The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1902, Page 7

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¥ RVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 190% ii o wt HOW TO READ YOUR SWEEGHEART ‘S TRAITS, % nae MER \ ELEWENTA ARTICLE OF SERIES. eS The Fairy Dancer She Was “Fifine’’ on the Bills, but , Jack Mannon Recognized in Her His Dorothy. SWEETHEARTS MEET STRANGELY. | 4 Romance Began in a New Hampshir: Village Ends Happily ina City Music Hall. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. L, LEMAIREE. Ny Story Pub. Co) actress, and I'm going to try it," she 66] EINE, the Fairy Dancer," \was) had sald on the big curd that the white-| That had not been his first offer. He sulted boy placed at the corner| remembered well his dogged devotednes: of the stage to introduce the fif~h act which had brought out a proposal ever: in a downtown vaudeville. Jovher week. Finally, when she had A young man who was sitting well! gone, he had received somehow, an in-) toward the front and in the middle of tultion that, deprive a woman of what! (Copyright, 1902, by Ds + the ce, when the saw she has considered her own special prop. | es exe, ai SAGE. WEEE Fein Arca = Straightened back his shoulders and/ erty, no matter of how little worth It hi : ‘ : Ki - ONADENOTE OFA DEVELORIENT || ae . Sreccer ious drew a long, deop breath. Though he| seemed, and {t at once becomes to her ease é ‘ seta SEL! SACIMEICE AREASIGN OF LONG CHEEK had been watching every act on the| the most valuable and most desired of : " f pices ‘AND DIGNITY LIFE: . stage with more than ordinary Intent-| ail things. On this plan he had worked s tee ee ee S TEES ness {t had been through the natural! and wa three years. And he had é : : Rares MOST DELIGHTFUL AND curiosity of a stranger and not from come now to tempt her with the decd 6 Sy BT hashdal ACCOMPLISHET) HOSTES&ES @ personal interest. But Fifine! He had put himself to a good deal mind. It was plain that his| trouble to see Fifine to-night, ed her greatly and It gav The music burst into a quick, rollick-| him hope that her life here had not Ing dance and a petite, silk-and-lace | peen completely satisfying to her. ttle person tripped onto the stage with| Lunch over, she sat opposite him on —— ¢ @chirp and a whistle, bowing and and smil-| the couch and dropped her chin tn the) FULL ROUND CHEEKS DEWorTEe nev of her o'd home in his pocket and a wily elf-sacrifice and dignity. | “All consumptive patients are clear- with habitual sufferers from sluggish! © hoapltable cheek 4s réand and minded, bright and hopeful, ail more or /liver. If this sign ts acceepanted by a full in the lower part. The subject is| leas mentully adert. They, however, lack | yellow or sallow complexion, the iver !s Always a most charming hostess and is | staying power, even when not actually | torpld. Whon the whites of the eyes aro f go happy as when entertaining | feeble. They are never sluggish or lazy | tioodshot and more or lees covered on and generally work on, pray on, hope) their inward angles with yellowish fat Ease a SOUND PAIR OF LOMG hey friends, AT THE STAGE DOOR. Duss PP USUALLY He & An English writer's analysis of the |? to tho last of their short carcor, the ver Is more than torpid, It is dia- COMPANIONS OF A CHEERFUL cheeks is wo very interesting I quote| “When the countenance te pale and | easing, A breakdown may be looked for MIND. tt for the benefit of Evening World| the copstitution of a refined, nervous|at any time, Persons possessing natur- readers with shallow skina or weak [ast and slight exertion causes the face]qiiy active natures, but whowe