The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1907, Page 13

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— MAMA'S ANQEL BE NICE To RICH OLD UNCLE) COMING 7 PReTOOSER\ =: BABY! \ CF BoES MY_OLD — RHEUMATISM 400D TO SEE THIS FINE HAPPY FAMILY \ HO-o! 4 HUM! TAKESME Bad AND SO THAT’S THE , LITTLE RASCAL\ HOW'DO OH,U BABY | WERE JUST TALKING: ABOUT AH-H1 SEE WHAT UNCLE-HAS FOR THE LITTLE _The Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Thursday, August 8, ISN'T THAT DEAR 2 AND HE'S SO FOND OF LENGINES , TOO! OH, UNZLE? “AREN'T MEA THOSE CARS Away FROM HIM} You INV TO TAKE cCHOO—CHOO ——»——— \your ewords, but save him, as you are /* @By Permission of Georke Munro's Sona) brave men, as you are generous foes! { With a single sign of his hand their CHAPTERS. | leader waved them back where they yesh | crowded around her, and leaped down i sf a povlewnan, take on Bi! trom his aaddle, asd ied the horse 54 brother Merkle), and. with bis Bet sca US Algeria, winery, th "fear Ye te < all who Aeiearies frend, ne ie “4 {| | @Nopsis or PRECEDING officer in a crack British he sald, genty, we are not brutes, to avenge ourselves on enemy; we are not vile enough to ac- cept a martyrfiom. Take, my horse— he 19 the swiftest of my “we are we f Rockiagharn (i | cf Rockingham known Fatveva to Leleve: him guilt pase, “Cecil ja the idol of My ; Wins tame: tue ‘herolem an ural in the Chasseur rox be his “colons! ‘ in ° erie telluweastdiers: | becomes &_ cor: Pre bate! from me.” tse times| Je Desert Pledge, Po fenetaily | ‘Ah! now I delleve that thine Alan They | rules thee, equally with Christians! If T itve. thé other night. If I die, France will know how to thank theel’ And, borne by desert-bred boast, she went away through the heavy bronze-hued duliness of the night. Her brain had no sense, her hands had no feeling, her eyes had no sight; the rushing as of walers Waa the giddiness of fast- ing and of fatigue sent the gloom eddy- ing round and round Ilke a whirtpoo! of shadow, Yet shn had remembrance enough left to Pde on, and on, and on, without once finching from the agonies that racked her cramped Simbs and Breer ahd etal Spot where the ex | CHAPTF Wonulawe RXV, * £y For Life or Death. ¢ SHE let the horse, which ha. ‘SS the Inatant the bridle had touched | his neck, stand stil awhile, Ge Kept her eyes fixed on The advancihs @ioud til, with the marvetlous surety cf! her desert-trained vision, she‘ d's- enfangled it from the floating mists ead wavering shadows, and recognized, ‘@a it was, a band of Arabs, “They will kill me, Sut tha} may save ~im, “she thought. ‘Any other way he {s lost.” , 80 she Tode directly toward them: “Me e0=thut—she crossed ther front. | and placed herself in their path, stand- tng quite still, with the cloth torn from the lantern, so that ts ght fell full Gbout her, as she held it ahove her head. In an instant they know her. They were, the remnant who had es- ©apéd from the carnage of Zaralla; @rring surety of hate. They gave the| comrades that loved Cecll, should rise brill, wild war shout of their tntbe,| to his rescue, casting off the yoke of “Vand the whole masa of gaunt, dark} discipline, and remembering only Mounted figures, with thelr weapons| tyranny and that wretchedness which they had seen him patient and unmoved throughout so many years of servitude. « He stood tremru!l beside the coffin within which his broken Mmbe and shot-plerced corpse would smo soon be ‘There was « deep sad- had remembrance enough to strain her blind eyes toward the east and mur- mur, in her terror of that white dawn, that must soon break, the only prayer that had ever been uttered by the lips no mother's kiss Had ever touched: “OR, God! keep the day back!” CHAPTER XVI. * The Execution. HERE was a line of lght In the I eastern sky. “The camp was very stil : Sunrise and solitude: they were allie chew lest the army thet honored; the waited In