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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday” May 5, 1908. DBBDHEDHDB® POBPDH BHDPDH HHDE BHO PLGEDL PE DEHHDHHHOHEST DD GEQED + KHL GVH LOBHHOWHOBLE PBEBHDDHEGDBE DE PHEDHHKRESSBHHSE BBB omance of Love-Making 3 8» Thornton Hall § Garlbald! saw through a spyglass the girl who was to become his wife. He was on the deck of a ship at the time, and she was in a Lord Lytton (Bulwer) was annoyed when told by his hostess to look across the room at a girl. But having once looked he kept on looking, and finally married her. Their union was unhappy. ‘ village on the Brazilian shore. : z Gen. Bernadotte, Napoleon's dashing officer, rode Into Paris, From a window a silk mereer's pretty daughter smiled down on him: He ut Sir Walter Scott, at nineteen, offered his umbrella to a girl during a shower. She returned the umbrella, but kept his heart. The sad When he had gone by them Isabel said: ‘ side of it was she did not give him hers in return- George Washington, riding one day with despatches, stopped for lunch at the house of a friend. There he met and promptl y ‘ell In love with his future wife, the lovely Widow Custis promptly fell married her and made her Queen of Sweden. “Arabian Nights” Burton passed Isabel Arundel and her sister on the street In Boulogne. “That man will marry me some day-” He did. m5 the hand of a young actres a friend of his sisters which introduced 4, and atter tenderly kissing {t, Nathaniel Hawthorne to Sophia Pea- | { Plows. He was so vigorous, so alive, of room for you at the table and 1 . SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTER. ,0n coming off the stage for her negtect © full of energy, so unused to sufter-)am gure you will enjoy yourself.” Mr. In the fi rae ators y for, as j whioh I was afterward sorry for, romantic 4 peal dS) Ge eteeane oe e placed fis of her husband. I} body, of whom he later wrote. “Sophia | | nx How would he bear with her?” Chamberlain was unable to resist such aduite saw ‘a tale ty howl sears later the child, now grown to| pe Want both,” she sald, almost with her ts a flower to be worn in no man's But his importunity at last won ner|@ tempting prospect; he was ass.gned “gpyaqiaas: now “Arabian Sieits 1 Tee ure Haat worlaniood, mbecamenaMrs! | last breath, “to promise me solemnly bosom, but lent from heaven to show {unsent. and the two lovers (for such|@ seat next to that of the charming En Move | at lfirat “sicht: hw ERIDDIS lis recraras oe talib eeeay wRapang Tore that you will become man and wife the possibilities of the human sou! icy already were) mot at lost in the! daughter of Judge Endicott te Gelehtveyee Tato Onesof wit, ac." “llaciding to be done, ee would mercily, § after I am gone.” ‘The promise was Sophia was, at the time, an invadd Gatkenedsroom, /Roberu Browningh the) nieucaih panwanwaiieceaanny pean sccnite seaeeeeea i ‘ ” given; and the union that followed was and it was with difficulty that she was | Vigorous, the active, the travelled. the @o clever and fascinating Bi Ta th to do It. | i t that wh he left me BT ore Neary a s ideally Dy i ch Induced by her sister, Elizabeth, to | pelted voung man of London society, | Uo) MT) ee ON) We) pic? \ copyrighted 1908 by the Pr Pubiish-| Weber's first touch of the hand, the) jas ice ae happy as that which had | 5 y ni heraeee ‘ | sat down and poured out hia soul to| D8 heart was no longer his own * “3 york recedes * of low! ie drawing-room to see oA a Bol 0 | “ - ing Company, N. Y. World.) possession of which was to make him \ | Tees Gin Wieck's brilliant playing theneut hae aaeie nee | the lonely Httle woman in the sick! Cupid was in an equally romantic e hap; of me vhe: vn- | Ae L i prelane sD) . Toom, and told her that he had | me “be: i - % |) Si beeen ba ide on the pianoforte which made the first | ‘My sister Sophia," said Miss Fliza- Neds Calas Gace ge aE CAeey aig GH coh cathe abeauiitaies