employ- | LONG AND MOLLOW £5 tung. to flush greatly (as distingulahed trom | ment iy of too aedentary a character, | DENOTES Bar, Gi cenmeover He OLZOWS and depressions In they the jawe and chin aro often, but not| “The ‘poles of tho Junge, iver and|blushing), and if ansiety or bad neWS/are the greatest victims of “liver com. | AGRO ONT year AAmeeee fare are signs of weal and no| always, narrow and almost perpendicu-| stomach, and 1 Include the heart algo,|causea sudden nervous chilis down (he/ paint.” Buch persons are tempted to $ are eftttaced therein, Ac form and complexion, the cheeks are |disease, elt 1888, 2 in reading| lar instead of curved, the teeth long ording to size) spine and throughou or valvi the body, heart] taye alcoholte ar de! fon ia to b props and hasten the) nolow and crimped cheeks in leading? tx or weak-| cataatrop! the entra er Indications of the cheeks.| and narrow, and the nose also wilt be races or individuals? Philanthropiste A full, round palr of cheeks is the} narrc all the indications are for in- nificant of good health or the Ye-lress of function may ve looked for. ‘The liver should be alded by natural} and reformers, victors by fleld and flood, usual accompaniment of od health, | suMecient breathing to supply necessary consequently of digestion, | pale-faced people seldom have | ramediex—exercise or massage, a care-|‘theroos in the fight’ for good oF ill, fine lun, an unimpaired digestive | oxygen to keep the lungs healthy. Ky. amlabiiity and what not. =| hearty” countenance, fulty restricted diet, electriclsy and hy-| have been and are men of chase Apparatus he mature woman with! Phe four-sided or rectangular cheek| “When the lungs are healthy and vig-| “Goods dheeation presents Ite #lgn in| aropathy constituting the curative ther-| “While the cheeks pr Ps youthful, round cheeks Is usually of a regarded as a sign of conscientious. | 210US: the circulation will be perfect} ine jaughing muscular ridge, which lies apathy employed, marked degree signs of Health, AY) do! 1 y and the disposition more or less san- Fil be t 4 Hot so cleafly, except {n the réctangulae? cheerful, happy nature. She may not al-| pegs, It belongs to the square-boned | ful, THe ek acroes the face from the sides of the} “phe vulgar {dea that ‘cheek’ Is| form, furalan’ sof longevity. 33 ways be deeply intellectual, but she ts | subject, and indicates great firmness) SU buoyant and hopeful, The cheeks | yos6 down to the lower jaw on olther| necessary to success Js a shrewd one, must be furnished by the face ag Wee whole, ‘The principal si will be full, firm-fleshed and the in hue. ™M-| sac, This sign fa marked in the har-| and ls based on keen observation. We en: monious face, and is sadly wanting In| eee the physical aide of the argument o:| addition to ti those. of health, and additton to distinot and well-pron rie 1 never misanthropic, and 1s not affilcted |ang hard common sense. Susan B. f longevity ‘a with nerves, Anthony has the four-sided cheek, ; plexton more or less ri Should the lungs be weak and inert I have yet to hear of a round-cheeked| Very full checks, that owe thelr round- {the inharmonious physlogonomy. Dys-| statement In faces every day. features harmoniously correspond y ho facial muscles will be thin and the! suicide, On the contrary, the long, | ness to a development of the bony struc- San pIeaBR pale, If ines lunes ate dis, |2e28% or Imperfect digestion is shown ‘A good cheek is easential to health,| fone, welletormed. an and’ frateiy nt » harrow, thin cheek {8 often a marked| ture, are a sign for a long lite. in Inflammation of consumption | bY te checks