Newspaper Page Text
THE GEORGIAN'S MAGAZINE PAGE
JONES
; ■an George M. Cohan's Play Now Running in New York
. -g Story of “Th. Great Whit.
* Way."
By BERTRAND BABCOCK.
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
WiM exquisite tenderness, the girl laid
wr land upon his arm. as though she
uld assuage the hurt she was about to
P .Then—it’s because you are a—a—a
..enrtthrift. she said at last/with splen
a.-, a rage, her brave eyes facing him.
RoughU'' Broadway jerked out:
..Kot—much-I am not.”
T ‘ he ..,, was pity in the girl's face now,
W ’J Woo d. You will never
nv-i’ir.g else. Just now you think
, b'.t in two years from now you’ll be
.fending "hat the plant has earned over
>p . b.ve expenses on your wonderful
Broadway- It’s in your blood, and I
" n ?ptuft a nd nonsense, broke in Broad-
, ’ "There's nothing in my blood ex
the decent qualities you have seen
eomlng m ’he surface lately. I am not a
was once—but I see things as they
RF6 TV -
■•You can't help yourself.” went on the
gtrl. in a low. moaning way.“ It's in your
Hood -your grandfather—’"
GRANDFATHER'S FLING.
Broadwa i s belief In himself received a
momentary setback. His grandfather!
What could the girl mean? Why, his
grandfather had been the most staid of
* if he had had a fault it had been
that he had remained in his home too
closely, and had paid too much attention
to the dictates of his wife!
■ What do VOU mean about my grand
father?" he asked. "He was in bed
every night at 10 o’clock." ...
If ani other persons had been involved,
Bmadwav would have had a hilarious mo
ment at the strange course this wooing
was taking ~
"Your grandfather was a spendthrift, ■
went on the determined girl. “1 have
been 'old the story and 1 know that it's
, rllP Your grandfather, after he had
been married just two years, went to
New York and Broadway."
"How long did he stay?" demanded
Jackson.
"Two weeks.
"Well, there, you see."
"He didn't come back." went on the
girl, "until your grandmother went to
New York herself and got him out of the
Astor house, where he Irnd a room at $6
a day "
"There, you see," repeated Broadway,
"two weeks at $6 a day isn’t much.”
'•BUT HE CAME BACK.”
But it was the attitude he took.” said
Josie, "and for a man in his position
then, and the times he lived in, it was
almost as much as spending a small for
tune would be now.”
"But, you see," said Jackson, "he real
ly came back, after all."
"He came back because his wife took
him." explained Josie, "and he stayed
at home after that only because for the
rest of their lives she henpecked him
into staying."
She was smiling through tears now.
"You really wouldn't want to be hen
pecked and made a man of in that way,”
she said, with another of her moments
of exquisite drollery. “A henpecked
made-man always bears the marks of the
pecks."
While the to him absurd quality of
what the girl was saying had not been
lost upon Jackson in the. earlier moments
of their talk, yet the real basis of her
truly feminine words had Its effect upon
him There was some truth in it all.
While he, as of a later and more sophis
ticated generation, might smile at that
long ago extravagance of the Astor house
and the $6 a day, he reflected that his
grandfather probably had not smiled at it.
It had been in a sense deadly serious
with him. it had represented to his
grandfather the top of the imagination,
the utmost crest of a wave of willful
folly, a devilish and daring thing for a
man of his grandfather’s period, and born
and bred in that elemental countryside
of long ago.
"IT'S IN THE BLOOD.”
Perhaps Josie was right. Looking back
upon his own monumental folly—which
had never loomed larger than today—
Broadway saw that heredity could ac
count for It ven’ easily.
, Then into his mood, his warring mental
•npulses. came the words that Josie had
■ fo'en on the night of their first meet
ng, when she had given him the little
1 oP " a fers made In his own plant:
Hand it down to your children, and to
® children's children, and so on-and
so on— ’
drem? at Sh ° Uld h * hand down to hiE chll ’
H ri s ht ’ he thou « ht ; “it’" in my
down to my children? I’ll
ver hand them a lemon.”
