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THE GE OB 03A MS MAGAZINE PAGE
‘ <r TL \Y/ki»/ ’ /lw Exciting Tale of Love and Adven-
1 lie W Ilip ture Jh a t 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.
vEopyright. 1912. by Drury lane Com
pany <»f America, by arrangement
with Arthur <’ollinß, managing
director of the Drury Lane
Theater of London.
A Special License.
To the amazement of the captain she
took from her handbag and gave to him
a special license to marry, dated but a
month before
Sartoris sat bolt upright nn the bench
they were jointly occupying
'Why didn’t you ?” he shot out.
“Some rot about nu in the papers
er She made a vague gesture.
"There’s more in about you thia morn- '
Ing,” he said. "You’ve made divorce
rather a hobby, haven’t >oii?”
But she didn’t note his last w->rds.
"I could have talked him out of if,”
she went on. "Now there’V never be an
other chance. It’s awfullx rough hick. I
might be a widow. Lad> BrancastAr, 1!
anything happened tonight l imns situa
linn if I’d married him last week, and he
recovered, and then, as So- \ndrew said
couldn’t remember anx thing h< had
done ”
There was a period of silence between
them, while both stared straight ahead.
An idea secund to h< in the air Neither
afterward know just which of <’•.• ”i had
thought nf it first. But after a moment
they turned with a common impulse to
stare understanding!' at one another.
"Suppose ” he said in that sinister
fashion he had at time-*
• "I wouldn't dan countered.
Then tin it • * < s met anti clung togethei
in a glance <>f the deepesi undeistanding
"rm devi ’shl' hard up.” hr said.
"So am i. sh» returned
Sartoris .‘-wallowed hard, then when he
began to speak the thought that was
vaguely in both their minds, his first
words were trcniuhm -. but as he Went on
hts t< !■■’• lei a no cold, <l< • dedly » mot ion
lc-<.
"Suppo <• lonight you drive up in your
motor to a village church and the date
in the regis' r and on th«* certificate were
put back ten days ami the nanus came
out ns yi.i” ,ind Hi;.lie. r i - ' he
asked.
In t < r ex*.aim; mov that H-lr hith
erto unspoken mutual thought was out.
she got : ■ her feet.
"Impossible, she exclaimed The
risk
"What risk. \ hare chance of recov
ery and none of memory You heard
Sir Andrew lie’ll never be able »«» denv
that he’d married you, since bp wouldn't
be able to remember anything that hn<i
happened during this period \nd when
he'd forgotten, the special license ami the '
marriage certificate would remind him.
Where's your pluck ?” *
In her turn, the woman clenched her
fists and swallowed a lump In her throat.
"Where’s your parson?’’ she asked.
He smiled pleasantly at the prospect.
"How much?" she asked In a hard
voice, thinking of the onlv motive ihu»
could impel him she knew.
With a shrug of his .shoulders Sartoris
returned:
"We needn’t bargain I II sec to my
share.”
"Where’s your parson?” she asked
again.
"There’s the Parson."
As if in answer to her urgent request
for a spiritual adviser, the Ucv Verner
Haslam passed along th. terrace on his
return tn the vicarage. With a con
temptuous gesture Sartoris indicated the
man.
'There he Is,” said he then with a
quick stride he passed before the clergy
man ami stood directly’ in his path, while
the woman sank down on the bench
Advice to the Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax
GO TO HER FATHER.
D .ir Miss Fairfax:
I am 24 rind deeply in love with n
youug lady six years my Junior. I
inet. her over a year ago, and it
V, as .1 ..I tote a! first sight.
I am earning good motley and ean
afford to support a wife; but she
'HI not consent to get married un
til she I- I 1 Xot only that, hut her
father will not allow her to go
with me or any one else. So. you
see. our meetings are held secretly
S. o. S.
Go to het fat In i ami make an honest
avowal of jour prospects and atten
tions. If you are worthy, and the gill
loves you. 1 am sure his objections will
be overcome You can never win him
over by getting the girl to meet you
secretly.
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druggist has Piner.,
-I "[,! -"t it for yon if not -end to
again, covering for the moment her face
with her hands.
“Well. Haslam,” said Sartoris, leering
into the other's face, "what are ynu do
ing here'.”*
Haslam made a motion toward Falcon
hurst.
”1 lie began.
