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Published by the Press Publishing Company, Na 5 to @ _ Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter, WOLUME 45......ssseesseneeeeeesNO, 18,760, Leads by 24,483, Te WORLD printed 42,702 “Help Wants” last month. The second highest New York newspaper contained 18,219, or 24,483 less than The World. Employers Adbertise in the Paper Thay Regularly Read and Know, | ccs » ‘THE EVIL OF THE MEDICAL FAKIR. * Aeeording to the counsel for the County Medical So- Glety, there are fully 20,000 charlatans illegally prac- the healing art in New York. If the figures are ‘@iaggerated the olty has become the headquarters 80 extraordinary army of impostors who prey upon the credulous ailing and derive thelr income from a _ Most despicable form of deception. _ Why are they allowed to follow their nefarious trade? Tho law regulating the practice of medicine in ‘the State is sufficiently strict. Under it any person who Attempts to treat any disease Ly any means if not regis- , tered as a physician commits 1 punishable offense, Has LP County Medical Society done all that it could to on the abuses of which it complains? In the exer- ¢ise of ita jealous scrutiny over practitioners it has | Beoured more than 600 convictions for the illegal prac- of medicine and procured a {otal of $90,000 In fines. _ Yet this showing of activity becomes Jess impressive in = light of the figures supplied by its counsel, It has ‘Gealt with but 2% per cent. of the pretenders whom its ~ should be to expose and to disqualify by pub- Ueity and punishment {rom further pursuit of their __ evil oveupation. © Unfortunately for the wider success of such prosecu- _ tons, they are too frequently baffied by the technical legitimacy of tha! most dangerous of quacks, the pseudo doctor with whose fake methods of treatment the law not specifically deal. He as well as the distin- d specialist is entitled to concoct his “cure-all,” ft with an attractive name and prescribe {t until a te termination of the treatment opens the way for Ma arrest. This Ucensed quackery within the limits of } law is one of the worst and most Insidipus forms of . i |, a8 it is the most diMfcult to uncover. ~ But thero are ample opporturities for attack, chiefly the exst side, where the ravages of the quack doctor Most serious and more open to detection. There “water-cure” fakir, the “coneumption-cure” fraud capa eae disreputable fraternity ply their evil ingiy with largest returns of profit and ith gravest results. They can be exterminated through Inteiligent and energetic crurade against them, and be in the interest of that protection of its citi- wel - health which the city is in duty bound to give. mi Society the Society of Medical Juris- fn conjunction with the Health Department | tne police have ample powers to effect this reform. | do not lack af incentive for it. | a > Led Qvercrowding.—An excursion steamer plying 4p local wutere having broken the law, as is alleged, by | passengers, has been libelled in thy, $1,810 by order of the Secretary of Commerce. occurred, and the steamer'n season Is over, to be imposed as a preventive of instead | of accident. ‘This action is as novel as It as a precedent It should have a good the Secretary next direct his attention to) overcrowded ferry-boats? | 1904, by J. 8. Ogilvie his thoughts. Publishing Company. . ! OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Was before his eyes yes darted ra: se, RALNOTINE Dei a noe | Within a week he in 2 ited” le sr accused s Sh unconverted Stor call upon her, and ¢' eaten en bin "4 Pee at tats talon releases her, driv. Served In regard to & demon that hes csst #8! dared not visit her every evening aftet CHAPTER III. her house by stealt under cover of the them. ¥et, at last, | Enrique’s Coming. ‘YA, daughter of the learned One mort of which she devoted much of Det own time and labor. One portion cal the garden was set apart for the ton of such medicinal plants as jiied. thempelves to domestic cultivation Yesterday. Gieeping or waking. her fair. pale face of fire into his soul. ahs Paty ct resulted in his complete surrender to ma Chrisclan maiden. her charms. He de¢lared his passion and became her accepted lover, As the utmost secrecy had to be ob- Sorceress at Home— % ‘ree months they revelled In the joys of a new-born love: nothing ov- ag Spies Watch the House for curred to mar the perfect bilss of those happy hours which Cupid ‘vouchsafed the spirit of their dreams, when Alsha, _ Bhysic'an, Abou-Abaza, lived In| faithful servant, opened the windows ® pretty