The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1906, Page 15

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iia Th ao) Fee 4S JARR FAMIL BY ROY L. MSCARDELL & a a em. Unere Might Have Been Words Between Them, but Providentially Mr. Jarre Handed Out Some Surprising Neighborhood News. a. for you, obi lady," aid Mr © came Into t muse with & X > vu Ko a ou had been arink c ws met” enapped dart, who cn Mtttle difference with the servant which As servants are quick to anger and quicker fo leave, and husbands have to stay, she thought it beat to take out on Mr. Jarr | 'E haven't had w @rink this day: One would think to hear you talk I was an oid sot!’ exclaimed Mr. Jarr indie pantly | "Well, if you are not. you are becoming wo fest!’ maid Mra. Jart, enger for the fr Goah take it al 4 the now aroused Mr, Jorr. “you are enough to drive a man‘tH drink! I notice that you ” have @ good h 4, © good, temperate man that may take a glass Of beer now and then, are always r everyt 4 can't drive him to drown h do for those who are looking for excuses!" sneercd who vindictive Jual to Wee i “Ob. eny excuse will Jarr “Im nat looking for any excuse!” Twas a drinking man, a man w vociferated’ Mr. Jarr, “But I do amy that | > aquandered his money tn the maloons and 0 to his wretched home—though goodness knows mny home tm wretched nai his wife, you'd be better to me, You'd never have ® croas word, you'd be kind and patient, like Mra Lemen ts to her husband.” Much you know how Mra\Lemen fs to her husband tn private!’ exclaimed Mrs. Jerr. “I don't say she isn't to be pitied, any woman ts who gives up every- tena 4e marry a man, but qrerybody knowa that it was trouble Grove Mr. Lanes drink ~ "Yea bat bs trouble was whiskey sald Mr. Jarr, “Bot what I want to to me @bout those people for? What have I got why you to do with the Li "You brought them into the conversation.“ sald Mra Jarr. “Ail you can tatk | are t nae?” @dout is how food you are and how bad other men are! You are as bad as any of them. I am not ur ing Mr, Lemea. and I 4 want to hear anything about him or her! Bo kindly do not mention them any more or let me hear any- tag dheat the Dern WHat Ge T re ter ae ‘But I do eax if truth was known, you'd find there's two sides to the story, and you can't things you do and the things you mould be ashamed of if you had eny regard for my feelings by bringing in Mr. Lemen's name!" “Woman! You'll drive me mad!" exclaimed Mr. Jerr, “T came home, ifke « fool, expéoting # kind word, and feeling happy, and I just ventured « remark fo you and you started at me Tike a shrew . “A shrew?" exclaimed Mrs, Jerr. “I think you must spend all your time thinking up unplessant names to call me! I wontt stand tt, 1 have @tood # long end I have pb til! AAint or @ worm would have turned, but this Is toe much! You came home angry and your first words were not to accuse you ot @rtnking. Your face was flushed and you know it!" *] beard something I thought might interest your was afl!” “Something unpleasant If be bound.” replied Mra. Jarr, #traggting between her curiosity and the worthy womanly resolve “not to give tn.” “L know It was something unpleasant!" ehe repeated, “or you wouldn't be #0 eager to toll ft! What ls it? Some of your folks coming to visit me? Weill. I won't have it! They always make trouble! I won't recetve them! If It tan't that I don't want to Wear ft” “Ob, very well then.” sald Mr, Jarr swallowing his anger with an effort “No, I don’t want to hear {t, because I know ft fs something you want to tell me just to plek # quarrel! Don't tell tt to me! I won't hear tt! Don't speak to me! ad | “I will tell (tf reptted Mr. Darr, “you cant ksep me from epeakirg tn my own house-Mre, Lemen has run off trom ber hurhand.” “With that baldchanded man mie always anid wae her orelet asked Mre Tart, eagerly, “Well, I Alwaya eats that she wos the decelttal thing, and poor Mr. Leman hed tekeon to drink. The fed! And her at her are! what ts the world coming to? ‘Tell me all about ft, Edward! You | ost wxnaperating dear!’ cried Mra. Jarr, putting ber arm erqund her peck and essing him, “tall me all wbolit tt Ian't tt terribte? Why can't people get along ricely together Itke we dot” “Ita th the papers,” aid Mr. Jur. “here ft 38.” Mra. Jarr devoured te account feverishly and ran over to tell Mra. Rangie “Mr. Jarr brought the paper hon she asd to ber friend. “Talk of women Being goeatps; the men are worse!" incents 2 Advice to Lovers. call. as Tam under the tinpresston that se ts much older than twenty-four ond eaid