falling in below the cheek | phyalcal power and energy. Well-de-| cheeks, good-sized ears, Well thrown ou cused ce from the head and rominen characteristic of the man or woman| High cheek bones do not of necessity they will indiente the fact by a hectic YM pale and sallow complexion. Full-|pned features, belonging to the great, well-projected cant eer ihe combined. who {s always Jooking for the worst. betoken a wicked nature, though there ‘0 nega at the temples, at and slightly] to the strong and noble, to leaders and| signs for a long lif A thin, long obeek denotes physical | is almost a universal superstition to this Cou cleesy between Thabearnaee cijabove the miter angle of the eye. Indi-| heroes all the world over. Generally | = feebleness; when there $s pronounced | effect. the iene and the opening of the ear, /cates, We are told, an active liver. When | speaking, of course, there are individual! fre, Ayer’s next reries will be — hollowness there 18 usualiy dyspepsia!’ Combined with brutal and savage} yven in health small nostrils and small |the face 1s narrow and ho.low at this} exceptions; there can be no more eM-| «ow to Bring Up a Baby.” It and often inherited tendency to con-|physiognomy signs they accentuate| facial muscles, with or without large,|polnt, then the liver Is weak. I think icy with feeble cheeks than with i] begin in Thursday’: I sumption, thelr cruel signifoance but in refined | full eyes and long, fringed eyelids, pro-|this is a better sign of imperfect nutri-| feeble brains, foreheads, noses or chins, | Will begin in Thursday's Even- When consumption is a family legacy|and gentle faces high cheek bones de-}elaim the consumptive diathesis. tlon, However it is generally present} Who ever saw shallow, weak, small,|ing World. Amusements, Amusements. Letters, Questions and _Answers. | THE OLD RELIABLE \isit PROCTOR Pezyieia.. 255%) HUBER’S {4TH ST. HOSEUM, “IT'S GOOD TO BER YOU, JACK MANNON." . Suit 001 K ON." SHE SAID. | every APT 4 EVR. | HULL OROMESTHAS. : Tai aS ; i - NDOUS VAUDEY! * Ay Flghitand leet to the protracted|| honow of Gar two nandaltrom which “The Right to Work.’ {{f a half hour fatigues you. Before tho) for taxpayers to form a Municipal Unjon 98d st. ley'h Bowkyea., Kilateure'e: Jape. Geo A CONGRESS OF CURIOSITIES, % : Ri Hch EheatealtheTtavorits stig Meokeeavapviae Quid ln iter ohGe taal Teton ealior ob tae ng Wort reaction sets in after the exercise bathe. | for the defense of their interests Bfane. ULV. ryaeerald—25 Ventures, | bean, May, Glantens: Wa, Ching Ma, Beats ‘g pee sete Peatprnnl rani of [taieaereee Pa Ee oy poe To work is not a night but a “duty | Do not stay In the bath longer than one LANDLORD. bthay AS YOU LKR VT. Maule Setigman ae St oes yeondert a an : m Veet Hh | a y r ere P, “rub vn’? ae Rosa: i Pavorite Stock. Sumpius the house watched every movement of|Plainly he puzzled her. She thought hiv hanes ally to the Astors, Vander- | minute, and “rub down’? quickly and| Jersey Girls, * Sua Scente ‘Re Vaudeville. ant Miniature Wile gher slim ankiés, every bend of her|grown quite indifferent. Thus tae frat | PI'S. cas It does to an Avenue A| thoroushiy with a rough towel. To the Faltor of venting World 68th s ON THE HOWRY: Me. Cummings ‘graceful, whirling body, and he recalled] step in the slege was won. emaker or washerwoman. Again, Plenty of Cheap Land. Several times I have heard it said dt yavarus sass Yous eat | Where does the “right to work" of the unemployed come ii? E. H. JONES, No. 64 Fast Eighth street. that New York people do not think > y has many pretty girls. 