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‘ Whin” & n Tale of Love and Adven-
111 CVV llip ture That 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.
, , -.right, 1912, by Drury Lane Com-
•«ny of America, by arrangement
with Arthur Collins, managing
director of the Drury Lane
Theater of London.
Part 11.
CHAPTER 1.
u-irtoris Meets an Old Acquaintance,
r six days now Lord Brancaster had
1( n one of'the old lofty ceilinged bed
c i vrs of the ancient castle of Falcon
> He had not regained consciousness
moment since the day he had been
•: >1 out when his automobile struck the
: ■■ bridge.
■ I it> the words of censure tne Mar-
, t Beverley had spoken of the Earl
l hancaster there was nothing for him
now save to try to efface them in
• . ry possible way.
.ev rlej had done more than the situ
„ demanded. It was as if the injury
l.ad fallen upon the belted earl had
, .»d ,ut all the past and had brought
uh old racing nobleman a renewed
,i ,< isness of the brotherhood of man.
„ .st noted physicians and surgeons
I. noon had been summoned by hint,
sir Andrew Beck, whose very retain
s os. a distinction upon the faniily able
luce the great surgeon to visit them,
e.<n now tn consultation with some
.. z.-n of the kingdom’s greatest sur.
.tn d names. There was a question as to
•'ier they would try an operation in
li.pe of relieving the pressure upon
•he brain, but the consensus of opinion
ia- against it.
Caring For the Earl.
•■’lie 'hamber in which Brancaster laj’
.... been the abode of more than one fu-
■ p nobleman in the days of the coni
: wealth, which had followed the as-
■eiiuancy of the Puritans after the exe
•i.ti of Charles 1., and there was a well
authenticated legend that "Bonnie Prince
< i irlie” himself had once been sheltered
• when there was a price upon his
certainly never before had the old
rtment occupied by the unconscious
Hrinicaster had a more lovely aspect.
. were flowers everywhere, but not in
! profusion that would have meant an
i - i'nee to the ill man had he been con
,. . os us them. There were lilies of the
:ii;ey in the old . tone vase, built into the
misused fireplace. Their white love
liness- was accentuated by the long trail
rg vines which formed their background.
1 ir Lady Diana had seen to the comfort
nd the decoration of the apartment of
the man she was sure could not be all
mite had
■ accident to this young man in the
prime of his life had done much to soften
■ er pride of the very young, and she real
zed that her judgment was harsh.
I " ■ ’ -
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lor
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In these days she accepted nearly every
thing without question. When the woman
she had seen with Brancaster on the day
he was known to her merely as the artist
called at Falconhurst and asked to be al
lowed to sit by the side of Brancaster,
the girl had led her without question to
the bedchamber, though her grandfather
had subsequently seen that a footman
performed that office.
Lady Diana had not inquired as to the
woman visitor anything more than her
name. The "Mrs. D’Aquila” she had re
ceived told her nothing and she did not
ask other information as to the dark,
foreign appearing woman who seemed to
take Braneaster's injurj- so deeply to
heart.
There was within Lady Diana a deep
spiritual sense. She felt that the stricken
earl might die; indeed, she had heard
it so whispered, though the marquis tried
to spare her such thoughts as these. She
felt In her pure consciousness of small
sin that if he died without receiving the
benefit of the Church of England, or of
any clergyman, there would bt> a cloud
upon both his chances in a world which
might understand, him better and upon
her own conscience. She could not for
get those murmured words as the car
shot by her, and that waving of the hand.
Surely "that within us which makes for
righteousness” could not ignore such a
spirit. His was a rare soul, which must
have its change In that void into which it
hourly seemed about to escape.
So she had dispatched a note to the
vicar, innocently unmindful of the fact
that "Sporting Jack” Thorpe rode far
better to hounds than he did to grace,
and that even then he was taking the
cure for gout far from the village the
great name of which was Beverley.
Lady DI and Sartoris.
