The evening world. Newspaper, June 20, 1908, Page 9

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A ADDL LANs “The Evening World Daily Magazine, kd Lea its ie \ mS # te IL woulon’t LOSE OAT SKY- PIECE FER A FARM! DOOD) OROIDTSODITDIRTEREDTBHSSTOOOOTOOOD __Panhandle Pete Goes to the _ Dogs---But No Farther -:- By George McManus 00000000 VLQ0C00000000000 DOOODODONOAAOAADAAD NAGATA DERE'S NO USE DOG, MLL GIT You YET! come HERE You PuP! OH—WELL, DE HAT DIDN'T FIT ANYWAY ! *& ROMANCE OF NEW YORK AND ITS THEATRICAL LIFE. Chorus Lady. aa FOUNDED ON THE PLAY OF THE SAME NAME OOD OOOO By James Forbes. This Novelization of “The Chorus|notme's Perkins, William Perkins, but) a my there's some as cawls me the Djuke,’ bady” Was Ma replied that personage. By John W. Harding. ae you're the Duke," was Craw-| ‘ord’s comment, and thereafter he (Copyright, 1908, by 9. LW Dillingham Com" remained allent, wrappe¢ in thought throughout the journey Uppermost | NOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ||" ENO eetnooe a Virginia horse trainer, ie 28 mind was his interview with Patsy: beac to Patricia O'brien, a New, oH He did not like her, and with good ra- ora girl, whose, father, 1p teed son. With her keen intuition and ta ‘Timea are hard, and Mal in bush ‘New York a Bim in partner @ rich New Yorker millarity with Individuals of his star named Crawford. Crawford cor teeta | Se had r r : jdt wf aw ford cere meets | She had read him through instantly ftracted by Nora O'Brien, Patricia's and sized him up as a bounder. Her flan’ girl, who Cry 8 Prey, wee nes lost a CONVersation with him had been brief he Shrimp, one of Mallory’s | and to the point, | her Into pay: seeks to bully known aa RAE i ie stable boys, w ing. Another at “Keep Your Mitts Off!” Oltvien axee a iisiike to Crawford. |The. . OrRrten takes a unlike to Cravaim of her | “See liere,’ she had said curtly, point- Refi AT ay the wager, Pa- ing her finger at him. “My little als- frlela comes home: She quarrels With ter's not for you to monkey with. She's Mallory asks i, too good an’ don’t know enough for ence: but abe, dec Setalwford the Hikes o” you, Understand? You Kissing Nora the «irl from N* keep your mitts off, or you'll find your- Jurca “Patricia dec to take her to self up against me!” ge | He would have passed the matter off 2 = 2 with a facetious, bantertrg remark, CHAPTER V TIT. but she had foresialled his reply and The Debt is Paid. intimated that there was notung more said by rising and leaving the He wondered whether she would lory about it. He did not ca: HE heavy rain of the night before to be | and the blustering squalls of the |room early morning had been succeed. | tell ed) by brisk, bright Indian summer |Whether she did or not. If the subte weather. In the stable yard the Duke /€ver came up again, he would dismiss was unsaddling Lady Be having !t as absurd, as a ‘joke, and furthér Jas a matter not to be reverted to. | brought that famous mare in from her eyes, her mouth, readi- | Nora's to so much trouble, he sald Mallory did not need much persuasion to induce him to remain at home. He had little time enough to spend with Patsy Crawford's Manoeuvre. He wan very grateful to Crawford, whose thoughtfulness had raised him pti] pigher In his estimation, so when the Duke brought the buggy around he lordered the boy to go along with it Whe, two partners shook hands with ‘great heartiness, and Mallory watched the departing New Yorker until a turn 4n the road masked him from sight. He was more than pleased with the partner he had had the good fortune to Interest in the stable, To be sure, he advantage to himself from the finan- etal point of view was not great, For the time being he wid, as he had told his flancee, get little more than his would look him up at his office on the quiet at the first opportunity. If she was afraid to—for she doubtless hi a bad quarter of an hour with the Irascible Patsy—he would eaally find means of communicating with her. Arrived at the station, he threw a $5 dill to the Duke and dismissed him. The Duke did not become aware of the denomination of the note, which he had belleved to be of $1, until he was well on his way homeward Then his soul leaped for very joy. A Queer Settlement, “Five dollars! My heye!” he ex- claimed. ‘That's what Hi cawls @ gent, a real gent. Blessin’a on ‘is ‘ead.” The