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THE CGEOUaiAWS MAGAZINE PAGE
t >TL p Whir/ ’ An Excitin & Tdle °f Love and Adven-
1 lIC VV Hip ture 7 hat Grips From Start to Finish
By BERTRAND BABCOCK.
The Story of the Play of the Same Name
Now Running at the Manhattan
Opera House. New York.
nvright 1912, by Drury Lane Com-
'inv of America, by arrangement |
’ with Arthur Coilins. managing
director of the Drury Lane
Theater of London.
TODAY’S INSTALLMENT.
Not now. perhaps." he returned, tern- ■
~,r i zing “But in the old days, don’t
remember how wild you was with me
about little Susie Dobbs-when you and
. was keeping company-'
■\Ve never kept company,” returned
e Hon. Mrs. Beamish, furious.
■Well, if we didn't, then we ought to
, , iVe kept company," answered the literal
Tom. “With me walking out with you and
kissing you.”
, ince only, and by accident," cut In
the elderly flame of days when the Bev
friry stables were smaller.
■■Well, I suppose a collision's an acci
dent. but 1 liked it, and so did you," said
Lambert.
■ T didn't," denied Mrs. Beamish
It Might Have Been.
■You and 1 were happy,” went on The
Whip’s Master, “till Beamish came along
and you got taken with him. I can’t
forget you, Betty, and what might have
happened Don’t you ever remember,
Betty, before you was a great lady?"
The air of the woman was kinder than
It had been for some time to Tom
T’m not a great lady, Tom." she said,
gently for one of her vigorous personality,
fm a poor relation, though Lord Bev
doesn’t treat me like one—but I
T’m I>ady Di's companion, and dis
tant oousin by marriage I'm sort of fe
•nade major-domo of the household —and
I'm very happy. Tom, I'm not a snob,
but Tve got t° i-emember that I’m the
Honorable Mrs. Beamialh—that I’m Lord
u«verler*s eoustn by marriage--thst he
ooka upon me ae one of the family—that
i mustn't disgrace tt by—by—"
TMnking of the likes of me." said
Tom sadly. "AH you think of Is that
you've married into a noble family—not
.has you pame out of—of —a —h m— *’
"Oat of a shop. Oh, you needn’t mind
■eo-ng tt. rm not ashamed of it.”
Why should, you be?” went on Lam
bert. 'Ah, they don’t make shops like
hat nowadays. I can se it now as If it
was yesterday, and smell it— And what
apples your mother did sell. Many's the
Hme she’s given me one when I was a
nipper. Lord! I wish Captain Beamish
had never been quartered in our town—
never set eyes on you.”
"No Good In Hoping."
"I made him a good wife, Tom." said
Betty, a shade of regret In her voice.
‘Til he bound you did! But you’d have
made a better If only you hadn’t been
educated above your station. I mean
above mine. Ain’t it no good my hoping,
Betty?”
A. trifle sadly the Honorable Mrs. Beam
ish smiled as she said, with an air meant
io be final:
"No good, Tomi If ever I feel weak I
lake down the. Peerage and look up Bev
erley Geoffrey Vandeleur Deacrolx
■ icorge Jocelyn, tenth marquis of
and it strengthens me to do my duly in
■hat station of life—" ,
"To which It did not please God to call
you, supplemented Tom Lambert decis
ively when she hesitated
Chapter IV.
All the morning; Captain Greville Sar
toris. the cousin of Lady Diana, and
'he heir to the Beverley title though
!e fortune would go to the mar
■mis' granddaughter, had led the greater
‘art of the house party in an otter hunt.
Xow. with the hounds that they had
aken for their rather tame hunt in full
'. they were pursuing a large she-otter
he hounds had started. Through the
••pen the little creature fled, followed by
he yelping pack—not that, of course,
with which Lady Diana had run. and
lie party of men and women on foot with
'heir savage otter spears.
The animal had found its courses along
the littl? stream no longer in their ac
customed solitude, so now the animal
seemed to feel that there would be safety
m going toward the spots never de
>erted.
In any event, she broke .cover com
pletely and made for the kennels and
'tables, still, however, keeping close to
the east bank of the Bourne.
