The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1907, Page 10

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ree 1 RS JARR had sunt returned from a week end at Asbury Park, where she =o “MI had been visiting a friend and also to spy out the land to neo if It would ry cat be a good place to take the children and her husband when the latter ne satook bin vacation carly In September : 4 ‘pelt the girl to make mein fresh clip of tea!’ sald Mra. Jarr sinking {nto Bae a) a chair and fanning herseif with a newspaper. “I’m that worn out, I thought ae Pa wdied on the train!" L, ™\ Ti swhy didn't you come back on’ the boat?’ asked Mr Jar. rts roiqe {1 went down on the boat to Sandy Hook,” sald Mra. Jarr. “and the mi ition. made’ me 30 sick that I liad a terrible headache all the time. Don't make = Whe tea too strong, but\sce that the water ts fresh, and that it lias juat come to ul, boll. If thers is anything I despise It Is ten that tastes ex flat aa dishwater, Tent) tea always does when it's made of water that’s been standing in the ketile iydor votre, or If the water isn’t doiling. ‘There in a knack in making a gooa cup of tea and some: peopla never neeni to learn it. Mra, Rangle's girl always bol “the tea, and. then it's bitter a “3, You can pay a dollar a pound for: tra, End yet !f vou don't know howto make tea you just might as well throw! your money. away tori my watet. dear, tii] I, take off my things and pit on (ymeAredsing ancoue witle my tea Jk boing maden it feels good ‘to be hohe where fag70U ean rece aa vou please, 1 tell vou Jlow about’ Asbury Park ?-nkked MriJare "Did ‘you find lany nice hotel that was reasonabie : “Oh, those hotelst? exclaimed Mra, Jarr,’aipping the tea which had now “been! brou her, ‘1 never sa ) a bunch of women in,my, life! Why da they sito} handbaga? 71 don't kno: piazaas holding thelr ntured Mr. Jerr 1 the gaod lady. “Jewelry! Huh, sil tit was imitation tewelry lear to be all covered with diamonds, although, of courke, but to wear them in the morning {s wretched taste and Perhaps thelr Jewelry t# fn them.” fitaewn ai them, LApi ‘And I'm sure I don't want to go where we are expeoted to keep dressed up, and here {f Sou don’t the others will look down upon you. I think people should Ro, t9 a summer resort for comfort only, and it’s nobody's business how one cafittates. -and-to-comment-on tt shows bad-breeding. 3 You say Mra. Wilkins was wearing the same old mohair skirt?" said Mr. me hh : pointedly, Mrs. Jarr didn't see the point Yes," she titterel. ‘That heavy old mohatr skirt, and tn midsummer, tao! pd know she must have seen I recognized {t, for she qolored all up!” “How were the rooms?’ asked Mr. Jarr. no, TE aldn't look." sald Mrs. Jarr, ‘Mrs. Rangle had a friend stopping there gavho said they weren't very good and that the Wilkinses had one atuffy little 4Foom in the back, on the same floor with the servants,’ But you should have seen their airs on the plazza! : “Didn't you wo and inquire any place else?’ asked Mr. Jarr. Was only down-from Saturday till Monday, said Mrs. Jarr petulantly. ec Gractous! You would think I had nothing else to do but run around from one emearding place to another!" “How about the place Mrs. Rangle was stopping at?" “I didn't xe it at all,” sald Mra. Jarr, 10) OC eed Mr. Jarr. "And, anyway, I came away in such VINGEN. HOW TO PROPOSE, 4 Hon Shad} Stel her tact dove her’! xek many younr 9, © tat - men In their letters. In just the words you use in writIng me. She knows ft, anyhow. Ne man eeds tn concealing his love for her from a womal or ‘den ts very far from his mind. But when his feelings are really Involved ne reveals théni ii every look and tone, Tell the girl you love her and ask her to be your wife. No high-flown gestures are necessary, or, indeed, meme { _finplest little words you say, and the girl who has long ago read your heart will “H¥lp the avowa. by her ready understanding. 