The evening world. Newspaper, August 15, 1907, Page 13

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om. AAs abe teense eboeseees } GREATEST LOV. AY Princess POTOHOTIS LREDEDIBRIERRED Author of “Mr. I —— Copyright. 180. By Phillips Publishing Cor pany, @TNOPSIS OF PRY agers, Zens, a dansh! , wing: In Constaptinogle in. buy fora Venetia female lave. The request cails for ‘a woman of exguiall face 4 form und pilanmente Yen) co eulte, hie ‘Omobono, who recommen Armentan. slave zene of fortune, Je asked to egutiations for beautiful Greek Saughter of ern purchan Zor, fell herself Dbenefactrens —CHAPTER ITI. (Contin The Sting. of Pove ty. OE was ‘not Ayr owa Z ud been’ th and his wife for after their marriage, in Gespair, they had adopted a Ite the child of a young ad both died of ally visited Con Rhan- wn tle baby irl. Venetian couple who the cholera that period! stantinople, Kyrin Asa gabe brought her up daur! and again a —at_last two them within elg Rhangabe's affe thelr ars passed Dy; b ‘Kyria Agatha loveq ter better. any children would have a mo! pect when they were old eno’ reason, She had not been unk Zoe. still less had ashe concelved a dis like for her; but she had grown Indif- ferent to her,and had looked forward with pleasure to the time when the girl ebould marry and leave the house. The knew the truth about her birth, for Rhangabe himself had not ithought It right that she should be de- ecived, but she hid not the least rec- ollection of her own parents; the Pro- tosparthos and. his wife had been her real father and mother and had been fa kcirad, and it was ker nature to be grate- She’'saw that the ful and devoted. Kyria loved the boys best, but she was @lready too womanly not to feel that human nature must have 4s way where the tles of flesh and blood are oon- Glow, cerned; and besides, if her adoptlyé “4° moment later some one she coulil mother had been cruel and coll, jrstead of only intfferent where shefiad once been loving, the girl wousld still have given her life for her, for dead Rhan- White he had lived, she wotehipped him; in ble last wife and children, and ¢o her, whioh by worse happy miracle had been delivered: “and now that he was dead she was ready to die for those who had been his: more than that, she waa willing to be sold into slavery for them The Fate of a Girl. ‘ fihe—sicod bythe bedside only half covered, and she tried to think of some- thing more that she might do, while she gazed on the pale face that was turned up to hers “Are You warmer, tenderly. "Yes little. Thank you, child.” Kyria Agatha closed her eyes again, but Zoe still watched her. The con- viction grew In the girl that the real anger was over, and that the dell- cately nurtured woman only needed care and warmth and food. That was all, but {that was the unattainable since there was nothing left that could be nowt" abo asked, sold; nothing but Zoe's rare and lovely | self. A hundred golden ducats were a fortune, In .old Nectaria’s hands such @ suni would buy real comfort for more than a year, and in that time no one could tell what might happen. A turn of fortune inght” bring the “emperor John back to the throne. Then Zoe’ freedom might be bought again, and she would go Into a convent and live good life to the end, in expiation of auch evil as might be thrust upon her as a bought slave. Thin she could do and this she must €o, for therp Was no other way to nave pent fe andthe ives of the Uttle sank upon her knées beelde the bes, forgetting that was cold and half-wtarved, as the of Ter Thoughts tone in a wave of despair. ‘Then she sprang to her feet like ‘a artled animal. Some one had knocked the door, “Who knocks?" she asked In a very jow tone, clasping her tattered gar- ments to her body. The Armenian's mooth voice an- swered her in olly accents, The Slave ; Dealer. ‘Tam Gullabi,” he said, “I am sud- Genly obliged to go on a journey and T start at dawn. Will you make up your mind? I will give you half as much again as I promised. e girl's face had been pale; it turned white now, for the great mo- ment had come very suddenly, She made an offort to-swallow, In order to distinctly, and she glanced toward “the bed. Kyria’ Agatha was in a deep the b sleep, HINTS FOR , Rhubarb Pie. NE and one-half cups of rhubarb; add one cup of sugar, two table- spoona of flour, and one egg; mix well and beke with two crusts Cracked Eggs. NBDRT a common pin tn the broken | part and remove It when the oges Gre boiled. You will Be purprised when not ® drop of the contents bolls out, Baked Bananas. Fe @ baking dish’ with bananas, whioh have been peed and cut in halves, lengthwise rd crosswine. *Te each benana allow two tablespoon- By F. Marion Crawford, cs, ~ dre porn to Y g World’s Daily Maga ° 4090500000025) STORY OF YEARS. 