And tn an agony of spirit his head sank,
that nt': 611 .. 1 ! ,hat bitterness, lie knew
and il:a' 'h<?r ft v, l , f '? me i ver ' close to him,
•"hottMers, ds ay aln,ost u P° n his
Part X.
/ OSIE IS PUZZLED.
rlrnan 7 ° ne flaßll time something
_" lal bfal ln ’he being of the man. His
No Suffering Yets!
• ls unnatural suffering of so many women at times
'.‘ ,l relieved by a little care and proper help.
eecharn s Pills give just the assistance needed. They
Sently but surely; they correct faults of the system
so Cf rtainly that you will find better conditions prevail
Amongst Women Who Take
ren °wned and effective remedy. Beecham’s
"ill help your digestion, regulate your bowels,
f 111,1 your liver. Headaches, backaches, lassi
] Ul < C A* 1 nervous depression will trouble you less and
' ’ ei ’ you take at times—whenever there is need —
BEECHAM’S PILLS
Wa
U}«*r y°“*hful looke and to fool ot their belt
« turn to read the epecial direction* with every bos.
SoW everywhere. In boxee 10c., 25c.
arms stiffened as their muscles prepared
to seize and hold this woman, and there 1
came the old brute knowledge that if he
forcibly drew her to himself her resistance
would be at an end.
But the muscles did not do more than
harden slightly. His arms did not move.
He did not act upon the knowledge that
comes at some time or other to all de
scendants of the men of the eaves and
forests of a time long before the tetone '
age.
For a new Broadway Jones born the ■
day he entered Jonesville—had come to ;
almost perfect and complete conscious
ness. He could seize and carry Josie by
storm, but if the taint of the spendthrift
was in his blood he would not subject her i
to the moral hazards of life with him.
Not only the spendthrift had been dis
solved tn the solvent of his new attitude
toward himself, but the old selfishness
had gone.
THE IMPORTANT THINGS.
Then came lowly, brokenly, grief em
balmed in every word, those tones that
had the power of moving Jackson as
neither God nor man had:
“I must have seemed to you—to be
leading you—on—l was leading you qn
—because I wanted—l want your—oh,
when I put away the specter of your an
cestor I wanted only you—Jackson—-only
you. But it wouldn’t be-right. There
are other things in the world more im -
portant than just ourselves—our per
sonal characters—the good we must do
rests upon them—we couldn't, we can’t—"
She stopped, her breast rising and fall
ing convulsively. Then for a moment
the eyes of Broadway clung to hers. There
was nothing between their souls. These
two suffered, yet grew calm upon the
broad plain of a mutual renunciation.
• » *
The hearty voices of Bob and his fa
ther, now in perfect understanding, came
from the road, as the two walked to'the
gate of Jones Manor. And at the same
time the judge and his wife and Clara
drew near to Josie and Jackson, too. Even I
the judge’s wife was willing to agree that
Jackson and Josie had had all the time
in the world.
As the younger Wallace entered through
the gate he was saying:
“The town itself has a population of
about four thousand. The plant employs
over seven hundred of them."
Then seeing Jackson standing with Jo
sie, he added-
“Oh, here's Jackson now. Tell the gov
ernor all about it. will you? Tell him
how you turned down the trust's million
and a half, too."
"Whqt—a million—er yes—why of
course,” faltered out Jackson, neither
knowing what his friend had said nor
what he himself was saying.
While Josie turned instinctively and
hurriedly to obey partly her impulse of
flying into the maternal arms of Mrs.
Spotswood, the elder Wallace, who was
too intent upon the business matter be
fore him to notice anything else, said to
Jackson:
HIS COURSE APPROVED.
“Mr. Jones, my son has just told me
of the grand single-handed fight you’re
making against this giant corporation.
I admire your pluck, sir. ou deserve
all the encouragement any assistance
possible. Believe me. the Empire Ad- I
vertising Company is with you heart and I
soul. Your loyalty to the people of this I
town is commendable, sir. You deserve I
great credit, and I want to shake your
hand."
