The evening world. Newspaper, April 17, 1906, Page 12

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oD eT EE TELE LE SRE Evening Worid’s et ant ite ae a a yn Hiome ringazine, twesaay 175 1906. The She Published by the Press P Entered at the Post- VOLUME 43. MORE NO, 16,310. RACE BET HYPOCRISY. The refusal the precede nt is followed at tracks, as it is in hard hit. M word, wil suppres: tion Taids, or the virtuous action of the West removing it Where now will t! the Where, indeed, but to the t betting will still be provi not be dis Thou, of busines there is no reason to s Ness at the o What is within the race-tr: to the tweedledur Swelling the revenue of the regular: off from the pool-rooms. go to “ Moral mo y be out ussed, nd it ma) tand. 2 will @ will c nue to be lawful and proper ub adds a new compli while incidentally the rece The Jockey C m-tweedledee of betting hypoer y diverting to tl BRITAIN IS CONSERVATIVE. President Roosevelt’s inheritance-tax suggestion scares no one in England. They have it there; that it is not dangerous. The British “estate duty” runs from 1 per cent. on estates of less than $2,500 to 8 per cent. on estates of more than $5,000,000. If Mr. Rockefellers estate were some day to be “settled” in England and were to be inventoried at $500,000,000, it would pay $40,000,000 in death du- ties to the crown, thus far reducing general taxatiort. The British income tax was 14 pence in the pound the last year of the Boer war, An income of $25,000,000 would that year have paid $1,450,000 to light. i And wt President Roose- velt, by the v they have it graduated and they know y not? urday about the income tax. he radicalism in our republic i pla tive England has long acted. They are exp-cting 45,000 new arrivals at Ellis this week. Jt 's use. less for immigrants to try to come early and avold the rush, € Author of “THE TRUTH ABOUT TOLNA.” Why, in not put the jade o to St ie him ela Denis and t but when wa rested not with n the League's Mayenne led; nor w He meant the St. Qu lation, knew of t wo! wha (Copyright, Www-iwi. by Th ¥ Co. Al bts Re | Would he o bs ae \T had ne CHAPTER XIV. leaner In the Oratory. bud a okike r Rue Coupejarrets two F ‘ead. 1 had walked and J jaid on. contrived t what a Strong man could | ber ; : i & with orer elled and as close Lip Wanted how! cowered an of Jean « crowd of thought | that of the on the fic quiver t the ¢ awn blood, ack, whereat lend a th thinks of ever at 1 spent t Knot of 1 Quentins thought that M, Etle hands full wit glement w und solltuce I Tan wered her tween hit yet. In worth Bot bee PEELARBESSAS HAHA nEEAESSSESS EMMETT wf name ef hea‘ of his tood And Still They Coi J. Caimpbel!l Cox THE MOCK ORANGE BRIDGE WHIST CLUB. By Grinnan Barrett. | Oliver ¢ President of the Mock Orange Holy Week we decided r, We're going to you has been teache until somebody It just some- » isn't a At the beginning of the game everybody gives the 1 chips—and that’s the auntie, All os ve for everything. knows what you po jee a) €o | Rv eee tm isn = 5 ener RRO ge a a — crc said Mrs. J.) Bridge Wh fn ‘ ——. oN iN DONT, TELL ME. ae ee eeey ‘ ' y poker, just as | iTS TRIPLETS «. x t Chub 1 saw | Mrs. Wiseburd— + Ing mea lot about it. Poker s down with you and te ; comes to you like magic. out It. Tt ha you, The Witt thing to do with the limit, I think | real person either! | dealer a counter t a real cat ata fo you kne only you call, the | the funny things about poker is the nee name they h Now, in bridge when you say ‘Grand SI mean, but poker’s very, very different. “When I first heard Mrs, Wiseburd talking about ‘sweetening the Kitty" | 1 supposed of course the Jackpot was something like a sugar bowl, but {t isn’t at all. Whenever you have two pairs of Jiclts orvbetter, you take all | the trumps, and that’s a | “But you don’t name | burd says you must keep that a dead secret around and then everybody puts tn a jor a white one, I forget which—and If anybody wants to ralse you—doesn’t that sound cute, ‘raising you ey put in two chips. And then you throw away the cards you don't need, althou seems very foolish to me, be- cause they only give you as m uot to get any better cards that Mrs, Wiseburd si Hut any And then you expected to make—a ro you pass the when you begin to play. Mrs. Wise- First you deal the cards all either a red one or a blue one t TRIPLETS ! 1 have to do it if y haven't made what you a) t. four of a kind or i tner goes it alone But 1 know fro the onty ertain about, anitarium, where r she had almost days the ! How t have suffer es) HOT GROUNDERS BY BARNES. NO. 4.