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~Sgmlled at even ke It passed dVer him, A Story of Lov Horse-Racing Wy Permission of Georg: Munro’s Sons.) DING Cs ‘ea on hi by eee Se CHAPTER XIII. | (Continued. Love aud Hate, f E listened, amused with her boast- ful supremacy; but the last words touched him with # certain pang Pust tH that moment. Hoe felt like @ ‘glave—a slave who must obey his tyrant fer go out and dle like a dog. “Well, yes.” he said slowly, “I am fp slave, I fear, I wish a Bedouin fiissa would cut my bonds in two.” He spoke jestingly, but there was @ Bnge of sadness in the words that touched Cigarettee temper to contrition, and filled ther with the game compsesion and wonder at him that she had felt when the tvory ‘| Ayvreaths and crucifixes had Jain tn her | Mnands. She knew she had been ungen- pbuaages crime dark as night In the changeful of the little chivalrous soldier, “Tens!” she said, softly and way~ fwardiy, winding her way aright with \/@hat penetration and tact which, how- dever unsexed in other things, Cigarette fied kept thoroughly feminine. ‘That diwas but an idle word of mine; forgive <#t and forget it. You are not « slave deren you fight In the fantasias. Mor-| 2% Wleu! they say to see you kill a man “fs beautiful—so workmanlike! And you Sgpould go out and be shot to-morrow, ‘yather than eell your honor, or stain it sh? Bah! while you know they should eut your heart out rather than meke you tell a Me, or betray a comrad tvou are no slave, my galonne; you havo atthe best freedom of all. Take a glass bet champagne?” tAn Unwelcome Appointment. ‘Wewith which Cigarette, Icaning down ffrem her casement, whose sill was “about @ foot above his head, sendered (her peace offering in a bottle, three of which, packed In her knapsack, he had carried off from the luncheon table of tm Ruaslan prince who was touring through Algiers, and who had half lost \pis grand ducal head after the bewitch- , Gauntiess, capricious, unattachable, npurchasable and coquettish iittle fre- eater of the Spahis, who treated tim pith infinitely more Insolence and, in- Gifterence than she would show to some lbattered old veteran, or some worn-out id dog who had passed wrough the at Kaballa raids and battles. “You will go to your Colonel's to- wht?’ she sald questioningly, as he rank the champagne, and thanked her RStor he-saw the spirit-in-whteh-the rit Swan tendered: Tas He ahruexed his shoulders, Heart ‘got care to discuss his Colonel's orders Igeih this pretty litt hunte, a chiefs command, you} “A fix for a chief!" retorted Cigarette) 'tmpatientty.° “Why don't you say the Jtruth? You are thinidng you will dis- bey, and risk the rest!" Well, why not? I grant his right tn “parrack and field, put’—- “He spoke rather to himself than her, ind his thoughts as te spoke. went Mack to the scenk of the morning. He felt, with a romantic impulse, that he that he would rather have half a dozen {auskets\fired at him in the death-sen- ‘ehoe of a mutineer than again haye fhe glance of those proud azure eyes abweep over him, in their calm indiffer- snes to @ private of Chasseurs, their ‘ealm ignorance that he could be wound- TWO FLAGS By “Ouida” CHAPTERS. ritlah rest ira: hs 2 Ber: the ts is killed who e, War, Intrigue, and Adventure. ‘of her oval hole, perched in the quaint, ay, Moresco wall, parti-colored with encausticn of varied “hues. ‘Chut, bon camerade! that little word has been the. undoing of the world ever since the world began. ‘But’ {a a blank eariridge, and never did anything, but isa fire yet. sles are) rst raet Ae make a miss i a iay, teauroy in oney wan niente: He would not answer falsely, an id not’ care to thoughts to her. enna purtued Cigarette, translating his sitence at her fanoy, “you may to ike; but- never Bo.you won't —you S 6 be ordered in th hie thi am @ good soldier; 1 for like a hawker,\—you say. noble one wil’ wow. m: Dl “ 1 yt wi al efit byon mat pay Edler ittio’es ne locked up at her. . rot exactly Dot something a2 foolish, Perbabe, ade, 7eu witeh, witoh! Theat oan say. be sent 1 om ind two together, and rh Tdont read the, alphabet. one eading is a good deal Fees 1 the ther 80 you mean to disobey the \Ftawke tomestt “T like you for that. But Ieten hei | you ever hear them talk of Marquire?”’ |The Punishment of Mutineers. “Come, tell me what is MarquiseT—a idtten?” “A kitten l* Capi wearoly you-are not far “But you asked echoed Cigurette con- You think me a ohild, I r Well, he was whet you are, a baw! entieman jn amen carrion craws, 8 gentleman in ranks. how weal Nobody irae knew his real name, Dut they thought ke was of Austrian and we uise bo- xo womantsh white in his Dak ey ' uise was not to blune, but they [thowgnt ni oth kept—and wounds in his olden, Pair ail e 4 le that erie ne were carTion: and-we never knew more of bim than that. OStows” she. Nery, low, rutin: joy wit) shoot fort “lice, Marquee, and” you. will just ax Soe him. wall.” he i j fhe cnewered her, slowty, not? Death: ie no great terror; I oommon it every day tor the sake of A soldier's rations. Why should I not ohance it for the sake and in the de- fense of my honor?” A Girl and a Promise. “Bah! Men edll,their honor for tho!r daily bread all the world overt’ satd Cigarette, with the satire thet had tretlo raciness from the slang in which she clothed It. ‘But it is not you alone, See here—one example set on your part, you ‘die why i and half your regiment mutiny, too. It ts bitter work to obey the Black Hawi, and it. zo. gira the signal of re- Voll, tiree parts of your comrades join’ you. Now, woal wit ena beau Mon—eh?"” “Tell me—you are a soldier youreett, you say. “Yes, Iam a soldie between har. tichtset eyes Mehtened and ber voice sank down nto a whisper that had a certala ter rible meaning Ta Tt. 1ke tho rat drop- ping of the scattered opening shots {n the distance before a great battle com,- tHences;—tand I have seen war, not holiday war, but war in earnest—war weher-men-thh: tke: hadstones-and teat lik Ugers, and choke like mad di with their full of Fand; when the gun-carriage wheels, go crash over the writhing Hmbs and the horses charge full gallop over the ilving fates and the hoofs beat out the brains rT,’ sald Cirarstte ch, white ar. loge throats blood and before death has stunned them sense- lems, Ob, yes! I am a solder, and 1 will toil you one thing I have ‘seen, I haye seen soldiers mutiny, « iron of them, because they hated thelr ohtet and loved two of thelr im 3 and I have seen the end of {t alla furndred— men; tind wi: with despair, at bay against as many thou- sands, and walled in with four lines of steel and artillery, and firet-on from soore of cannon-mouths—volley on vol- Jey, Ife the thunder—till not one living man was left, and there was only a shapelens, heaving, retin! tas, with the black smuke over all. tis what Sedona etungs *<, “But? echood Cigarette, leaning out By Walter ¥° @Bsyptologista announce that Rameses Il. was a fraud who forged his nome other men’s monuments.—Item.) And show Or on a cigarette, Ram was such @ he was ripe and three-score Nor smote the wicked Camel Trui (e-never ordered indies thrown. frem castles on the Nilo— In fact, he lived a life in very m BUT don’t you ever once forget and wo upon the pyramids raised 4, geaning 60 posterioy ine ~ Rameses, History Faker. ‘ARK! from th. H ‘Rataed by Rameses Twooth, When now they draw aside the vett That old Rameses was-a fako— In fact, the worst one yet— Who'd carve his name on bricks AMEBSES was a faker and he flourished long ago In the land which gaye to fame the awful hooshy-coochy show, ‘Where mummies were not Oslerized, but were the real, real things, Aa showing where the villagers had melded eighty kings, tiff, they aay, that e'en before he died, To history he didn't wish to be a total loss, mh ‘He goon erased the tenantn’ names and carved hin own instead. tos that's how old Rameses slipped his fancy-sounding name fwith the real live dead ones In the Rgypt Hall ® Fame. The Moral is: Fame will attend the fetlow who 42 lick 1 have aean; you wilt not make me see at I give you my oa «To Be Continued, A. Sinclair, ¢ tomd the doleful tail the awful truth: fo dake years he'd grown quite mummif awful bumps, st, thua causing all thoso humps; allycoddie style, Ramesoy was the boss, up to noted dead SORE Shoot dead, or don't aim , yourself, ‘I ain an aristocrat will not td _| worldwide fame ax an author ftrough HERE, BABYS SEE PITTY BALLOON! SEE WHAT i DARLING PAPA - BROUGHT FOR PRECIOUS | | A a BALLOON! PITIY! PITTY! me Evening World™s Daily Magazine, T HPD HHHHHHHPHSPOPLEPLE SPP PHS HHH HHH Ho doo gone ¢The Newlyweds- % The PuT iT IN LITTLE MOUFY, BLOW, Aug Vos oi ecatee 5 ust I s Cos : HARD! THE UNPOPULAR GIRL, herself unpopular with the majority of men. Very often the whole trouble is that she tries too hard, forc- ing conversation. when it would be better to remain silent, and straining to entertain him when he