Across the stable yard the small pur
' ted object went in an effort to get far;
enough away to make a dive into h deep '
pool there. Over the retaining walls and
“'hei obstacles in their path leaped the
*'*n of the party. Sartoris was first.
I ” lt after he had made one frenzied lunge
ith his spear he realized that the otter
ml escaped
ith an exclamation of anger he buried
i' spear in the ground, and then looked :
P to find the amused but more scornful '
p yes of his cousin upon him
A Scornful Beauty.
Don't. Greville. it’s horrible. ex
a med she strongly, while her grand
ather was showing th? fox hounds and
' njp of his famous racing string to the
visitors.
'A hat is?” Sartoris asked aliz-
' c that the girl was condemn n pu>-
*ne that he regarded as sport.
TWO AND A HALF
DOLLAR GOLD PIECE
FOR AN XMAS GIFT
Atlanta'. Oldest Savings Bank Will
Supply You.
Nothing fits in for a Christmas pres
ent exactly like gold—nothing could be
more appreciated. It saves giving a
useless gift, and best of all, it puts an
end to the annual worrying, vexatious
question of what you shall give.
The Georgia Savings Bank and Trust
1 uftpany following its annual custom.
"11 furnish you with brand new $2.50
P' eces f° r Its equivalent in any
other denomination. We ran short last
'ear, but have a larger supply this
.'■'•ar, and as long as the supply lasts we
ai e yours to count on.
" “ pay 4 per cent interest and will
. pf these little gold pieces on deposit
til"- same as any other good money.
• "‘o g. ,\| Brown, President; John
'' ■ G'ant. Vice P esld.mt; Joseph I',
le ston, Secretary and Treasurer
(Advt.i
"Otter killing—like that—otter hunt
ing,” she answered.
"But you like fox hunting: went on
Sartoris in the bland tones of surprise of
tbe Englishman of his wiry type, with
I his wisp of a mustache and his w eak
I appearing ttgure. which hid considerable
I skilled strength. "You like to see a drag
! gled, beaten fox torn Io pieces alive."
"No, I don’t," interrupted tbe girl
“But it’s done." went on tbe man.
“I know.” said the girl. “That’s why,
if I w r ere a man I’d ride nothing but
steeplechases. I love a run best when tbe
fox gets clean away. I love a race with
neither whip nor spur! 1 love sport - and
In the beat sport there’s no pain!"
It was for such speeches as that—and
actions, too—that they called Lady Diana
“the cleanest sportswoman in all Eng
la nd.”
"Not if you re beaten?” questioned the
cousin.
"Not if you played fair, said the girl.
Her cousin was moved to reveal—al
most unconsciously—some of that queer
sporting philosophy which sustained him
in the somewhat questionable practices
which w-ere already being commented
upon in his London clubs.
Weakness for Winning.
I confess I have a weakness for win
ning." he said, with an air of frank
ness. “Whatever the odds in your favor,
there is a. certain pleasure in pursuit
in getting home."
As though to give emphasis to his
words, he drove the head of his spear
into the ground He raised his eyes. and.
with a start, found Myrtle Anson, the
young sister of Harry Anson, The Whip’s
jockey, near him. She had come quietly
into the yard, and. as if moved by an
impulse of her budding woman’s heart
that she could not entirely control, had
gone straight toward Sartoris. Lady
Diana had not seen the girl, for the back
of the marquis' granddaughter w-as
turned to this more humble young woman.
For a moment Sartoris regarded the
girl, then, with a slight move of his shoul
ders, he turned away. Myrtle Anson,
seemingly cut to the heart, sank on a rock
at the edge of the stream and continued
to watch him with eyes of love.
This little blt’of by-play had taken but
a moment, and while it was taking place
and Sartoris was still eyeing the sister of
the jockey, she. was replying to his last
i observation:
"There’s pleasure in getting home? On
a weak thing that can't defend itself—or
strike back""
His Guilty Conscience.
Her words seemed to the sick con
science of Sartoris to hold a double en
tendre, and he looked sharply at his cou
sin.
“Eh?” he exclaimed, suspiciously and
expectantly.
