The evening world. Newspaper, October 13, 1902, Page 11

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under cover Robert plac aire. ‘AE MOST EXCITING ADVENTURES IN THE CAREER OF THIS SWAG- GERING ROBBER. TALE OF VILLAINY AND VIRTUE. Last Brilliant Crime Which Cost Macaire and His Pal Their Lives. By GEORGE W. SxNoPsis OF PRECRDING CHAPTERS. Robert Macaire, aii ex-convict, oi Hage In France, where™he inpore mple peasants, and marries Mar! ughter of a rich te young man named Plerre La Macalre robs Marie's father. Robert and his fe are arrested on suspicion. On the way t Iprison, Macairo changes clothes with Marie and feacenes. ay ' CHAPTER IIT The Foundling. HB gendarmes ran back scoured the road right and Wut all in vain, for Robert M had broken from pris and from custody too often to be c ‘mapping when th a chanec i@ecape. He was already safe in the woo roof its she Moment a great di self and his p vainly soare! which he had j + Beeing that the mnd that the or ing him was by ry from the station, walled his men back They came, naturally toukhly angry at the » had been tricked and vowing v and left ught was of ana each | . in vain yuur- was r of the the encugh, M. REYNOLDS. pursuing her or the pace would have been quicker. She made up her mind—she would trust her child to the mercy of this stir Hastily wrapping him in tee woollen shawl, she laid him tenderly at the foot of the shrine. after kissing him with passionate fervor, and hurriedly hid herself in a clump of trees that grew thickly around the ehrine. The horseman approached at an easy peered out eagerly through to what kind of a per- about to trust the fate of She leay she was hild ad thrown the rein on the horse's and was to all seeming unconscious of what went on arcund him, He was y in some deep distress, for the we Ing down his cheeks. The mother's heart grew glad as sho saw him stop and after a moment of uncertainty ste take up the now walling child and after a few moments sitation ride away with the babe. fe me now to prison if ke," erled Merle, “for if they me they will surely find me, but, thank God, my child js saved." In all the department of the Saone-et- evid tear on Robert Macaire in case they s ‘avery lay their hands upon him age Lolre there was no man more generflly ed and respected that M. Dumont, THE DESERTION. BHE LAID HIT: NDLRLY AY THE FOOT OF THE SHRINE, AFYER KIS8- ING HIM, {After a fow hours’ more journeying | Whey reached the jail, where Marie. Whoroughly exhausted, sank into a deep meep, + In the morning she was taken before the Magistrate and charged with theft. Of course the gendarme told of the es- ape of Macaire, and Marie, who up to this moment had been in utter ignor- ance of her husband's bad characte Mow found that she was considered merely as a tool in the hands of a criminal known as Robert Macatre, mrhose guilty record, though unkr to the ru darmes at the time of His arrest, unfolded to her agony and ams though as an In- escent and dec \ She treated with the utmost kind- ess by the warden Into car he was placed, But the awful thought dat her child would be in prison. ade her resolve to eRe all hax- 8, fin the @ead of night she arose, Hith little difficulty made her to the darkness Her evident and extreme d-lulled all thought of rest on the part of the ler. after hours of w yrning was bi ength going fas! vn by a little wayside shring, whe figure of the Divine Moth wave &@ new hope and she sank lower tn dust and bowed her weary he » she prayed. 2 felt no fear now. image of motherhood and before her she felt that her heard and that her child would from the curse of its fatherhood, tere alone, save for what she felt to he presence of the Mother of So: s, her son was born. the morning grew, however, a new began to assail e thougiit - she might be capturel and taken sto the prison again. je fear that after all h get the taint of the pri ngth to stir herself and and her eagerly for yugh the maze of doubt thought that the best could do was to place her child where where it would be take of and where it would never know ‘sufferings or the deepalr of his poor er or his fatherss shame, efthe thought of leaving him almost fe her heart. She fultered in. her pose. iddenly she listened. There was jie! of a horse's