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¢ | What’s Her Name? Sse 5 carters. | h ‘s man who hi ons grand on. vex ira Lovell, a gypsy f girl. who loves Van N rand. and who hold Roderick, Should thie image be destroy ‘Aine to gypsy lore. lis oriainal must Van. Nostrand discovers that some one has been Impersonating him among his friends, fe returna home one night to find himeelt confronted I an ureepected Vinltor. This visitor in his exact double In face. voice and,manner They fish fm Knocked senseless The him In rags and further din throws the unconscious man Into the street, Van Nostrand, falling to regain edmission goes to Mother Revekah, ‘to his own house, Aa he ies, half delirious in her tent. th Farttic, sentence comes back to his mind, an e aiddeniy wuessen the letters forming thy Girt in’ Black's name. CHAPTER IX. The Beacon of Love. T® strange discovery of the name he had so long and 60 vainly sought cleared the mists of fatigue and ion from Roderick Van Nos- trand's brain Ike magic, He sat up, head in hands, muttering the girl's name over and over with every imtona- tlon love could. master. ‘As he did so, he heard a voles at the outer entrance of the tent—a voice that thrilled him as the ‘Charge!’ of the bugle call stirs a cavalry horse. It was Mer voice, the voice of the Gir fm Black. She was asking admittance to the tent and Mother Rebekah was Greetlrig her cordially. Roderick's first impulse was to brush side the curtain that parted him from H etary: iS By. Harriet Hubbard. Ayer. assume that no one set of rules will ] work satisfactorily with the entire aggregation of husbands, But among ali the successful plans there may, I should say, be found one suited to the needs. of each Individ There are men—w.s have their wives’ written test- mony to this effect—who find home the most attractive spot on earth so long as a good dinner, a tidy home and a @miling wife’ await them. Intellectual heeds they appear not to possess, There are others who want to talk thelr business affairs with a wife and) desire to know how things are going on} at home day by day from cellar. to garret, There are others who wish simply to be diverted, whoso wives hold them in easy bondage s0 long as staying home nights means a sort of continuation of eld courtship evenings, chatting, read- ing. playing games, music, all the in- nocent diversions of t cheerful herrth.. aide. And there are others, A yood many others, ‘The woman who has failed in one direction should carefully read the stories of success and take advantage of ths suggestions contained in them. 4 'Longshoreman's Wife's Sensible Ide: Dear Mra. Ayer; 1H way to keep a husband at home nights is to make his home so pleasant ‘he won't want to go out, Meet him with a smile and don't put him in a bad humor by remarking that jthe supper is spoiled tf he should be a few minutes' late, Let him read his piper in peace while you wash up. Then, Mf he feely inclined to talk, alt down and Sale with him, Don't tusile around aa] the woman he foved. Then he recalled his disheveled aspect (for he had not yet bathed nor discarded his ragged clothes for the riding suit) and he shrank back ashamed. Perforce he overheard the conversation between the two women on the opposite side of the portleres. “Mother Rebekah,” the girl in black | was saying, “I once had the happiness to do you a slight service. You told me| then that if I were ever in distress and | would come to you you would help me. I haye come now.” “You spoke of a ‘slight service,’ daugh- ter,’ interrupted the old gypsy. “Aud there you are wrong. When, two years back our tribe encamped on the borders of your father's country tate, 1 fell il with the dreaded Busne scourge of| smali-pox. My people ted from me as| the ragged, dusty arms that were ae | out to welcome her. The old eypey emiled mysteriously and left the tent. When she returned half-hour later the lovers were seated | sfde by side, but rose and advanced toward her eagerly. “You, told me the truth,” cried Van ostrand happily, ‘You sald I should find a Woman who would give me jove's most sublime happiness or