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The Evening World Daily Maga ey fret Preto Preboede Soeforge fort PPh Peo he hepepephye foepemehep ¥ SpSolordy Loca acta ea tare hrntreMs Paehreekaeds Paehneka ha shonkreyneys PADI HD > boohoo 'The Newlyweds & Their —————___. The Hippodrome’s “Battle of Fort Arthur’ Hot-Shot Spectacle. bs HE Battle of Port Arthur’ gives the Hippodrome {ts needed thrill a It's a hot-shot spectacle, as thrilling as it is interesting, and whi Wells Hawks, the peaceable < more, press agent straight from Fred Thomson's valet, or some equally prominent Japanesc that this battle is historically correct and worthy of patronage It certainly looks like the thing you read about during the last violent ov There are two armies on most unfriendly terms smoke and rain ugh the winter, break of the speshulextry each ot »8 bursting in air and on the back-drop, vou can hardly seo what's going on, enovgh snow to last us t faachine-guns having a ripping tlmo of {t, horses taking a Russian bath in the tank, and last, but by no means least, a bullet-proof heroine who never says di: This heroine ts a copyrighted by Mr. Owen Davis, wh fought the whe he order a few the He Battle with his trusty Davis makes weeks Mr. . Lee Shubert gave 150 ‘Nellio, Clonk Medel” and t Port Arth To her lover, a Japanese « ed ng n wpy, Rinka saye: “Wher 60, I go d just for at she goes to jail. Through the bursa of her open work prison sie watches @ fine exhibition of plain and fancy riding by a 1 of Cossacks, and {t {s also her good fortune to witness an interes! the Hippodrome soldiers who are out for the Czar. But here her nollday ends. She {s carried off in a sleigh and planted on the Most exposed part of the Port Arthur fortifications. There she stands right t: the way of the bullets and with one particular bom bursting and rebursting HOW THE JAPANESE ARMY CAP TURED THE RUSSIAN FORT AT 203 METRE HILL. a ts con- @est over her Ieft ear, But it's al he same to her. So fur as Ri! @erned, the baztle is a waste of ammunition, Nothing touches her, She comes @ut of the awful slaught with a whol ‘mak ‘The Russians do most of the fancy dying the Japanese go right a enti) they scale the wall ive the oroshestra leader the high sign to play Uttle victory stuff. It !s an extremely realistic fight, with eqnally realist @oenery from the big brush of Arthur Voesilin, Rinka 1s painted by Miss BE. Mckenzie in fast colors, which even the rain does not affect, ‘As you pass along to the circus, pausing for a moment to admire Miss Rose @ae Harte, the Human Three-Sheet, you see many new acts that make ene of the best ever given at the Hippodre Maree @hings to do, and the dancing Ara Worth his oa: In the 1 spectacie of “The Four Seas The Ive Malden now files @traight out of the wafer an” soars dripping to her throne, You wonder t whe does her death «£ cold, Anot in ‘Winter Car: which t sina Feb} Winte up to their knees in water. And yet we common mortals can't stir of the house without catch the grip! CHARLES DARNTON, e$e— Possible to o Have Too Much Love. | The Adventurer cee ay | {tCopyrignt, 1907, by D. Appleton & Co) zine, Thur . Gee, rly HONEY WIFE 1S A DEAR FOR BUYING ME THIS PIPE AS A PRESENT! € QEar | HEAVENS! HE'S GoT my PIPE \ \ VM COMIN sday.’January 9, ie By George McManus Baby 2% ) on fovey) \__ * WILL YOU COME a Out To THE KITCHEN 2 § HATE TO StT out HERE AND SMOKE THIS PIPE | WIFIE woutp FEEL BAD iF 1 DIDN'T SMOKE (T! BOD GOODDOOs¢ vessel would soon heave to. T to civilization. {¢reants could impose their own terms trucks of tne |and he never doubted but what thera the finawasa. [would be a pariey—and a» Taovgh consuined with anger, to admit that Jackson {nand of thein, iwelf to the mort! tion of submits on, It would te a hard pil to swa! low, but what else waa there for ther cock and Jack. to felp them off by CHAPTEL XXII. Kidnapped! tie pursuing figures dwindled. The Lloyd Gutsaane: [ ——— camp shrank to a few melancholy SYNOPSIS OF PRE CHAPTERS, bits of white silhouetted far be-| Tie possession of the ship, the guns. BY Helen Oldfield. is Kirkpatrick Kirk’) fe hind on the edge of the sky. The For- the stores and wat Jed any ar ie some men @ to love two ney ee niet {2 tuna was held on an tndeviating course | gum The only alternative was te with what is to all appeara . to the westward, her booms guyed’ out, Perish miserably, like castaway sailors use affection for the first love has waned, bu:, because her towering safls singing as on a raft. sNelinaniisiweaiiantlca ; to the touch of s sed and rocked before