenty
fourth street, Detroit. “It is a great
thing to relieve the pain.”
Mrs. Reed had tried many kinds of
liniment and cures in the nine years
she was afflicted. Yet every winter her
knees would swell up and grow tender,
and she was always in pain from them.
A friend who had seen some of its
work recommended the “Try-New-
Inflammatory rheumatism Is ono of
the most painful of all varieties that
torture mankind, and one of the most
dangerous. Neglected, ft not only
drives the sufferer wild with agony and
makes miserable the lives of everybody
around him, but often attacks the heart
and causes death.
Another form of rheumatism which
is especially painful Is sciatica, where
the disease fastens on the great nerve
of the thigh that runs down the back of
the thigh from hip to knee. A severe
attack will make a strong man howl
with agony, and even a light, attack is
very, very painful Yet, It gives way
readily before "Try-New-IJfe.” The
very first treatment relieves the pain,
and with steady use of the Instrument
It disappears entirely. Take no man's
word —come nnd sec.
Lumbago Easy to Stop.
"Try-New-Life” takes away lumbago
Just as It does all the other forms of
rheumatism. The muscles and nerves
and blood vessels of the lumbar region
are treated, and in place of the con
stant pain comes a feeling of warmth
and comfort —a glow of health ami
vigor. If you will come into the Ham
flton-Beach Sales Company's offices
you will he shown, without charges,
that this claim Is true.
Gout is at least a first cousin to riv u-
Life" instrument, and Mrs. Reed bought
one. From the very first the pain wag
relieved, and she could sleep at night.
“I never feel rheumatism any more,”
she says, "so long as I use ‘Try-New-
Life’ occasionally. I have had the dis
ease so long that I couldn't expect to be
cured of it all at once. And I know
that it hasn’t gone away of its own ao
cord, for whenever I neglect ‘Try-New-
Life’ too long, it comes back.
“But when I take the treatments
there is not a sign of it.”
“Try-New-Life” never fails to re
lieve rheumatism.
Sufferer Sleeps
Every Night Now
Detroit, Oct. 24, 1912.
Hamilton-Beach Sales Co.,
Detroit, Michigan.
Gentlemen:
The “Try-New-Life” Instrument
which I got from you has done every
thing for which you recommended it.
I lost the little finger and part of my
right hand by blood poison, and for
three years the hand gave me great
pain and was practically useless afl
that time.
Then I began to use a “Try-New-
Life” instrument, and from the very
first I had great relief. For months I
had not slept all night, and as soon as
I began to use “Try-New-Life” the
pain began to go away and I slept well.
I can heartily recommend “Try-New-
Life” to relieve pain and build up a
weakened part.
(Signed) C. H. SERGEANT,
35 Richton avenue.
matlsm. Both come from the same
cause —an excess of poison 1n the blood,
which Is deposited in the weak spots in
muscles, nerve or bone. In the case of
gout, the acid takes the form of chalk,
and is left in great, painful and disfig
uring lumps on the joints o£ fingers
and toes.
Deposit Is Dissolved.
Instant relief is given by "Try-New-
Life.” The circulation is so stimulated
that the blood at once begins to dis
solve, take up and carry away the de
posits of uric acid, and with proper
treatment of the kidneys with "Try-
New-Life” they will be able to eject It
from the system entirely. At the same
time the aching nerves are soothed and
lh<- pain taken away.
Take nobody’s word for it—come In
and see.
Mubcular rheumatism is the result of
uric acid and other poisons deposited in
the muscles anywhere in the body—al
ways the weakest spot Is chosen. It
yields as readily as any other kind to
the skillful use of "Try-New-Life.”
Neuralgia is close akin to rheuma
tism. but It affects the nerves of the
head and face rather than muscles and
bones, and at times is as painful as any
other form of the malady. It is quick
ly soothed away by "Try-New-Life.”
Come and See for
Yourself That
It Is True
Whatever Your Ailment
Give It a Trial With
No Cost To You.
Scores of people dally are finding that
there Is quick and sure relief from pain
In “Try-New-Use,” as given by the
Hamilton-Beach Sales Company 1n Its
offices at No. 4 Adams avenue, West,
corner of Woodward. Free treatments
have been given every one who has
applied, and "Try-New-TAfe,” the
latest, discovery of science for the re
lief of pain and the cure of disease,
has made hundreds of frlendw.
Sufferers by scores have been find
ing relief. Men with arms or legs
drawn by rheumatism, which had long
resisted drugs and liniments and hot
bathe, were anrazed at the relief they
found the very first minute. The cold
hands nnd feet were warmed Into a
glow; the flabby, deadened muscles
were stimulated to health and vigor;
the stiffened joints were made to work
again; and the pain—here Is the de
lightful part of It—the pain wae re
lieved tn a moment.
Headaches Taken Away.
Women came with headaches—the
kind of headache that whitens the fa.ee
with pain, draws lines across the brow
and below the corners of the mouth,
and puts dark circles under the eyes.
They must have believed they could be
relieved or they would not have come:
but belief had nothing to do with It
Just so they came. For a skilled op
erator, working with a soft, velvet
llke applicator, soothed the throbbing
nerves, gently stimulated the blood
vessels to carry away the blood that
was gorging the brain, smoothed away
the lines of pain from brow and face,
and the headache was gone.
Cases of backache there were, among
both men and women. Overwork, men
tal and physical strain, weak kidneys—
no matter what caused It, there they
were with pain In the small of the
Ijnck. They could walk, but with pain
at every step. They could sit down and
rise up, but at the cost of many a pang.
They could even stoop and rise “Up
again, but every movement was ar
agony.
Pain Is Quickly Soothed.
A few minutes In the hands of a
trained operator made a world of dif
ference In every ono of them. The spe
cial applicators made to reach the seat
of pain In the muscles of the back went
right to the spot that felt so sore,
soothed away the pain and stimulated
the muscles of the back, so that warmth
and vigor and strength took the place
of chill and weariness and aching.
Some had gout—that painful, deform
ing malady, caused- by the blood leav
ing uric acid In the form of chalk In
the Joints of fingers and toes. Tt was
amazing how quickly these were re
lieved. When treated with drugs and
liniments, gout Is a slow and stubborn
disease; but "Try-New-Life" Is instant
In Its effects. Hands that had long
been well-nigh useless were given back
their suppleness 1n a few minutes, and
the pain was taken away even quicker
than that.
Little children there were, who had
suffered from infantile paralysis; and
there were older persons who had been
stricken. Withered arms and legs were
warmed into life, the blood stimulated
to flow with renewed vigor through
half-dead parts, and renewed vigor and
vfm injected Into muscles which from
disuse were wasting away.
Wasted Bodies Rebuilt.
It would take a book to give the story
of all the good "Try-New-Life" did In
the first few days It was offered to the
public In this city. The list of dis
eases It has relieved would be a long
one: sciatica. Indigestion, neuralgia,
asthma, lumbago, nervousness, depres
sion—they all found relief. If you have
any ailment whatever, come In and see,
without a cent of cost, what It will do.
Cal! at No. 4 Adams avenue. West, cor
ner Woodward.
■••••••••••••••••••••••• as
• AGENTS ARE WANTED TO •
• HANDLE “TRY-NEW-LIFE” •
• Agents are wanted to take ex- •
• elusive charge of the sale of "Try- •
• New-Life” in several choice local- •
• ities in Georgia. The company •
• has a great many inquiries for the •
• instrument from outside cities, •
• and has filled many orders, but •
• these could be better handled by •
• an agent on the ground. •
• Men or women of character and •
• ability are wanted, who can de- •
• vote all their time to a live enter- •
• prise. •
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