death. The lack of her fove would indeed have brought me death. How. can I ever thank you for all you have done for @ mere stranger like myself “You were not a stranger to me," an- swered Mother Rebekan, “go and bathe |put on your own clothes, and eat. Then |rome back and I will explain.” A few minutes later, when Roderick 13 OTHER PRIZES. EACH "trom the white death, foik would not aid me, Then you came | ning the curtain, he bore scant likeness The country |yan Nostrand again emerged from be- | \not love m ve | woman, i | place, and whose ho | sti | to do. | grudge him a new book. to my tent—young, rich and beautiful as you were—and you risked life and beauty to nurse me back to health. You, @ stranger, saved me. I vowed then that I would make your whole future life happy. You told me of the man you loved and of the mystery in which you had shrouded yourself from his eyes. I vowed that he should be yours I knew how a mystery and the spice of danger attracted men of his stamp. So i hid your name in a sentence and bade him discover it, I also hinted at danger of death should he fail, He t# yours, daughter.” “He is lost to me,” answered the girl sadly, “this very afternoon I met him face to face on the street. He looked me in the eyes and passed on, unrecog- nizing. Yet on his wrist he wore the [bracelet charm you gave him, He does “It was not the man you love, but nother that you saw," declared the old “another who has usurped his x @re numbered.” “Prove this to me,” cried the Girl in Black. “Prove it was not Roderick Van Nostrand I saw and I shall be your devtor all my Ife!" ‘Phe curtain at the rear of the tent was torn aside and a man sprang forward, calling her by name,’ The girl started back at the first glimpse of him, in the half-lit tent. For before her stood a figure clad in rags, his face still soifed nd not yet wholly free from the bruises that had discolored it, his hair partly restored to its former golden hue, but streaked with rusty black. The eyes, haggard with the, experiences of the past twenty-four hours, looked out with undying love at her, trom a drawn and distorted face. ‘The dust of the day was still on him. Scarcely a man to attract any woman, Jeast of all the dark, beautiful girl whom he sprang towand with out- stretched arms, repeating her name over and over! Yet with one keen look “her love pierced his hideous disguise and with a glad ttle cry she flew, straight into OOK OUT FOR The Girl in Re iNew Prize Story. Next Monday. A Romance of Six Gir is’ Love For One Man. BY ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE. | Find the Heroin FIRST PRIZE.. SECOND PRIZE. N ame. $100 In Prizes. - $25 19 | Through the diaphanous ourtaln in thelr unilghted end of the tent the lovers could see him quite distinctly ‘The newcomer was, to all outward ap: Roderick Van nl peurances, ‘ks It the custom of the Buenes, Mr Van Nostrand.” asked Mother Rebekah. enter a room uninvited? here to find a gypsy girl and wish to marry," sald the man, "I was told she was here Her name ts Lura "Tf I tell you where she is and how to win her.’ said the old woman, | raftily, “what will you give me?’ “Any sum in reason,” the stranger re- plied. “The bracelet you wear on your wrist,” asked the woman, "I will take no other price. Give it to me and she Withhold it {s yours if you wish h and you shall never see her." to the vagabond that had entered the tent an hour earlier. With the stains of dirt and fatigue washed away, clad in his own clothes, and with hair and eye- brows restored to almost their normal jeolor, he was better calculated to win | Yet his handsome ; |a woman's love. face was thinner and more wan than was its wont A new look of Lappiness, too, transfigured it. A second glance Wita One Keen Look Her Love Pier Cry She Flew HE CALLED THE GIRL IN BLACK BY NAME, ced His Disguise, and with a Little Into Mis Arms. ‘would have been required to recognize in him the easy-going, pleasure-loving Roderick Van Nostrand of a month “I bade you change your clothing be- cause I needed time," said Mother Re- bekah, ‘One is on his way here who also must hear what I have to