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— = The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, July 2, By Gene Carr The Chorus Lady. | FOUNORD ON THE PLAY OF THE SAM& NAME By James Forbes, \ Lady” Wee Made By John W. Harding. @, (W, Diulingham Coc- Coenrriett, 1008, by, Tr gave the girl takes her to New ea chorus Kit in New Yor K, god her n (whieh Crawford holds) in order Money she owes and to buy clothe ad to Crawfons'# apartinen divahters gets rid has had Mr ut thelr O'Brion, a Brion, have come to New York, Crawford of Mallory, but not before the latter pe of Nora's arm through 1 does not guess the ident! terd's fair quent. CHAPTER XIII. A Little Supper. a tue door, EFT alone !n a's bed- L room, Nora with terror, afraid to m: Hor tiret thought was that Patsy, when the latter found that had left the tha ter, must have suspected that she had carried out the {dea of calling on Craw- the note and ford and asking had sent Dan a@ She expec open and find him. Mallory’s chee.y greeting to Craw: ford and the manner in which thetr con- versation opened—for the trainer's loud voice was easily -soon reas sured her, FE © was Ignorant of her presence, and !f he did not have feccasion to come into that room he would never know she was there Bhe therefore, held her ear to the thin panel and caught what ehe could of the conversation. She could not hear all that Crawford said. for he spoke tn softer tones than Mallory, As the conversation progresed and she rea!'zed that there was no danger from Dan's 9 recovered her equantmity. th elf face to face with bedroom door aud prenence {ttle by Mttle. and lstened with curtous interest. Dan's eulogy of her even caused a smile of gratification Nora’s Idea. She liked Crawford more than ever, How he had dean to her—how gentle and courteous! She had felt all 4, ong that Patsy had mistudged him Patey, anyhow, was suspicious of every mean who wee nice and was always preaching instead business. Tt was strange, though, that he whould have made her sian her fathers name to that note, She wondered whether he had not done so simply to humor her because whe had insisted upon having the debt reeardet as @ bust: ness matter, She Inclined to the be- Met that he had ant that {t was not after all, such a serious thing as Patsy had tried to make out. Why should he, who had proved that ty of Craw: | JODO. A ROMANCE OF NEW YORK ANO ITS THEATRICAL LIFE to! ng her own | soon satisfled herself that he had not notioed her imprudent sortie, but her Derves were #o unstrung by the narrow escape and the emotions of the evening that she had but one desire—to get out and away from the plac quickly ax possible, Consultation, When Crawford returned to his den after escorting Mallory to the door he paused, defore rejoining Nora, to con sider what he should do. He had been making splendid progress when that marplot of a Mallory had interrupte? him by his unwelcome visit. | He pressed a button beside the fire place, and Rogers appeared. “T want a nice little supper for two at once,” sald Crawford. ‘Fix ft on this Mttle table, It will be coxler than on the larger one.” ‘Very good, slr, What would you | ke, sir?” asked the valet. | “T don't know,” mused Crawford What would you sugwest—birdat’ “Hardly, str, You've got to be edu: cated up to dirds. I should aay a chicken walad, loa eream and a sweet | champagne would be about the mark | of this young lady, afr.” “Rogers, you know I couldn't stom- ach that truck {n a thousand years.” “No, sir; certainly not, air,” eoqut- | exced the man obediently. | “Come In! It’s All Right,” “Rouches a la reine-I know they | have some ready—accessories, a bott of that Chauteau Margaux and som champagne, usual kind,” ordered Craw: | ford en he went to the bedroom door onenad It 14. Come tn.” he “Tes all right” He offered her his arm with a play- fu! alr, but she walked past him, He enw that she was shivering and almost orving. ‘Tocan't wtay anv longer, Mr. Craw ford." whe told him. ‘Please give me the note and let me eo.” Whe." he sald. von are cold, Poor ‘ttle efrl! That fellow scared the !fe of you Sit here by the fire a minute, I'l) efve you something to warm you uo" "No: please let me go. T onn’t stay really, Tim sick and I want to #0 home. T'l! come hack some other nixit on mirpose to see you." She looked at him anneatinety. "T wouldn't for a mjnute think letting vou eo In euch a condition.” he insisted, arranging the cushion In the chalr und drawing the latter close to the fire ‘You can walt a few min- utes, mirely unt] vou have had time to mull vourself toeether out of “And will vou give the note?’ she naked anxiously. Temptation, “Whe that'll be all right.” he as- sured her, ‘Tt fen’t the note I care about, {t's you.” She seated herself reluctantly, and he