The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1908, Page 15

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Auto Story With Speed To It rFBtTT GROG OOOO OLE o if Automobiles Could Only Speak, What Wonderful Revelations They Would Make?---Here Is One That Frankly Teiis Its Own from one point to an- The flame united, in . with the vapor in my in & burst of rap- exploded! By John Colin Dane (Copyright LWT by G. W. I laugied in my wild happiness, and | sake » prevented I should | CHAPTER I. | | tj -vou and I} I start in Life eninisaldktnaudearl| HAMPION thou s be; t rejoiced at the! C3/ and re om I name | the emmnly pronounced He wo: en's overalls, and his the n t vol nomy world | Bleeve ed up over arms where th nder the two others; De worth Jer satin, or, ae I great Uny Waves astir be- born the satin surface of so hem at seas was tall, with broad € new sand a noble throat which rose et e the collar of blue cotton, brown ice | Whe ek dark head was set upon t white below. His face was brow: s features, an, : ae reno mus- Cre ee : and chin, hag talk & 1 n we 1 i few secon ed it n exe Isn't a Mystery!" wre, to By RHETA CHILDE DORR. Karn a Living DAH ewer ee GOCOOUROOD! OO} This series gives complete anjfor-ycopie, many t in water colors by mation as te positions open to girls, ; © 7h < ne work, and are sold over the country he requirements, d the requirements, d Gareniieul toe chants also how to yet the pos ume lustrat ee it ¢ he import NO. X. evod perfe as a pattern. The illustrator must mak Cos ume Design I]lustra-)| tie dress with her pen and her colors H and put it on a styitsh figure, wit tion dressed hair and an alr bl ance. This helps the dress- sell the gown to her cus- | other work be- ator ; eatly | The me within |sides. She paints model gowna, hats. few years, |&c. and crinoline models of model atiing them on attractive fig: n the owns, p hat is, seu sv ash are not befng hibites nds work making 1 v for rs’ and milliner! girl if journals, Sometimes these are di a re janted in black and white, India nae of color nna, or Water color, but u ily they are Neate for de- jored. Many high-class catalogues sent sien and arrange- | out by tavern houses display hand- the | made illustrations, ent and (hase wa) ay Ae Mee phe pay is considered very good. it | Ame) and) ‘money, pags On) ets good (art||(1s) alll) piece) work (and) the) amount ee! Aone eee Who cannot afford j earned depends on the ability on chal aC t ut 4 n art school, j industry of the individual, The girl | so ae ean iploymient which) | Cannot draw the) Agures but whojcan cOls) rere eit ducer int: ana/iremunerative, ||or tiem) is pata) from) one to) feur/cents8)) One of the best of these 1s costume | plate, and she can color as many seis design {Mustration hundred In a day, ‘Three dollars a day Most faxhtons originate In Paria, Theis often earned in buay seasons. i | largest departme stores and the | more 8k artist who cal Ae wealthiest dressmakers and milliners |and pa « able to make iron @ tend agents and buyers to Europe once | $2 a week making fashfon plates, Any | or twice a vear to buy m gowns s doing catalogue an hats, coats, &c., and these copled work. tia re and moditied or rearranged by clever Trade School » fo Sorkwomen in American establish- Twenty-third street; ments. 3 High School, N Besides the gowns and hats Pret n| thousands of sk 8 are sold to the and De Katy American trade by the fashion kin: pectal pana od of Europe, These sketehes, called} ned Institu- “eroquis" (pronounced kroke n sht class for workers. Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. by Helen xowland. HEN perfect frankness comes in at the door love Mies out of the window. avery man knows he {s not th ce, fascinating creature his sweetheart pretends to think him; but he would rather be ied to to his dying day than to be told the manners inte nd less 1 ten years Ofer ain after his je of the str marriage, a prize fight, atrimony; but fe tas to halla ‘se people can't thet rriage would be more like a pai ‘A man forgets all about how to make | 6 wonderful how quickly he can get Into p Might as well hail a Broa sway car on the wrong si carry Of cou but if they could, 1 ve dies mar on th) wrong side of his vanity Don't fi yourself because he calls every Sunday evening that it is a sign that he's getting serious. It may only be a sign that everything else is closed, No doubt when a man puts his cheek against a girl's he always imagines tha* it feels as smooth as hers does. +2-—_____—_— The Chilled Banana on Wheels. ANANAS are no’ cooled in the cars. The alr ts injected into the cars B and allowed to . | the interstices of the cargo until {t is all thoroughly | chilled, “The cars are then partially closed and radiation prevented as ba as possible, and under these conditions the cargo is carried on to the Ll distributing point, where a new supply of cold air is injected and suitable reduced. sh te oaibie ; ——— eyebrows 48 he broke in “Of course hear of him often, as motor-car world I nobody tn birth, and aw fully nouveau but it isn’t Hke you to care for and yet’— My master laughed — A amu though un too n forbid T 8 aid care for t But Barr- nons ‘s my never mind. How could you know And it's better that vou shouldn't know.” “If you mean something horrid, per- haps it Js bettem » I'm In his house. and drinking things —such good things, too suppose it isn't that-—that pu'T@ angry about Edith m ng him, for you | wouldn't look at her in spite of papa | wanting it so much. d, anyway. © tor } ett eereeaersd is den.” aw you. I'v came to find me in t fsn't I} ae a mystery. 1 I staying wi m and his dark poor girl, she took him qu eNovaoit her marr! aster laughed oca'n But that's In her favor. is noth! 1 to me though y , in your da Imons in the have talked to him about him Jealous. wise » know of your existence.” “What Do You Mean?” field, she may and madi The Evening World Daily Magazine, He the Idea bungled reason to jevement of zen man have at least have @ and with the race for Inventors.’ “T know. i've Simons talking at it win with a car he's his ur works | “He won't jit with a car I've motor works. jinvited to compete without the mechanism until the race !4 over said Shetla. don't, but I hope to. because I'm going to w! been making in my explaining (quite a new thing in the way of moto racing, and very sporting of Vande: voorst." Barr-Simons, “Gilbert Barr-Simons knows him," He expects & been having made n Love, keen A Heart-Climbing |; Love Romance | Romance and Adventure Woven Around a Cup Race---A Speeding Machine That Carries High Hopes and Fluttering Hearts, With the Blind Little Yours Ww , have you — . RBie tice, Ge cue 1 CIttse God in Control. want to sell my tnventlon. which, un fess I'm much mistaken, ts the very | thing Barr-Simons {s trying to work | but. Hf T did. otnors would roap the |t Wn. T shall patent my tnvention, It's) hatmted by that alr, Tt was catle® reward, and I should be forgotten; av, |® Tk to delay “La Belle ‘Toinette, when my idea had taken clear form in| ™Y OWN reasons for thinking It's a = my brain, 1 put every penny 1 had into | Worse tisk the other way, CHAPTER II, the experiment determining to make a| “Is Gilbert Barr-Stmons a man Ike WRG ne tia OP svecimen car, with as little help as pos-|ttat?-—Edith's husband!" Sain Clete, sible, and run it in this race, If the| “Gilbert Barr-Simons ts @ man ex- | RNAUD'S coming put an end te ; ycup had been offered to ft my plans it|a@ctly Uke that; and perhaps all the | any confidence betweon my maw. } ouldn't have sulted them botter, for|more because he {a Wdith's husband nena Shella, or i¢ there any man who has invented @ nivelty ts/ You see, he knows that the Pater was any more they must have been 1 when Haugh saw bade her go: sister te d-by. W evenings later, on her marry!ng me, in the old lays when #he used to visit us. He'd or | sot a allly. Jealous notion, I fancy, that r| he Iked me"— eoaty elieedimeis ve chosen ang “Pooh. I don’t belfeve tt. Anyhow, nas a ne f eanenen 4 | schoolgir! fancy for a boy of her own | wh 5 (dinner) s"<ro'e jae. But she Is of our aot, our {row 1 4 i aa ur set, our class; |row night—any night but this { | and he—well, he nons lien altel Ran?asliedlmeltolbe withriecs I'm not muoh | "d me to be with her? | “Do you think he's half Spanish? id to have missed 1 in the way of knowing American or} very dark." I would gi x 9 “Oh, wouldn't he? He would probab: |other mflionaires at present; but I'm| “In some of his dealings ns w: ebulde Heer Ff phase owe tha teat ‘ding my time, and I don’t think | complexion. Poor Raith! But. he cht. Serve him right for eased to have h ve to wait long before Vander | a few millions, and ‘i r ne AE PAG i oe aged j » and I dare sa hess if the car ques wrong! What | voorst and all the big fellows who're| good to her. ite : a j mind about motoring will taike aw much 7p 6 Arnaud's Rage. ve | ntereat in tne ns T do in them, I've] The Frenchman. | Suddenly he nto gird at me Destiaore Re sherelln Snare yeu Wney | “Can vou trust your Frenchman’ | he aimed — furiously, | a th only iin ‘aL n to nse) Ey icrehallavenimoariMMranaiye If he | tld J be sacrificed for you ‘ } uidn’'t have had him if 1 could) were a traitor—but I won't even think | It !s a madness that monsteur will ave done without any one, but there! o¢ it, That way madness lies. And so | have you watched and chaperoned ag’ ore things I couldn't manage lrarkaahiionnien have @abatitied in. 88 if you were a beautiful young lady | eanded. 1 took this workstios Tal ae Sats aalney man was wanting to kidnap. Hl been conting me a pot of money. Jean Arnaud was crossing the big is not thinking of you 1 lot more than you'd *|outer room, coming back to his master « in and steal your to look at it, and I and my man, Ar-|and me, af nishing lunch, © go away for an ynud—a clever man I brought over from| Now, as Arnaud came toward i |the Fernand-Panton works tn ‘France. | the half-c door, she! wasll whistling |upls pereater ay where I learned more than anywhere | jittie French chanson, pretty enough, KRown—a joy that will never come to |elne—have had access to the casting-| tut meant for a woman's voice. I ane Poy peey rea rune pee 7 ops A forges, and a h e didn’ c] alight Tol 3 ‘ n= ings é PHONE sas Ge ‘zes, and all that a didn’t think much about it then, for comparable md I have been ful he | | ny have you been so secretive I was deadly tired of It, and it stopyed 4 i s . pu"? iter foo i 5 © ° ‘ ° asked Sheila, ddenty outside the ¢ | There ¢ a light, distinctly aua- wants | The Brave and Beautiful American Girl, | “because, my child, others are on the patie fie Ncages nd ry STB ny ert ae ve wy ' , . > 5 ene 2 i 4 z : od 0a Oo be (To Be Continued.) bd doubt T've inherited Who Saves Hero and Car From Des ruction. ORC Ra LOWa Cun e Ine BkCU CpaCLsCo Crag — 3 ave got wha: | | I've made, though no one else has yet i @ =| reached the end Barr-Simons ta the } SOOOM0COCOOO! [o°0101010,0,0,0,0,0,0,0[0\0,0.0,0.0,0,0,0] mT arest to It, I thin but he's coin to e 9 even to make him and lito be a m More than a vear of | a standstill now, for the want of one B tt V t d . Seat pee Aon ae apr taneeattes itn GU ay cena etty Vincent s Advice + | such a dig seeret that I ve in constant penny IT have tn the world are tn that head a year ago fear of having it found out and being piece of m bies# it Cham-]| Motor people a tly saints; ar Cc S : a Or cumphemy tumpn| plon TAMe raza cice erase leas crea destin tol na aeal betoceat on Courtship ana Marriage worked so -you can't Champion doesn't turn out a champlon ‘as ready to patent It" 000000000000 w hardato earn” after ll why. 'm a ruined as well as] “But why don eee) = ore making mv heart beat!"