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@ ‘The City of Gold = & BS ks Is Now in Sight ¢ RBRED With Cassaquiari Outlined & on a Hospital Cot, Being Nursed Back to Health and Strength by Vera. CBPPBPESHSLPEDSH’ j through his spectacles fit: ngs, ucres “the treasure was the But the crumbling bul K. all covered with |fures and hieroglyphe—tie courte—the | triumphal arches, lopsided and toppling —the mystery and gloom and vastness of ft beggars all description. Imagine the grave of @ vanished civillzation— a London of forty centuries ago—a for- oan The Adventurer Lloyd Osbourne. (Copyright, 1907, by D. Appleton & Co.) gotten Rome. It seemed to cateh a fellow the throat. You were over. BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING C: awed te of yourself. You stood (nicknamed in eof it all'— Lewis Kirkpatrick plucky young An f ata rr worls to go terprise Tie colossal py, MTG aR logt be transiated. Speech was Ble exinsls ct ry OUR peopler i ing!" Bald Wicks, solemnly, fill- Dr. Von 7 Mrs, h Q RAS enormously wealthy ld @ breach, Weethrook rn CHAPTER XXIV. Treasure! ie the first flush of enthusiasm and Joy tt ts in repel ay seemed as though the object of t were ag good as r yoyage Blowisnod Hin refuses. ready gamed and little thought was the crew. twhil a the obstacles that yet had to fhe voyage) to overco efore the Inca treasure might in reality be called thelr own To have reached the limits hing transport f the tano other mutine: ReaeNiens wounded, sign whet f metal thirty-one miles cr more from * Ss at mountain strongh d was quite ian other CHAPTER XXII. A rough road was slowly built, and naa ver it daily the two automobiles plied asure house and ship. Two he crew of each car, and je of prectous metal rose rapidiv Kidnapped. SEING col ot ule 1e Fortuna’s hold. Hirk went in’ sea it was a tter of some b ing. to and V Blundering through the di to see Cassaquiart. West @bout answering shout thev at length | qatly said so in one of @iscerned shadowy figures hastening to’ ments of assert meet them. The first was W! who | divided forces ker on recognizing Kirk let out a roar like “St Maan a dull. Devonshire granite wasted no time in greeting, but turned back, eng to pass the com news to his compan. fons, “It's Kick!" he cried, “It's the cap- tain himself! Richt as a trivet, and no harm done!” ‘There was an outturst of exclama- tions. Kirk found himself in the of a little mroup, who seemed ready to th lanterns. ot the miss. in a constant alone of the and he, 4 Indian on the tnas had once be whole party, A tew of the the southeast, darkening for an hour and then sink Suoveeding period everything aited to the task of bring- the treasure. Each car was make two round trips dally, ring a distance of a hundred an ing dow: able to cov antral pull him to pieces from excess of thank-| twenty-odd miles, and averaging «| fulness—Wioks. Goltz, Phill!ps Craw-/ thousand ds to a load. Crawshaw shaw. Westhrook and Vera Henderson, Goltz and Weaver were ‘The upraised tantern lit ther pale and the cliauffe ne on, ona off—each duty n turn haggard faces thronging all about him. wi Littie Crawshaw wept unbdlushing!y. drawa ‘Westbrook, in that mellow voice of nis, | with always #0 sincere and kind, and now} tinged with a singular nobility, thanked | wii nor panied by a h a Goa that Kirk had been spared to |imy them. [sea Cassaqutart “I never thought to see you again.” | eo take ay fhe eaid. ‘It's like meeting one risen | 4!! from the grave!” , Kirk felt a little, soft hand feline] tte aftece ard for his own, and an tnsinuating elrlish | § body nestling beside him. Vera fad| vesttally into th mot spoken a word, but her eyes,| Kirk's and Ver luminous with a strange and tender} Westhrook ‘The pair were to Ught, nad never left his face. She/secretiy with Crawshaw aft perceived what had escaped the others. | day moel—the best time, it wi ; “Kirk,” she sald suddenly, “you're! for suethee the old m jwere p! The Evening Wor BOLEPDLEDBHD HPOOSSEOHGOVO2 | | She = YouR WIFE ‘PHONED FoR vou To | COME HOME SIR; MUST CO WOW, WIFE Want WHY DON'T ‘You MARRY,| MONK, AND GET A COUNTRY HOME ; ld Daily Magazine, The Million-Dollar Kid 2% #2 SES, MONK, You OUGHT To MARRY! You HAVE “ONEY— 3 ME! MONK , WHY DON'T YoU MARRY AND SETTLE DOWN January 13, 1908. Talks to Girls. & Nellie and Johnny Marry on the Equal-Pay-and-Rate- % and-a-Halt-tor-Gvertime = Basis and Find Happiness. 