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EP TE REE THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 16, 1908, ——————ewwr F DOUBLE Omi } PAGE, A Grave throu; Bruce. My moth of Kings; but alas fair as the day, fairer than I, for I Inherited a darker | and besee strain of blo F, too, was the descendant of a line | the mainlant, father; her mind was noole, her manners queenly | foul intruder in er more than the equal| back from ine as from one who had blaspheened. A of her neighbors and surrounded by the most consid- | superstitious reverence plainly encircled the stranger. w not where, but f head whirled, so strange, wo sudd, @nd accomplished, an seeing 2 erate affection and respect, 1 grew up to adore her,| I ran I kr. hor did I know she was a slave. Her death, which be-| As [ went my Yas an isle set in the Cartbbean Sea, some half hour’ for in that warm climate all are early riser found not a seryant to attend upon my wants. 1| g¢ mado the circuit of the house, still calling, and my| .riegs surprise had almost changed Into alarm when, coming at Inst into a large verandaed court, I found !t thronged with negroes. Even then, even when I wns among them, not one turned or paid the least regard to my arrival. They had eyes and ears for bi one person, a woman richly and tastefully attired, of @ont carriage and a musical speech, not so much fn years as w rred by self-Indulgence; ce, which was s t yed with the most crue! passtons, her eye burning with the greed of evil A girl slave, to whom I had been kind, whispered | my eur to have a care, for that was Mme. Mendizaba Dut the name was new to me. Twen table a, an influen In the hile the woman, applying a pair of glastes to her eyes, studied me with insolent particu- larity from head to foot n Young woman,” great’ experience in re: netory servants. and take! Ts 1t possible that you do not know y @be returned, cal! [free land of Br MME. bOUISE TELLS HOW. FOR A SWELL EVENING. Dear Mme. toutes T exvect to go w a ewell evecing aftr ron Kindly current a tress to Give, 1 ain twenty-one years stout, PMMA accont th a ruch it Mare low In fro One of the most becoming and stylish gowns for an inexpen vening dress | fa blat¢ sik mull. I say that black m gowns are inexpensive for this reason: When you have the mull and lining you he 7e your gown, while other mat fals cost more to trim than the mater- fals themselves cost. A pretty design | R consists of a skirt tuc in five tucks | *!nish around down the centre front; these are emall |! elhow tucks one-half inch apart at the top, wed and a er nove, the le! wn worn de: FOP HOME DRESSMAKERS. | The Uvening World's Daily Fasiion Hint. FOULARD GOWN, Dear Mme. Lo. diy give sult ma may h or transparent. Would like he. oF if 704 can auger nthe skirt, ea white taffeta riu equares ¢ which for Ig | and © Ww pretty tucked co THE FAIR CUBAN’S STORY. BY ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. CHAPTER I. Positively, 1 must buy her. vil, pose?” she added, turning to the servants. Y father drew his descent, on the one hand,| At this I found expression. Calling by name upon from the grandees of Spain, and on the other, | the servants I bade them turn this woman from the the maternal line, from the patriot |house, fetch her to the boat and set her back upen But with one voice they protested these kings were African, She wan| they durst not obey, coming close a hing me to be more wise; and when I in- d from the veins of my European] sisted, rising higher in passion and speaking of this terms she had deserved, they feil fell me tn my sixteenth year, was the first sorrow I| were these events and insults. Who wa had known In Heaven's name, The place where I was born and passed my days} my obedient negroes? @ slave—why spuaen of my father’s sale? rowing from the coast of Cuba. T was still running, mad with fear and anger, when vne morning (from which I must date the beginning |1 saw my father coming to meet me from the of my misfortune) I left my room a ttle after day, | piace, and with a ory that I thought wou and! me leaped tuto his arms and broke 8 and tears upon his bosorn. said my father wit volce, “I must make to-day @ call upon your cours much must be told you, do to help me. and my daughter must prc woman by ler sprit shall I say, or how am I to tell y y years ago she was the loveliest of sla to-day she !s what you see her—premature!. ced by the practice of © Waa the power sh Why had she addressed me as there ts much that 3 As for this Mendti nm may Hea lent mates, the slay pounded as {is reas ty among her rious Horralne rites, e—the rites of Hoodoo. ave you dismiss the from her that d: she at last, “I have had alens us, and tnt . I make bold to 1 dl never citalt pride in breaking them tn, You really 3f t had not er affairs, and these of me Am. father, te wee = Seeds, I should certainly buy ything but this suspense | your fatfer's sale.” “1 wall tef you," he replied, “with » Madame'— I began, pot my voice falled me. ness, Your mother was a slave: !t was my design, | position? | #9 soon aw I had saved a competence, to sal! to whore the law would suffer m MAKE YOUR OWN DRESS.! spreading at the bottom: and the ss betwcen the hip and wast tucked. Have the foot trimmed with flounces, will not take per at the back 4 * cluster of tucks down the| ind tucks all around the} r-| Wear your wast long in front and just to the waist line at the back, finished small belt of black LAberty satin. | corsage and bottom ves with two narrow p shor Ve separate guimpes, eliaer so April and May, » Placed in hotbed, or a gr second sowing should an idea how to have tL momething prettier Soult like very much to have rou ame CONSTANT READER. A very pretty design for a gown is made with two shape flounces h edged with a row of foulara | and