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w Monday Evening, September 4, orld’s Home Magazine, Getting to Be a Big Girl. By J. Campbell Cory. $, 190d. ssciligiad ‘a . {Woman and the Man Who Don’t Tip. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. @unanea py tho Press Publishing Company, No, 63 to @ Park Row, New Yorke Entered at the Post-Oftice at New York as Seocond-Class Mail Matter, woman I’ is all very well to talk about the emancipation of It is all very well to feel emanct of us do nowa But, did the cave woman, fling over the cave man's shoulder, feel Yo hopelessly humiliated than the modern ho, dining publicly with a man for the first time, discovers that he tips the waiter too little or not at all? There are very few circumstances that dismay the woman of the world; for she {8 generally able to meet and master any complication that presents itself. But in this matter of tins what can she do? What {s the slow-moving finger of scorn compared to the untipped | wadter’s gaze of dispassionate contempt? Does {t not follow us out of his own glittering fastness of Mghts and flowers into the cab that takes us | home, and Instead of attaching itself to the callous man who has aroused it, pursue the woman Into her own boudoir, haunt her very dreams and waits beside her pillow for the ebb moment fm the pallid dawn when, walk tng, she will realize that just because she dined with a creature who didn't tip the whole world is an ash heap on which she is the smallest and most contemptible cinder. Of course, a good deal of this feeling may be due to the injudictons consumption of lobster or crab meat. Most of the soul-anguighed emotions | originate in the stomach, which accounts for the old Greek theory that i | was located there. The furies that pursued Orestes were nothing more | or less than indigestion. Nevertheless, whatever Its great first cause, the humfftatton of having left a waiter untipped and contemptuous fs one that often lasts a sensitive woman a week. Tt is the one soctal situation n which she ts as absolutely dependentan a mem‘s whim as if she were a Roman slave, I remember on the one occasion when this parttoular tron wee driven into my soul, the stfll undiscovered Shylock with whom I was dining showed suoh persistent and prepared dtspleasure with everything the watte? did that it did not take me long to discover that he belanged to ¢he ant Gppers. No woman ever forgets the slow agony of that dimen, with the fatal moment drawing nearer with every mouthfal The poor waiter! So suave, so expectant, so over-zealous, Everybody, imnows they don’t get any wages to amount to anything, Ism’t there some way she contd tip him herselff But even # he fas NO, 16,088, most as —. VOLUME 46......66. OYSTERS AND GERM MANIA. ; The return of the oyster to the half-million dinner tables of Man- hattan occasions the annual revival of typhoid fears. Unfortunately, this September finds the public in a sensitively receptive mood because of the} unusual prevalence of the disease during August. That bivalves which have fattened in polluted waters may conv infection has been proved beyond dispute. Actually the risk for the sumer js so slight as to be negligible, a thousand-to-one shot with diseas Yet there are over-prudent citizens accustomed to take counsel their fears in all matters of germophobia who look upon raw celery o1 unwashed strawberries as contagion itself. They will accept serio the suggestion that oysters dipped in a weak solution of carbolic a + may be rendered entirely safe! Perhaps some day an antiseptic condiment will be devised * hall be palatable as well as prophylactic The welcome given to the short-lived theory that lemon juice would Kil oyster germs hints et th demand for such a table sauce. ui The state of mind which detects colonies-of germs in-a pinch of dust} and magnifies the perils of microbes indiscriminately is not to be For the ignorance which was bliss in the old days when every man wa expected to “eat his peck of dirt” umquestioningty it has subsiftuted a comprehended knowledge which is destructive to mental peace and m 8 little learning a dangerous thing to one’s phrysical comfort. In an interesting paper read at the conference