The evening world. Newspaper, July 20, 1905, Page 14

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The Evenin Pubitmed by the Press Pudliching Company, Mntered at the Post-Office at New York VOLUME 46.. 6 to @ Park Row, nd-Cliss M Ma k NO, 1 6,089, MR. RYAN’S SINCERITY. If Mr. Thomas F. Ryan is sincere in his willingness to get our Equitable he should formally notify Gov. Higgins to that effect and ast the Governor to recommend to the Legislature the tment of legisla tion accordingly. Mr. Ryan cannot complain because the public are su 5) Picious of him. In every one of his many corporate transactions prior to © this the outcome has been the possession of the control and the assets by him and loud wails from the former owners. For Mr. Ryan to explain that he has made an agreement with Paul Morton to get out-whenever Mr. Morton thinks best is equivalent to say- ing that he has made an agreement to do as he pleases, for Paul Morton is his man and was put in the Equitable by him. If public indignation over life insurance corruption should subside! before Mr. Ryan withdraws, there is no ground to hope that Mr. Paul Morton will put him out. COATS AND COLLARS. Physical comfort is not as dependent on external temperature as on fnternal conditions. Humid air at 85 degrees is more uncomfortable than dry air at blood heat. This is familiar to every one who has experienced | af World’s Home How to Keep of about a nths, with a ked and long-sleeved was ing in the 4% his go-cart, sur- ad owith bh elder- pillows which rose up around his small body, adding to the heat and dis- |comfort. Raby had no hat on. There was no parasol on lated for his shading her own features with a large picture hat. The poor little baby was crying pitifully, and the the cart, and he was being per jhealth by his fond mamma, who back staring at the sun. As soon as he turned on |his side the heat from the pillows suffocated him. | are those who wear the fewest clothes. A little He was almost purple in his face from the heat and angrily crying. His mother didn't seem to mind {t at all, and continued to allow the sun to shine on her child’s unprotected head. Beside the present suffering of the poor baby, | mother will have herself to blame {f the child's! out in the heat of the day. Their heads should the different effects between the lower heat of the Russian room and) higher temperature of the dry-room in Turkish baths. | i Here is where the manner of dressing and the food consumed come By fn as such great factors in the effects of hot weather. Men seem less| adaptable in this respect than women, which accounts for the cooler ap- pearance of women and the public sweltering of almost all men, Women} do not wear coats in the summer time or starched linen collars and they do not put several thicknesses of cloth over their chests, backs and shoulders. _ Coats and collars are responsible for many red faces and oppressive @scomforts. Pajamas such as are worn in the tropical countries would/ make the most comfortable masculine apparel these days. A man at-| tired in one thickness of loose-fitting garments would tend to cool off in the slightest breeze. In Indla water is cooled without ice by putting it in Porous vessels suspended in a draft. The evaporation cools the contents of the jar below the external temperature. In like manner the human system has mechanism for keeping cool, which will work if a fair chance is given it. The perspiration evaporating through a porous garment will cool the surface of the skin and lower the temperature of the blood. If the perspiration is checked and the dampness exuded from the pores confined to the surface of the skin the effect will be heating. If in addition there is a tight, starched collar to prevent the natural circulation of air around the neck, and a coat of a dark! color which attracts heat, the effect is the opposite of what nature has made provision for. if The disuse of coats and collars during the summer time, the wear- ing of only such garments as have not been starched, for starch closes the pores, and the adoption by men of some of the cool ideas of women’s summer dress would make life in the dog days much more tolerable. j Another candidate has appeared against George Washington Plunkitt for the Tammany leadership of the Fifteenth District. He is 4 Alderman Richter, who The McManus