The evening world. Newspaper, May 8, 1906, Page 14

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The Evening World’s ttlome Magazine, Tuesday Evening, May 8, 1906) i « lated Aas _ —- ne = — - — = te Th y The New ‘Troubadour. THE MOCK ORANGE World : BRIDGE WHIST CLUB, | By Maurice Ketten. Pudlishes by the Press Publishing Company, No. © to 6} Park Row, New Tork Entered at the Post-Otice at New York as Second-Class Mail Maxter. —_—— VOLUME 48... UNCLE SAM’S WARSHIPS. For the third time By Grinnan Barrett. SST vow, i ee women stret sure th of the Mook Orange Teally have something to talk s nats or your me n there are always a d OH, $ki000! you nervousness, oF 1 then when you rrupting and try joast bit interesting an oppo! has been} en New York to inspect at close Of course, right at s, and we tried to that way at the club K we passed a rule range the pick of the American | but untess you we the talking you were ikorthat: p. that you couldn't navy. In many respects the pre: | | y keep your mind on t st sat up there ike of fighting craft peace-| on a log somebody else dn‘t ase any. Rut yestertay gabbied. My lke throwing fully g at anchor constitutes the most impressive display of the na- tion’s naval strer average citizen | leged to Here are rendezvc third of all of Uncle S ams ssp | jat Mra. Colefeet’s tt was perfo | dear, you couldn't fan apple core in “And what rr as if I was go! | although I a F else was that just when t seemed e—nnd I was perfectly crazy about the prize— ’ izes, because that jo of both arma, and y to seo if it tmn't " shouldn't look a gift feet's gift horses ever & to win the ys have my 2 ubts abo irly oné- one of her p | Shopworn marked down | horse tn the mo: but I will | have any gold teeth. | “But what was I saying? Oh, yes, about almost ng the prize Well, those women gassed so much that I couldn't keep my mind on the ourds. And [in the last game I got so confused that I made tt hearts when I shouldn't, and right away I ran out of trumps, and then I led a losing club, the second [hand naw how weak the dummy was und she to I thought, seeing that I was #0 ¢ i | untaa : ! LET ITBEK KNOWN: | tie naa he Hy any ehance at all THE STANDARD OIL “She led back her partner's strong guilt and ther discarded spades and took Ca fecah Eien nota Here are the crack Gakack cruisers i Series. which cost nearly $4,000,000 | and the formidable battle-ships with their powerful armament. Nearly $40,000,000 worth of modern war vessels, carrying a complement ¢ of 7,961 men, one-fifth of all the men of all ranks and ratings in the nav: al | service. Commanding them are 441 officers, with the broad pennants of | th it of the trick a ny 5 three admirals displayed at the masthe - aS APPOINTED laguettvand leqt uorawenerencaatant iia After a Madison Square Garden “military show’ with its popping of | PRESS AGENT \ i "So I came home and had a gol, blank cartridges here is a glimpse of grim-visaged war's wrinkled front} P q Be a ig | in repose which it requires no burning of powder to make convincing. | [ i$ RAs | The Fudge “Idiotorial 39) Even the dullest mind awakes to an appreciation of the stern realities ; (is Ry | - by of modern sea warfare on looking at the Missouri’s 12-inch guns and re-| ,0' Wa A " rey | ‘ calling the ten hits in three minutes at 1,600 yards in Guantanamo Bay. | ; ols 4 How long would it take these floating fortresses to blow a hostile fleet out of the wate | What a fine clean-limbed lot of boys compose the crews! What a conception one gets from their commanders of the meaning of “of- ficer and gentleman’! What a thrill “colors” gives to the stiffest spine Riverside £ which sees many things, sees nothing to compare as a combined spectacle and an object lesson in naval armament with these n Once reserved solely for es ‘about these modern amount of pride and We have just written our one millionth Best Idiotorial, and have celebrated the event