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ae The Evening World's ‘Daily Magazine, DVICE*LOVERS THE GIRL WHO FLIRTS. my young men readers asks me to € about ignent over theo Eiris Who Mirt. tte i] who flirts in the mrec If, Id c hasty to condemn them for tt / I His Proud Family. : “ year Betty: aad AM a young girl, nineteen years old.) very. ear! . hot to herself ncan respect hi regard ker street “conquests” an ly realize It they ary jus heless, thers Is a h en that they know and eatly in loye with a| ¥ y cannot rea o her charm and beaut) er intelligenc yoand’ I love m entire position of your fan: ly Is very unreasonable. ‘Nhat a girl she wait for her older sister to Ret rriggts absurd. If she loved you at f : , . | would think of such delay. 1D. Gh) young man ‘twenty Years-old. Ll 4a a of her threats, Go’an guave i bat tao Honths. Ie} Ww i feaandptellathecrn ts of . Ho gives mo} & renot at all, + Phis eirnines ly. The only draw-! x7 yeog- ve bey re proud, ana| ten “*Skiddoo from Her. we ara Dear fettr: Please tell me ww to get aoquitinted | @nd bo friendly with them Dd. W. Unless you are engaged to the young ‘ian and you aro saving to Go to hauss keeping, it ls most Improper for receive hia salary. He alrould brin mother to call on you if he expects to make you his wife. Must Wait Till Sister Weds. Dear Betty: % | ‘AM a youpg man twenty-three years ‘of ago, éarning -{15 per week. My intendéd 1s twenty-one We have “pean keeping compans_tor the last three | years, Woe are not engaged. Bhe has jan older alster who does not keep com~ any, Her parents object to our getting ged, but don’t object to our kesp- ag company, She states that the sister must come first. We aro satisfied with that compromise, but here is where tho whole trouble lies: I was boarding with hem, but as my folks have now moved ato the city I want to tive with them, which .I think is perfectly ‘right My. fiancee and her folks stronsly protest. They are holding me back—they stato| no reasons, and with all my deflance It appears that they have the upper hand. I euppose they think that I may negleot to call on them. I promised them every thing reasonable. but to no effet. My fiancee threatens’ self-destruction, and by ber attlons I judge she'll carry out her throat. I am deeply in love with jind-cannor seein to get Read nowsp Atellaw Ret h | AM in love & nice fellow, for a while, and then th ened tell me how I car win this fellow, FLORENCE G, ng, givelup using slang—| “siciddoo," for inst For one Mako yourself ive as possible to put don’t run after, him. pera and take some Inter- est in sports. Don't thie about your nelf nl) the time nor cosstp about other | women.’ A Sensibte Erttte Girt. Deer -Betty1 f whom I love dearly. When wo [= four months ago I met a sir] first mot whe treated me very af- fectlonately, but now she treats mo very coldly, I asked her the other night why she treated me #0 and she said che treated all fellows alike. She also teld me sho was too young to bo thinking of fellows or having a feliow think-of her. Her mother ‘has no ob- ection to me and alto wonders why lishe treated me so. She will be Afteen Do you think Bhe ts very much too young. Her attitude 1s unusually sensible and I think hixhly of hor for it. Don't seek to rob. the cradie ~ Watt til! sha iis eighteen, Friday, November 9, 1906) By Maurice. Ketten No. 17—When He Rushes for the Harlem Express. Got It at Lastl BOF course” WHEN MIN A SURE Por! TAKE YOUR TIME, DING MIN SUCH A $ mn « Ww ow By Jean Mohr. The Compromise. YOU HAVE HIS. STICK LES AND BEAMS IN-PLACE AS PER. ENGRAYING- USING THE WHITE OF AN EG6~ LIBRARY PASTE BEING TOO ‘Hints from the House Horrible; or, How to — IF NOBODY1S AND NEATLY UBTRACT THE 0 UMMER RESORT ‘FROM TOP. FIG.) WISH FORA NICE EDGE. see EASY AS DIRT. TO MAKE A A GOOD WAY KEEPING A tight-tacea young “hing named Ver. na Ardund her equator grew leaner ‘And leaner each day, ae se wny, 80 you scon could sea daylight betwrass her, : ; i Gives an Encore, CUTE ONE E DIBTANCK. THICK FOR — HINTS FOR Smoked Shoulder. ELECT a nice clean looking shoulder weighing a!x or geven pounds and ‘wash it thoroughly in warm water. 