feet quietly captering, thought came to her lke an in- gation that it could not be any one wn 4’ now ement ived p whose bor! ye at and y out weakness atehfulness country-bred ndering and as the king, finding her she threw herself With that ai- utter praye son might nm gave her » looked gome ul 5 before her, thing that the proprietor of Les Bons Amis, a thriving aubergs (or inn) which stood tn the outskirts of the village of Simard, Just where the highrond to Montret Pr the end of qhe lane leading to the old church, M. Dumont was a widower, having st his wife some twenty years before. They had gone to Marseilles to see her father, her only remaining relative, who was dying. The fatigue of the Journey had been too much for her and she had died in siving birth to @ son, thelr first and only child. Having laid his young wife and her old father side by side, M. Dumont re- turned to Les Bons Amis with a Ittle nt, a few weeks’ old, to ard the great Joy and Inter- F lite; for he never thought of remarrying, but devoted himself to the bringing up of his child and the care of his Inn and his farm, In course of time the baby grew up to be a tall, man, the the apple little delicate strong young pride and joy of his father— of his eye. He was a genoral favorite with old and young, while his gentle manners and soft, dark eyes made him spectally pop= ular among the young girls of the sur- rounding vill ‘Things had gone well with M. Dumont, and at the time of which we speak he Was a very rich man. M, Germent] was a wealthy farmor, an old friend of Dumont. He had a pretty daughter whom he wished to see married to Charles, the mnly gon of M. Dumont Mow MM, {1 and Dumont con- t ‘cd to jeave Charles and Clementine, the daughter of , together, and both old xentlemen were delighted to ary A coupte of houra later that Charles had been accepted by Clementine, sudgec approval of Germenil, Dumont, upon belng informed of the tate of affairs, aid: “Th been my right hand ana comfort th iy a year, and now he pings im daughter T destred ana thelr little ehildzen will cheer my old ise. On the day he marries, noighvor, will become the owner of this Inn, ind when I die he will inherit all my avin, “Oh, Hoy "Mm th eo father!” anding in his And 1," sald mentine a dot exclaimed Charles, teare lark eyes, Ger Hl give wry) of 12,000 france dat my doath—— But there, wo a t going tou die” , my old trite Wr many 9 hoarty year before us, 1 thon arranged that and his daughter sai Bons Am It was M. Ge nild come Les day. THE WORLD: MONDAY HVENING, OCTOBER 13, 1902 FIRST ARTICLE OF SERIES. es Many persons have an off-hand way of isposing of the subject by saying, ‘T don't belfeve in physlognomy, I don't belleve you can tell anything about a man or a woman by her face." Fortunately this {s a free country, where lberty of speech and a few other privileges are allowed the just and the unjust. Now, I do believe that a man's or woman's tendencies are early to be read in facial signs and in mature years, I know that, broadly spenking, our faces tell the history of our lives. The mind controls, or should control, the manner of our lives. ‘The mind—or perhaps T would better say the thought behind every action, like the finest, tinlest graver’s chisel— traces its record on our faces, in the look from our eyes, in the curve of the ps, in the expanse or contraction of the nostrils, and In a thousand criss- cross network nes on brow and check that never would have been without the thought that set the muscles in mo- tion, whose contractions finally carv the tell-tale tracks. However much the unthinking maa or woman may sneer at physlognomy as as an indication of character, as a mat- ter of fact we all do believe in tt. I once had an Irish maid who was {rightfully superstitious and was very sensitive on this particular subject. One day I forgot something and at- tempted to enter my apartment after having closed the dogr and started for ee 5 Seta bd HOW TO (a YOUR SWEEGHEARG'S FACE. wf BY HARRIET ADEE ID AYER. the stairway, My faithful Jane opened the door and, throwing up both hands, barred my entrance. “Don't! Don't sthep over the dure- sill fer the luv of Hivin!