explain. He is even now entering the camp. He ts to be guided to this tent. Stand be- find the curtain, both of you, and walt until I tell you to come out." Scarcely had the lovers taken up thelr position behind the portiere when a voice that made them both start was heard just outside speaking in. the Romany tongue to one of the Gypsies: “You say Lura 4s in Mother Rebekah's tent?” “Yes, sir," replied the gypsy in Eng- Ush, “shall I show you the way there?” “No, I can find It," replied the other. “It 49 my double!” panted Roderick Van Nostrand. ‘The gypsies, too, mis- take him for me. That ts why they an- swer him in English instead of in Romany. Oh, to pay off all scores!"* “Hush!” whispered the Girl in Black, gently laying “er hand over Roderick’s mouth, will hear you, How strang: your voice, and your intonaa dust be the rian I mis took fc ay. Bu’ .ho can he he, to nifily resemble you so closely."’ ‘The stranger, meanwhile, had reached the old fortune-feller’s tent and without waiting for permission to enter, had OOK OUT FOR The Girl in Re New Prize Story, Next Monday. thrust aside the tent flap and etrod® fn." The man unclasped the bracelet from his wrist and tossed it Into her lap. “No price Is too high to pay for her,” he sald. "Not even this charm. I have How Do You Keep Your Husband Home Nights? °<~ Answer This Simple Question and Win $25 in Prizes. How to Keep Your Husband Home Nights. HE EVENING WORLD offers the following prizes for the best answers to the above question: A prize of 410 for a letter from n wife who has successfully kopt her husband home nights for tne longest number of years, A prize of $10 for the most vouvincing letter telling How *o Keep Your Hueband Home Nights. A consolation prize of $5 to the woman who has tried the hardest and failed to keep hor husband home nights. Lotters must not 5e over 150 words in length and must be written on one side of the paper only to receiv attention. Hubbard Ayer, Evening World.” Address letters to ‘Mrs. Harriet if you fhad not @ minute to epare ana/ don't talk about what a lot you have It he is fond of reading don't It he likes company entertain his friends pleasant- ly. Don't try to “bogs" your husband, and last, but not least, don’t grumble about tobacco smoke, even if you don't like tt. A "(LONGSHOREMAN'S WIFE. ‘Truc Love Is the Only Power. Dear Mrs, Ayer: HEN a woman loves a man with W ail her soul, and thinks he (s the only man in this world of ours, and when life is not worth Uving without him; this {s true love. And then she is always happy while she te ‘by his side, and no matter what his dally toll may be or where he may be, she is constantly thinking of him and counts the hours and minutes for his return. And what joy and happiness when he does return! So, find the hu: band who loves his wife in the same way and has the same feeling for her as she has for him, Nothing in God's world would keep him away from her Dut necessity to provide for her com- fort and happiness, It ts the true lo he has for her that will keep him home. GRANGER, Religion the Corner-Stone of Home Dear Mrs. | years, have two children and think married Ife a blessing. My husband has stayed qut very few evenings for hig own pleasure, but always remains at home with his family, Why {9 it? I try my very best to have my home in the best of order, Supper on the table, children and myself neatly dressed, I am all smiles when he comes, and g0 to greet him with a kiss, Then there !s such a hanpy feeling in me, I cannot describe, and that makes him feel so happy, tog. that he cannot but help loving his home and wishing to atay there, At times when he feels some- what troubled about business I consule him the best I can. I think religion in @ home ts the main thing. A home without religion is a home where thera is always something Ayer: AM @ young woman, married eight mulaning and where there ia always @] rest ia easy, Gain bis Cull confidence] any more. longing for things which a person with religiag does not think of. Mrs, L, TEPEL. Be His Banker, Friend and Con- fidante, Dear Mra, Ayer: T husband home and hope it will help some