But Lady Diana, who had noticed noth
ing and was but speaking of tbe imme
diate object before them, went on:
“I mean a weak thing like an otter. $n
sport there must be a fair chance."
It was with genuine relief that Sartoris
answered:
“1 know, but I prefer lowest weight in
life’s handicap—a shade of odds in my
favor, when I’m trying to win. But you
are a girl and mix sentiment with your
sporting.”
The women of the house party now
claimed the attention of Lady Diana and
they called upon her to explain from her
stores of "horse wisdom" the points of
some of the racers. About them during
this time hovered the anxious marquis.
He had ordered The Whip put in a locked
box stall, and not even tho most charm
ing entreaties of the fairest of his guests
Could induce him to unlock the door.
With a furtive glance about him, Sar
toris walked toward Myrtle Anson, sit-
I ting like a lowly muse of tragedy by
i the Bourne. This quick glance of Sartoris |
was by no means a precaution, for lie '
■ knew that the few words that he might
publicly exchange with the pretty sister ;
I of the jockey would not cause any com-
I inent, but his act was one of Instinct.
• There was something furtive and almost
• sinister about, this sportsman who took |
care to win when he could without caus
ing too much scandal, and his rapid sur- I
I vey of the positions of his equals was his I
i tribute to his own caution.
“Nothing Like a Trial.”
: But the first words he spoke to tbe girl
were ordinary enough. He disliked "emo
l tion and all that sort of nonsense, you
know." and be did not often exhibit it.
"Morning. Miss Anson. Been botanizing
again?” he asked, lifting his hat and
pointing to a leather case she carried
slung over her shoulder.
> “Yes,” said tbe girl, in a dull monotone.
“Up on the wold?'' he asked, lowering
his voice with that cautious instinct,
• though there was no one to hear them.
, Continued in Next Issue.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
j The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the y/
Signature of
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Tetterine is used because Tetterine s’
scientifically prepared to remove the '
CAI Sl< as well as the IJ'I’CCT.
TETTERINE CURES
SKIN DISE AS E S
Jesse \V. Srott. Milledgeville, (ia . writes: i
I suffered with an eruption two
years and one box of Tetterine cured
me and two of my friends. It is worth 1
its weight In gold.
Tetterine cures enema, tetter, ground
itch, erysipelas, itching piles and other
ailments. Get It today Tetterine
50c at druggists or by mail.
SHUPTRINE CO., SAVANNAHfGA,
(Advt.)
I 11 I Opium, Whiskey and Drug Habit* treated
111 ■at Home or at Sanitarium. Book on auhjcct
I |k> iFree. DR B M. WOOLLEY, 24-N, Victor
Sanitarium, Atlanta. Georgia.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DII.UMI UKANI, a
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lake no otbrr. Bur ©f roar V
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DID BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
A Novel Knitted Evening Hat
MF > M
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A pretty wool head-covering for opera and theater wear, with high peak
ed crown, will be one of the novelties for the coming winter season. This
hood is very light, and, in addition to keeping the wearer warm, will keep
the hair from flying about. When removed the hood can be stuffed in the
muff or coat pocket.
DO YOU KnOW-
Experimetits are being conducted at
the present time at the Chelmsford
works of the Marconi company in yvire
le.ss telephony, and speaking over a dis
tance of nearly- 200 t iniles has been
found possible.
An old lady, possessed of $500,000,
has just died in St. Petersburg from a
malady due to 22 years’ abstinence from
soap and water. She allowed nobody
but a single servant to enter her house,
prepared her own food from fear of be
ing poisoned, and allowed mice and
lats to play about happy and undis
turbed. The cause of her death is more
extraordinary in Russia than in any
other country, for the Russians are
great believers in the bath, and most of
them have a hot steam bath every’ week.
“Sunset Limited” -M
The Famous Extra Fare Train de Luxe |
Resumes Its Special Winter Service |
January 2nd
From New Orleans to
Los Angeles and San Francisco
Special All-Steel Equipment
Completely furniuhM with electric lights in all berths, vacuum u
cleaners, telephone connection at the three principal cities, ste g
nographer. barber shop, shoevver bath, valet service, includ
ing clothes pressing ladies maid, manicuring, hair dressing, J
ladies parlor with magazines, men's buffet club room with |
telegraphed news service, and all that goes to make this
TlfE FINEST. FASTEST TRAIN FROM THE GELF
TO THE GOLDEN GATE
Three-Room Suites— Private Staterooms—Pullman Sleepers
Track Protected by Automatic Electric Block Signals.
