The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1908, Page 11

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| The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, February 10, DDODOOUG(DODOPHODHHDHTDDODHOHDHOTDODOOHDHHOHDODODHTODOG The New East Lynne : By Clara Morris Author of “Stage Life” “A Pa:teboard Crown,” and others. — § SOOOOOS COS O OOOOE’ (Copyrighted, 1907, by Clara Morris.) | mamma and T, always looked up to him : abe as to one supertor to other men. T Leite 13 oF pat ae Uaire ERS. could not bear to see him stoop to the _ Lally Keith, 4 yong "Ww follies of othe You must understand, Sate cen PACT Cousin Dap! that !f IT was a bit Baars father, eccentric oi | ™pettous I was actuated by a pure Prot, Kelth, and tis ward, Olive Masr, | 9Nd Sacred destre to protect him from Clive secretly lo 0 gucsees himself. aherery are “Pardon me, Ollve, you were actuated aryinents by furfous Jealousy. e is a miglity This knowledge chasm between our two estimates of = eal how seems tO your feeling for my husband. Your ke her \ a A aataeata mask of childish, innocent familiart aire, loves, Daphne, 228 Worn so thin that your womar has kept away from toWerlng passion shows plainly » have two children through. I cannot wrangle, quarrel or CHAPTER VIII. ued.) Belden’s Plot. a Da (Co * tnterr made she him an expletive ov and running to Philip's Anger, His isce fussed, his eyes sparkied thank for this Then nd giv he may be sowing in h The doctors un was how Amposs attempt to ar om duty end ately a ttle le accompanied the > all pres- ent @ nce Daphne, the Peacemaker, Daphne felt the hot sire of resentment beaping b ip her heart, while Olive Pushed on age ‘And you—P! to stoop to such falsit: I tried so hard at night to keep you home! I had a new song @hat I had practised carefully for yor @musement, and you could not stay Oh, no, you were compelled to work, to complete a paper on—oh, on goos: flesh, or hiccoughs, or something! Paper that all the world was hol¢ Sts breath in walting for! @uch perfect quiet, you had to go to your office, to write far into the night arousing our sympathy! Do you sup- pose we enjoy being cheated, mocked, 4mposed upon? That w “W-we?'’ stammered the doctor. “We?"' thundered the Professor, “Are fwe in New York or Salt Lake? Is this ®@ Mormon household of one husband wand two wives?” ‘The hot blood rushed over Daphne's dace. Raleing her eyes sie saw a lis- A ne You needed "\eening black skirt and white apron at| the head of the stairs, and sald very tow: “You are providing material for a yffme symposium below stairs. Mattie ts ebout announcing luncheon, and Lena 4s, descending with the boy. Philip, either speak lower or go into the li- * brary.” Olive and Philip withdrew as sug- uiwested. The Professor called Depine- " May tnto the drawing-room with him, and Lena, trying to look innocent of eavesdropping, led the short-legged young Mr, Ketth to his mother and re- tired below stairs. Presently, when the oki man and the! ,bables had been seated at table, Daphne went back to the I!brary and} | opened the door to remind them that | Diasr, her hat off, and repentant tears |, streaming, hokting ome of Philip's ty hands between hers, pleading with him Shet@ idle and forgive!" “Ste doctor saw his wife first, and, » Yooking rather foolish, drew away trom '.@he girt, saying: “Good Lord, Olive! Will you never ebe more than a child? Try not to be wuch a little termagant hereafter,” and paseed out of the room on the way ‘to table. ?*1 Warn You, Now!” Olive looking up met the icy anger of Daphne's sapphire eyes, and ex- aimed nervously: “Tt seemed so ternible that a man of fa high character, of his professional anding should stoop to mean, vulgar ‘ickery for the sake of @ hideous, un- ; luncheon was waiting, and found Olive) make scenes, but you must not me incapable of resentment—a resen nent that will be swift, strong and pe: haps reckless. 80 I warn you now, ever again you make such open ex- hibition of your love for my husband, one of us will leave this house on the instan| Then Daphne swept from the room, table, saying calms fe, take @ tray of luncheon up Miss Murr ts not feeling think ———~ CHAPTER IX. Stolen! Lagain will T speak e dis- wing word anent th rch fair or the ahartty ba- zaar,”’ smiled Belden, as Anton held the zing taper to his cle: For, know- x Mrs. Keith to have charge of the urt booth, ad won permisston to mate @ picture arity and her pised assistance in its selecting His to him: “I hope felth will drop he w o will ghe adores the harn, I kno And he had repeated Dapnni fae of coming, if her neuralgia p> ted, edding anxiously: “Her heal! om the flawlessly per! tmmonths ago, Au don't suppose Dr. Ke some “Yor sip this gos our ‘child . do you? f the air ug his cigar in