went to the sofa, gathered up an armful of cushions and piled them un- der her feet, so that they vere on @ level with the logs. “There!” he exclaimed, with a boy- he was her friend, seek to injure her? | ig) exuberance that caused her to There was no doubt, however, at #6) gig in apite of herself, had dons wrong {In stening her father’®) men he poured out some Scotch name, and {t was Imperative that #he/ wniskey, aquirted a little seltzer in ft) ne girl seems rather unreasonable, should procure the note and destroy tt @he was sure Mr. Cras vford would give ft to her for the asking, He was #0 good. True, he had kissed her hands ‘and her eyes, and she was far from be- dng sure that this was the proper way | you have to obey oniers.”” ntleoman to treat a young girl, for a but he had done ft fn such a kindly, | tne fatherly wey that she could not fee! offended. A Narrow Escape. and held the beverage to her lips. Bhe demurred. “No; I never touch Mquor," ehe said “But you must,” he coaxed gayly. It's medicine, I'm the doctor ene) She drank a little, and he gave her! lass, which she held in her lap. | ‘The stuff did not taste unpleasant or too strong. “There's no oecasion for you to hur- | ry,” Crawford urged. “Tt fan't 9} Moreover, it proved one thing—that he |o'clook yet. You don’t have to go back | Mked her very, very much. ered this quite natural, for was she not pretty—much better looking than most of the girls she knew? posed that all real gentlemen who mar. red girls began by making lo manner, The kissing of hand events, entered largely into courting as ft was done In play At last she heard the other door slam, and, looking into the glass to see that he wae all right and adjusting her hair with a few deft touches of her fingers, ghe opened the bedroom door to emerge. There, almost within touch, but with tHe back turned to her, stood Mallory, lighting his cigar. Her heart stopped beating and she nearly fainted. Her band was still on the handle, however, ‘and she had sufficient presence of mind to pull the door to swiftly, She thoug! that Dan had seen her, and ghe stoo back, with blanched face and dilated eyes, waiting for what would follow. And she sup- | She consld-|to the theatre-I told you I'd fix that. | All your folke ere there, and !f you | reach home by 11, or even half-past, It will be early enough.” The whiskey was warming her veins and steadying her nerves. She felt) that It was doing her good, (To Be Continued.) a Lucky Brunettes. GbR TOU are lucky," aid the first Y mother to the eecond, ‘in having « brown-eyed baby.” “Where does the luck come in be- sides that of his being g00d look- ing?” inquired the second, “Because brown-eyed bables are mmune from many of the infantile ls that blue-eyed children always ive. I've seen {t work dozens of ys and heard doctors edmit It des catch everything, but bru- s git off easy.” WHAT THis SuM SPELLS BEAR t BONE - ONE + EAR ANIMAL DOES THIS SPEL! { iW 1) =the Pao. Wa Ra a § - DEAR L | All the Comforts of Home. MR. 8MITH’8 WILL POWER 18 BOMETHING WONDERFUL. OOK LEFT—HAVE Gon To SPEND THE Nj F MOTHERS * GHT AT Go0O oro tl ANO } ah HAVENT A CENT I i 4 (HANG rr Ave) SMITH HAS [f THE RIGHT | "VE ONLY TEN CENTS MR SMITH. THaT Le po, Thank You JAKE: SMITH, WITH ALL THE COMFORTS OF AHOME NO WHAT HAVE We ! | WONOER WHAT THE | COFFEE Boys ARE DOING NOW Wors'¢5] MILIK $1 iC) ary POAT PAOD DAAPOOIDODIOODGED : How Not to : If You Are a I are in @ most dan- Kevous —_ position. You are ike & none throwa uong a pack of dle dogs. They | yay not want to gnaw at the bone! ‘rough hung r| t each wants to Irag st off for his” wn dolectation, to | worty in private, | and to bury where} the other dogs| By Lili F you area young can't find tt. Poor bone’ You would imagine that the bone would shrink from this wrang- ling, but there are ectuatly some men who purposely select a summer hotel 1908. on a Summer Hotel Porch PODDODOOTDDOSDOOY Be Hated -:- Young Man an Bell whose thin phoulder-blades you fin of to the girls, or the maid, have made thing but gossip and crochet, These may afford you no mental edifi- cation, young man, but It doesn't help you any to blow olgarette smoke in thelr faces, for theso are the ones who the money, and they are also those whe disouss your bebavlor whee they get home, It never oocurred to you when yeu were making fun of the old maid's thin egs when she was bathing that she len your employer, and that your sonse of humor, combined with her thin legs, are why you didn’t get the raise you so confidently expected, did Mt? I often fee! compassion for the brain- less young man on @ hotel porch, be | oamuse he never seems to know when he ts doing the wrong thing to the right aye m tor their vacation just #o that the girls | people, will make a fuss over them. If he gets under the window of the | perhaps 1 oughtn’t to call them|nervous invalid with his mandolin and la fringe of giria three deep he never WANT YUH MAH Hone Y= “Not Soothing Things to Go to Sleep By.” seems to think that his coon @ongs are there girls who will make not soothing things to go to sleep byt over anything tn the male line That a fuss OOOO ODO OO U0U0UL CORDE OOD OOU 000000008 Give, Q ' ’ jaw On Courtship «= Marriage S a . OOOOK MODAL IOGODGOSY 9 IDDOOS. 