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See nee ee NRG IN VIS x Sorry ree ema R Ee meteor ans # THE »# EVENING w WORLD'S # HOME # MAGAZINE # “ By= Harry =Leon = Wilson i) ATaleofthe Third Generation ‘egy Avttoet“The Lions of theLord” Ht (Copyrighted, 1902, by LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY.) - (Printed in EVENING WORLD by Permission of Lothrop Pub. Co.) it Phis Successful Novel Has Been Dramatized by E..E. Rose for Charles Frohman, Who Will Present Wm. H. Crane, the Comedian, in the Role of Peter Bines at the Savoy Theatre, New York City, the Coming Season. | ost disreputable mustache I ever saw, yellow and ra 20. t it, 1 he could eat it off even clear CHAPTER “And stageering erate under my burden, I wade out ‘The Heir ot Dea’ a to ipa youre was ing. acranean bl aiseand anywey, f) fixeiy to talk the most execratile sl be 2 mn . G sia or) We Daniel J. Bines died ef apoplexy tn his private you're a miner and to such things. to quote Browning. But h Making. real love, and youl @t Kaslo Junction no one knew just where to ae Remained stan cps. ti aha tininet ‘ Ani the Id I'm noe used tor ein 5 pocuatomed’ to 6o m yipace| ther ther “But I'm_ not "'m not @ miner fore aha’ calculating eyes, to show If I'm worth t ate hie a astaes Oe te ae Con a on | setae you i: om sai chine, and't suppose for the|seking-price,, But here was real love being made off down | a ean, death. Somewhere up the eastern slope | most part Tim. t nm YOu seem to @ gotten |in the earth (we'd run away from the others because I liked et the Bierras the old man would be leading, as be fad long| tired of: the taan who doosn't have to do anything. “ven Him'igeones) "tf don't mind telling you ho moved me, partly @hooen to lead each Srospecton, | now I'th this close to. work only because, my grandfather| because 1 wondered about him from that night and partly had erniner jhe toclevameelcr a oF. | Wanted me to look over the properties my, father left. of all I had come to feel about this new. place and ‘The young man, two years out of Harvard and but recently “But, hw ease, and set me down.’ the new pe a be he seemed t ‘fi 5 c] rth deck from an extended Buropean tour, was at some point| “Not uit wara you that I'm just a@ apt to do things| specimen of Western manhood. ns ©n the North Atlantic coast, beginning te season's gureuit| 4¢ the kind of man you thought Iwas. This is twice I've| But, Mutterchen, now comes the disgraceful part. I'm { et happiness as he listed. Dleted you up now. Look out for me—next time I may not|afrald’ of myself, even in spite of our affatrs being so bal. Ny put you down at all.” Dad had doubtless told you something must be done very Only in @ land so young that atmost the present dwellers —_ soon, and I seem to be the only one to do it. And yet lam fherein have made it might we find individualities which eo CHAPTER IL hy ae at the gate. ee te has wasettied me, I tell you, me, among other things, see x Mecistvely tailed to blend, So Witls congricus was the Semntly ‘Three Letters, Private and Confidential, But you are saying that 1 ike the present eligitie, That's @¢ Bines in root, branch and blossom that it might, indeed,| yrom Mr, Percival Bines to Mise Psyche Bin the trouble. I like him so well I haven't the heart to marry be taken to ploture an Cm of Western tre as the romancer bd Montana otty. . oe him, | When I was twenty I could have loved him devotedly, * . Now something seems to pe . some fr Lagu bers Heprardat Bea fesedtoied pare ce ree On Car at Bkiplap, Tuesday Night. or fondness. I can still loves. know It omy too well night days WAR BIS: When you kept nagging me about “Who Is and day—but it must be a different kind of man. He is so it Casson, gf far i | ; ‘ young and revorent and tender, and in a way so un- HESS 1s a der and or- 7 and I eaid you could searcn me, you woukin’t ‘ sa mn wae ahowed the tall bi earlier pioneer, have it that way. Eut, honestly, until ths morning 1] pauaicated. Fries pei oy tree SOE aL RIS pretends ot ; = yrould there be wanting gure of this, pres- didn't know her myself. Now that I can put you next,, Is {t because I must be taken by sheer force? I'll not be. | Fa containing, in potency at least, the stanch qualities ears ate 5 rurprined if it is. Do wa not in our secret soul of souls nour: grandsire to rovin, power to group One night last March, after I'd come back from the other | barriers?” Florence Akemit paid fees taucn ooanda Pee Testless: ys westward, v oo-ordinate, to “think moves anead’ which had) side, I happened into a lUttle theatre on Broadway where a|Florence, poor soul, knows something of the matter. Do ‘bis ore oft ; and, further, he had some- rT ni 5 we not sit defiantly behind the Varri ft Hi iwodern