"1 know’ what you are doing at Fal- j
conhurst," went on Sartoris. “But I j
mean In the village”'
”1 am taking the vicar's duty,” he said, i
as his head sank beneath the other’s j
contempt
"Has the vicar any idea who you are?”
came brutally from the captain. "Does
he know you are a drunkard and were
deprived of ' our living ”
I <>ne brief moment Haslam raised
. I;is shamed head.
”M\ blsl <>p knows that I have striven
tn conquer an evil habit that all but
ruined me. Up kn<»ws that. 1 am striving
to win back
"And what else does hr know?” ' roke
in Sartoris. "You have several her
little habits that aren't a credit L "ur
< loth There 'wan a card scat ’a 1 •• m
we were in Paris.”
' I beg, I entreat i ere
known. May not a man repen. ..; ercly
<>f everything?”
"By all means go ahead but you’ll find
that that is rather a large order. Tell me
at.marriages Jn your church lately?”
Threatening the Parson.
"None fop three weeks,” said Haslam,
glad that his tormentor seemed turning
from his Immediate object.
In a seemingly happy humor. Sartoris
slapped the man of the robe on his back.
■<’ar»ltaK” he ejaculated. ".No dates in
the register for three weeks! Now, if a
marriage took place and somehow —owing
your habits names got a bit muddled
and dates a bit sot back couldn't you
include it in your list of er regretta
ble reminiscences?”
'lnclude ’ stammered Haslam
"That,” said Sartoris forcefully, hand
ing to him the license to marry.
Bra m uster.” gaspel the curate. "Bran
caster, whom I’ve just left
'Dying probably,” went on Sartoris,
"leaving undone what he meant to de
leaving a great wrong to a woman.”
I here m»w came into the voice of Sartoris
<i great Irony While he seemed to bo
framing ;• plausible argument to Haslam,
still his tone Implied that he himself
understood how specious it all was, and
his irony was directed not alone at him
self. but at Haslam, Mrs. D’Aquila, and,
indeed, the whole world in general. "I'm
not a knight Paladin, but I want to put
It right In the sudden extremity, there
is only one way. There will be no one
to question most people think it’s done
already but because it Isn't Is the wom
an to be left tn er shame? I'll save
her' again the Irony in spite nf himself
“if you’ll help me. Can’t I appeal to
your better self?”
In bls agitation indeed, extreme ter
ror Jlaslam took a fuU step backward.
Haslam Yields.
"it s fraud; it’s crime.” he said, his '
whole figure seeming united m a strange '
' rembllng.
I his time Sartoris openly sneered as
he went on with his appeal "to your
better nature." for he was sure of this
weakling.
“No- justice mercy —pity! You’ve
asked nm for pity and mercy What is
your anawer when I ask them from you?”
"Heaven forgive me,” came from Has
lam.
In reply Sartoris drawled out:
'"Strange way <»t putting it.”
The Weakling again hesitated as he
thought of the consequences of expo
sure if exposure came from Sartoris. He
loved to minister to the wealthy and no
bly born. And. failing that, he would be
submerged
Continued In Next Issue.
WHY NOT IGNORE HIM?
J icar Miss Fairfax;
1 am 19 and in love with a
young mm whom I met a few
month* ago. lie asked wh< ther lie
■ ouid cull on me. and I consented.
He called quite often —in fact,
twice a week and then once dis
appointed me and asked my pardon.
I granted It. He then took advan
tage and let it happen again with
out giving me an explanation.
HEARTBROKEN
I am alraid you sit at home watching
for him with tears in your eyes. Did
you ever absent yourself on the even
ing he is expected? And please let it
happen several times. It will at least
make him less sure of you, and that is
most important in winning a man.
DON’T WORRY YOUR FATHER.
Hear Miss Fairfax:
I married three months ago. It
was love at first sight. I am great
ly troubled with collectors to whom
my husband owes a great deal of
money. He is working now. but for
a small salary, so that we can
barely get along, even though we
live with my parents Would you
advise me to borrow money from
my fattier to pay tile hills, or would
you let him go his way. as he says
he wii evet pay them and giv <-
me very little money.
ONE W Ho II XS BEEN FOOLED.
t’nder no • ireiimst.inee.: must you
take your husband - bad debts to your
fattier. There i- entirely too much of
this thing doi>< now. If he will not
.-lipport you, leave him. That would be
better tiling to do than to lay him it
all his worthlessness across your fath
er? shouldvi.*,
NOT THE GIRL FOR YOU.
Dear Miss Fairfax.
I am a young man 21 Nine
months igo I was introduced to a
young lady t liter years my Junior.
I called on het steadily till we had
a quarrel, and then did not sec hci
for some tint- In the naatltime
-he heard that I had a little money
in my own light. Then her broth
er wrote wanting to know why 1 did
not visit them any more. 1 stated
the reason, and both of us being
at tault. 1 apologized. Now. this
giti ha* a habit of using profane
language of which I do not ap
prove. When I scold her about it.
she becomes ugly and passes in
sulting remarks W H. B.
The action of tlie brother indicates a
mercenary interest. I am sorry you
I, ivo renewed your attentions. If a
a>. won't discontinue ,q bad practice
'o. :: lo\. n n-yer will for a bus-.
brni-1 Emi the affair bvton you le -I
■■ • ■ . |.|y involved ;
Eloise Gabbi Tells How Argentine Belles Make
Selves Beautiful
*—
Eloise Gabbi, the Tango Dancer in Ziegfeld's Follies.
By Margaret Hubbard Ayer
IT'S a brown-haired, brown-eyed
Gabbi who has come all the way
from Buenos Ayres to teach us the
real Argentine Tango, and she is not
to be mistaken for a certain blue-eyed
and blonde lady who spells her name
differently , though it sounds the same.
Senorita Eloise Gabbi is a very young
Do You Know—
In Japan school children arc taught
to write with both hands.
A caterpillar eats 6.000 times its own
weight in food each month.
Os the 11,000,000 married couples in
France, nearly 2,000,000 are childless.
Over one-half of the entire popula
tion of the world are inhabitants of
Asia.
The swiftest bird that flies is the
frigate bird; its speed can not be cal
culated accurately, hut it is supposed
to exceed 200 miles an hour.
In London more fires occur on Sat
urday than on any other day of the
week, and more in August and Decem
ber than in any other months.
The number of unemployed workers
in Great Britain varies from about
330.000 in the best times to 1.425,000 in
tlie worst times, or an average of be
tween 800,000 and 900.000.
A horse can live 25 days without
solid food, merely ifrinking water; 17
days without either eating or drinking,
and only five days when eating solid
food without drinking.
In order to gauge her average speed,
a vessel, when on her trial trip, is
made to run four times over a meas
ured mile, twice with and tw ice against
the tide.
In 1883, only 83 pounds of aluminum
were produced. Five years later its
production was Hl.ooo pounds; by 1895
it had reached 920.000 pounds; in 1900
the consumption exceeded 7.150,000
pounds, and in 1910 it had reached 47.-
734,000 pounds.
An umbrella made thief-proof by be
ing locked in such a manner that it ean
not be opened has been invented by a
London cloak room attendant. The
locking device consists of a metal col
lar. one end of which may be slipped
down over the rib tips, and is securely
locked to them by revolving th. three
mt tai rings. These rings bear the let
ters and numerals .if the secret combi
nation.
Some very strange beliefs are re
corded in a recent book by Mr Edgar
Thurston on "Omens and Superstitions
in Southern India." Every animal
seems to have some superstition con
nected with it. Thus the sight of a
jackal is very lucky for any one going
on an errand, while that of a hare
bodes ill to a traveler, and that of a
cobra ora rattlesnake should cause the
postponement of a project Pigeons
ate believed, on account of their habit
of standing on one leg. to lead to pov
erty. It a house is infested by mos
quitoes. or the furniture or bedding by
bugs. I'M names of a hundred villages
or towns should be written on a piece
of paper, which is fastened to the ceil
ing or bedpost, and relief from the
pests will be im-tantam-ous. A human
bone from a burial ground, over which
, powerful formulae have lieen recited, if
thrown Into i. ene.oy's hou-e, niii
cans, hi* ■ uln
person, who f< it so desperately lone
some in tlie great city of New York,
away from tier sister, who is her danc
-1 ing partner, and her mother, that she
could m-ither eat nor sleep, and never
felt warm, despite the raging steam
heat, until she got out on the stage of
the Moulin Rouge and began to dance
th. Tango, all of which shows that she
is a very temperamental person.
She assured me personally that it
was impossible for her to rehearse her
dance in an empty house, so the mana
ger had to corral the innocent theater
ticket speculators, box office assistant,
and th-' ladies of the scrubbing brush,
and make them sit in the front rows of
i the theater, so that Mlle. Gabbi would
not feel lonesome while she tried out
L the Argentine Tango on an American
stage at the fearfully early hour of 11
a. m.
, Being tempei rinental is very hard on
other people when it isn't expensive,
as was tlie case where the senorita
could not sleep one night and jumped
I int" a taxicab and did nineteen dollars
worth of skidding before she had com
posed her nerves to go taick to the ho
’ tel, using the sign language and a. pair
of eloquent eyes, because she hasn't yet
learned English.
Shudders at the Climate.
' When I saw her the senorita was bun
dled up in a large American coat and
1 sat shivering in a warm, overheated
room.
"Oh, they told me It will be summer,"
t, said Mill ’Gabbi, "ind here 1 freeze. 1
f freeze,” and she waved her arms about
in a hopeless and pathetic manner.
I while her large eyes rolled, and she
threatened to become temperamental at
any moment.
Fearing in emotional explosion,
i which always wrecks an interview, I
filially got tlie pretty little Argentine
l danc.-r on the safe and sound subject of
feminine beauty, of which she has a
i very notable share.
"You want to know what we do for
tin- complexion .' Oh. that is most sim
(de," .--aid the senorita. in pigeon
( French.
"Out ide.tl is quite different from the
American. We like ti)e pale beauty the
best, and very ted cheeks or rouge are
not used in Buenos Ayres. To be beau.
i tiful. you must b> quite pale, and thiek-
L ly powdered, with very red lips and
• very dark , y es.
"Anothe tl Ing-. It is not considered I
amu' 1 : —=■ r- tv ... .1. aujjsa-
11
Safely and Promptly
I Hcadiu ho« from any cause indigestion. 1
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■ are quickly and saf y vanquished bv
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I ***•' tor Sanitarium. Uiar.ta. Ga
proper for a woman to go out without
something on her head. It may be only
a ribbon or a bit of lace, but the girl
who goes bareheaded ranks as a social
outcast.
"Os course, there is a great deal of
riv tlrj in Inventing pretty headdresses,
and v. hile the Spanish scarf is used by
many people, bands or ribbon or silk
wound tightly around the head like lit
tle caps are the latent things."
Their Aids to Beauty.
"What does the Argentine beauty do
to make herself beautiful?"
"Oil, a great many foolish tilings. J
think. Just now this treatment is very
popular, and it will make the lips very
red, and the texture of the skin very
line.
“Yoji begin by having very hot wa
ter, perfumed with rose or any scent
that you like; apply to the face great
wads of cotton dipped in the water, and
lay it over the face until the skin is
just as hot as you can bear it. Next
cracked ice is applied; the ice being put
in small bags of soft cloth, and passed
rapidly over the fijve; this stings, of
course, and that is the effect desired,
for that will bring all the blood to the
surface.
"Without drying the face, a quantity
of face cream is then put on and left
on all night. This face cream is made
in every household, and consists of
mutton fat and a little olive oil, melted
together and mixed and scented with a
very strong perfume. It. is made fresh
every few days, as it becomes rancid
very quickly. The cream is left on the
face all night and then rubbed off the
following movning with cotton dipped
in rosewater; the face is then powdered
thickly and the beauty is ready to ap
pear in public.
"The thick coating of powder Is ap
plied to the face to protect it from the
sun. In this northern climate, Heaven
knows it is not necessary, but even so,
I prefer it to the rouge which one sees
so much on the cheeks of New York
women and which shows so conspicu
ously in cold weather.
“I would rather look too white titan
have a blue face. - ' concluded Mlle.
Gabbi, and there’s considerable in what
she says.
Up-to-Date Jokes
Mrs. Benham —Do you remember that
I gave you no decided answer the first
time you proposed?
Benham —I remember that you sus
pended sentence.
Wise —Do you know, I have a very
little mouth. In the glass it doesn’t
look large enough to hold my tongue.
Husband (testily)—lt isn’t.
Stationmaster—l think some one will
get into trouble over that train starting
three minutes late.
Assistant —Why? Any of the pas
sengers complaining?
Stationmaster—No; but the restau
rant man says he’ll make it hot for
whoever is responsible. The passengers
have had time to eat what they paid
for.
BRENAU
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Smacking of Convenience
Ry Beatrice Fairfax
I AM in receipt of many letters from
young men telling of girls who
have declared their love for them.
“I am very fond of this young
lady,” one such bewildered young
man writes, "but have never told
her so. She, on the contrary, toid
me the second time she saw me
that she loved me, and has even
suggested marriage. She lives in
the South and on one trip I made
there I took her to the theater. This
is the only time 1 have spent with
her except in occasional talks with
her at the hotel where she is em
ployed as cashier.
"Since coming North, she writes
that she is coming to seehue. I can
not take her to my mother’s home,
and I do not want to see her. 1
feel that she is coming to again
propose marriage, and T do not want
to marry a girl ofywhom I know so
little. I have not seen enough of
her ways to make me feel sure that
1 would want her as wife, though
her manner has always been agree
able and most unobjectionable.
What can I do?”
I do not advise any man to acce) ' a
proposal of marriage. If he loves a
girl he will discover that love and pro
pose without any further assistance
from her than the laws of courtship
allow. When she proposes, when she
urges the marriage, it seems to me
that she is actuated by sentiments of
convenience.
She is tired of i arning tier living.
She doesn't want to be a confirmed
spinster. She imagines that he has
wealth, or a social position, that would
make life agreeable. Or. perhaps, she
looks no further ahead than the excite
ment of preparing a trousseau, the
congratulations of her friends, and the
rose-pink glow of the betrothal and
wedding day.
She takes no account of the drab
like existence that always comes after
to those who married through some
I
Serious Costly Sickness
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ffleechanft ffOUd
The directions with every box are valuable—especially to women.
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I Southern California affords more opportunities than any
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You Will Want To I
Know All About This
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 tell 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 about Los Angeles
and the marvelous country of which she is the metropolis
The information will be accurately and entertainingly
I set forth, and appropriately illustrated.
Th« proposed opening nt the Panama Canal rami al) the eves »f tie
world on thin region.
This spec!.' edition vHI be mailed to an address in the United Fiat”
i or Mexico for F ifteen Outs per copy.
i AB thy edition is Hb ■ and so bi .
I request ’•* it i remittance Is desirable Remember that soti-' of your friends
I may nnt see this announcement Uss the coupon belou and free that they
; get a copy.
I
I ' lajs Angeles “Examiner.”
} Los Angeles. Cal. !
? Enclosed please find cents, for which you will ?
S please send thp Ninth Anniversary number of vour paper to <
I ! ? the following names.
| | Name.. Street j
I City.. Slate
v
Street <
n.. ' ! I
State (
11 Los Angeles Examiner
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA
i;, - -
J - ■.* ■ * I —** ii ■ ■■ i ' . 2.T.
I . -.- ■ * ■ t.— -r, ■■■ ■ ■—7. ~i.. i ■ asms—■
other sentiment than one of pure I< ,
She regards any eligible young a ?
as an open door through which - ,
hopes to escape to pleasanter cor. . -
tions. If the first young man ief us ,.,
she proposes again, and again. Inch.,
the same mail that brought the letter
from this besieged man brought
from a girl who confessed that she ! . j
proposed three times. "I was alwnv.
accepted," she writes, “but the n,., n
soon tired of me and broke the .
gagement. How can I find a man wh ,
will not tire of me?”
One letter is an answer to the oth ( .
If the writer of the letter accepts
proposal of the girl down South,
will grow so tired of his fate that es.
will offer nothing worth living for. ■
If the writer nf the second letter vi
read what this man wrote, she will dis.
cover that the girl, by forcing matteo,
has cheated herself of love. The man
admired her: that admiration mean
friendship, love, marriage. The _i
told him at their second meeting tl o
she loved him, and frightened j >
away.
A man enjoys that the most tw
which he makes the hardest strugge.
There would be no zest for him in hunt
ing a deer if the deer pursued him
He will not admire, he will not et<-n
respect the woman who holds list f
so cheaply that she is ready to time
herself at the head of any man win
looks at her u second time.
The girl who inspired the first 1. i •
and the girl who wrote the seeonc
seem to have a distorted idea of what
love is. Neither the girl who propose,
the second time nor the girl who con
fesses -he has proposed three times
knows.
They also have an exaggerated idea
of the joys of matrimony. There are
none so great, nor so lasting, that they
can rise above the indifference, the dis
like, the contempt, every husband In
time feels tor the woman who pushed
Cupid and his time-honored methods
aside and swung a lasso over his head.