of sanitary eng fm London Mr. F. C. Lewis, of Liverpool University, took oocasion combat the popular notion that the microbe brings omy disease. “Pitz: has now,” said Mr. Lewis, “been harnessed to the sesvice of man i many ways, and when he is better understood he is likely to prove t of our best friends.” j Microbes are employed now in brewing, bread-making, f making, tanning and in the cure of tobacco. In many ri special departments are busied solely with the cultivation of specffic on, 8, When we are not in love, bbed by the hair and You ARE DOING VERY WELL LITTLE GIRL. DON'T *GET more helpless woman, q ganisms for use in various manufactures. eee cere fee a Fatt she ont even in secret, be so abomtnahty A Swiss scientist has shown that the ferment which produces Maybe ff she jaa aap ecitare ee she ener him Bish oe j milk is a benevolent microbe which kills the poisonous germs present in |next day? Imposstble also! Everything indeed is imposstble She oan the human digestive tract. A bacillus jn butter which has one of the most) only vow that never, never again, will she dine with a man whose tipping offensive of odors is of prime value in butter-making. power hes not Veen previously demonstrated, course, women themselves are notoriously stingy tn ng. But In the case of a superior kind of butter obtained from the milk of | tney regard stinginess as one of the privileges af thelr 2s, and mutes none cows foddered on rich grasses in one of the Westem States a shrewd the less when they encounter it in a man. 5 investigator found that the fine flavor was produced by a bacillus present: | in the milk. This germ was isolated, pure cultures of it obtained and Safety in High Speed. | Time for Ascenston. | the milk inoculated with them yielded a butter possessing the flavor N the/stralght stretches of thellne | ¢¢7-~ ID you ever know why it is that Hi desired. the fmst train, because of its D @ balloon ascension, promised, } esired. higher velocity, fs less Ifkely to for 2 o'clook in the afternoon, | About the green mould which gtves Roquefort cheese its quafity, the be thrown from the track by some ob- Reyer coos until about 6? Herry : i |etruction than the slow train. ‘The|Bindley, expert parachute fumper, esks iH @isagreable little microbes which make Camembert what it is and which i writer was once on an engine that wes |!n the St. Louts Globe-Democrat. i Uncle Sam is now ready to furnish farmers, and about many other} T ‘thundering down grade through the| “It always happens, and the explane- iq benevolent germs the bacterlologist tefls tates which are the fairy stories | pad lands’ of Dakota, with « ten-oar den oes, fs that the vreparetions t a . train behind !t, at a speed of over sixty re the ascension could not be made in f of the new science, iL tt y f m th P l st A Ww t t Whee an hour when the enaine struck] time ‘This ts rarely the cam, for the 4 Man in his half entightenment, being unable to discriminate betw. eters tro e eop € nswers to UCSTION Sg iets arose: vant ot” wild | bailout ‘never hed any intention of ; Berane erode ard fee to , a €cN| Mx Schuman, Who Was at Cebu. | power they are always changing the | ended well and just now stands out aa the seamon? I and twenty other boys horses that /deaned oh ofa — aig Seen just eked se | s » too often gives himself over to its fears. DotheEaitor of The Iwantog Weald: style of caps in the Fire Department? |a bald mas oke of diplomacy, but| my neighborhood are dealrous of fintsh- | CAnyOn eros tlie Sant tha g mesenger Sie is. ‘A ehort time since John H. Babuman | They dave sot orders now to get a new | how would it have been considered had! ing the coume of instructions. train was upon th The a not onty ts an ascension at any to you ¢or some information about style next cant and get them from |¢he reenlt been otherwise? BAMUEL DORFMAN, - | tain kept the ratis unharmed. At ee. ce ee) esse ee Sauhs (saors mé man, Tamma' SESE: 5 . time he on an engine the ° f The attempt of a Ohicago gardener to produce a national flower im 2. nthe bedtle ut Cebu in the Philippines in| .omething and take tha RUSSELL PENROSE. | John D. Himself Doesn't Know. other ee yume a ad ae rc leeaaiy Gove Wut’ lie Geceoes EP { chrysanthemum