cottage, surrounded by a of the reception room facing a garden tl and well-ordered garden, to to let in the morning sunlight a young To Test the Quality of Love. | a | By Nixola Greeley-Smith | ATE sixty- | I filth Rock | River Conference of the Methodis: | Episcopal Church has de- cided in favor) of long court- ships — “long enough to test love!” But how long ts that, anyway? And Rum what final test Ri of love s there bie rage, which is the only acid Nixola Greeley-Smith. ee re man affection may be tried? “Marriage from love, as vinegar from wine, @ sad, sour, sober beverage” Jeered the cynical Byron. But he for- got that all wine doesn’t turn into vine- war; that the best of It, indeed, grows richer and mellower with every year, Certainly the wisdom of old ladies Is against the dictum of the Methodist Conference—that wisdom which ts con- centrated In the dubtous shake of the | head, accompanying the remark: “No, jno. I don’t believe in long engage-| | ments.” What js the use of long courtships, anyway? People, especially men, know Abeir own minds @ «reat deal better In three months than they do in six. One can't test the quality of old, for in-) stance, merely by postponing the ap-| Dilcation of the acid. If one found what one supposed to be a very valuable) ring, one wouldn't Increase the chance of Its being genuine by hesitating for months or years before taking it to «| Jeweller's to find out, And {i's no trial of the quality of love to delay marriage, which is the only sure test. Long engagements are queer things. | Presumably @ man has realized that he, wants to marry a‘woman before he asks her, Presumably, also, she has decided that she wants to marry him before she accepts the offer, Then; why should they need an additional vear or two in which to make up their minds. If nine-tenths of the people who are engaged six months were to prolong the period of courtship through.another six they would never be married at all. Perhaps, the cynic will suggest, that would be a ood thing—and it might be for the individual. But the fates that preside over marriage care nothing at all for individual happiness. Indeed, the twin rascals Cupid and Hymen are the greatest confidence men | in the world, and having sold thelr | Breen goods they care only about get-| ting away from the victim, to send out | sowing circulars through a new terri- | tory, Of course, they don't deal only | In green goods. There must always be/ p iho of an occasional bona-fide bill | to inspire confidence. And that accounts for the happy marriages. But long courtships won't make mar- riages any happier, If you are going to take the plunge into an ice-packed river In January it will do you no good | to stand pn the bank and ponder on the | probable temperature of the water, The | only things to do is to get right in up to your neck, relying on the survival of Lue jiteat and (rusting that you are o1 of them. Very probably you are not, but Jt makes the plunge easier to think #0. Of course, this applies principally to | Men. For conmuerea trom the point of view of absolute seifisnness, and putting | Kade A Questions OF mental or moral benefit or injury to be derived iran the quality of § * Cd “ * I™ e ] can Smeue IT FREEZIN' ? $ oa Firem To the Editor of the Event: [it any determined A friend says a fireman receives $13.12 work of some kind, but even a night- a week. Anothér friend says that they watchman has to have youth and ex- werage of $%.67 a month, perience on his side, or at receive and that would figure out mre than heavy pull. $13.12 a week. What Is a fireman's wages? NICHOLAS, Firemen begin on $800 a year, Their) A Brutal Husband, To the Editor of tne Evening World: 1 would like the readers’ opinion and pay {6 Increased $200 @ year until it gavice about my husband's actions. If Mary Jane’s New Way to Make an Omelet. She Saw a Magician Do It in This Style, and Pa’s Silk Hat Undergoes a Strain, Now , KICKUMS, Goin’ To SHOW You How To MAKE A 3D 49900900000400000-0 110-0 in HOME » MAGAZINE. > ae cad STIR IT | | | 3 | $ 4 es » + Ps ; 4 i 3 $ 4 4 2 4 | £-5992-9-9-9-2-32 UE 33690004 0499989099909 the ehildren, He struck our one-year- man ought to get old child in the face with hot sausages and struck another child with a hot Sweet potato. He has also struck me. | | These are his usual actions, even when sober. Mrs. F., Woodside, L. 1. | A Word for Sicilians. | To the Editor of the Evening World | In answer to the letter describing | Sicilians, I wish to give the following least & DESPONDENT. teaches $1,400. Engineers receive $1,600) things don't go his way he comes home corrections; Sicily was never inhabited @ year | and smashes all the Neo Pinee for Old Men. so vs tae Bivening World ‘To the dishes on tne table) by Turks of Arabs, but by Greeks and throws the meals at the walls with- Sicans and Phoenicians, all of them ctv- out any cause. | have five children. 