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poe ae 20 Stories of New York PIDDIIIOOION DEI BO II IO DEI MIWA II AIS HIS pe ote - yee A Servic e of | Love. The Romance ot a Twenty-fourth Street Laundry That Was Spoiled by a Heartiess Hot Smoothing-Iron. by 9.) you and tn a short time were (see above) when one S art no service see ture, Phillips | (°° ire, Phillips | 5 and Mrs. Larrabee began house- , Art no gi flat, It was a isnesome ard, Hat—something Ike the A. shu ay i 4 down at the left-hand end of the key- n w x And they were happy; for the: w fr Art, and each oF e to the rich g man it ) the poor—janitor for t of sin a flat with your Art and your shall in| 3 1s the o sme ts happy 1 the dresser billiard table to a rowing machine if they will, so you and Datla are between. But if home he } rows. with a flowing tled up s enter you at the Go! Gate, hang your hat on Hatteras, your cape on » Horn and go out by the Labrador. Joe ainting class of the grent Magister f< fame. His foes are high ons ar us Meatn-lughts have brought him n, © studying under Rosenst ite as a distur! a number Delta w Fathered to dls ner, music, Fi tures, Walt and Oolen Joe an Han Pate ib > plano ke They were money last not be cynieal happy as long as ts every—but alms were wil! of the other, or eich ©: , a | very clear and defined. Joe was to be | Mme. Komisarzhevskhy’s Comedy Iriamph a ~ isarzhe y brought out her hidden smile to brighten “A Child of ening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, March 11, ' Full of the Life, Love, Hu Crispness and Sparkle of the Town MOOOOOCSLOOCEC OOOO mor, Struggle, momte awiten Kverytitag goin coming In aR the val was lacking & pay pvkethooks aad noding And we can Ive aa bappliy aa miliion- You murtn't tink} x one another tn thee leseone a week; don’t mind it a b et two or three more pi Jesmons with, son $10 a week When one res one's service seoms too bant teoome fanitiiar and then contemplr | ¢ when #he saw reaching for the keep the chafing dish bie days she went out One evening she to be giving im't Art, But you'ro a trump and al sho could ave wore throat and lohater fn a private dining-room and recuse to] wrinkle becween your brows, dear, and lot's have @ nice supper.” all right for you, Dele," said) dear to do ft.” “When one loves Art no service seema too hard,” sald Della, vanvassing for Duplis in my opinion, waa the| three five-dollar ! » ittle fiat—the ardent. | er the day's atudy linners and fromh, Hght breakfast jangy of ambitions en each with the other's or Joe attacking a can Tye| carving knife and a ha | about me? she said, gleefully, oh, the loveliest neraldieneral Do you think I'm geing to you bustle for wages while T phil ander In the regions of T made in the park.” a splendid house, Joe ng two of them in his window | che front door! Byxantine, I ehink And inside! anything lke it before. “My pupl! ts his daughter Clementina It] I dearly love her already. you ought to s wuess I can sel papers or lay cobb stones, and twing In « dollar or two. Della came and hung about his neck.) you are silly your studies. erlook my artiesmiess and cheese sandwiznes) sald Della, mweet ankful for Gi Tt 1s not as| Pinkney and this veal roast.” ng tov; But after a while Art flagged. She's a deli-| keep on at | semiquavers and t |1aid them beste the other kind, let It be wide and long| | was game, though, and bought It an: how. He ordered another—an ofl aketoh ; Oh. Tuess Art ts Ts was surprise for surprise at Daly's last night when Mme. Kom- ature,” and admiring Russian citizens brought out a silver wreath to crown girlish Madame’s comedy triumph. This may sound like the press agent working overtime—burr might keys, to put it's really an honest at to the main of the matter right at the top of the column. If M Kom arzhevsky (pra ma ect) has iiny more surprises up her Russian sleeve like the one she sprang last night tt In to be will shake them out before she returns to St. Petersburg. A more ~browed little lady has not broken the Broadw monotony in many a night, and !t was li t tonishing