the the billiard room, our of his appoint from ns the ved. he Was conscioy frowsiness, 1 lag stiffer ame, payed by out from mao upward, signi any uaul in had lost an é known a bi . and he p me | only now he felt drowsy. your accompanyin thelr daughter jes ” ° RS, WILLIAM ©, LINTHICUM home, It 18 good for ner to go out with My Two best Weapons | Noel cai , iM Sato tia Sonate pea ratalll As he recalled his losses, his face With her some o Is ae ay young flance whose brings a of each eva from sweethearts in distress and wives] prospe nts-inel TY rt A } necesary Fae ance ae tin eed! : One domestic affairs get tangled, she! feady to be hostile to him. P| betore ma is contemplated |tered smiling. “Well, its time for emitted them to the club women for/ The Letter. Mrs, Helmuth Thinks liuek to come my way. Never in my | cher answers, Four of the most pr pa ae | é Life before have I found the attainment | gota remen), pres entire ven SbL cai AM itystnvol and h in| Sunday Dancing O. K. lof a married beauty so desperately aim. }are Printed I love with a 1 RS, WILLIAM TOD HELMUTH, {oult. My two best weapons have bréken | Mrs. Lewts Advises for three I agreed h M former president of the Sorosi short off tn my hands—vanity and env : 2 festa) 0 ritworyeln! 5 amy eke ns | “Dapine has ever been calmly oo Love-Misied Swain. I accom- jof a dancing diMeulty In this way: \sctous of her bea therefore it has RS. §. DICKINSON LEWIS soi wheroulaiell thenlettert been Impossivle to turn her head and M the perplexity of > young Re AS OCH evar | Win ment ravens detiered en bia 8 er who thought he was in st week I have disco’ V YPAR'S I met a young man at tofore I have 6 4 great faith In thelfouna it to’ he onlye “'passing f ned preoa Ae srletainigeuscaanalihaveisesn | seductive power of jewels, They are to) The Letter. y her either in the moniing him three times since. The las} [thes tempter, of tosday amhat tide MON e | Desc natty hey also object to my taking time I called at my friend's was on a derful apple was to Satan. Women who | are mercenary, covetous and vain find in their exquisite beauty intrinsic value, and the general becomingness of ra Jewels 1s a temptation Irresistible. But/ aig ty [here they are useless—here, where it would be my Joy to crown that haughty | little head with Jewels, to see the cold | “Daphne reapects all the conventions, | as well as all the virtues, as a woman of good breeding should. But there ere{ times when my longing for her ts al-j most unbearable; when I wish she was} of a lower class of life, for I swear I'd be capable of some mad folly, some| dime-novel !dlocy that would antagonize | the law, for abduction 1s not popular even in low life. Belden’s Despair. “But when the world holds for you ‘but one woman there's mighty ttle you will not risk to win her, and— good Lord! how I have changed! | have reached the place where I know the value of a tender word! I have learned a new side of feminine nature! I reatze that I have never known love before! | "I have eought only pevelty, have | known only passtons, swift, strong, brief—that have burned through t¢ months to satiety, And I have been | held cruel ama faithiess, Only a few j have broken fair and without scene making. One was that Roman flower girl Maddelena, who gladly eeld her splendid, dark beauty for some bead: and earrings of rose coral—and another as considerate was my Lady A——, of London, who, moved by enmut and her love of emeralds, had been won to rule me royally for a time; and when I wearted of the game. with ferce pride she sak, ‘Adieul’—and no word ee _aande Santini | very badly. The Million-Dollar Kid T WANT “To IMPRESS ON YOUR MINDS THE FUTILITY OF RICHES! THEY ARE NOTHING! NOW A PooR MANS LET US PITY THE RICH! Nopopy RESPECTS THEM! WE HIS INCOME A MILLION is WILL Some ONE KINDLY INTRODUCE ME? & ‘A PooR MAN HAS THE ADVANTAGE! THE RICH HAVE NOTHING ! ETS ALL GO To Lu By R. W. Taylor ncH! IT's Lover NOT To WORSHIP: MILLION You AGAIN! 5° GLAD TO SEE for The Evening Soran OOOO OO0UD One Ferplexed Sutior. SHORT time ago I became ac-| A quainted with a young lady whom I thought I would learn to love I gave her encouragement. But now 1 t it was only a passing f: have called on her several times, and aly I know if I stop calling she will feel Teacher—That'a right. Can you surgest any wa Small Johnny—I guess it spells “one.” HJ. eo. EACHER—Now nall Tommy—Yes, na’am; it spells “tuo."* hands her parents should Out of the Mouths of Babe ‘Tommy, ean you tell me what “t-0-0" spel Tell _her your love was but ner out to places of amusement. Kindly ds At vou consider it best jet me know if they should object to ‘ how the) true state of your above arrangement A. F. 1 ne, and not co:tnue t0 Mpg. Linthicum’s Advice. vive her any longer. 