of ita own that ‘neither of the others burlesque wap running, It's « rowdy little place-e music |iTe "Seatoning capital punishment for any aseantt, rolushes pos. a. ‘and yet which came as the just fruit of the parent} bal—but nice people go there because, though ‘t's stuffy, /not one severity, yet tal} gf meek and su We kept decent. to the man who brutally and honestly be: so rut ay sean ate, Bho was 12 & box with two eneo—one oid and one young— |festtoye them utterly, o many’ full by merely” beating and an woman. As 1 a an untidy ltter is left ki ‘Would be told by avery, daily newspaper in the| ind an older woman. | As soon as Team her phe had meltrow. We reconstruct the barrier, and that particular assail- peter Suinea' nat Gan esanon year was| dashing over me. I never took much stock in the tales |4nt !s thenceforth deprived of a combatant's rights. What oda Tobe wriertaien: The ’h oe about ita happening at first signt, but they're as matter-of- dear you are that I can say theso things to you! Were girls 4a i our time? oe Pa ont af | toot as market reports, B00! look: levise was to wire the OE | EASr te ten er or onteee noon | main nockeai ae Hert) seared <c math Ing be more pitiful than a flne old family” 00) id ways. 9 Cary ine at ‘ouperiitendent, on receipt of tho| better than any’ two "people between the ‘Sattery’ and Yon. ry-rot_ like ours? I'm always amused whe Boar kers, and th: aan: i read about the suffering in the tenements, - ed five men_on the mas many, difter- L Yrash't acting soolable to ait down ¢there|guish is up in the homes {ike ours. “We have to no eitheet eee away from her and pretend we were Strangers Yet. oy ts most mebanle route, Bill; sprue took with bien ell, I watohed her through the tobacco smoke until the |80 very many more things, and mere hunger and cold are Aap. Weekly Uy Bite COOK, With aang | last curtain fell, ‘They ‘were putting on wraps for, a minute compared to the suffering wo ec he Sent notice of el J. ines, @ notice sent | Or, so and i noticed that the, young fellow in ¢he party, ook for us in @ week. With a bear-hug for you. been drinki; yw, wasn't 2 Citi oe ne Mendy “odo an aston the Righ-wite, "iney left the box |,,P: SIs tt true that Ned Ristine and his wife have fixed est aa he started came down the stairs, I duncbed {nto the crowd |{t up and are together again since his return? Not that I'm y, er ea grow restless ih apetng. AL cwrener some De eater int myself ooze out with th won if I'd ever Interested especially, but I chanced to hi it the rush to Califorma and for twehty years] And let ¢ 5 erence) see | other day here. 03 tno car. “Indeed, T hops you knee how ed stream banks and mountain wides for ty aatcne ai quia wite hed 1n exit on the side street, and there thoroughly I detest that man! firm faith that some Gay He WOUlA | were directly in front of me. 1 dust nasirelly ested tS staked out two claims, ‘The | he side, an: eco tnued, cle erat corner barons CHAPTER IIT. Boy,” | re owed, and Moff, while she and the young fellow waited for theirs. A Strange Price, ot | drive ropean travel followed, and then a yeas *) Bh) ‘caia something to the drunken cub and started to reach Grek the porter, came back to the observation room in the Bast, Then he hed go f} of the Bines car wi in a longi got fe elmple ue | tne carriage by going out into che street behind the one in a cor with a telegram for Uncle Peter, ‘ihe Vecnk gt ys At same time their, tarted forward, man read it and foi tu imsel loved: Whien spting came each your he grew revives | aga” ake (aebdtietes instead of going with Ror, started the mits. obitvion, POOR AT OTE (Ot) mountadn: Be needed | other way to mect ft, and go, ‘there sno was alone on the| 4Uncle Peter aroused him by making his way back to the ims against a bene nt ‘veh and by sleeping in a, all} vement in’ this muddle of pranci: Tees deek, the roli-top of which he lifted wi fovand pew lai ‘the rain aay ween the cuines | slippery, boven of prancing horses and) catica to Percival, Bitting down at the eae he wy He hed ‘up in to ls ey pry ren on you can get any bets that I was more than two seconds| ‘*lesram again and handed it to the young ean, 5 deer Earel ek ‘him that 4 nam proves deed. Hing out there to her, take them Git, ‘and ‘give better “Party will try © make good; no bluff. Won't eee Tena | ‘The old man lo his years, As he came nearer Billy track odds if pecasaat?: Then 1 regs she got rattled, | limit eet. Hare seen paper and wish another interview velote fallen, patton Gan, Gemple tn as a be came need down | for when I would have led her back to the curb she made a | 196 original instructions. “Party will wait forty-eight hours bofore. 