by printing them ALL in Book form. We waut YOU to have a COPY of this book. It will help your BABY CUT its TEETH! One | Million | Best Bests. All babies should cut their teeth early in life, This book will help them CUT their EYE teeth. Buy | a copy of your newsdealer. It will enable him to make twenty-five cents. The books COST us sixteen cents, but we sell to the dealer for seventy-five cents, 0 we can both MAKE some MONEY, The printer, binder and paper maker get the SIXTEEN CENTS to divide between ‘them. Itis avery handsome sum. Some time we will tell you what we do, with the FIFTY-NINE cents that comes TO US. ® | BUT we will not write our AUTOGRAPH in the book. WE writewitha typewriter, and it will not produce AUTOGRAPHS, AUTOGRAPHS are no good except on checks —and NOT ALWAYS THEN, + visiting white squadrons. Much of the affectic the “wooden walls’ ironsides, toge patriotism. of the early navy now ce an even greate r r with perhi INTO WHOSE POCKETS? has the miners chiefly to thank, How terest is not so mate: erted coal strike the publ: y of co on was dictated by the satisfactory outcome of the dispute, which fs the main thing, The f, the miners had most to lose by a strike will n ‘om the credit due Tepresentatives for their conciliatory attitude dur the negotiations, | With es removed c! ¢ ne doy heard of rebates to cc higher pric trarily fixed in ¢. is has €reat year for re Is there not the coal trade? Inte whose pockets do the proceeds of this pa r act of highwaymanry go? | — POAASeesaanserase canes AE ARAARA RR aaa ae ane necnencsasananannasescssasas he Melmet of Mavarre by Berth Maile Labor Leader's Expedient. which ate ‘y remarked 9 came to get ative of a famous waxworks Sir altaa ion ‘ y 2 also for the old the hich did na hint of j & enough to par waeased. An exch ns had a new suit arranged and Bu SAAAAORC AAD AAREASAAL RAMA AAA AAAAAAEEAAAEAAAAEAAAESAAAEEESEAAED SEEEEEEEEEEAEEE ES ESSE SEES SSE EESES SELEELELSOLESE ESS But before I had verily come to this something ppened to change the situation. ntered like | oung tempest, slamming the door after him, ide of its walls again!" be free hy #48 Author of “THE TRUTH ABOUT TOLNA. he never look on the outsi Even as I spoke the door opened, two sen- poorer id. One was ah Naren appearing at the thres | stranger; the other was Mayenne. | Our gulde held back In deference. ahs duke and | his friend stood a moment or two In low-yoiced| \ converse; then the visitor made his farewells and) went off down the staircase, Mayenne had not appeared aware of our exist- 4 up from ence, thirty feet up the passage, but now he in- i S ke aan hand. | quired, as if we had been pieces of merchandise iY 5 ‘i aeross the room, e you there, Louis?” a ne sald, n goldsmith, so p night bo- dismissed him eyed nne surveyed us de! Be length said to M. le Comte: i your wares.” | 1 his eager, deprecating smile, ha rcs, nne’s nephew in the 1 you before, if you love me bed me by the arm, drawing me of the window, where ur faces blott te you now Go to your o a tranquil Your Grace. last Ih Lucas was all hot and hurry half from wrath, a3 at . ty The CHAPTER XXV. | A Double Masquerade. we, poor cr spoke no French | “How came you in Paris, then M. Etienne for the feo h tim vent through th his tale. I think this time he must have smbled over it. My Lord Mayenne had not the ution of being easily gullec For aught we knew he might be informed of the name and con dition of ¢ : person who tad entered Paris th t. as he Mstened, stolid-f A > hiniself the number of monsio ne trembled tn h al his he knew his histo eu, by| in nothing so yenne sald: for annoying ¢ janation for + stened to it, ‘but nsolence nt he had it him #0 more the vd that other night, noncha- ed, sitting down and m the tray nese mon betrayed itself ‘ hheld {t the duke ac of yourself? You es which he kad found walt outside, while Mayenne acre tie y the window where t. Telinched ht befo ni