Mr. Jarr, “that Betty V oe ae ob All perylexed young 1p » tain éxpert advice on their tangied love ‘abaite by “writing to Betty | | maa, be decelving me Be te quite Vincent, | Letters for. her, handvome and a aplendia florist “ax well address BTTY lan as eee Went, Peal Om a musician and ponman, Please Adving me what to do in order to find | out his « GUNEVIEVE, Hile age should not concern you at al! | if you love him, Believe what he tells | you. Of Different Religions, 2 Waiting for a Letter. Dear Betty: MET @ young wan several weeks ago At my friend's houme, He saw Meee that wipe wad tay me for an outing. I went and «pent a very pleswant time. After that he got his vacation end went to the cowntry for « AM ip love #ith a young man, and 1 know that he loves me and we are olf enough to be married. But fow weeks. He went nie puwtais, which |as he is one religion and I another, | I anewered. Afiwr that I went ont with | what etal! J may if he aske me to | tum once more He asked me to go| marry him? He fs the only one I could again, and sald thet he would write, | ho iB Mw) 4 1 have received no letter yet, I Jove), Say yee. A difference of reiition does iim very mivob, Please advine ine what | not metier when people love each other, ta 60. M. A. | You will have to wait till the eats fl The Young Man Kissed Her. Man writes to Fou of tll you meot him, | Dear Mins weetys It would be mowt improper tor you to|y 4M 4 young girl of atxteen and have remind hin of the invitation. | many por Mend, Lest night on He Fibs A Hi Geparting one of the doye put his | bout His Age. handy wround my neck am Kissed me, ‘Dear Detty: at Which I becazoe very much insulted, AST «summer I became acquainted | Do you think there le eny berm in with & mat in an adjoining vil-| this? And do you think there ie any lage. who gave his agh as twenty-| bacm in going bo @ dance with w friend? four. The acquaintance has grown vo | My amother dogs not approve of this much that I feal I love him, He» has| #4 Will not allow me to do i LA. ‘expressed Jove for me and written 90: Nery affectionate lettare, I am at | bol yp Bang igh wore Rell x. kins you. ¥ woo loss to know if 1 should allow him to ‘ ry Da ice fo a al ‘The Seven in-Six Puzzles. First Series—Peter Pan. . - Hidden Picture No. 5.—Find the Indian. HP BVENING' WORLD here prints » hidden-ploture puzele It will print one every day, Each plccure is complete in itedlf, but if you “qwill cut out and auve the aix plotures of esch series and put them ly Wi ‘the end of the week you will be aurprised to ind Se Sas ermoai, make Sats, Ree aay Demet ce e Evening World's I UNLUCKY L asiney OOIE. How Fate Pursues Him! By R.W. TAYLOR. event) a eee Van TAKE HIM OUT TESM' 1 1 VORKED SXERCISE MY Bi) or te eas VILL LOOK For A Little Fipol rt — H : careruL ! LIVER WUR THINK You WILL oo SR \| CAREFUL OF Ls FActORY _ Ss) i My ITTLE | ‘i MUNICH! ‘ Le | OOGLUMS } | { | i } N i\ fe a { | feces { 4 } cas: ae a | DIS 1S A SkINCH! ] WERE | You | + BET You 1 HOLD husTN'T. BITE a DIS yoR YUST SO NopoDY, FIDO! Long AS WuN YEAR. BEHAVE YOURSELF. / KING MIDAS. Printed Exclusively in The Evening World.) (Coprrighted, 1001, by Upton sinelalr.) SYNOPRM OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS Helen Davia We loved by me, ee brouner, hone parentage ta unknown. rejects bie her aunt's a Arthur, love. ans Mire. od to har and her and at a tum in the rowd ode coeva. nrough Hitown end dhe shee SF com cm of a low saloon. Bie ocheara Mp. Toward att Lieut, Maynant. two Cinna alocuog Nar soarowoary, mature he e talnis, “Howart adcittel his love for panion. pilin eet CHAPTER IX (Coutinaed.) T was not that, abe was hiding-—she had no thought of that; % waa because she had been struck there by (io scathing words that she had heard. Bome of them. were eo bitter that they could only have thet she not known that thay we tri tho not been awed by what she bad learned of this man's heart, She could feel only terror and fiery heme, ond the crue! words had beaten her down, first upon bet Knees. ‘and'then upotl her face, TASH EA HWE Ine” Wittpset tteme weet torre: She dared not later him!" she gasped, Mr. Howard had come to her as d vishon higher world, making all that he had known Admired weem hideous and base; ant her one thought just then wea of him, ‘Fe will stii soorn me,” she thought, “but I must tell him I reaily @4 suften” And, heodlena of the fact that hair wee loons bout her shoulders and her dress wet with the dew of the gras, tho girl ran awitdy up the kmwn toward the house, whispering again and