1 travelled a great deal in both Burope to mind, as he had done hundreds of; “Do I dance well, Jack?’ she asked, times before, just how that Ittle form] coaxing for a compliment. ‘ditor of Tho Evening World: there are thousands of acres of land THE WAGES OF SIN, Mist Keim a NSE, “sd ate'“Powier, Permanent Stock q * all favorites. Vander, ae free S TOCK COMPANIES IN FRURCTION Keren READ ALL THBATRES re = EMPIRE THEATRE, m 3 MATINESS THIS WEEK. ‘TO-! DA, TO-MORROW and SATURDAY, * ; Evenings, 8.20. Matinees, 2.15. JOHN DREW | rie ntinnind Sie. weber & Pields HAL [uate to Mats. Tues. had yielded and swayed in his arms,| “You're great, Dorothy. You always within a few minutes’ ride of New York and how her eyes had laughed and her| could dance, you know.” An to Vesuvian, which are as level as a board, low in| 4 America and have not yet found checks glowed, when together they used] “I thought you had forgotten.” She| To the waitor of The Evening World: price and only require drainage to make | SAY sitls 80 pretty, “buxom, dllthe and &p out-dance the others in the old] glanced up at him sideways, but he gave| Kindly let me know If “volcano” and|them tdeal home asltes for New Yorkers, | (bonair'’ as the girls of dear old New | town hall of that old-fashioned, moun-| no sign. ' “Vesuvius” mean the ‘Refer to tho famous "Jersey Meadowa,” | Jer#ey. If readers do not credit thi taln-hidden New, Hampebire village. “Jack,” she ventured again presently, P. PATERNOSTER. | Let some syndicate drain them, bulid| let them come over to Jersey and the if LF, eehold, N. J. will prove Itsel He forgot the presence of those about| “I've somehow always held up before | Vesuvius 48 merely the name|cheap homes on them and thue relleve him. He was hack in the long meadow|me what the people thought of me at| given to a yoloanic mountain near Na-| the overcrowding of our big city. and the girl was with ‘him, his llttle| home, and T could not do anything that| ples, In Southern Italy. HENRY BELDING, JR., KN ‘To-night, 8 atrarp. Extra Mat. To-day at Aixteon-year-old sweotheart, Dorothy; would make them despise’ me if they| For Mientrie “iL on Ninth Avenue. Schuetzen Park, | ——s_— WILLIAM GILLETTE in SHERLOCK | Hiei Time: Humming Birds & Onfons., bushes, and he was teaching her now to] So she did remember the home people. | yn 2) BUSIAE (tr eek cao eat mae oe Divoreg or ssueme MAY MANTON | va) in sono As het | NONORA eERONORAL Ly : : t] To the Ealtor of The Evening Worl | | 3 Seca cal gllSaueG ca thier ecinoe Sateone ranetrae deter him about the|M@e 8nd on the Sixth avenue “L" to, ‘The divorce question should clatm DAILY DRESS HINT. ie caries eg a etcaat Ss : ‘And when whe tired of trylag. they |home people, thelr old playmates, the| Elty-einth street. But why nat on the | most of the attention of the people and | Absolutely Pure Evenings at § sharp. Matinee Saturday at 2, 10 Pertormenene Only, o* pelted cach other with daisies. church people, she had not forgotten | Ninth Avenue “L.2” Why must the old-| the law-makiog bodies of the nation, VIRGINIA HARNED in IRIS. | "eset Wet 6 tes Sees i OO And now he was watching the girijone, and sho reviewed the news and|{*rloned “L" engine trall its mass of| When divorce Is obtainable In so easy THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE R i COTTHEATRE Saito whom they called Fifine, dancing to a| gossip gleefully. Smoke along Columbus avenue? = Weja fashion as'is the case to-day it is Seen hie sata ie EXTRA MATINEE BLBCTION DAT. crowded house in a vaudeville theatre, | «win, Jack, ft seeme somehow thia \WCSts4ers have some rights, If tie | table not only to wreck and destroy tho 3 MATINEES THiS WBEK. David