fron ¢ efore He locked with towurd u “You would not have me sp: min, unole?” “These yermi made answ ak before these vere de? me feel 1 the tunnel, helpless in the ds with da rs I could not see. Ma the Hght shining do 3 ‘ow the still surface of the water. r the edge and peer 1 can as easily look th ) 1. Heeould deop the water is. I . f make mist like the rest of us. For onee ho ot Mayenne suspected ue not In tho least. had been caught napping, eae Lueas leaned back in his chatr with a meditalye no French,’ Mayer sit likes you It 4 hand, Mayenne dtd not as what M. Etlenne had Ned him--a man, nelther god nor di : his arms. sae a summer day, turning ¢ Pasa sa ni placid ag qisummer da, if idly wondering whether to speak or mt, tents of the box, showing little Intere ther to in our wares, every now and then speak- t have wondered one nm- : enne assured me in that quit. plisued, for there re-) i. gic process of bar : cee Had Ma ing a ‘ons word of praise or asking a friendly d set her heart on &! question, He the very model of the gracious! tono that he eared nothing whether -I spoke T is Wanted a yinalgrette, 4 pri e humble tradesmen whom we fetgned to Should searce haye been nble to utter my words » pri fost enc Tut there was so strange a twist in buekle M. Etienne deve worshipfuily loved h id h ‘bo must needs | tthal I Lucas’s nature that he must sometimes thwart his witha a out hat w that all the tlme he knew us rests, yalue his caprice above his pros- fa golds fi ; I thought the a Presently, own {n Hivs could not full to be suspic fous of sitch prodi- aay he would walk casually ont of the Derlty, Also in this case hia story was no triumph. t we rrik a stolen goods, Put :oom and send In bis creatures to stab us, ant one, Hut at length ho did bogin {t: t set nents defeated thelr own te “ft wont to Belin to Inform him that day before Had 1 known this fora truth, that he had dis-| TRAE AAY Bllanna Aad Mae TERUn taeda aRESe covered us, T should have braced myself, 1 trow, 7) ° despairing, when at covered ts, Lae would have been hears| Pontow in Mar's howre Innere Counsisrsetut ethought herself that eT had courage to face vuln, It wns the tin-|_ \y ir} te hat yenrourane paenae Rete ns ne, wae at Hand. and that ue one Meer certainty that was so henrt-shaklng—tike crossing) 1) 00 Ate talon ittig’ nto in roricuaaes er reicloaa aie sin the dark. We might ye on the eat “"yiuons started forwttrd sherply, “Do you tell i “ eo ap ath; we might with ies stop be wandering is aa wore commanded to bundle out,| DOR, thers wen no way to tell, Mayenne wan qutta) | Alo, Getting unawereds “I dd nob. Sane ae mai Nirienielldalnerity wetaic: | the man to be kindly patron of the crafis, to DINK) Coen mnvcelt to discover what," CHAPTER XXVI. Frosdom was in sight. I was not so nervouson| Out a rich present for a friend, Ito w (To Bo Continued.) y . i resenice of his enemy, unbetray- fell on Within the Spider's Web, 8 journey os I hod beon coming in, An me man to ait in the pre Tt roeined to, m6} they fired our ¢ mers with longing to se further. I ath Mme pM time v at hand, ) S yalting, ae Lorraine y to the pasted, lackey-led, through the long corridors, 1] {nm, tranquil, assured, we Seay “He was not her ed upon ADPMC sa ieotlignont ciate inad pestis ‘ot mind to enablo me to take my| that 1 a fow minutes mora of this 1 should go) rt We ona anit his ein Fale mand! ; ee r iaveataultnc haat One Onn % - “4 aan s/mnd; I @hould xoream out; "Yes, [am Fellx maenenen beat ei iacatwas Lemna ; her roo ts with her, Ourove bearings and to whisper to my master, "Tint door oa Comte de Marl?! Joy ecceing MW Ls) : “Then he slept pleasantly in the Bastille. May! “What, Lorance, you could not baat the pains} desire now was to be 6 but {t.was| yonder 1s the door of the council-room, where I| Broux and he to M, le Comte 4 yt 5: 4 . I aa hacarmtessenrt ew pers ‘

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