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i ae * pathway 4s generally a great favorite with the gen ¢ | BEIZY VincpnT5 © "ADVICE T° LOVERS MAN’S MOST ATTRACTIVE AGE.° T WHAT ago fs man most attractive to w I A it the impulstve youth with bis enth m and buoyancy, Is ft the would-be sage of thirty years or more, or is it the biase man of the world who moat attracts and holds the elusive fancy of woman? If you are a maien of very tender years, you Will loudly acolatm the. unsophisticated youngster as the prize of the matrimonial «market His tmpetuosity and scorn of convention, his gay spirits and air of good fellowship make him the Ideal lover of the immature girl, but to the maiden who suuc- cessfully passed her first love affair his very inexperience tx the thing she most dislikes. he man who has reached the thirty or thirty-five year milestone tn Ute'e r sex. To the enthustasm @f youth he has adied seriousness and common serise, and his txperience in the ways of the world havo made him sympathet!s, indulgent and reUadle. If you are looking for a golden-edge security in the matrimonial market, the man who <fw tn the thirties is a pretty ure investment. ‘Phe fascinations of the older man seem to be very strong, for many maidens @ucomnb to hig oharms. His advantage over younger men is. great. for his knowledge of feminine whims and his vast and varied experience make him master of any situation, The woman proposttion ts to him an ensily solved problem, and he usually has little trouble in winning a woman's heart. But, after all, {t depends upon the girl, Every maiden has her own idea, and no matter how fascinating or attractive, how young or old a man‘’may be, he has little charm with the girl who hag already foved her real affinity. mm) - ine é 3 A Youthful Suitor. Jove met. “jess, bat espectally at {ifieen will cause, hands and fost were literaily wollen <n —hatt—agatr—thetr normal —else—_from. “Sears Left by Eectric Needle. sgiearitiest wellA th ta _ Princess Arethusa, in Disguise, Risks Her | tor hts part —oft—the—quarret—ent te Son . The Evening world: s Daily Magazine, U GLASER. Is Striving to Rescue the. German Girl from Stage Caricature —— IL VL Comedtenne Believes ‘There Is a Field fora. New. and Legitimate Type. what a big man! I had By Charles Darnton. “@ no {dea—that. is, I had Never supposed—you see, 1 didn’t think—well! well!” That's what I got for going into Miss Lulu Glager’s dressing-room at the Liberty Theatre. Moral: “Big” Satur day, ‘wants me to make wp with htm. The other fellow thinks @ greet deal of me. I find I love the first one best but don't like to ¢ell the other fellow- as I know !t would Oreak his heart How can I renew my friendahip with Dear_Betty: AM ninetesh, and am keeping com- with a young lady one year m$ senior. She does not know my age ‘and haa said she would never marry ‘ny man younger than herself. Shal!}my first love, withou: causing trouble 1 tell age and taka the con-| with the io 2 Bequences, or would you advise me {©[ You must choose between them, as Keep {{ secret? Do you shink it’s prop-| there Ia no way of keeping both. er for a lady to marry a man one yedr hier junio Mx | How To Win. Tell the «irl your age and I think | Dear Betty: AM twenty and am tn love with « | young lady of eighteen. At times she treats me ery coolly. has A great many gen! you will find that one year will ‘tikka No Affference in her affections for you. ‘The difference in your ages ts not suf- te prevent marrage, though at present you are too Young to marry. A Choice of Suttors. Dear Betty AM seventeen and know two nice young boys who call on me often They quarelled over me one You will have to take a chance with the young lady's other admirera. Pay her every attention, be sincere, and jin time ahe may favor your sult How to Meet Him. very night. One I do not Ike. 1 don't want | Deer Betty: ®oth of them to call any more, and; | AM én love with a young man one don't know whom to ask to stop|| "“t my senior. I know he cares for calling. 