other wife to do the same. Make the home pleasant, make it as attractive and comfortable a, pos- sible and give your husband perfect freedom with his pipe and tobacco wile in ft, Refrain from nagging, Let him be head of the house. Be thoughtful, kind, considerate; be economical and industrious, Take interest in his plans and pursuits, be his banker, friend, companion and comforter, be a good mother to his children, Let your watch- word be: To bear and forbear. I have tried to be this for seven years and have succeeded in having a happy home and a husband who prefers his wife and home to club or hotel. ‘ Mrs. O, Oradell, N. J. A Willing Maid Gives Her Idea, Dear Mrs. Ay ¥ idea of keeping my husband at hame nights (if I had one) would be first of all to keap my home tidy. Then I would try to make myself more attractive than the club or out; tke sights, I think a man, toiling hard! jall day in a shop or office, after his dally toll, likes to go home and find a neat tidy wife and a clean house. [ would supply him with a smoking Jacket, slipp..s and box of cigars and allow him to smoke and also hold a con- versation for an hour or so on different toplos of the day. One evening a week I would invite a few of our friends to dinner and after dinner 1 would pro- pose a game of canis or start a gay. conversation and ‘have all join in and have @ good old time, A WILLING MAID. Some Excellent Ral Dear Mra. Ayer BPLIBVE in treating your husband as you did during your honeymoon, Keep his love and respect, and the HIS 1s my rule for keeping my’ wertrenonenonenemenenano-0-d) and give hint yours. Honor and love, him and acknowledge him your {deal of Let him start at the head of 4 man, the house, as is his right. Interest your- self in everything he is interested in, Let him invite his friends to his home and he will not go out to see them, Always have time to Ue interest- ing to him. Don't have your house full of relatives or friends of yours. Let |him smoke. Don't let your home get| monotonous. Don't gossip. Keep your! troubles and household affairs sacred. | Don't spend his money foolishly. A/ man wants a wife with good sense. I} belleve a man 1s just what a woman makes him, If he wants to go out manage to go with him, MRS, BE. RUIZ A Canny Scotchwoman's Old-Fash- jfoned Recipe. Dent Mra, Ayei SUPPOSE I may give my opinion on | how to keep husbands home at; nights, I have been married nine! years and never had any trouble keep- | ing mine home at night. It te said the} way to a man's heart ts through his vo a nice meal cooked ready to put on the table. Always be neat and keep the children neat and clean, Don't begin to tell him when he comes home about some trouble you have had with the woman next door, or about the chiJdren quarrelling; always have eome- | thing pleasant to tell him; make him feel that he 19 at home. It t# most discouraging for a man to come home and find the table just after lunch and have to keep a crying baby Ull his wife makes him the read- fest meal. It ts no wonder that he will @o out and try and find @ ittle more pleasure in the nearest saloon. ‘This ts an old-fashioned recipe, but tt ‘4a worth trying. ASCOTCHWOMAN. A Mere Man Dares to Give Opinion, Dear Mra, Ayer HAVE read some of the recipes un ] “How to keep your husband home nights with considerable amuse- ment and curiosity, I think that the majority of men would prefer to have a bar in their home and round tables to play pinochle on !f they had to atay home nights, Some of your lady corre- spondents appear to think likewlse—in faot, they prove !t. Now, the only way to ‘keep your husband home o' nights" would be for the wife to tell her hus- band that she is also going out—and do it—when he says that he {s, She must do this every night that he starts up and reachos for his hat. After several experiences of this kind the husband will soon “catch on" and will be “all to the mustant” for staying home nights, end will never, never (be 8 night cw! It > Husband-Robbing OU woulfin't believe me if I would tell you how many women in their husbands,” said a man whose business !t is to keep well versed in “By this I do not “refer to the occa- sional or even regular filching of small talging about husband-robbing on a large scal The public hears of few cf up. but a map in my line gets to the inside. must be admitted that most frequently the crime 1s committed for the benefit gon's debts from the father or to help a loved brother out of diMoulties, for “One of the cleverest forged checks I ever saw was executed for the first- blank check and made it out to her son for a considerable amgunt. So well had and signature that both the bank off- clals and the youth himself were de- barge Scale uv Philadelphia systematically rob crimindlogy. coin from the trousers pocket. I am these cases, as they usually are hushed “In justice to the fair criminals, It of another—to keep the knowledge of a example. named purpose. The mother stole a she imitated her husband's handwriting ceived, and the fraud wag only discov- ‘ered when the husband, examining his bankbook, noticed a payment for wi Practised on by Many Women. he could not account. Even then, 90 good was the forgery, he could not be Certain that be had not written It until T inted out several minute but distinct iffereneces, “Another victim was a wealthy ngin,! whose wife—the child of poor parents— had married him for his money. Her family soon disoovered, hewever, that, though generous enough to pis wife, h would give little to her relatives, driven by thelr demands and reproaches, the young girl stoopel to a means of supplying them as hase as it was in- genious. Arangement with three of her trades- peopie—her miliiner, dressmaker and! Jeweler—by which everything ane pur Shased from them was charged double price. Th on her husband paid the bill, the overcharge, less a commission for’ the storekeeper, was handed to her, In this way she had robbed her husband | of nearly $5,000 before an anonymous letter, written by a discharged employee of one of the storekeepers, brought about an Investigation. “A writer of fiction, whom I also know, recently realized that he was being’ fore el in the magazines by @/ new writer, whose plots were identioal |wwith those be himself had thought out Jand noted down for v At first | suspected his amanuensis, but then a plot waa used which he had not even written down, but only talked over witn | his_ wife. “mitten with @ lterery fever, end apparently unable to invent a plot her: self, she ha» betrayed, her husband's confidence and used his."" What is ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, It is Pleasant. Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness, Colic, It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency, It) and Soothing Syrups. natural sleep, 80 years, his personal supervision since its infancy. ‘All Counterfeita, Imitations and ‘‘Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of Amusement: OTRO wa fon. MAJESTIC. Susser. Petes BABES IN TOYLAND, | With WILLIAM NORRIS and Co. of Music by Viotor Herbert-book by. MacDonous! Prices Eva. & Sat, Mat., $1.50, Wed) Mat. $1. | Feat ia on ¥/P A ACKE IN JOHN ERMINE. | Next Mon. Chas. Richman {n Capt. Barrington WEBER ‘A FIELDS) ARES | 3% ae “a bat, “WHOOP. DEE-DOO” | way|BEST SHOW IN. ees ae) AD GREAT ACTS—00 KGIHS ih! PRICK 296, AND BoC. | {Wg of aad oF it was left | assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, The children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over | has born the signature of Chas. H, Fletc! wway & | AMERICAN Castoria Paregorio, Drops | N It contains neither Opium, It cures Diarrh@a and Wind giving healthy and er, and has been made addr | Allow no one to deceive you in this, | Chp{lithea. Co Amusements, ating Season Skates Pree a IQ CONTINUOUS 14TH ST. 20 & 0 Cl, ing & Gore, Irving Jones, CH Win Latelt irene ranklln Ford Sisters, Orville & F Ey, 8.50, Mat. Sat. Adelpht Theatre Succes The wife contrived to make nn | HIS story will end to-morrow. A the clue to the T orrest the mis: companying blan«, rolled words. Ho’ mpetitors: the story ends to “T 1 in Blick New York Wity."' the prizes will Le awarded name, which is made up of the letters 1equirod will be received up to 12 M. Saturday, N+ misspelled word in each olapter gi w to find it will be shown in the wg= are asked to fill and send Immediatel} Editor, Evening World, P. 0, Bow 1. shes Letter. “* Wy No. of Chapter. Misspelled Word. Corrected Word, 1 LOFED | LOVED 2 oe 3 4 5 6 1 | 8 9 10 Name of Sender. Addreas.. THE HEROINE’S NAME.............