8 YES, MONK = MY Advice To You 15 TO marRY AND SETTLE Down LIKE me! (ep! must GE Fine! By R. W. uy {EOLELODEO HS GISESHRSLOED | MY ee] By Gertrude Barnum. ce) YN tn the balcony of an east side theatre where [ | jad Deen invited to join ‘a bunch of the girls, and we were all munching cracker-jack between aciy antl plea agit trieseny? Vhut do you want to turn Joe down for?’ asked the old maid of Olara, the youngest and dresstest girl. “What would I want to get married for?” ‘e nothing about how bad he feels?” “That's his looke I ain't hunting up a@ job of house- work and tending kids. I got wise since my sister tried it.” “T ain't sorry I je it,” said the sister, dividing a box DON'T YOU MARRY, MR. Faull bat Coenen Ok wene tinea Ody eee TTC MONK! WHY | USED To LOOK rom the muff you're feeding ‘em. And soll they JUST LIKE “MY DAUGHTER HERE! oo, 1 guess, Tecan t care of myself better’n any man'IL Nes) IT YES! 1 GUESS \ PiUde BUM ke care of me, TM bet! , 4 ¢ sed to tal ist that way!"' sighed the old maid. YOURE RIGHT! “But df I had tt to do over I'd do diffe | “How #07" I asker | "Well, Tuned to think you h | “explained the old maid other.” igt here the curtain wer musT BE LEAP YEAR) Too! 1 to be @ doormat to some man, or else go It ut I know a girl that didn't do neither one t up, and we followed the hero of the melodrama breathtens!. his v ous pursuers from the roofs of New York tenements to th down tmprovised rope ladders, across burning bridse drifting on ice ing for @ moment. id had resumed where med to take her for granted at vd and pler saying, ‘I ws first, but she made hina ke care of you all your Ife.’ You w take care of you.’ he begged awfut ton herself, you think a heap of me tract with you, providin'— ming with Joy. tract,’ enya § that work together fatr an@ shateine we reckon on equal pay for equal 1a half for overtime—same’s I'm gettin’ where T work now,’ t met t whe 1S EVERYTHING RIGHT, SIR? BACHELOR KRALL work, and time a HO- HO-HA! ALSO TEE - HEE! an’ they've kep’ tt up. Of course she gets the most but still he often takes a turn sitting lay. It works hey're tm y hein right s the 1 hero had been over rock mountains by his ig nnecence nd the music, while the weary couple re © T won't turn Tor contract myself.” Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. down. T guess RRRRRRR RR RR RR RR RRR PRR RR RRR RRR RRR RRC RRC ROR RG Ree Re Re Re Reka all alla lad lal ll al dad caliel | ‘% + Betty Vincent * er it tee “oe -, better qualified to mupport me. He con jfrst man don't give him up, for you|I discover tf my affections are re: ppot Too Young for Love. iow “him and (youl are) sure (oe his||\turned? G. J. L. |stantly wrote to me until a short tim Dear Betty |love. The other young man might dis-] Ask the young man to call, You can-) ago, when he stopped corresponding ESE EE EE 8 OF OE OE OE OE OF EE OF EO OE OE EE OF FE OF SE OE OE OE FE EOE EE EME IEEE EE EE EE EE EEE EE EE Ot Ot Ot THE USE OF BRUSH AND COMB. HIS part of the tollet of the hair is usually, we re- I gret to y, a perfunctory one. The hair is brushed and ¢ |, Of co , but with a Ick and a proza- ise. At night the tangles are removed, the hair is quickly braided and the whole affair !s over in a trice h our and we have no Id alk %, On Qourtship «* Marriage : Gives Faviee which vther's has fallen appoint you greatly. not learn positively if your affection 18/ with every ene save his parents. Do you ae tenaae Ho sends me tH) young sees fit] think he same feeling towar e tende returned until the young man sees h ume feeling toward quienes and tor Carstmas Ask Him to Call, to