-THE RAH-RAH " FIND.” Ya wonder w PERSGRMDASA SERA CA BRA d sen Eses EASEAsADSEAASesEAsAsesenae bby Bertha “Is he hurt dangerou "1 adm 1 ret SOPDAASESOSAAO4G4449608 ecael And what it bodes & PEESESSLOSSSSSSES like well to | ! ng to my M, | 3 standing fn tet I have not much, “that he was per Ihave Is fr ed up h she had t not afraid to eh g out her silken more ; ken from her bosom, but ashamed of my esa } tp or if we : j s le sou. They do ove sleur at the Trofs Lanternes, and return to the Hotel St. Quentin to s he can spend. Oh e had been abo’ hat M. le Cot But ast h too would he gue! in the dark- hanging on my. when I told her And $ in the IGT had I been Out of that had eyad ein! M. de Mar has c bis Lucas without Paw ng me tr emoiseile; if my mon indeed, I would not r nen if you cannot take it for him you can it for yourself, It will be strange if in all you cannot find something you like ‘our muster think this Lucss a tool of Mt. Q With her own white fingers she de Mayen ipped some tinkling colns into my pouch and, “Yes, ma it short my thanks with the little wailing ery; | plot against “Oh, your poor, bound hands! 1 have my sassination wa n from {es do not ir own pleasure.” my cousin tard in my dress, I could free the as Mayenne’s way,” ehe nt of confi- i I had been here with you they dence that as eit coln, 1 1 gO." Raw well ¢ h » did fear at guilt. If mademoiselle is running Into danger I thought I might tell her ng here J pray her to go back to bed. M iid not send me hither to bring her grief and | ” ycoming to Ms “Who are you?” she asked me abruptly. “You /to jJpin the League have never been here before on monsieur's er-|M. de Mayenne, seeing himself losing the whole rands?” house of St. Quentin, invented this,” H “But it failed. nk God, it failed! He will—he must! trre’s camp to-more 7 aaartne enna EERE te told me that M Since his father's Mayenne made him offers nd he refused them, So then ademoiselle; T came up only yesterday 1 belong on the St. Quentin estate, s Felix Broux.” you have chosen a tad time to And now from F visi Waked by a Light in ‘My Face. “ET eame up to see life," I said, “and mordien! 1 am seeing it.” “1 pray | “But that makes no difference! He must go for all that. The time {s over for trimming. He must Jemoiselle | my glove y 1 you may not see death too,” she I answered soberly. i and on one side or the other, [am a Ligueuse Satta! Aa le wit [oNShe stood looking at me helplessly, horn and bred, and T tell him to go to King Hene : : | Sy am dn my lord’s black boo id slow-| ry. It is his father's side; it 1s his side, He can- PSS I had got you Into: this rte herself; “but Laight weep Francois de | not stay in Paris another da siya By , to Ket YOU iets rough heart to softness. Then it is a ques- | 10 not think he will go, mademoiselle.” z Ua Yo flon whether he could turn Mayenne. 1 wish I] "Rut he must!” she cried with vehemenca, ; ety whether the duke himself or omy Paul do) “Paris is not eafe for hlin. If he cannot stand for Tytler pee Mane has planned this move to-night, That | Ms wound be must go. Twill send him a letter : nat reve added. blushing, but speaking ont can-| myself to tell him he must, bay ly swhether they attack M. de Mar as the Aap ; t | ‘ie’'s enemy or a my. lover.” j ae t ) Meat “opis M. Paul de Lorraine,” said T, speaking as He was golng because he thought ser to find out en he finds ; espectfully as | knew how, but ex 1¢ does not i mo that this M, de Brie respco et for M. Btlenno—“this M, de Lorraine nll, Af he bu¢ stop out of W rd-room gonsip: Anil | tO demotselle'’s lover too?” know him, When ho thought himself ¢ pa ‘ ould hardly display | 18 ove shrugged her shoulders, neither asventing| “And why did I turn his suit Into 1 not lenying, “We ure all pawns in the game for the salon if T did not mean that T despised him? / , Nee ML de Mayenne to push about as he chooses, Wor |T did it for vou to tell him how T made a mocle mt ee ela time M. de Mar was high tn his favor. Then /of him, that he might hate me and keep away i - ss Nae my cousin Pav) came back after two years’ dis- | from mo."* i | ha vculd chow leppearance, and stralghtway he was up and M.de “Oh.” I sald, “mademoiselle ts beyond mo; I in i Mar was down. And then Paul vanlshed again as not keep up with her. ae ‘when the billet was (suddenly as he had come, and {t became the turn| “And yon believed it! But you must needs spoil’ j of M. de Brio suddenly as he had left and at once played on me 4 € T told what Th sald I should bay re from his bed at once Now to-night Paul walked tn satel by flaring ont with Impndent speech." from fatigue and loss ' (To Bs Continued.)

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