Today, just as the sun was about to
set, she was waiting on the terrace of
the Italian garden for the appearance of
Thorpe in answer to her summons. As
she walked to and fro along the terrace,
with many glances down the little path
known to her friends who did not wish
to drive three miles along the road
through the acres of the marquis before
they reached the castle, she was joined
by her cousin. Captain Greville Sartoris.
The captain was, as usual, "devilishly
hard up,” and he was trying to evolve
away to make "a killing.”
To him Lady Diana expressed her fear
that Brancaster might die before a cler
gyman could see him.
"My dear Di,” exclaimed Sartoris, "he's
just as likely to come to himself and wake
up as he is to kick off, and when he
does wake up, mind you, Di, he won't
ask for any parson. He'll ask for the
lady who Is sitting by him now.”
The birth of what may have been jeal
ousy began in Lady Diana. It was not
strong, and merely manifested itself at
this moment by a curiosity not usual
with this gentle, though self contained,
English girl.
"Greville. who Is Mrs. D'Aquila?” she
asked suddenly.
There was astonishment in her cou
sin's face, as he realized that the ordi
narily self-sufficient Diana, who usually
was content with the personal knowledge
that her own senses conveyed to her, had
asked him a question on a plane with
those asked by the ordinary members of
her sex. Nevertheless, he did not pause
in his answer.
"Oh, you know, DI, she was staying at
Rlevers when the smash came—staying
there with a very tame chaperone—oh,
she does everything very correctly—”
"But who is she. Greville?”
"She was a married woman moving in
good society," said Sartoris. "She is—er
—still received In some society. She is
exactly the sort of woman who suits the
Brancaster sort of man. She is not the
sort of woman Beverley would wish me
to discuss with you.”
He stopped and looked into her face.
She seemed abstracted, musing upon
something very far away. He thought
that there was a look of tenderness on
her face. Perhaps this wasn't the right
moment —but he was rather hard up. you
know, and they were alone. Who could
tell when they would be so again, and
the girl was heir to much. It was worth
trying. Sartoris cut in on her thoughts
with:
"The more 1 see of women like Mrs.
D’Aquila, the sweeter, the fresher, the
dearer seem the natural, real, true girls
the girls like you, DI. You've been an
awfully good pal to me, and I wa*it to
see you— I've never talked nonsense and
love to you. Di, and all that bally rot.
But I’ve learned to love you for your
self, and because I've seen the world and
know your worth in It. I'm not a saint,
but every hour with you makes a man
better, makes him try to be more worthy—
Is it quite impossible— Think, Di! I am
the heir to the title, and, with you as my
wife, the Beverley fortune and the Bever
ley title would be brought together."
Proposal Declined.
Not all of this speech Lady Diana heard
Now she slightly smiled and made a com
monplace gesture. She refused to be
moved by what she unconsciously felt to
be another of the constant attempts .if
her cousin to reduce life's odds more in
his favor.
"Greville. it’s quite Impossible.” she
said, "and for the sake of friendship and
cousinship, let’s hear nothing further
about It —ever —”
To the relief of Lady Diana, this dis
tasteful conversation with her cousin was
ended by the appearance upon a lower
slope of a youngish man in clerical dress.
She went to greet, him, and he explained
that he. the Rev. Verner Haslam, was
taking the place of the vicar during the
latter’s absence. During this explana
tion of the stranger who had received
Lady Diana’s note, Sartoris, who appar
ently had recognized Haslam, smiled
slightly.
Lady Diana was about to lead the
stranger to Brancaster's apartment, after
her explanation of the accident and the
unconsciousness of the earl, when she saw
that the clergyman and Sartoris were
exchanging strange looks. Sartoris broke
the silence as he said with a sneer:
"I feel that the poor sufferer will be
benefited by the ministrations of so good
ly a divine as the Rev. Verner Has
lam.”
The rudeness of it all shocked Lady
Diana, and she could not relieve the sit
uation by other than a perfunctory in
quiry to the man in clericals:
"You know my cousin 1 ?"