6 ks. Yet his voice waa roken and he was, indeed, | dash the other way and all but slipped under a team of] !ré. Where can you be seen? Wire office to-night. oe Unesnecious of the tears: : bays chet wero fust aching to clay the rosce off her hat. 1) a oo “TATE @ corns. — | st jess turned around,” so I just natu-| “Well, son, it's a matter I cal'lated fi “7 was afraid of that. Ho lived too high. He ate too | rai her, and she was so frightened by this time | self, but it looks rst off to handle my- + = . 4 now as {i 4 ingot SLE SOE Id ls wns Bast that she grabbed ime and the remit was that T carried het |ienow just how much’ you knoe moult your pes Ways, bat) soft" — to the sidewalk and set her down. ‘Their carriage atill stood |anyhow, you wouldn't ‘1 Kk down the canyon, where the swift stream | (0 £00". 0 RAC MoT preservert” though, of course, with the| God knows, Teint discointin: the oomtee ty Dan J. was, wied itself into white foam far bel _ | fight and nolse kad ber mortifiontion, that was natucal. Tin him Fed stand med it cle: oe ae ole aways took ATi woulda't use his legs; I prodded thim about tt con- | Might and Holes and per clove ie OF Hot sno waa tho girl. | Don't forget that wlont year ey at ANY etage of the game, t in to brace timselt against the ahock.|Andl never dreamed of seeing her any piace but New York| ‘The young man reflocted. ‘He stopped as in, “Uncle Peter,” he sald, suddenly, 1 Billy Brue still looked away. ‘i Well, this morning when I came up ¢rom below at the|do they? N never did? oo” oey don't all cut loose, “f told him high altitudes and high lvin' would do eny | ming she was atanding "there, aa if sho pad been waiting for| © “Ves, did aon: “I sanked away from all the hitchin’ She is Miss Avice Milbrey, of New York. Her | of decericy when I first struck It, Jest like all the cect Gtoasy man'’— Again he was silent. me. us ii’ he'd over suy was that times had since neal, it you must know, Uncle Peter. this 1 what, the] $44 oct, 2"neyve been lon, Shepien” nas with him | Biwagh at that Oy ee notice says that come by wire to the Ledge office,” and eM had iunoh with them, and later a walk with her, they |Grand Har. The babe scot tne we eerike I outfitted in fead dogged! Teaving at 6.80 for the East. We got on fairly well, consid-lation, Bakes! but it did tortrere © bode Mortal aggray- The young and Deautifal Ofrs, Bines, who had bee accompanying hering. She is a wonder, if anybody cross-examines you. Chine ee tee ae ua torment a body sol it was kep' by peri FOUE and, beaut Bins, Piet eens elere Norihera, Il New, L'vo told you everything: except taat. the people. all | story enke with frosty. a ote ee age as & Kind oF two- Decatrated by the shock of his sudden death. asked kindly after. you, especially her mother anda Mrs.!the des, and on the Lottow rural teen fob and down ‘The slow, painful blush of age crept up across the iron|Drelmer, who's a tour-horse team all by herself. Oh, yes!)rich. And it had cocoanu eh ny all I knew, it looked that grength of the old man's face, and passed, He looked away|No, I can't remember very well: some xind of @ brown | concrete looked fit t ut mixed in with tt. Bay, now, that Sa he spoke waiking skirt, ehort, and high boots and one of those blue-| with-and a hunk was ane one, jee tiie Tene, NOW, Jerusalem se SPOKE y new that. My Dan'l was like ail that| striped shirt waists, the squeezy-looking kind, and when we|so much—showln' a cross-section G Uke I'd always dream of *prigco bunch. I taxed Dan'l with it. T spleened againat it] went to walk, a red plaid golf cape; and for, general all: | fruity-lookin’ win’ a cross-section of rich, yellow cake and 1 and let him know (t. But he was a man and nis own master | around dearnees say. he other entries would all turn gree! yy toeneine at bit gba teteat nade a man want to sive up. ore wn master t! joes | al ave to rawn. any on inks 18. days, y day. Bee peat if you can rightly calla man his own n Rea yee Re eiunu ak eta Barron Gee he yay; wake of that window and Jest naturally hone fur a slice of that e1 them things.” t y n. The Chink wi itandin® Hi wn th ‘ail with Billy Brue and back to/all you can get. ttle Willie Lushlets was her brother—a wae fas standin’ in the door the first day. mattans ity to care for 1 th Bly Biaughter and the| lovely boy. if you get to talking reckless. "With love to Lady ‘Six doll’s," he says, kind of enticin’ me. ay "i J. had lef! deniy. Abercrombie, and trusting, my dear Countess, to have the le might as well ‘a’ sald six thousand. I shook head. sone he was secret ‘Sroud of nis ‘gfandson, Peter Percival| pleasure of meeting you at Henley a tortnight hence, I PEA lay I was there again, yearnin'. The Chink sce 4 Bines, he did not show ie pride. Pre the poutas remain, p MALE ato aRVORS, ie ou i plecait ielenye mother