Jackson was now able to reply, and the
new youth that he had become was quick |
to give proper credit.
"Thanks, Mr. Wallace,” he said, “but
much of the real credit is due to Bob.”
“My son has told me of your modesty,”
said the father, "but do not attempt to
deceive me. He has also told me of your
wonderful business punch—something Bob
has lacked, and something that I have
longed to see him develop. I am very
proud that you have taken him into the
firm, and if advertising has any market
value well fight them to the finish. I
have promised my son to return here Mon
day morning. I may have a proposition
to put before you. I’d like tq see him
an equal partner In a business with such
a promising future."
, “I don't know what to say. Mr. Wal
lace,” said Jackson.
Wallace senior misunderstood .him, and
assumed that Jackson was putting him
off.
A NEW MYSTERY.
"Oh, Monday's time enough," he said.
”1 have an appointment with Pembroke
at his house tomorrow. After ten min
utes talk with me 1 promise you the Con
solidated people will make no further at
tempts to absorb.”
The old Broadway Jones or the new
one in his infancy would have thought
that this speech opened the gates of all
possibilities, but the new one did not,
since it meant that there was to be less
of hardship, less of peril. In the under
taking he was to set for himself. Indeed,
this, In the mood of Josie and himself,
would only be another barrier between
them.
Continued In Next Issue.
The Children of the Balkans L, " ,e Pnp S,ranee
HBK-vini " K
■OS i w
Ws i V [
■||| , IBs J M’MS
* * -4 |h ■■ «.
& I W I I HA
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This little boy learns Latin letters. He is a Croat A little Croatian girl. She lives northwest of Ser-
and speaks Servian, but is a Roman Catholic, and via, but speaks tbe Servian tongue. She is in holiday
writes his letters in Latin letters. attire and revels in bright embroideries.
al|M|| j M N r|=== Ij^=^== 1 j^=^== j A
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,N f fl , W
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/ \ —z
A Servian boy. who learns Cyrillic letters. He Another Servian child, wearing a fez and white |
goes to a Russian church on Sundays. cotton dress. '
Things Worth Remembering
The world’s i;ecord for pole-jumping
is 13 feet 1 inch,
The cherry, the peach and the plum
were first grown in Persia.
Great Britain uses 4,000,000 bales of
raw cotton every year.
A retired British soldier. Mr. Ferd
erick Irvine, who was wounded at the
relief of Ladysmith, has just been dis
charged from the Royal Victoria hos
pital, Montreal, after a remarkable op
eration. A Boer bullet, wrapped in a
shred of his pierced tunic, was found
to have lodged just within an inch of
his heart, and was extracted after re
maining there for over twelve years.
Superstitious people in France are
worried by the new method of count
ing the hours. Trains which start at
1 p. m, (now thirteen o'clock) are much
less crowded than others, especially on
Fridays. It is cursious how the su
perstition of thirteen persists. Masse
net never dated his letters on the fatal
day. Even his manuscripts he num
bered thus: 12. 12 bis. 14. fiy a strange
coincidence or fatality the great com
poser died on the thirteenth of the
month in a year whose figures added up
to thirteen.
The statistics of French insurance
companies prove beyond question that
women live longer than men; nor is the
feminine advantage in longevity a mat
ter of a few months, or even years.
The difference is one of almost a third
Thus the average age of death for wom
en annuitants on the books of one com
pany’ Is seventy, and for men a banc
fifty. Another company has several
centenarians, all women, on its books
This company is ntpv thinking of re
vising the tariffs and making “one law
for the man and another for the wom
an."
The French government is making
ever-increasing use of women in the
various minist . ies and public services
and whereas twenty years ago women
government employers numbered but a.
; few-hundreds, today there are 155,028,
and a further possibility of other state
positions being opened to them in the
1 near future. The most numerous body
of state employees is the teachers, who
number 70,693, while others are em
ployed in the post and telegraph serv
ices, the state railways, the admiralty,
the war, colonial, finance and agricul
tural offices, the Board of Trade, and
' the ministries of the interior, justice,
foreign affairs, and the tine arts.