-.- the charm and—what ts the matter?" he broke off abruptly. For the old woman nad clutched the bracelet and burst in a acream of eld- ritch laughter. “Oh, you fool!’ she laughed. “You poor fond fool!’ You have) cast away ‘the one defense that would have saved you from harm. You have delivered yourself into our hands, Shaun Lovell!” At sound of that name the man shrank back as though he had been stabbed. “You have known me all your days, Shaun Lovell," jeered the old crone, “and yet vou dared to match your poor wits against mine! I warned you that harm would come If you thwarted me or {f you sought to harm Roderick Van Nostrand. But you were wise in your own conceit and went your own gait. “And now you have lost as [ said you would lose. Did you think, fool, that I knew nothing of what you had been do- ing for the past fortnight? That I did ngt know you had noted the wondrous Ukeness between you and him? That you had shadowed bigs day and night? That, you bad sold. your horse to buy clothes like hie? t you played & daring gamg to put yourself in his place? Aye, thet I did not know.you sought to ‘murder him two nights ago? You paid a poor dupe in this camp to drive a stolen carriage for you. In that car- riage, after you had Jeft Van Nostrand for dead, you dressed in evening clothes [not been able to learn the workings of|and went to his club, You gave your; Amusements, victim's riding clothes to the driver: he brought them to me and told me 4 “You played the game cleverly, dear grandson; and had not love woman drawn you back here I have been troubled to cast you from your stolen n throne of wa the memory of Lura, whom you At brought you here to-night. she. Wont to scorn you and she loved erick Van Nostrand. et Fame jok Van Nostrand yoi win her, You knew: too. that any imapedeneny would ni wed you. gave me the could dave done. Inet you. ool that 79M “Shaun Lovell stog nae vowed bj under the mooen, attempted hope awe in a alt ‘the her checked hime We wie eager Ly anne: Mother Rebekali. Then, tu curtain, she called: Come fortht”, Rader stepped trom benind it, bo and took a mop. toma, clenched fiat. The other sp: to meet the attacl ing between ‘thane Ir your own tw bee iif et own twin, bro v is you er, Or, Van, hite Lovells, Je eth fpr HORSE SHOW MADISON SQUARE GABDEN, NOY. 18, 19, 20. 21. GRAND EXHIBITION OF HORSES WEDNESDAY. NOV. 18. SHOW OPENS AT 9 A, M. Trial of Hunt: ‘Teams, Ponies, T Runabouts, of Hor i CONCERTS BY LANDER. | The Seats in the Twe Upper Gal- _leries Are Not Reserved. | LYRIC presents GRACE VAN'STUDDIFORD- tn “RED FEATHER, tora at 10 clock TO.-NIGHT UERRERO Captures cu New York—her won- derful expre es bring th audience to t! To-m'w. MADISON 52207 Millnard Ui cant 'CASINO Wiss’ ERMINIE 2 ATRE, 41 St, 41 Bt. Bw Mat. bat. BROADWAY “ie aon, FRITZI SCHEFF faiseete | HEA’ ve. 8 NEW AMSTERDAM WM Be MAXINE EL! NEW YORK -BERLAUR OF Tesi aad 5Oe., 1.00, 1.50. Byway S8th, v8.80 Last 4 WEEK | KAI RBOCKER, founes ROBERTSON THE, certruve ELLIOTT |eayuer \raILED. DALY’S FRBATRE, Biway & doth Bt. | A JAPANRSE NIGHTINGALE *s's,sow ‘on Sale, ICTORIA. FRANKDANIELS | © CNL " The Office Boy. IRCLE >= and 60th 8t. jes’ Mat, Dally. THE GREAT THURSTON, MR. AND MRS. SIDNEY DREW, | PAPINTA, RAYMOND & CAVERLY, OTHERS, BELASCO THEATRE ye Shep DAVID RELASCOL RST IR GARTER, va, Presents MRS. xt Week, Dayid Belasco's DU BARRY. WEST END, ih tinee ‘Toda: 1 Irving “The ft EMEWELL DAT TL nah etic Seats $2 to $3. Ready TO-MORROW Morning. ACADE HIST ‘ah Igving PL Frohman’s Ss Prices 25,50 'd'yaRat..2. By.8.15. BSTAR Ay. ante Mats. Mon..Wed..Sat The Price of Honor. Charles S. | PEOPLE’ S THEATRE sovtar, rue WORST WOMAN IN idiboie” METROPOL! Eves. 6.15. Mate. Wed & BLINORE SIs Mra, ‘Delaney of MME. 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