the wind. Jackson's Lreachery Nevertheless, m such divided atleg the ma ere is something extraordinarily dis z 5 rt n divide | No, Jackson had ft all his own wa) ree and shame, agonies of re even H Btrength which might render him true to one. The old prov makes the world go round,” is true enough in its way, but ft {= quite possthle to have too muoh of even so geod 2 thing as love, and the man who ts trying to woo two w« one same time will soon discover that the : ing fs a hard « i sooner or later find himself in water of the hottes temperature, writes Hel: held fn the Chicago Tribune. The man who finds himself wholly unable to decide to which of two women he really has given the first place in his heart should try a tempor fon from the This will usually settle the quests n heart grow f 1s an oft quoted provenb, anothe; rst. te: “Out of sight, out of mind,” actual tri n decide tho matter, In any caso no ma oman unless Ne 1s sure that one tn all the world. It js a mean thing io bog cepted posal to make a woman one's wife, but {t Is worse to cheat her with vows wh ~) cannot be kept In the spirit as well as in the letter. ‘When the ¢ ca is limited te that of two ertls, he who is wise takes that which, (De least. = : | nd on for him she is the one off from the 4 TTY VINCENT: ED a ad | LEAP YEAR, | S ft right for a girl to propose to a man even though It be I Leap Year? Woman's position in the courting game is supposed to ersed this year, and she now has the of exercising her own preference in selecting her) life partner. Few girls, hawever, serimsly regard the old custom, and men will undovbtedly still play an active part in the Httle game of love. No girl who has an atom of pride wishes to take the initiative In matters matrimonial, It {s contrary to convention, and no matter how much woman rails against the unfairness of courtship, she is generally willing to let the men do the proposing. Any girl with cleverness can get anything she wants without asking for it, and the Leap Year custom need not bo used by the majority of womankind. Judicious encouragement ts far more efficacious In the matrimonial game than the more etrenuous method of proposing, Most men fwould rather pursue than be pursued, | tat The free-born peopte only bowed. Ta Difference tn Religion. t unbecoming for any American to lft Dear Betty! his hat for any one? G. RP, HAVE been keeping company with a young lady for a short time, and lately her father, finding out that 1/ am a Catholic, told her he did not want her to keep company with me, because It 1s customary In America to }ift the jhat when bowing to any one. How to Win Him Back, | Dear Betty: @he is a Methodist. What fs best for AM twenty, and for the Inst seven| me to do, as I love her and think she|/ years nave been in love with @ Ukes me? She te eighteen and I am young man who has shown that he Mineteen. W. H.R. | joves me. Although I cared for him, 1 Passaic, N. J. did not show it,“and many times ra- Have a talk with the father, Ask him! fused his invitations because 1 had to judge you for yourself and not by |ihree older sisters who were not en- pour religion. Difference in religion {#) gaged. At sixteen we moved away un Bo obstacle to marriage. If he still ob-|expoctediy. This was the last time T Geots to your suit it is best give up| saw him, A few weeks ago I found out | be girl, as you are atill young and will n to love some other @irl of your ‘own religion. Lift the Hat. Dear Hetty: HE slaves in Furope were not al- his address, Should I write to him or ko to nee him personally? A. W. W. | I think {f the young man loved you he would have found out your address | before this, However, if you wish to try and win him again there Is no lowed to wear long hair, and in| harm In writing him a note and asking order to show that they were!him to call. In this way you can re- [gitves and that thelr hair was cropped new the friendship, Do not go to 00 | me Rak tn tae tote Rete nee ee terwant 1 Qfticer, the trea tr * concerting in the treachery of one’s me- ‘and [chanical slaves—to be gutllotined by ne's own gufllotine—to be shot by one’s n pistol, It was almost incredible to Kirk that their good old ship, so long heir home, whica had borne them ao bravely and so well {nto these untrod- en wilds, could now be used so effec- against them + first was convinced that nd the best that could be made of de- feat was to accept it gracefully, But he ground his teeth ali the same, and in his heart cherished a wild plan of retribution, even if it had to be put by ull they reached