agoin, “t must cell him!” It waa only ® moment more before she was near the ptazen ord could see the people upon tt as they wtood in the lighted doomvhy. Of. Hows wer one of them, and Helen would bmve rushed difndly up to peak to him had It net deen that another thought ‘came t her to atop her. “Suppose he whould Know of Arthart she mut- 6 £2 S oonta I tel himt” And whe abrank back tito the derknens Miko @ Back aid guilty thing, She Crepe arourd the side Of the hous and entered by oor, stealing Into one of the darkened partors, where ahe Qung herself @ewn upon « sofa and lay (rombitng before that new tarror, When & few minutes hud paampd and she heart & carrlage out side she sprang up wildly, with the thought that he enight be woing, She had ran half way to the door before ahe recollected that the carriage mist be for the Ueutenant, and then whe stopped and stool still tm the darknim, twisting her bands together ner vously and aaking herself what whe could do. | 1h occurred tw het that she gould look down the piasaza from the Window af the roam, and mo she went swiftly to it, ‘The officer waa sunt deacending to the carriage, Mt, Roberts with bim, and her aunt apd Mr, Howat mtanding at the top of the steps, the latter's Agvire olemriy outlined tn the moontight. Halen's heart waa so full of despair and yearning just then that she oould have rushed out Bnd flung heresi{ at huis feet had be been alone; but she felt « now kind of abrinking fram her aun. Gihe stood hesitating, therefore, muttering @o bersalf, “I myst Jet him know about tt scmpeahow, aral he will tell me what to do, Ob, I must! Amd I must tell him now, before It 1@ too Iate!” ) Mase stood by the windors, panting andaisacst ohok—> ing with her @motion, kneading her hands one upon the other in frenaled agitation; and then she heard | Mo. Tlomerd say to her aunt: “I mall haye to ask you to excuse me now, for I munt not formmt that T am an invalid." And Helett clutched ber burning Aatipiety seeing bien turn. to emter the hoes, gird noting that ber chance was going. Sho glazchd whout her, almost goepetate, anti then suddenly her heart gave a great leap, for just beside her was wome- _ thing that had brought one resource to “bar mind. | She hax seen tho piano fn the dim Nght, and ad | thought suddenly of the aong that Mr. Howard bad mentioned. “Hin will remember!’ ehe thought swiftly, as she rah to the inattument and wt down before it. With & wtrength born of her deeperation she mastarwt the quivering of her hamtm, and catching Der breath, Degen in a weak And trembling voice the melody of Rubinstein: “Bacpute ana fair thea arts 5th font kato my haart. ‘By Vpten Sinclarr, Author of AMLDDER JOB cone! ( vON'T “THE JUNGLE.” Water Lily; the girl thought of wim Mr. Howard heed maid About the feeling that comme to muftwring mortals wt the sight of something perfect and w- rene, ami ashe began playing the litte ples, very ] matty, end with trembiing hands It la quite wonderful musto; to Melon, with her heart full of grief and despair, the ohords that fronted 0 cold and white and high were alnowt oo mach to be borne. She played desperately on, how- evar, becnumerahe muw that Mr. Howerd hed mopped | egnin, and abe did not believe that he comld full to | understand that mune. | 86 whe continued until whe came to the pleading wong of the wwan. The nmato ta written to & pom of Gelbie'’s wich tells of the anow-wtite Bly, and) of the bird which wonders at its beauty; ater werd, becwuse there te nothing tn all nature more cold and uneppromchable than «a watervitly, and because one might sing to ft ai Umy and Awrer fancy thet it heard him the first melody tieee agwin, ss keen and as high as ever, and one knows that bie ywarning tp tn vain, and that there in poth- ing for him but hie old deepatr, When Hwen came ™ a oe nouncement of “Peer Gynt” as a he may att beck tn his ‘rive home and pride him- fact that he hee suo ing to hie promise made cholomioal moment’ last Mansfeld hae but three h to delight his world. er Gynt” fe to mark the be the end, what, oh what) wil Anything thet he o ater would, #0 It geo ui he wave we I Richard Mansfeld intended his an- M tin wh t “Faust” next year, and « dramatized “Inferno” for the lant Jreadful moments of his career. But ts, the erying @ What can any of wild poetry ter truth at the expense of humanity embodied in Tbven'’s nge heroT And how is he gotng to make matter-of-fact r and bit Amerioa understand this Seandinavian | Fauat who abducts bride on hi ding day; makes love to th of the King of the mountain with her rides @ pig over the moun tains; becomes @ slave-trader in Amer- fon; a prophet in Africa; an emperc of maniace—and never in his wh fantastic, whirling career got beyond the sublime importance of hia own weak, worldly self? It's not exactly the sort of thing thet actor-intelligence ordinartly—no “strong scene” no ful’ love interest, no “happy ending.’ And yet in the same year two actors turn to “Peer Gynt" as the bright parttoular god of their reper- tolres, By putting your ear to the ground you may be able to hear Arnold Daly saying “I saw him fret + PRAKING of “notices,” here's the wed: vebter velope loadea_with advertising matter <wteiling he vietume of 2 “weight 1900. FL and O Sy OF the T BRAK A ports, the who had jauthor enw upon his work « wrealting of upon the the play fair only when pe wettes things, Bot waste time looking for [1a one story—both lou—of an |manheer in the cold, ery twilight the evening after and eased his | guished soul with teara Ire « world—the Uneetrioal world! eee I’ all the annals of yellow theatrical t Hh Bg i lam there ie nothing to equal te announcement that the Thaw-White tragedy is to be “dramatived.”’ Lionst B. Lawrence, who was stage manage of the verformance which Stanford) While wae witnessing when he was |whot, t* sald to be at work turning | tragedy into a vaudeville sketch. Ni | dowbe tt will “draw.* “Mange! Champagne,” It will be remembered, turned ‘em away,” and, with a second murder to make life easy for the presp Agent, It might have given dally mati noes, Vaudeville ie quite able to gel slong without the crimes that are to¢ often committed in the name of melo} drama, We were spared Nan Patters Jeon. thanks to tmaly hissing out of | town. and if Mr.- Lawrence were cons sideraip be would spare us. a second Visitatioh of the Thaw-White sensation, Of course tt would “draw’—but money count for everything and taste for nothing? . THE Itved tn a boarting-bouse, wis Dadi Bee Gay See got the better of her. | | “Ob! I'd pay $ any day to see © HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Too Much Water, MO. O-Weter should never be) taken during meals, as It must + A be taken up before the food oan he digested The quantity you Uwe wil) be excellent for you betwean | meals, Apply at any Of the eye hos pitala here tn thie ofty for eye tromt- ment. You will be treated at certain ours of the day without cost. The Hair Comes Qut. RA. J. H. R—The condition ef your M hair Js rather discouraging, but 1 would not attribute it fo the pres- ence of dandruff, but rather to an Im- poveriahed state of the scalp. Use the tonic 1 give you to atimulAve the scalp and look for good remulta: Aromatio vinegar, 4 dramas; glycerine, 3 dram tincture of mux yotnioa, 21-2 drama: tineture of cantharides, 2 drama; roae’ water, € dreams, Use every night, rub- mall to that Me coukd go no farther, for ber wretohed- news had been heaping tteei¢ up. and her heart wae! Durwting. Her fingers gave way as she struck the) keys, and she eank-down and hid er face In hor) arma and broke Into wild and -pasiowate sobbing. | She was aimost choking with her pent-up émotions | so abaken that ¢he waa no longer conscious of! what went on about her, She did not bene Mr. Howard's voto he entered, and she did not «ven! hear the ¢rightened exclamations of ber sunt until the latter hae flung her anme about her Then ne rushing upetaine and locking herself In fer own) room, whete ahe flung hereekt Gown gpon the bed End: Wont wert sie cond waep Oe suore im the maat-| time not even hearing her aunt's voles from hallway, and altogether unconscious of the Might of Bassey c Hiiteeg “E wor hance pon thee, open aye mony brow, And pray that tight, keep ther So pure mhd tair-ma now.” | Helen aia not know how she wae sinetng, he | twught only of telling her yearning amd her patns abe wat #o choked with -amotion that whe could wourosty vtler a wonnd et wil, and the song rourt howe wtartied those who heard It, It wes Jafien with all the tears that bad bean gathering tm Helen's | heart for Gaye. @e dd not fintsh the eong; she wee thinking, “WUE be understet!T”. She stopped suddenly as ashe janw a shadow upon the pomoh outalde, telling her thet Mr. Howard bad coms nearer, Them wee « exinule or wo of breathiens auepanee and then, as the shedow pbegen to draw slowly backward, Helen }olanehed ber hands copvulatvely, whispering to her- self, “Ho will think it was only an docident! Ob, | what can I dor” ‘There ara wcme people. all of whose emotions take the form of male; there qaine Into Helen's mind