Film Fun, April 1922 (1922)

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Posed by Elhd Clayton. "Thai flour you tent me yesterday was tough.'' "Tough, Ma'am?" "Yea. My husband couldn't get hit teeth into the />o.v/n/ / made with it!" hot breath on her face. She staggered slightly. Not from his breath. They came fare to face and stared into each other's eyes in astonishment. "You!" he gasped. "You!" she murmured. A deathlike silenee fell between them. Not a sound could be heard but the screeching of motor horns; the jangle of street ears; the rattle of the elevated; the cries of newsboys, ticket speculators, actors and theatrical managers, mingled with the hoominjr of the subway and the moans of peo- ple baying theater tickets. "You!" he gloamcd. "You!" she snorted. The air between them was full of electric currents. They were both shocked but she hail a permanent wave length. There wasn't a dry eye in the street. This tragic couple was too much for the crowd of passersby and the tears fell copiously if not bounti- fully. Gradually the water rose higher and higher until Broadway- was a seething current. It rose men- acingly to their necks but they stood like statues gazing into each other's eyes. It rose higher. And higher. It reached her mouth. She tasted it. "Water!" she yelped. It rose higher. And higher. It reached his mouth. "Water!" he screamed. But they never moved. Amid the groans and cries of the struggling pedestrians could be heard the chug- ging of the police boat coming up the street. On the front porch stood the gallant captain clad in a purple kimono. He faced the peril fear- lessly. Throwing off his pink kimono he leaped headlong into the surging waters. Martha was just going down for the eighth time when he reached her side. Clutching her by the left elbow he returned to the boat with powerful strokes and with the aid of the crew soon had her on board. Martha recovered consciousness and looked around in terror. "Father!" she cried. "Where is he?" The gallant captain bared his head. "He went down with flying colors. He refused to open his mouth to the water and suffocated !". •lust then the gallant captain espied a bottle floating nearby in the water. There was a message in it! Reaching over the side he picked it up and ex- tracted the piece of paper. A note written on the back of a Gordon gin label. "I die with my bootlegs on! All my stock I give to you! Papa." The gallant captain handed the note to Martha in silence and when she read it she burst into great sobs. "A watery grave!" she moaned. "Poor father!" "You are rich!" cried the gallant captain. Martha looked at him scathingly if not scornfully and her face saddened in the deepening twilight. "No." she sighed, "I couldn't touch a drop of Papa's stock! I'm going to give every bit of it to the poor! They need it more than I do!" She slowly tore the note into tiny shreds. Above the sound of the captain's Page t-i