The eyes of the young clergyman sought
the face of Sartoris almost pleadingly:
•T did at Oxford," he said, as though he
were asking that something In the past
be ignored. "But we have not met fo>-
many--years."
Then with another troubled look at Sar
toris he passed toward the castle with
Lady Diana.
Continued in Next Issue
* The Ancient Czars of the Balkans
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JwE arlß 1
ShJl G F J ' 'nr i IdS j
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A— -w .■ - v-
St. John of Rila, a famous Bulgarian
abbot
BORIS, or Bogoris, the first Chris
tian king of Bulgaria, ranks as a
saint for the same reason that
Olaf, of Norway, and Vladimir, of Rus
sia, do. Actually, in early life at least,
there was little of the saint about him.
Boris succeeded Khan Malomir in
852 A. D., at a very critical time. Bul
garia had been beaten'in battle by the
Serbs and Croats, and Boris himself
was badly defeated by them. He event
ually, to strengthen Jiimself, formed an
alliance with Ludwig, the German, first
king of Germany, brother of Lothar,
the Frankish emperor of the West.
This angered the great regent. Bardas,
who then governed at Constantinople
for his dissolute nephew. Michael HI.
In 863, while Boris was absent help
ing Ludwig against his rebellious son, I
Karlmann, the whole army of the East- I
ern empire invaded Bulgaria and con- j
quered it without a blow, and Boris, to
regain it without fighting, consented to
be baptized.
Naturally enough, the pagan element
Advice to the
Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax.
JUST "DEAR."
Dear Miss Fairfax:
Which Is proper to say when you
are writing to a very dear friend |
of either sex —"My dear.” or just
"Dear'." A CONSTANT READER.
' Styles change in this as in other
things. Just now “My Dear” Is re
garded as more formal than "Dear."
WHY NOT?
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am a young lady of eighteen,
and met a young man about a year
ago whom I loved very much. I
have not spoken to him for about
nine months. Last week 1 received
an invitation to a party from his
sister, given at his home. Would it
* be proper for me to go?
S. W. A. K.
The quarrel was not with his sister, |
and if you want to go to the party it I
would be childish to let a little differ- :
ence with her brother keep you at |
home.
Go by all means, and the meeting
may be the means of a reconciliation.
DON'T DO IT AGAIN.
Dea l Miss Fairfax:
I am a young man of eighteen
and am desperately In love with a
girl two years younger. She won't
accept my company just because I
tried to kiss her. Please tell mo
what to do to make her love me.
HEART-BROKEN.
The girl was right. You are too
young to be engaged, and kisses should
be saved for that happy period.
Convince her you will never trans
gress again. Go to work and make a
man of yourself. Then ask her to mar
ry you. and may happiness attend!
HER MOTHER KNOWS BEST.
Dear. Miss Fairfax: i
1 am deeply in !ov> with a young
lady two years younger than I am.
Her motliei obje ts to her keeping I
company with y oung men. She can
talk to me. but can receive no pres- .
ents. FRANK.
You fail to state what age is meant I
by “two yoais younger than I am," but
I judge from b»> ■ mother's action that |
it is an age that is most immature.
Respect h> mother's wishes. She
knows best.
SHE IS RIGHT.
Dear Miss Fairfax:
I am a young man nineteen years
old, and in love with a young girl
the same age We have known
iach other about a year. Three
months ago J asked her to attend a
dance with me and she accepted.
Ever since then we have been go
ing out together. I have asked her
for her company and she refused,
saying I was too young. She Is lov
ing. and tells me every time we
meet she loves me. ANXIOUS.
A boy of nineteen Is too young to
keep what is classed as ".steady com
pany" with a girl.
This girl is right in telling you so.
but site does wrong in encouraging you.
at. tin sarm tint' . by 1 . tsig you of it. i
love.
L y
—-—————— ——>—«
"* TXT “
Top picture: St. Boris, the father of
Simeon the Great, the patron saint of
Bulgaria.