Helnwo presents tor @ limited season Me + Q electrics aro practicable on one road| home, but to do serious injury to the Amusements. TO-DAY, TO-MORROW and SATURDAY When she had-pirouetted off the stage! wan a dream, my belng here, and a€|wny not on aucehere Ain why block | whole country as well, Without a doutit naRNubina, OP GERALDINE, The ~stupsornness | LESLIE ee oie again, kissing her hands gayly and in-) though that qwas my 1 iscriminately to boxen,and gallery, the| pellove T have wantey Hall tee eine ang | ‘he game by renewing che Fitty-clghth | divorce should be restricted. BR A rar , Paha es ng man rose from tils seat and find- . street train? The shuttle cars there are LOUIS A. KERPEN. S| NBWSAVOY THEATRE. 24th a1. & Bway. you. never"knew what was the matter.” And| >, 2 N. HN D. 3 MATINEPS THIS WDEK. ing his way to tho stage entrance asked! 5111) his sult of armor scemed without|P°* GHORGE V. DASKEM. Full House Beats a Flash, soun'ts risiten’ a as seat: svcorss, THE TO-MORROW and SATURDAY, PUN ON THE B ee for the dancer, He waited with somé|q weal spot. Ye ‘To the Walter of The Brening World: , “he wit equals, AS Rrecines at B15, Matinees at 2.1 sO ee trepidation at hid daring. RASA ay home, ha iivee tere aogeyi| 7 tte. Mtr ofi'THe) Hemiae “Worldl Which wins in a game of poker, a full ruoncpon |, A COUNTRY HOUSE, oe ee a When she finally came, having chang] s16 drow the deed from thie pocket and| Did James O'Nelll play ‘Monte Cristo" | house or @ Mush? ROBDRT R. YW 1 winning by ‘Auth BARAYHORE ed by “CARROTS.” ther fancy dress for a street costume, Go and) + the Grand Opera-H New ¥. Yes. ments pane Hi ees shamelessly watched the tears in her Saeche hh WaT TD AAR. 3) . | thetiotaan GARDEN THEATRE Zt 6.8 Madioon Av, ; she esas enor ine te 3 oTothy | evap ag ahe read it, within the last five yeans? W. | To the FAltor of The Rrening World: SUeeetelip een: XTRA MATINEE TO-DAY AT 2 ares BOSTOCK S pea CH ™ a Is @ woman 6 ven 8.16, Matinee Saturday, 216. Bhe looked at iim questioningly a mo-| “Our things, too, the old furniture. Advines Wite, husband MLIBUT DENS ETtie ace eee 14th St. Theatre, wt Wel sat tat Oe A PATRICK CAMPDELLS EXTRA AVNRETELOLE ment, and paled a bit as whe recognized | Did you buy those? Is my old room just| To the Rdltor of The Evening World: Mid bye dudget aoe wotcottn nes MATINEE | ‘0-DAY. THE JOY OF LIVING. EXTRA m5 aye him, but soon the Dlood swept Hotly| tho same?” _ IAS Haber chogh) SWtollla janes eae ybe) | Eae eset ML AUTOR In oa ee Nov. 10-MRS. LE MOYNE, over her food again, as she held out) “Just the same, only I havo added | from readers as to her husband's affec- igaiiettnemcre OLCOTT lord Limerick Town. | rapison sa. THeaTAR 203 ae her two bands in ber old girlishly im-| ew: tlons, She says he loved another before |To the Maitor of The Evening World: ‘Alay Full ot Human interest." HERALD: Pia By Ld oa ear tr| NE prewng “And, Jack, the morning glories, are|h!8 marriage and still speaks of that] WA clalma that all that is required in exe > sivene, | Sees ®*” |THE TWO SCHOOLS | | MATINEE TO-DAY. : good, $0 vee, you, Jack Mannon,"| they around the back porch an they | other girl. Let “Molito” do her best to] Voting a split ticket ts to put the X In ALNDELSSOHN HALL, M*%nWWent, doen street, Re baat peel rte mS ae Aa ald, she lowered her eyes to| used to be? And the roses, aro they|Keep her husband's love, Because he| the circle of the ticket you support and 1 2) Wane BiSaawey wEloisnin H 0 joeaue ke asi tessa ene ‘EY TROCADERO ORL UR : x thelr moisthess. * alive? You remember, you helped me| talks of the other girl it don't signify}an X in front of the particular candidate ANDERSON-BAERNSTEIN | [araay peat at AL | Bada, [na WOODEN WanDmNa"—Vauteriin’ | Daa Pitts rou beard eave) onénged you.