carer, ‘yack against which tho old man Bart, and Notary Public. I says, "No, you slapt-oyed heathen,’ or somo such name t against which the old man ri: more val Bines, a fact agains! wan ramet a as that, But when you're looking fu Bn onsehold | From Mrs. Joseph Drelmer to the Hon. Ceell GH, | don't from your 1a play: tht tus in over the transformation of his let that one hide away from you. I'd play that fur Pay: here battle royal in th wher. ive ere eny after the death of Dan'l J... his son and Mauburn, New York. qpeftiest moral courage I've ever showed, any way. Gaughter presented their plans for the future. They wanted Hn: mowtes Abe! 3 al athe third ony, it was gone and a lemon’ ble was there, osed thelr al , Aus. ; ynish snow on top. I. wi ’ p My Dear Maubuen: Ever hear of the (ribe Of Mines? 1¢|Way"out ‘then, pushin’ the mule, “T took ‘ane lingerin’ last R ive in New York; old Peter force, and unavailingly. Mrs. Blnes was neutral. not, you need to, The father, !mmensely wealthy, died a bit fast favor bdfore you pike off Eas and felt proud of myself when I saw the hump in the “Well, now do me a Pee id a ld man. “Make a trip witn me over the prop- 5 ing a low and two children, one. of the latter | Pack made by my bag of beans, ety an onee, any way, ‘and’ sce ‘a little more of tit brotird ed] Ea ae dL) daughter in more than the merely ‘That-like flummery foot's no kind of diet to be trackin’ nd these people. Mebbe they're Detter’n you think, is also a grandfather, now @ little | Up pay-rock on,’ I says to kind of cheer myself. SINE he about Garde mechs or a. month ana thee by, Grim | cimeetae ney HS ER OF Qe, Nia Rabe net io 48 | haa eines inakape Lott a: ake ae eater see hat, i n go off if you're set on it an “what "t I was able to leav b You, can go of it ”Amentcan character, as that feiler | With, a queer old chai aie iotinges about the "mountains | to others places. twas, biggeh. but L made fur Grand Bar, eat and dest in say, som youn find out there's a whole |S0d looks as if he might have anything but money. We lettin’ on’t I wanted to ree about a claim there, Tila’ felt ‘of difference between a great man of wealth and a man] gay phey hi iva te masioaticcee ne en apes water foolish to have any one know jest why I was mekin’ the trip. of t wealth. Them last is gettin’ terrible common.” Ca EA OE Le oe Na a eh oe eee ‘On the way I got to havin’ nightmares, ‘fear that Chink mat wealth, Them (ns young man made the round of| more sybarillc, and they d been making a tour of inspoction | would be gone. I knew if he was I'd go down to my grave eres coperties. gycr thelr properties: They lunghed witn us. Knowing the | with something comin" to me because i'd never found jest gervanlongrmne inorning to find the car on a fting at| ward the don, Te wan toe Sutny at hvat™ Avice was te ony | ahgien ipa gaia Hd wren camfahing tur 3 @ One Girl ine. Coup! oO it was an , hi up front of the window, you c. Ee One £0. t at once mat he was the very considerable | or not, but that Chink was jest sittin: down anathen ike i stern road that thelr train had taken on some time in| Dorsduage he Ye, and F ee etint. ‘Percival noted the car with interest as he paced | PuROiaes we 28, Sne se Bractice in the'd Helsey dt protean, how that Monte Cri ‘0 carried on after he'd Deside the track in the cool, clear alr before preakfast. The somewhere near China, fan Her Gear rents were Weil, I got into his class, all rigpt. I walke curtains, were drawn, and the only signs ot life to be ob furious. Dressed as one of the miners, they took him to be in past a counter where the Chink had crullert and gingers @erved were at t i} S$ Bisa ‘orter on the Bines car, told an employee. The whole Party taking the cue from out- t tittle eigpe of low-grade stuff like that. and I set dawn Fat be ween astir. Grant, p Bines car, told | Faged: parenthood, treated him ‘elly when he emerged. from Oa little table with this here marble ollcloth on tt. im the other car had been taken on at Kaalo Junation Ghd) one of those subtérranean galleries with that tender sprig of | ¢, Bring her back,’ I fays, kind of tremblin’, and pointin’ that it belonged to Rulon Shepler, the New | girlishness. That is, we were icy until, on the way up, he|*® the window, who was aboard with a party of frien remaining in the depths, Avice’s dear mother began to’ re- “The Chink pattered up and come back with a little slab ‘a when he emerged froin the shaft of the One Girl| boxe the thoughtless minx: for hee indiscretion, of strolling |Of At on a tin plate. I jest let tt sot there. mew the party from ie car, @ girl, her father and Rulon | through. the earth. with @ working person. Then Avion: Bring it all,’ T say's; ‘I want the hull ball of wax.’ . He know the latier by sight. He knew (ne girli|sweet chatterbox, with joyful malice, revealed that the| (,,S!x doll’s,’ he says, kkind of cautious, face and voice, seen and heard once in a young man, whose name none of us had caught, was Bines, I pulled out_my buckskin pouch. ‘Bring her back and Fac and ote, Seat. With Her hand extended she ap-|2na'that ne owned the mins we were in and she’ didn't know | '&ke it out of that’ 1 saye~ wh F back ed him, emiling, Saying: “Why, Mer.’ and real; |how many others, nor did she belleve tie knew nimaetenno” | “He grinned and hurried back witht. ee | ays ing that she did not know tie name. Now, if your dear uncle will only confer a lasting benefit Well, son, nothing had ever tasted so good to me, and I day. a .| upon the world and his title upon’ you by paying the only | ain't say'n’ that wa'n't the biggest worth yr “aur. Bines,” he sald. coming up,,hurriedly, behind, Per-|debt he ie over Hable to pay. vam ‘perauaded you could boll ever got, I'd been training fur that alka fur Teen ead Ch Roeland or aut! ree ing giri with |the man here. I know nothing of how tne rortune was left, | year, and prodding’ my !magination up fur the last ten ines, ret ore natrument that had) POF its extent, except that it sald to be stiffish, and out | weeks. itude at the bumble inst ere, th round sum. The reason I write| “I et that all, and I ct another one with Jelly, and a bunch NFR se lolly! 1 am Mise Mubrey," she added tn a lower] Pow" Pnhat'sweet ifttie ailbrey. chit realy, Avice ie.far too [of inandled ponchos, and about e does cea pms sagt tore Xamme, Mr. Bines—an 2 5 a dozen cream pu’ tone, and then, raising her voice, jam a Fines oai,|old now for ingenue parts—has tout erate Cian ky ‘ ot only ‘grappled the son] a lemon ple with ¢rostin’ on. to Bape.” and there followed, & hurembers of the party. gal] vith, hooks of sine, Dut, fram, remars the good mother (rushes, Fhe Chink had learned to make ‘ens all in “ieee id, in that moment the young man had echemed the Cisse aha i a Gualities of her son, she means} | "That meal set _me back $31.75. When I went out I noticed edifice of all his formiess dreams. For six months he had | \y convert the daughter's dot into Milorey prestige also. |the plain sponge cakes and fruit cakes and dried-apple pies— What a. glorious double stroke it would be, after all thelr | thi F ane Known the ynsurpassable luxury of wanting and of Knowing) years of trying! However, with your title, even tn pros. Re as ther aitece Common and Unset: Bela Be Sack acetan cote oe Cae UME oe inn un Sau ote ee een ns he nn aR | ghar Le aa ter of tights ora Yohey were putting on outer clothes|¥ou to stay In New York. Sincerely, lemon pies fur the nextday, the big cakes and two more fom Le be room™ to protect them from the dirt and JOSEPHINE PRESTON DREMLER, | "Fur four fanyn T'teaa lite of what they call ‘unbridled * tng ehicotae taal gain, at the, bottom, of| From Mies Avice aitbrey to Mra, Cornelia Van Gelat,| van any hand, fur drink, bat 1 cut Tobee tn that taney food outa Don tne curigus And Wtererat this cifcumstance| Mutterchen, Dearest: I feol like that green hunter you sactite firth day’ T begun to taper of. 1 begun, to have a id be ranked among the mont interesting of natural phe-| had to sell lasts ea one spat Would £0 St @ Senos pia es the ati Rafa anes ets sprraauet math plasty of uld have a name, as the run of mor-| With the most perfes 2 ice cache should be one name Ores, than another.| bulk and bolt When it came to jumping. Can it be that [,|4¥8% and my shameful debauch cames to an end right there. 1 discoveret further that her yastian mace was who have been trained from the cradle 10 tne idea of manry- |! remembered the story about the feller that cal’lated his Wee the Skesomenon became stupendously bewildering. [ing for money, will Bolt the gate wfter all the expense and | chickens wouldn't tell any different, so he fed ‘am wawdust if he was again in the mine guiding and guarding] pains lavished upon my education to this end; after tho | instead’ of cornmesl, and by and by ia settin’ of eggs hatched avicg mi ey Yeara spent in learning how to enchant, supdue and explott | out—twelve of the ‘chickens had wooden legs and the thi wn one of the cross-cuts they, started. stepping aside! the mort useful of all animals, and the mst agreeable, barring |teenth was a woodpcker. Say, I felt so much like two to Jet's car of ore be pushed along to the shi few? And yet, right when I'm t’.e fittest—twenty-four | cords of four-foot stove wood that {t made me plumb nervous t. a “Po you know,’ beg: g girl. 1am ap glad to be able|years old, knowing ull my good polnis and just how to co-| <> ketch sight of 8 saw-Luck to ink you for wha! you did that night,’ erce thé\most admiration Cor each, able nicely to calculate ercy went over to the esk and began to scribble a na: “I'm glad you are ablé. I was beginning to think I should/the exact disturbing effect of the ensemble upon any poor jon the pad of paper. name) alyays have those thanks owing to me! male, and feeling contident of my excessively ¢éligible parti| He was writing: “IP I'd not seen you,” saki the girl, When I decide for dim—In this pituntion, striven for #o ear-| = “My Dear Mise Milbrey: I send you che frst and only before—that evening, I shouldn't have rememb nestly, 1 feel ike bolting the!bars. How my trainer and m I ever wrote. 