* she cried; “it's terrible bad luck. I laughed and sald: “Oh, Jane, you are 80 ridiculously superatitious,* whereupon she became very grave, and In an offended way sald: I am not superstitious, but I do be- Neve in stiens."" That's the way with the people who make fun of phystognomy reading, and protertl there's nothing in it. ‘They don't belleve in physiognomy, but they do judge people by thelr faces, Sooner or later you will hear one of the non-bellevers say of a man or we- man, or even of a horse or dog: don't Ike his eyes. “She doesn't look ‘honest, ‘She is a concelted thing; {t In her face.”” “She has an honest face," xcuse me from a woman with that sort of nose; it means misohlef." “That dog has an ugly pair of eyes. Or @ man “has a bull-dog expres- ston.” These are every-day terms. If they mean anything at all they mean that a man's or @ woman's character Is to be read more or less distinctly, according to the knowledge of the reader by the subject's face. Men in love are unreasonable beings. But the man who {s in love sometimes you can [has iuclé magnents Let him study his sweetheart'e face intelligently. He will know better how to appreciate her fine qualities and he will be far more generous with her shortcomings, which she 1s fairly sure to develop itn the course of a life partnership, if he realizes the tendencies she must over- come in order to triumph over faults which may, If not corrected, prove the entering wedge of a quick-growing dis- cord, Now, !f you are studying a girl's face, begin with the form. Most faces are of one of three distinct forms. One is the oval, That is to say, the face would, if framed, present the out- line of an oval, From the artist's point of view the oval is the most beautiful form. Look at your sweetheart critically, and if her face forms a perfect oval you may consider that she will possess @ great amount of firmness and self- reliance, that her friends will not only be those of her childhood, but that she will make new ones constantly, for she is usually of passionate loyalty. This is particularly the case, when oval-faced girl has brown eyes and brown hair or dark hatr. Artists and the great painters have almost always chosen the oval-faced, dark-haired and dark-eyed woman to represent the Madonna, the martyr and saint. The oval-faced woman ts intensely maternal. {dolatry. 6h love affairs. time, but oft You may force alty. This is no! type, but fo: pre-eminent. The ov: your affection face pretty n eves and glin 1s witty and round-faced She ts an a Tho round- Uclous or vi love on each frequently © She gets tire that she will no longer att She to the end of her days short married Ife, break her heart men have done «0, but you can rarely the ov brown eyes and brown hair to disloy- -faced woman ts a pir! for a man to tle to. couraged if you happen to have The round- ‘The round-fac! ful sort of a con otherwise she ts fat But whether she be fair or dark the lucky creature, and usually affair on hand. lasts, but she Ix not always to child with yeste But a day her breast, this morning she throws {t across the room and only asks not to y}ser it again. Of course there are exceptions, and it would be perfectly ridiculous to say that every woman with an oval face is a al saint and each round-faced girl a fickle coquetta IT am defining physi- gnomy sicns on broad, Mberal ines. Generally speaking the round-taced girl {s too impulsive. She has more flexi- bility than stability, She loves to have a good time and she will not be made a martyr of to drudgery of any sort. She is tye soul of amlability, and even In her | tancy ia what we commonly call ‘‘good- rted."* The round-taced woman !s sympathetic and generous; sho weeps with those who weep, and laughs with those who laugh. | She will divide her Inst dollar with you, and she always has lots of friends Constancy can ho cultivated, and It ts well for the round-faced woman—who frequently kngws herself that she {s fickle and says so—to make a study of her own case and | loyalty, The pear-shaped face ts spiritual of the four types. also regarded as the most It is the expansion of the up; particul the dome of th or pear-s loves her children is very constant in her She may mar! nd ten she remains a widow after a v e a seo and many al-faced woman with the t the highest Intelle. r womanly virtues she Ma- on But you need not be gt n to a round-faced girl. faced type is one whose early desoribes a circle. 