3. V. <me, for I overheard him say I was The one you 4o not Ike {s the one|the only girl he cared for. I was never to drop. Brees to him, and so never spoke to overheard him may that he Must Choose Between Them. | wouia uke to have an introduction to Dear Hetty: me, bat 44 not know how to obtain AM clahteen years old and have kept stexfly company a young man “for about one year. "We loved each other, but we had a quarrel a few mionths ago and separated. ~ Since ther I have been going with another young ‘Tell your mutual friend that you fellow, but the other nient my would like to know the young man mand askei my ardor However, do Rot sepm too eager. one, as he knew none of my friends. |Ghan I seek an introduction througt a triems of his who 1s also a friend of mine? Im anxious to know him. HH. fire| Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. vile of Tight Lacing. It is sre | persona, G yaa Pimples at Fifteen. able that the nl colored, loose fin-| J] EY W.—Boya of fitteen pearly al- ger nails, the A ways have pimples. If you live swotlen Ongers| FN, a healthy, out-of-door life they apd the Jarge ab-| are sure to disappear tn Unie, Drink a as are alli great | of water, eight glasses a due fo the same | day, take plenty of exercise and don’t tht tlgit’ Jac-| smoke cigarettes, which are the worst ‘fo. 1ace your | enemiea to the complexion, Here Ls a corsets ‘too. tiglt- | formula which will heal the pi ly at any age Is a | DUt fe wil hot prevent: other pitiptew very nerious busi-| from coming, Thir you will have to do youraelf by careful living and eating. Settled 1 cream would help you. The electric needie should never be manfpulated by LAIRE C. C.—jany but experience’ and practised you endicsa trouble and suffering. In __the days when small walsta used to ve faapion, [ have se | the Players’ Club a —anh Raymond Hitchoook to define the difference between a tragedian and a comedian, eays Harpers Weekly, to which the “Yankee Tourist’ star re- plied: “Well, I hate to talk about my- elf, but I have come to believe that a {ight corsets, Dut awollen extremities ; | ere only the least of the evils from this foolish vanity, Wear your corsets comfortably tight and I venture to say that the swollen fingers wil resume thelr size and the pale fingernails their atural healthy cojor. ‘What you-calt @ ‘thigh stomach” ts probably due to “your taxing putted—voue:—versets...to0 ght at the waist, thus pushing the flesh below the walstline and ruining of FOUF Meare. halr, while @ tragedian is a brunette who thinks -he-!s an-actor.' “How about the brinétte comedians and the blond tragedianst” “They're neturefakire:* ——— A meeeeeneevoms The Picture Sum. Anewer to” the Piotité Bum printed ia yemterday's Evening World: Patch, plus urn, shee eave Patrick, Hen, plus ourry-comb, mine comb, equals Henry, ‘the “His I, C—These scars are yory hart tn remove. but it ts posaible that TREATS, by_hand may do it be 3 hat Is known aa the ‘skinning’ proc- Tao not believe the tissue: Dullding We Gr by electricity, reinus cree \|I had begun to feel Ike the gentle- URING « high-browed discussion at | comedian ts-stmply-an-actor_with biond+ minus churn, phis men should not go into small dress- ing-rooms. Really!” exclaimed the blue-and-} white bundle of buoyancy, with the} Lola plaits and the old Dolly Varden eyes which were scanning the} heights. “Really——- But do sit] down!” ; t I did so gladly and promptly, for man who stands next to the midget in the circus. “And so you've come to interview me?” she bounded on. “I haven't been interviewed for six years.” ‘How lucky! laughed “Hal Ha-he!” Mise Glaser. “But I wasn't lucky with my interviews. I was misrepresented— yes, misquoted—until I decided ‘to glve It up as a bad job. Some one who knew me would say, ‘I saw an interview with you in last Sunday’s So-and-8o0, but it didn't sound a bit like you.’ And the friend was al- ways Mght. I-suppose the tnterriew— ers remembered as much as they could and made up the rest. Per- hapa they thought it didn’t }what-l-talked-about What are we going to talk about?” “Suppose you talk about the dia- leet part for a woman,” I suggested. You evidently believe there is a field| for “women, as well as for men, in | dialect work.” Woman's Right to Dialect. “Indeed, I do!” was Miss Glaser's response. “Why not? Women, as well as men, have dialects in real Ife, 60 why shouldn't the rule hold good on the stage?” “You are not attempting to follow in the footsteps of Fritz Emmet or Sam Bernard “Not at all, I’m trying to strike a straight course. I hope to be able to do in my way what David War- field bas done in his—take the Ger- man type df character out of carica- ture. Until Mr. Belasco made his tenstrike with ‘The Music Master’ and Mr. us his sweet, “human -old Ge: Aaveliad shad seen only LE parson's small boy had been | his new nurse, At last he spied “Mister, The giant In “Why, yes, sonny, Ibe" i catty “Are your neighbors obliging? to. =MMlilwaukes Sentinel — « . Kindly Old Gent (to the newsboy w: make you tired, my boy? Little Boy—No. I doesn't read ‘em, oe “Thin. keoy."