The evening world. Newspaper, January 6, 1903, Page 11

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SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTDR. Gngliehman, ts turned out of doors Sail yivie tes lost a —_+—— CHAPTDR Il. Mating, ughter Dawes returns doing 80, BAPING to his feet Dawea's first impulse was tu rush upon ‘hia assailant, but he saw the ready bayonet of the sentry gleam and he checked himself with an effort, for his assailant was Mr. Mau- riee Frere. “What the devil do you do here?” asked that gen- “You tasy, siulking hound, tleman with an oath. what brings you here? If I catch you , toot on the quartenteck again I'll give you a week tn irons!"* Rufus Dawes, pale with rage and opened hia mouth to justify himself, but he allowed the words to die on his lips. What was "Go down below and remember what I’ cried Frere. Frere leaned forward and took the girl's shapely hard with an easy gesture, but she drew a flash of her black eyes. “You coward!" she said. The convicts were battened below for the night In berths that allowed sixtesn inches of space to each of the 180 prisoners. There was no ventilation, no Ment. In the tler of berths where Richard Rufus Dawes, lay, his nearest companione were a surly giant hamed Gabbett, a cripple named Jemmy Vetch and a ian who called himself John Rex. ‘This last man's history was noteworthy. first place his resemblence to Dawes ‘This was accounted for by the fact that ® son of Tord Bellasis, but by another and earller marriage than that which the susceptl| had contracted with Richard's mother. Rex had, Crofton; had educated himeelf to live the pall He had been sentenced to seven yea pent in Van D Dien ane Land, His wift in boyhood, taken the name of Iionel and had, with tie help of his beautiful but unserupu- lous young wife, preyed on society in the capacity of gentleman gambler until one exploit, stepping beyond had fanded him tn the net of justice. J be near him, had a In that capacity under the Pursuant to a plan that husband and wife had pre- arranged, she was even now engaged in a violent filrtation with Capt, Blunt, skipper of the Malabar; Maurice Frere, and with Private Miles, with Liout, one of the sentries whore heavy door leading to the convicts’ quarters. Sarah was unusually polite to this she paueed near him. For she had over- This sentry heard Surgeon Pine say hospital, “Against orters, miss! ask him." putting your mortification, the use? ve told you,” of the fow, conspicuous by its white beckoned to Miles, it away with tern!" brought It toward het the bunk sat up erect and Devine, elias} ight. “Sarah!” The girl leaped out of In the was striking. Rex was also ble nobleman by his wits. savagely, to and fro. arm imprison- in order to THE CUP THAT CHEERS—THAT’S TEA— DESTROYS WOMEN’S COMPLEXION Harriet Hubbard Ayer Advises the Fair Sex to Go Slow with the Fragrant Brew from China. HBN I begin to write against tea drinking I feel as though I were assaulting one of my oldest family friends. I may as weil confess that, though I) rarely indulge my taste, I am myself a natural-born tea lover if such a thing may be. But the excess to which tea drinking 1s at present carried is a real dissipation and, In every other form of extravagance, it 1s followed by a weakening of the fbre—in this case both physical and moral. The woman who cannot get on without her cup of tea at a certain hour of the day \s a woman enslaved. You may emile at the bonds that are forged in a tea cup, but try to break Away from the habit of excessive tea drinking and you will realise that you have been entertaining a good deal of a tyrant In what you supposed to be an innocuous beverage. There 1s no question as to the Injuri- ous effect of extravagant tea drinking upon the nerves. No woman can keep her complexion Jong after she has cultivated diseased herves. 