/p disappointed man.” Unccauseebirc ‘Shoal 7 le sent my eister a letter, sut I 7 sir, “Go on-tel! m ould He A Fecelved Pere acer ice fe gir, “Go on-telll Mei THe lower of Autos fond of the Pater’ Office lately.” : sk for Her Pin? | ony x postal with initials, “tt he y Inked) averyth me : Dear Betty: should write another letter to us would ad secret th “Phere on wails” said he, “are! ‘I remeber how you invented the | Treachery | HAVE a great many boy friends, put|!t be all right for just me to answer ween) it (ant |the nlans that have ke .@ busy, heart dearest litle motor-car for my dil, be there fa one whom I especially oare|!t #0 tha. he will give me more been open ao long) and soul and mind. for last twel tors were heard of in London,” | ‘Oh, Hugh, you don't mean” for. I would Ike him to wear my | thought, as I am very anztous to keep 8 for purpo jonths, Here before you ds the plans’ |laughe? Sheila, ‘I'm afraid I do. He wouldn't ston! \vcjety pin. Is {t proper for me to ask |COmmany with him when he returns? of my own T hope | completion 1 to me “Weil, Champion's the development of {at anythine, On the day of the race | sim if ne will wear ft, or should 1 wait A. B. and believe. 18 going to win fame | ow a king = ma that—the tine flower of that seed. She| when it's too late for him or y one }until he asks me for !t? If your sister does not care for the and fortu: of both recon- | dearest. Is it o bea —no, he -for Champion's not hes| else to cheat me out of the ten thou pracy, | Young man it will be proper for you to cile the to everything Ive} “] should rather think it was going 'nt masculine—is something absolutely | sand pounds I hope Champion's going] ‘There ts no harm In asking the boy |#2*Wer the letter alone However, ig —— = f he would like to wear your pin, for pacer ayaa I would not attempe”, even if he likes you he might not ask | {2 {fin be affections, as he scems tex Can You Beat That, Sadie? By R. W. Taylor |? se atin em Sts Too Young to Elope. C@) y 5 A MW, {rules of the society to give the pin| Tog t an u pea at, sadier xnxx pales Young to Elope. ‘4 ; Dear Netty: \ She Wants to Win Him, ‘AM eighteen and desperately in loves! Con! van ve LooKs Lovely WEATHER || | oo: petty: |] with @ young man two years \PooR FeeT! (KE GOOD F ! senior, He has told me of his love: e Ne FARMING RE ASS WALKING | AM twenty-one, and recently met & yoth of our parents object to oUr mate he Love To young m : me in every | 5) " f ‘ Ue TRAVEL! way. He has been ill for a month |Uake MyInE we are Wo young. Would —— = it the hospital. I wrote a letter of | YOU Sdvise us to elope? ( | ich his st BEWILDERED. | FORSCOTH sympathy, whic is sister answered, | ; f eee was unconscious. My aister and | Don't elope with the young man, You) THEY DO | got on very friendly terms with ber, | #re too young to know what true lo: | Well, cur new srow turned out a quince— The audience mobbed the poor old princ He ducked and we ain't seen him since! Can you beat that, Sadie? ODS BODIKINS, NOBLE FELLOW! WHAT EATEST THOU THIS DAY ? 00H! WA WHE AT CAKES 5¢ We dian’t bring back all the bunch; Our !teading heavy lind a tunch— And he as a job in a dairy lunch! f 10. heag that, Sadie® el WHAT A FANCY \TER! ee T LIKE MY] })# 1) in We closed last week at Rocky Glen; Most of us walked te Punktown, Penn, Where the nearest pawn shop was, and then I hocked my fur coat, Sadie! OOH! LOOK OTR WHO 15 YER a ) piPPIN! ) -— — But Vir glad I'm out of Rocky Gien And back on eld Broatway again— That tanes just packed with handsome men! Sayi Can you beat that, Sadie? le stance, consequent this | yet apveared. ¢ | is, and tf you marry in haste you willl Don't seriously cone! until you are twentye! he ure, also 0 so we Bent ours. A eived postals from him id she sent e family, be sure to repent ask- | sider matrim 1 oe twent ERYTHING that gives the short waist line and the Empire iggestion 1s greatly n vogue just now, and is one of that has It in- blouse ent ga ludes a ver lace, as in this in or from sik or trasting ma. idered or agutuche, from r licta’ The ling of $ { the bio pred a ‘ N SHIO ‘ si reet, New Ovtate ork n ordered Patterns IMPORTANT and al- a

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