silence now, looking across the plains to where the dawn was growing richer and brighter with every moment that the numbered seconds of hls life drifted slowly and surely away. “Did t Ever Fear #”’. ‘When they came near to bind the eat, let me ppeak one word with you baa Fig bg ied pid eee ‘Bret,’ Mt far from Ghe told of her mission, of all that : 3 i; hung at etake. The young objet Ma-| “styiq 1 ever fear to look down the he Gravely; by the glistening of N19! soothes of my enemies’ femsketst’! { Diack eyes, be was surprised and| Over the slope of browa and bartien me moved, theugh, trhe to his texobing)| earth that soreened the afamp from view neither emotion as he an- herr * does he perth?” he asked. he forgot for oncp that ne re; and because ho has borne Of @ guilt that wae not his there came, at the very amomont that the ramrody were draw@ out with a vbrill, shanp ring from the carbine DETTE, & single figure, tollstalwart, lithe, with the mpring @f the deer- stalker, in bis rapid wtep, and the sinew of the northern yaces in Its movld, Cecll never saw it; he was looking i bave given yourself up to troop—and - go you on your errand; you are wate shalt see mo back ere an-| the feetness of the | I two layers. your death you may pur- messenger trom ys tor this wt tho ast, at che deopening of tho morning flush that was the signal of alaugh bip-nend was turned the speaker. To Relieve His Heart. ‘Dear Betty: r HAVE been keeping company. with ‘We had a Mittle quarrel and T have not spoken to her since, al- | dearly love her, I am a good-looking though I see her very often. I received fellow and keep out of bad company ‘The Time, a girl me» Under Two F lags. «<> THE MAN TROUBLE-MAKER. ROUBLE-MAKING 1s not by any means confined [ to women. odetight—in-gowtng- dissension between any—two. women who seem to like each other, and his motivo, though he perhaps does not know It, ts very obvious. Bo long as two women are quarrelling and saying spite- ful things to and about euch other, he can imagine that the-cause..of-the rom is-rivalry.ton lls affection. Peace hurts his vanity. into the caloulations of either woman at all. ‘he proceeds to stir up trouble. He lures one girl on to say something about the other, and then repeats tt. The woman who gossips sometimes does so without evil intention; ut the man who repeats things does so with malice, avoid him. His a¢quaintance can do no one any good, throbbed in her beating temples; she |~ 9 RS! The new-comer went straight to{ “I heard of it yesterday; I rode all)! have heard it thought that he the adjutant in command, and “| night from Oran. I fect great pity for| J# of my country, and of a rank above dressed him with brief preface, buf-/ this man, though “he is unknown to his standing in his regiment hero. rledly and iow. Me," the stranger pursued, {n rapid} nee may address him, M. Je Duc; “Your prisoner ia Victor of the) Whispered words: “His crime was''—| Dut be brief; Time presses, : 8 ts to be hot this morn-| “A blow to hia colonel, Monselgneur.”| JR Strange Meeting. _. - Ai EMU] “Ama thice ts no possiblity of @ re-! FH thanked the officer for the unuéual Tha officer suffered the{ DrieveT” Permission and turned to. approach the: an} {aterruption, the rank ef| ‘None. prisoner. At that moment Cectl turned “bay I speak with him an reser also, and thelr eyes met A great shud- By Ouida ads dering cry broke from them both; his head sank as though the bullets had| already pierced his breast, And the man who ‘believed him dead stoot gazing at him. paralyzed with horror. For a moment there was an awful sl- lence; then the Seraph's voice rang out with @ terror in t thrilled through the careless, callous hearts of the watching soldiery. “Who is that man? He dled—he died Ro llong nenlaAnaeetinn! (To Be Continued.) ViveENT® ® ADVICE and think I am deserving of such a sirl. I hope you will give my heart an carly rellef. + WN, Either