7, ; . : If the girl thinks enough of you to Mrs. Linthicum Helps | piace ner t object to And what does “‘to" spell, Johnny? ROO OOOG SO OOOUOOUGO ROU! Frominent Club Women ot New York Turn Betty Vincents W orld and Advise on Love and Marriage OOD OOO g je\eteeeiee.s ss crown the newly made bride bound up her hatr, significant of her subjection te 1908. Secrets Girls Keep ~- They Tell Too Many of Others’ Secrets. By Gertrude Barnum. F were mitting 1 the waiting room of one of the large department stores, when my friend Edna called my attentt humerous giris with their heads Close together, whispering in tha corners, “They are all telling secrets,"* sald Edna, “And about tiree-quarters of what they are saying is fairy tales, Shoe pointed out one pitifully unattractive elderly maide en {n partioular “I heard that one tn the telephone both a Htt!s while ngo axking some fellow why he never came to see her atter she'd asked him so often, She was sweet and soft chocolate opera m, but he rung Ser off, Now, of, conrse, she 1s going on to her friend about all the lovera hat ask her please them as.door-mats, and how haughty and cold she treats them: “Those married women over there are bragging about thelr husbands; but I'N bet they ain't much to brag of, and the women are really scared because their little boys lovk tke ‘em. Those two next to us ere telling other women's secrets, an4 telling each other not to tell they told. Wou'dn't ft be fun te connect the whole roomful by wireless telegraphy with the people they are talking about!” “W-h-e-w!" T excle!med, with horror. “Poor things!" Filna went on. “It’s only in their own fairy tales they ever | get the chance to play leading lady. The ieading man would never recognize himself by their description, and as for the other woman in the case, when they, are through with her she’s not fit to mention In polite society.” “Not one of those girls is telling how she runs after mao and gets laughed ef and snubbed—or how disappointed she tm if she captures one to find he can*t talk nbout anything but prize fights and the advertising business. No strreef Giris den't tell thef- real secrets!" In looking eround the room I saw a number of shabby working girls appar ently reading the mupars. “They are lookiag through the ‘ads’ for jobs," Edna explained. ‘The hard | Umer have knocked thyusands out of work. They keep up a good bluff, even if they haven't amy flinnels and thelr shoes 1s wore through. They'll take eny ot fob. but they'll never tell where they work nor what's in their pay envelop, Oh, no! ‘They just dike themselves out in their rat furs and talk about Uving with thelr parents as if they was the Rockefellers. A girl's stomach mmy be caved in and her heart may be broke, and her last pair of stockings gone past mend- ing; but those are the secreta she keep How true it was—what Edna said! Girls tell too many of other people's secrete and not enouth of thelr own. They chatter false and frivilous goastp, itke magples, yet Uney lock up closely their burning recrets which ought to be told Rudely they tear the vells from others’ lives; their own himgry and thread-° bare heurts ard souia are hidden under imitation “fine feathers. Hore and thore we find the rare ¢ 0 knows when to hold her tongue am@ when to muster up courage and speak, She volces the suffering of woman ecornel. She repudiates a mate absorbed ouly in prize fights and the advertt ing bustress. She refures to brir » her sons In such an image. Such a girt gives promise of tha new woman, the sphinx who will presently speak, to enswer many of the old ridiles of Iife. Oh, elris! Let's etop whispering “fatry tales" around in corners, ant try to be real “leading Indler" for a while, Let's connect with each other around the world by a ert of “wireless telegraphy,” and speak up for women and children in this wan's world. Let us muster up coursge to tell our own true secrets, | —_—_——+-¢o__—_. Early Bridal Ornaments. | By Frank Shelley. VROM the earliest times white was the uniform color for a virgin bride, and three ornaments were worn by her on her way to the altar. These were the rings on her fingers, the brooch on her breast, and the gar land on her head, the first being typical of the endlessness of mat- rimontal love, the trooch signifying maidenly Innocence, while the garland wag the reward accorded to her for having successfully resisted the ‘temptations to evil that had beset her course from childhood to matrimony. No widow on her remarringe might wear a garland, nor could any bride whose reputation had suffered from her own lghtness of conduct. ‘The garlands were mostly composed of roses and myrtle, and the hair was generally worn in loose to the altar, In token of her freedom, but on laying asids her virgin to or tresses a husband.