1 may, of coursé, ba a prejudiced critic doubtless 14 not have recogn! ined You to-day jockey would weep tears of rage and despair if they | but It seems to me to possess In abundance those graces of “T didn't know you did glance at me, and yet I watched) guessed it! metre, rhyme, high thought .n pogiic form and perfection ot in demanding. 0 be honest na! finish which the ‘critics unite you—and why should I concea} that concelt whieh ovece risk someching- .0 want to want something more thapjartist Is sald secretly to fect In his own production set have i ever learned .v want. eriegtintered no other poem in our noble tongue which has 3 without letting it be seen that she sees.’ That's one reason !'m acting badly. The other will inter-| moved and captivat m a8 90 ZAS they walked single-fiie through the narrowing of al est you more ete 1s but tata to warn you that this ts only the first vole t, ahe wondered about him. He was Western, plainly,| It's no less @ reason than the athletic young Bayard who|ume of almilar poems which I contemplate writing. And memployee in the mine, probably @ manager or Glrector oF} cheated those cat-horses of thelr-prey that night Fred dkin't|the theme appears now to be inexhaustible, I am not aun Ihatever it was they called those in authority in minos.|drink all the Scotch whiskey in New York. Our meeting, ana| that I can see any limit to the number or volumes I shail | ‘too, he was a man of action and a man who en-|the mater's treatment of him before she discovered who he! compelted to issue. iray accept this author's o with hi Something in him at once, was, are too delicious to write, I must walt to tell you.|best and hopefullest wishes. One other copy nas been sent ‘These were the admissions| it's ‘enough to say now that though ¥ heard his name it re- to the book reviewer of the Arcady Lyre. mn the hope that im a ‘ou? dissatisfied than ever. It makes me want to do something—| wit e laughed, tte every moment of the evening. You didn’t know that,| Auntie, dear. the trip has made me more reatle 8) "Ot course t. knew { has to note such things|} A womi she made to herself, alled nothing to me, and I took rom his dress to be ajhe at leas: will havo the wit to percalve in it that ult! OTe ter er action,” she sald, “Honestly, Cam glad to} Suvingman fn the mine we were Visiting, though, from his [and deal perfection for which the humbler bare have hich. ‘an anes (ough, from bis lero striven in vain, Sincerely and seriousty yours Gnd) vou Here at your work In your miners” clothes Soilemal merlousty Fo ml ink we forge Oo value men that worl he was so dear, and so ‘eaternly brees: + BINES.”” : MBH the point of saving thoughtieasly, “But I'm not work-| greaiive and enterprising and x0, appalingiy candid! Lye | Thus ran the exalted poem on a aheot of note paper: , 1g here—I own the mine,” he checked himself. Instead he m the ne woman” to him, ‘the unknown but remem- ‘AVICE MILBREY. You] speech and manner of a gent! a defense of the man who doesn't work, but who|hered Meal” since that encounter. Of course that was to rico Milbrey, Avieo 3 he ey | Gould if he had to, “For example,” he continued, “here we| he sald, but strangely enough he meant it, He was actually AVIS. Uibreviaavice. Milbres, view: aioe - are place that you must be carried over; otherwise|and unaffectediy making love wo me. “He's not #o large or Avice Milt Avico 'Mflbrey, % to wade through a foot of water or go around| tall, but quick and springy, and muscled like a panther, Avice M Avice Milt He teat tong, war werve.come.. Ive Fubber boots qos sad eo.t| Hes not beautiful, elsver, Hut pleasant 0 look atone of] | Avice Milbrey, Avice ailiprey,, Avice Muprey. ha’ ™ @ ghose broad, jC] ne es 80 Mic! the nd ninety- it thousand other verses quite 1 tga: herself with a hand between shoulders, ‘est, with the funniest quick Yellowish-pray eyes, ‘and the Mid {To Be Continued.) 