that will bear red, white and btue diossoms és pure varity. = - = you rely pint him? B ls Right. Ty the Batter of Te Brening Wort: small band of sheep oraselng ene nas these same winds the balloon and para- — 3 peqnest Sobemen - 5 BL ets tl . Mer ved enough to - ; It might serve as a fair advertisement, but cowld never resuft in anything |cnunicate with me He is the only man Pe RIND OF THE BLUE SHIRTS. |p the Beiter of The Evening World: worth one billion dollars, trchaatne fen it takes but @ very amall force to de-|chute are apt to be oasried too far Ji: 4 but a freak, Why not let our demagogues have a monopoly of ches: |r know ftving tn the Best who wees in ‘he Prentdent and the Conntitution| A says that there is a law forbtdding and stocks; B bets he jen't. - | aly flect a billiard ball that bs rolling slowly away, perhaps so far that injury mey the national emblem? PeDINE | nat bettie. ‘To the DAltor of The Bvening World the President of the United States the |se:tle this argument and oblige. Oe ee oelia rat tbe eats ce 100 iteer| Cent tam DeCors) tear ieee” We) reser. A careful reading of the Consttution| “¥eton for the third term. B says J. B., Elizabeth, N. A accond (a, freauent speed for these fat | et. | WILLIAM L. FARRELL, late of Com- |pany M, Mineteenth Untted States In- fantry, No. 278 Pearl street, Brooklyn. Tammany and the Firemen. there is no such lew, “The old and M. FRIEDMA! pi pointed Young Swimaners. To the Editor of The Evening World: Why have the swimming institutions of the public baths closed so early in Scpresses) 1t could only be deflected by expats) 4s of considerable foros. ft is the instinctive recognition of this fact T came to this country at the age that hea leq som: le enelueer ees ny, ‘ we scan ey mus y of slx months. My father Is a citizen. Dotarively Weht obstruction, to Increase Am Tacttizen w must I get out natur- rather than decrease the speed of the ‘ization papers? JOE WERNER. | train of the United States and a critical con- qideration of all precedents in internu- | tional affaire fail to disclose any but ueurped authority for whet has beea | done by the President's interfereace be- How is tt when Tammany Hall ts in tween Russia and Japan. Luckily it has You Are a Citizen Now. To the Fdltor of The Prening World: The Chinese Emperor has issued a decree to suppress the boycott on} American goods. But if individual traders wish to continue tt, how can | they be prevented? | To the Editor of The Bvening World HA: over by @ mystertous white woma’ Ayesha or She-Who-Must-Be-Oheved Leo became il] with fever, and a native Woman, Ustang, attached hersalf to him Holly was summoned before “Bho” who dagzled him with her more th AYES SHE GHE FUR_GHER_ HISGORY OF She-Who-Mus a s ss t-Bé-Obeyed. BY H. RIDER HAGGARD. Author of ‘‘She,’’ ‘‘Allan Quatermain,” “King Solomon’s Mines,” ete. pt, which, HMke the box, was nt to you. | ‘What Mr, Holy meant by thts ‘com- mand’ I do not know, for he would speak no more of the matter, One and clothed tn his night things only, Mr. Holly in the snow, the strangest figure, I think, that ever I beheld, "He appeared to be uttering some tn- vocatlon—in Arablo, 1 thinke—for long‘ stood The Rider Haggard Story | jyorai veaut pass on to the last scene. One | voo ‘ . ” rip raichy tclool in is | bet I reached him I could catch A ha She" told 2 bout 11 o'clock, knowing that his ‘ore I res m mula the of Which yes. io” told him that she was 2,00 p I went up to see him, | tones of his full sonorous wolos, end eee years old and that she was still wait | ng for the reincarnation of her lover, Kalltkrates, "She," Is the Sequel. UDWIG HORACE HOLLY, sitting all powerful, went to Leo's one night tn his rooms at Cam- and cured him of his fever. | ridge, Hmgland, engrossed in| “Sie recognized bim as the reinoar- | gtudy, was suddenly interrupted by the "@te Kalltkrates, and when the womap | Guiranoe of his friend Vincey, a tall and U2t@ne refused to leave him struck her lextramely handsome man in the last | 784 With the magic of her glance, @on Leo grew into a young man of mar- \quiious Grocian beauty. On his twenty- | § @ith dirthday the mysterious legacy of | a Holly he called ov Kallikrates! I 6 ‘Wis father was opened