to find tnt actress of last week's serious roles Hghtr humor that set an audience rocking with Ja You didn't have to know a samovar from a soda foun- tain to know that the Russian artist | <]owas ais light In her comedy as Gene } comedjenn: n thi <8 at The playsk!, by one Ostrovsky an odd lttle thing. The oddest thing about It was that nature's wild child 1 to be heart over head tn love with a bald-headed married man who was old enough to be her grandfather. | se was so far along that when lively | young Varya kissed him vertigo, or| somet ually dizzy, sel he almost passed away. This 1s the | open season for kissing along Broa way but if the practice continues mu ionger we may see an ambulance bac up to a stage door one of these night a poor, weak actor off to th t Varya didn't n ng for appearances, even when the hocked wife of the dizzy old gentle man saw where the kisses that be- longed to her were going. She wriggled her fingers from nose—both hands, e too!—at a stupld ass who was talking ee | Russian rot; she walked on her ‘heels, dame Komisarzhevsky as Varya; chewed her beads and tumbled about tn K. -V. Bravich as Alexander Ash- the hay mounds as though life were a) metyev. plaything made for her amusement, Dressed {n a Russian costume that was as bright as her face, and with strings of beads about her neck and her | Jong braid dangling down her back, Mme. Komisarzhavsky looked bitter-sweet F aixteen to the day. She knows how to grow young over night, and she kno} | now to put the Joy of living into any language. She probably knows, too, why )) Varya threatened to turn love's young dream {nto a nightmare by embracing Old Vertigo, but on that point, ft must be confessed, we <lash to press in the dark, No matter! When she insisted upon running away with him, he told her he mwas too old. We had suspected as much, and a peek at the English synopsis of the nature-faking comedy confirmed our suspicions. And anyway {t was the | wite’s fault. As early as the first act she had asked the simple child to pay @ little attention to her visiting husband just to keep him from feeling lone- forme on the old farm. *. If the play had been dead tn earnest you can see what would have hap- pened at about the time you were trying to make up your mind whether you ‘would take the subway or a surface car. But it was a comedy (somebody gets ay and writes one in Russia oocastonally, you know), and so Varya turned gight around in the last act and married the fellow who wears the barber's coat. i That fellow’s always getting marrie: /CHARLES DARNTON. A System of Whisker Storage. By Henry Underwood, D, W. Our esteemed friend the illustrious Herr Prof. Welssnichtwas, of the University wf Goessigen, has perfected a system of whisk storage that !s pecullarly adapted “te those whose daily activities prevent their indulging in newspaper and tar paper | packing. The Herr Professor wns an enthusiastic yachtsman in his youth, and learned how to make all the ‘tricate knots that old sallors know, He advises for the average business man a combination of sheep shanks, running bowlines and olovehitehes with occasional use of the Figure 8 knot, These make for grace no leas than for compact and easy carriage. The Figure 8 knot a tho easlest to @rrange as well as the most majestic and beautiful. To prepare it take three strands of whiskage and roll them in contrary dipections so they will grip one another when they are cable laid. Now take the Whisk cable in both hands, and by & few deft movements tle !t in a knot that can be made to look like a Figure \Y 8 oF @ pretzel,"according to the taste and fancy of the wearer. Repeat, until all the whiekage ie used up. Many inquiries have been made as to the best way of riiding whiskers of the moths, For a time mothballs were tried with a fair degree of success, but since Tecent experiments in the United States Department of Agriculture these “aave been entirely superseded by this formula: “What's this?” asked Joe, taking the hand tenderly and pulling at some white strands beneath the bandages. weer OOS