tell you that he loves you me as fe also whether he will surcns era I re hold me tom ise? ANXIOUS. than f Dear Bet e mise? ANXIOUS eg Ma) Sag known a young man tor a| He Writes Her No More. a) REET aearen Eo See e eran aemialetoan Year, His eister told me that he| Dear Retty: deeply he would put you first on his vould be wide apart, and ner objects to t am six loved me deariy. Although he hag || AM eighteen and was engaged to @ | correspondence list, I think you would WelibrGEnt enaeiditiecovie Bye i has never it cousin ‘who lives out West. TRE be justified In c ng et Ush should thave its You are too young to think seriously Se HOM OE aOR in man. | an, though thi 3 from this young is no b m very much. How can marriage was postponed until he was wn ation and und dust 8 | once @ day + | ceterates the ciret | tte Je of dandruff P, and € hurt!" Al S . calp invigorated ane the urtt jee nothing! he returned.|iand) ellay, on| his part, any’ possible Has Two Suttors. The Raggydolis. : hair is cleaned, the scalp Invis e #arm's a bit dicky. that's all. sospictona of the truth. Dear Retty . Dear Beit that day. x Hae oe ine eet aa ‘And with that he fainted Inincheon was just over. Westbrook {ECEIVE flowers a few other By F. P. Pitzer. AM twenty-three and am keeping eom-| ‘The selection of a com> 6! amd ne with enre ts teeth thick wide, deep in a game of chess with Von J Sill A young man HE Raggydo!ls are funny folks, ‘They hail a party vesterday— pany & young lady two yeara| pertectly smooth and well-rounded at t e buying a ait > 1 itz. The moment for filght had whom ver met, but who ] They live in Nur fi It was a dandy treat— my junior, who at times 1s very in- | up to the light and § n eitrafillly: tor. ansy row CHAPTER XXIII, know @ gentleman friend. occ) CHEN) Gina ‘And when they finished with their play fferent and to please, but at arranging the hair a comb with finer te 1 Forward! — jl young man who sees Jokes; ‘Nhey got these things to eat other times is very pleasant and a Mwave in tearing the hair with this tne f Sos all t things and ts very jealous. ‘heir tearsiare lemonade, ay wble. I have given her everything she! {, clean the scalp with a o r ae days that followed were hardly CHAPTER XXV. |. don't care for the other one, a Some gingham sandwiches quite thick, | Wanted an en her out @ good many |< c4 47 it is uml: ised to 8 lp It more than a dlank to him. It , ¢ him; but IT like the young Dheir breakfast food is sawdust dry, ome calico cocoanut ple, thnes. Do vu think she oares for n : I. ave! head, and the fine toot vay ; ) ae vane shy n No comb should ev 5 tould had become the most natural The ! unaways. MoS aith whom Di Keeplicompany;. ant t me tafty-tafty ona stick Ga year} of thing? Iam|y, omitted from every thing In the world to have Vera ahout IRK slipped away first. Vera loves me. Shall I stick to my own Some ribbon bona, and my! well acqua her fami nd Keep yo and scrupulously an, They should be thore One afternoon he awoke from a long a minute later rose quietly to AG Ors OMA eS. friends with this \ great big cambric of !ce-cream, they Ike 2 19 1s a very good gl ou washed once or twice @ week and rinsed afterward in hot water an@ sleep. erate ulershxedanernsy ian fellow? Every time We are to Tonney haven't got 4 single hair Some sable muffins, too. iudet_ and industrious, and doesn't asso- | OE “Vera.” he sald, “I think T must be It was so formidable tha t he has Can Ee se, My parents Tyaonkinetenetle)netas: Of donrlktizenlisz lant teers with every one. That ts why 1" fe noticed her pallor, the dark rings in his game it questio! as ne a reads mm the day Magazine. Don't give her up, as she seams to be under her eyes, h n seen her, It was vay no f Y attention to the man \ i Me worn, wan beautiful even after days and nights of blind and introspect watching. vaitine for mer a dozen “How long have T been here?" le gangway. Below him Henderson beside expect and ar. Vera was the seat beside dup behind. e engine and aw and ng up “Let me think nt days ou have been nursing me?” Why didn't you leave !t to somebody else?" “Because I love you, silly boy!" A dellclous contentment stole over him. He felt his hand fondled against ther hand, her cheek, her ! sweet to Ile there, in a languor of wi in destde him. sound of gears, a leap, forward y wore off: They sped over the plain lik ‘And all the while, at a pace that anar jar ness, and be petted. ie It was my arm, of course?’ i} e elaxed twisted 1 “Compound fracture, with fever and | on thelr upward way, Before delirium.” | ey met We and Hain had been wi them at a sort of siding. explained that th a clear road in elther he Fortuna was not damag the second ot Irreparably, The forward truck was badly smashed. The mainmast was | ¢ sprung, too, but they repaired the plic by shrinking on hoops of red-hot iron. | The maintopmast couldn't be saved, but expatiate en- the foretopmast was doctored into) ¢ hogan to shape. It looks awfully patchy, but Mr. | thusiaatically about a place they were Wicks ts sure it will stand. Oh, they've | nearing been so busy, Kirk!" | awe cal ft the lookut.” he Nine days later the Fortuna, with her | “thouzi the Inca’s Chair ts also one sails furled, lay awaiting Von Zedtwitz's | names for {t 1 there we return, To port were some tow, red-j look straight down to the Fortuna, dish hills, Through the winding gap In|open ont a bie part of the road © the nearmost ‘hills Von Zedtwitz had | have coming over, If it isn't the Alsappeared three days before, leading finest view you ever saw, Td lik a party of ten well-armed yoluntcers. heart name of any that Sixteen miles beyond, as the crow fivs, | beat it was Cassaqitar!. That had beenatdawn They were 8 on able to judge for ng from the ah to attain, with de- ness, the high, bare ives, © rocks and tre unexpeot By Wednesday t! ected the party of they grew HMghtful on @ Tuesday morning. night they had fully e to return. By Thursday anxious and apprehensive. Friday found | Shoulder of the mountain. Here there them very gloomy indeed, {or ned before them an uninypeded view "On deck, there i hills and va s that & rated aA them m the Wortuna, Mey, “What Is it? below on the ear t of Ub plain, “Dhey're coming, sir!" Jilke a toy at thefr feet. ‘They got on The #hip broke into a wild uproar, hoard the car again and, In the, best | Discipline was forgotten as the ex-( 9 oniy three miles more,” said Craws plorers drew near and, headed by Von shaw say, Miss” Westbrook, if Zedtwitz, climbed aboard. You'll ary Over 9 hit you ean wet a The old fellow stood panting in the | eth Bt the ATS oo. name, you centre of a mob. inom” Cant Inake it out? ey " Peat ee Sretig mae fiver Lfoaw Mya ned 8 the treasure a tually, positively DUCT ONRGh Ns aear tee there? and Vera ¢ doout with a “Bars and bars of it? pum exch Duttresslike | a the aks Crawshaw cume bustling up to shake bends oat | oe tne “Captain,” he oried, bis eyes ebining f mighty arch, th dead city beyond, «ma Be Continued.) st outpost | who sends you flowers. If you love the thousti a trifle capr: DOOOO™ Some of the 1. The cleada, eaten with erushed dates Africa 2 Wood-boring caterpilia of trees by Australian at nes and “ without cooking 3% Caterplilar used by Chinese for soup. ‘ong talla are @ fungoid growth, t Weird Dishes E MOPMONOOOONOVGIOS) orld Over. DOLosororax over over) aten npe favorite for heavy lace, ¢ | brotdery and 1 | Mala of the s nd this season ts 1 ONG he: Australian sen.elUR Call or send by mall to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MA § now to ev \ butterity by Austr 8 c TON FASHION BUKBAU, No. 21 Wes: Twenty-third street, 7. Shay fin marrow estoumed a ol ) Obtain York. Send ten cents in coin or ps for each pattern ordered. Chinaxe aA Rh ore. IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and al- 8. A cricket eaten by the Greeks and a prin y Frenea i erms ways specity size wanted, dom Nex feet ELLY LALLA LLL beetle eaten by the Romana e7vV_———eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee a + ”