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[oo ee we * : te ' ce i EOP IL eS MEORE AALAND OTITIS 89K a IE EEL SE Wo & - . wan NLP IEEE 5 i RAT TR, A TETRIS bint 2} He Pie " ee T ~ 5 A, “ Tn wan 0 pode Jo { ave iy P Yan a co WN i) ut turn ren ° “Clarke's face was as expressioniess ax a manner was calculated to freexe one. “"'T’draw no inferences whatever, Galton,’ he --- — fooldly, My business was to see that Mire, ‘No,’ @ald I in an indifferent way; ‘I gave it back tu , RR A T, Ho wouldn't swear to it, because | guest, ae Mat guost made no attempt tol ley's ring was returned to her. That accomplaedy to {ts owner. It must be somewhere about her plate, | he'd seen the sing before and wasn't expecially Keen} ease up tuntion it simply at back in| prefer to keep my conclusions to myself.’ q ° I think, or'— to examine tt, but the girl on he right told him|her chalr awaiting tae outcome of events, with the In-| “Before I could reply there was a auick mo ! “*Perhaps,’ some one suggested, Interrupting me, ‘it | (ia: sre had given tt to him to pass on and as he|tention to race her jewel or know the reason| beside me and Jessie had sprung to her feet,» Soe had fallen to the floor.’ And then we moved back and hadn't it about him, why h) must have passed it on,] why plainly written on her fi ““But I,’ she cried out, with a blazing face i B: ‘J a search was made, quite fruitlessly, as T could have | don't you see? And so forth, and so on “At last Clarke called the but to him and gave] shaking voice, ‘prefer to feol, Mr. Clarke, that {| Ly ELIZABETH PHIPPS TRAIN. told them. ‘ @ woman down the t b to chaft}an onter {n an undertone, Immediately all the ser-|!8 no possibility of any conclusion or inference on the, ae “Everybody became visibly uncomfortable, and ail | me about being the Inst person to 6 Evahe Cb ants owedtad the ROONE Then Wer ‘Homnlto tele part of somebody doing Mr. Galton an injustiee! j ot ; ne | oF 1 iit 7 ° : hors!) talked together. Everybody remembered passing tie € fellows took up the joke, but 1 wasn't Ladies and gentiemen, he said very gravel: She broke off a minute to get better control of Copyrinh: b1 y Btory Pub, Co, i " y o conv P 5 ara “ HE whole Teh Seth is ter : ia Ito pel i ae Hie aia ney nb ‘ rane Kk tf ony wat ring to his neighbor, and everybody's neighbor re- A sod to jolly them bar and was so cursed}am placed fa a me awkward and wneomfortavle| Self. Then ina steadier volce went on, ‘It ts obyiol { has Canon e ma sa o that she had heard the interview between ly and | membered having received It. And yet Milly Charnley |sayvage about the whole busine.@ that they situation. A lady, to whom my invitation to dinner | that an attempt has been made to cast a yile sites) pues: Langhorne and one or two other men who| myself. There was a look on her face and tn her huntew of wafe conduct, nas, tt would seem, | pleton on him, and it remaina for me to refute It) 16 had brought up over our chasse cafes at the|eyes—Deucs take it all! [ can't talk about ft, but you > WAS AUB Neste ee) ae Jekd . 2 i H ¥ 3 =| = robbed ¢ errupted himse quicl js a task that any woman would gladly und club an old matter In which I had figured prominently | fellows know what It 18 llke—the look that a woman's JESSIE TO THE RESCUE! i delete Tubied Ri Asele aunts : Aah Lavenebe ht > and anent which Is Impossible; has nude the object of a| for the man she loves.’ Again she broke off, Mushing t which many garbled accounts had come to| face wears toward you when sho first finds out how tloal Joke, let us say, here at my table, Ladiew|hotly, She turned from Clarke then and addressed: pra lomen Udo not approve tloal jokes, | the whole astonished party, a my ears, “is this You all know Milly Charnley | you feel about her. Aa the pOrHatALan or sthla th SeEARATRIy REN: It may be as good a time as any, perhaps,’ ald) 4 and at once r i pretty well, I think one or two of you have done| “She had a duffer on her other side and I had Milly time with her, as I did. Simply pour passer le temps. rf n mine. S89 you see we were just driven into each ore Mrs. Charnley's ring to/*he, ‘to announce my engagement to Mr, Galton. Te I qulte understand that the matter has gone|!* anticipating my original Intention somewhat toy than the jester probably intended tt to, and| take this occasion to make my great happiness bey) ! None of you ever thought, probably, that Milly would | other's arma, as It were. I should have devoted my- Wy \ | A has taken on a more scrlous character. ‘Therefore, |to my friends, but 1¢ T were not to do ao (t might be as an ope take you seriously, No more did I. But apparently! self to the Witch of Endor, under the circumstances she let her imagination run riot in my case, and when] As {t was, well, Jesse and I ot things pretty well I tried to slip out of her clutches I found I couldf't, | settied between the courses of that dinner, net of restitution might be somewhat em-| Ta here she smiled a lttle—‘tor me to: 7 r diMfcul prove an allhl for Mr. Galton’s hands. The fact ae She wouldn't let up on me one lota, 1 got dead sick] “At last came dessert, a good deal quicker than I : TcNave dinWiReRd’ ine, RerOaHta Rd of her and her caprices before I met Mrs. Galton, | cared to haye {t, to tell the truth. The party was not aeons a at the. lights: hegelng that ia the| ladies and gentlemen, it would have been phswlcatly , who was at that time Jessle Parmly; after 1 met her, | #0 large but what the conversation could easly be- ntkness the jewel may be replaced upon the table| impossible for him to have replaced Mra, Charnley’ God bless her! Here's to her!" (there was a momen-|come general, and suddenly In a pavee in my duet ‘3 ‘lal nas ate beth Winer ae tahoe has teken it | fing where {t was found because his hands at the Most" | tary Interlude while the men raised their cognac] with Jessie I found that either by accident or by de- t so that all might grasp his glasses and pledged my wife) “any further attentions | sign the talc had fallen upon the subject of precious } : : : to the other woman became simply impossible. So I| stones, and that everybody but ourselves was oc- told her frankly, and for a few days there were high | cupled in the discussion, the main feature of which “He waited a mome meaning, then continue I shall walt ar sngth of time, and then|!¥. EB order the lights turced on again. If the ring Ja not| feally “Were both Iikewise engaged,’ he ment were Yoth—were both’—— Her confidence fatted | her at thia point and she looked at the table hel} se ‘ybhody by this time was smiling sympa Billy Goodhue came to her ald. inks between us. appeared to be a very valuable and interesting ring ” t forthcoming I feel that but one resource is left S Letiers, telegrams and telephone messages piled |bclorging to Milly Charnley, which she had taken tre, 4d and Mra Clarke, will offer ourselves. to be| Whereat there was a general outburst of laugh Up on me from her until I finally had to flee the city | from ner finger for the inspection of the party. It had personally searched, I shall esteem tt an act of| ltd by Jesste herself. A moment later her changed utterly, and she leaned forward across for a while until she became more reasonable. pretty well gone the rounds by the time I woke up RUNTGAIO LO THE WhoReNposl HON bus mune RI tael tO: “I came back after