1 girl is the most cheer- panton. Oftener than with dancing b ts of gold in her hatr. men attore her. she he fs a jolly, happy has a love girl dent lover while the spel! stant. man ig not n ndictive. She really ts separate occasion, She Js onstitutionally Ine d, and this does wilfully hurt the 1 wh Facts her, but she is like a | line to the the most | and it is! ellectual, | per part of forehend, ight, that haped, out. faced 1 | me | TO WAAT TYPE DOES SHE BELONG?» Pd se Usually women of this type have de ugo she hugged the toy to[licate and finely chiselled features. They, with fine, soft and not are bright-eyed, over-abundant hair. There are, of course,,.many modifica- tions of the pear-shaped face and the temperament 1s yarfed in proportion with these modifications, The pear-faced woman lives in ideals, Her senses are acute, her intelligence lively, her imagination brillant and poetic, She is trequently an artist or # Poot, and always an {dealist. The pear-shaped woman rarely lov but on If the man to whom sh gives her heart proves unworthy of th Righ standard she has set for him, and he frequently does, being more or less human, the pear-faced maiden or wife wraps ‘the mantle of silence about her ‘to the end of her days, mourns fer the death of Love. The sq ced type is the girl of endless y and grit. Square fac fy women have been at the head und front of every great. ndvanee Movement of the modern world, The square-faced woman Is a tower of rength, Let no man for an instant suppose that a girl whose face would fit better in a square frame than in one year shaned outline,: ve a tender vine to which; ay the part of stalwart oak. contrary is much apt ° and while the square. is fully capable of a gr rificing love, it will be { er to he Gappy dominated by a character lers stronger than her own, and these are not often encountered, Mrs, Ayer's next article will describe noses, and tell what noses of different shapes mean, The contract should then be signed and the wedding take place the next da; On the morning of the next day every one was on foot brave and early at Les Bons Amis, The best room was opened and aired, for there the marriage contract was to de signed, Boon M. Dumont and Chater appeared in earnest converse, “My poor Charles," sald Dumont, “Germenil must know, but It wiht be all right. You must have more confidence Where wiil Germenil find a more eligible son-in-law? Do I not give you up the mest flourishing business In all the country?" » ‘As ho spoke the sound of wheels were heara and M, Germenil and Clementine arrived. Charles took possession of Clementine, and ak soon as the two old friends were alone M. Germentl erled: “Why does Charles look so sad?” “He has reagon to look sad," said Du- mont. ‘I have revealed to him that which may affect his whole future hap- piness. ‘The fact ts, Charles {3 not my son,” “Parbleu!” exclaimed Germentl “Yes,” continued Dumont, “after the death of my Wife and only son (who died an infant), while journeying to this place, In great sorrow I stopped for rest and a few moments’ prayer at a way- side shrine; here I found a new-born infant wrapped in a ehawl, There was no clue to his parentage except the name Marle Beaumont worked In the shawl, No one but myscif knows the 1 a Se in Ow! BOM, went sald Germenil, “I see no reagon shy this should affect the marriage why Qhew your good heart.” answered . “sping his friend's hand, Dumonty eerie Contin —<————<— BIBLE IN NEW TONGUES. Four hitherto unknown tongu far as print 1s concerned, are now ing added to the lst of languages in which the British and Foreign clety prints the gospels, and of three are for the beneflt of subjects of His Majesty. The New Testament !s to be turned into Nyanja for the trives of the Bhire River Bank, Nyassalanc in this work the EAviemelonis Mission of the United Free Church of Scotland, the antyre fi of the Nstablished Church of Scotland and the Myera Mis- gion of the Duteh I formed Church collaborating sion in Yalunka is nearly ready ives of the Falaba trict of and in I u for thi of Ysabel: Island one of the group. Lastly. « raasletion :nio Visayan, spoken by some be- these and 2.460,004 persona’ In the Paillppine arch pelago, is belng undertaken. All are lerprizes of great Interest t9 philologis FRIENDSHIP AMONG INSECTS. AN ODD ALLIANCE. 