2 few days ago a friend of mine sent pamphlet containing Fraulein Bophle Leppel's paper read before the ‘Woman's Christian Temperance Union in Melbourne, Australia, The W. C. T. U. decided that tea is @ harmless beverage taken dn modera- ton, Bo itis, But what is moderation—and how many women tea drinkers are moderate? Last summer when I was in England to what lengths the tea habit had gone and the cofi- cessions made by the busiest of em- ployers of the largest shops to a cus- tom which certainly goes far to prove that tea drinking does not differ from any other form of drinking in the crav- ing it creates, Hairdressers, manicures, typewriters, @eametresses, dressmakers, shop em- Ployees, every one, high and low, ex- 5 ects one or two cups of tea in Hrts- and each afternoon and gots it. They Way they must have it, Fraulein Lep- pel is @ celebrated teacher of dietetics nd her conclusions are ‘well worth con- aldering. “Ih my opinion,” said Fraulein Lep- el, ‘next alcohol, the greatest master of the human will and destroyer of human vitellty ls tea, Tea belongs to the same elasé of drink as alcohol. Lts constituents, those of aloohol, act on the ner- aystem, although in @ different Alcohol is g stimulant—tea is a The former is capable of ife ®y. producing sive action, the other by preventing action. “Taeine 1s ene of the most important @lements in tea, and there te no doubt that the action of theine on the sys- is principally through the agency of the nerves, If theine is given in @ufficient doses to animals it kills them, bee deen given to frogs and half a killed @ frog that was full grown. animal to which theine ts admin- ietered Js at first paralysed, then efter @ time becomes convulved and finally dies. “The death from theine is very similar to that from hydrosyanic gold, hemlock and other pedative poisons, Such polsony do not produce sleep or drowsiness at once; and it is only when insensibility eomes on that any remarkable derange- ment of the functions of the brain it way. = | gaerved. The action of theine on the ranmisoes hilarating influence, removing fatigue and depression and enabling one to re- sume work with renewed vigor. “The craving for tea, which ts fre- quently exhibited by strong people as well as by weak, is caused by the In- fluence of theine on the nervous sys- tem. But the action of theine does not always cease with its immediate In- fluence. It has been shown by competent experimenters that {t has the same kind of conservative action on the tissues that 1s found to take place with alco- hol. Any substance which exerts an Influence on the nervous system, whether that Influence Is stimulative or sedative, prevents the destruction of ‘tlasue; and this 1s not always a health- ful or desirable effect, “For instance, when persons are growing stout, when the blood is get- ting corrupt from the introduction or the retention of improper elements, it Is always desirable that every facll- ity should be giyen for the increased activity of the excretory organs, The healthy life of the tissues depends on their constant waste and reconstruc- tion, Now, the soluble tannin in tea Produces indigestion, loss of appetite, palpitation of the heart, mental excite- ment, sleeplessness and a thousand other troubles, “Tue Woman's Christlan Temperance [% tea, It exercises, primarily, an ex- Union has decreed that tea shall be considered harmless if taken in modera- But what joderation? Our she takes seven cupé of tea a day, excepting when ‘dieting’ her- self, she never takes more than s!x— taking care, however, I doubt not, that the sombre hue of the sixth Is funereal A BALANCING TRICK, A performer in 4.0 Bnglieh music hall raises on bis chin @ piece uf furniture combining awning, table and chair; also a * ne eating bis dinner. Much depends the balance of the man In the chair, ey this was not pentect Mfted fell headlong into lady's maid to Mrs. Vicker and sailed on the Malabar selzed that day with typhus fever and transferred to murmured Sarah, just for one took.” “Mr. Frere will let me go in, I dai Miles swore under his breath. “Curse Mr, Frere! Go in if yer like," won't stop yer, but remember whet I'm doing o: Smiling at the poor lout sho was befooling ahe passed into the cabin that served as hospital. The alight nolse made by the opening door roused the occupant of one of the berths; he rose on his elbow and began to mutter. Sarah Purfoy paused In the doorway to listen, but she could make nothing uneasy murmuring. Raising her arm, he lantern,” she whispered, “bring me the lan- He unhooked st from the rope where !t swung and At that moment the man in he cried “Sarah! and swooped with a lean arm through the dusk, a¢ though to setge her. struok the lantern ont of Miles's hand and was back at the bunkhead in a moment, With open mouth and agonised face she stood in the centre of the cabin, lantern in hand, to stone, gar'ng at the man on the bed. She dropped the lantern and rushed to the bed. And wreathing her arma around the