SCC CCS OCS COE 9-0 000-09-000-00-0-0-00-006 50 Ways for Girls to Farn a Living | This series gives complete mation as to positions open to girls, almshouses, dispensartes, settlements, probation officers is on her feet. Art talks. | the requirements, duties, pay, etc. was! Also how to get the positions. By Rheta Childe -Dorr. No. IV. tuition fee 1s $50, payable in two immigration and all manner of charitable and coryeotional institutions. work under supplemented Organization four days In the week, be- devoted to this branch the student serves four | entiee or unpald as- of some soclety ed nim and’ Workers in Social Field. HILANTHRO- in the employ the work {sh but at the end turned into a onfldent that her serve | and around alone are fully 1,000 salaried posl- triined social Organization employs over one hundred we ndation will claim, as time goes on, lendid course | ng and salaries Schoo! of Ply an endowed Salaries are girls is called t because {t is essentially o: 4s required of entering) In one year's coprse of study Is possible to |school fits stud in the 6 by 6 cr Rr Gasoctine 3 tenepoonfule i _ Anatostion 3 drama. ane AB ‘well 4n, ‘strike a match and apply—Harper's Weekly. wisiion “General, the enemy are on the run “Good, very good!” “Yea ain but thew’ra mnning this wax. «irl The Captain—See here, sis, if you runs home and swipes some ple fer me an’ me ad. Hb, | @tarvin’ troops, I'll make youse daughter of de regiment, see! | During adi the next week the Larra: be , Spilled a great lot of it, boiling hot, over en ind au early breakfaat, Joe was'imy hand and wrist. It hurt awfully, enthusiastic about some moraing-effect| Joe. And the dear girl vas so sorry! nketches Le Was doling in Central Park, and Della packed him off breakfasted, voddied, praised and kissed at 7 o'clock. Art is an engaging mistress, It was most times 7 o' in the eventing, At the end of the week Della, sweetly proud but languid, triumphantly tossed on the 8x0 (inches) 10 (feet) that centre table of me. I'm afr doesn’t practise enough, and [ ha ngs so often. And sea entirely tell her the snme t then she alway white, and that a But Gen. PI rest |mant I wish you could nim | He gomes fn sometimes when Tam with for tian at the plano—he ts . You know—and stands th < his white goatee, ‘And how 4 iquave ins? he you could see the wainscoting at drawing n, J And those Astrakhan rug portieres, And Clemen has such funny Uttle cough. I than she look: fam getiing attached to he > gentle and high bred. Gen 's brother was once Minister to pme one And then Jne, with the alr of a Monte Cristo, drew forth a a five, a two and a one—all legal tender notes—and Della's earnings r of the obelisk to ‘Sold that waterc aman from Peor mingly “Don't foke with me," sa fd Delia—"not | from Peortat® ‘All the way. T wish you could see Del Fat man with a woollen and a quill toothpick. He sketch in Tinkle's window and thought St was a windmill at first. He of the Tackawanna freteht depot—to take hack with h Music lessons! in It"? "Tm so gind you've kept on.’ sald | Delta, hearty, “You're hound to win dear. ‘Thirty-three dollars! We never, had so much to spend before, We'll have oysters to-nfeht.” “And filet mignon with champlenons, sald Joe, “Where ts the olive fork?" On the next Saturday evening Joe reached home first. He spread his $18 on the parlor table and washed what seemed to be a great deal of dark paint from his hands. Half an hour later Della arrived, her richt hand tied up tn a shapeless bundle of wrans and bandages. Tow {ts this?” asked Joe, after the usual greetings, Della laughed, tit not very foyously. Nementina,” she explained, ‘“insteted tinon A Welsh rathit after her lesson She ts auch a queer girl. Welsh ranbit: at 51n the afternoon. The General waa there. You should have seen him rma for the chafing igh, Joe, fust as tf there | wasn't a servant fn the houses, T know Clementina fen't In mood health: whe te so nervous. In serving the rabbit she HINTS FOR lease ck when he returned} he announced, | Hut Gen. Pinkney!