at again, #o very faint that she at first thought whe wee deluding herself, A# she listened, however, she heard tt more plainly. and then whe rawitze’ fn a flash thet Mr. Moward must have heard her tone: continued wobting, and that he wae playing ene thing tor ber. It was Schumann's “Traumerel;" and as the gti knelt there her soul was borne away upon the wings of that heavenly mejody, and there welled up in her heart a new and very different #mo- tion from any thet ghe had ever known before wes born half of the music and half of the ealm and the stillness of the night—that wonderful pence which may comm to mortals éither tn victory of de feat. when ther give up thelr wealinow and thelr foar and become wware of the Infinite Preaqnee. When the melody had dind away and Helen rove there wee & new light in ber eyes and « new bewuty upon het countenance,-and: she knew that her #ou! tered, clonehing-her hands unt! the natla cut her! that tomtant 2 melody that wae the very soul of | was right at Int | flesh. “Oh, what would he think thent And what HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE. tle pepper, ter, half ao the milk on Snow Pudding. HRRE tablespoons corm siarol cup of sugar Dissolve corn # | in « little colt water, add mugar and stir Into one pint of bolling wate When moled a little od three egm, beaten stiff, « whites of ttle walt flavor to taste, Beat ton minutes pour into Croquettes, NB -cuptul of boiled rice, one cuptut ot the ess, we! crumbs, aid M wel a tie After cooling. Fish Savory. 1 SLT and mix in a saucepan one Ego and Fish Salad. “tablespoon fist ‘Tan the remalus of fish lett trom and flour, and gradually stir in) of [one cupful of hut milk. | When amooth- meatoany| 17 thickened slimmer for five thinuter LoL AL i her agitation and her longing—MacDowell’s "To «| two tablespoontiis of but- wptil of milk, one ere, Pat | to ball, and add the meat & bit of baking #oda half vice and seasoning; when this boils add) and pepper to taste, and ona pint of cold cooked “halibut boned |e gently for five minutes HM iaten, stir one minute. whape, dip in ome and try, with hot milk euch gt butter dinner, aither bake tree trom skin and M » . pea, a few drops of onion fulow, salt oh rounds of toast previously motwtenna with & Trem Aroming and met on the Add to KM onehalt of @ cwptvl Of] ue As serving Hane put ® epoontul wm | them whole, (Te Ne Continued.) bing it well inte the scalp with « rs eve A Delicate Rouge, 168 A P. F.-You may Mke tts formule for rouge: Finely polted. tele, 4 ounces; carmine, f drama, Make m solution of gum tragacanth and warn weter—a very litte only (s required, Mix the talo ad carmine | bo firat well together, and sift; add enough of the debuted gum tnuraaanth May Manton’s Hubbard Ayer. | fe, Ore sowty with « harps foot to te | Shampoo and Tonic, J } H. O-tere are what you have + #0ap while employing thie sham- poo coonia water, ) lk gumoee; tneture of | omntharides, © draw; bay - ram, oundem, alootal, 4 ounces; water, ounsen. Dissolve the potamfime carbonate ti the water and add the remaining Ingter dionts ub well inte the roots. Rinse Theo dey e+ | horoughly ia eeversd waters, ouretuliy’. Formuta tor ounce®; Unotiiny | Arey to | twice & thet the Ghamyod at lekat onde a week. |Cure for Pimples, water, 21- Mix’ and dimolve, Angty miatt amd sprang wp and tore herwalf loose by main fome,| 0 form {nto wmooth paste: allow it mornitig. Daily Fashions ie I MW iii te z | FES5E Naat Peet ti erag = £ Re | i} wirained tomaty previously mixed with the heart leaves of Tettuce, add halt a the aise of a| hard-boiled ee to-euch spoon of fwt,| aither chopped, aliced or cut in gapr- tors, and arrange to look like « daley.) faked. AGA. wpoontul of any govd dolled drews-} Fancy Walst with Girdle, 4 werve| ing and serve at once. This is rather «| of all-over lace. 34 yard of wik for bortha and Why tw tne left-over fish than a rogular|2 yards of lace banding and ¢ yards of velvet rfl ealad, and it Is very nine if you add as mn No. B4G8 is cut tn wines for @ At, HM, | mueh dived dolled potatoes as you have fia mow to ‘Call or send by mall te THN ote TON FASHION BURMAU, Ne M Weet | or oles, Baked Pears. Ont | York. Bend fen conte in com Oe Atatnpe tor benes; pik AKE peare aa you would apples IMPORTANT—Write your name aad amd can while hot bo mot | } Panerne Ont they fall to tut bese always upeolly aise wanted la atl isla \. ‘SU Eket a there. te. ane at, the thee. em es cement bianca sonic tas SARA ns stan iets asi

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