of any conven soll in w pon er Have these side made in panel effect + of dep [Naa Raa aaa ee with a clust tucks where skirt. up the ce ik six inches ar line, being joined { the waist with a turned-back cuff DAILY PUZZLE PICTURE. Accomplishments, I sup- hat oft me, pleading wan toward the bew e? Wh wielded ove d have k 0 @ passion singuiar gravity of must © herself a abal, wh. it what » urri Re th, thought her: You can plant fifty vari tics of flower aveds effectively sma garden twenty-five tect | square, dhe price of these seeds, manner of plantins,ot caring 10 th flowers, their eneral “ppearance and = cauty ar told in this a:ticle, The list 0} flowers has been carefully selected an. will be found mo t effective HE time to sow flower sreds ts in n shallow boxes or A warm house, if to four weeks after t sion, ax weil am to provide a ure of the first sow! Ing better to sow seeds In | boxes, from two tm three inches deep As soon am the seeds are up take t care to give them suiliclent ight Mixed p s from seeds worth $7 a to marry her—a design too long procrastinated, death at the Inst moment intervened. c understand the heaviness with which your mother's memory hangs about my neck.” what was at TERESA’'S TOUR stones, th on the we from the c It matters UTILITY LESSON NO. VIII. “HOW TO START A FLOWER GARDEN. From Practica! Information Supplied by J. M. Thorburn & Co. —- | TEN bESSO |. How to E'ectric Wire a House No. 2. How to Build a Boat No, 3. How to Paper a Room {. How to Make a Dynamo. S How to Start a Vegetable Yo. 6, How to Build an Engine. 7. How to Do Your Own Car- 8, How to Start a Flower Gar- 9. How to Mend a Clock. 1. Now to do Your Own Plumb- t Mon- ‘The aster, prominent among the fin: ne size. The proper h to pow seeds of ail the smaller kinds is a very fine, 8 rich, sandy & to the variety. In variety and beauty of its blue tints the flowers may b ngly effective | and motsture, water, or they will “damp off.” W. ‘ young plants are well out of the need-leaf they must be transplanted to new boxes, Ie 5 ter are avails the along the edges of the soon as the ground ts warm enough they can be easily turned out and planted singly, as by , " . aquired fort ripe ‘ of om @ far flounve, | the yoke; trim w 3 ya 21-2 yards | Mke flounces. Wear the sleev bse ‘ 3 hes wide or 12 1 effect on upper arm. puffing over | PB 6, sizes 22 to 32/ lace, and lower sleeve tucked to match ; t ents the body of the waist. The girdle ie of | i t b World, | black and white Liberty satin folds ‘ > ye teriaved. | so Is none too much to seeds as press the ing all flower seeds, danger of their drying roots ean get firm held of the soll Seedy of the hardier ann sown where they are to grow rule, it is prefer the plants then become stronger and more able to withstand the draugh| During very dry weather, and yet not too two I le, net out fr ‘zen or more of the y ve made good roots. When the cannot be had square boxes or tn cand rant, may be substituted. A in sowing flowers nx well a8 other aceds jn tn covering too deep. As a rule, cover 4 oF with sams, for medium-sized seeds, half an inch (should be watered frequently, ug shrubbery much of pansy pee tone offered w ace sometimes increas: d Tuls seed costs fr hes or more in diame- m three to ink seedlings, pot, so that as All varieties a deeply dug and wel! *| give the largest, | are made every year ,| under tase in that time they will gg 18 su0) flowers may nmon mistake gathered outdoors uit oxes under glass in February h and thin or pot off the mee cape ae cena UNDE n FLAGS he depth of the thickness of the lke t about April 15, about April ver. Buch tine toryals of abut rtulaccas need only to be a row or two at a tlm for #uc. pressed into the soll with a plece of board or the palm of the hand, Alw: arth down firmly after sow- foot or else there ts o up before the tn. ree weeks ti! Aug y swing will N eke goo! ys flowerlne Average height in double rows ls may be but, asa The pansy isa plant Chat we all delicht | to transplant, as ors all the year. bedding the seed Is wings should an the ground can be p does not hurt the frost| of the and when coldframe or in rich, :20tst ganten beds flourish in the : THE FARMER'S WIFE 18 CALLING HIM TO DINNER- WHERE IS the seediings are first put out, they from which the plants can be trans and your nesta iT GLASER 8x0" Dolly Vara MARLOWE) wae | ferred to @ coldframe, setting them two] earliest flowers are from seed sown tn] garden is well atarted, be repaired, and T must | defebictsieieleisitefelebicbisiteteioltetei rece b eb ebbibbtebitebtebiteeteieibebeebee Stevenson, in this story from “ The Dynamiter,’’ has caught the true tropical atmosphere of Cuba, and leads the readcr through a labyrinth of thrilling adventure, tender heart interest and real humor. close by the this bag; arrive at the might else ng up the ne poured into ighter than ng, as they or of the dark: tat disint And dusky ae. the & tity of the hill ‘ plante!, Por some y margin of © mark, ned of the secret path shall await me. > the swamp to t is safe I . ssuade him, urging 5 , ace. in valn that 1 begged fo be wt e inet k blood that I now peals he 2 of the ; ane me 1 foto the pestilential om gut the sered in the fires was of ® heat of the vants crying out n And an fictions and perished, (To ereoue COMI NG. 1s which are known to ly numerous swarms of it is thus enabled to uiturtats In the infected Te portion of the vould otherwise the t1 then endeavor to will exter- pers 60. ite 535,538, $40, 512,544, 546 West 23d S! 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Var MARLEM 1 es R Wy OF t opera: C1 SIE W WORLD. M TINEE TO-DAY. ann aan DeMa (hit EW JUAN) rave HALL OF F AME, eae es es ft pubic. os ses HOE R Gani Me EDEN |wor:n ix aren n MUSEE | oreneatrs eri 3 tyn semonts. MONTAUK, 2