2 Put pot on, have water at bolling point. éii put in shoulder and tableevoon of vinegar. After it has started to boil well sst pot back from front wart of stove, but where !t will still be at boll- tng point. It will take at least throe hours. When done, take up, skim, thon place in-large- baking-pan and.-put in __dread crumbs and let remain in oven minutes. browned and meat, will be julcy and Surplus fat will be extracted. Southern Popovers. WO egrs; 2 cups flour, 1 cup mili, 1-2 —-} oun water, 1_tablespoon sugar, 41 tablespoons meted butter. - Very _-het-oven, cloves, one teaspoonful cinnamon, a little nutmeg and ore cup raisins. Dis- solve One teaspoon soda in a Iittle THE HOME cup of sour apple sauce, letting it foam over the ingredients in the bowl. Beat all thoroughly and add 2 8-4 cups sifted four, Bake in a loaf tin 4 min- utes, Very rich, molst,’ delicious and cheap. No eges, milk nor water, Flour Griddlecakes. IFT one teaspoon salt, three heaping s teaspbons baking powder, and’ one dessert spoon of sugar in one quart of flour. Add. milk to make batter Lproper-consiatency, then-one—tablespoon | “iets, —oorer—the} Shor lel Wig — ATE AWS WET BEATEN BEES, Pry jmmodlately. Ir you Wht use sour_milk use one-half teaspoon soda. to sweeten miik and two apoonfuls baking powder. ° Gorn Cake. IX two-thirds of a cup of butter with one cup of sugar. In an- —¢iher—bowl_beat_the yolks of }— throo eggs with two cups of milk; add this to ane butter-and sugar. Then put in two and @ half cups bf yellow corn- meat and one and a half cups of flour, tar—amt—pne—teaspoon—of—bakcing —wodn: DASNY Weg thes whites-ot-the: three ose beaten te a stift froth. Bake for half an hour ra a fat pan to make a cake which can be cut In squares or In regu- lar muffin tins. Be sure to hayo the: warm water, and then stir it into alpang hot and well greased with Jard. May Manton’s Daily Fashions {Mleses' Corset Cover and Petticoat~Pattern No. 6,509. in every way. Tho AURSY of material required for thc medium sizo (14 years) in 1 in p RETTY and taate- ful underwear be- tongs “to every young girl, and every ———ormat gtr take “pleasure in its’ posse: lon, Here—ar “very. {charming tittle aminently imple at the same timo that they wre eminontly f practical —The-— cornet tover 1s made from flouncing ‘end the pet. “—theoat-ts-trimmed “with: the same, so that the two are hown to match, But thia ja not <—hecessary, asthe aldirt can be trimmed with a ‘tacet edged or in any way that may be liked, #0 that it also makes A most aatistactory model for taffeta, ‘Ihe corset cover ts one of the yew ones that ft to a nicety while the Iabor of making {s re- duced to. the mini- mum, and) is charm- ing ond attractive as well as comfortable. It is -espectally do- signed for founcing, but could be made from any plain mate- tat trimmed ax pro- ferred. Also thero are hand embrojacred Airips to be purchased which are admirable f Astana of flouncing 14.Inchea wide, withs14 yard of plain material 3 Jnchey wide Aor the corset cover; 21-1 wardy of material 36 inches wide, with 1-2 yards of PRouncing 14 inches wide for the petticoat, / or 31-4 yards 3 inches Whle if one roughout, fons Hes} fe used th: attern 5,500 {5 cut in sizer for girls of 12. 14 and 16 years of age. Way Cal or send by mail to THN EVENING WORLD MAY On! ‘Woes } YOK. Bend ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern orered. IMPORT: ‘Write your name and addross plainly, and always specify $ u OUT OF AN ORDINARY STEAM YACHT. I can't eat meéit, the doctor says, 1 must turn v if Goulash a la Hungarian. (aaaanedl HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. ~¢For-a- Bark Skin. PPOSE A LADY HAD LOST A DIAMOND RING INTHE WATER. How PROUD You WOULD Frei To RUN AND 4 YOUR, mo, DHT Try this unt versal bleach! ACE WEL WITH P der, & grains lnazel, 2 ounces; rose APTER ALL PARTS HAVE BECOME WELL SA WEBSTER PERSONALLY FoR DL SET AWAY TO DEFINITION OF Wt Mop over the affect- led parts, “Keep out} WELL’ AND COOL. this. ‘|Scars from Pimples. B C.—I thiik the marks from pim~; and_children. For a Scaly Scalp. RS, R. D.