Lower picture: The Janissaries, from
;a curious collection of model figures in
Constantinople.
fiercely resisted his efforts to Chris- j
tianize them wholesale. They besieged
him in his pulace. Boris had —so runs ;
the legend—only 48 followers, but he
called upon Christ to aid and rode
forth at their head. As he diql so,
flames enveloped the palace and seven
figures of glory appeared to lead the
forlorn hope. The pagans cast away
their arms, flung themselves prostrate,
and submitted. So far the legend. W
ak'.j on surer ground when we hearthat ]
the "Christian" king executed 52 rebel
“bolyars” with their families.
Boris after coquetting for a time with j
‘the Roman pope, settled down as a
Greek Catholic, and the great patri
ateh. Photius. called him "the fair froi 1,
of my labors." His people have since
always been faithful to the Greek com
munion, though once or twice tlte kings
like Boris drifted ' Romeward; such oc
currences were political in origin. Boris
! abdicated in 884 and died a monk tn j
| :.07.
i We must not imagine that his profi
tably Tartar lineaments had anything in
I common with the beautiful Christ-like
'features of the elkons. Savage as he
was, he had great vigor, and when he
found that his eldest son and successor.
Vladimir, was worthless the old king
came forth from Ida cell to depose him
and raised to the throne Ills second
'child. Simeon, the greatest of all the
czars of Bulgaria.
St. John of Rila.
cpHE monastery of Rila, tlm most fa
mous in Bulgaria and also prob
ably the earliest, lies in a beautiful val
ley among the Rilska I'lanina moun
tains, a spur of the Balkans, about 30
miles from Sofia.
It was always considered the chh f
religious center of the ezardom, and its
abbot acknowledged no superior bur
the Exarch, the official head of the Bul
garian chureh.
St. John of Rila. the most famous of
its early abbot? and a great figure in
the days of Bulgaria’s glory, died in
946. Miracles were pe: formed at hi <
tomb, and so widespread becami hl.
sanctity that in 1183 Bela of Hungary,
in a war with the Eastern empire, car
ried his corpse away to Gran in the
hope of securing for himself the bless
ings which its possession conferred.
; The remains w, re recovered by tim
j Emperor Isaac 11. in 1187, ami eston 1
;to Bulgaria,
The Column of Constantine
; 'p HIS famous column was raised by
| Constantine tic Gr.at on tile spot
! where his tent had stood during the
I siege of Byzantium, which made him
master of the Roman world. It e.in
sisted of eight drums of porphyry tvitli
tlm Joints concealed by bronze laurel
wreaths on a base of yvhito marble . ml
topped by a stat tn; of < 'onsta nt Im ,
ly an Apollo with a new head, croyvned
t with rays and bearing a spear and th'
(globe of.empire. It was popularly be
i lleved that the Palladium of Rome and
part of the true cross were built up in
the base.
The column has suffered many vicis
situdes, and now presents a terribly
wrecked appearance. Tim t'onstantino
polltan.s call it “Xhe hooped column,”
or "the burnt column." in allusion to
its apt" arancc and disasters. Legends,
of course, clustered about it. and many
superstitious beliefs, the most pathetic
being that of the lift, enth century, that
the Turkish tide v ould be stayed.
It Is almost the only surviving frag
merit of Constantine's oyvn city . On Its
base the emperor placed an inserij
• on: "O Christ. Ruler ami Lord of the
The column of Constantine, built by
the founder of Constantinople.
World, to Thee I consecrate this obe
dient city and lite scepter and power
of Rome! Guard Thy city! Guard it
front every harm!"
The Janissaries.
XyO institution is so wrapped up with
I the early greatness of the Osmanli
I Turks as that of the Janissaries. The
i foundation of the famous corps which
| bore the Turkish standard ail over the
j Nearer East and Barbary was due to
| Sultan Orkhan and his brother and
j vizier, Ala-ed-Din.