man's head, she pulled {t down on hep bosom, rocking it the! Just then the quick ears of Miles heard the jingle of fere’s the doctor coming. miss the sentry saluting. Come awa: She seized the lantern, and, opening the horn allde, ‘og an advertisement for “Say It went name of Sarah Purfoy. In the prison duty It was to guard the that John Rex had been berths, was a “T want to go Into the declared Miles. y, wt gol grapeshot. he sald; 'T sleeve in the gloom, she carried to the twisted himself toward the in shrill, sharp tones. the cabin like a panther, like one turned halt partition, was anid. he cried. Quick! > “T hear aroused him. enough to mourn for the missing sev- enth! ‘Many people say they never take tea that is, they only pour dolling water over the leaves and do not allow them to infuse, and that, therefore, tt can do them no harm. In the same way many people who never take alcohol, occasion- ally take just a spoonful of brandy in thelr coffee, a glass of beer at dinner. or a little whiskey and water at night! “In regard to the argument about weak tea I might make two statements worthy, perhaps, of consideration. The} first Is that when a person is possessed of a knowledge of the properties of | foods, sotld as well as Hauid, and when | ‘the person rightly combines those food elements, very little, if any, drink ts re- quired, It 1s well known that much Mqutd distends the'stamach and weakens the action of the fluids concerned In dl- gestion. To confirm this one need only note in the street the unsightly figures of many of the passers-by, esppclally those in advanced years. Fraulein Leffel's paper in of too great length to quote in ite entirety, I do not agree with the distinguished lady in her radical views in foods, but I know that “tea drinking in modération"’ is @ phrase of extraordinary elasticity. Any habit of eating or drinking that requires an effort to control Is dang The woman who ‘cannot get on with- out her cup of tea,"" the woman who de- pends on her cup of tea, ls the woman who should stop drinking tea. « I have discovered that a cup of hot water, or two or three cups, taken at the tea-drinking time, will, if persisted In, break the habit the depressing after effects usual when even a mild habitual stimulant is with- drawn. The most obstinate complexion to {i prove and mako healthy—and pretty, és that which may be dij ‘aced the excessive ariaking tei green te id the first step Fomedying the. colorless. leathery akin of the habitual tea-drink ting off of the cup that. lies stroys the beauty of og HARRIET HUBBAR AYER, — MATERIALS FOR “BREAD. Some of the many materials used for bread have been brought to notice by is the cut but de- Paul Combes, mys the Philadelphia Ledger. Beans, peas and other legumi- nous seeds, as well as maize and other vegetable tances, require mixing with wheat or rye, or the bread will be soggy and indigestible, Mashed pota- toes with wheat or maize fidur give palatable bread, which, however, tracts moisture, Rice flour makes fine yellow. bread, agreeable both to sight nd taste, and the chestnut bread that forms the chief food of the Cors mountaineers 18 healthful, asgresab! digestible, and keeps fifteen days or longer, Bread has been made from acorns. Mosses, dried and powdered, are Btlll esteemed tor bread by Norwegian The roots of bryonia, colchicum,: iris, ree ataria. mandragora and hellebore the leaves of gconite are among tie other substances of which bread bas been made in tlme of great need, oT AN ANTI-FLAT LEAGUE, In Jackson County, lilinols, the birth- of Gen, Logan, @ movement h, been started which should be far-reac! Ing in its infuen Its purpose is for the advancement and betterment of the people in their home life, the cultivation of the apirit of dove for the home an¢ He wacred essociatior The promoters of this movement desire to encourage the establishment of. individual hom outside the walls Of an apartment bulld- sunshine can} ot South Africa use to the present reach, To re-establish the domestic|/day, The Greeks used sickle shaped | P) rpirit and to exalt the power of home| ienives, sometimes made of precious influence is the praiseworthy object of hold your tongue. Bho bent over the convict, low, and then glided out of the cabin just as Pine descended the hatchway. pregnant with murmurs, feet long and 8) feet wide, and ran the full height of the ‘tween deoka, vin, about 6 feet 10 inches high. The barricade