—Balttrvore Americ: ry your money or your life?” ” ‘Cheer Up and Be Gay! “Thenplease arrest this woman. She won't stop follorin’ me around "= “T should say so. They always let x use our telephone ahenever I want” Tom—It was 4 casa Sriveat ee wight wtth—-me: Jack—Then why didn't you marry her? ‘Tom—Oh, Teaw her sguin-on several occasions—Chicago Daily News. “What a very thin rotce that girl has” Why, {t's 80 thin she ought to eing all her music in a skeieto: Now, Patsy, if {i should come to a real issue which would, you rather tore TOTS beROTTA: “OFT SAVING Me tower Gespetately trying to run away froin @ park guard. {th big bundle)—Don't a! thowe papers sur,—Puneh, Teaceehiee oRohealan. merauld threshold while she aoKe to him, out of the maids’ hearing, and In Italian, lést they should creep near and listen. are never. w Arethusa w. A Princess in Slavery.|| tisntenca, are yours u Vito grinned. "Am T of trod. or of stone?! Or am I perhaps a lon? , When there is fear I am -afrald “Hut surely you would not run away By F. Marion Crawford * Gapyright, 1800, by Phillipa Publishing if ‘Company. and leave Messer Carlo to be killed. at would your’ SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ni a" ‘hat would be another ‘affair, would be shame to go, homé alive Sf Boe, a beautiful, princess living 8 con ‘Vito answered quite almply. penal Jat, changes her, name to if) sells’ hererit into slavery to Sear iat a PE ,Ree Mien: [the master were ‘killed. When one of fortune, She and Zeno fall! must die, one must, ae God wills, It Abate other, ‘The former oad, | may be for the master, It may be for, isoned by hie Vente, But for myself, 1 ask you, ous, ten Seine 8 conept ing reatre im to the throne. 3a, evo 10 sby Gorllas, a fetlow- irator, ty The foot fot the tower whers je confined, Arethuss, unseen by has hkiden tnsthe boat. ‘The deposed cinparar re(vrea to escape, lei hie youngest Bon (who te B18 a prisoner) “should be tor Eee to, death In, revenge, by Anaronicus ono fails int the Hands of hie fellow | Senapirators, hended by Cochtafniah. a xian’ Berar, wholmprison Rint and deine a. ree, Flown life Zoe lens the OR the of tFimberor Jonahnes tn orton tn aavs if Zino trom dexth. Why should 1 die for nothing? 1 run y, It ts more senaidle,"’ "You need not risk being killed If you do what Iam going to ask,", Zoe said, ‘What { It, excellency? "You need not cl me that Vito," answered Zoe, “I Want you to row mo fat sunset to the landing which is near leat to the palace mate. It muat be the dirty little one on this mde of tho Amoena tower, ta It nott’ “hat la dt, But without the master's orders''—— = A Vito looked at her doubtfully, for he had been reminded that ahe considered herself a slave, And it ocourred to bim that she meant to excupe in Zeno's ab- vencs ie genre XVII, (Continued) A Daring Plan. ORLIAS left her to make his own) preparations, When-he was gone Zoe went Yulla for Zeno's own man, Vito, “the Venetian boat. _G “Mésenr Carlo would wlah me id o- if ‘he were here,” Zoe, atinliy, aald Soctteal Sarthe a ee "TI have no soupy is as you @fy,’” Vito answered, ‘But ft have ao orders “There je a theasage from the, master to some one in the palace,’” “Na ar Bug can ‘actor eantly, sali,” obeatyed. Vito, feo ded orders.” tre iting tober tore: pead at the man's rudeness and diatrast er, bus ake comtrolied herselt, for | pr cape need on obtaining Raat whe | & mészage,” she sata: ett | {tT asked Vito incredy- and ook letter from, Unfolded {t, and spread it out Bha sto hee shoe, for Vito to nee. The effect It made upon him was Instantaneous; he looked at it carefully, and took a ‘corner of it be- a 4a thumb and finger, KH New Probigun. “This is certainly a letter from the master,’ he sald, satisfied at last, af- }ter wiat he eojsidered a thor! consckentious Inapection. BAdd, he wlehos. me to Geliver ‘sald, "If Tam to do that, must feod ciate to. take tne to the | ldnding nthe boat, There ts no other | way!" ‘ { eayld tike the Jeter” rayaelt,” Vito syngosted. A woman with be allowed | (derstand, and nodded Handsome John," he said, and fixing Min even