a two weeks’ absence and just |to what was on, passing from hand to hand until at he exceedingly painful, if my « 1eata volunteer to | hold of a sort of dangting knot of Isee in time for a dinner the Jerry Clarkes were giving | last 1! came in turn to Jeesie, You ought to have Minnil tea muleednsiaction?) " y wore on her breast for Jessie, When I got to the house a few minutes | seen her lift the thing and hand it over to me! You'd “Thers was @ general movement of consternation, | ‘Mrs, Charnley,’ sald she, looking her straight fr before dinner I found everybody arrived but some|nave thought it bred contagion. 1 couldn't help Clea iaase le de ll marie aah the eyes, ‘have you noticed your beautiful lace? highcockalorum for whom dinner was kept waiting. | smiling to myself, but no one else, unless it were “Presently Billy Goodh whose actions always!can have happened to !t? It looks as {f you had I did the polite thing by Mrs. Clarke and Jerry and | Milly, noticed her manner. The trinket was already carry a certain authority with them, you know, rose | leaning forward across your coffee cup until the end was making my way to Jessie when by an unlucky | forgotten It doesn’t take long to exhaust a dinner- nd con ar ded Clarke's plan. ering to take third| dropped in. Lucky it Is for you that the ring was chance I ran foul of Milly Charnley, who, in spite | table topic, and already somebody else had engrossed FARR Lin ene MORTON IBESDRE UxGtercarnten lover O06 | moeRcrhar wl Were of all I could do, lugged me off into a corner and gave | the general attention. ine fail intov ine: 21 t over to the] “I wish you could have seen the fair Milly's face at ' me one of the worst quarter-of-an-hours condensed | “Tie finger bowls had been put on and coffee was awiten andturned! oft) the The candles| that. Crimson was no word for It, For an instant Into five minutes I ever spent. being served when, during momentary silence, Milly were blown out, and the darkn gypt reigned in| a! not know but what she would come some fishwife's / the room for about three minutes act and strike the girl. But she recovered hergelf al- “Tho situation wae a rather dramatic one, and the | most at once, and turned with a loud, forced laugh t6— cravity of the affair pressed heavily on us all. Then | Clarke. ts were suddenly turned on again. A sharp,} ‘Ah,’ she sald, ‘the cat 1s out of the bag at: Milly drew the attention | What a detective this girl would have made! een ber and|was I who put the ring there. It seemed to “I'm not a very good-tempered man, as you chap: know, and I swear she made me savage. 1 shouldn't ‘Well,’ sho said in a Mght, matter-of-fact tone, wonder If T was pretty brutal, and sald a good many | ‘won't somebody give me back my ring, please?" things T had no business to, T don't remember what| “I turned and looked at her quickly, and for one me did say, fo 1d come to y © le ne ay, for I had come to the end of my pattence | stant her eyes met mine, and I understood what het | wporoRm t COULD REPLY THERE WAS A QUICK MoV spoke up, addressing no one in particular: xclumatiton from MENT BESIDE ME AND JESSIF HAD { with her. But Ido know that T told her in so many | damnable plot was. There was a general hubbub and LSUGMNInO TEER Gooey Sa NEM RBUIGATOE IHG { words that T was dead gone on Miss Parmly and had | confusion. Everybody exclaimed; everybody ex- ; _ Mee are te lit SIRcGG: (Well tor’ | Come ange gerry, whe youn ceereA lick laren Taam ‘ hut one hope in the world, which was to marry her| plained; everybody denied possession of the ring;| declared that it had never come back to her, while Ij to look at me rather vddly, and I saw that I had entreplece of orehids and ferns bit slow h I thought I'd etir things ap a | , If I could induce her to have me. At that-she let out dy asserte that he or she had passed it on.