1) Slised peoples. Garioald! did not capture I have come to the conclusion that attend to all the household duties my-| Sicily and subjugate its people, as tne after a man Is over fifty he isn’t in it self. My husband makes enough money | correspondent says, but Garjbaidi was it. marriage Is about the best thing that | It is hardly a wonder that the papers | to hire a maid, but I try to save all the| called to Sicily by the Sicilians to neip are filled with accounts of suicides. Ini money I can for him. He is brutal to| them chase the Bourbons out of the can happen to @ woman. know them, but the: here, nor did they | This morning at sun there, lying behind they had passed tne Ing for some on This story caused fety ; her dark, lustrous vented an excuse to his second interview erlet Zaguir. there are "Yes: thelr attachment he Was not there bef openty. but almost me nightfall he reached h and so departed, "Take care they 4 Aisha.” Then they “See! They are standing there now!" the one with the and sat down on some cushions which ¥ do not live near ook lke travellers. rise they were still the fig trees, as if night there waich- with a great effort at sincerity; reoel who comes in secret to get m cines tor his sick wife.” “Poor woman!” exclaimed Zaguir ,in mock sympathy. "Bhe must have takeg a lot of medicines 1 nthe last two montha, for he comes every night.” “Hush! You wicked bov!” “Well, don't tell me any of your ghost Stories, my dear aunt. | don't want (0 saia * js name—that's none of my busl- but you should warn your mis- Alsha some anx- tlree men,” “Allah protect me! 1 will not even her what you know." at as you Ike,” said Zaguir you should tell her that the hous being watched, “Well, it hasn't done them much good fore, Hi sald lon't see you, left the win ow por Jog 'y in the centre of the roo night. For @ periog {4} In the centre soaraeeetins ead i the last two nights,” said Aisha. “He marhior did not come I hear Zoraya mov- “Well, they would n Ing about, Gee-quick! She is coming!” there ‘a!l night uni Zaguir ‘eaped to his feet, but did not Watching for some one have time to leave the room before a change came o'er = Zaguir seemed em itated to reply. Fin Zoraya's | _, "Perhaps for him what say you?" “Who could they be watching for?’ Co often after nightfall. In here without being seen; and he goos Joraya entered a A saw him, who is here?” she asked. bar a “Only Zaguir, my nephew, who ehould who comes here so not be here, but he had a good ex- cuse. Since yestertay he has some Jemanded Aisha, men watching around the house. sternly ; Yes,” added the boy; “they passed “Oh, you need not be angry. It ty| the night under the fig trees Ing outside | Des . 5 Hesidea, | You can see them from the window, lad who was sitting outside the window tei) iv one but you what T know penora,’ sald Aishs, as. she walked led to her in eat manner Pad,*: what do you know, you bad ard \t, followed by her mistress. w, what is it, 2, + . | boy?” ‘Fro is side—look! t ters through the orchard gate and thon 1 them,” ‘said at nightfall, 1 saw two in the shadow of the arches he glides oy vem,” said Zoraye. golng toward the bridge. country, The ~ by the Italians, but are loved, because they have contributed a good deal to make Italy great. We all know Sicily | is the birth-place of many of the great- est men the world has ever known, able wedding? penses correct? LETTERS, QUERIES AND ANSWERS 2 o a big city lke New York it seems as lians are not despised | ANTONELLL | dding Expenses, To the Editor of The Evening World Whgt (if any) of the expense Is pay- y my future son-in-law for his My daughter says all ex- hould be borne by me. Is she Mrs. X. Z pay for the The bridegroom should bridal bouquet and for the bouquets of the bridesmalds. the wedding should bride's parents, i The other expenses of be paid by the Pah | apa se St Be { “- The Board of Health Will Soon Cog — spire to Put Everybody ona Diet of Hay. ; SEE," said the Oigar Store Man, “that the of Health im stage-managing a big scare om Bright's disease.” “Pine,” reviied the Man Higher Up. “We are getting it lumped, People get Bright's disease of the’ ”” kidneys handed out to them as the penalty for high live Ing and tiredness of the heart for drinking three-cen® whiskey and eating