for tie other Em- 0, Oily pass where thi must Ito begart (9 head’ wise! “It ta fo ogni to hit with, on. Bueased it," you take me ‘akg ond of your staves wita t Oo when you go Out in we emia i tue : matter | caricatures of the German on the stage. Perhaps I should except Em- met, But all the others have frankly toffered us caricatures merely for the sake of making them funny, I'm not eritleising them—for I ‘think Sam | Bernard is the fanhtest man on the} |stage and that Louis Mann has more \talent than the average person Ruesses—butt belteve thera 1s_an_op- portunity for a woman who gets away |from the grotesquo and (offers a fair- ly legitimate type of the German girl.” “Why is it, do you imagine, that men have bean more successful than women in dialect parts?” I inquiréd. Comedians Use Foree. “I don’t know,’ said Miss Glasér, blinking reflectively, “unless it is that men are more forceful in getting their work over the footlights.” “It isn’t because of man’s more highly developed sense of humor, which’ he so modestly admits?” “Ha! ha-ha!"’—again that bubbling laugh. “What about the higher edu- eation—of woman? We're hearing # little about that these days. Per- | haps she’s being educated to a higher |sense of humor—who knows? But -there’s no denying that man {s more forceful, and that may explain the greater success of comedians in dialect parts. The same {s true in other lines of work. Look at the great | writers; they‘re all men—or nearly yall. There's George Eliot, of course, {hut then she wat ‘mannish,’ and for ‘that reason—forceful__But to come | lback to acting and @lalect parts, I lam bimply trying to make Lola a frank, natural, lovable German girl, a girl with a sweet, simple natare, and perhaps just a little sense of | Humor, I like her, and I feel that I }icnow her. “You—evidently know your Ger- ” Lremarked. “ Yes,” she said, “and a little | French. I get one from my father, | the other from my. mother," ~ “And you get your laugh from'—— Laugh Like Mother Makes | LF pom... my .mother."_ Interrupted } | Miss Glaser, quick to give credit| Where credit was due, “My laugh {8} exactly like my mother's. It Wasnt” ; om September 21 1907. dialect through Says Dabid Warfield Was the First to Lead the Real Ger- man to Footlights, HWke serlous work, but I’m not going. to be foolish enough to try it) Fm giving all my serious thought, just at present, to Lola's dialect.) “It is not an easy thing to carry @ -three-act play?’ “It certainly [Isn't replied Miss Glaser. “I haye to waich myself very closely to’ keep from dropping it here and,there. One must remem- ber {t in the lyrics, as well-as in the dialogue, and this isn't always an easy thing to do. The temptation to get ‘laughs’ by twisting the dialect manufactured for stage purposes—I was born with {t. It doesn't seem funny to me; it just seems natural. And that’s the way a part seems ii jT happen to Ike it—and ft do tke Lola. I like her next best to dear old Dolly. I never grew tired of Dolly Varden. She was a rollicking, good- natured girl, after my own heart, and 1 always felt grateful to her. You hear a great deal about the: public and the critics growing tired of an actor in the same kind of part, but I wonder whether ine public and the critics ever stop to think of the actor getting tired, too. He gets both sick and tired of {t at times. Yet he must goO-on-and-on-In-theeame_sort_of thing because the public won't have him in anything else. If an actor who has made his reputation as a come- dian should attempt to play » serfous part he would be taken as a joke, 1 j should like to see a few of our serious | actors try to be comedians—I'm sure they would be funny—ha! But Rich- ard Mansfield was the only one of our actors who could play comedy one night and tragedy the next without getting the laugh In the wrong place.” “And what is your explanation of Mr. Manafield's success in both?” “His forceful personality,” an- swered Miss Glaser with emphasis. “He made people accept him in whatever he chose to give them, Such cottrse would be-fatal to most ac-| tors, but they, perhaps, could not be blamed for their failure. The blame more likely would rest with the pub- lic, which always has its actors picked out for ether serious or com- edy work, If {t wants tragedy, it goes to see Mr. Sothern; if it wants comedy, it goes to see—well, Wie comedian {t happens to like best at that particular