CHAPTER II. Chi, Mi Aiiey 13) ene eae ) inroad on Schumann's heart and led to| beth, who, describing the scene after- aR MUNG ERIN Tale Racine eee eee Cairo Conca ben Re 7 . Pi sulpeunoces mecschesnenvOUstyCUnBa cent thelr singularly happy unlon, in which | wards, remarked that as Hawthorne eis ne, at a Cowes ball. Waltzing Zhe xomance of Lovers’) poser hetore the ¢ of the Frank- = || 5 | i | made him giddy, and he detested danc- bone | one of their chiof pleasures was to play | rose to acknowledge the Introduction he | How different and how idyllic was the | ing of all kind t Meeungs. furt Theatre to receive the applause |one-hand duets, the disengaged arms| tooked at Sophia intently. “He did not | | fitwt: meeting Cot Tennyeod’ with Mine | gieidclilac hep cane cana o titi ed Meals i won by one of his operas. finding employment in mutual embraces. | guess how intently. As we went on Jitmiy sett i Tey e Moller ah, fo CHIN Ech bt) Bhe ts com ny own, my sweet; | | Emily Sellwood, who was so long to] was living with her mother and eldest ee ace omy aweeti | Str Willlam Scott first set eves on It was also the plano keys which | talking she would frequently inte:pose | he the sweet companion and guardian | sister at Rosett me) Sysheattew area j bis future wife in the unromantic en- Opsneda cory eral econ portale meta lovel| awremes ioe hotel Sama mec temvoIeal| [Ear aan aes Ge Gea odie ce Lites ttage, a small house Wareilt ct : the Old Batley when he| Reprovine One day when, as a boy, he was pass-| Every time she did so he would look at |bridge student. was spending hin vaca-! with a ty nee beng for the summer, her son on a serious; His . ing the house of a wealthy merchant, | her again with the same plercing, in- f |{lonimatientaithomeNsebierany anactsey | atic rece fee facing the see, Onaclbiecis ‘ A gracios note of thanks to) Fyruge_ his steps were arrested by the notes of |drawing gaze. 1 was struck with it| y ARS SEIN | wtienlone (day the|sellwoodsidroveloverl savaica-igvdiua, cose oe Ooo N cout, Cui § supple mented by a win: wine a plano played with remarkable skill. | and thought, ‘What if he should fall in howves “ from Horncastle to call on the Ten-| ythe » oY eye meviereinity act! 1 played such | havoc’ with Day after day he repaired to the house! love with her?’ And the thought trou- nyso: Ou ot wan whys aac / 4A actor, who had been seriously il, was |nyaons. The young poet was rambl dent—so runs the account—and went bled me, for she had often told me that | had prac: y spent her life in a sick /{n solitary musing. In the Fairy Wood nothing would ever tempt her to marry | room in Wimpole street, dreaded meet-| to which end infitct on @ husband the care of an ing the young poet whom she already | Hallam as escort. also. chanced to invalid.” knew so well from his letters and poems, | direct her steps. At a turn of the path eect story 13 told: ist, the boy whose wife she was des- was under very similar conditions | “she was so little and frail and plain| they came upon Alfred. who “at the | W&S @ beautitul night, warm and atill, that the beautiful love-drama of the| of face, and such a victim of draughts, | sieht of the slender beautiful gir) of With the lights of the yachts shining He was standing by the death-bed of | tined to become his first wife when the dying woman It was a chance call at the house of | Brownings opened. Misa Barrett, who! wo at the mercy of every evil wind that! peventeen, In her slmple erey dress, 08 the Water, and the sky bright with ther hia ite, Oar 6 . a 7 Saas = moving ‘I! stars. After dinner they found them- ether in the garden, de her his wife, | Eo On © @ COOMSSCOE |land wavs, aly ath the ermine that @ Carried, half conscious, out of the ani stood outside the window raptly mths later the Judge found him-| Gismpic ‘Theatre. And of Charles | drinking in the sweet sounds, until the bs Mehl has ttl Mathews, senior, father of the “poor | merchant Invited him to enter and Ney OLY CE UC fas young man," the following remarkable | troduced to his daughter, the fair pian- for a walk, That evening he once more a guest at Rosetta Cottage. That night-the third of their acquaintance— Sellwood, with Arthur a those tongue could be have been Romney the famous painter, | mance tender mints- en Meht across these wood- suddenly sald to her: ‘Are ing at ( @ctress, Miss Char selves alone tc contrived to nly to reward her devotion by desert e B Sian nh aut i— brie tsh vithstand| ; Bettie Nicach ia yaaraea Ne ee a a. Sryadwor) an Ordade wandering ane prief courtship notwithstanding ee Jee e'" [The Newlyweds # TheirBaby ¥ Géorce McManus) ep ee : : m4 made @ nurse once s e pasa casted He ee es ene George McManus? | 1 v2» t6 mote ance ciara | doce ation aske n Kea a " ae = | Laughitn he lovely Fairy Wood | bearing, “W bby man |. Franklin's saw her future hus- | ge 900.000000000000000000000000000000000 000000 ODO CREE OOOO CO0COOCO000G. OOOO oi oma |) ne me an at i ; 1 tb wad | a Sri and as he Ked past her door car- 1 ering afternoon sunlight | | ret St Be US ci ler each arm; playing down upon her through the | outdone In rudeness, the actor walked | TY!°S ee We Gee ik tender leatage of early spring, so that | Now PRECIOUS , NO BABY, and, ned to his port's fancy a thing up to the mar a loud vote coach in the form of a young lady, | demanded, “And who the devil {8 she?" | stiss Morland, who chanced to be read- | \ you SiT ate You caNT eter added by are to t ab vuitles | RATS RUOOESS RHI ning =| E of the vernal wood.” t ‘Tennyson | ub) Gene Ie cares nal Wei hy GET Down, first saw the vision of delight” wht h was to flood his later life with so} much sunshin 1 PpuT You! ” PAPA HAS LoTS OF al to married bliss, and | James Brindley, the great engineer. won the heart of his wife-to-he hy gifts of gingerbread the cacy makes its the | ynnes" chanced to A guest at the s table as young illlam Ewart Gladstone, then on the threshold of his brilliant pariiamentary uses that young mar ister remarked to 3 indicating the youthful dip leross the tabl Mark my e will one day be Prime Min- | ® la Uttle w Tt was a little later that one o me Miss G t which this de rful appeal. s first sight of the woman he married was tn the glamour of a ball- room; but the one great romance of his life came much later. One day he went to fee a ladv who wished him to ertake the art-education of her two | ers. While chatting with “presently the drawing- der . at the girl's used dn a stranger of) But so resourceful ts Cupid that ft was ar room door opened, and Roste came in Kly taking stock of me with her m such brilliant ave was J would be difficult In the extreme to eyes as she walked across the dicted, and who, moreover was f) imagine any ynditioa under which he Nine ears old, the eyes rather handsome and striking appearance «1 | has not plan: lovers’ meetings. ue, Ups) perfectly lovely in’ pro as might well appeal to a maiden at| Only a few montis ago, for instance, he rest of the features what a the most susceptible pertod of It | the following romantle story came to (And yet, #0 strange a thing Is Fate | 7. well-bred Irish girl's usually j Was not, however, unt the follow! «us from Sweden when directed ‘oy Cupid, that a few Sr.” witer, when the two young people} “While recently passing in his balloon months later the “shabby little man” | Such. !n his own words, was the girl were members of a part " too! over the Baitic Sea, M. Adolf F enkel, @ torchlight view f the Hiseum at | an enthusiastic aeronaut, resident in this. ed the middle-aged au- led the “litte Irish spittre’ to the | WO can! altar, thaugh both lived to regret their thor’s heart, and. as she grew into a ns 1 was i to Chasen ipeae ine ehange of attitude to each other. radiant voung womanhood, revealed to | 5 nk ar fy the two Hives tne [island ef Ueland. He landed ina gar- Macready'e first meeting with his fu-|him all the glories of a lfepassion | 1 PUT HIM THERE, OH, DID PAPA found Sea UR UTE TaTeaCasmauleneactr sential vee ture wife was little more promising | Sie declined t rry him on reitgtous ha 'S SY. LOVEY) + DRECIOUS Mr In wedding wogeror Ut Was. hospitably This te the story as he tells it 1s 15 Mich cost her her ‘vi SO BUSY, Y! Aaa dus P sent 4 , welconed to she fe -vitles, and fell a “A trifling occurrence at Glasgow, to! nut to his last day his lost love so MEAN, PAPA dent. A ot Gi ete ay PA B BelicamemuersdinWacterin(feaarell ned to Rusia “a spiritual pres- DIDN'T MEAN ago he 1 Fey s was: pub 4 on the night of my wonefit. A pretty resiraining and leading iT! an Amer 1, to mn rs xt of one of the children in| The vory first words Charles James MATTER WITH. HE'S BEEN 2 fair hos There is related in to-morrow's instalment. act the part of one of the children in| Je Vory frst wo aceite fmperfect in the words she had to years his wife, were these. "Ah, poor @peak, having had no time to learn them. young man! it’s atl over with him— Not being aware of this, I scoldede her| he's not long for this world,” as the SITTING ON A PIN! NO WONDER THE LITTLE DEAR WAS CRYING! PRECIOUS 2? | kKefiections ot a bachelor Giri by helen kowiland, LOVE affair 1s like a well. Sv easy to fall into, so diMfcult to crawl out of A man often thinks he will marry a gir until he discovers that ahe thinks so too, 0 WIOQAOOOOAE 1K) 183819: Boarding-House Fables By Joseph A, Flynn, § Platonic fr p is like perpetual motion: a beautiful theory Oo} A husband's idea of taking things ypiiteally is going out to get a drink If Tess Were Only an Heiress! ® Bag you wera a swell racket upstairs, Invite Adrian ning to the lan tean't be paid ts nobody on earth like him, while his wife ex ord why the re Before a woinan marries a man she thinks th rward she hopes so. eiress to|and all the members of his club, and S60) 000,000) vou} Ktatheyouritawest niceimrialieeaics Of course a gitl should not marry a man with vices; but, then, are all of us ke a young WO-| ull the settlera in thls camp. ait tonbes olaitr: man in Pittsburg, |up ana take not! Dea A Man doesn't admire a sensibly short walking skirt, because it's no tun D and 2 notice, especially tha f yuld you still as: suzing at ankles that are im: © ween would you sull 4 | snappy bunch of feathers on the second | suzing at : hee ; sist your husband | hoor tront who. told es Ky the way seme men sp ‘ a girl before marriage and skimp ier pening oysters in | 1° eRe rt AY ee afterward you'd think they were trying to collect interest on their investment, ternoon that 1 was improving a little | pee | husband's Mea of frankness consists in telling his wite what he suspects his restaurant?” I asked Tess at|!” looks. | ; Kade Unita “But it's queer how prosnerity ats I hin S tacks some people. We all have happy ow When a gentieman dining with a lady disputes the bill {t Is a sure sign they she ts likely to find out any are married. + The Angleworm at Work. By Agnes C, Laut. HAT does science say «bout ploughing, anyway? She says, in the first place, W that Nature runs the biggest plough of all, and that we had better watoh her at the trick and see what she is doing and how she does it. Weli, the norning, trying to ells fn our busy domes before a| ‘onceal my agita- tion as a new set over, but when | HE waist that | or | of rolls was piacea |%® Ret on our meady pins again and I is trimmed E the drops off we're not the same | OI I 1ien with buttons ts {I money wave topples on the table “Asedst dough Jently brushing imaginary specks Gust off the front of her new shirt waist so as to call attention to same as before. one of the novelties “Why, It was only last night aml To Know. [en the season and 's | ats!" she replied, vio- Courtship and Marriage. exceedingly effective. This one is tucked in Whisker:no slipped me a queer one about a Jolin in the next house, He's {Hints for Home. i i ! a | Advice on : world did the first ploughing—they. S. grindi:g off and depositing a rs and the streams of a preiister, round and tore over the surface of the roc! a way to be so treat- “If I tumbled out of the hay some] been boarding there for two calendars. | { «i exceptional happy morning with 60,000.00 1, live, ;and Serr cath rans, night {t was all} ed ceptions T | ‘olden bones tagged on to my name, |e could do to fish up his board. He | ’ fl success, anc | i ise dressing of silt, which we call soll, but the clays were fearfully hard-packed, GoXG seo sUme excitement around here | had a good job, but was too fond of | Baby's Quilt. | ceedingly chic and maa Abcut Is Fair Flay, lose-textured,"”” science calls {t—sy hard they resiste. the soakage of water for a couple of tinkles of the clock: Mowing the foam, He was one of ET one and one-half yards of white rt while ft Is ab 4 | ike rock; so Nature set the angleworm to work, burrowing, chewlng, irst off I'd gently break news in the steady rent-payers at George's on elderdown, {f three-quarters of a! solutely simple. In | a Heiner digesting the hard sub-soils. @ confidential tu Mrs. Starve-em, get| the corner, and Whiskerino saya he yard wide, so that when It is) the illustration white | RAT teeRUbe aieiinen at for? To break them up, so the roots can go down and fetch the cream © top, or, rather, feeding the cream to his crop, to be h for the statement, or [ should have me; but th greatest scientists of the rithin a single acre of ground there is ten tons of earth.—Fiom the pear buttons, but linens and mining the cream off immed in the harvest? I do not v« the scientists of the world down or ne does not care for her. bo, World do vouch for the statement that that he is just trifling with ass through the bodies of anglewo! J. LB, | Outing Magazine. ant time 1 am with this girl and he | me he pays more attention to her than o me, but when We are alone take it off her hands with a snap, throw | Not long ago one of his relatives was | Sometimes you can get it In re: in a bushel of mazuma just for luck, put six inches under the ground and /eneth, which comes cheaper. Turn in| colored and then open up shop for myself and /Jonn fell Into a bundle of tin, He | 288 and buttonhole stitch all around white materials Lizzie. Adn't believe tt at first, but when he | With blue or pink wool, then make little ped with color, “Right off the bat I'd Jam a heavy aid open his eves he made everybody | DOWS of the same color baby ribbon and | both are being exten- brake on that gushy few on here and there Instead of tha| sively used th Moor, the one that gave me a !arge |inetr packs and look double in hig) 00! knots, It makes a warm quilt and | gon, and the cotton |he does 1. tells m annually rticle on yOUr!in the neighborhood straighten h | I’think the young man Is tfif_ing wi Juicy call yesterday morning because 1! qineotion,” | !s much easter to than those ftled |-volles ou h ubed | your ons, and I would not waste egeldentaliy Uanidientulbel nace ree “You needn't go any further” 1 in-| Sith cotton | he i ee Tea 1 on him. Accept into her lap. She made a grand noll€l | terruptod, gazing longingly at the rap.| @ Se Eur Se eae ; some other man and p 4 about me rulning a skirt that cost ner |iqty Meapnoaring ‘mata at ‘he ray. | Southern Potato Salad. ming {s not iked, tor, turn about le ear id be embrot dered either with the same or contrasting 1 give an ex- s conduct, discs ¢ nks you he may cha) 'A Silver Wedding Gift. @ plunks in real moncy, while 1 KNOW) ho's painting the town red and {t won't UT up as many cold bolted pota- as a matter of fact that she got it with| be Jong before he's back.at his former GC toes ax desired, with a fe pound of candy and a dollar at that’ place of business, dogging for his old | amount of onions cut up fine and new store on the corner inst saturday , fob, eh?" | one or tw» stalks of celery cut up fine: ner ous 0 : ceedingly smart anc dear betty afternoon, but just the samee I had to ot muon;! Tess) reniiod, | Held) fol-|miy all together Into a large bowl. Cut| ucne, smear and ee ete HIRED A 18 493,20 « cough up two hard earned bones to low a spent nickel for three miles NOW, | uy one pound of bacon in cubes anu try | AnORNCR UP-to-date Fe La all venetian vere 25 2627 naaneal and would rather a cell for Ute) 1 AS hile i pineaperee th very lit Prather euyere pee ne ann varear A mavenitcc than unwind his. baniroll."" nice and’ brown. While that is frying) jayor, the simple shirt of the parents of my fancee? ieliiketter bers funeraliwasioven: tid mix one teaspoon of valt, one of mu: ait right up there at the head of the SSS A. B. |} Some silver gift ts appropriate. As waist that Is treated tard and one heuping tablespoon of | jy ibis way being one meal counter und. he picture of tne Too Good at Guessing, sugar; mix with half a cup of warm of the notable feate (rie tatto AVEATATvOuR tinue Battle of Waterloo and hand out a few Wester and add to bacon and fat; then Fr i Ieeetee a eases ete cB POTnIng, erie | w of the present father and mother-in-law, It would be frozen calls to the overdues. IKE was coming to America on| aaa one cup of cider vinegar and mix | « ina enn en wteve(uarnaln Tiere el han eyoG “That ni I'd hit the hay good and an ocean stes with a bag! w bacon, fat and all. Then pour) ‘phe quantity of mas can afford hard at 9 sharp and not open my beau on iis bac of a ban-| over potatoes, onions and celery, leanlenoeuateeniee 5 : tiful orbs until 9 next morning, 1d) danna bandkerchief, In which were all ; red for the Fe Failed to Call, ! Catmeal Drops. ; medium size is 91-3 dire a machine, take in all the dig of his ongings | aan Li heard or %, 38-8 x i Dear Bettys windows, get one of those ropes of) Thero were two Englishmen aboard NE cup of sugar, two-thirds of a gti bes Tucked Shirt Wa Pattern No AM ay girl of twenty years, and sparklers for my neck, like the lead-|the beat with him. When they landed cup of butter and lard mixed, | tds 32 on 2 yards 44 inches wis was keeping steady company with a fng lady wore ¢ other night in the. in Philadelphia they thought they would two eggs, a Kool half cup of Pattern No. 5 is cut in sizes for a 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 Inch bust oun man about six years my indy the 5 ; measure i third act of ‘Beautiful Bernice, the have some fun with MI | eur milk, a@ teaspoon of soda dissolved enior. He made an engagement with One said, “How far is tt to Baltimore, | in the milk, one teaspoon of einnamo ————— » for Sunday evening but failed to Button Maker.” Then I'd waltz back | ange atplnentorien Meche ncriciralsingtar: an Can or send by mail to THE EVPNING WORLD MAY MA How shall 1 tr now I see inere ain fh horn awake all the uns aitiow a4 you guesaymy name?” said/ cup of nut meits (either waintcs, hick Gd TON FASHION BURBAU, No. 132 Fast Twenty-third street, New te gad. would ‘like: to.,win’ hime back, : P thing,” sald Byank, “vhhe if you udd/up the dates that have tw ow the rot of the\merry vil- kes ory or English walnuts are good), two ‘0 2 oofm or stamps for each pattern ordered tor [love him and agn sure that my love Msa benching,’ }: sald Mirani Poth sy Ol 7 Jagers on the dlock what real rags look) "Oh. I Just guessed tt.” said ; > other.| cups of flour and thres “n= sr + cmeal Obtate York ARIE ihe) bantasley nla ada tes rua Lie ey KGB ig already passed and subtract that total from the total of the dates to come, | cll’ said Mike, “If you can guess| Drop by spoonfuls on greaseu pana, Phese paren . tal t. He owes you an apology and an ex- the difference will be the date of our wedding day. yas ' my name gusen ow far it le to Malu-| leaving.sa Mie mvace oii arvund to Petterns, apecify size planation, Greet nim coolly unt ne[ o,, you, tell on what date Frank and Florence will ke married} 4.\¢