5 o, oe Everything 1s made dimcult by thinking about {t too much. The momen: you 7 make up your mind that you have found the one Birl in the world teli her so. It a8 SWI "be cary unless you make it hard by too much thinking about { nd by a Paid for Her Soda. r would be to see me. Kindly let me : Seales know, for I dearly love this gentleman, ANXIOUS GENEVIEVE. Why should you give him up? You tate no reason. Go automobDiling if he asks you and he ts an honorable young man, A Jealous Lober. Dear Bett; | AM madly in love with a girl of sev- | -AM a young fellow eighteen years | old and not long ago was Introduced ito a very nice girl, The other even Ing I askedgher If she would have a foda with me, and she-sall yes: So oe “Went In the store and drank the soda, and I went to pay for {t and she re- fused to let me -and paid for her own Ts that an Insult? CONDrr, Noi it looks as if the girl were mere! Ts entsen I kept company with until last fal) fis eagnorant of custom. You should haye i | § Jana had not made up unt I went’ out = fitesisted on paying for It. | of the city, and then I wrote to her and side i} ed her to be my sweetheart again, te ashe, Loves a Motorist, | Bhe vald yes, Everything’ went all right bTaear Betty: until I came back to New York, when } of HOVE-@-man dearly: Phe other dey + i he came in and asked me to go out ed“euto riding with him. I said I could tmot do 00, becaues of another engage- ment for that date. He did not seem the least bit angry. If he asks me gain ahould I consent to Ko, or, should | heart to love another? IF ek-give him up? I have asked him to} Yes, write again, and try not to be jthe houre, and he atated the date he | Jealous. WE Tad WHOUTER Quarrel T Waat To Was not so Jealous o¢ this girl, but I cannot [hetp tt, as T certainly do love her. Do you think {t would be proper for me tq write her again, as I think of her day and night and know I will never hay oes be wap US - Heaith and Beauty. Give By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. ito Restore Bleached Hair. However, if you are determined to ore ou brown, vou sh Gi fear you must have your hair | Your halt Bern shone Davee i$ . done at first-class halr-dressing shop. Gyed untll the bleach wears off i iN dati Tt would be very difficult for an ama~ K ‘There is no other alternative un-|teur to achieve the proper ahade with Glefs you are willing to walt until the a home-made dye, red hair being the Wleach disappears without the ald of | most diMoult of all to dye. conn Red Nose. {Wants to Dye Red Halr. MA TEUt saiyon vay, indigestion! ~NXIOUS.—You are extremely fool- cn 4s causing the red noi T pan ish to change your hair teem a + o@ly auggest that you eat ete beautiful and -rare color te one that {s ordinary and usual. The eyes and ‘complexions which’ Nature gives to te simpleet and most wholesome food, avoiding anything ‘that ts rich and Svee-nalred people would be most un- _laditable with halr of any other color. Breasy, Take four or five cups of hot water SA 3 the day, one always a half hour before meal times, Also prac-: ANY of my readers are in the havdit of coming to ace me per- sonally—the correspondents from out of town usually write for appointments and thus avoid a useless trip. In order. to oWitate matters I shall hereafter be “at home” untt! further notice for ¢ readers of The Hvening World who wish to sec me on sudjects of t to them or to other women on Tuesday afternoons from 4 to 6. World Butiding, Room 48. MARGARET H. AYDR, can't de Yoitowlm ying {17 aald Mr. Jarre, ‘But tell me what do the good cla ecPi, hotels charge a day for adults and how much for children “I don't think we want to take our children where there are a lot of other pi ghfliren,” said Mra, Jarr. "I never anw such bad mannered young ones aq 1 Raw at Asbury Park. They were running around the piazzax yelling and screnam- 4ng and fighting and squabbling. No wonder T had a headac! 