|set them out? And the swing, under| anything. Have more faith in him, Mol-|on the other ticket whom you wish to JOINT SONG REGITAL, — [aig Station Frohman” — And not expecting you, of course, I/that tall elm. Oh, do you remember?| le. Tere {8 no harm In, his wanting| vote for. B claims you should put an X TUESDAY, NOV. 4, 8.15.7. M. TN, ERY MAN... De Re er er eee couldn't know, you ail at once,” she ex-| You used to send me up so hign 1| to, Know how she CUE ACR Dad In front of every candidate's name on AUIS DANNENBERS, AT THE: PIANO : h COUNTRY GIRL: os plained as they were walking home,|could look into the bind’s nest on the| Sout nis marriage. Don't notice ajl |Your ticket and not the one you wish to sl bs oes ona: Bos i Same production ax seen at Mendelssohn Hall, - ‘. . skip and jn front of the candidate in fe she had insisted that he lunch with| second limb. [the little nonsensical’ things. La the other tleket whom fou want co vote Without further pretense she was sob-|them off, Be cheerful. There, te noth | ro? vousnould put an X. ee they Fadhed the tttle etsnt by| bing with her head in the soft plliow, | 128 ke it. BE ROWE) W. STRIGERWALT, PASTOR’ SE 4, Jaa Richmond Gienroy, London Favorite, Murphy & || AMERICAN 22°58 50a ne MAT, DAILY, ANS ENEMY (Exe't Mon.), 2e. | ue ott ten chamiver, which served the triple|But the man feared yet {t was only for The Maiden . a | Hs purpowe of bedroom, reception and din-|the home ghe was grieving. Y (OF ve the adltor of The Breatng Worl Fa pearing Add sae pepsin bs FOR INDOOR WEAR a Ae dloe-PAUL WARNES. & CO prea Fate Day & Sat. 33 ing-room, sho ewung herself In front] Presently one eye became vistble and| Will you kindly tell_me the maiden] Tyne tun of fim evening Mant, | | No material Is better Itked for Indoor TO-DAY, OPEN 1.00 A Me au Seas tacsl lala bry ROBERT EEsoR or - FORTUNE, of him. 4 a very damp, white check, while a|name of Mrs. Henry Payne Whitney?| 90'S, toe, Tale Sain igngh oy rifeg’ | Wear than fino supple broadcloth, ‘Tho Wi Ths GRAND GENTRAL mug, ‘4th Street Every SU NDAY Night, VAUDEVILLE CONCERT “And I? Now, look at me, Have 1]choking voice, sounding very tadiatinot | There has been quite an argument over] Hrown and Jones. Smith Rete 100 votes, | very stylish gown tilusteated Ie made ws OSBORN'S PLAY HOUSE ate 9 Lexington Avenue. | rc Acks, nrway @ (6th week, HENRIETTA, grown ever s0 old?” she asked. and forlorn, {n the depths of the cushton, | it, some saying she was a Miss Hay; | 7 0"" Ke reiDihstet sipped kel % votes. | of the material in a delightful shad Fatra Matinee To-Day, Election Day.! KAL 1148 To-day, American Dey) VES HMI OR OSMAN “Not old, but you've changed some,| questioned: others a Vanderbilt, G. NEWSTATE, | Niet, are Ree and plu-/5 fecru ant is bined witi a vest of] Bret, at $45, Ma TOMMY ROT.) B: AND Aiternoon and Evening, Xie Mat Ee ine ais a eera ot eme Bis Dorothy,” the man replied soberly, and} "Jack, which girl ts # that's going to gilarty, Bayne Whitney ‘married Miss ID F. LYNCH. |oream linen lace and under-sleeves of 3 MVED SEATS, B0c., Tic., 4 Kisg a neiges wonderad with a misglving how) have my room?” jertrude Vander 3 brother mar- A bandlordisl woen, ecru chiffon and trimmed with bands of Bach Strect | ————— - hanged. It wae up to him then, and he waa |e? Miss Hay. To the Faltor of The Evening World, gream “dotted and edged” with black, ee ae ae UAE ' Madison So, Garden 24% ° Adm, 0c é Tite ert Began to prepare the simple! down on this knees