suddon possession of all this| wealth set him to thinking what he could do with it, and instantly his mind keep as a result of the arrangement,| Was made up. He would settle Nora's but without the funds that had thus| bet. This generous impulse was a very | pome to him at a time of dire need he| natural one with the Duke. Nora was) would not have been able to continue|the object of his timid adoration, and it ‘he business at all, Now he hoped in| she turned up her pretty nose at It—for ‘the more or less near future to be able| It has been truly said that love and a © make enough to give up the train-|cough never can be hid—this did not} ag stable and try his luck with alprevent him from worshipping with all tock farm, which it seemed to him of-|the swoet, foollsh ardor of his years yred a better chance of success. everything that breathed of her and re- Orawford himself was well pleased| called her, rth xls own part of the bargain, which| The Duke knew, or, at least felt cer- tas @ good deal more advantageous to] tain, that the Shrimp would carry out | im than {t was to Mallory. He was/hia threat and demand his money of | y no means @ millionaire, but he waa| Nora's parents, and he dreaded for her| ‘au od, and it had been his great desire| the scene that would follow. When he| > ape the wealthier men of his set by] reached the stables he found the shrimp| htaining a proprietary interest in a| working in the yard with O'Brien, and; his heart went into his mouth at the cing stable “are the Ghrimp? he demanded | thought that perhaps he was too lat + ‘the uke, who was driving as they| that his fellow helper might already nerge® on to the highway. have betrayed the girl to her father. “Die, als, Deggin' yer parding, sir; me (To Be Continued.) ad (sie 1} Ore) The Evening World's Serles Of 20 Hunting Stories By President Roosevelt, By Special Arrangement. (Copyright. 1808, by G. P, Putnam's So (Published under arrangements with G. P. Putnam's Sons. New York und London.) STORY NO. 6, Black Bear and Caribou. N September, { 1888, oT was nped on the shores of Kootenal Lake, having with me as companions Joon Willis and an impassive-look- ing Ind ed Amma Coming} across through the of north. Idaho we had struck the Koote- nal An hour or two before sunset we were travelling. as usual, in Indian file, be- the str of hemlock trees, afternoon exereine. The GoInE | maine SET GT cE Een Rea ELE is hunter who was trading peRop in LON ES MANETS AN SAS © |to ints Kise, haunted him.) She was notlronwacd: aidvesme fifty feet Lorene SURV And: Varden Be mraiatialllikelhecialater Shel hadynoinead\iler uit (auneca teens enaiiderniederiore piGtamord) ancl aaliara/ acted: 18 she nna nating, (Shelnad/swalloweall eqs toring, one Gane er edhe Dukentog anya us of the bet with a most pror FO CONDOS ac eR CNDE At Belle and hiteh up the buggy aiallory lie Baa aoe Mae ae peo u iz Gn i natn a hollow where a wanted to drive his partner to the |crecy and the manner in which she had) teavoh ercw loxusiantin ant ne ed station himself, but Crawford would eee eer aistor had. interrupted | caver, Krew lusuriantiy, and he was ‘aot hear of It E them convinced him that she was tol fing ieee and omeentng chem we nis paw, and was on his work to notice us, for his head was pointed the other way. The moment he ross again [ fired, meaning to shoot tarougn the houlders, but Instead, 1a the hurry, taking him in the neck. Down he went, but whether hurt or not we could not see, for the second he was on all fours he was no longer much too int! visible. Rather to my surprise he ut- tered no sound—for pear when hit or when changing often make a gre: nolse—so I raced forward (o the edgo of the hollow, the hunter close behind mo, while Ammal danced about in the rear, very much excited, as Indians always are in the presence of big game ‘The Instant we reached the hollow and looked down into it from the low bank | on which wo stood we saw by swaying of the tall planta that bear was coming our way. wan standing some ten feet distant, a homlook trunk being between us; aud the next moment the bear sprang clean up the bank, the other side of the hem- jock, and almost within arm's length of fy companton, the I do not think he had intended ‘0, charge; he was probably confused vy the bullet through his neck and had by | chance blundered out of the hollow in our direction; but when he saw the hunter so close he turned for him, his | hair bristling and his teeth showing. |'The man had no cartridge in his w pon, and with his pack on could not} have used {t anyhow, and for a moment | Pres. Roosevelt's © through an open wood | the | The hunter | Ammal himself was one of the Lower Kootenals, * * * He was a good In- to exchange more than the most rudi- mentary !deas. night when I happened to tell him: o: ny baby oys at home; he must have been an affectionate father in his way, this dark Ammal, for he at once pro- ceeded to tell me about his ewn pa- poose, who had also seen one snow, and to oncribe how the little .ellow was old enough to take one step and then fall down, But he never displayed so much | vivacity as on one occasion when the w hunter ppened to relate to him a rather grur mutual acquaintances, an Upper Koo- @, as Ind! .s go, I often tried to} talc with him ebout game asd hunting, | but we tood each other too Itttle | His face orightened one | teat 01 one of their | YOOO000000000010 0000000 0DO00000 0000000000000 000G0C0G0000 00000000004 Own Stories of old by Him @) @ @) @) 2 O] @) ro} s) "Hunting Big Game ean OO: of hobgobilns. Indeed the night sounds of these great stretches of mountain woodland were very welrd and strange. Though I have often and for long periods dwelt , and hunted tn the wilderness, vet THE PONY OF THE Noatnamn AOCKIES [never before sow derstood why Peer na CENTURY COMPANY the people live in lonely forest | regions nre 6 to belleve in el fle bite In passing. However, as the/ gun a iittle,” he remarked parenth peepee eaten aoe betnen ot an Deast sprang out of the hollow he cally, His last feat had been done IN| “nie caribou trails poised for a second on the edge of the| connection with a number of Chinamen |. 00° net ased, and it bank to recover his balance, giving me|who had been working among some “®* ©Yident that the beasts were not a beautiful shot, as he stood sideways! placer mines, where the Indians came | ‘esd of us in the barren, tre so me; the bullet hit between the eye) to visit them |cesses between moun and ear and he cll as if hit with a| Now the astute Cainese are as fond of |"N4 Snow: and we turned back the valley, crossing over to the « pole axe. gambling as any of the borderers, white Beene tits P Our prize was a large black bear.) or red, and ve very successful, genor- | °F Sout bad ‘ e stream, We had with two curious brown streaks down | qily fleecing the Inaiana unmercitully, | Urey eaten our seanty lunch, for tt his buck, one on cach stde of the apine.|-Three Coyotes lost ail he possessed to) “8% Afternoon. We skinned him and camped by the Jone of the pimtaited gentry: but he ap was no breeze, and atte carcass, as tt was crowing Inte. * * t rest nearl parently took his losses philosophically, Jand pleasantly followed the vi round, until the latter had wor a we began to go d poin the shoulder, ive fr bru n wood cash goods of — veral other In ue | avai wit | Then he suddenty fel! on the extia! Ing every obj |from the Celestial Empire. slew him and BOS sal Po took all his plunder, retiring un- molested, am {t did not seem anv one's business to avenge a mere Chinaman. | Ammal objected strongly to leaving |the neighborhood of the lake. Ho w the hunte the shelter of a the first day's Journey willingly enough, tg matte ob but after that ft was increasingly |and unconsctous Gifficult to get him along, and he They w gradually grew sulky. For some time fetal we could not find out the reason; but fit" tnally he gave us to under hat he harmo with the was afratd because up in the high Kesar non-rovered mountains there were ttle) spam) DoULaere largest, .9 big ith Indians” who would kill him if they “f°, i A ery § nearest. As he s' It looked as if he stood a fair chance| tena! Indian named Three Coyotes, caught him alone, eapecially at n! sme with his t vwn I to ct being hurt, though it is not likely! The latter war a qua lsome, adven-| at first we thought he was spoaking of M8 Neck, breaking and he the bear would have done more turous Indian, with whom the hunter stray warriors of the Blackfeet tribe; 'pPet 4) Wemendos back somarsa th ‘knock him down with his powerful had once had a aificulty—"P had t@ | put tt turned out that he was not stunned tor. then one, a young. forepaw. ex verchance give him a sin- beat the cuss over the head with mys thipking of human belngs at all, but Tushed past us up the valley dowa O00000000000 0000! Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship ana Marriage 0000000 0000000000: BS IT am now going with him again. “A’’ Is Correct. youlthinlitha rdimerenteotntote me tees monk too great? T. P, 9) SAYB that a boy of sixteen| Your love seems sincere, but your shoud take off his hat when | parents are right in thinking you too meeting a girl friend of six-|young to marry, The person you choose at sixteen might ful to you at tw is for life. Go be entirely dista y-five, and marriage n the young man if nays he teen or @ trifle younger. “B’’ should not. Which Is correct? GIRLS A boy ts never too young to be polite | your parents do not object to him per- to his girl compantons, A young gentle-|sonally, but no woman should marry man will take off his hat to any glrlj before twenty-one the earliest. If to whom he speaks, if she {s sixteen} you do not love him enough to walt or six, Courtesy is always correct, and/that long you had better find {t out respeat for women and girls ged form. Let Time Decide. Dear Betty | AM sixteen, and am very deeply in beforehand. The difference in your ages fe not too great. Hostess Buys Tickets, | Dene Batty love with a man of twenty-thre | WOULD like to Invite @ young men My parents are very much against this match, as they claim that I am entirely too young to love at all; but 1 feel and think differently. I love this young man so much that I feel life is a blank to me withont him. My par- ents Influenced me very much, and I left this young man for a period of about two months, I thought that I would forget, but it seems that the 1 go with to an affair at my clob. For this affair you have to buy ticketa, and I know my friend will want to pay for mine, but I think es ft is I who am doing the toviting I should pay for my own tloket. Kindty advise me what to do. ana Sinoe you are Inviting the young man you should buy both the tickets, uniess more I kept away the more I longed! you would make him unhappy by Going for him, I took it so to heart that| so. If he insists, allow him to buy the I got very sick. My family thought it/ tickets. You can avoid embarrassment vest for me to make up with him, andl by buying them beforehand. May Manton’s Daily Fashions. garment 1s to be found in the Perfectly smooth at moi, ham! combined wi dant flare at the lower edges. All materials that are used for underwear are appropriate, The quantity of material required for the medium alze is 13-4 yards 3% inches wide with 3 yurds ft embrold- ery, 4 yards of, In- sertion; or 2 yards 38°" inohos wide with 6 yards insertion ‘when One-Plece Circular Drawere—Pattern No. 6016. WH are of the ma and $2 Inch waist Pattern No. 6016 {s cut in sizes for a 22, 4, %, 28, 3 measure. Gall or send by meil to THE HVEINING WORLD MAY MAN- TON FASHION BURBAU, Ne. 182 Kast Twenty-third street, New bed York. Send 10 conte in cola or stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT-Write your neme and address pletnly, and al- ways specify sige wanted shoot him (for his head was not good) the temptation was sore, and [ was iad when, in another second, the stupid beast turned again and went off up the valley at a slashing run, ‘Then we hurried down t( examine which we had come, while the other, largo Dull with small antlers, crossed ight in front of me at a canter, his neck thrust out and his head—-so coarse oking compared to the ¢ cate out- nes of an elk’s—turned toward mv. inovement# seemed clumsy and/ with pride and pleasure the dead bull d, utterly unilke those of @|—his massive form, sleek coat, and fine it he handled his great hoofs! antlers. It was one of those moments y enough and broke into a head-| that repay the bunter for days of tolt Tattling gallop as he went down {and hardship; that ta, if he needs pes iulisida. crashing ‘through the say | payment, wad dona not ‘ind. ite in the A Teaplag over the fallen lows. | te} Mere was a spur a ilttle beyond and| “ucerness Pleasure enough in itself: ; this he went at a swinging trot, —_ \iting when he reached the top aaa % ap look at mie once more. fe Was only a hundred and thoush 1 had aot Story Ng 7—“An Elk Hunt™—~ | wt be printed In. Monday's Evening LWOH?. RFR 1 a

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