7 We can Ko some place where there are no children,” sald Mr. Jarr. ' bad “They won't taxe' children at the places where there are no children fad) i ‘Mt Jarr, * coming Into people any way? After a while they will try end people to jail for haying children at.a , tell me," sald Mr. Jarr. “Did you pick out a sAW A very nice plac ked very much,” sald Mra.sJ eThe W World's Daily Magazine, Mon day, EPISTLES OF ANANIAS ( How ABOUT CONEY THINKING OF! WIFE'S (irs EARLY YET 7 (SiN WHAT IL WAS 2~ A 6o0y/ WOULONT HAVE VnisseD THIS FOR, SGNYTHING / ==} aye stopping th Well, the oldest et married after all! You know they sald ahe was engaged to / SACHIN. SOON, 7 MUCH FUN LOOSE © thought better of It, and I don': blame to:| |XTHING: A HAVENT DONE / 2 than over! And Mrs Willing was_wearing \ Are yEet-Lrs MM. Be Une ents cern ext eice ave Tuasautatonaesananewolinereneeannraed cele CHANCE Now PePHET And was wearing a shirt waist with {t that you could see right j oA THAT WIFE'S Aipagine, at her age! You remember that black mohair?” | Rep S WASN'T wi bap HE do not remember saldimohair!' growled Mr, Jarr. “What I to know | AWAY: how much will {t cost us to Ko there? his was, or at least {¢ aeemed to be, a very stylish place,” ald Mrs. Jarre MUCH FUN SINCE I WAS). NOW WATCH ME; WE MUST COME) COowN HERE: AGHIN. E I bipn'7 KNOW. apo WAS sie THIS_TOWN + /N. Wi ITS SPORT, | Git. RIGHTS By Joseph A, Flynn CCORDING to this paper tt won't be long before tl: Yote," I said to Tess the other evening, as she sat on the front stoop. “Burest thing you know,” she cepiied, cutting khort the tunnal through her ear, ‘Why ehouxin’t wet Give us an inch and we take three blocks. If our Kmlt was calico ‘we'd be Satisfied Mary with obeesecioth, but give us m Minen collar and.a glad amie and we make an awful howl tor & ahirt walst. “There'ak great yell in this country how about Mollie's right Last week the drewamaking-bund I pull with had D same Visitors oguple of four-eyed bouneta that looked: as {f they'd been icft over trom. tho Flood, and to hear them splel you'd thtnic they peyed tak with Adami. They made a holler abdut all the things we ought to get but don’t, and that we ought to be on the mame floor with every Jolin that-aha but right there I atop the car. Let me out! “De you think I'm willing to be put in the mame ool! with eume ‘of the sow ing-machines, apron strings, bald knobs, rummy-dums, Whiskerinos, and fly-bye nights that ['ve bumped tuto in this world with « mister before their name? Nix for culne. Me for Grandmaiand the sewing lessons when tt comes to that, “On6 of the Mary Anns was Hungry Henrietta on the looks, Btouchy Dan |on the clothes, and the only Mollie in the city who could hide behind a match | She said to have nothing to do with the Johns, and never get hitched up. ghe said WE GIRLIES should get our rights, go nix on clothes, and pay more atten- Ton 6 oUF apiitual weil alever that means, and read politics. And #h@ ended up with a weary ‘Now-Girls-6-Good’ rong and dance that nearly put oug’ all’the Hghts in the hall, “Well, take It from me, I'd rather be Jennle-By-TheKitchen-Flre with Bargains-To-morrow-Ladies than waste any sleep over politics, and when if comes right down to the ground I'd rathér gobble 4 soda on a high stool with some Handsome Harry than listen to @ couple of cold storage Clothes Pins shoowe ing hot-air rings at each other. . eae “While we were at the meeting a Marm~Ann alongside whimpered to meg '‘Pote'll be aa mad as the dickens. 10's been walting outside two/hours.’ "Some of the gas wasn't so bad. One Mollie mid we were’as good on the Think as any Willie Ghakeepeare that ever tived, and since hearing that I've been Pondering Sadie ever since. You know we Sparrows haven't got such « cinch in this world as you guys think. IAfe {sn't The-Candy-Window-On-Christe man-Eye with us, or Lach-In-The-Glans-Casa overy day. We have to be Johnny, Behave all the timo, while every rummy-dum {n the country cn kiss the alde« walk alx ntghts out of seven, coma to the top Sunday moming with a cleam shave, and {t's a cone of ‘Ten't-He-Grand?” Can we Ko out ani make @ call on x JackT Not #0 as you could notice tt [Gan wo Hit the coma nals? Nor on your natural, tft tiben on cur pack halr fs playing Hide-Dhe-Button with the breeze we are Untidy Nelly with body. If every John went around with a bathing sult on no one would make a crack, but if I lose the heei off one of my Trilbys on the street I'nt