|@s firmly asseverated, not to her, but to Clarke, that | become an object of perplexity If not of suspiclon to bi ,’ she cried out, ‘there it really ist My | Don't look so. glum, Jerry. There was no harm in a) on me; and what she had to say wasn't a bit com-| Only Jessie and I out of the whole crowd had nothing |{t had gone from my possession to hers. them all, ke! What a clever scheme, Jerry! How did you|T should have confessed the trick before we, , forting. She even went so far as to'bet that the match |to say. We both got on In an instant. It seemed to] “Then people began to question each other and| ‘I don't mean t» Imply that I think any one there| ever como to think of it? Oh, Tam indeed glad to get |up. It has really lvened us up a ittle, now, hasn't would never come off, and at that I simply turned on| us beat to hold our tongues themselves as to whether they were absolutely eure| thought for an instant that I ].4 stolen the ring ack again, ‘Thanks so much.’ tutned to the {It?. You must all admit that. Peccavi, peccavi!" t my heel and walked off. “Presently the duffer on Jessie's left turned to her.|of their actions in the matter. One woman thought) They were most of them gooil friends of mine, But|man on her lett Then she had the effrontery to turn and ‘I suppose Mrs. Jerry thought she was doing the| “It's up to you, Miss Parmly,’ he sald, You re-|—yes, she was absolutely certain—that she hi} passed|they knew that 1 had been aux petits soins with| ‘Reach out and get It for me, Dicky, there's a good | wanm congratulations on us both. She tel handsome thing by me when she gave me a woman| member my handing it over to you?’ it to the man on her left, and yet, when she came| Milly for a long time and that the affalr was off.|eoul,’ she sald. ‘It's quite too far for my poor arms.’ | Didn't seem to find her soclety particularly wel to whom 1 wus known to have been devoted to take “The girl was as white as death, ut she showed hef-/ to think of it, didn't some one else down the table had become curious concerning the incident as| Then she turned with a sort of triumphant, mall-|to anybody, We don't speak any more as we into dinner. But wihon I found to what I'd beon | eelf a perfect little brick. ask to look at it again for a moment? Bome man ted to our mutual atttu visas look in her eyes and shook Mer head at me|by, she and Jeaste and f. And I shall never with a half-laugh on her lips again to any one if I don't get something to In was a beastly situacon, ‘Trying for every-| reproachfully I do arkes, who naturally| ‘Oh,’ she said, ‘I've @ mind to scold you well, | my throat with. Who's with me? Confound If Opie, but I won't, seeing I've got It back again. But |I'm thirsty as a fish.” elected—well, all T could hope for was a decent Ieft,| “ ‘Isn't It lke “Button, button, who's got the but- | declared that, after all, he didn’t think he had eeen and I got tt. Life seemed worth living again when I}ton?’ she asked, lightly. She turned to me and | the ring at all. And Jessie's duffer appealed to her|body, but especially for the ¢ found Miss Parmly placed there. smiled. ‘Is it next-door neighbor, Mr. Galton?’ {to know if he hadn't really given it to her in his|felt themselves reaponsible for the property of a a a aay Diet ih ee No Sweet Mash Whiske £ ____ Excursions MAY MANTON’S HELPS FOR HOME DRESSMAKING, ) ooo eee ONT lisieearariet ka geeg| Sel ae any blended or compounded Whiskeys aa nT ag STRAIGHT, wee gathered iuto deep-pointed cuffs, over) over the hips. The flounce Is graduated y inverted mlaits that le flat and meet 4008. yards, 21 inches wide; #%% yards 27 inches ing example Muatrated shows shadowy Hons of sleeves. For skirt, 8% yanis, J] /s of Straw—No. ane ‘the Dairy, graceful as well as smart and 1s sulted The blouse pattern, 4138, is cut in sizes || On or abour ( aate) 9.80, 10.00, 10.45, 1145 AM. The lower portion of the walst proper {DAINTY SUMMER GOWN. }| whlch they droop most gracefully. in depth but straight at the lower-edge. | at the centre, but {t may be gathered If] A Quintet of Marks in a Quintet of Hats; IOLD 3 The skirt 4s cut in five gores that are|a fact that renders it pecullarly destra-| preferred shaped to Mt anugly at the uppor portion, | ble for cotton and linen washable fab-| ‘Tho quantity of material required for Are Worth $20 Apiece. ¢ ‘~-ROW —— —— Tea Flowered musting are in the height of wide; 24 yards, 32 Inches wide, or 1% MY STRAW HAT RYE ‘ALL atyle and make tdea) gowns for after- yards, 44 inches wide, with 1% yards of | Delighitol alt t 0 Fishing. TIME TABLE 21 inches wide; 7% yards, 27 inches wide; SURI BEy BLT SOR STRAMERS LEAVY plnk flowers on a white ground and is ; ee aera trimme:! with cream gulmpure lace and 64 yards, ‘2 inches wide, or 6% yards, Was purchased at. H. B. KIRK & Co. Gpeelanae a olar, 8.00 00, gt As, for a 82, M4, 86, 38 and 40 Inch bust meas- 3.15, 4.50, 6. to many materials. . 16 8. ‘The foundation for the walet Is fitted ure. [t will be mailed for 10 cents and bears this mark: hattal Cortana tn a. ‘The skirt pattern, 4092, 1s cut In sizes M, for Cortlandt et. only. $00, for a 22, 2%, 26, 28, 80 and 32 inch waist | 609.0 and 8.00 P.M. is laid in plalis that form groups of measure. It will be mailed for 10 | mira boats on Sunday ws three each, and closes invisibly beneath If both patterns are wanted s¢ Naane FOR LJ | __inctuding admission _to_all ate Fancy Blouse, (1%; Five Gored Skirt, | tiny darts completeing the adjustment | rics, The fulness at the back fs laid in] the medium size is: For blouse, 9% roon and dinner wear. The very charm- tucking for yoke, ouffe and upper poi- te built that way, and won, the Gold Medal 191 Dinners a Ja carte. la ruches of the material, The design is advinches’ wide. | Sole Bottlers, N. Y. Piltea sherry Hiya 90.0 my 3 ning that closes at the centre front. ae \ All Druggists’, 25c. and 50c., | EXCURSION ROUTES TO THE SEA il the outer plait on the left side of the | ’ ‘ 1f {na hurry for your pattern send an | Address | front. The yoke collar, which Is per- your 7 aA REA ERATED FIER E extra 2 cent stamp for each pattern, and ; or tat RALAINE €0., The Long Island 7 us Ulustrated, is arranged over the walst His nu pe pene ly mailed by letter —= = 1 BOS ‘Ve Petey! BEACH. and the lining is hooked into place at Post, In sealed envelo; i110 “Straw Hat Hunt, Evening W ‘Trains loave New York, a ey BR ; a a a blank ces and mailto . A ; the lefe snou.der seam, The sleeves, in Send money to “Cashier,” World, HT p, Qua gag Ne Ye Clore | Amusements if bout fam Joh, | Pulitzer Butlding, New York City | 2 = f . 6.40, 7.10, 0, 84 a | ANHATTA Bat abet ‘the bi rks ade c neil by | THE SAGE’S REWARD. ee etna niiniere ae the | *BEACH: d ee | A sovereign, being desirous to confer haps you're wearing one now. five Evening World marks. and if so | | To pay ag ars) eR Ney Tom Webel a liberal retard on one of his courtiare,| ‘There are five marke in five straw |is worth $00 to vou, The Bvening World |Wosp er ee SHANNON'S phir, BAND! $7.8 Per, aa 8, GIL PAIN? S AXCIRNT ROME and 1100 410, 2.20, 3.40. 4.0, FN who had performed some very impor-| hats and $20 will be pald to the finder| mark is not described here. It may be portions but full and soft below and are you seen thy $100 straw hats? | Hungarian style, are snug at their upper 4 A “SURE THING” GAME. Two persons agree to take, alternate- GRAND FIREWORKS: jon Fare, 60c, ly, numbers less than a given number, ‘ Ans Nl cops ner Lar eEe Sant eryioe:, dealred (nimto. aak what: or cao Se ee ea a ee an | | TO-NiaiiT at 9. SATURDAY MATINEE at 4, ROCK AWAS Sucka ! ver he thought proper, assuring him i Z Nor will The Evening Wo NSIRELS | gether till one of them has reached a should be granted, The courtier, who] The Evening World placed a private! tei what sort of hats the marks are In |PRIAROSE & DOGKSTADER'S “SSeRcks x mark in five straw hats—one in a Brook ‘ept that all five hats are étraw. lyn, one in a Harlem, one in @ OWN ‘Thin contest {a open to every one |Next Saturday Military Day certain sum, such as 100. By what was well acquainted with the science of | means can one of them infaJlibly attain Wns TA ca UpLatad wilh ihe salaes. a neat) that number before the other’? y ested e aula 4 in n i y pete | LES A Pe Te HT arch would give him a quantity of [‘0WM. one tn an east side and one jn * There is as much chance for you as for CASINO Brit 39th wt, Evenings at b 15 | immediately making choice of the num- wheat equal to that which would arise | West side hat store e mannered jany one else. Go in and win, MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2.15. from one grain doubled sixty-three [Some sao. All five hats are pretty BUFO , qusssee—emmeeerrerrmrmmes | A CHINESE HONEYMOON. bers 1, 12, 23, 34, and so on, or of a series to have been sold before now times successively. The value of the - which continually increases by 11 up cw us ‘A record was kept of each hat, its de Oar reward was immense. for it will be record HERALD 8. THEA, Promptly, 2.15 and 8.15, 100, Let us suppose that the first per- ae Ay rene scription and size, how marked and The main point Is this " 7 Saree vj MATIN \ son, who knows the game, makes choice aay Ree embavon ine seer ee where on sale, If you have an odd | if you pay more than THE DEFENDER SATURDAY, | of 1; 4t ls evident that his adversary, z erm oF the double progress! | mark of any gort In your hat, describe $2.50 for a good Cood- = = = = epee entreiaiteci gia fy rely divided by 1, 8 4,8. 1, 22, ef 9228-11080) A powtal ear TH Inthe socom oar Welt Shoe, YOu ff {VISIT PROCTOR'S, f20%s8¥: most reach 11 by adding 10 to it. The gre eatat Latest She oun o) Al he} Sanying blank and mail it to the "Straw | ‘AY TOO MUCH! Ask 25c., Soc, Reserved, 78c, Box Seats, $1, first will then take 1, which will make hing, with! a maye Ve ebtaineg by [Het BUnts ning World, HQ. box) your retailer for Shoos 20rd St.) IDEAL SUMMER VAUDEVILLE, 26 12, and whatever number the second A y be obtatne 'Y 11.354, New York Oty.”” aring this trade-mark bth Ave, z 118 HEARTS DELIGHT.” — ig su may add the first will certainly win, provided he conUnually add the number which forms the complement of that of his adversary to 11; that ts to say, If * the latter take § he must take 3, if 9 » he must take 2, and so on, By follow- ing this method he will infalltbly attain to 89, and It will then be impossible for the second to prevent him from getting first to 100, for whatever number the second takes, he can attain only to "%, after which the first may say: ‘And 1 doubling the last term, and subtracting | vi 7 q If yours ts one of The Evening World D 19+} Stock, 10 Big Vaude. Acts, Contin's. | trom It. ‘The number of the wralts Of | murjed' hata you. will recelve c00DYEAR A26th St.) y2ehin, eae adie oe GRAND REPU Wheat, therefore, in the present case! "rhe hat in whica you tid the mark WELT Li tddcd ets: Mls odlaialtcu Will be 14,446,144,078,709 651,615. Now if @ DUSS*s Wat's Band Caraiv Writs sebum Weak Bee honed Mid Arctie Breeaae, Rags i. 5 i P. ry Landing, 33, 30.40 +, d be yor 1 0 Kors t pint contain 9,216 grains of wheat, a nese ine | ee Bais Lees gallon will contain 73,728; and, as eight | elet than the Soak EEG NS with the contest’s simple cond! tious, allo " ~analvti Kallana make one bushel, if we divide | not necessarily to the owner of the hat. the above result by elght times 13,728/ Tp wa ure uw aint look inside Your we shall have 31,174,997.411,295 for the eae fe ae, © calls number of the bushels of wheat naval sweetheart’s straw hat when be ill t edual this evening, If the inwide of tae It to the above number of grains, a ‘nl contains any mark (except, of couree. tity greater than what the whole sur se 3 face of the earth could produce in sev 20 dog. Cooler than the it's MANTELC | xoursion gr JAPAN BY NIGHT, 50 Wg) See! MIKADO Mauch $1.50 GARDEN, | caonse'ees:+'/¢-e 40m. Chunk, Glen Onoko 1d nese makes 100."’ 1f the second take 1 after ‘anal lvaana|\ané detlah iinialionwcuid ‘ Hl dversary ‘ § 5 , * . f . BA would make 9 and bls adversary exceed all the riches perhaps on «|| $5 FOR AN ANSWER KNICKERBOCKER 4% Bree.) 894 Switchback z love. a Weel P 3 irs E 100."" Between two persons who are f = ‘ : , Mere! dav THE WILD ROSE. Via NEW JERSEY CENTRAL i ft equally acquainted with the game, he Why de artiste introduce ‘The JAMES MEANS SOK for Intivding Wadle Fog. Irene Bentley, Marie Cebit, SUNDAY, JULY 27, 190. b } who begins must necessarily win, VEGETABLE VIRTUES, baby-carriages and robber gaa ht bans Roonaan pgpraved by) AL Hart: sie estes, Margate Clas 1 one 1 rai Sa toot aber ! 4 ‘Tomatoes rouse torpid iver nin im plet { domes- hue ever puton ihe tal wt a rovall y Perry 8.25 A.M n plants im pletures o: shoe ever p LTH ST. @ 3D AVE, 4 CRI MAY MANTON'S DAILY FASHION HINT. Onions gre a tonle for eas ervar AES Pe prise seats the wtanatcttes’ Tle BT PASTOR'S “teokntiout!™ | This is a sketch of the fashionable may be obtained through The Bven-| Celery 18 an acknowledged nerve tonic. |f | i mene hoe for men which has ever been Trocadero Quartet, Irving Jones, Grace La Rue Within the convention he partly found e soutume which May Manton describes ing World by following Miss Manton's| Asparagus is eMoacious in kidney all retalled at Ant Vickanlnsion, Sriviai Millie sad Shantz De and partly created Moliere is wll but] (eine Wom seeas Bataan deal Pein ‘The Bvening World will pay $5 for fed welght Lace it, Mayes 4 w. ene emda fe One, aod Viet Kid-on Metropolitan Last, alao enemys 4 impeccable, says the Saturday Revie the best answer in rhyme to this HAMME Jo. ~ABBURY PARK AND Of Bhakespeare's passion and profound Dandelions purity the blood and tone) | oa otiae, PEt Rid Ochs te Martecdlltse Lane ARADISE. pn \ AND Aub NBARGY. SEASIDE up the system. ¢ ROUP tw. W. i 8, 8.55, 12k Me thought and wendrous lyrical gift there wi m . Do net write more than eight lines. Ni tee, Roots of | Saturdays, 5.55, LAM. 1245, 240 thet morte at i ot NOT SO EASY AS THEY LOOK. apifatererens ta. “zona, astround”|| Gena anuwet co vBrookivn systery GARDENS Hush atte [tra | Raita a Pir bm + akewpeare's love of plot . 