2 , a one = 4 ~ OY Ai ¥ A: sede atiabiier Seti dian Fares 7 i MPRISONME: aba w ki eli se lt JULY 20, 1903. ALL WOMEN CAN WEAR SILK BY AND BY. HE Department of Agriculture an-| mulberry or osage nounces the result of long series of successful experiments in the culture of silkworms. For many weeks|slrous of going into the Division of Entomology een| will be fu trying to vroduce a cocon that rivals] partm the finest-grade French article. When | gr two trees of this v: free with the United States succeeds in manufac-| Th are sent out to eaéh appli- . turing Its own silk from domestic co-| cant in lots of three or four hundred, | After detaching the cocvons from thelr web they are sorted coons every woman of average means|inclosed tightly in a double box con-| into three classes—perfect, double and defect will be able to wear fine lansdownes,| taining instructions. Until you are| way to kill the Chrysalides is to s udject the tulles and chiffons without having to) ready to hatch the eggs you must kcep| steam temperature of about 212 degrees. worry about the cost them cool. When you have secured ithe| The after handling of the cocoon, by which Next spring the De vm, and feel sure worm eggs to people who possess white one not so fortunate as to own one or shed cuttirigs by the de-| head the white mulberry trees, 5 artment of Agri+| proper accommodations for the future vulture will distribute myriads of silk-| worms, in the shape of a large, dry! length, and is then m smith can make one. | As the time for ha days—the eggs become white ‘ung or sheets of perte cut mulberry leaves are then placed over the Iiing approaches—between Double pieces of t be fitted with racks The rearing-room m the mosquito- volume larger \t cessantly night and da month grows 14,000 times larger than it was at in separate lots during the entire period of tated by providing ments filled with stubby pieces of broom corn orange trees. Any| Wood. which Is in liquid form at fi creted by two microscop! worm enwraps It ment. The transfrmatio’ pleted In from seven to ten ¢ eald to be mature, and this 4 arlety bot stil de- > silkworm culture, which to start a | reeled off in, one continuous fibre, averaging ade into the slik thread that you can sup-| another chapter in th piy the required quantity of white mulberry leaves, pwb the eggs in an incubator, A small Incubator, such as i used in laboratories for drying, Is recommended. Amy Un ‘ated cardboard sprinkled with finely the outward passage of the worms as soon as hatched, © stting frames, by means of which the worms are fed. Feeding should take place three or four times each time being accomplished by the efmple process Of ing a net full of leaves directhy over the last one. “Com- et with the air causes the new born Insect to acquire .® > an it had Jn the egg, and it quickly begins | {to gnaw tle under surface of the mulberry leaf. Tt eats ime ~ except when asléep, and in about © worms hatched in one day must be reared together and kept larva or worm stuge is completed when the Insect begins to build {ts cocoon. Its endeavors in this direction are ‘spinning boxes," a series of compart- It takes the larva forty hours to spin its cocoon. ‘The eit, hardening afterward, 18 se* glands. By a rotary motion of ite f{ completely with the’ delighte from the larva to the chry#alis ys. The cocoons are then the best time to gather them. i commerse, ie e liistory of the silk industry. three and five — mosquito het ene to for r birth. -All the growth. The or fine brash e. The best ‘cocoons te ® the thread Ie 1,60 yards in WHAT’S YOUR NAME? | Some Odd Points in Nomenclature. HAT is your name%s Where did you get it, and what does it mean | Of what use Is a name, anyway%, | According to the books, every name of a person significs something. Away back in what we now call historic times an ¢ndividual | good one. " Christian names, however, have been more or less in use| for a long time. e given to distinguish one Smith or Brown or Jones) nother. And, as a rule, Christian names were in a measure descriptive of the Individual. The sfudy of names, thelr meanings and how they came to fed to certain individuals Is very interesting. ‘There are several different books devoted to this, and some of the larger dictionaries give the more common names, to- gether with thelr meaning The Germans appear to have the least variety of names, while our own country has the greatest, which is on account| of or population being made up of people from every elvilized nation under the sun. These bring thelr names with them, no matter how cumbersome or outlandish they may be. Prof. Nathan Pulvermucher has taken the trouble of com- piling the names of 41,00 school children in Berlin to see which were most 4n vogue. Among the boys there were 1,627 whose name was Wilhelm or Will. LT tall Next in frequency was Paul, followed by Friedrich, Jo- hannes, Karl, Max, Walter, Enrich, Otto, Franz, George, Ernst, Richard, Curt, Alfons, each