was planks were in some places wide enough to admit a musket barrel. nace. At first sight this the humane purpone of ventilation, but a second glance Glepelied this weak conclusion. The opening was just large enough to admit the muzzle of a small howitzer, secured on the deck below. In case of a mutiny the jera could sweep the prison from end to end with those who remained. The felon, Rufus Dawes, had stretched himself in his bunk and tried to sleep. But, though he was tired and sore and his head felt like lead, he could not but keep broad awake. ‘The detachment of fifty being on deck airing, the prison was not quite so hot as at night, and many of the convicts made up for thelr Iack of rest by snatching a dog-sleap in the bared bunks, Three of these old hands who had “done time” he- fore were conversing together just behind the par- titlon of Dawes's bunk. Of these the glant, Gabbett, f®eemed to be the chief. now on his way burglary. The other two were a man named Sanders, known as ‘’The Moocher,” named "The Crow." They were talking in whispers, but Rufus Dawes, lying with his head close to the It was the mention of his own name, coupled with that of a woman he had met on the quarterdeck, ¢hat the subject eyebrows shaved off, considering them superfluous and contrary to thelr ideas of beauty. extinguished it, ow! she gald in a fleroe whisper, “and Leave me to manage.” if to arrange his pil- of the ‘tween decks rojmmed a darkness The prison was about 50 loopholed here and there, and the On the aft side, next the soldiers’ trapdoor Ike the stokehole of a fur- ppeared to be contrived for Old men, young men and boys, stalwart burglars and bighway robbe pickpockets or cunning-featured area-sneaks, slept side by alte with wizened The the same berth with the body- Smal! wonder that in the fetid atmosphore and hor- ribdle conditions ship fever or typhus should have broken out. Since Rex’ more of the convicts had falle: selnure by the malady three victims to !t and been hospital, while a panic of dread filled He was a returned convict, to undergo a second sentence for and Jemmy Vetch, nick- enabled to catch much of what they FOR CHURCH AND VISITING WEAR. Monte Carlo coats are much worn for church, very stylish model is shown in dark blue Kersey cloth, with trimming of black fox fur and black silk ornaments, and 1s worn over a akirt of blue dotted vel- veteen, but all cloths, peau de sole and velvet are appropriate. {al required for the medium size 48, for coat, 7 yards 2 inches wide, or 2% yards 68 Inches wide; for skirt 7% yards 21 Inches wide, or 5% yards 4 Inches wide. The coat pattern, 4308, is cut in sizes for a 32, 34, measure, The skirt pattern, 4199, Is cut in sles for a 22, %, 26, 28 and % inbh waist measure, ~ Pattern ooste 10 cents. Bend money to cashier of The World, Pulitzer Bulid- ing, New York City, The quantity of mat “I saw her speaking » with an oath, T ain't goin’ to risk my neck for Rex's 3 “ay doar friends," Keristian friends, “It natur' gave you such tremendous didn't put something inside of ‘em. Jack's in the slon't make It no better for him, of {t; and If he drops his knife and fork, why, then it's my opinion that the gal won't stir a pos. , Not ours, that she's been manoovering, “Well, saya Mr, Gabbett, was but partly convinced, "I 11 the more reason of getting it off quickly. ‘Another thing—when all the boys know there's fever aboard you'll see the rumpus there'll be. They'll be ready enough to join usa then. cheat, and we're right as ninepenn’orth o' hapence. Thie convereation, interspersed with oaths and slang, as ft was, han an Intense interest for Rufus Dawes. Plunged Into prison, he had hitherto—in his agony and sullen gloom—held aloof from the scoundrels who surrounded him and repelled thelr hideous ad- vances of friendship. knew that the name he had once possessed was blot- ted out—that any shred of his old Ifo which had clung to him hitherto was shrivelled in the fire that consumed the Hydaspes. The secret, for the prelserva- tlon of which Richard Devine had voluntarily flung away his name and risked a terrible and disgraceful death, would be now forever safe. was dead, and the secret of his birth would die with him. Rufus Dawes, Rufus Dawes, the convicted felon, the suspected mur- derer, should live to claim his freedom and work out his vengeance; or, rendered powerful by the ter- rible experience of the prison-sheds, should