said had to pay Plunkitt for his nomination, If @ pretty girl cannot say good-night to her young man on the stoop, j what is she todo? There are hundreds of blocks in New York which have 3 no front yard or hammock or gate, the Baby Cool only way he could rest at all was by lying on his, Scie eee eye for achila ight is defe han to let tt tive, Nothing 1s wor tire Into the s 0 S morning another exhausted lilt nh its mother's arms, id hanging, too far gone to ery, also heavily clad, shoes and stockings, the high neck and long sleeves adding te the heat of the little one, its little head scorching from the SU Its little body even more heated by contact wit» She warm arms of the mother. | adother child in the trolley car was being Jolt- ed up and down by its mother and patted on the back in a barbarous way to ameliorate {ts sufter- ings from the heat. Besides, it was another vic- tim with a tight thiek cap over its head and large ribbon rosettes fastened over its ears. | The Health Bureau informs us that almost sev- en hundred children have died during this hot spell. Perhaps a few of the deaths and much suf- fering may be attributed to causes like these just cited. | The happiest and healthiest children at present | flannel band around the stomach and one loose, light garment is plenty this hot weather, ; A prominent doctor in one of the city hospitals | gives the following suggestion: | Small children, like invalids, should avoid going res ‘Thareday Evenings Jal by Margaret Hubbard Ayer % 20, 1908. “The Man Higher Up’ Finds always be pMRectea shade nat or umbrella There Are Wads of Easy ' Don't tie fie child's cap tight under tts chin si . _ ke Off 118 shoes and stockings, particntarly it Money in Wall Street. stockings, no matter whether it is fashionable or eae, not. a Vake off the ribbon rosettes from the baby's By Martin Green. ears. This is a barbarous style for hor weather, 6 6 SED," sald the Cigar Store Man, “that the District» Children aro made hardier by allowing them to| Attorney is listening to a lot of squeals from Walt fo with low-neck und short-sleeved slips in sum- street a ty people who have been trimmed by mer, and are made more delicate by being en- veloped in tov much and too tight clothing, Don't pad out baby's go-cart with stifling feath- er pillows. Give it one pillow, not too soft, to lie on, The wicker work of the carriage will allow plenty of ventilation, and ventilation is what baby is crying for at present. Change the child's clothing tn hot weather— never allow time for any friction or irritation by damp clothes, and whore there {s a tendency to itching or prickly heat bathe the little one fre- quently with tepid water to which a little vinegar has been added. Don't bathe the baby when it is overheated by’ crying or exercise, nor after it has been fod. It possible have a small hammock for the child, which should be swung out of doors or in the house, and let the baby lle in it This will in- sure more air for the child and less heat. These hammooks are very inexpensive and are far tetter, resting places for the little ones than the crib. Place the child in the hammock and fasten the sides over him securely to prevent falling out. fhey are squealing a whole lot now, while they can stay under cover,” replied the Man Higher Up, “but Mr, Jerome {s going to have the time of his life dragging them into the open when he gets ready to put the grafters on trial. Wall street has been a field for blackmailers for years, and It isn’t played out yet. An occasional pinch don’t have any effect on the guys who have pulse enough to go to the richest men in the country and make them cough up te have stories suppressed that na reputable paper would print. “Tt is the experience of every legitimate newspaper man in New York that Professional society people and big financiers of the flashy type are simply dippy for publicity. Many of them have private press agents. When it comes to wanting to get their pictures printed or a record of some stunt they have the soubrette and prima.donna looking Ifke shrinking violets. “Mr. Jerome will find that it 1s not necessary to blackmail the average rich New Yorker to make him produce for a publication about himself. Of the arts of printing and painting and fine book binding, the most of them are ignorant. There have been enough fako oil paintings and phony