. i This IVill Stop Your
Cough in a Hurry
Save 8- by Making Thin Cotigh
’ Syrup nt Home. .
■ I
r
1 This recipe makes a pint of better
1 cough syrup than you could buy ready
made for $2.50. A few doses usually
conquer the most obstinate cough- ’
■ stops even whooping cough quickly. Sim- ;
pie as it is, no better remedy cati be had ,
at any price.
Mix one pint of granulated sugar with i
% pint of warm water, and stir for 2 i
. minutes. Put 2> 2 ounces of Pinex (fifty
cents’ worth) in a pint bottle; then tid'd I
tiie Sugar Syrup. it lias a pleasant
taste and lasts a family a long time. |
Take a teaspoonful every one, two or 1
’ three hours.
You can feel this take hold of a cough
in away that means business. Has a
good tonic effect, braces tip the appetite, i
and is slight Iv laxative, too, which is '
helpful. A handy’ remedy for hoarse- j
ness, croup, bronchitis, asthma and all 1
throat and lung troubles.
The effect of pine on the membranes .
is well known. Pinex is the most valu
able concentrated compound of Xorwe- I
gian white pine extract, and is rich in I
guaiacol and all the natural healing I
pine elements. Other preparations will I
not work in this formula.
This Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipe has I
attained great popularity throughout the I
United States and Canada. It has often ■
been imitated, though never successfully. ■ I
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or I
■ money promptly refunded, goes with this !|
recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will I
get. it for you. If not. -end to The F
Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, lud.
U 1 f. 2 .> /• j «*
Gen tie. QisSck, 1
for aii coirntr.jns v,h rep >unis prominent*
—head-aches, neuralgia, acute or chronic 1
rheumatism. gout, nervousness, insomnia, I
pain«ppot:r t: -irtn w-inyi.ntc
x ANTi-AAt.'HIA TABLETS
A a stimulant, intoxicant or habit former, S
Try t lend
/At All DrugrrHts y
B ' -’T UHtyix.tJ
' '■ ■ ■
J— 4 - <& L’Sc ilcxce
ECZ E M
Ami all ailments of (he skin, such as
tetter, ringworm, ground itch ami ery
j.s pelas are instantly relieved and perma
nently cured to stay cured bv
TET TERINE
Iton’t suffer when you can relieve your
self so easib Read what Mrs, A. B.
King,-St. Louis, says;
Have been treated by specialists for ;
eczema without success. After using i
Tetterine a few weeks I am at last
cured.
50c at druggists or by mail.
SHUPTRINE CO.. SAVANNAH, GA.
> Advt. I
I WiLTON jauCO I
I __ _ I
I A !3
&■ I
155.00 Per Ton]
I The Jellico Coal Co.
I 82 Peachtree Street
| Eoth Phones 38ST
Advice to the Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax
DECIDE TI-fAT YOURSELF.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am twenty and in love with a
young lady two and a half years my
junior.
My friends think I should give
her up because of her young ap
pearance. P. E. R.
If you love each other, that would be
the strangest reason for breaking off
the ielationship ever known.
By al! means, be true to the girl, and
rej >iee that she is so favored. To look
younger than one’p years is a virtue,
And your friends regard it as a fault!
WAIT A YEAR.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am eighteen years oid, and a
yea ago beyanie engaged to a
young man of 21. We were engaged [
eight months. My mother objected
on account of money matters, and I
then we pallid. I have met many
young men. but none appeal to me
as he does, and I find I love him '
still. A few days ago 1 received a
letter from him saying that he
could not t’o without me and
wishes to keep company with me
again and mv mother still objects.
A. B. <'
You are only eighteen, and he is only
21. Too young to marry if there were
no other obstacles. Wait a year. If in I
that time he doesn't moke good in your i
mother’s eyes wait another year. You
will never regret it.
TELL THEM £O.