seize both, in defiance of Jail or jailer. With his head swimming and his brain on fire, he eagerly lstened for more. “But we can't stir without the girl,’ Gabbett said. “Sho's got to stall off the sentry and give us the The Crow produced a dirty serap of paper, over which his companions eagerly bent their hend bett read aloud: “AM 1s right. HELPS FOR HOME DRESSMAKERS. MAY MANTON’S HINTS AND PATTERNS, visiting and the ike. FOR THE TERM OF HIS NATURAL LIFE. BY MARCUS CLARKE-—A STIRRING MYSTERY IN WHICH LOVE AND HONOR ARE THE POTENT FACTORS. Dawes yesterday,” sald the ve don't want no more than evening at threo bells be safe.” wife's fancies, and so I'll tell her.” Rufus Dawes, though his eyellds would scarcely| the door, A rush upon deck, lads, and shes “What are we to do now?" asked the Mooshor.|keop open, and a terrible Iassitude almost patalyzed| That is, mine. Mine, ane my wife's. “Jack's on tho sick-list, and the gal won'toatit| his limba, eagerly drank In the whispered sentence, | Crofton—Satah—Evittos There was a conspiracy to nelze the ehip, Sarah Pur-| ha!—lacy’s mata and nursot returned Gabbett; “that's It. foy was In league with the convicts, There were 18] This last sentence contained the name-due to! said the Crow, ts to be nr ‘my keyind and tted that when | suc: y thick skulle, he I say that now's what of that? That does it? Not a pit ss ful, Rufus Lawes thought ‘orapital; shuddered, It's on the berth. Tho trio, findthg him there, were for killing him lest he betray their secret, but were soon convinced with the alr of one who ‘pose it Is." that in his fevered state hospital. Boon after Frere joined Once get the snapper the convicts. night,” part. He now saw his error. Ho] She torsed her hond. your guard; 1 don't care" “Pat, Sarah, conslder’ “As if a woman in love She loved hini then! refuse! without his supervision. vi Richard Devine his allas, alone should live. ‘Hoe! tain. And as sald she. Frere left she quick upward glance that and brought it to her, “Oh, thank you, Capt. Gab- pital, Watch me when I come up to-morrow to say. LETTERS, QUESTIONS, ANSWERS. “Mr, John Smith” In Correct, To the Editor of The Evening World:: Is At proper for a young man of twen- ty to have his cards printed “Mr. John Smith" instead of plain “John Smith?" GEORGE FARNSWORTH. Not a Cane of Love. To the’ Editor of The Evening World: Allow me to say to the correspondent who signs himself “Perplexed Lover” and complains that the girl he 1s en- Baged to makes him give up tobacco or give her up, that he is not in love, nor {9 the lady in question. If she were she would not refuse a man on account of such a trivial fault, thereby jeopar- dizing her future happiness. Besides, What harm Is ‘there {i a good clgar— pipes and cigarettes excluded? And, were he in love, would he pause a mo- ment in choosing between the two alter- natives? Imagine putting your future ‘wife on a par with a measly smoke! Wake up, both of you! Matrimony is most aggurediy at a discount whet a {man considers, “Which shall It be: The enjoyment of a cigar or the companton- ship of a wife? MABEL, Mo: To the @ditor of Th When dit Aug, 17, 1885, fall? M.A. Would “stop Growing.” ioase tell me how I can make myself stop growing. JOHN MILLER, Atlanta, Ga. Thero is no harmless method by which wrowth may be checked. For « Loreus Testimonial. To the Editor of The Evening World: Although it is too late to give Dr. Lorenz a testimonial of our gratitude ®ach a keepsake can follow him to hi home. Let a sum be ralsed in dimes or nickels, s0 as to make {t truly popula and the nature of the keepsake be set- tled by a public vote, What is done handsomely for actors, artists, celebri- tles and notorieties, » Indiscrimination. af "Atenicans, signe be repeated with more eredit for iis humanltarinn objec WILLIAMS, Pearl River, N. ¥. Not Good at Mi To the Editor of The Evening World Iam schoolboy. When the teacher is explaining any work in arithmetic 1 ra Evening World: This $6, 38 and 40 inch bust THE RAZOR AND THE BEARD. { THEIR EVOLUTK | If any writer on the history of cfviliza- ton should ever undertake to write a! history of the b record the fact that a majority of the rd, he will have to every bit of hair from thelr faces, either by shaving or by pulling the hairs out by their roots, the civilized nations in nearly all epochs of oly! ered it the proper thing to be beardles: ‘The ancient Kgyptians, Greeks and Ro- mans