Mable to get thirty days. ‘When we get married the first thing Hubby does {fs to introduce us to the Kitchen, and if we make a holler for a nickel for hatr anchors he throws a fit and tays we're robbing nim. When a Molife ts born In this world Hard Luck | ‘athe frat thing to blow in the door and kisa her on both cheeks, and he sees that she never dodges Trouble afterward. Fut just the same I'm not kicking. We might as well be Merry Pete white swe mvtm, for our relatives won't be long wearing orape. Just give me what'e coming down my strest, and all the voting and everything else can sail by. After I'm trapped and say ‘I DO’ my John Henry can do all the spouting he wante around election time, but when he goes to vote Till -have the best part of the chicken.” “How o you make that out?’ I asked In surprise, striking a match on tha railing, “He'N go to the polls, won't het! res, bowing sweetly to a stalwart guardian of the poace “he'll to the polls all right, but he'll carry my vote. who sauntered by, © ARETHUSA © A Princess in surprise. Zoe had been sitting in @ Slavery ® lied,; another house, the slide Id slip back abe crop lions | andcanereoeld veceeetecrue tee ere is no more to te! Sometimes, to be sure, she thinks he loves her when the; wanted; no big words borrowed from novel or play. Your feelinga will be in the | w fh tev Dereart rer ot the city. The wider | when she ta being exh{hted fess pba had has fallen Tit, ficient terea the room carelessly. «ttl] wearing his cap, As Zoe resumed her seat ho took st from his head, bow!ng Inatinc- tively, ax ho would have done on meet- ing a woman of his own olass. A faint out, laying one hand was not often that CHAPTER V. (Continued,) pected diMculty. commission for « bought @ slave with found himself faced He wal . | condition, and to~show it to the cus eae eoneaTe) be told to get down. i Lady Gate Moanin tt The volee woukt be i 5. Wh < | tomers who honor us.” big chair {n the sun, and had half risen | ghAKing Der Doe. much voice woukd be a man's. Who wad By F. Marion Crawford tafoba deat opaoees har hana rorting on (Aad uate YOU Vary vena ey arate-| el What wae\biacneme? “What fet : J y his for a moment. ‘here was | she .o him e Was & Venetian, Face fo Face. one of the arms of the sem. Her eyes (iy io i *enem, but he saw that ahe Fhe Fuegwed by his dress, ‘and she fl Author of ‘'Mr. Isaacs,”’ ‘Dr. Claudius,’ Etc. | ae wmited pleasantly as he anid this,| met Zeno’, end for a moment no one fad not been weeping; and, like a mam {hat Bis blood was gentle, Ike her ow nd remained standing while Zeno fol- Fac) eae au ran had been present: be pe aimee Ce yee eer yee cop- | rongy. his property. pit was dreadful; or, would have ralsed the price of the mer- happy she wo ; ; P- at least, ft should -be dreadful to thinit Copyright, 1900, By Phillips Publishing the negress, keeping her hands folded |!owed the negresa out of the room, At | chandieg to five hundred ducats ot fous tears the jivetons ieee Ue bye foe She felt that she ought to long for Cot many. andi banainesanitil [he walkas behind her he could not help|{east: the black .woman only grinned, ‘captive maldens In the tales of chi | death; nows:a thousand: tmies more enr> (3 be g noting her strong square shoulders, and | Well pleased with the appearance of the, ie looked at the beautiful young hand, | pestly than last night. a : “This lady,’* sald Gullabi to Zeno, “Is | ly 8 shor |HiTl, whom ahe had herself dressed to now lying on the arm of the chair, and| Sjut she did not. SINOPSI8 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | my wits and my right hand.” He|the swing of her powerful hips, and her | receive the customers visit of Inspeo-|for the first time in his life he felt} ¢. © . . ‘5 aria Seapos: ax! lens pen toch sae. “ , td, | frm tread, and he concetved the sea | tion. | embarrassed: Little Omobono's thin legs carried ey ache Ai Miatrarnatod tpinae roar eran ne Meet >O Verge HOR RAICy ‘ orraneer ‘The negress, who was not at all used| him up and down the seinirs, oe Pr ay Shotian friend a beautiful female| pray lead his Magnificence to the| that she would be « match for at to much methods inthe buying and sell-| Zeno's house at an. astonis! | Qxquiaite face and fora and ma: com: | slave's room. I will walt here.” dinary man tn a tussle, He was sos CHAPTER V1. eto Memon eanewa neste forward pace during the next hour; for Carlo SOSTatty we pao ste fhe 3 4. . ee ola . ern 4 fae. cave yl Fy OW one 4 bend Seer “Soy poenlan. et perpaitne eer wien aus eoenerumaun re aac ata Tat Sas eae | “T Ama Slave.’’ Mant oer hee moccaemnes tee [he Inaleted should be executed at once: }Guhad) Guibentian, Zeno. orders Gullawt | ANwement | ; woe |QNVery fine natural hate," she ob-/It was not a small thing to install » [eoueRt Gulpenkiae: cantina, ion Armenian | “Oy wite,* explained Gullabl, ‘and Another door opened, and he was in| -7 OE'S hand tightened a ilttle on the! served.” “Your Gorgeousness will s Woman luxuriously In a house In which has bean conducting secret negotiations for) 1+. 44 the creatures better than I. My|® room flooded with sunshine and sweet | arm of the chalr and she rank) once that ft has never been dyed. [no woman had set foot s.uce Carlo had fainelZoer” adopted “duughter vot Lady business Is buying and solling? it da her) with spring flowers; he stopped, and un- Gulstly into her seat again ae she | She, took, Zoce, plaita in her noon: (Iinuten Te trie, teat. the Heh renee Pheneane. indy iimneabete husband | Nat panto keep. the merchandise 1a good|conacioualy drew one. sharp. breath. of Surned her eyes from Zano‘e-tace.: “ot ner alone?” Zeno aald sharply HcHShant had raat store: of thick care | tater Koncimoateg alia widow and ner — Aotaptting that ahejhad ocomited)heraelt|(7) an) knoti piling sia fia isu Mahe oa] Del enas Anes ATU eu RG AllrsOrtsuoteat ctarie, "have found) auabby riage in, the to stand erect and cold ase slave should} | Deon per or her in a, tone of subs |{cus, and darved Ivory, cheasmen. trom india; but though some of these things t | fekly Hee she. Ta ably sella, hers | If the Venetian et! doubted, that by | "It shall not be her business much /quickly furnisied the upper rooms whloh Leese ane ein (order 10. eave’ hersctere some mysteri ‘ ’ longer,” replied Zeno, almoat to him- | Zeno set apart for the valuable slave’ ku ysterious chance of fate|the «irl 5 |facteosa She te carried to Gullabl's house, | welt ‘usw while she remained under his root, jgapisesiee Syed Mi RAD i ha had come to buy at the siaye-doal- | *¢l% yet aclmitara, “chessmen, and heathen * t hasan, Will, ca! aan day, Fog faker tne nang gt TArethina."* On Sea trasl aaarell chor ea nleoaltiaes | Strange Doubt. lalisthes chineal np wnrurenents eros thy: aas atter her arrival: Zeno comes fo. bee n disbe ee i ° Tone her DeRUTy IN BUT : 1 ve suddenly turned away from her, ‘pected to need at a moment's notice, Peete Credible Wenstinn friends, expec Ma lingering uncertainty. He bad en-|went to the open window and looked {from hairpins and hat-mirrors. to fine linen pillow-cases, | lap~log. “Zeno's ideas of « woman's re- quirements were a littie vague, but hé etermined that Zoe should want nothy | Ing, and he charged Omobono with the minute exécution of his smallest comM manda. on the tron bars. Tt he hesitated, but he by a very unex- executing a | and if he frlend's money eatmeats, and © frie! his A Man and a Maid. he should feel bound In honor to sen color rose in the xirl's cheeks a2 she her'to her now master at the first op~ | Then we had a quarrel, ! the deco vreathing. 1 Zo: a0 Kaye her a sharp glance and turned to Zoe, jof the house which he had reserved| problem, as {f it wi ready to be seen?! not. Passengers Billy Binka waa able to “take up’ on one, trip? he shrank from auch a solution of the) When he had Qmobono’s Dilemma. HIS time the door was opened by _Jooked at him again. ortunlty the other hand, thoug! i ‘Gillabl Gilbenkjan ti person, and? Pao wife IsoRhed aifentiy, wtand= 7 eas—pertectio cheer from: ie girl He hiineeit 1ved™ sihipiy— iene — shape > | abl . » . : behavior she expec! novsbetter, | rid die slept on a small aard dit Zeno Ing # Nitto behind him, Zoe spoke