0, ¥ TTT fee 30, 1i tina lend ike oie ae Fetes te] A man cannot rise from a chair with-)/ that the runner, in order to win, would| Ordinary Mma beans, aome one has || yvenine Worle ® Gee uae dew rome tester FLOATING ROOF GARDEN, hy co Ww ita takes us into the stuffy playhouse, | out bending forward or putting his feet 4ve to beat all previous records. eald, are good to allay thirst. on the day of t air rece pt Evety By. St. ORAND REPUBLIC, Fri. often ante ‘ rehes fame and smoke, and gentle-|under the chair or outside of it, Many| If ® man boasts that his penknife ts} Spinach hes medicinal properties equal pata tat cana sop pou ONTERNO A 147i BGT. BAND @ oe men with periwigs and swords and|a man will back himself to give another, Particularly sharp ask him to cut with | to all blue pills ever made. na well aa your own, Ly, Wai ot 8 P 4.80 PM Battery 9 P “Siow ork and ladies with or without flounces and|a start of fifty yards in a race of ‘one| 08@ stroke of his blade one of those| Potatoes should be eachewed by those A PAYING GaG. Dept.@,-JAMES MEANS COMPANY, TERRACE E GARDEN - BROCKTON, MA' yellow ribbons, mostly of allk, which | who “have @ horror of getting fat.” ure around bundles of clj In 990] Lettuce has @ soothing, quieting effect] A Marts casen out of 1,000 the knife ts not sharp | upon the nerves and ia. remedy for in-| men, sitting bn Rat ata boclevand enough to do this, It will cut through | somnta, cafe, were recenuly app by al rs idle lagily in the wings or around | hundred, provided the man having the the dreary stage. But when we grow| start hopy all the way, But no runner, accustomed to the place, the gmell, and| however awift, can give that amount of ays 4 party of witip Auber’s “FRA DIAVOLOW e ATLANTIC gaits, ae ace a sights eten to what is going on|start to an ordinary man, For the first 9 d b all the ribbon exoept the last atrand,| Parsnips, tt ts contended by sclentiste,| man whe had # clarinet In hie banc) Bonita ies, The ba Veils, Hamiton &| BRIGHTON BEACH 5; 4 $ ma Frye al ine he rip of one] five yards they Ko at practically th®lang that will pull owt long, and the pacpsiio 1.4 the same virtues claimed | and who said: “Gentlemen, excuse me, IMPURE DRINKING WATER Wiley, Jara Mat’ Kataar, Bachert's Oreh | & Ryan eae ie , Kia artists, same pace. more he tries to out it the onger tt] for sarsaparilla. I have to make my living, but I sup AND FOUL AIRS Biway | MEST SHOW IN TOWN | Picvinionien j i Ae ‘Therefore the runner, to go ninety-Ave4 will pull out. —— ‘ powe you would rather give me a you). = Fi -p = KEITH Si |i aka AOrer 3 | Marine ia ay ALAS: POOR WIFE! yards while the “hopper” goes forty-| No one except a blind man can stand ANTI-CONSUMPTION not to hear me.” They took tho hint, | Breed Malaria. Im many of the summer 0 1 whic Bo — In Portugal if the wife publishes liter. |1Y%, Mula have to run more than twice] without support of any kind for five - He repented Sle performance, U1, ane | dieses te thus carried to the syaiem: As & SRR RY Mien at. Brett KEIR Ale > ary works without the husbangy at ]as tant, and Kt would be 4 weak man minutes ata atretch, If he fw thoroughly | WDD the last ten years more new] day, vie of the mer wale te felt ko | prnmmeatiye und cure take w boitle of 1 | AE OMEA Mauatin Mose Ye! VAODEVILERS | WHERE THE MILLIONS pid. aw ibcanchite atone who could not hop forty-fve yards at 4] pjindfolded, without moving his fect, I¢| methods hawe been devised for dealing | hearing @ tune, and asked him to play. | eed ot J y Malaria Take it two or three | = ~ w P; of the * A aikuriatuias ablations hee from all pace equal to twenty seconds for one] ho does not move his feet he is pretty | With coneumption ¢han any other buman|’ | im suyy. aid the man with ‘he | Unies y when the frat eripplania ay EDEN [WORLD 1s Wax. New Groupe The Want Pages . , hundred yards, and that would mean! suse bo tepple over in abou. a minute, Silman, Clarinet, "bus 1 oannot vik & mate," tg and tt wil oy ae Sess | MUSE foranetns comer’ Vocal Gains, | WOrkd every, Sung oo Waegrpntre scary ene “