would muoh rather be merely rested. A woman's ohief-churms are sweotness and natural- ness. The girl who is constantly striving to please can Possess nelther of these. Tho dissatisfied girl is her Own severest ‘critic. comings and try to remedy them. When she hao done the best she can to rat- Please any man she cares about, provided her {deals are not wrong. may be Bhe must try to find herself, to realize her own be: will be sure to become popular if for no other reason th: ura. qualities, and becauso she {is nat- h a discovery was yours, when you r 10¥ ‘Think tt over, and con, te yourself that xhe is not to be yaar wife. better fate. Opals and Iil-Lack, Dear Betty: Engaged to Two Men. Dear Betty: AM acquainted with a young lady through a« flirtation on the train (I #m_a railroad man) and loved ber st first sight. We got engaged and she ac- cepted an engagement ring from me. A week later I surprised her out walking AOULD there bs any cauz2 for with another young man, which broke alacshe online ipartnociarsonns: my heart. She wrote me she was very}() jagy who wan given : worry, but could not keep Up the friend] wo opala and two d shipwith me, as she was engaged to lin jt? Although the young lady this other young man longer and would jor (be married in October. ‘She did not re- | ¢riends turn my ring. I toye her dearly and |opsis aro ‘feel I cannot live without her. [ery LOVESICK ANDEW, yey Bhe ts a yery mean girl and I am| wearing th > expectin sorry for you as well as for the man to|ment to aye some iN- whom s@ intends to be married. Of) course !t ls a severe shock to you to! Girl friends of girlé are so: comes; not the opal A Secret Marriage, Dear Ketty: four months. | that ls proper? take, suade your | oventy that roason for delay. ; mena.tmoment.than.e dead father, | After the Smile, What? tt Dear He Oa filed, Taleo Pontes Ln {t, Do you,think she loves me? You neglect to ent, ether she sald smiled. I infer, however, was 4ll, as whe did not when S % ADVICE 7° LOVERS very noneensioal persons who revel inj thvugh a girl may “emfle end emile and OW and then a girl writes me saying that not-| "UPerstition and mystery. The preeance withstanding all her efforts 18 5, as jot an opal has never harmed a hair of i he ta ote ee rae anGe! any one's heed. It a the suggestion of Si-luck thet brings trouble, if any HAVE been married secretly for I am working and earning a salary of $60 per week and Let her discover her own short-/my husband also makes a good salary. I_am_very-discontentedat-the secreoy | isty her own standard of good appesrance and manners she will be sure to lof our marriage. The cause for this \s |that his father ts dead only etx months, No girl should imitate another, no matter how pretty or popular the other! and he says he wants to walt a year he before giving me a home. Do you think ‘TRUE WIFE. | 1A secret marriage 1s always @ mis- Now that the mistake bee oc curred, your only way will be to per husband to. acknowledge you are his wife You deserve a| fither’s recent death is not suMfictent A living wits ta of His 1H time ago T became acquainted with a young lady whom-I dearly TOVE= TD AaKST TOT -waveraT teste} out with me, and on answering ne iy yanked for” but she seemed reluctant aboot giving PERPLEXOD ten m6 as to i phe rat the smil 2 you ad- nes dress. A amile 49 always a good omen, be a villain etill.” On suct insufficient data I can scarcely gather what the state of her heart may be. Try again. I wish you yok. She Can’t See a Joke. Dear Betty: AM a young man of eighteen. I know one or two girls, but they aro tmpossible. They cannot even under- stand a simple joke. D. D. A girl who 1s undiscriminating enough not to ‘@ joke is indeed exasperat- Ing. If you are ‘fond of jokes you must wait for the uncommon girl with & sense of humor. She {3 somewhere. Be patient. Lthed His Friend Best, Dear Betry; AM a young man twenty-four years of age and love a young lady of the wame ogee. Last week I took her to a reception and there she met a young man who is a great friend of mine. Wien T Webt to her house last nig! they told me that she had gone out to walk with my friend. To-day I met her and ebo treated me very coldly. Please tell me how to get th v -) Mevgenaraca ee Benen er love back, I ms vn }d me that a#be aaid she liked my fond better than ste liked gne. Be thankful that this has occurred how, ratier than after you kad formed | 1 It Is far better that you | ittle now than a great deal fe is