first. pected no. better: | rudely: Deo ard diy he bowed to the ground as Z yp a eel rr a fate, h absolutely © fas being | With @ ttle bard gushion under | got off his horse and stoai deside him. Pray, sir" shq said, “be covered. in som a kroat Wrong Was Deng | head, and & clowk to cover hin in \Sull bending low, he made way and “Min High Mightiness uncovers hia | done. and he bad never yet nasted #| weather. He hated hot water, acented i ‘ oadlifonvodolnsraitaald wrong by 0 y 0 1 \youp, and all the soft luxuries o} with a wide gesture invited his visitor HOA Or Seen eetisn Bec) Pac gmreess = Sinn nis pace pts hlauaword, | Cleary: | or an bath. He liked « ‘rood | dinnes ‘t} ss jhe was still a iberty to buy Zoe |when he was hung wood wine when lersetince Zeno through the small part! | Ama Slavel Iiimeelf, and take her to bis homo; yet | fo nae thirsty anda” wide . ie worked” all day; but erg the hardest of | never had cost him @ moment's di iL ‘What should -he do with @ YOUDS | comfort to exchange such a beme ea:h@ “Babirjiant dedi rtd Sais Saepas MS ed Fert Is not possible that you are a [ata “heap cgirh in hia house; | comune to, expbanee: euch s_vemeess seoma/iwhere jhe i kept, his: stock! iol sinye,"" he sald, coming a little nearer where there were no women, Where) Women were different beings, bow- -slaves...In..an.anarapartment..thay. . . Sne-woman ever set foo? Sho would | evar, go be made ol allowances far Jot | eae SA ATC eh heed female attendants, and | of then, and went to extreme lengths in| Piet ther negrese, resplendent jn scarlet} But she would not meet his eyes Hood” temalsuid buy them for her | eutimiating thely necessities, ss Oma: velvet ande/;heayy; gold chain, her: red = ‘It jn the truth, ir" abe aald. "Iam or hire. them; but he thought | bono found to hls cost. Yet with all hi |halr combed straight out from her head. A slave and any one may buy me-and with strong distaate of such at @s\aD- | preoccupation for details. Zeno, forkot “ | teh Il this would force up that Zoe must have a Ww in to her | Zeng MP Beerea sane eee ees RAY: Hin’ foreover, ie knew well enoUgh | on’ her at ouce, and when he realized sumed what she considered a modest | you have been carried off by it waa not his ture to, Ko on | the opnission, alnowt af the leat minute, but engaging attitude, crossing her} Zeno answered with conviction, leading, the peaceful life of a merchant the future Conqueror @f the Genoese, great hands upon her splendid coat and n Wht, perhaps, or in somo raid of [{USR nee permit He had! always jrtotortous general of the Paduan = Icoking down arith a omanyellous.: aby emles on enemies, Tell me who you beon aa free as air, Aw he was now | paign, the here of thirty pitched battles tempt at a slmper, | are and how {t happened, and, by the iV Hahah 1d Plott a in. Cwens [sink with something. Mke fear, What - Gullabl stood etlil and for a) moment body of blessed Saint Mark, I will give) Go'our hours, leaving his business, | would have happened i he | hag. no) ven-} b: t Y n ue anot merchant | remembered n Ned neat Hey aan aie whim | Bele Dacian wee Ursa AReUR G Phoush ats tow oted, But it would de} Pesaro’s miava must have @ maid? Sl jad ME alt) MO Saat | “I am @ vslave,” Low sald quietly, | for he nad prospered ret, ise, |aheuid have two, or three, or as many pie terrific negreas in her finery as tha! “Only a slaye and nothing else, There OUYer is protection, and it r Oc-|au ane needed. ss as the litt Incomparable treasure of which he had is no more than that to toll 2 leurred to him, after he had looked inte meOmobonan: har kei ae, ther ltt spoken. But Gullabl's worde explained drew one hand across her brow her ves, that she opuld live under ts | secretary came UA ThA Tee ay everything, | ALD Bitly Binks, the diplomatic elevator buy 3 # aa Jf to shut out something or Toot exce perotbets her. fro xinary | buy raids. They must be young “My “Life,” he said, speaking to his! "You'll have to draw bots for tho first trip. I can carry five ladies » came nearer tect heropiotect inary, wronke she| healthy, clean, clever and stent. 