moment. Everything fs lald out for the serious or comic actor, The public tells him what to do. ‘That's the most serious part of it all.” “You are not taking, with Lola, ‘the first atep in a serious direction?” No,” she answered. “I’m satisfied to leave well enough alone. I may Pointed P. INISHING 4s the hardest part of F aragraphs. a lazy man’s job. Most married men do as they please—in thelr minds. It's diMmcult to generate philosophy on an empty stomach. It a girt-te-happy. tte a_sign_that —j_girl_never likes to be Kissed uni her_clothes are satisfactory. Forbéarance is one of the virtues ‘our enemies do rot posse: ‘A woman's idea of extravagance iv to spend money for sensible things. Bome “Kirls are lke some dolls, They cry “mamma': every time they aro squeezed Loye is the only cable shat will keep a couple on the sea of rhatrimony from drifting apart: It's a fortunate thing that babies onn't say what they think of the baby talk «women hand them. Paradoxical though !t may seem, ing company are usually heavy, the light bills rendered by an iIluminat- Girls begin to att up and take noti ice of young men abot the same time they. begin to-sa4 something of Interest In a mirror—Chicago News. Why Pans field Sueceeded.} is another thing that must be guard- ed against ff oue pretends to play the part along legitimate lines. You know’ that by giving just a little twist to a word the laugh’ will come—Uhat ICS out there valting for you—and that ‘laughs’ mean the success of a light play. Knowing all this, one is obliged to exercise con- siderable self-restraint to keep from | breaking over the line.” _ thé Laugh, “but the ‘laugh’ from the audience goes a longer way with me,” By Ali Baba Boo. WRS “of lancheona: given at home’ this day have every ausury for success. Luck slifnes in the algn of tite fishes, Almost anything connected in any Way with the products of the water will turn out well this day. For ordinary-buxiness the-best-aspect fs—-for—selling, An excellent day for consultlag surgeons or for operations. All chances are for happy results, Stenographers and office assistants must exercise great care to avold er- rors this day. There Is danger of mis- understanding Inetruction: hose whose birthdate te should tbe prepared early this coming year for having things go contrary. After the fourth moon matters will mend, but they will pe In danger of misunder- atandiig© «wood friend: The boy born to-day will meet with many chances of advancement, Sut ili }irow. them away unless care te taken ER TY Saturday, Sept. 21, 1907. hifband will be older than she and her lige. will. bs exceptionally appy: “No, | mitt go along with you And I myself snall be dressed like a slave, | and I shall have a basket of things to carry on my thead to the wife of tne Salle gee," aid Vito, who really loved | adventure for it, own sake and muon leas inctined to run away irom | danger than he represented, “1d you may Tou wished to qo at sunset vf whall be ready. But ft will be Det- ter to. take an old oat, and 2 will put) ‘on ragwed clotties, to look Hke a hired boatman. "Yea; that will be better. — CHAPTER XVIII. A Woman's Wit. apex aun had pet, and the wide court of Blachernue was filled) With purple lght to the wa'l tops. Yke a wine-vat full to the brim: and everything (iat was in the glow took | color from Jt, an silver does in cla the pollahed trappings of the gu uniforma, the cresmy marvio steps of | the Palace. the white Tunisian charger of the of!cer who rode in just then nd ithe swallows that circled round the courtyard. The officer rode in on his charge: and after him entered a girl si! Greased ,in coarse blue cotton, and carrying on her head a small rouad banket, Which was oovered with o clean white cloth. The four cornera of the napkin hung down, and one of them would pave Mapped across her face af he had not Held It between her teeth to keep i€ down. It partly hid her fea- LEM UU Ge: et | her oth Life | blue cotton kerchief passed twice Atound and knotted upon her forehead, She Imped a little as sho walked. What | could be seen of her face was pale and | Quiet, and had a rather Axed look, @ was walking boldly through the Without slackening her pace, wher , one of the two sentinels stopped her and | asked where ohe was going, Sha stcod | still, and one hand steadied the basket lon her heaw!, while the other pointed~to the Amena tower, s “My mistresa sends some-fine