—Joe, that old man hearly went distracted. He rushed nstaire and sent somebody—they furnace man or somebody tn ement—out to a drug store for sald the t j Some oil and things to bind it up with, ‘t hurt so much now,” ‘What's this?” asked Jos, taking the hand tenderly and pulling at some white strands beneath the bandages, “It's something soft," said Della, “that had oll on It. Oh, Joe, did you sell another sketch?” she had seen the onoy on the ta ‘Nd 1?" said Joe. “Just ask the man Peorla, He got his wepot to-day, he Isn't sure, but he thinks he nts another parkscar and a view on the Hudson, What time this afternoog did you burn your hand, Dele?” “Five o'clock, I think," sald Della, plaintively. "The Iron—f mean the rab- bit came off the fire about that time. You ought to have seen Gen, Pinkney, n?—— swn here a moment, Dele," said He drew her to the couch, sat be- her and put ils arm across her “What have you deen doing for the last two weeks, Dele?” he asked. She braved !t for m moment or two with an eve full of love and stubbora- ness. and murmured a phrase or two amiely of Gen. Pinkney: but at length down went her head and out came the eettivaraktents mat t get any pupils,” she con fessed. And I couldn't bear to have you gt up your lessons; and I got @ place froning shirts In that big Twenty- [fourth street laundry. And T think I did very well to make up both Gen, Pinkney and Clementina, don't you, Joe? And when a girl In the laundry. set down a hot tron on my hand this after. noon T was all the way home making that story about the Welsh rabbtt. You're not angry. are you, Joe? And it | hadn't got the work you mightn't have sold yout sketches to that man from Peorta."” | "He wasn't from Peoria,” said Joe, | slowly. | “Well. it doesn't matter where he was from. How clever you are, Joe—and— Klee me, Joe—and what made you ever suspect that T wasn't giving muste les- sons to Clementina?” “TY didn't” sald: Joe, “until to-night. And T wouldn't ba then, only T sent up this cotton weste and oll from the engine-room this afternoon for 1 girl upstairs who had her hand burned with f smoothing-iran. T've heen firing the engine in that laundry for the last two | weeks.” | "And then you dtan't*— |My purchaser from Peoria." sald Joe. “and Gen. Pinkney are hotn crei- tions of the same art—but vou wouldn't call {t elther painting or music.” And then they both laurhed, and Joe | deean: “When one loves one’s Art no service seems’ — But Della stopped him with he- hand on his ips. ' ene sald—"Just ‘When one loves.’ | | PERBEROAEEESSAESS BESSEAOESEOEES ESE OA4644446 04096066 THE HOME Furniture Polish. Fine parts of turpentine, boiled Mnseed ofl and common house- hold vinegar make an inexpensive and excellent furniture polish. The vin- ear and ofl combine to make an emulsion which eradicates smoke and dirt Care of Silk Petticoat. © hang up a silk petticoat, tapes on the Inside, at top edge of} flounce, then hang bottom side! up. ‘This keeps the flounce from “fla tenting.” PASAEAERERAAASA DS EALEAEESEELESEESE May Manton’s Child’s Bishep Dress—Pattern over embrold: und 21-4 yards of edz Pattern N. 's sizes fol tween" Call or send by mail to TON York. S| IMPOK! nd ten cents in size wanted. Banana Croquettes. FTER removing the skins and the coarse fibres of the banana, cut in halves, roll in egw and sifted bread crumbs, and fry for a minute and « half in hot fat. Drain on soft paper before serving. Keep Frult In Cake Jar, UT an orange or lemen in the- with yeur newty made cakes or cookies ang you wil it will give them deflcate end Uctous r, Dried opange peel will do the same. ss ii Ie Daily Fashions. of long or short sleeves and ts Just as attractive and dainty as well can be, In s}lustration sian lawn Is com- bined with em broidery, but in the back view the shown with the sleeves of plain material Iso It can made with » em stitched No. 5903 2-§ yard of a nohes wide rv girls of 1, %, 4and 6 years of age. aed a TE VSNING WORLD MAY MAN- SHION BUREAU, No. 4 West Twenty-third street, New oin or stamps for eac —Write your name and address plainly, and al pattern ordered.