—Ilustrated Sunday Magazine. sy Other young people being | there, we danced quietly. Ie and T | have an Invitation to call on her Sun-| i i i Iday. My guardian has forbidden my go- African Snails Are Musical. ing | dance cause we danc quietly on It you don't ever han dan) aven !s assured, yulte 1 to had an 1 for It. | The Letter. | Dear Retty ‘y. I would jo this and also ho | pat with? Miss Boswell's Advi Join some settleme: meet plenty of friends ther Sunda ess In YOUr| few chances to go out? AM ed with eome nice girl. od. Is it wrong to} es I have PERPLEXED. Mrs. Helmuth’s Reply. easy do anything worse ng on Sunday your entry into Miss Boswell’s Hint to a Lone Young Man. ISS HELEN VARICK BO8BWELL Proposition Her advice will wocan I ice. nt club. ——E je to the young man who is It 4s good advice to twenty-one and earning a good tke to get acquaint- How can I make a masculine friend, as I have nobody to c. B. You will nice men and girl Not the Kind He Wanted. \e2 ch diamonds burning at throat andl in veeieieeacentaces a poagtl Mra. Lewis's Advice. Teac Now, Elmer, spell chicken (by arrew: wilile ran aware “Daphne above all women I have ever)" Fee et enoentianien G : : 46 Wille ran eyay to hunt peer vrei and shoulders of the| Tf You have called merely in @ friond!y Small Elmer—I'm not old enough to spell chicken me on hen. IL ed aiinaiit | | & aisali a 6G ee | ‘ain and flawlexs whiteness of | Way you can gradually cense calliny, . : io ; nee foe that would enhance the lus-| but !f you have given the girl cause to IAttle Elsie—Harry, what ts a py poman lea pun “But he didn’t find his trous Nene of pink pearls, They are,|TeRard your attentions as seri you Little Harry—I guess it's a fellow who has a mania for ple | tather had finished with him.’'—Harp- | too, her favorite gems, but—well I am | Owe {t to her to have a serious talk [ers Weekly. not likely to forget her amazed and) — . | cold: disapproval on the occasion when 5 I thought to offer her a remembrance | h W d f th Y v4 Av B T Ss All of a certain aay. | The isgqom oO e young Ze se NY 15 Sb en Kid—lam mister Go zou want dis pile of ancw cieaned of cbeept! FRICAN SNAILS are as big as a man’s fist and their eggs are as large as pigeon eggs and have the same color and texture. When travelting | together they produce aeolian music, apparently by the movement of the | shell over the bark of the trees as they travel in search of food. Large as they are, the eggs of this remarkable snail, those of a near aly, known to snail | scientists as Borus Maximus, ar Il larger, approaching the size of a bantam | fowl's ear. Becnuse of tne big there Is no larva stage. When the enatl enferges at the time of hatching it ts like the alult in everything except size +2 Telegraph Poles of Glass. LASS telegraph poles are coming into use in both hemispheres, ‘They ere G to be manufactured at Grossalmerc Germany, An architect of Cassel has been granted patents for it in Germany and other European countries |and tn the United States. ‘The glass {s reinforced by wires eultably disposed. These poles, {t 1s supposed, will be particularly adapted for countries where wooden poles are quickly destroyed by Insec nate. ‘The Impertal Post Department of Germany has ordered these poles for its telegraph and telephone lines. s orc UCH a preity, S soft, full blouse i as this one | makes up charming- ly in chiffon, in net, in all-over lace and in every thin ma- ltertal. It can be | used over a@ lining of matching or of contrasting color, and the yoke por- tion can be of riile or of velvet, or | any fabric that may ibe Mked. In tits In- |stance, however, | brown chiffon is made over a lining | of white Indfa silk and this ining |s | taced with filet net | to form the chem- | {sette. The chem- | isette 19 banded | with narrow sou- | tache braid and | trimmea with little | gold buttons, while | the yoke te made of | taffeta etged with | stitched bands thit are trimmed with | tiny buttons tke those upon the | chemisette ‘The quantity of | material required | for the medium sf | ts 81-4 yarda 2 28-4 yards 27 or 15-8 yards 44 tnohes wt'e, with 8-4 yard 18 {nehes widy for Fancy Blouse Waist—Pattern No. 5,900, chemisette and outs ming, 1 yard 18 inches wide If for three-quarter sleeves, 1-2 yard of deep cuffs aro used Pattern No, 5,900 ts ut in sizes for a 2 4, 38, 38 and 40-inch bust. oer? | to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN Call or send by How to $}TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 21 West Twenty-third street, Obtain 3 York. Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. raese IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and al- Patterns ways specify size wanted.

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