chuck steak. Bverything eeems to conspire to put us on a hay diet. “Up to a few years ago {t was the common unde standing that we eat to live. Now the doctors seem to be trying to graft {t upon our intelligence that we go aginst our daily chow to die. It we paid attention to rything that is told us about the dangers of diet we juld all be subsisting upon atmosphere table d'hotes. “The chances are that we will ali go on eating an@ drinking the best we can get. The humble laborer, with his dally feed of rye bread, sausage and hard-botled ega, runs in the appendicitis stakes with the.miliionaire, who subsists upon goose livers and champagne. The healthy agriculturist, who fills his face for 365 days @ Year with! | the products of nature right out of the ground, don’t live as long as the flat dweller, who gets his vegetables oud of a can and goes against a 65-cent feed, with wine, | every Sunday night. The patient boarding-house patron, who secures only the simplest and cheapest fodder, looks like a materielized chunk of fog alongside a wine agent, “The natural disposition of modern man fs for come fort and enjoyment. If he likes rich food he Is going to cal it, provided ne has the price. If it makes him a cane didate for the tender ministrations of the undertaker be has got to stand It. The poor man, wearing bis summer “ | clothes in winter, is cold, but'he don’t overfeed. Give Xim a chance and he would take his fill of everything om the bill of fare, even if he knew that it would put hinw out of business before the taste died out of his mouth.” “Look at John D. Rockefeller,” announced the Cigar {tare Man, “ile could go against the finest grub In the land, but he subsists on seltzer water and crackers.” *. “The trouble with John D.,” responded the Man Higher Ip, “Is that he can’t afford to die.” Nature’s Jokes. ’ Gardeners all over the world are tolling to produce new’ flowets. Nature, in a freakish moment, will sometimes aoe complish what generations of horticulturists have been unmet | able to effect, says Pearson's Magazine, As an instance in point, there Is a Malmaison rosebash te a garden at Violet Hill, Stowmarket, which one summen recently produced a most astonishing floral freak. The rese grows near an apple tree, and when one of its largest buds first burst into bloom {t was seen that five perfect apple blossom petals were springing In its centre. A flower discovered on the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in thé early morning blooms a pure white; by midday {it has changed to a perfect red, but before it closes g. nightfall 1% has turned to a pale blue Even more wonderful than @s change of color Is the fact that at noon only does & give out any perfume. But the strangest flower is the New South Wales flannad flower. It is so called because it has the exact appedrance of having been carefully cut out of white flannel, Panama Gambkrs. A Jamaican newspaper correspondent at Panama sage. “There are more gambling ‘hells’ in Panama than in any other city of Its size on earth. Fortunes are lost nightly, and sultides are so common that they reoetve no notice elther from the public or the press,” the Sorceress w The Great Sardou Romance » The Sorceress A Story by George Morehead, Based Upon the Play of “The Sorceress "In Which Mrs Patrick Campbell ls Now Appearing Successfully Here. "Go~—go quick! urged Zoraya. The boy hurriedly left the room, and Zoraya stood, looking out of the win- jow, watching the movements of the ing to the church bells in the city, After the fore last." it may have family duty" — He nor children.’ which were rin & few minutes she turned from window and asked: “Why are the beils ringing so early in the morning? Is it some Christian holy day?" “I don't know,” replied Aleha Zoraya now left the window and Paced to and fro tn the room, nervous and excited. Finally she said ‘After walting ¢ im for hours, I ended by faling The noise | of the bells woke mi n I heard your volee. I thought that he was here, and I almost betrayed { by calling nis tained him. Cestie, moned to “Yes, aya ‘Allah protect surest way to been some unexpected “No, ne!” sald Zeraya; “he is free. has neither father, “He has commatid of the archers and owmen in the city, jot for two whole days.” argued . in & mournful tone. seem like an e.ernity @ member of the Council of and he may have been su Aranjuez to meet the Kin at is possivle, t he might have found some means to send me a@ seoret jetter.” We are in danger now. #0 infatuated with einy of the true God pause replied: wife “You do not under motner, love Perhaps