Oil-Burning Locomotives—No Dust. Soot or Cinders
Modern Metropolitan Hotel Dining Car Service
The extra $lO fare buys 24 hours time and 3 days of pleasure
One day gained over regular schedules by the
"Sunset Limited.’’
Leave NEW ORLEANS every Thursday at 12:30 noon
Arrive I/OS ANGELES Saturday at 8.45 p. m.
Arrive SAN FRANCISCO Sunday at 11 a. ni
Returning leave San Francisco Tuesdays at Sunset—fl p m
Also two regular fare trains daily from New Orleans to
Pacific Coast Points.
For full information, reaervatkona and literature, applj' to
0. I*. BARTLETT, G. A. R. o. BEAN, T. P. A.
D. L. GRIFFIN. C. P. A. t
121 Peachtree, st.. Atlanta. Ga
THERE'S SAFETY SECURITY AND SERVICE ON THE
“SUNSET ROUTE”
Up-to-Date Jokes
“My husband considered a very long
time before he proposed to me; he was
very- careful.”
"Ah, it is always those careful peo
ple who get taken in.”
An old woman, being cross-examined,
was asked by counsel how she ex
plained an obvious untruth. She re
plied:
’l’m sorry, sir, but 1 lost my pres
ence of mind."
"There seems to be a strange affin
ity- between a darky and a chicken. I
wonder why?” said Jones.
"Naturally- enough." replied Brown,
one is descended from Ham and the
other from eggs.”
Daysey Mayme
and Her Folks
By FRANCES L. GARSIDE.
I AN ANTE-CHRISTMAS REVERIE.
Daysey mayme appleton.
whose purse is as flat as a pan
cake, and whose Christmas list
| <’f friends to be remembered is three
| yards long, goes about her household
(duties with her mind rambling in this
fashion:
Three eggs! I believe tin' embroid
ered towel will suit Cousin Jennie and
she lives so far away sift tile flour
which reminds me that Aunt Maria
needs a new flour sifter though how a
I flop sifter will look done up in white
: tissue pape with a card on it saying
{best wishes for tile happy Yuletidc
I goodness knows.
"But I have bought her a plate 1
could give her the plate one cup of
sugar it seents to me a box of fudge
might be nice and I will finish that
pillow cushion tor Aunt I am forgetting
the soda and it takes an hour to do a
rose I wonder if she will appreciate
all Hie work I have put in a pinch of
salt and now for the spice and what
I shall I give Cathey?
| “I wish he would give me some more
i money to spend on laisins have
I to be chopped oh dear if 1 haven't given
'that bultei plate to thme different peo
ple, and I had almost forgotten the
butter in the cake.
There the cake is ready to go as to
I Chauncey Devere I'll give him what’s
I left in the oven and I am so-tired and
I so afraid I wilt forget some friend and
let it burn and I ought to be glad I have
a nice home and I suppose 1 will have
;to slop and wash these dishes, ai d
ifi lends who love me and I must be
: brave and not complain if the water is
too hot and 1 had completely forgotten
! Cousin Sue’s baby I suppose I will have
to make the cake’s burning and I just
knew I'd let it burn with I might pass
on some of the presents I got la.>
Chibtmas on my mind.
T have so much to be thankful for
and it would be un-Christian not to
remember everybody when the burned
edges are cut off it won’t look bad with
some little token of my love and icing
will cover that.
“I have so many. Many Dear Friends"
* * * then w hen she thought of How
many dear friends she had, and not half
her presents prepared for them, she
broke down and cried all over the cake
“I wonder." was her last harassed
thought, “if it would be Just Awful to
have no friends at all!"
“Recollections of
a Soldier’s Wife”
By Mrs. John A. Logan
Did you think there was a great deal of bitterness in
the recent Presidential campaign? It was a “Pink lea”
compared with the excitement, rancor and turbulence
of the campaign of 1860.