1 ea er ne Dr. Hans Thoman, the ramous natur- alist, has discovered a curious and won- lerful Mfe communion between two forms of Insects, says the Philadelphia Press, The discovery was made while he was on an entomological expedition in Switzerland. There he found tho caterpillar of a Uttle blue butterfly, the lycaena argus. When he pleked It up he was sur- MAY MANTON DAILY DRESS HINT. noon gown Is deeper shade. held large en the three 1 waist, mailed prised to see two ants holding to its back. | He thought at first they had attacked | the caterpillar, but every caterpillar of the same species found by him that day was accompanied by ante, | Ho studied the strange occurrence then and found that, while ante and caterpillars generally are bitter ene- miles, these two particular specles were |intensely friendly Whenever he agproached a caterpillar | thus accompanied the ants on its back would prepare to fight, raise thoir heads angrily and open their mandibles ready to bite, Wasps and stinging files that tried to attack the caterpillars were attacked ‘n turn by the pugnactous creatures and generally driven aw. It was comparatively easy an to learn all these rex for Dr. arkable {t was not so easy for him to Scover what It was that led the ants to be s0 careful of the caterpillar. Yast. however, he solved the puzzle. On one of the segments of the cater- pillar he found @ tiny aperture. Out of this there fowed a thick, ayrup- Uke juice, not continual ot co} ¥, but only ne and the; a The ants, he this futce, a! found, watt greedily | and when it oars sorge themselvox on Thoy love It so much that th waiting for it, r long the ntervals may be between production Tt Is not love, or even gratitivte, b: Just plain greedlr the fight other er »prouch | thelr host ie or they hey do not how fe | | ures that QUEER SUPERSTITION. pnd oT yund y one nerica.”” sald Louls, ti 5 came pew u day ay |elass, which b ASsiw e with his hands | | nd, Ey it is satd Bonrs the Signature of ST. NICHOLAS BONAVITA AND HIS a LIONS Byery Atter APT 230 $1 STH AV 3% OBTH ST. i L2GTHST. +S eM IRE FS ETHEL BARRYMOR cri Evenings at GARDE! URS, a) MADI rie DE GARRICK T. THERE'S MANY A jel aT TH Tt, KOGLRS ICAN , AML r, The W. ‘ork City, nd money to “Cash Pulitzer Butlding, New sition, but nor or A thvow Hight om its orig ny DAV. ‘Tit a to day CASTORIA For Infants and Children, | The Kind You Have Always Bought FRO THEATRE, JOHN DREW WV 8a VOY RION THEATRE, VIRGINIA HARNED in 1 IRIS. THEATRE, PATRICK 2. Amusements. Amusemente, Cpa Amusements. 14th St, Theatre, or. 6:4 Brandon Tynan, ¢*s iy, Robert Emmet iigg_#? production and best cast In New York NEXT SUNDAY. ¢ D BiG CONCERT. ENORMOUS BILL 232. & 0c. (Seate Heady) aedome GARDEN, Col. nd Its Doora “ope ‘arnivora at 4.30 @ 10 P. ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 14th St. icaENP ACADEMY Mats Ture COMPAS Ba al AEVE. & Bar SLY THUREDAY. MORNING A CHINESE Wh Lt BELASCO THEATRE a ISLIE CARTE Rel Bey | Uroatway @ 49) MUMMY AND MUSING LaRD, wel THe THE hte wow B A cou dita Sk NIRY HOUSK, "CARROTS," Matinee Sa Wide a “ MPLA: : Rare icon ¢ in MRS, JACK. TORE and BAND. ie MATINEE TO- DAY, ROSE HILL * Deity THE TWO SCHOOLS |" Reta OAR ET HAGENB: ws Trained ‘Animals| ya ND ME vt ANvE THEAT HEATRE. HW way as ! R. 32) Na SLIP. THLELHMON. i} y . Wobul & FIELDS? | SEW BK i Sth (VARD 1 \ noity Betis PEED 5 21 week HENRIETTA | 10 CROSMAN | TheSword of the King ‘ THE | xt on’, “THE IV IVY LEAR, KEITH 5, v or OW IN TOW SO-GRBAT ACTS—20 \ PRICES, 25e. and 50s, ” way and th at, ergy, sng /HUBER'S 47" SWAN DAVIS TRIO, Coon Shouters: HOMAN & LANSOM, Hypnotists. Theatre Cae THEATRE, 416 9. & Broadway. atk” Mats, ve & Sa! Geo W. Leceres's gts ees, (OALLY at iLieV Manhattan PO ray 6 a, Ev. 8.20. Mot. Sat, 216, MINNIE DUPREE, A Ro! PLYMOUTH-TOWN, a DALE Oe cuit The New Mu: DISON squane A COUNIRY it ‘DN nf = 190 to 1 | WORLD IN WAX! CINE VA TOGRAP H. Gorouation King Btw 8.15. UU GLASER it Dolly Varden, 107th wt. TONIGHT, 8.15, Mat. roti ase RELLY & MODS comedienne Brooklyn Amusemonts, MONTAUK Web. baat nTaY L HOUS ex. 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