3) DDO! 2AASAAALASALAIAASASSALIIIAIASSSIAIAM SAAARIAASLAN SII AEASL LLL A AIG ALSAAK AS ARG MHS HE Ht Ht STEAK A EAA : ye The Best Fun of the Day by Evening World 1% % % zine, Thursday, August 1907 $| sensible talk with you and ali you do Is sneer at me!’ 9 g ° ’ ° | “I wasn't doing anything of the kind,’ replied the asionished Mr. Jarr. : The Jarr FamMily’S Daily Jars. ' x sess to teu me esi women being foots and, out of poilieness, 1 in Sla $ @ didn't even agree with you'-— + sth r e wi 2 abou! * sald Mr: rr, in tin: very. $| By Roy L. McCavdell. [nm TOu,never Agree with i about: anything.” sald Mra. Jarr, Interrupting $ THINK some women are foolish,” ent Mra, Jarr,|. “Gee whix! If I had agreed with you, you'd have gotten mad, I didn't eel “Dr. Claudiu. with ney Zoe asked, alniost pan.ing, Yes. he hand that grasped’ the rags to em together presied deaperately her heart. While Guilail could wed ten there was. aslience whee again she looked toward | the | And then, with Iniinlte precaution, slipped out the wooden bar thi the door closed. Once more her raga over her, for they fallhn back’ when ‘she . ised hanlts. suw ae ) sleep)" | ir kite hal en Kep\t A ancl pped him a i tiother hus fallen into she, said. “Give! me the not wili go with you.” Gruliabl, placed a mail € and ‘biack board thrust for ang Wit her "One hundred an, answered the Armenian he knew ta ny there | Nevtarta came back} with pans of coals! her ese and hei! out le bar a woman s.aced.! looked at Kyr a's sleoping face. | caueht Aga 3 wet down the pan upon ¢ floor and! | ‘ame fo ard. “ it Is the Only Way!” “He has broug the money, 120 ducats, be whispered. forcing tie baw Lane Nect. noun hands. “it ty YA UIOK— UL ell her I dless the am < Nactatin—ould-anewer Zorba}: outside, barefooted on mud, and scarcely co J nothing now. and Gulla wut Fe takin 07 hi wriste aod held tt frie w hurting It “ne feet, young er el inl make a das! r freelom yet, (« woul ince he could way into the ruin. sd take buck his money if s But he nearly lost a; before, and he would) ekept his strong hand. ped round the slender wris: escaped him young slave onci risk not te jibcugh Zoe walked besile him quietly si the deep gloom, thinking o of covering herself from his<gaze, ¢ indeed he could scarcely see the ou of her fgure. A few stepa further and Gullah! stop- ped short, wull Golding her fast by tae wrist, and she saw that they had ¢ upon'a group of men who were Wa! for them. One suddenly held up a lan tern which had been covered, and now shed a yellow Mgnt through thin leaves of horn, and Zoe raw that he was a big Ethiopian, as black as ebony. She drew her tatters still more closely over her head with hor free hand and turned away from the light, aa Ww pa Gullabi's unrelaxing hold would al- ine not ee¢ threw a wide warm cloak over her shoulders trom betind her, and she caught {t giadly and drew the folds to her breast. “Get into t Mt sald Gulladt, sharply but not Jond!: There was nothing soft or olly in his tone now, He had bought her and she was a part of his property. A Journey of Mystery. Four men carried the litter, a fifth, armed with an ‘ron-shod staff, went berore with the lantern, and Gullah! fol- jowed after. There was nothing in the Appearance of the party to excite sur- prise or curtostty la a clty- where every } Well-to-do person who went out In the evening Was Carried in a palanquin, and ACCOMPANIED BY UT TELST TWO TrUMty” ser> vants. For that mattor, too, Gullabi's {business was perfectly ‘legitimate, and it concerned no one that he shouki have @ newly bought beauty carried in a closed iltter from a distant quarter of the ‘city to bis home, in an age and a land of slavery the slave's fate was familiar to her. She knew that there ‘were public markets and private markets, and that. her|{ | beauty, which meant ‘her value, would | save her from the former; but to tho daughter of free-born parents the dit. ference between the one and the other | was not 80 great as to be a consolation. Ghe would be well lodged, well covered and well fed It was true, and ahe nesd not fear cruel treatmen but custom- ers would come, perhaps to-morrow: and she was to be shown to them like ® valuable horse; they wou'd judge her! | points and discuss her and the sum j that Gulab! would ask; and it thee {thought thé price tuo high they. would 0 away and others would come. and others, tl a bargain was struck at last. After that she could only think | Lot death ne-the-end. : + |A Dream of | Vengeance. |, 48 she lay among her cushions - |ing the end of the journey, but creda: ally wearying of the future. her thoughts went back to the first cause of all her misfortunes, of Michael Rhan=| abe's awful death, of all the sattering that had roliowed them. One man alone {had wrought that evil and much mone | one man, the reigning Emperor Ane ddranten Was -not-revengerut, not ry far trom bloodthirsty; but | thought of him ahe felt’ that sho would Kdlll him if she could, and that It would only be fuatice, Suddenty @ ray of something fike hope fashed through her darkness. ” Nectaria hid told her how beautiful she was; per- | haps, being #0 much more valuable thin | most of the slaves that wont to the! market, she might be destined for the Emperor himself, It wan {ust possibile She set. her” teeth and denched hes [ttle bunds in the dark. If that. should he her fate, the usurper's days were numbered. She would tree her country from its tyrant and be revenged for Mhangabe's murder and for all the reat “tone quick stroke though she might ie condemned to die within the hour That was indeed something to hope for, The Utter stopped and she heard krvw thrust Into locks, and felt that the pore ters turned short to the left. to enter a door, Her journey through the city wos at an end, (To Be Continued.) THE HOME. Juice and @ ttle salt. Baste often and cook slowly for half an hour, of until the bananas am red syrup thick, Berve-hot. Cheese Straws. NE cup grated ese; sid ne cup] flour, halt of @ small cup of butter, and a quarter teaspoonful salt; knoad all together until of the rgnt consistency to roll without crumbi ng; -bake, Blackberry Mush: [Js a halt cuptul of water to each quart of the berries; stow and pulp them, To ench quart add a cuptul of cereal; cook In a double bo!l- or forty-five minutes, Mould and serve ) fule°of water and one of ugar, a tea-/oold for breakfast with sugar ond poontul of butter, melted, ons of lemon |oream, , es Y thelr’ best , they are no worse dristiing up. bad, What this “You just were aay replied Mr. Jarr, gently, m0 -they-wre: but that’ . Ita no excuse for = then pome folks are born’ fooiteh, and aumy are made yy nim,’ h, and some foolishnass thrist ‘upon them,'* “What's: wrong about that?” asked pon MEY! sald Mra. Jarr, gtaring at him. “Of easy enough to atizk by anotlier. all the éxanperatlitg people I ever saw, you are the worst! i try looking up from the evening paper ves, a great many of them are," sald Mr. Jarr, | | 1 40, han men" “As a matter of fact they ats not near s2 world would “bo If the women didn't ‘fo to keep tt sane and sensicin I don't know." Ing that sorho women were foolish,” ho. excus ay, agree with you and you got mad. fan't 1t? said Mrs. Jarr, !4 Mra. Jarr, abo jin the pupers,’ sald Mrs, Jarr. you may such a thing?’ for you mén."' Jarn, * ~ahowldn't avd Mr a friend who w: to have a need | I tick by us w “JM neither affirm nor ‘deny the statement,” said Mr. Jarr. What's a man to dot’ “A man might try to be kind to his wife, hat's Wtlle enouga 2 an his wite comes Mr. Jarr.. ‘When all Ita not at all dific hen we ere {n tyouble. goes weil! It ; but wh for lilm to [MAM right" sad Mfr, Jarr, “TU be kind now. What is tt? What fe ft all 1 wns only going to say that some women were foolish, fram what I read | the “What makes “T've been readisg another cave where a man geta mixed up In a-matter ho/ beh and all his own fuult says she belleves in him, that he ts being falsely accused and that she will stick Rrd and for: Le HAVE A O/P WITH US fats (Rw) By F. G. Long * oI AUNT THIS (BEAT Yo moat devot 0. and do not refrain from making new ones, the more Near Betty: I older for. d fi the man AM a young lady twenty- of age. and have been keeping com-| It pany with @ young man a few over two LONG ENGAGEMENTS. DO-notbelieretn jong engagements z Many giris mak me whether or not they should | Veman Is sincere” wir walt two or three years for men them for wives, but will not be in a position to marry I (or-that length of time, To them I would say this: you utterly the feeblest kind of brake on i Try to make dim Jook at tt in that Mght. Shoald Make Him Jealous. wait for him the length of time he asks you, but do not bind yourseif by an engagement. By mo doing | pear Betty: restrict your own freedom and put his. You oft from the society of all other men, and lve a nunllke existence which the | ¢ wil be Tar-trom fottowing, : If a man has asked you to walt some years for him, and you love him, 40 But meantime do not. give up your harmless friendships with other men, The more men you nee and know, ently thinks a great deal of me. T he does not hesitate to show tnd (action. How can I find ont ff this gen- eo tetting ts who have sought | know? Rui, Appear to take an Interest in some other man, That is the only way, If you love the man The Family Bank Book, only cut yourself AM a youne man, married a year, and give my wife $0 & week Now, I I want her to put what she has Pwaved= from —that--in- the bank, butte my name only. She objects. She may ahe sayed It and {t belongs to her. My mother-in-law gets Jealous of me when yauneyersHould Lanne tated aby Swrnee of him. | she Ands out.I go home oftener to’ my | mother than to her. Sometimes she mak me dlagusted with tie racen she Ge nk but Li aaeect | makes when I come around. I often Rreat dea} of toi, but L do not Ike hie} ma} taping Away altogether. What speaking to me in a flppant way of /ame tts do UNILAPPY ree years| our getting married some day. I find | 1ihe money, of course, belongs to. you . “lf It is the source of quarrels between [penemoste om bariasn for, notwith- | you and your wife make her a regu-ar years | standing thle trifling converaation | ivwante far fousekorping and. per. years, I think a! which he alwa: indulges in, he appar-! sonal expenses, and put the balance in ETTY Vivernrd ©» ADVICE 7 LOVERS he bank yourself. Jaw makes faces there at all. (A Jealous Fiance. Dear Betty AM a young lady VT aed’ to" a) youne {4 years. The other question, and as it he wanted me Idn't, He then a at you hima 4, he say.n I am employ 1 htm, If your mothe! euuse nen wh ORS ep and fot his Raine the dack-of-the car seat tau stop golak lao and have been en- man for two Ing I asked he could not to tell nim, sked me who rau not ng that I lumoris ts x eee vat Rr hom eae get | “Do you th atick by you If you got In trouble like thatT’ asked Mra, Jars, sharply. dh, thersta no a, nger of anything of that sort, sald Mr. Jar, senflingiys “but the man ‘nay be falsely accused, and we should all be considered tnnovent |. our Kuli oven, S80 I do Lope if anything happened me you Would not betieve: me guilty, but would stick by me. Z 4 “Oh, dear m ra, Jarr, with a worrled look, “are you i any unpleasant trout Cit in my bones someting was going to happen, but I Gidn't think you would do anything to disgrace yourself and your family!” “Great Scott!" matter with you? “On oxcaimed Mr, Jarr; “what in the name. of goodness is the Vin all right!” i .” sald Mrs. Jarr, ‘Tt's no use trying to trust anybody s—after you read what's in the papers!’ : "tread what's in the paps thon!” orfed Mr..Jarr angrily, “What oh8 me for {f you alwaya «id think I was no good?” 3 T didn’t th In, pure," sald’ Mra. Jurr “Dut you can tell me what you done and ¥ will try to bear up under It." : T haven't done anything’! sald Mr. Jarr, ‘'and I think you are erazy. Ira MI Teht Waste you aerre readiix about xomekode = “T toh yor what tt was,” said Mri. Jarr.., ‘Het anoilier married man who “De have has been loading a double lite, and hla wife says she doesn’t believe it and will stick by him: that's why I day she's toolini"’ Taba ng sloca ever hapien to mie,’ sald Mr. Jarr solemnly. “remember I] y TRLt wil come qn ay ays believed the worst of Ido not.” agid Mra, Jarr. Lin't lve with you n day. ‘ ut suppose you did find out something,’ sald Mr. Jarr, “what would-wout not unple. t surprise or disillusion to. you. You ey "If I thought anything. tke that’ of you I people the matiafaction ‘of saying that they naked Mrs. Jarre. ndeed 1 wouldn't. Not that 4 it would!’ she added warningly. “But Think I'd give oth stick by, you?” An‘'t end alt for tn een us, I ldn’t let the world know "Then why do you say this woman was foolish? asked Mer. Jarr. Hestite ni teinen ane wine thate } Sis are_cumserned." reniied Aire Jarr, “and I'm just, Uke ahy other woman y + See ee New York Thro’ Funny Glasses By Irvin S. Cobb. N our last numeer we left Cousin Hi and his City Relas if uve © act of taking # cab for the spangied portion. of Main street In r that Cousin Hi might get @ proper running start for his week of metropolitan ‘sight- Seeitic. ‘Phe reader will all how the City Relative had. gone lo the fF expecting to greet a human squash who would want fo be Jed to the Aquarium and the Bronx Zoo, and how he had been aurpris by a live wire aving nil the ou age and a ROT) “ores signs of a hign volt= — ret teenth as Rollo's Tutor, Tg? self-appointed pl and an as they journey through the fastnesses- E day he will haye to open His clutch to the fast= expects to stay on the same block with the light-moving plppin|} {rom Bosky Dell. It often turns out just that way in real life, although It/ rarely does In the funny pictures. When they stop at tho first souaepariiln fountain for an Interchange o€ tokens of mutual esteem aud good will, It fs customary for Sagectous Saul, the! City-Bred, to wara lila bucall¢ brother to de carefitl_absutSeaving {1 thesa — fancy mixet dri and covered w the same aa putting | And sa along toward Relative becomes a tots cs. dex cards In a file cabinet. the shank of the evening the well meaning City loss. Aftor vainly trying to pit his teeth with a patent down his cuff In the bellef that he ts far lehter and squirting the tell filing his high ball glass, he pasyes to the comatore state and, for the nones, (drifts Into peaceful stumber with his ears among the free lunch and his feet | intertwined with the bar rall and tne cuspidors, and {a heard no more. Z , At which to ‘cousin Hi is Just beginning to feel properly {luminated. He the comedy halt the musical team ng ever and anon to convulse the that are new (o New York and is stl giving an excellent imitation of playing tune? on the toddy glasses, oniy pau sarkeep with one of thése-end men's whee old everywhere else. It 1s only a strong sense ‘of hix obllxatio | bid a reluctant adieu to the works shortly before dawn, He would stay on and nake a night of it, only tha City Relaive's slumber 1s beginning to be restless and broken, So visiting Hiram folda the mortal remains up inside a cab and takes them home to the flat and puta them to bed. And next morning whfle City Relotive is trying to get something beside his vest to stay on his etomésh the rural wojourner will be putting away a few measures of ham and eggs and wheat cakes and asking bim If knows Any attractive young ladica who could be dragged out to dinner. tf pr rly introduced to. Thus endeth the second lesson * TH > FUNNY PART: Wo never seem to realize {t, but any. person’ whose interior Is inured to the | Kind of set pleces that they five at the leading cafe of a small Interlor town te admirably qualified for juggling such comparatively mild skyrockets a8 ary touched off along Broajlwa A to his host that compels him to ARGARET | gp TIUBBAAYER CARE OF CHILDREN’S HAIR. WO women and a little girl sat in front of me on the I open car this morning, The*women were very elab- ora! y dressed for such an early hour—but in New York one gets used to see'ng women dressed as for a gare den party at$in the morning. The little girl was also patn~ fully conscious her pretty clothes, but her face looked tired and haggard and as if she had bocn up very late the night before, One