that de herey Orfige. friendship with my gained my freedom “Two “Would to Heaven “Unfortunately, I am but « womal is young and hand AASERLEd sore That would be us Into trouble. And when he had gt 1 thought no more « that infidel, an en- Zoraya sighed, and after a moment's one can tel. the why and wherefore of * ¢ * You see, One word from him would have | given me into the grasp of the Holy It was necessary to buy his from Toleto before the dawn.” he flesh is weak, and me; he has a gen- erous soul, a gentle eye, a loving heart omplice of poor Kalem, and for jass # crime as yours,” T would die first!" “Allah! Allah! love Every night I am there, 9q my couoh, with eye and ear wake, trembling at the least sound, ‘And you are happy and gay in the face rstand, Aisha. No I was at his love. Once | had I Intended to fly a danger. What folly!" Zorayn arose, and, going toward companion, she addre her, mygh fore and feeling: n. ‘ou do not understand, we had! Alsha. To loe wéthout danagt, ooh very well it ts the common lot. Bu added Zoraya forbidden love—love which le cursed conderoned in advance; which draws | Joy out of peril, and bids deflance to tleath—that js love! ‘The deliclous flavor vf the forbidden kiss. Ah! Aisha, that ven me my liberty of Aight.” You cannot expect Lord Bnriques| “Ah! The Knight of the Sword! Be- “Alaa!” exclaimed Alsha, with a ges- |! real love!” es now until this evening,” replied Aisha. | hod the spy!’ cried Zoraya, holding (use of sorrow and despair. 9] “ART Be ete een ae eee Tite Ah, my God! Two days and two | aloft one of the canis. Why, what would you have me do? 10). i his “step.” Bhi ran gud Rights have passed since I saw him, "Now, you see. it Is too late!” said Ah! the ! ea powertul ene sora and-opened ft “Tt la her AMT and no word from him. What torture: | Aisha, “I thought that by this time enemy!” cried Zoraya, holding up a }/6 Jf a is he!” a And such horrible dreams! Give me| we would be far away In a place ot card, and much pleased with her dis- 5 ie cents Alsha, Ah, those bells have safety. You had decided to act like the covery. even though it was @ portent ‘ opped fest of our people and fly to Africa to of evil Aisha searched for the ocarde and | escape the persecution of the Nagar "Now, vou see! I told y CHAPTER IV. Gre fuera to her mistress, who sat be when you mt that man. Then Hush!" whispered Zoraya down before a low table on which she | all was changed, Woe to us! © * The “What? spread the cards. Aisha tat on the | first thme he came here. and you a0] thought 1 heart him.” said zor-/ 2€ Lovers Meet Again— floor ‘and silently watched Zoraya'a | foolishly cast yourself Into his arm& ayn. intently listening for some sound. , renance is she arranged the cards. | I fancied I heart the black wings of “after 'a moments alence Zoraya alghe| ZOPaya’s Mear—The Spies ' When {he silence had become tire- | Azrael, the Ang of Death, fluttering eq and sald St Ml W: sume. Alsha remarked above our roo! “Ant will not come be- | ( “He should be warned of the pres- | “Remember, Alsh he Prophet says Pie Tad = hie dha atch. once of these men.” ‘Our ~ she gethered on the men sitting and talking together the th em! destiny is ended from our “Twere better that he never came or tite. a we et | cate at the pot wil § Bes tha Ban | eee eee Lad big ud aon Mat nis tae ee Iq. Zagule tee them before last neck. If It ts written that T must le again meTetorted Alsha, bitterly < ‘ a Shae sr n Hot f ar. . ia the: 3 r Enrique, T cin do tt—only hoping It “Stop your lamentations! Do you wish SN af father had been private physi. Martino Bridge. They were only a hun- oe i ai YT Bea ah ty; and see senora.” cane be ta ti aaa? ava” we pig if monte HEN Enrique entered the bed to King Boabdill, the jest of thy red steps from the house, I did not re explained Alsha.| “Yes, senora nat ual tie presence of these men does, “Oh, my child; you who have been #9 That would be better than to be 1¢ Impatient Zoraya threw her | igh Kings in Grenkda, and after the ———__ ne unt for his absence night be-|chaste In vour widowhood. why are you buried alive In a convent cell. Ilke the arms about bis neck and erted "1 i — ee — a — - at, with nervous force fall of the Moorish government a reseneprnenenenetemnivasehesenemetenesion a _ _ | ou : i bata became attached to the WwW M | "At last! Thank God! At lasta@h of Bishop Talavera, « man rs. age an r. w By R L. McCardell last” ‘ and liberal views, who admired : § iV oy ° cUlardell, aprtags Nem rapturously rr: bare Warde’ svill and, learning-even ¢4f “ANT help feeling biue to-day, Mr, Nagg. Goodness help feeling sad over it . Sag ali aE tee a ee ae Cen ) effort to restrain or conceal the joy Mi : , knows it is very seldom I indulge myself in the lux: A wornan's lave Is always constant ateady, f on ids me. I must have $2), Mr. Nagg. Mme. Smith will be “But 1 you give mo the $5 you won't have any she felt, while he seemed nervoug an@ . ye stea t here wit new dresa owe her $20 on it yey to pa ‘ n, you Ww iu or ge + pre sp nd reaponded cold}: fie her education and given her irl | ah lowr and think of how I try to please you and his wile, He never thinks that a kind word af a caress fubt, wearing a thin gowa' of (wo summers ago. In this dive me the 9% here W #1 for your shoeo! b wotdhucs Gee GSSCE' Ki Slddce see tag® training in the preparation tful alt ¢ay, T ca rylng would be more happiness to her than all the money in the chiliy weathar while that man of hers wh sid imma 4s $1 for your shoes! Thank goodness her Maries his colors la ed anne 4 ou put your hands on me! I you to world. c ar me HOR OF NEES J e no hot selfs tle: isha quietly drew the curtains EOF medicinal herbs and plants You doe esean tt and 1 kooe 4 ; a day's work in bis life, dresses L:ke a prince! You never think of me. You neglect me, you hardly ever over the windows and discreetly lett | 7 Hoh At that time formed the stock w care “Please don't hold me so tight, Mr. N Don't you eotly left the ) open } fe denta | (28 MO You show it In a hundred ways to love Pape: : rh doa! ase. n't you mee = Well, 1 won't do It. Here's t Y, you say? What in speak to me, you never kiss me any more except when you room, Zoraya then said to Enrique: q hy Since Bis Beats | ine, Mr. Naga, bus you don't fo aul tae ‘a hover Of ae his full of ping? Perhaps you would like to make that other money you have? Five dollare? Why don't you leave in the morning or when you « home at night, and = “Flow fast your hesrt % Ftave », whe ¥ Nile #8'd0A €% Kone now adays and put your arm ind rege me swallow some them and expire in ago: give it to met T have ‘> turn this $» right « to Mn lam fo 1 ugh to feel your neglect you been running? to the city for fear of exciiing @M¥Y | iw you used to That's rigt own muikily, You * you don't: amit 1 { want a palr of shoes ty match the gow What Is the use to lve? I have nothing to lve for! No yes those who would gindly seen | “Lam cold toward you, yo ay? Is wonder? 1¢ CHre anything £ Mo Ary Mever alfectionat Ah, if Speaking of shoes reminss me tha man brought one loves me except my dear mother, and she is always a \ at a Moorish heretic you had a hy like thle ty look aft ad a thou. YO% Could sec ate His wife gave your shoes bach today. He half-soled them and the auarrelling with me - F t ow wits Don Enrique! sand troubler and worries on your mind. as 1 have, you !!M $0 to spe 1 kn ft employment o} was $1, I told hin you were not home and he “You separated me trom my mother end have he-living 2 @ Featol this remarks | a aide a change ha!| wouldn't have any time for such fo ess a ae bo ore and he Kista her ao sweets wouldn't leave them without the money. I only hat fit, Away from us now sey eons she and 1 cid e able love scene with the arently You took so silly eping up to me iike a lovesick mon. '¥: It Was me sweetheart than a husba nd | have to pay my dues in the Kind Words Club to- on how to run the house. | suppose you are sitlefied + P =e Foality in the anguish | key and trying to kins me. Get away, don't you see { “And here I sit, patching and darning and fixing over my morrow, so, of course, I couldn't pay for your shoes. Why, are you going downtown? Can't xe have one SU! more remarkable inel- were and despair that @ a am busy fixing over this skirt? old duds and irying to be cheerful, even though you neglect “Those tan shoes you are wearing look horrid; don't for- evening together? But I suppose I am not good enough for dents that follow, will be a8 forbidden by law ww wove) “Now, as 1 was saying, Mr. Nagg, you don’t care for ™*. get to stop In in the morning and get the shoes the man you? You won't go out, you say? Well, you can do as you givenin to-morrow’ sin: tal ree BS Mooris) | ™* any more, I know It, I know there Is no use for me * as I said, © kind word or a caress means more to a mended for you, I won't go out with you while you are like, but I am golng to run over to Mrs. Terwiliger’s for 4 Stal. trom | (© complain abou: it and J won't complain, but I just can’t true wife than al) the money In the world. And that re. wearing those shoes, bd | while. Dents forget to put out the cat!” men Seren nee | eee ene é lament of ‘The Sorceres: ‘