Political differences that meant Her recollections are History
probable war—a bloody war be- a most important addition to
tween brothers. Speakers and the history of that period of our
writers felt that the very life of country. They fire the imagi
thc Nation depended on their nation and carry the reader
wor< ‘ s ’ along as entertainingly as though
Mrs. John A. Logan was the hpr work a l">pular novel
girl-wife of one of the most ° “ '*
noted figures ot those stirring Mrs. Logan’s description of the
times. She knew personally the famous Lincoln - Douglas de
actors in the great tragedy being bates, the fierce campaign of
staged; she was one of them her- iB6O and the inauguration of
self, weighted with a responsi- Abraham Lincoln, appear in the
uility tar beyond her years. January
COSMOPOLITAN
15 Cents a Copy At All News-Stands
The New Order of Things
By Beatrice Fairfax
A NEW YORK woman has formed
AA among working girls the “Spug,"
a society for the prevention of
useless giving at Christmas. Undoubt
edly the society will accomplish some
good in curbing those who are spend
thrifts when under the Influence of the
Christmas spirit.
But tbe fact that such a society lias
been organized, and that it was needed,
should make young girls and older
women stop and think for themselves.
Ha- it come to the time when no
woman van exert her own natural God
given common sense without first join
ing a club organized for the purpose of
sanctioning such action'.'
Are these the days when a woman
can not of her own will power take up
some good study and pursue it: master
the art of cooking; become a little
mote economical; nr smile when she is
depressed, without first joining a club
that mothers such a movement'.’
Will the day finally come when none
of us will be brave because we are not
members of a fear not club?
Is the day here when a woman will
not hang a picture on the wall till she
has first joined a make home beautiful
club and been told that pretty pictures
arc given for just that pulpose?
Every one should be a “Spug." If
necessity, but how much there is to be
admired in the girl < r common grown
up who conducts Iter little or great
finances in such a common-sense way
that membership in such an order lias
never been necessary for her!
<'hristma/es come ind Christmases
go. and every Christmas there is abuse
of the one who spends foolishly and
recklessly. And every Christmas there
is mote contempt foi the Obi Scrooges
of life. These two exlrenn - attract such
a monopoly of attention that there is
little heed given the great., big army of
Christinas shoppers who buy in a spirit
of sanity.
They remember the needs oi theii
friends, and they remember, also, the
limits of their purses. They put
thought in their gifts, and love, and
give not for effect or display.
They make no gifts hoping for re
turns, and this holiest of all seasons Is
not degraded by them w ith any taint of
barter and trade.
They remember the children first of
all And since the first Christmas, so
many centuries ago, there lias been u
remembering of the homeless waifs on
this day that has steadily grown.
We wish to call your attention to tho
fact that most infectious diseases, such
a.s whooping cough, diphtheria and
scarlet fever, are contracted when tin
child has a cold. Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy will quickly- cure a cold ano
greatly lessen the danger of contract
ing these diseases. This remedy is
famous for its cures of colds. It con
tains no opium or other narcotic and
may be given to a child with implicit
confidence. Sold by all dealers. (Advt.)
The world would have made poor
progress If every individual effort had
depended on mutual organization. There
would be no kindness, no cheerfulness,
no patience, no charity. There would
be none of the tender graces of life If
every woman had been obsessed by the
belief that she could not cultivate one
or all of these attributes, without first
Joining a society.
And so I say to my girls: Don’t say,
T can’t be economical, because I have
never joined an economy club."
Don’t feel that your education has
readied its limits because you haven’t
th< time to join a reading club.
Be something of yourself! Stand on
your own feet! Take the Initiative be
cause your own good common sense
tell- you you should. Cultivate a lit
tle personal backbone of your own, and
do not get the feeling that you must be
foolish because othets are foolish
Make your Christmas gifts match
your means. He a ' Spug" if you can't
buy wi-ely w ithout joining a Buy Wise
ly club.
But. oh, how much more to your cred
it, my deal Mill, if you vail hold your
liarkbone elect without any sui li moral
support!
ShotectlfcuMety!
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