The early Osmanli armies were dis
orderly syvarms of horse bowmen, use
less for siege work, and the Turkish
yeomen, whom Orkhan tried to form
into battalions of infantry, proved of
| small service. Thereupon the brothers
Ala-ed-Din is popularly supposed to
havr -uggested the idea—decided to im
pose on their Christian subjects a trib
ute of children who should be trained
into a military order. The utter cal
| lousness of the idea is worthy of a
I Turk, but its success was marvelous.
Cut off from all ties of country, kith
and kin, these descendants of Christian
parents developed into the most terri
ble weapons of Mahometan conquest
that the world has ever seen.
Orkhan called upon Haji Bektash. a
famous devotee, to bless the new corps
when It first paraded. The old man
came to the head of the line and laid
| his hand, with its white sleeve falling
j back from it. on tile first soldier’s head.
“Be ye called Yen-icheri" (new sol
jdiery), he said. "May your faces ever
shine. May your right arms be ever
strong, your swords keen, your lances
winged and may ye be victorious for
ever and for aye!”
And in memory of that day the men
were equipped with white caps with a
white streamer to recall the sleeve. The
original cap witli its streamer varied
( later with different regiments, as may
I be seen by studying the costumes of
1 lite queer little collection of dummy flg-
I tires in the museum at Constantinople.
In 1328 there were 1,000 soldiers. In
i t century ami a half they conquered all
| the Nearer East. Their crowning ex
ploit was the storming of the breaches
at Constantinople in 1453 after all tile
other divisions had been repulsed. They
[ were then 12,000 strong.
j Suleiman I) altered their organization
and permitted recruiting from Mahome
tans by birth. Always full of esprit
de corps, after 1600 hey became a
i curse by their turbulence and deposed
; sultans at w ill Their numbers rose
from 12,000 in 1453 to 120,000 in 1803,
but the glory was departed; in 1826
Mahmud 11 abolished them by edict,
and 20.000 were massacred in Constan
tinople alone.
Do You Know-
In Ihe head office of the Suez canal
at Port Said is a model of the canal
showing the exact position of every
ship moving through it. It Is thus <juite
easy to arrange by telegraph for vessels
to pass one another.
Tin- deaths in Irish work houses
during tin pa.-.i year included those of
rm fewer than si venieen centenarians.
Ime of tie S' persons was stated to be
tin years, amt another |i'B years of
I age. whih two had reached 107 and
I three 106 y< ars.
I
——
JI MIMIIBWIiHII IIIMW ■—lt
I WILTON JELLICO
I $5.09 Per Ton
II The Jellico Coal Go.
182 PEACHTREE ST.
BOTH PHONES 3668.
Little Bobbie’s Pa *
By William F. Kirk
I ELOPED witli a gurl today. It was
my birthday A I was ten years old,
and she had a birthday the saim
I day, she was ate (8). As soon as I
found out that we was both having a
birthday 1 sed let's have a party oaver
to our house. All rite, sed Pet, that is i
the only naim I am going to call her, j
beekaus I nev ver tell real nairns.
So we went oaver to Pet’s house first
to see if she cud go oavi r to my house
for this tarty, & Pet's Mu sed Yes.
I
Up-to-Date Jokes
i
Recently a clergyman told his < on
j gr-'gation that he owed them a "deep
grat of debtltmie." and now comes the
report that at n. wedding ceremony a
young man asked it' it was 'kissto
mary io cuss the bride."
Father (to his old friend's pretty
daughter.)—Good-byi. my dear. 1 w on’t
kiss you; I have such a cold.
His Son (with alacrity!—Cun 1 do
anything for you. father?
A eei tain young man who prided niin-
I self on u brusqueness that he mistook
fm wit met an eminent but sarcastic
sculptor at a studio supper.
“So you're the chap," lie said on be
ing introduced, "that makes mud
heads!”
"Not all of them!" the sculptor re
plied quietly.