write her a nice little note to say that you were in the wrong (not oany to way, bul manly and brave) and Ask her forgiveness, or call on her and tell her ao in person. If she is the kind of girl worth having ashe will [Probably forgive you and fonget all about the matter. To admit it wher | we are wrong \s a mark of intelligence Fire Escape Flirting. Dear Betty: AM a young Bunday-school teacher 4nd have become greatly infatuated with @ young man about my ow: Age who useg to attend the school tha I taught in. He. nwas recently graty There is a certain typo of men who It means that he does not enter Therefore Pa Once you have found him out, a-letter from her a fow darn later and she gave me a hard calling down. I To LOVERS hear bim that he thought I used to flirt on the fre-escapa with nother young man. This is quite untrue, but I do not know héw I can tell him this sithout arousing any suspicion that I love him. I do not want to lose his love, aa he is considered a great base- bal piayer and all-around athlete by hia friends, I have seen him several (mes talking to a you raduated with him, She is very home- y. belng cross-eyed, and I do not un- ferstund why he should be talking to ser, What shall I do? LI E HEARTSIOK. It seems to me that the only thing you can Jo to r up the misunder. standing ja to assy to him frankly ‘never mind what he thinks) “I un- derstand that you sald so and so about ated from the Sunday-school? ‘and I have not since seen him as often. He know {t {s all my fault and am very anxious to know how I can win her baek, as she ip a very nice girl and 1 of my girl friends who happened to The Place “oon! SOME. GIRL 1S STUCK ON ME! NINE O'CLOCK, HEY? has also ceased to show ma the atten- tlon he used to, and I learn trom rome | SR and let lim have an opportunity to exprés# himself on thi” tire-escape flirting matter, Ho cannot admire you for prefetring his good opinion, does not necessarily imply that you love him. ~and the Girl, Mocha Cake. i f\NE cup suger. add one and ‘one- half cupe flour and one egg, one tablespoonful butter, one and one- halg—teaspoontuls baking powder, one- half cup milk, vanilla to flavor; make Filling—Use pleqp of but- tor the size of an egg, two large spoon- fuls of cocoa, one and one-half cups of powdered sugar; cOld coffee enough to make a smooth icing,’ Cream Puffs. OW. together one cup of water, one- half cup butter; one eupful of fi smooth. Let cool; add three @g ts, not beaten, and stir until smooth. Drop on He bolling, add and @tir until Knifo-and put a twblespoontul of cream} to use much vinegar, as vinegar re-{ in each puff. Cream—One-half cup su-|tards ‘digestion. Lemon juice sa gooil| &ar; one erg well beaten; two heaping | substitute, i tablespoonfuls of flour. Pour this into a half cup of botling milk; Muvor with va- eer Omelet. Mi nilla; let boll until thick, stirring aji the | (\) N2 and one-half pounds of round | ime; fet it got cold before Alling the} stenk ground; two mes; | puta. fourth cup of milk; two slices of Baked Bean Salad. | bread crumbed; salt and pepper to | CALD trom four to tix nice ripe | “at | x tomatoes. Peol and put away to| Devil’s Food Cake. chill,” Arrange lettuce™leavea in a ‘WO cups sugar, add four eae yolke, virvle around a« large ‘salad dish, chen i . ded ss one-half cup of shortening, ono make an thner border of allced toma- half lard, three tablespoons of | toea sprinkled with salt und popper. | nelted chocolate, stirred up with two! In the centre place a mound of cold | taplespoonfuls of bailing water, one tea- | Boston baked ‘beans. Pour over the | sponmcact ealt, one tearpoon vanilla, ono | dnd two-thirds cup flour, ona rounding | tablespoonful of baking cup ae wat agli" waltes me one- | whole a plent ful supply of palad Srmn- tog, When eating ada a tew drops of ' aot, af i HINTS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER. moderate oven, and when ‘old frost with elther while or chocolate frosting Good Plain Cake. REAM ecant 1-2 oup of butter with , 1 cup of sifted sugar, beat in 1} eke , then beat aitgther into ure good and hard. milk. 1-2" cups of eth 2 powder from’ sides Oke. Add pastry four © feaspoons of hakle tl edges nik Very nice. Poor Man’s Pie. with 1 1 Bake an- pan. AKE the crust firet; use one cup of water, one heaping table: spoontul of corustarch, | two. ris etm St ML MUEIT. woODtUl OF | Gorter, Corea eggs; We Me whtes ext two of them for fromUng: use temeu ¢ or any kind of pxtract to sult the | taste. Boll wll together and put in the atust. Huion the frosting and set in tae wren ull brown, BEAUTY DAYS. Miss Ayer’s “At Homes” Every Tuesday, 2to 4 P. M. For Evening World Readers Who Wish to Consult Her. AN Y of my read- _ers are the habit of caming to see me personally . =the correspondents from out of town usu- ally write for appoint- meénts.and thus avoid auseless trip. Inorder to facilitate matters I '? shall‘hereatter. be ‘‘at. -home”’ ‘until further : notice for those réead- ers of The Evening _Wo-ld who wish to_ see me on subjects of . interest to them or’ to other womeu on Tues- day afternoons from # to 4. Margaret H. Ayer. World Building, Room 48, By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. of my beauty-column’ readers came to me the other day—for occa- |. O sionally We have to have real heart-to-heart taiks with ench other und-say “20! a few things Instead of printing them. As the girl went out a mere man came in, “My! ghe'a a atunner, Whe is she?” asked the,man. “On, 1 replied, “she's a reader are for the face nature gave her. She's been telling me what faults ap) Ras to find with her looks, Alt ane wants {s her mouth made amaller, her nods sawed off-at the tip, a new pair of eyebrows, ttle eyes, inatead of brown; wavy instead of: straight locks; m. Aifterent figure, broader shoulders, a dimple in her cheek, a formula for per- sonal magnetism, and, oh, yeaa Job. How would you Ilke to be the Beauty Editor?’ - a ‘The Mere Man fell backward. “Why, I thought she was a peach,” he eald, humbly; “but, of course, I did not look very clonely’— ‘She is a peach,” I answered, sternly. “There are lots of peachy girls, a whole crop, but when they get before the mirror they start in to find fault with themselves, until they don't find a good feature left, Then they got perfectly ~ reckless and start in ‘improving’ themselves until they have neither money nor looks left." ig Look at yourself asa ploture as a whole—get the general effect, and don't well on and exaggerate one bad point, which can usually be effaced by bringing. | out @ good point. Did you ever see a girl with a large ngse looking into her”, mirror? She can Uterally never see farther than that nose of hers, which | usually ‘¥lyes character to the face, or, if really too big, can be made to look | smaller by careful and artistic arrangement of the heir. i "1 Ligten to your own common sense and to the praise of your friends, and’ don't exaggerate thelr criticism, or you may fegret it. Last of all, try and act a if you thought you belonged to the peach crop. It doesn’t pay, to be vain, put Jt makes sorry woman ‘miserable to dwell at length pn her own physical ae shortcomings. 5 frults and vegetables and as little meat a possible. Exercise is what you need rather than diet, } Eyebrow Grower. —This ts the formula for an eye brow and eyelash grower: Red | Yaseline, two ounces; tincture| Bleach for the Neok. cantharides, one-eighth ounce; ofl of X. L.—Lemon jnice or pure alco- & | second shelves, lavender, of] of rosemary, 15 drops each. Agply to the eyebrows with a tiny tooth brush once « day until the growth is sumiclently stimulated; then less often. ‘This/ointment may be used for the ey: Inshés also. In this case it should be very oaretully applied. It will inflame the eyes, as any ofl will, if {t gets into them. 7. 