Felicidad. But there was no slen of shortening sail. The camp had faded from view | and still the ship was kept at a terrific pace. The situation began to assume a | More ominous and sinister aspect. Was there to be no parley, then? Wore thes: fellows above coldbloodedly deserting the party behind? It looked more and nore like tt Revenge had to give way eer, whe ortuna starts vast army of io rifles and a “eed, bees to abandon She breaks | Cras aghast at tie blo Orn ane Tam become engaRed) Tin refuses the Some tHeadache Cures, ADACHES may be due to any number of causes, amiong them a dis- H ordered stomach, a torpld liver, fatigue, over-excltement, Irreg: Halltheli moral practlonikconaldsration ite als and lack of fresh alr. Search out the cause of the trouble and, f/ mvhat he was to do. Do! What couli! using that as a starting point, proceed along the corresponding line of cure. || he do? He had his sixshooter, bit . . . much good {t was to him, crouched | there on the fournals and holding on If the cause of your headaches is a disontered stomach, give that organ a day's rest by adopting a simple diet and taking a little soda in a glass of | hot water. Sip a cup of hot water before every meal, even after the day of rest 1s over, and Keep up this treatment until all trace of indigestion ‘has || tke a buckjumper, At Bay! Should he drop and take his chances disappeared. RR jf rejoining tho camp? Risky and 5 Worse still—profitless. Should he wait If a torpid Mver ts the cause, take one-tenth of a grain of calomel MT rans au eee AS eT you have taken ten (one grain) hefore bedtime, The next morning before}! gile the vessel? Pxcellent-tf he but breakfast take a tablespoonful of ealt in a glass of hot water. In the mean]] joey now. But how? Ile racked his Pah head for ways. Almost any harm with- time, if the headache conUnueg bad, consult your physic rhea <e In his power to infllet could be readily Mkelihood had he of finding it? None would be eas: | Heat applied locally for neuralgia pains {s very soothing and effective. Ith) repaired, It would take as ot 1s best to have a hot water bag always in the house, as tt is one of the best! qynamite to do anything trre ways of applying heat. The heat of the water may be too Intense to hold the | but he had no dynamit knew bag itself againet the skin. go It !s a good Idea to make a flannel bag for cov- || there was some in the hold, but w | ering the rubber bag. | The machine guns? By T.S. “How do you like my new sled?” “Say, I like it so fine dat I'm not ¢ any oder all de afternoon,” “Oh, Kitty, weren't you surprised to hear Jimmie an’ I wero engaged?” ‘Nat in de least; he toid mo dat he dreaded tr asa lann waar anma in.” ing to ure th “Vm OOOOCOOOOOOOO! ¥rom the Truck of the Speeding Stolen Ship Kirk Clambers Up Over the Side and Fights a Fierce Pistol Duel with a Quartet of Mutineers for the Helm. @ mis-€O put you, little boy ane Or TOOODCODODD TOO aOOr @DOOOOOGODOOS: ; hem out of commission, Easy Kirk's blood bdofled at the thought The motion of the vessel was go irregu- |tov, to get at the rockets and blue lights | of tt ot tf he oould help tt, by Jar and vielent that it was impossible to |in the chart room and signal the post-|George! He would gladly have given | forecast tt, Kirk nerved Mmself for the on of the ship to the desperate meh] his life to ctreumvent such deliberate) erdeal, and watting for the moment of ind. But the distance was pronib!-| villany, which, he considered t,/revound, dragged himself through with Vevllctieliwaymmakinglellie grew more and more probable. ‘The! feverish agility. The fangs closed be- and ft would be a long time yet | Poor wretches, ready to drop with ex-/hind him with a disconlant grating and Sears down. ‘They | @ustion and thirst, would te gathered|croaking that made him shudder, But Maweltwents if a yara—|!2 bY twos and threes, without even| he was safe, His head swam; he saw The futtity of aig. |{2 strength to reproach the scoundrels) a dizzy world through the whir of Ina even if hie eneaked | 20 had infioted this auffering upon|whoels; the flesh seemed to cringe on iy ind lashed a couple |{¢™- The picture of Vera on this l-| his bones—but he was safe, of lanterns, the one above the other. |MEBt march roused Kirk to desperat yb crawl! out ti he could see the . a c joven af he tpot sion out wih rosketa | Daring Plan. paiditaletesine ieee iraninieasteat ca i a He might be sate! He was a powerful man, in the prime below. He undid his holster, placed bis n till ng, but they'd sheot| of vigor and benlth. Better still, he! pisiol in his trousers pocket, and, with jte lanterns nde Tt was im-|haa q revolver and six forty-four cart-|the grim resolve to #heot first, pulled Pp hopeless,c Besides {t was on| ridges. Surely he could do something himself up the shrouds. Here he rested {the cards that mutineers would! —surely—aurely! Suoh deviltry ought|to get his breath, to toss away his cap, themselves signal —blue Mirhts and all—|not to be perinitted to go unpunished.