por+ traits unloaded on Wall street to cover one side of the Rocky Mountaing, When it comes to selling the average climber in society a book, all you have A “Baby Party.” ROBABLY the Boston hostess P made the sad blunder because she lacked knowledge of human nature. ‘The invi rus she sent out for a recent festivity bore a re- quest that every guest should forward at once a picture of herself or himself taken tn early tnfanc: Daguerreotypes tintypes, silnouett: eabinets poured tn, the night o ¥ person received a tablet and was requeste side every number a guess at the errors that ar atmosphere of !' Pretty wor se created a deligh M feeling, even enm n were offenaded wher Little Willie’s Guide to New York. Ghe Gas-House District. HE gass howse districkt is whare mister merfy and the big bils come frum it is on the east side and ts full of tanx some of the tanx are painted red and some of them paint the districkt red. when mister merfy was young he used to watch thoase tanx frum the hurricane deck of the hoarsecar he droave and he said to himself Thoaze tanx are round and fat and not pritty to look at but thay rake in cash frum evvery secktion of nu yoark. Go { and do likewize and likewize he done it. thoaze tanx inspired mister merfy to the noable carreer that has arrowzed the love and addmiration of all nu yoark and thay are still thare and waiting for sumboddy else to inspire when the gass bills come in a whonle lot of peeple are inspired but thare bank ackownts arent and the next month the fammily goes out of town and shuts up the howse Money-Making Errors. HE average person takes pleasure T in calling attention to errors in spelling or grammar in signs. The mistakes furnish them a’ tempta- tion to display their knowledge that Is hard to resist. “Every now and then.” sald a local haberdasher, according to the Kansas City Times, “I fix up a window sign with a misspelled word or an error in grammar in it. Dozens of people drop in to tell me where it's wrong. Of course, I act surprised and thank them. Then the chances are I sell them something. At a Kansas City theatre there used to be an ad- vertising curtain which bore the word “versus” apelled “verses.” The word to tell him or her is that his or her picture or sketch will be on the next page to that of Mrs. John Jacob Astor, A man in public Hfe will pay @ misguided blacksmith who has gained a knowledge of caricature in a cor- Tespondence school $500 for an original drawing of himself, and howl like a Siwash Indian if he sees himself caricatured in a newspaper by the clever= est man in the country. All the District-Attorneys in the United States can't stop grafters from working when such a large percenage of people with money and social aspirations are lilerally begging to be stung.” ‘Don't these people know they are being played for suckers?” asked the Cigar Store Man. “It they do,” replied The Man Higher Up, “they seem to like it.” A Symposium of Mixed Trades. fee anne a al ee pertisulatly and then the gass tanx play a merry joak on them by matking the bill for attracted more comment Laat ugly babies, that month twice as large as the month befoar. so you see maybe the ¢ acta aie cite AS ee Gheatrioal. busl- —— t+ 1 aide aiken eneine on The hates ork} ease tanx got just a little inspirashun frum mister merfy too. the $858} 108, ‘to"ger the public to, talline about . aimpiei-oneeked infant” ‘Vlow pretty | howse districkt 1s called the alteenth asembly dlstrickt by peeple who doant} things 1s the rat step toward money Vo, 6 The Young Lady Physician Describes Somo Fee eiee act. Reetne Tie Aizet} like to hert mister merfy’s fealings but a gnes howse aisteoet 7 anny} Meher the house manag abour the St je (Symptons, was tghiy trig’ My naime wood smell as sweet. good oald gass howse distric! led word, however, a range oy e party teas a bignhy frigid aitair by tne A. P. TERHUNE. Finally aad to have tt changed. f ee a ee epSome wof wethe # Best # Jokes & of # the # Day.se Housekeeper—I regret to say, rir, that because of the quarters and halves—)we have ‘o move some of the furnf- too much gossip; I couldn't stand for your pon and the cook have eloped. Philadelphia Press. ture out—Chicago Tribune. {t—Detroit Free Press. Rich Ol Party—Thunderaticn! Then *. “ee a fe we ma'n't have any dinner! —Mt-Bits, | ‘We quite agree with those who Insist Sew ee true, there is no danger in running train: Lompe— There 8jn9)/ soubty about tne| But proudly she holds up her head & high rate of speed; the trouble begins) a ee a eS nctae Neat © tae, iaamay when they stop suddenly.—Detroit Free| creature, will do Press. Browne—Yes, but not as quickly as his! wen you give him a needle to thread. wife will find him out—Philadelphia —Washington Btar. Press. * A woman can’t sharpen @ pencil, ‘tis| “Yes, Ive still got the first dollar I made.” ‘hat's rather remarkable.” “Not remarkable. Only ‘queer.’ Since {t was my first, {t was, of course, im- perfect and hard to pass.”--Philade!- phia Ledger, oe Mrs, KXider—Oh, yes, he leads « regu- Jar dog's life with her. ‘Miss Gaussip—Indced? Do you know I suspected she wasn't ell that she— cause the food was adulterated. Mrs, Kidder—Yes, she's petting and Quibbs—So? kissing him all the time—Philadelphia| Nibbs—Yes; it was eo mtxed up with| Press. | wt & By Ernest De Lancey Pierson. ‘Tho Visttor—What a delightfully snug Miss Ascum—I've often wondered, M?|iittle flat you have! Rymes, why you poets always speak of! The Renter—Isn't tt? When we open the moon as “silver.”” the door we're in the middle of the Mr. Rymes—Well—er--I suppose f'slroom, and when the #mshine comes in The Second Avenue Rubies 4 s s eee eee Nibbs—I left that boarding-house be- sf s s |emotion. SYNOPSI8 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Charles F. Dodge’s $40 set of City of New York. * false teeth has been paid for by the : # Letters from the People. | A Face int Another B. R. T. Grievance. othe Wittor of The Evening World: ‘The trains to Borougy Park, @tch, Ulmer Park and Coney Isiand run nly once in fifteen minutes. When they do run (especially in rush hours) they are jammed to the doors, and big erowdas wait and swelter and hustle and gam to get aboard. This seems to me mafefr, as that line ie the only direct means of reaching the vast and popu- ated district at Beth Beach and Ben- sonhurst, &c. Let us have trains every @even minutes in rush hours and every tan the rest of the day. Tho profs murely wil) justify this slight concession, CROPSHY AVENUE. The Car-Window Law. Bo: Gee Hiitor of The Evening World: I noticed yemieniay two men at vari- out tims try to enter a Brooklyn ele- vated car by way of the windows, in- atead of taking their chunces with the hogs at he regular entrances. One was arrested. The other was hauled out by the neck and cursed. Why? I asked & musrd. He pointed to an inconsplou- Gus and dirty sign fornidding such In Kreas. Not one pagrenger in forty oan FRc Mead iT don't blame the poor a for trying to dodme that jam. Bath | lyn. The Song of Mosquito Bill To the Editor of The Evening World: 'm Mosquito Bill, of Union Hill, From out the swamps and marshes: Of blood I'd sooner have my fi} Than Hungarian goulash My ‘Gppotite ts out ‘of alghee No indigestion there, Brooklynite 1 love to biter e's on my bill of fare, I begin to sing before I sting, For music, they hath charms; And then I'light and’ firmly oling TO neck, or feet, or arms, Wild passes are’ made, but I'm not afraid, For ‘tis It's a risk T enjoy it Wom that the; sane. im, but what if dt is, to beat the band as Voun@ One Defunct Cat To the Editor of The Evening World: I found @ dead cat in the water this morming while taking my swim in It 1s @ perfectly cat owner can have it by o: @t that part of the ch, It won't be stolen {n the meantime. I’m glad it's there, for I weary of the vegetabl diet of melon rinds and cabbage leaver cast up by the Ade to tempt swimmers’ | appetites, OR ATATOS. BLL, AH HAMAND ran upon a broken slab of marble, He mole ob | Abi dropped the breaking it in plecas. @ould not Ml out the whole, Faces spiny, the proWen Abll took tt under stone wile ohusing @ oat, and the centro fhe space left was octagon in shape, but| ducing her.”’ ‘ no mattor how he tried, ns there seemed to|that led to the back rooms. for the opening, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. Puzzlers aro} If two of the black pieces are cut in the right!" oan watt. Mections can be Atsved into the hole 99 that the slab ei vere fen sister, Mrs. Bea urn, either. fiice. I want you | The dot wing bim down tha| |dingy ha ou. CHAPTER IV. he Crowd. A It neema outrageous to fine them $10 for! To’ sornce or the eer ee eer went to the frving to wet in by the window. It 1s a. a ee HBNAD: lov of itmited quality to live ia Decee There in tt by @ crowd, lay 1. B. PB, | the broken carriage Fr enougn to @ re- im tell a yw scribe that in the bot- le had beep found a partly-emoked porter to hear | She was turning away when a man jostled against her coming out of the retreating crowd, and muttered an oath under his breath as he plunged on ahead. At |the turn of the next street he looked around him, and she eaw his face, It was the same that she had eeen peering out at the end of Mrs. Reyburn's garden, & proceeding which had excited that lady exceedingly. Without stopping to weigh the matter m her mind Allce started off in the direction the man had vaken, |resolving that she would follow him until she learned |more about him. Mrs, Heyburn was surely {implicated in Dick's disappearance, and here was a man she evi- ently feared. A friend of :he lady's he was not An| accomplice? More than likely | Allee Rayn nied to Know what bond there was |that existed between them, . . The man whom Allce was following was tall, slender and bronzed, He walked on to the ferry end Ai-ce wae ‘olose enough to Hear him ask for a Ucket to beadow~ |hurst, a shabby Long Island suburb,’ She bought a Uaket for the same place #4 caught the same train as her unconecious quarry. Leaving the little station on the train's arrival at Meadowhurst, the man lost himself in a maze of half- completed streets, stopping at Inst before the door of la tumbledown suburban cottage that was sadly in need of paint and other repairs. Beside the gate bung la sign bearing the name; “Dr, James Rowsby.” In response to the knook the doctor himself came to the door, He was» shambling, blear-cyed man, wuose face bore marks of drink. He started back in amaze at sight of his visitor. “Gilbert Chetwood!" he cried. in Austratta!” “I'm back an@ making money," was the old partner Jethbs and I are working (ose I'm rich now, and without help from my dear neil Take me to your “I thous... vou were in @ room about 10 feet | Chetwood four square, the floor Well, 1 has ness, | Chetwood. sacted the bet- | ter, Lam sorry but perhaps, after | all, @ little money ca lish wonders,”’ Just set It dor 4 that 1 am willing to agree to onyth Rovwhy hastened to say. "You ould not hay iin at a me opportune Ume, | for I was tt should have to Mit out of thia | slough of «i t er able to get the innocent tradesmen o to trust me for provender, 6 I am yours nmand and I can | lge you my word that Mra Rowsby"— e married, t jwith a slight trow “Yes, and I shall ntorrupted Chetwood n. have gveat pleasure in intro. He rose and moved toward the door | “Don't hurry with that,’ sat@ Chetwood, dryly, there was no woman about, friend, a-young man who t@ the victim etrange Bee here, I have «| tied, He j hallucinations. In short, he had @ knook on the head which had upset his brain pan.” The doctor's watery eyes twinkled and he nodded as if he understood, “This person ts now in the city and, as I am inter- ested in his recovery, I thought @ sojourn \p the country might do him good.” “And so you selected Meadowhurst as the most suitable place for an invalid to recover in?” “I want to bring this young man out here, where he will be free from the noises of the olty, and can recover, slowly getting back his reason, I say slowly, understand me, because I don't want him to recover too soon. A month, or perhaps two, would be about the proper time. Now, would you be willing to accept | the charge? Could you fit up @ room in this kennel— I mean house—for a young man to occupy who was | used to the comforts, If not the elegances of life?” | “I am prepared to lodge your friend in comfort tn the said room, and Mrs, Rowsby shall minister to his material wants, provided, of course, the emolu- ments are commengurate with the outlay and # bonus | 1s given, because he is @ stranger, and !t behooves us | to be carefw whom we take in from, you might say, the streets.”" “Bor the trouble I shel pay you #10) @ month and another $100 at the end of the term. Here," Iny- ing some bills on the table, ‘ts $50. I shell return this evening bringing with me the gentleman who ts to be placed in your charge. One moment, please,” @s the Gootor was reaching out @ lean hand over the table to take the money, “one moment, my esteemed friend, you are not to let any one in the neighbor- “No doubt! no doubt! but