of which was represented more than 500 times. Among the girls the ten names most in vogue were Mar- garetha, Gertrude, Martha, Frieda, Anna, Else, Maria, Char. lotte, Hedwig, Erma. ANIMAL’S EYES. The eyes of an animal can only work together when they can be brought to bear upon an object at the same time; so that, as a rule, the eyes of a fish must work more or less independently. This 1s sometimes also the case when the eyes can co-operate, as any one who watches a plaice or other flat-fish in an aquarium will soon discover, ‘This is true, too, of the curious bulging optics of a chameleon, which roll round, swivelwise, in a somewhat ailm- less manner, When they do converge tt is bad for the in- gact upon which they fix themselves, ‘Many animals possess more than three eyes, which do not act together. A leech, for cxample, has ten eyes on the top of its head, which do not work in concert, and a kind of marine worm has two eyes on the head and a row down each side of the body. Some lizards have an extra eye on |Diphthong and erysipe! HARD WORDS TO SPELL. Amusements, TAND up, you spellers, now and|1 MANHATTAN BEACH TO-DAY $40 SHANNON'S gear. BAND OF take some simpler word as “chilly” | TONIGHT) PAINE’S POMPEN, Or gager or the garden Ily. To spell such words as syllogism And lach | 8 “AND GRAND FIREWORKS, Last Week of alts Hiaeaghoryotoign ‘47LEW DOCKSTADER Apocryp Jeju @ and homoe and celandine, AND HIS GRPAT h MINSTREL COMPANY, Rhinocer erm, MATINEE SATURDAY AT 4 Metempsychosis, gherkins, basque, Next Week, Is certainly no task | Kateldohsine and Tennessee, A Chinese,Honeymoon, Kamehatka and disp ary, And etiquette and sassafras Infaliib) Allopath and rheumatism, MATRSTIC 9°? NS Re A BA and ptyalism, 27TH WEEK an 3oe nN. Yo Wed, Sat, $1.00. And cataclysin and beleaguer, WIZARD OF O7) estar ‘Twelfth, eighteenth, rendezvous, in- hr FRED A. STONE as triguer, SON S BC MAD SON SQUARE GARDEN. Ors Gee And hosts of other words all found MAD SON SUA msT PLACE On English and on clagetc ground. GNDOIS'? | hese seule Thus Behring Straits and Michaelmas, |D US tcuustna, | °°" 60 oserge., y! j , it lee i Cy Thermopylae, Jalap, Havana, Tre cause ot “Venice in New York” Cinquefoil and Ipecacuanna, And Rappahannock and Shenandoan, |General Adm, 50c. | “ig ees And Schuylkill and a thousand more _—- ‘Are words that some good spellers mi: ARADISE ROOF GARDEN, fn dictionary lands like thi Roots of VICTORLA & BELASOO Nor need one think himself a scroyle . Tt some of these his efforts foll, Latest Eureoenn| A CF Nor deem himself undone forever Seasationt? Glaze and 12 Vaudeville. ‘To miss the name of either river— ‘The Mysterious | Extravaganse and Ballet, The Dnieper, Seine or Guadalquiyir, CASTORIA |IFiataiy For Infants and Children, Signature To-nlgdt 15. Cl “FLOATING ROOF GONEY ISLAND. Continuous edera Vaudeville and Restaurant the Bast bdo Mal HE RUNAWAYS ROOF GARDEN. Str, Grand Republic. High Class Amusements. ry Bi Bavept Friday, Fare S08, ass Vaudevill I'sCoalalPROCTOR'S «toxpaNi- ees $8e:| MAPIEON ROOF GARDEN—S0c, DB St, jie br Tutus chamsers. new | Japan by Night come Opera OTOYC *' Redmond.oco,, Keanedyéivans, othe and BOSTON'S LADIES’ ORCHESTRA, and 234 Street. the top of the head, which does not act with the other two 5h Ave Lata KEIM, Manhattanss's. nd 334 Sire ‘A bee or wasp has two large compound eyes which posstbly Hravorltes Bie H hel veach other, and are used for near vision, and also three HUMBUG, THE EARL OF PAWTUCKET. te 1 the top of the head, which are em rf § oRAWForD, — a held. Witiereinole eyes! on th ead, are em- Hike ees, BE “| TERRACE GARDEN, 82 4 A oa ploy! for seeing things a long way off. mp wat | TE 3 Ny, Seth & coins = {25 tN Ste) Goon Wie ico kekte | fin. “THE BOHEMIAN GIRL. ck Pay <r ONE VATICAN GUARDSIIAN, — Re APES TScaita wal LGN aOR in Romo would not appear to have PASTOR’S Se BLANCHE RINa. = , for noble Romans. AND 30. CENTS. y trel Minsen, 10 POE A few days § ‘Antonio Pletromarchi, excused himself upon a plea of {rx iiiness from his duty at the Vatican, and went off for an automobile trip with friends. Unfortu y the car which ho was driving had a spill, and the ac t was mentioned in the Roman papers. Trouble for Count Antonio naturally followed, and he was shut up for a week in the Vatican prison. A few days later he Invit to tea in prison, and, this becoming known, Count An-, e 4" "tonto Pletromarch! was dismissed from the Guard, Ri | new one of the Noble Guard, Count|{iiiissien & Tue & Pioks, 1th 8 “The: Tinater. “JOHNSTOWN FLOOD. KRITH’S Bway [eee 1N TOWN, penn Binvwtebss Brooklyn Amusements, Ja number of his friends NVM THE THOMPSON | BRIGHTON Sisters Metedithe. WUE KAK 3, & DUNDY SHOWS! $3 BEACH Ex 2%ian 1 Pease