|to draw out his revolver end cock i to take the heart by exposing them twenty of she majority! ny Heavens, he would find a way! He! a frightful tramp | had to, He must. miles of prairia. He crept out on Then with stealthy deliberation, foot by foot, he mounted till his eyes were on @ level with the deck. One Man's Feat, At the steering wheels were four men | clinging to the spokes, and swaying | with every movement of the ship— | Beale, Harding, Gibe and Mackay~ oOo 6 so near that he could #ee the whites of A simple way to relieve sore throat 1s to take a lump of resin about their eyes. The big Australian had @ Faelastalovalniithant iit intotantclableape Wipotriont bollinekeratersanatenan lll tos ou eldtanpand placal iia ena ulliniryourimeuth; el asera) oil) seoretress|| | ator eusaeni nie wtamen eae {al in allaying inflammation. sprawled over his wheel as though, a e) ¢ O usual, he was letting the others do all the work. Forward on tho bridge Kirk could make out some figures, one of them a woman. From the crow’s nes, protrude’ two tiny heads, As far as he could gather this completed the pompleiment of the mutineers. ‘The gal- ley was shut, the long deck apparently empty, and the fight seemed to resolwe {teelf Into against four, If he kd manage to land the firat shot the would be child's play. A Pistol Duel. | across one of the axles, Cold Weather Hints. by suffers from earache, a Mitle vaseline rubbed behind the ear I affected will give ease at once. good’ Take a small handful ) of dried horehound and put into a cup of antil tho strength of the herbs {s drawn out, thes Add to this one cupful of honey and two cupfuls of Let this mixture boil until thick, Pour {nto a wide-mouthed bottle or mall jar and tt 1s ready for ase. One teaspoonful every half hour until the cough 1s relleved. This cough syrup is eastly made and very yf dried hops and a smal! hanaf Let t s steen Knitting §s declared to be a most helpful exer, ome stiff from umatism, and Jt fs sometimes prescribed by physicians be ause of {ts efficncy. FP. ‘sons Mable to cramp, paralysts or any other af- knitting te reganied as most benefictal, for hands Mable to te- one For rheumatism try the very simple cura of hot Take at least A No scrambled over the rail, and even Pint betore retiring at night. The object of tal ter Inte at night 1s [| as he did so Beale saw him, and with & hat during the hours you are resting. and the «t not being tried, the}! yell whipped out @ revolver from his pot water can do {ts work on the gastric jutces t and fired at him point blank. | Kirk was so unprepared for che fellow's ——— - | quickness that three shots whistled by his head before he could reply. He had « fangs with bang, like a ca: (To Be Continued.) Allen | halding tight, watching the . fis of those terrible ral springs) never been tn a pistol duel before and N which hel had tol mass)! ct ake a target of a man was a par- I er 1d crush er as the yeese}| alyzing sensation. His weapon scemed \ as and ound again with, to Ko off of fteolf. The explosion was | disconcerting suddennass, terrific. There was a flash of flame and | To be caught here was t ave one's ed faces seen through the smoke. | body gr sa It of again o | | one ci se horrors ‘bay Health and Beauty. By Margaret. Hubbard Ayer. To Whiten the Neck. | L, W.-If the skin on you aturally dark—tho has been tanned. Phente acta, 2 grams; tincture of nue grams; tincture of rea oln- 8; alneture of cantharides, chona, 8) gra b {+ grams ene, 120 grams, sweet SUR PeEAD "almond oll, 60 grams. AIRGRAISEL y to the roots of the hatr with a | spor once or twice a day. This good for very dry Oily Comple xion, N V M.—l\s abstemious tn the , |For a Dry Scalp. } and eat mor ess meat. give you temporary RS, J. 3.—This A below will but for perm | seal anent rellef it is 8 & question of “And which one of the Smith children are|maxes y« Whore t tthe esta ee will only xe v the ne lotion. pl 1 lotdy.” Soyo bee " Fee icc. a eR uAt COCA de black sheep, loldy, would promptly counteract the effects ,, sulle of Zing gran, compaune at the tento: Tonto for Falling Hair— water, 1 canoe, reo: