The evening world. Newspaper, April 14, 1908, Page 15

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, April 14, 1908 (0 ye)pe agg 34° 54 99 2194 ETHIE RRR ERTS HAE HHT II AW HRY ETS HPP HP TBST IH PTE HH OE ae EYES pers HHH HI ICH OOO OHIO MOA HI j mr s. Merry,the Widow * She’s a Joy-Scatterer, All Right : By Eerd. G. Long see RHE 20 30 3 SRUDEIOETE He ae Be ae HERE ag ae tela ate REE WE? AW, WOTS id (MY LIFE1S) E (A BLOT! ) 63 aE RC RRC TEE 2e DEORE ED HE Be ae see ae OTE ae ae Og TH 2c HERE ae UMEDA aE 9 pen 3 3 ak Be Uae BE HEIGL 3 a BRE YH 2 38 3 SRR 9 MEI RTT OE 3TH 3 SHH ELI 1 3S HEL TTT ORTH HO 8 WOH Ba (ON ne! fe Vou sh TOF 5 meray | Tine! THIS HT TER ais ae |(GUESS Yes|-—— |)9 HERE, NOON? sess] GED I (hen | nee | eile (hy) Quick! 6. oF | Oy -----!}- RIGHT, COVER TH THE SLAB. exoosoes! ‘O000000000000 0000000 00DG SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS u Cameron, disinherited son of a Scotch fobleman. invents and bullds a of Motor car to compete in the «1 ‘ander- woorst, Race In France, He names the far Champion ithe car ie supposed to. te 08 pec ide! cae Frenen machin! Hugh's ‘former rival 1p Tove bullt_a ar for the rac seeks jon's secret “mechaniam Pande Loarding-house bees Champion ag ing It T aM without ree ognlt (Copyright 1907 vy OW. Dillingnam Com. | pany.) | And not lone after Mr. Cam: CHAPTER XI. Love ard the Car. <@). Murray his name, vaid bushels of people since and Camerons and Campbe! nd all sorts of names in Scotland, T t pretend to sort them out in my mind, and ticket the right | owners, But as for the wheels of his car, I don't know that they were dif- ferent from any others. 1 only his car was no more like ¢! know | than al race-horse {s like a hippopotamus.” | aa-| ‘No, his car w Wke this,” Mitted Lia, “but the wheels are just the game. They had ordinary tires, you know. It makes me quite homesick to Gee this automobile. Mr. Murray laushed. “Tf it makes you homesick, we'd better go back to the house," sala ke “No, I want to talk to vou here about this car.” she objected. “But we "t keep the Miss Brentons. You went on to the sisters, ‘‘T rsuade my father to buy this automobdile!"* ‘We Won't Buy It!” “T don't think we'll buy t# on any terms.” Mr. Murray put tn. stolidly “T'd have heen willing to hire the auto- mobile for you, if It had pleased me when I came to see It, but’ “Well, we'll just talk it over, anyway, Pad; and maybe the Miss Brentons will let us stay here, where we can look at the car," cut im Tia in her pretty, @oaxing votce. “Anybody'd think you'd spent half your life in an automobile to hear you talk, Lia," sald Mr. Murray cet that day going to Paris you haven't set foot in one half a dozen times since." “Oh, but that day was the day of my Mfe,”” she cried. “I shall never forget —or Mr. Cameron,” “I don't recall hearing you mention | hia name since the day we learned that he was out of danger from his injuries,” said her father. ‘Wall, we left France and went to Italy that very day. There were lots of other people and things to talk ebout,”” she answered, a little confused “I remember being a bit worked up| because you wouldn't stir till you heard | he was all right,” went on the old gen- | tleman. “But afterward, when you @eamed to forget him, why, my mind the one who gave the ot mobile race where poor Mr. |into his father's title, but Mr. was relieved, and I tergot him, too. Not de wasn't e very aice goung man.” v ERaiABIGn By John Colin Dane. “He was,” icnow, said Lia softly. he's a great swell now." the Millionaire s Marriage, “No, I don't,” lied blankly; “I don't k im except that in the hospita! for a good many wes and probably went ho y paper in London and Paris. Cameron came to xrtef. It was {t? Well, per- haps TI saw the account of the te but didn’t associate the bride's n with any one we knew: pen? ne While we were tn It on an, but this i Cann pu e, kind man, for he was ars because h, As If Vocation! You was a lord, did Long ago. the sa He was a cler e I don't t been a very wn without a t know his father Lord Dunayrtoun. “Not I. Wh kind of a lon?’ “A vise nt, That's why M Cam eron w the Hon. Hugh Cam n. B now he's Lord Dunayrtoun, and there are often things about him in the Papers. He hadn't so very much money 1s seemed, even though he did come Vander. vcorst and he went In together for mak ing the same kind of automobile that Mr. Camero) invented and ran in the race. “There were neople who tried to steal the secret, but they didn’t get It, and Mr, Vandervoorst was now fully Interested in the oar that was broken They've got works now where their artomobiles are made, end already they've delivered a few to customers though {t's only a year since they be- gan, and they're making a great suc- cess, They’re hurrying up with one of 120-horse-po ver, or something gigantic like that; bizwer even than the dear old car that diel.” Ot course, it ended as I thnught it would, in Mr. Murray's buying me. One hot, dusty day, as they wer driving me along an English highway out from the cloud of white dust far ahead, down the straight, level road, 1 saw emerge—mysell! Yes, it was true, and no waking dream. Myseif as I ce had been, was coming to meet—m f, as I was now- coming faster, faster, and near, Soon we should have passed one another as ghips pass in tne dark, and all would be over. Perfect Ease. HE—He ts a person of perfect eae S and self-possession, and is thor oughly at home anywhere. He—Yes, he even has the faculty of inaking you feel a total stranger in your own house —TWt-Bits. ae The greatest ghost story ever written, ‘The House and the Brain,” by E. Bulwer Lytton, will begin In Thureday's Even- ing World. he got well after lying | to work because other ¢ 1p for the auto-| was a| ma i Dear Mrs. Dorr: VU you think 4t is wrong f whose parents can supp i-}-0-0-0-0-00-0-06 The Right to Work. se 90-0 0C0 OP LP9000-0000090 0000000000000 0000000004 hroph, Charities Building, No. | they teach painting In any high school? East Twenty-second street, L. B. F By all means go to high school. Your An AES Career. letter indicates that you need further 9202-0000 0000000 0000000000006 ton Irving High School with a portfoilo of sketches. them over and found her qualified for idvanced classes in draw.ng and design, olP, The art teacher looked immediat RAH! aH MERRY Anti-Kink, &o. SHES Gris i, Cie Ni @ Health and Beauty. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. water, 1 14 ofl of rose, 8 drops; alcohol, 1-1 Melt the paraffine wax, add the Ianoline, 1 ounce; ounce; ounces; dra D. R.—Below ts a pomate which, when applied to excesstve'y rolatum and lanoline. Stir constant. training in spelling and English. They | ‘"d placed her there : i f her ‘mothe Es curly har, makes {t easier to beating the water in during the er ‘ays liked to draw, and have | do not teach painting in the high achoo's| |* delight of her mother, who accom : vit a 2 nated then Hil P| I believe. I shall be| out the Washington Irving High Schoo! | vanted her. erreree Beef suet, ae yell w recta 4 the oll and alcohol wher . on G 5 co a daeni When you are graduated in June take| W&X, ounce, castor ofl, ounce; ben- | neirly cold. ave no! ppy. I don't ca graduated from grammar school in| has a class in costume design Ilustra y nes to the Manhat-| #0t0 acid, 6 grams; ot] of lemon, 1-2 and shall want to find some kind| tion. yment as soon as poss.dle. Still] A young girl who read the series ko to high school {f I thought| “Fifty Ways for a Girl to Barn a Liv d gain anything by so doing. [| ing heard for the first time of this go a year or two anyway. Do occupation, She went to the Washiny rate the rat nky soctety of a smal {ke to read and wou My father nate than I, need the posi third street, he summer classes Brooklyn Nurses. and ask for admission to| | ran; of of cassia, 8 drops | beat, ailow to properly cool and the other otis. any other pomade. wax over a slow and acid and then add Apply to the hair as Mix the suet and —y - Spat tte Viet ou are indeed very young to Going Bald at Twenty-five. ( begin to suffer already the biiwhts and ravages of age. Youu say you have used several tonics al- ready, Perhaps you have not given any ou have a pi to earn y« es Dear Mra, Dorr There 18 no tone which will prevent f t to € 6 ' & ; ares one preparation a fair trial. Scalp m 4 30 Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. | AM twenty and deatre to Dooome &/an inroad of gray haire, unfortunately. | sage iw more teroeact thee ote to do so, if vou are well and stronz to a) fe a Scalp massage will sometimes do !t, by | wunic, howev and s ; ee ' iar onto, jer, and I would advise es claim you at ee, i? By ‘silty Rowland Pee pair cae id you let me know | invigorating the otroulation, but when | taking a few treatments from an owe know at r SE lover, Mke a good cook, ts one who knows when the fire Js out i. Spee A the gray hairs have got a good start | pert. etther by jt be able to A man is like a cat, chase him and he'll run; sit still and ignore | Go to K Ea ela cannes even this ts of no avail. Expert mas- These esatnenteraan Suelieros cares Ay op him and he'll come pu at your feet. son Oe ey capital. | wage will reduce the face and neck t App 4 - eeteant pia vanits ce tt r k. | at the barber sh gee New York Public Li It takes an awfully big man to own up to hia wite that he was @|Raymona street and De Kalb avenue, (thning des ay eas Wave bad classes at the Muhlenbe little at fault in a quarrel for Information. and possibly a chance Hands Are Cracked. DRE nie aaa rary Gay a No. 20 West Twenty-t When a man gets a wife who makes him happy, he lays tt to his per-|to take the traning IT am afraid you F. X.—It you posstbly can, wear| yomiea, 71-2 grame; tincture of red clea I should think p! ai when he doesn’t, he lays {t on fate. will flnd your educational qualificat!ons wloves. If the skin of your hands|chiona, 39 drama; tincture of cantharidea, aiid also interest yc 1p 4 gis] who would be really popular should do Js to wave a rea|itcking. Most hospitals require « high 1) ig musually tender, crenma and|2 gram, cologne, 12) deamos ewcetl an) | of }qanger flag at a man and then start to run in the opposite direction. school educat | lotions will only relleve them tempora-/ almond ofl, 60 grams, When did it} at ~ | rily. 2 THIS 1S THE CHEAPEST PRICE 1 CAN GIVE IT Jo You FOR! SEE BABY, PAPA GOING IN AND BUY MAnA ONE OF THOSF P\TTY WATER BOTTLES! Too MUCH! YOUR BABY 'S A BIG EXPENSE To You 5 DOLLARS PLEASE GH) DON'T: CARE! SEE, HE'S SORRY ! 1 DON'T THINKS VLL BUY ANY CUT GLASS FOR THE OH, THAT'S DOOOCDOOOT | | eloves that can be pulled on and off without trouble, and have one pair al- ways clean and ready to put on D. bathing them In w: [in the ntornine before puttine on your! loves rub tn the ¢ latum, 8 1-2 ounc Get two patrs of loose chamois| Apply to the roots of the hatr with af soft sponge once or twice a day. This lotion !s espectally good for very dry} ow! hate, in a formula for a lotion which will ‘ hea! the chapped places. Rub thts Mosquito Bites. cream into the hands at nicht after water, and again scars: Lanoline, 2 drams, ointe ment of binlodide of mercurty i dram. M S.Try this formula to remove . am: White 1 paraffine HE shirt waist IP that 1s 6 treated as to conceal the arm- hole seams 1s one of the novelties of the season and a trates produced by a alm= ple trimming ang h 1s eminently ve and novel. le {t Involves no trouble and no ine tricactes, There Is a wide box plait at the front a the Ing {9 made tne visibly beneath tf, and there are trim- bands arrang- sm or 2% Inches Pattern No. 5,084 zos for @ 82, 34, 86, 94, 40 and Blouse or Shirt Walst—Pattern No, 5,924, “ * ensure, euneeee ee Ned Gall on send by mail to THE EVBNING WORLD MAY MAN ast Twenty-third str Now a TON FABHION BURPAU, No. 182 y Nes ek York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered bed IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainiy, and a! ways npectty size wanted !

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