apparently zs would tittle us possible, for it may be but a temporary attraction between ir Baby & By. Wider oun Uitle comer of the-gandentearntng: to femn mponher own WrenEtt, ~~ strong attraction at some ume | have Inevitably manifested {ts. Love | s goes where attraction {4 strongest Grieve as George McMan e & “WON'T. PAPAS? ANGEL PLEASE Ste— Blow | IT UP FOR HIM, LOVEY! GET A.LOT OF THEM LOVEY ANB BURST ONE EVERY TIME HE DA-DA! Japanese Wall Flowers. HE Japanese, with their usual ingenuity in overcom-= I ing insurmountable dimoultjes, long ago wolved the life problem of the poor girl who had nedther beauty i nor fortung-with whJab-to, win a husband. uch a wife ip of inestimable valye to a Japanese husband, because she 5 > brings tuck, success in-ull ventures and long tite, conse quently @ happy one. A Japanese can give no greater mark of his esteem than to courteously desire that your life be extended for ten thousand years. The plain, undowered Japanese maiden 1s thersfore prise worth asking tor-- In this country we have left the whole ‘endhey Problem to the girl hersétf,-who has graduaily but surely straightened it out to her own satisfaction. Dowers and beauty are no longer neceasary to her soul's happiness, for one reason because po woman nowadays feels hopelessly plain. Hoalth and intellect atand higher «n the acale than just « matchless face and form. Moreover, beauty is more easily. sequired now than {t used to’ be—not the beauty of paint and powder and hair | dye, but the freshness and charm which only plain living and high thinking can give, | ‘The girl who has neglected neither her mind nor her body, living tryglentoally [and educating herself to love only the beautiful and the best, has solved the | Problem of. the undowered plain. Thank heavens, apinsters have grown to be [quite ‘the fashion nowadays, and there {# no finer thing than the fine young: ‘ epinyter-who-tax-iatd-ip for Herewr wh godly dower of health and wisdom. ‘The Japanese girl my serve as a mascot to attract goot fortune to her hus band's door, with a plain face and an empty pocketbook, and certainly tt la'a Yery simple and pretty wey to relieve the unhappiness of the poor little Jepas- ene wall-flower, but the Amerioan wall-fower who grows up aturdily and merrily, 4s, I venture to eay, far the happler of the two. To Keep Down th w, tiie td sar -recommendter- deeer easter to ix tt tetra ts TTR « ing down weight. Avoid aweets at all unroly. Tt will not make it 4 all veretables containing starch curly, certainly, and if the hair fe sugar, auch as potatoes, peas, beans, | Xrtifictally jcurled wit! remove the corn and beets, Mitk and cream, eggs | Wave. the orange flower water. Brilllanting e Weight. rubbed onto a hair brush and brushed Wet and exercise are the best | into the hulr makes tt glossy and them, and soon wear off. The Greatest Novel of the Day d’s For The Evening Worl —>——_ It, Is Marion Crawford’ Latest Work—A Slashing Thrill-Laden Romance of Venice in the Fourteenth Cen- tury. 7 /HIH strangest, most ortginal ro- mance of love and adventure written during the past quarter rethuea, a Princess in eer, Marior'—Crawtord's latest and best novel. “arethuea!! ¢ unlike any other story, | Tts daring originalty and enthralling interest hold the most jaded reader spellbound from beginning to end. Its recital 1s @ series of new and Drilltant tea and episodes, underiald by an exquisitely beautiful and unusual love interest. F, Marion Crawford long ago won “Dr, Clavius,” “Mr. Teeaca,’” the Saré cenesca serios and many other. books of high merit. But in-‘‘Arethusa ho ha written; his masterpiece. It ts a nove that will be talked of everywhere, ‘Tho Bvening World will publish “Are thusa’’ in serial form, beginning Mo; day, Aug, 12 No lover of a aplendid story, splendidly ‘told, can afford to misa_p single instalment, The scene M4 laid in the Fourteenth Century. ‘The hero {x Charles Zeno, « Hate ptotured brick, Eat | Qnaning. clever soldier of fortune wie holds the world at his sword-pomnt, ‘The heroine ta a lovely girl who, to! She and Charlva mecti and thelr stir: ve trom ty the family that has ring adventures form the theme, then: heneelé a8 @ slave, Lorin, of the Don't £ pear ae: ‘¥Marion CRAWFORD: | get that “‘Arethusa’ will: ap ly in’ The Byening Wor beginning Aug 1k Read it! Readers Household Hints. Cherry Pi, TT the cherries and be careful to re- Move all that have been worm- ater. plac them on a nice ple Fuat. weetes > taste and mix a tea- boon bf cornatcach with the sugar, or \ tablespoon if the cherries are large ‘nd jutoy, Tate tn two crusts or asa ‘arty “with “strips of paste twisted and i and buttor are forbidden, Have your Remedy for Olly Halr, bread toasted and abstain entirely trom ALTING—Here ts «@ tonic whiok surar, As you are @ man, it would be simpler for you to jJotn a gymnasium will cure otliness of the haty and exercise vigorously for an hour Witen hazel, 2 ounces; alcohol, § } every day, But any Kind of exercise 1s | Ouncon; Mistiied water, 1 ounon; remo Kood-—-Waiking, whoeltiy, rowlig te Wgralns “Apply every night, rub nfs, Be, & {t thoroughly into the scalp. Ase other good remedy Ja to sift « quant Flesh Food, &o. Stil pommeres arria |sokiowe metre: R. Eo-Here is a formula for | about every ten days, Rub the scatp flewh food which you requested, | thoroughly and brush out with clean A. It may de rubbed onto the arms, | hair brushes. This seems to absorb all neck, face or any part the body: | the ofl and dampness. It ‘s well to White—wax,1--ounce}- spermaceti, 1} clean the sonip firkt qith aicotol; wttol: + olaced over the top in diamond ahape Nxt co WIM Figur sprinkled over the top. Blackberry Flummery. IMMIER together a pint of ripe blackberries and a pint of water. Do not stir. The Derries should be tender in ten minutes. Mix four seant tablewpoons of cornstarch with a little sold water smoothly, and stir in care- fully, being careful not to break the fruit; remove, add half cup of sugar and when cool pour Into Klass dish. Serve fey cold wit sugar and cream. Inexpensive and delicious. Angel Cake, fl NOWL CAKE (origtnal)—The whites of alx egen. boaten ati, then beat In three-fourths cup of sugar dive @ good beating, then fold In jus Sne-fourth cup of potato flout and one if teaspoon of cream tartar sifted ¢ ONO teaspoc in an angel cake the tin, about im equal in sl: than the cleve flour, Sponge Cake. AKE the yoli c six ekxS left from the-ange! cake and one whole egg. Beat well, then add one cup. sugar and beat again, fourth tea- spoon alt, one-half teaspoon lemen extract, then add one-fourth cup potato flour and three-fourths cup wheat flour, ‘one teaspoon cream tartar, one-half of soda, all sifted together. Last add threo-fourtha cup of new milk and bake about thirty minutes, Don't have the ‘oven too bot. ounce; lanoline, 2 ounces; sweet almond | hazel, cologne water or the above tone. oll..4_omncta:cecoanut oll, 2 aunces: tot pad! see Ve icone ee tincture of bensoin, $0 drops; orange 2 hs. flower water, 2 ounces. Melt the first O-—Hot baths are. considered good five ingredients together. ‘Take off the for rheumatism, but I am not a fire and beat until nearly cold, adding | L.. physician; and your query should [ttle by Mttle the benzoin, and lastly (be sent to @ doctor, .) Fhe Father of Baseball; tema tt HB House of Chadwick has had two titled members in rec I Sir Edwin, famous in his day as @ santtary engineer, who Ii ninety-thres and received a K. C, B, from Queen Victoria in recogol- known wherever basepail lghty-three Basebsil tion of his rervices; and Henry, his younger broth # played aa The Father of the Game, who He mtill ts, ag he been for twenty-s!x years, reckons editor Guide, and ts, henides, says Harper's Weekly, the recegnized Ame ity on cricket. Mr. Chadwick th.nks baseball has by no means reached it dnal state of evolution, The fault .tn beseball to-day, he declares, is Gia prominence given to pitching and Melding. Properly to round out the game, special ntress must be laid on batting, so as to give It equal Importance—to |Solution to the ''Cats | and Kittens’’ Ruzzle, isited-m jatl in order to take emteraye po notes for @ magazine article on inslcitiped isbn. life, hree cate On returning home he desc bree horrors he had seen, and his desc Sneone made a deap {mpresstan on the nnd o os Ritents his litte daughter Mary, weisliti:fourspanieta: The owriter and his offspring a week re castathatithe lator were In @ train together, whicli RRpcinisivraacan ene uaees stopped at a station near a gloomy < 4 four pounds 4 building, saya the Chicago Journal. A/ ioc, a kitten, “We may Imaging é Ten sakys | those three little ) 4 on the upper PRAT Meranda Ml Facales to ke grown up, which adage Whereupon Mary .embarramsed her Beyen cals, therefore, would) welem skin if a. Joud, wir voice; s pounds, a single cat. sevem forty -m! ‘were In, father?’ pounds, fath b i! Ne 3a Ou n j kitten three