beside her. ‘The fonmehenil Dimeuitles confront upartment-house | the’ tushionudie “fancy sleeves Th : 5 ATA AYS RLOWERKS & 5 SCULPTURE | 3 ; yanoh, She drew the tiny oll stove from|slege had worked to a charm even ‘to|Te the Editor of The Bveniog World: owners. Although the coal atrike is | graceful 8 CUt In three pieces an i ae 2 Se | EXHIDITION OF! 2 > ate A RUINED LIFE; LIFE, under the couch and the food from the] the end. Please publish the plural of "Mon-|over, they have to supply thelr tenants | {8 lengthened @ graduated cireular ’ x Groupe. | New Vora. Bele Wed Bat.dess,|Prices, [_ | Se dresser drawer, meanwhile chattering] ‘Jack, you don't want me, do you? |®#* W. BEEKMAN. [with steam feat at a cost atill above flounes that. Aelia inverted Diats EDE _ CINEMATOGRAPH, | HAGENBEGX'S TRAINED ANTALS, Brooklyn Amusements, in a nervous way, telling him of experi-|Oh, it’s T, Jsn't It? Say It's 1." | Yeu, the normal price, Without effectual pro- | Material ed for the medium Seyricay ra ecene Tosnighe vt} | i! t ences which she meant should appear| And while her Ups changed from the|To the Editor of Th) Kyventng World: tection for rent, they eufter under the | S1#6, for, Din 7-8 yards 21 Inches 3 ere MONTAUK. eae inches wide, or 2 yards |) r Mat. | SUNN’ with 1 To: funny, but which seemed to him only|cushion to his cheek she murmured the| Can a person vote if his twenty-first} "free time allowance’ clause, which | {\“Inones wide. terribly pitiful. He studied the sur-|rest of the forlorn story, birthday falls on a day between the last | encourages frequent moving of tenants} over lace and roundings which had been her home for; ‘It’ been so hard and jt doesn't| registry day and Election Pie As - and necesw#tates renovating apartments | Under sleeves; a4 yards. of all- -4 yards of chiffon for ‘or skirt, 81-2 yards 21 inches wid inches wide, three years and he wondered at the am-|amount to anything without love, And at every re-renting, Little wonder that an ae ; i By eats ano TAN bition that made uch endurable. He} didn't know for sure what the matter Morning Exercine. ownership of property mo often leads to | éoinches wide.) Tus Or te YAN HERALD.» . ae KEITH Oates | Pci aad ae Sea Se recalled how she had repulsed him when| was till I saw you to-day, But no-|-o the Editor of The Rvening World: financial ruin! Undoubtedly corpora-| _, Waist pattern, pe 3,963, In sizes for a THE © L. ‘KINGS. _—_———— SrTraeaa hse OR recat $ inex Waemic he had tried to keep her th the old vil-|body knows as well as I how to keep| iq it advisable on arising in .-e morn-|tions and individual millonatres pront | $3 i: 28 3 und #@ Inch bust mailed for PRINCE Bway, 20th at, Eves. 8.90 |X ARVZONA euxtiO RETURNS | lage. Reena, house in my old home, | its surely I, | ing to exercise a half hour and probably |by disaster which overtakes people of | Skirt pattern, No, 3,993, in sizes for a C SS, Mat. To-day I WILL UB READ. ‘Why Jack, twenty dollars a month|you want, dant tt, Jack? get heated and then take a cold bath? |modcrate means who Invest thelr say- | %, 26 2% and 9 inch waist, matled for 16] Wee: " Grommlth & Co, The Night of the Party of the <i, B, DODSONSANNIB ImIaAl rey Agape i for the two of us. ‘That wouldn't buy} “It it's surely I you want, Dorothy,” CONSTANT. |ings in aparimenthouses, but that dose) Cents i‘. = BA ESP 3) tive er, tt tn 'aae te Dead mld Teck, hai ‘Bxerclse for @ shorter time on erising ed0. to general proapetty. It ts tne! Putco Builute, Neer Pore eigen | CASINO “re.54%. “+ A GHINESE WOKETAOON 32 ek Ae ee ire ast Teed hours -.

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