for all that she may be) gifted with «a long tongue” “IT can promise you that mo one shall know the gentleman is here,” “Good, I think I can trust you, for I beleve it will) be to your Interest ¢o serve me well I could make) it very uncomfortable for you tf you did not” The doctor bowed and wes silent. “Ot course, this young man may object to being kept here, though you offer him such inducements) to stay, and I leave ft to you to use such gentle persuasion as is necessary to keep him here, Of course, if he gets away you will get no more money.” “You need have no fear on that ground. We shell take oure of him es tenderly as if he were our own son," “You had better, There fs the money, and «# that you apend it Judictously and keep sober." “Jim! Jim!" exclaimed a harsh votos that seemed to proceed from the back regions, and was followed by @ shuffling sound, The door was flung open and a strange figure ap- peared in the doorway, Bhe was a stout woman) with a red face and coarse black, straggling hair, replied | A dingy gown of faded blue, trimmed with dirty and she don't look @ good deal better than wi ragged lace, covered her ample figure, “Mra, Rowsby!" explained the doctor, Chetwood curly acknowledged the introduction and took. his leave, Rowsby followed almost at once, making a bee-line for the nearest arioon in order to celebrate his new luce. eee Dr, James Rowsby was returning home in a glorious state of mind, He brought material evidences of the success of his financial operations in the shape of eundry and van- ous bundles, seve they contained Mquidas, Suddenly hie sye fe on an object lying in the road before him, lala (, and. dulgin’ too heavy in neighbor Becker's mixed ale,” T would have Mked it just as well if| He eyed her for some “ 1 of which in shape suggested that | #7!ffed and strode majestically out of the room. He! “A woman, by ah that's holy! Must have been in- | Westioningly. “No,” wagging bis head, “she is either in a faint) or’—he hesitated a moment—"the youngster is dead.’’| “He opened the young woman's jacket and laid his hand on her heart, while his face became serious. | “Mighty faint, the aotion of the heart, but it's a comfort to know that it beats at all. Just fainted, 1 guess, but I must get her out of this fey wind. 1 can't afford to leave her to shift for herself, and then it may bring me good luck to play the Samaritan on this day when Fortune is just sticking her head through | the clouds and winking at me.’ Going over to the pile of packages, he selected one, not without a sigh, and unwrapped it, taking out @ bottle which he uncorked with his teeth. | “Good Lord! She does remind me somewhat of poor| Essie," as he looked down at the quiet face, while a softer Hght shone in his watery eyes, “If she had Uyed she would have been just about this young girl's ege.” | Supporting the girl's head, he attempted to force) some of the contents of the bottle down her throat. He succeeded at last in getting some of the fluid down her throat, and a moment after a faint flush retummed to her cheeks, she opened her eyes and then olosed them again. "I don’t know what Rosamond will say,” shaking his head sadly ae he cast an apprehensive look at his “But one thing is sure—thet I can't beave this youngster here in the street to perish. I don’t be- Ueve,"’ darting an aggressive look at the neighboring houses, ‘thet those mud turtles would stir a hand if humor; anyway, I must brave her, even if she does greet me with the soup tureen.” By Roy L. McCardell. NB of my most interesting cases {s that of a young man who has placed O himself under my care for heart trouble. He is of exceptional fine physique, and repeated applications of the Stethoscope reveal no cardiac affection. The patient ts about tweflty-elght, with a good family history. He is of athletic habit and of sanguine temperament. He insists on office visits at least @ day, and I would have diagnosed the case as hypochondria pure and simple were it not that there are absolutely no morbid symptoms. He insists that he has heart affection, and that nothing but treatment at my hands will alleviate the trouble. Under examination I find that his respiration {s far from normal, his pulse becomes rapid and his temperature goes to a hundred. This patient interests me greatly; his case is extremely puzzling, with many indications of mental perturbation, but uot sufficient to cause alarm, being rather the symptoms of a young man laboring under some Intense though repressed I have suggested thnt he give me a full history of his case, but at such times as I male the suggestion the young man stammers and hesitates and manifests extreme nervousness. He insists that my treatment, which has been merely that of suggestion, with the usual sedatives prescribed in cases of slight irrationality, loss of ap- petite, inromnia and the like of which the young man complains, has greatly benefited him. The strange part of the case ie that the young man refuses to take the medical treatment, and yet oalls day after day, although seldom during my office hours. He expresses great dislike to my having any other patients, and to-day he asked a strange hypothetloal question to the effect: “If a pretty young Indy physiclan received an offer of marriage from a young man able to support her in good style, and who was greatly attached to her, would {t be Ukely that she would cease the practice of medicine and marry him?" In reporting this strange case of nervous obsession to this clinto am I liable to be enlightened as (q Just exactly how I am to diagnose this case? costs money to Hve In Sou Two Servants $95 a Month, } A Play with 2,000 Actors, A woman resident in Johan if Africa. Cree an @ Ilttle town on the pays $6 a month for her sburs Fraser River, holds the curious $35 a month to a Hindoo servant. Inj nok and record of having performea a Inj in which no fewer than 2,000 tndlyiduate ‘ India she would bave had to pay only{took part, All the characters were red $5 a month for the Hindoo's services, | men. May Manton’s Daily Fashions, There is no come tume that suits the active young girl better than this one made tn the favorite regulation atyle, Te ‘s smart in effect, girlish and very. generally becoming, While at the eame time it allows per= fect freedom and ectivity, In the fle lustration the dress fe made of dark bine serge with the collar and shield of white and banding dusband es he staggered forward with his burden. Dut the model te w “Bhe don't look es if she would be @ very payin’ favorite one for patient,” murmured the wife, who had ploked up the linen and similar edge of the girl's ekirt in her fingers and wes ex- washable materials emining it with the eye of « conncieseus, “Twenty- ee well as for serge, five cents a yard, and been turned.’’ “You had better run and get those things if Gon't want Jimmy Hennessey to make off with them,” alluding to the nuisance and terror of the neighbor- hood, “Why, you great booby, what did you leave them, there for? Was there ever such an incapable man tn the worki?’ and with this parting shot she dimp- peared, “Now, (f @he would only stay away half an hour I might be able to acoomplish something,”’ sald the doctor, as he turned again to his patient. ‘Blest if 1 first set eyes on her, How do you feel, my dear?” gmooth- ing her hatr, “That'll do, Mr, Rowsby. No need for you to be- come so affectionate,” And his wife pulled his hand) away, while she vainly endeavored to steady the Wile of bundie¢ in her arms. , “Don't interfere with me when I am engaged in my profemional duties. Go; but first let me have! that bottle,” as he took it from her arms, ‘The fair Rosamond looked at the pale face her husband was bending over, then at her hugband, hurried after her, and, having looked the donr, re- turned to the girl, suprised to find that her eyes were! of black over white, flannd and the like, and tt Is conrect in white es well as in color, go that many variations can be made, For a girl of four teen years will be | required 8 yards of material 27, 618 | yards $2 or 41-3 yards 4 inches wide with 78 yard . 27 inches wide for ool \ar and shield, 5080 ts | In sizes for misses of ‘tualve, | gourteen and alxe teen years of age. Misses’ Sailor Blouse Sult—Pattern No. 6030, How to Ohtain These Patterns, Call or Send by Mail to the Evening World May Manton Fashion open and that she wae looking @round the “Who are you?" asked the doctor, eurtously, Pre.) name fe Alice Raynorl" Saintly answered the Bureau, 21 West 23d St,, New York. fiend 10 Conte Jn Coln or Bamps for Mach Pattern Ordered, IMPORTANT—Weite you oame snd addres plataly, and always apecity else wanted,

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