wheat bread and cream cheese fo the wife of the captain who keets the towor.” walt” Zoe, affecting + mincing accent very loommon with female slaves and Greek | ndfos'-toatds. | | Passing the Guard. returning on his | | ‘The second lehort beat atinel, ame up and stood on arian, cloth fo was a birt ne corner of t! land looked down into the basket, mere- ty for eof detaining the xirl He sa aten Joaves and the cream choose neatly dieposed on a aes ond napkin, and the cheesy was nested) 1 green jfeaves to keep Both the soldiers at once t t of tasting | their dagxera, but It with the points of at that moment ithe strolled out of the & cent young man ak ot the Wateh Duxe. a mur et and xold ‘Tho two sentinels at once tufned th backs on the cheese and Zoe, and murched away in enpo dons bn} thetr beats, leaving K in the hor beag wae Hed up ip @ (puddle. The oficer waa far too high “ihe stopped « Cececrretel | tak: fond mighty a-perscn (6 look at a slave- grt or hdr basket, and Zoe -theretore went on mithout turning her head, tal- it for «ranted that she was now {ree to enter Bhe went from under the great gate the liqutd purple Hght In the court, and it was pleasant to be tn it But the girl knew what she was doing. and sbe did not de i. ‘They would put out her bat that the cruel things would be the lesat . tf Gortiaa: tailed. they would do to & Sie was only a Weak girl, after all, and once or twice, ahen sie thought of ¥ pain, & sharp iiftle shiver ran, down her ck to her very heels, and thin; a swam before her for an Instant In t deep sea of color; but that only la ed [for » moment, and when sho reached the foot of the tower and went In un- der the archway thet led to the door, she was thinking of Zeno again, and of nothty ‘ It fold her, A lvery diterent watch wae sot there since! the attempt of the prévious night, and she found herself face to Foe with an obstacle she had not anticfpated. The! Iron door Was shut ang was guarded by | iva huge Africans tt black mall armor, who stood op elther side with draw scimitara, Another Barrier. They looked o er hor kind air no notl If you p whe 68 cone * neitt ues ato att DL oft Bo itech pleas >ated “with | ploadine amivhas’s and wail, "my atrosa’ spesking | in the middle ef PULPTIU PUR UCR EN ee - a or the Sale of the Man the sentence, suddenly scared by the immobility of the two black men, and by their size, and by the purple glare that was reflected ‘trom their great Pallensa scimitars, of which one nolse- Sweep could ‘sever her head from her body. However, she soon took cournge again and began to-speak a third Un You please,” aie said but she wot no further, for she had xen! plucked at tha malled slecye of on her right, to attract his a land he moved at once and bent a little. He tovohed his ear with his left fore- finger and shook bls head slowty to show that he was deaf, and pointed to his “companton” and back. to his own ear and shook his head «a and then, to Zoe's horror, he ope! fia | enormous mouth just before hi eyes. and she saw it Was emoty, no. tongue. The Deaf putes, Johannes was guarded by deat mutes, jund Zoe Knew Constantin and, the WAYS Of (he palace well eno: derstand that they were pla to make an end of any one, man or | woman, who ahoukl attempt to pass irled slgng now, She tovk her basket from her head and set it down on the step detween the sentinels, and crouched on he! and show the co sid nodded heads to on Which means indifference bj over East } covered UD her Ht onadlately. and Tose to Tiow wae Deginning to courtyanl, and she felt Ag the wiAdoWn deep Tho. closed door }nele was covered wt ith big nalts, It that it must be ope: clear if ly foun within, at all, end, that the mea themae!vee perfe She Lobes have to knock or make some a signal by, sound in ordectiot obs tain entrance for any one who w ally nuthorized fo go in. Jt was also clear that if the men on the other alde * , e stone deaf like the Ould not hear any ooking, and no entrance would two” Ku sueh be possible at allexcept when. thosa ; Witt Opened for some Teaxon of their own or at fixed hours, Again, though Zoe, it followed that there was proba- could there in some 0} from who and DALity, might haar wan such cars sup sounds All those apo “But your laugh, goes a long way,” T ventured. i “Thank you,” sald The Lady with Jo break, bimof an unruly temper and em yngdnerods sp The gil bora. toghay will marry early In Vite. Her