by and engraved with Greek characte: | @hocolate colored scarab a with | AYESHA, meaning of the writing on the pots Me told the story of art @eyotian princess, for whom krates, a priest of Isis, bro} Jand fled into the wilderne mm. The Further History of “cai: She-Who-Must- Be- Obeyed, vow An | when he refused to diseurd Amenarias the first to learn also of Ay . Hesea of the Mountain, the priestess of that oracle which since the Ume of Alexan- der the Great has reigned between the flaming pillars in the sanctuary, the last mystic consummation of the wondrous This letter, that was dated from a remote place upon the shores of Oum- ' eaning ‘Royal 1 of Ra. nd, ri ! pyaiee manning © ve fi berland. ran as follows: had seen it several \imes, and happened cecamie) enabled Jim) 10 make cat the Jeo APout ten days ago 1 was called in! to have been present not long ago at | ( 4, ts right, therefore, that you should bet? 8°¢ Mr. Holly at an old house upon | meeting of an archaeological society the cliff that for many years remained \untenanted except by the caretakers, but which I b ‘@ was his property, and had been in his family for genera- tions, ‘The housekeeper who summoned euched a tribe : jay it 8 GHHvO EHS F by 8 | (Copyrighted, 1001, In Great Britain and the holder of the sceptre of Hes or Isis|™o told me that her master had but| chamber of a tall, flat"pped cromlech, meen fall in Jove with Kallikrotes a peptic al upon the earth, It i# right also that to | Just returned from abroad, somewhere |or dolmen, which stands alone In the “4 “! INGRODVUC TION, you first among men I should reveal the | in Asia, she sald, and that he was very | centre of the ring. i with his heart—dying, she belteved; end was near proposing to inject some strychnine to keep the heart going a little longer. Be- fore I reached the house I met the care= taker coming to seck me in a great fright and asked her If her master was "No; but he was as dead. She answered gone—had got out of bed, and: Ju he was, barefooted, had left the hou the housekeeper to go and wake her | near by: to trace It ran ‘husband, for no one else Iv ‘The spoor proved very easy acroas the clean shee: of snow. Known locally as the Devil's Ring~a sort of miniature Stonehenge, In fact. 1 when {ts origin and purpose were dis- cussed, I remember that one learned but somewhat eocentric gentieman read a short paper upon a rude and hooded bust and head which ts cut wi lin the “He sald that {1 was a representation nis waving, outstretched erms. In his right hand he held the loopeg tre which, by hie express wish, I you with the drawinga I could the flash of the jewels strung a wires, in tho sttllnems bear the tinifing of {te golden belle, “Presently, woo, I aeemed ito become At le, turned toward the radiance a gc sees % by her grandson | aware of another presence, I saw, or alasea OF ood doh 0 Wks 0 dazzled with her beauty and was last secon SE Aly g | ‘Vinoey told him that he was about eo | Pat Goolaped bis love for her over among the very Scotoh Bree Rd shoney Py paw Something. gashor ini the J @e and confided to him that hi Ree eet bed. gna be were talking. The Jet) Fe thought |20M tts rude chamber—I "know not gon, Leo, thirteen years old, w a bathing in the Pilla: rifled out of his wits, for whi certuin—something bright and aa nat Geen ainag is birth 1 Ww ful revolving fane he beheld a ghost, had told her #0. | sterious shat M his mother’s life, He exucted a prom bit SU Ge 4G elinont | ne moonlight was very brillant) sik ary {ge from Holly that he would become Ais bavhe in It Hes. that night, especially as freeh anow had | "Ar any rate, 2 the boy's guardian and take charge of ap Be!BEr we Holly, they sought the | fallen, which reflected ita rays. 1 oF whateve | mysterious tron box, not to be opened es ogee A CNT) = Lee on foot, and began to search Seige HS one of till Leo was twenty-five. F "She" stepped into ” ‘ pee fis, ull presently, Just outside of them. | unable event ‘The next morning Vinoey died. His ‘op eke 1 found the track of naked teat ee 13 ee te Bs enero snow. Of course I followed, ca! |me that Mr. Holly also saw somecning, \ | Bimeelf. It contained an inner casket nal constaney over her | Var ivere Olt ana Ale and Holly left Africa print the contents, | mp the slope of a hill behind the house, found i ver, which on being 1 i 6; Horace aH uM tain drretlevant vor- w, on the crest of this hill Aa aaiitatrataher i and Pray eat eee | 3, and the name of the writer, as, |anclent monument of upright monolith mupped ebily: in hte baeds | twill be noted. he requeats me to do, {get there by some primeval prople ai for her slew him ERILY and indeed t | 5 TO ee led and gave basin to ae Ay a: i 4 it is the unex-| It Was Something Bright and Glorious that Gradually Took the Form | tragedy which began at Kor, per-| both of which suppositions proved to be| of the Heyptian goddess Isis, and that \m eon, whom who named the Mighty | Pee ar meReene! Ppobably Ap of a Woman, chance earlier in Egypt and elsewhere. | accurate. this place had once been sacred to some Avenges and dedicated to revenge hs | earth from whom the Cllr oe eon che] fulfill her promise and appear to them the rst thi ave fall ne |, very ili T have strumgled back "Mr. Holly was somewhat vexed at| form of her worship, » suggestion that Gathor's murder. From the time of sarin trom m tho editor of this, and | again an thing my eye fell upon was the | go cnis ald house of mine to die, and my | my being called tn, which had been| the other learned gentlemen treated as Nn of his| of a certain previous history, did n [signature IaH. Holly, Tt Is Jong 8c ee ie ee oan aed the doctor lame witvons ec, fee Fe all ree pricier nerurrtgr ry rth the polsherd wa with! peot to hear again, that a when Thad notly read any ugerly as I did that |} tter all is over, to send you the i his Knowledge, byt soon @housands of sienatures of hiv descend-| Ludwig Horace Holly, 1 t tor months; aritnour w|i ny here, after all i# over, to send you th ame friendly enough, and he ex-| never trayelled into Britain, though for nts to whom the quest for the myster-| good reason; he believed him to have |e! & ut of the blue, as Des 1 have asceramneg |fOcanaal it uate jange my gratitude for the rellef that 1|™m¥ part I do not see why the Phogni- fous white woman was passed, at jast| taken his departure from the earth, | t¥o% r er to these WON- tha: you still live, and, strange to gay, | May) ene ny bh nor thy | able to give him, though I ould | clans, or even the Romans, who adopted geaching Leo Vinoey, the lust descer Fj derings in a letto Patil liy for a little whi) 1 have mlthor the strength nor thé | 46, nope to do more, her cult, more or less, should not have ra y escendant| When Mr. Holly last wrote, many 3 ! Walle. will to write more, The record musi] a, of Kallikrates many Fore Ogee hae to ete many | Although so reat a tine has passed | “Ax soon as 1 cime In touch with| Myton ital, Do with ft what vou] OM day he pointed to @ rough box) brought i here, But I knoy nothing) Leo vowed that he would take up the| manuscript of "She," and to angounce | ence ie ab nd Wed eheky now | etyilization again 1 found cony of {jive and believe It or not as you like. | 74% Of some forelsn wood—the same] of auch matters, and will not discuns gearoh for his ancespr's murderer, and|chas ne and his ward, Leo Vincey, the | tore the wetting at enon, sloknan, J | your book 'f or rather of my book, ! 1 care nothing who knows that ft is] at T have now duly despatched to you | them. he and Holly wet sail for Africa, After| beloved of the divine Ayosha, were knew the = Ing at oncemr body ©: and read It—first of all in a Hindostani | |, and who dewart to solve ite jpner | ¥ tain giving me your name| “I went on as fast as I could to the eases hardships they discovered about to travel to Central Asia in the meee iio wh Hat RULE tat Hransletion et ‘teres. T Wish, you happiness and | and address, sald that without fail dt] ring, half a mille or a0 away. Presently Rerea eee tehe acento dels rata ties. Ty ghiea int te un cept 3 ol ore open see (hat you carried out your part| vod fortume. WareWell to You und to| W-# to be forwarded to you after hig|I reached Mt, aad thereyes, there-— 5 ose, th he would ; the scaled envelope, and, sure enough, of the business well and faithfully, it | all, L. HORACH HOLLY,” | avath, Aleo, be asked me to do up @ standing by the cromlech, barebedded, A MIOHR HAGGARD