Returned Fighter—And as I was be
ing carried away in the ammunition
wagon X
listener—Don’t y ou mean the, ambu
lance wagon?
Returned Fighter—No, sir; I was so
full of bullets they put me in the am
munition wagon.
———
"Bilkins lias just returned."
"Where lias he been?”
"To Monte Carlo, to win enough to
pay fits wedding expenses."
"And the wedding'."'
"Has been postponed for two years.”
Wilson -What a long, thin head Jitn
son has!
Jilson—Hasn't be? Looks as if he
had pushed ft under a chest of draw
ers for a collar button.
She—l dreamt last night that you
bought me a new hai
He—Well, that's the first dream of a
hat you ever had that didn’t cost me
money.
"What did your wife say when you
got home so late, the other night?”
"Nothing at all. She Just sat down
at the piano and played "Tell Me the
Old. Old Story.’"
Mrs. Youngbride—l’ve come to com
plain of that flour you sent me.
Grocer—What was the matter with
it?
Mrs. Youngbride—lt was tough. I
made a pie with it, and it was as
much as my-husband could do to cut it.
t ~~ ' moi
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It will tell you about its farming possibilities, its pcul- 3!
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Then we got some other boys and gurls
together & we went oaver to our house.
Ma Ai sum other ladies was there, & .
Ma sed Sure. Bobbie, you & yure llttei
fr.-nds shall have a birthday party. Go
las far as you like. All of you kiddle*
sit down. Ma sed, until J have finnislted
this story about Mister Smith-Jones
eloping with Miss Blue-Green.
<>h, it l.e such a romantic story, sed
all of Ma's trends. To think or tne deer
man having so much cur-rage. I al
ways wanted sum brave man to elope
with me, sed one of Ma's trends naimed.
Miss Black. She was a. old maid & I
was thinking wen site sed It that it
wild talk a pritty brave man to elope
with her.
After they had read ail about the
elope-ment. Ma went A fixed sum Ice
cream & caik for us. Me & the other
boys stirred the Ice cream freezer. Pet
wantedt o help, hut 1 sed No, stand
back, this is man's work.
All the time we was freezing the ice
cream wc cud hear the wimmen in the
other room talking about how romantic,
elope-ments was & how nice It wud
have been if they cud have been mar
ried that way insted of telling all the
nabors about thare engagement ahed
of the marriage.
I’a calm in jest then &• 1 herd Mm
talking to Mu & her trends. Pa sed
that a man was foolish to elope with a
woman wen there was so many wim
men teddy to get thare parents con
sent & then walk up the aisle two feet
abed of the man. Glttlng married (sent
one of tile hardest things to do in life,
sed I’a. It is the staying married that
talks a lot of mental arlth-metick.
But you are perfeckly happy here. Bed
g'ne of the ladles, you &- yure wife &
littel children.
Only one of them is our child, Pa
eed, llttei Bobbie, that is (muff, bee
kaus sumtimes ceven his one littel pair
of shoes gits run down at the heels.
Tiie rest of these kids is Bobbie’s
frends.
1 wonder if sum of them littel deers
will elope wen thay grow up, sed one
of the Wimmen & all of them sed
agenn, Oh. how romantic.
Cum on, Pet, I sed to my littel gurl
frond, lets you & me do a littel elop
ing ourselfs, as long as everybody i*
talking elope-inent.
So me A Pet ran away together, but
it was dark outside A so we got scared
A calm back hoam. I guess lots of
folks that runs away together gits
scared of the dark, A thay doant all git
ice cream wen tljey cum back, eether.
BETTER THAN SPANKING.
Spanking does not cure children of
bed-wetting There is a constitutional
cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sum
mers, Box W. Notre Dame, Ind., will
send freo to any mother her successful
home treatment, with full instructions.
Send no money, but write her today
If your children trouble you In th.s
way. Don’t blame the child, the chances
are It can’t help it. Tills treatment
also cures adults and aged people trou
bled with urine difficulties by day or
night.