—Try this for the child's head: Baturate with aweet almond _ oll, put ona Httle ofled sili cap: keop-tton all night, In the morn. ing wash tie mead with Repeat this every night untit Uie: head te clean, Atter-thts-an_ coe casional wash with halt green comp and—alnohol wilt keap—the sculp Clean, unless, of course, thin tw gir 7. Conan Doyle. The Mystery of Sasassa Valley. By thing would—tuen up. W = had-been there about a month some-|and I had, thing did turn ap upon aloertaln alent something which was the making of the {DOM or Us; aid ts wou hat Im going to-tell you. remem! t well! ‘The wind was howling past our ointment of Binlodide of reury, on: dram. Rub In Rell once @ day, To-Set Halr Dye. -- and was now busy In fitting a smatier slick Into the angio between them, by janipulatng dl he -elfher-cocked up or depressed any. extent. fstton—of- George Minro'e Sons. 1808, by George deunto’ When Luck Went Wrong. 3 tor_that comof padison's, o-| deyy- looking torthat Sareea down,—wherea—biack craggy clue juts | WM the ravive of ie right + t @ pull at my fask, pendicuiar attok, so that e-sinall prop-the erase SbY the ahd of , pt in any position for J] one ‘could bo an Indofintto. time. projecting ollft- [have menuonsd, noticed nothing unusual about It, heh put up my flash and took a step Sald Lona—[’ve just turned elghteen. Bald Cholly—You don’t look It, dear, Bald Willy—Don't you believe it. She tiirns efghteen every year. R ‘old tre Superfluous Hair. B,—I am unable to give an}, fox mula for prevention of hair, bus « would advise all my readers to cury_incoarss pow-) abstain from the tise of ‘vasollne ana witch | ton much lanolin on the face, However, hair can always be Kept In abeyance by briveh, soap and water, z Unequally_Developed, Gxdiand massage would-be help- ful in distributing the superfuoite, flesh over your chest and hecita ples will leave after a time, bud If you desire you can try this; In, two dramsy R.—You_woull hatter ask a hatre; dresser for # mordant. iam une = O, I know why Tom Donahue cabin, and the rain threatened to burst window: —We-hntt-a—grent: Jack!" ho cried, ‘tr-ourtoter ay os + adle to tel you. zt at = “your opimon— ip y rom the pposs--1—pus bout sight Test Tron t s 8 vot ight TrOHH aa ke iundseh words: from. wie, | im crom-atick pointing. wlraixht at a % IWerertng and onollikting, , geadually dying away and then reappasring.again. any? a glowworm and and tit te more than one In ten pwood-fre crickin oft those who call him ed can have kno:ked about a deal In my Ume en some sirange-sights,-but-none stranger than the way in which Tom quet” and his fortune Twas. aftting mending a whip, white Tom was lying in his bunk groaning disconwolately at thé chance which had led him .to such o to keep it so, and left It T tig Ax ‘ep ae Daily Knitting Chats. ByLaura La Ree.; Noo, Lye, garmente——thet-—are | he continued, nervous gained that nobri burning away, and L.euppose I gazed T answered, “it would depend at |t, trembling in every ten-mihutes--Then 1 took t step for= y it -Yanished Hike | "Cheer up, Tom—cheor upt" paid I. PERRY imb, for fully -—Ta_roughish now, -sirr but 1 was-eay tered atthe Middie Temple once, and Studied for the bar.” Tom—worse ‘luck! was ond of my fellaw-atudenta; and @ wildisa time we had of it until at jast our finances ran short, and we wore. competied to give up our s0- called studies-and look about for some part of the world whera two young strong arms and sound constitutions might make thelr mark, those days tho tide of emigration begun to set in toward and so we thought our best chante would be down at Cape Molony. Well—to make a long story short—we wot pail, aud were deposited in Cape Town with less than five pounds tn our pockets;.and thers we parted. We eacn tried our hands at many things, and had ups and downs; but when, at the end of three years, chance led each of us up-country and we met again, we were, I regret to say, In almost as bad plight as when we started, Well, this was not much.of a com- mencement; and very disheartened we were, so disheartened that Tom epoke of going back to England and getting * For you sce we didn’t know that we had played out al our xmall cards, and that the trumps were golng to,turn up, No; we thought our *hands" were bad all through. A Very lonoly patt of the country that wo were in, Inhmblted by a fow evat- farmers, whose stockaded and fenced In to defend them against the Kafirs, Tom Doniihue and Thad a Hittle hut Fight out in the Bush; bat we owere known to possess’ nothing, and to be handy with our ‘revolvers, Wo had ttle to dear. There we wait ‘dolng.mdd Joba, Wher Instant! ndlo blown out, ML stepped bagh hs time’ before T couli and porition from which it was visible. jast therd It was, the weird reddish Yeht, fMekering away as before, ‘The: | Soren LS Fase knt-mate-te: Uie.rock, but the ground wan go -unayen As imporsiblo and though I walked Even as I spoke the door was flung sacheid inc w plaid ‘abd “honest Dick the "water pouring in, his hearty red-Tace Joomin, the haze like a harvest moon. jamse:t and, after greeting us, sat down 9 fire to warm himself. =: + On auch WRIGHT as this?’ wald I. “You'll find the micu- matism a worse foe than the’ Kaffirs, unless..your keep more regulgr hours,” unusually werious, ain, but-ltwax some} tine for trom him, -stepped jind the exact apo! old friend—you'll | 8 CE along the whol mind you tell no,man where yo! je oli T could see nothing, 4 ade tracks for home, and I flounce of the material.) fellows with k Tom: sprang aintoatTrightened, did not know the man. marked it 1 he he replied—"had to g HY: tno longer, Jac had’ scarcely What's the matter with ‘Tom?! hi Tom was Yow witting with his legs’over the side of the bunk nd hia whole face betraying exclte- i to be almost pain- The fend would have two eyes, Bhd of course deo down that we had waited none of our blac! valley at night; and 4 til morning, the brute would have been in KamMriand,” “Why wouldn't the Valley at night? as “Kailira, I suppors,"' sata 1 “Ghosts,” said Dick, We both laughed, 6 they didn't matter-of-fact fellow ab you a sight of tting hia hands upoi fe es antenee. 1 daren't take mine: ¥ 60 down Sasassa sht do Ww ‘i iked Tom, night Ho with tt. cried | Tomehat's tho hills for a matter of ten miles on he kicked the blankets ,Pacing up and down with long, Suddenly he stopped opposite laid his hand upon his shoul- Bivo such 1 nek that it ml t shut tn on © Houlder-studded pas: | Designed with Bear Drand Yarns, Lady's Glove and Mitten. ACK FROST'S nips at our finger tips are not yery comfortable and we are be- inning to think longingly of heuvier gto ye In the suburbs. Ni ‘ot only are they ner «nd fit better than the glo nin our Mluatration ts . which gives o smart alr not’ or the plaln ribbed cuff, usualy, he mitten {a on much the sani lines fp the open deslgn tn the heavy vhs that te ar mak sald Dick, serlous) hat the nigg asa Valley before gun: is, X don’t want ever rise? into strong re- 10sec tt-agains “Well, look here; wa aro old friend Dick Wharton rgon't you tell any o! told us for a week. topped, while , the beat of the heavte > vastly and xo inexpon: Dick; you're Come, tell us © legend first and your own experience afterw: over the bottle, Jack,” ‘Wall, aa to the ley ‘it seoma that the n Handed down to them Valley ja haunted by a frimhtful fend: Hunters: and wanderers ‘passing down the dofilo hnve seen ita glowing evox under the shadows of the cliff; and the t whoever nas: chanced to encounter that baleful glare has had his after-tite blighted by the malignant Whether that us te patie "at opportunit Det wm hekr about what you saw.’ nt _ “Wel, t waalsroping down ths vai. the er man what you hay Wl promiao that, a clerkship, Tom Donahue I think that shi nid,"* began Divi, ors have had tt that that Saassa | bSKRed him: to rey tlon of the exact ay een thes apparition, hour at whion departure, which must have been a the. morning, bunk ‘and watched Tom sitting by tr fire splicing two sticka toxether, until I suppose T must. hav It appeared, A hundred yards. from [iti so you shove ak and Mido the same tow: Spanish ynrn t used ally the best thing quite, fine. Closely Knit. houties were a beautiful T fell nsteep, Inches. ‘In n at 2 will mall full diréctions for making this pattern to any of my readers who ate Jnterested. There will be no chirge for sending them, Kindly address be Are you ready Xes.'' I wns even more (To Be Continucd.) xwoke Tom ‘was atill away. {in simost the sime position ie across the fo! form @ rough 7, excited than | 6 ONS. other go an to Doping that some- arly those of, us who os are thos) that made, but they ages, Among tho peat models, seg, part 5 one pare > Bo-called and mitten, It ng both glove {te {s very stton the thread 19 wh