of the women, evidently her mother, began talking about her, taking the entire car In.o her confidence In a large and hearty w, “Gracious, but It's hot! If this weather keeps on T don't know what I shall ws fes_hair You know. it won't cur! naturally, and I just stmply won't have a child with straight hair, I don't ihinle ron r hair doesn't curl, do you? Besides, I w know, though, of course, my halr ls marceited, too; but, then, it would curl If T let tt. Atdeast Gusta he hatrdresser, says so. But, of course, it's easier to haye !t waved. Now, with Gertle's hair, I haye to do It up over curlers at night. Bhe says {t Isn't comfortable, but its the only way to make it Took crimpy, and {t'e much more becoming when 1's crimpy then when it's straight, and with those fluffy hats children simply ought to have curly hair, don’t you nt Gertie to match me, don’t you nd T sald & ycung man where oily yor My, but it's hot! And mamma rattled on merrily, while poor ttle Gertle bent her tired head Ne -wonder-she.bad looked exhausted! F; temper get the dest of him. I told him trying to sle@p with a wreath of hard, knobby curlers around your aching headl that I thought we were £0! to be jeal over trifles. & ng we were on tne brink of quarreling hfs temper cooled dowa and ie asked me to f-relve him. But 1 can never feel the same toward fim again. How should I treat him when I seo him again?’ HEARTBROKEN |] think you did wrong to exciry his jealousy as yu m to have done de- liberately. You were In the wrong and ld as sweet an before to Why EG Discontented? AN AUTOL GC) Go Gc) Go OW WHAT. HEY Y ‘OU THINK WATZH OUT ‘o By Albert Car SAY) THIS 13 400d ENOUGH itp mich cl Buon had better part If he Also the famous humidity was getting In its deadly work and slowly but surely unrolling her curls. In a few minutes she would be straight of hair and natura again, and the sacrifice of a night's sound sleep. which means s0 much te @ ebild, would have been tn yatn And the moral of this tale is that It Is more fmportant for your child to be comfortable than curled In hot weathe: If you insist on having a curly-headed youngster, the time to begin the cultivatioy of curliness ts just after the first duwn on a baby's head has turn ) halr Wat an unprejudiced stranger can seo, Wher bathing and dressing the child. and at odd moments, molyten the hand a }tde with soapy and rub the hair sack from Its natural way. lof growing. If there {s any tendency to curiiness vhly will develop and strengthen that -Inclination, M sonally—the correspondents from out of town usually write for 2 appointments and thus avoid a useless trip. In order to facilitate matters I shall hereafter be “at home until further tetice for those readers of The Evening World who wish to see me on eudjecta of interest to them or to other scomen on Tuesday afternoons from 4 to 6. World Building, Room 48. MARGARET H. AYER, wa ANY of my readers are in the habit of coming to sec me per- =H STE RE PLE TTT oe Solution of the © | The Explanation. “Picture Sum.’’|!! pire feelings of women are far RE is the solution to the “Pie- deeper and finer than thoae, of i SL ep ene man," cried the Jady orator, fm IH Ne pele eee tu [n ferce tone, “Woe wre told by those find the namo of an Italtan elty [who style themselves the stronger sex, Porocet : Prottowa; Mat We are much! tnfertor, Ia thak ne pletures and signs ran w. pie 3 Eb ad er tiled Neeadan: Rae bet a | ‘A loud chorus of ‘No’ from the len | minus "D." Reel! minus “Eel” | ties greeted. this auestion. mys Pears equals: Tt, Dome’! minus “D" equals) sonte Weekly, and the orator went oft “Ome.” "RM + "Ome" = “Itome, ci say that woman fools where Taam thinks" -—- st EE ; husband ta “Iy that the reason your bald" inquired one of the tow male members of the sucdie y Tt was tucky for him that he got twa seconds siart in the race for the daaty PLAY IT EITHER WAY, “Lay a little by," advised the editor. : “Td like to," sald the poet. ‘Buy a Uttle lay?''—Cleveland Leader. berause while they may go down slick they See rtad J burrs. Whereat Courin HI proceeds to stow them #way ue A iets the Teka wt crayon a i to fed bis hand greaped > —

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