1,040 wife ina caressing tone, ‘tm the trl] eleht wants or mix ladies and twelve kids. br ten kids and six gents : ns BtOON CAG ; je sald. in a {had never wumtered und alto make ; nd Aah aver anal pueretar sig Of urse, the ladies w 6 so who can tell just how many 0 ‘not be afraid! No one of he at she pr H “Is there anything wond "Aa my lord commanded me,” replled ie y se y tare SAYER. woos : in : Eine meas |The Bargain. | our Qmobone opened his HINTS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER 1 8 OES ie ta inte cane | yisin norm vere We Hy ° thing, and he ‘ Dit has | Mq" means” answered Zeno, correctins clusion in a shor chta, He Lhineate, wihe-tte YOUNR person who |x i celery, salt and cayenne and beat until cupfut of cream, three tablexpoonfuls of jwalt and popnem a dusting of mace, and taken me to descr Se OE eee ta be lodxed here, Tove. na time, Egg Cooktails. emooth. Serve with cold lamb or thin-|soft bread crumbs, half a cupful of | serve w fingers [tarred aor Marco F ga account. | Tray! Goan fast aa you cant | PP HESH are a delicious appetite sharp ly sliced beet. chopped clams, a seasoning of salt and} le Tart Wy ¢ a ge cco GCL Yy ls Too Late! , fern FOF: Ret. PATSONALERES ey, “Stato M ; | pepper and one deuten exk yous. Full] Crumble Tar’ 8, un for you Ian) 6 ng turned and went, not} f $ Seapoontul of lemon fen~, <~o1 ®Stalio Mayonnaise. Rreon peppers from which the seedy WAT the yolkavotsalx erkarwelll aad 3 ho mae The Teast idan where to zo. Byfora + drops of tabasco sauce, half « teaspoon: IGHTLY whip one cupful of cold) have been parboiied tn najted water half pound of powdered sugar eatery had Pe tie ntaltan ae ful of erated borneradieh, one teaspoon~ manhed patatoes, add the beaten | Place in a Mreproof serving dish and MIx one teaspoonful of baking Ka ne_ merchant, | tte ful of tomato vatsup and & galtspoon of} white of an tablespoonful |bake for, twenty ‘minutes; basting with | powder with four heaping tablespoon: | ed him qutelely into |. Uo, and got’ the lady paced Pee much surprised at roung person, Tale two palan: salt. Mix together al aaa one SEE | of chapped olives, two-fhirdy of a cup- | butter and water |fuls of well dried and rolled bread- 18 J eitosa of ona, and tell Oulladt to ‘beaten to a foam, It Js served in tll) a) of mayonnaise ‘and a cupful of crumbs, and add to the yolka and h 7 own slaves. You can glass with a long spoon, chicken ‘breast cut in dice. Berve on | Walnut Stew. gar, Chop one pound of walnut| one. litter and: being orlsp, cold lettuce. lanched walnut|moats, one pouna of dates, and add| Maint! tnquired Onto- Beet mayouralse Veen hota? i Seaver with|to the mixture. Add the ly dea: a man Of -tAsinine. AKE in thelr skins modium-slzed Peppers and Mushrooms. meats Into a saucepan, 9; pte feat eenacneer ing back tn ask what te pleagoa if T red beets. When tender plun, jE antexen stock and stmmer for thir-| whites of the eggs Inst, and beat ail! bbiehies cos Lee paslae yy TPE carefully and break Into! ty minutos; then drain and seserve tho| together, Spread thin tn pans Like | i S80: far SS f {Phe ja not reasonable into cold water, rub off tho aking | i" 4 bake twenty minut being counted out that ‘more ditatness with beets through ‘aysteve, To amall pieces fresh fleld muah-| stock, Brown two tablespoanfuls of but-| layer cakes an: vr es, | the OFS ee OO eT eerie nina ie lbp pated pend ys t @nd rub the ] M fi s a : 1 of four;| When wanted for use crumble, heap up| wns price of her yOune away tah Venetians,” answerod “Zeno, ; d & cupful of thia pulp add .oné-elgnth of rooms; fry’ slightly in a table-| tor, atir in one tablespoontu i rete Les push Guid fon taken nway inn Veneta arbla stairs. Fo, @ cuptul of lemon juice and slowly ‘aad | spoonful of brown butter. There should | add the netl-off-htock and cook until) on platter, and pour over nippeu, glared “te he ped one Or uate fro be Continued) rR, ; ® ovptul of stad of. Geseon with 'de a cuptul when cooked Add halt a‘ emopth. the nuts, @ seasoning of|aweetened cream, a iG ; 1 ee ae 4

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