barbarians, who allowed their hair and tion coneld- looked with contempt upon the rds to grow unrestrained and bi Heved that only a perfectly amooth face | | was proper and dignified for an educated man, Only in rere cases an Egyptian would allow two tufts of hair to grow on his obt mans were so radical in their ideas on and the Greeks and Ro- that they even had their The Egyptians removed the hair from their feces with the same primi- lve #tone knives which the Kaffirs metals, for the game purpose. Opin: were beardlens fas the savages carefully : i faces smooth, soldiers and patricians considered it a matter of pride to wear fine During and after the thirty yours’ the duced to @ aninimum. to remain, which strangely contrasted with the bushy perukes which men used to put upon their closely- shaven heads, When the perukes went out of fashion the beards followed Turing the 40's of the last cen- tury beards by pearance again, Gradually they roportions, and ‘Anully, tou or more yponleoally no restriction in regard to a BANDBOX ECONOMY, When @ girl ts poor #he is careful not to advertise her character, Cheap feathers and light colored vel- vets are not pleasing, even when they new, And when worn for a short time they become odious. ‘The girl with good taste and a uree | cnapes De Sereeit to qui cannot pay attention and therefore 1 never oan work any ‘examples which Fi v explain, some one advise me what I can do? AL tad ae He! He To the Editor of She Byeving World; In order to keep the pot a-bolling in the now famous beauty discussion in your letter column, especially when the tradesmen, long muoh criticised cus- tom’ of following ¢ashions was/trana-|Tivelry seems t a8 to other planted from France to Germany and|'®wns cluimin, moet handsome other countries the beards were re-|6!tls, I feel jusiified in saying that there is a real fairyland right here in Greater New York, and that is in the lbtle @ection known as Yorkville. He- (ween Bightyfourth and Highty-ninth Slreels, east of P avenue, beautiful fio" @bound in the grandest profualon ko the most beautiful blossoms of the Here's to the girls of York F HENRY J ‘The Med-Hatrea Girl. In answer to the letters scoring girls assumed | of the name of Kato and gins with red fnabr'"# | hair or, rather, auburn hair, the writers would not dare to say to the girle per- nonally what they write of them in the papers behind thelr backs, because they are afraid of getting a severe thrash- ing {rom some of the girls’ relatives. I'm, sure the girls don't care & pin for such erities, Let writers look up their own Gispositions and see perfect, Al Only @ narrow the nose was permitted the an to make ther a though at fret only years, her poverty by wearing Her hat 1 the keynote to Amusements HUBER’S ‘MUSRUM KOREAN TWINS, AT years old, PRS tetinrane ad $388 | a aan art in all w If I drop my handkerchief, get to work at the time agreed on, convicts and but 60 soldiers. and the precautione taken by Sarah Pur- foy rendered success possibie, of the Httle, child who had run so confdingly to meet him, and ‘Then the fever which had, unobserved, stolen upon him, gripped Dawes and he sank back senseless on their talk. Dawes was carrie’ unconscious to the talking with her In full sight of the c8nvicts, He was asking her for a kiss. “If you will meet me on the fower deck at 8 to- she murmured after many pleadings on his “They relieve guard at 8," Very turning upon bim a burning glance, which in truth might, have melted a more icy man than he, What @ fool he would be to Besides, the guard could relieve itself onve y well, at § then, dearest.” “Here comes that stupid cap- turned, and with her eyes fixed on the convict barricade dropped the handker- chief she held in her hand over the poop ratling, It fell at the feot of the amorous oaptain, and with a Blunt,” eyes rpoke more than her tongue. During all thia Rufus Dawes, removed to the hos- was lying flat on his back, stering at the deck above him, trying to ttink of something he wanted Rex, in a near-by borth, lay raving in delietum |: I'm coming; don't be in a hurry, ‘The! “safe, and the iwwitzer is but five paces from’ Tho sentry will If the firat rush proved |iabyrinth In which Rufus Dawes's bewl!ldered intel were wandering. ‘Sarah Purfoy!" He ren now ec detail of the conversation he had strangely overheard, and how imperative It was. he should, without delay, reveal the plot that threat, ened the ship, But his tongue refused to obey the ime! pulse of his will. He made an effort to speak, bul his tongue clove to the roof of this mouth and Jaws stuck together, At that instant the door opened.’ It was 6 o'clock and Pine had come to have @ look at his patients before dinner. Capt. Vickers ¥ with him. » “Here they are," sald Pine low''—going to the alde of had not @ constitution like a horse T dante hia | could live out the night. “Come, let us get on deck,” sald Vickera, win ws shudder of disgust, Rufus Dawes felt the sweat break out into beats on his forehead, They suspected nothing, They golng away, He must warn them. With @ effort, In his agony he turned over in the bunk thrust out his hand from the blankets, “Hullo! what's this?” cried Pine, bringing the Ién-|. tern to bear upon it. ‘Lie down, my man, Bh! water, Js It? There, steady with It now,” and he Utted @. pannikin to the blackened, froth-fringed lps, The cool draught moistened his parched gullet and the! conviot made a last effort to speak: “Sarah Purfoy—to-night—the—prison—mutiny!”? ‘The words, \ almost shrieked out fn the sui desperate efforts to articulate, recalled the wandering | senecs of John Rex. “Hush!"" he orfed. “Is thet you, Jemmy? Sarah's) Wait till she gives the wor.” PER! right, said Vickers, eee “He's raving," Pine caught the convict by the shoulter. do you say, my man? A mutiny of the prisoners?” With his mouth agape and his hands Rufie Dawes, incapable of further speech, made last effort to nod assent, but his head fell upon breast; the next moment the filckering gloomy prison, the eager face of the doctor atid astonished facel of Vickers vanished from Te the vessel was theirs, bright-hatred he could not have heard Sarah on deck. He stood She refused, glancing at he sald, deprecatingly. well, then, attend to ever considers!" said shé, worthy fellow picked It up said she, and her his etnitring eyes. (To Be Continued.) Forsythe’ S |iSi PROCTOR'S He ELVED EVERY APE, & BYE: ANNUAL SALE Til §)) sia Upawee m Sully Suiaord. THIS WEEK. i Aye} Sw bol SL Sa mh ee $2.00 (Cals EES 3s ow Baty shock Contra vi Regular Price, $3.50. | ,ckAND, ObstA"sExsne ba Sizes 32 to 44. The most im- tr By dae fe at Rissnserenen B's recommend early purchases, John Forsythe, THE WAIST HOUSE, he ities He ‘3 Wash Waists portant sale we ever held. 865 Broadway, 17th and 18th Sts, —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_——= ONLY THIS WEEK. % MADISON eM NEW YORK Soran roontteeerit Grand Bantams, ie ror, Pee owing ot Onn oy aay $i. at Amusements. ENPIRE THEATRE. Broad “LAST 5 NIGHTS. Mate, We steer 1 WM, FAVERSHAM in IMPRUDENCE | & N\_13.—EMPIRE 00. IN THI UNPORERREN. RS, LANGTRY=—ins ines Ways NEW POvey, THEATRE. sith St. nr, Boway, Ey'gs 8.20. Mata, Wednesday and hpi re THE GIRL “Ae! GREEN EYES, S8206 RADIEON 9Q. THRATRE, 2th at..nr. eae Mata, Wednesday and @aturda; BLITABETH TYREE in GRETNA GREEN, | 4 CRITERION THEATRE, Biway and fon m Matinee Saturday, 1 8.1 JULIA MARLOWE CAVALIER. GauDEN pesar HB. 27th 8t,,Madseon ‘Kvgs, 7.46 wbary Saturday, 1.45. SOTHERN as HAMLET. KNICKERBOCKER THEA, B'wey & stn 8. Last 3 Weeks, Byes, at oe Ca Bat, at 3.16. att; +, GOOD WIN wits, ELLIOTT R_OF FRIBNDSHIP.”” “i " i Ny rth Art Mats Wo preys rover 4 drumatiaation of HON, JOHN HAY’ BALLADS JIM BLUDSO, RoveRy | HintsaRo. 18T MATINE. 5 TO: Ie "Gon entuous. Pod AND 30 CENTH PASTOR'S» zane ac GARDINER & VINCENT, nia we) Ra rar Tels LE te a | SOUVENIRS VS NIG! THE NINETY AND | ee —26.60. 7.1.00. Mate. Wed. de Marth, F amioy gh MRS. FISKE There, jee 8 2 FARR D DALY'S ‘= i ary eae Murray With. Lex. avi 43 Alan Wale, desiaces: APTA tu tate SO Wober a Pills Ht Hate [Rama MUSICAL ABSURDITY. And_néw buriesgue, The Stickis = iLO 5 Wino OF OF ( ‘iL Sar aATINEE TOUR BROADWAY 2, = sc a ¥ oo DEWEY! AUSTRALIAN IM, BURLESOOERS, a .| BECASCO THE THEATRE a JOU Be) fH Kae Mowery, Ri ear Canal Screet @insiair & Mamiiios, Barlow a Dog Chrous, Mechs iD IW WAX, BPEN|" wou Giliaoegiea Mate, We . pois RS, 5, DOOLEY, WHEN con JOHNNY "oma ° wiht 1424 wt. & 3d ave. New York, Diver to Eve. $15, Matinte, HA. ELE Mare. goes. |, ae The Brookiyti Amusemget HERALD SQUARE TAT Rg, PRINCESS ® wareapa BL Byes.8.3). mentees Toure, Hat. Me Aubeey Bouctowuls ge oF ia'trenph te Halas ea itive MONTAUK £25,100 CHINESE OREYAOOK Mary Man 9°\AV8, Ne Over Niagara Palla, | meena COLUMBIA WEST T END—BGEY SHOW GL =

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