2 Too Fat at Fourteen. EANETTB.—Do not despair at four- teen over your figure. Give it time to settle Mts miatore” tex” anq— re the mean-tima-tead an active, healthy Join a gymnasium and exercine tantly. Practise deep breathing and take long walks. I certainly should not advise you to diet, except in ao far as confining yourself to simple food, fresh hol on the neok with a bit of soft ’ » cloth will bleach and clean the neck effectively, Use the lemon twice a Gay at least. . A Permanent Tan. : L.—THERE ta no formula which... ( I will tan the skin permanently. If + it 1e_e_make-up tan you wish—'" that {s, the one used on the etage—yau can t it. from a theatrical supply store or from any drug store, To Reduce Weight. 5 “GAY one of Rhy ot -the-differe~ ent systems of diet and exsrcisé { will help wou reduce your weight ..” You can lve on raw food or take the / Danting course jor think out @ oom: { bination of exercises that wit you! case. Or try the light vibrassage bath. Little Gilbert—What do they do? fusses because 1 wear my shoes out #0 *Willie."" wald the boy's mother, w mustn't you were talking about, mamma. That day t Mother—How did that happen? Small Harold—Tho rtingy teacher boys.—Chicago News. Out of the Mouths of Babes ITTLE ALBERT—Mamma and papa keep me worried all the time.” Little Albert—Mamma won't lot me stand on my head and papa that cake ta tie pantry white I'm gone. It wil maxe"you sivk.” | ‘Three hours later when she returned Wille said; “You didn't know what Mother—Harold, aid you get a good-behavior card at Bunday school to- Small Harol4—Yes, ma'am; I got two. money you gave me for the heathen and bought couple from the other fast. ho was preparing to go eut, “you cake didn't make me sick « bit.” @idn't give me any, so I took the Solution to the ‘Mother's Jam” Puzzle. HE solution to Mother Hubbant’s I Jam Puzzle in yesterday's Eyen- ing World may be arrived at es follows: § fly, during the first twelve days of the jam season, consumes the twelv: tt jara trom the two lower shelves, leay ing two large Jars on the second shelf and four medium jars on the third. | Since each of the shelves contained tho | name quantity, and six small Jara are) removed from each, {t 4s clear that the two remaining Jara on the second shelf are equal to the four medium Jara left! upon the third, ‘Therefore, one large | Jar contains the etme quantity of jam | as two medium jars, It ts now a aim-| ple matter to determine how many of} the smaller Jara are contained tn the medium by comparing the first and If we remove the large | jar and two medium jars from the top} shelf and two large Jars from the sec- | ond, we have lett one (medium and three small on the top shelf, containing tho) same quantity as «ix «mall on the} necond, Thus wo ee that ous medtum | jar contains’ three small jars, Having the relative capacity of the three ateea, we can now prove that all the Jem in} tee wapvoars could be contained In| y-feosr ct te smallest Jary, and, ince che Hubberéa eoatame one stall Jar per day, the owinter‘a eupoiy, wtil | last exaelly Afty-four Gaye, i i b they By Cora M.'\W. Greenleaf. Upon my roof, from lower- brought to me, ee, After the Rain. LL night the raindrops pat- A tered joyously ing clouds above. Sweet were the messages, Of hope renewed, of peace and power and love. The giants of the forest bow their heads, In reverence and gratitude are}: ?' still, i ide Huahed ls each sound of melocy, a and fled %o ahelter aech nolsy whtppoor- | "” will, : Softly as angel hands each pass- ing breezo i ‘ Falls soothingly upon ‘my troubled brow, And soothes my. Jongings, peace, sweet peace, , Until {n glad obedience I bow, bringing Whe soft, dim shadown in the wood- land aistes i Lie cool o'er fern and bracken, wooded knoll, The morning fi ¥i3ing sun. I Breet him, too, with calm, aa: trowhled seek co greets the

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