I>e,ir Mi-s Fairfax:
lam deeply in love with a friend I
of n*iy brother and do not know the |
way to show it. I have been in his ,
company only once, but my mother |
was there and I could not say much I
to him. Last Sunday evening my :
brother had a lady to the house. |
~ ■
GETTING MORE FOOD VALUE
FOR LESS MONEY.
When yon consider I lie high food '
value of Faust Spaghetti and the
delicious dishes it makes, tfie cost
seems ridiculously low. Don't you
think you should serve.it much
more often'.’ It will mean a con-;
siilerable saving in your house
hold expenses and a sure delight,
to your family.
Faust Spaghetti is made from Amer- |
lean Durum wheat, by Americans, in a i
clean American factory. We seal it up 1
in dust, dirt and damp-proof packages
to keep It clean and wholesome until it
reaches you. Your grocer sells Faust
Spaghetti in 5c and 10c packages.
MAULL BROS.,
St. Louis. Mo.
I
i
> ~ j * ———.— • ■ - ——-... ■- —— - ——'
j Southern California affords more opportunities than any j
other area in the world. WHY? Because it has proven its
possibWities in a thousand ways. The pioneer work is done.
1 The chances to follow proven lines are unlimited. The es-
I i sentials afe: Climate, land, water, power, transportation*
II and markets. Southern California has them all.
You Will Want To
Know All About This
■■»■■■■ niriwmfwimw bi
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 this famous land.
It will fell you about its farming possibilities, its poul
try, its fruits, its walnuts, its oil production, its beet sugar
industries, its live stock, its cotton, and, in fact, anything
and everything you may wish to know abotF Los Angeles
and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis.
The information will be accurately and entertainingly
j set forth, and apnropriatelv illustrated.
Th» proposed opening of the Panama Canal turns all the eyea of the
world on this region.
This special edition will he mailed to any address In ths United States
or Mexico for Fifteen Cents per copy.
As the edition Is limited, and so as not to disappoint anyone, an early
i ill requeot with remittance is desirable Remember that some of your friends
I may not see this announcement. Use the coupon below and see that thvy
I 111 get a copy.
'' "Examiner," " -
L ? Los Angeles, Cal.
> Enclosed please find cents, for which you will >
| I s please send the Ninth Anniversary number of your paper to
! < the following names. ]
1 I j I
j ( Name. Street i
’ < City State
i I' f
|j 1 Name Street - *
j L < City.......... State '|
I . -
li Los Angeles Examiner
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
' K- 1 _ 11 I
DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM
a- Imi • > and all inebriety and
OSH Opium and Whisky g-sa
these dlseasesate curable. Patients also treated at their
IRa homos Consultation confidential. A book on the sub
-1 ject free L'K B B 'VOOLI.EY k SON , No. J-A Via-
tor baniiarlum. Atlanta. Ga.
My mother made this gentleman
stay for supper. After supper an
other friend came with a lady.
About 9 o’clock one of the girls sug
gested that we go to the moving
pictures and we went without ask
ing these gentlemen. Upon our re
turn we .found them angry, and
they would not speak to us. We
feel that we have hurt their feel
ings and are sorry. FRANCES.
You were rude to guests at your horn*,
and must apologize.
You have seen this man only once,
love him. and say you didn't tfnow how
to show it. I arn glad you didn't know
how! Don't try to learn! It will be
soon enough to show your love when he
has told you he loves you.
Cottolene
makes delicious pastry
It’s the last word in pastry
making. It makes cakes so
: light and airy that every mor
sel tastes like “ more.”
Digestible too, because Cot
tolene food is never greasy.
Cottolene is better than
lard, because it’s a vegetable
—not an animal —product. It
iis richer—use one-third less.
Cottolene is cheaper than
butter —costs no more than
lard, and will give better re
sults than either. Use one
third less than
butter also. er \
* h ’
Cottolene is never
sold in bulk al-
ways in air-tight 1 1 «
j tin pails, which pro- | ' i
\ tcct it from dirt,
dust and odors. It
, is always uniform
and dependable.
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
Cottolene good for votes in Constitution's
M. & M. Contest.