5 4 | The young man seems most cannot care for you a very great deal) speak, Dp, Result of Trip to Coney able, but are you quite sure the at tt he cannot acknowledge himself at Pa osu eee t fault, In that case time and plenty of work will have to erase his memory, y his fault? Way of speaking to me long agot g to his ho: Dear Betty! HAVE been golng with a young 1ady about a year and have grown to love her dearly. Last Saturday I asked her to go with me to Coney Island, Sie shook her head, so I went myself. When I returned sho sent me over & note, saying she did not want to speak to me again. I have asked her to for- give me, but she doesn’t seem to re- lent. How can I regain her friends!'p? You are rip 6 to apologize ruld you make {t less ¢ The caeesla Telling him Lobes an Unknown, Do you think I am 1 Was his fault seems a litt! ae 1 Dear Betty: like “rwbbine {t In." Do not bo asha HAVE i Va hiteeel a | HAVE become greatly Interested in ee aNices| @ young inan whom I heve known ys iia ral by might for a year, Every time we ae meet he smiles os if he wanted to not HEARTBROKEN. He cannot be very much Interested | you tf a whole it {t seems to be place to apologize. He eneien, who {# acquainted with you, Try become interested in | and MG. \ e * f z Kefiections of B h | Gi | Tansee vaujoo eater te Es | It you have « sheltered yard or buce porch pend aa much time aa ‘Are you sure you have not offenied a ac (‘4 or Ir a Langu Si possible on it, Wear the alriest kind of costume. The nelghbors may eae other way?) Write her agata guage of Stamps, be horrified, but shut out thelr prying gaze by screens meats he does not answer Ey Helen Rowlan: Dear Betty: Bere feet or sanduls wiich make wa easier may quickly be toased Pe a Ae erage Me owland INDLY explain the language of | oft, and a low-necked and sjesveless nig! Br raprertorielieer materiel LsJ 5 ie y c man becomes a confirmed old bachelor It 1s stamps, as my boy friends who | will allow lota of sun to get at your skin and do ity heallng work on the fhe nots because) he haw eversmetl therens woman Ge. navereone te chaleepun nee ores, Let your hair down, also, for that, too, Is benelted by alr and Her Pride in the Way. could Ive with, but because he hag never met the U%@ It in sending postal cards ney i tent. one woman he couldn't lye without, and I would like to know what the You are) not very strong). uatiiving; ni the aun) Inve steamer chats wal Dear Betty: HAVE deen keaping company with & Many a man who promises before marriage to ltt every *“Y bor young man for two years, We were GiGi OGHID Aan Geni ccd EEA CTAE Gan, BEE Ctl Gn en Bt engaged to be married, although I joe off the dumb-waiter efter marriage come to me for the’ “Language aid not .ecelve a ring from him. Was BP EO ‘i renee ay at : Be 0 I right in not accepting a ring which {s nothing but moral Indignation that it do not know the he had bought for another girl and hod maxes men rush to buy the papera that print pictures of |SUMwe” nor should T give it In t taken away from her? This young man the sheath ekirt as a horrible warning. column, {f I did. If boys and girls hay and T have had a quarrel, and he wrot ilercules would never have performed those twelve... ee i to Cs other wht me he would not come to see me again Jangerous feats y nilssing {f he had been required | 46 of a. 1 Nt SE) the In- The quarrel was nder a pretty girl’a chin without kiss- Intrust that message as we could not agree personal to stamp | s wife's dre: FIELEM ROW CAND up the back withoue his fault. I have written and told him ; so, I love wim dearly, but he expects swearing, or to pase @ corset shop without glancing In te 72 Who, Knows the ne to go to his home and apologize, W'ndow. Y RY realelant | which ls against my pride. It ts threo One comfort !n being a woman Is that you have the right to ory; when a‘) Say What months since we parted, and I cannot | ma tears the poor thing always looks and feels as if he had been guilty “Mone, an Hii $04 | Work just two doors away from him. T have tried to forget him, but oannot, wasting time on eat has passed without Any attempt at an Introduction to you perhaps he knows no one some one else forget him. What can Ido? C. R | of an immodest exposure of the soul Veen dite now ING iris are Clarence the Cop we we «By C. W. Kables yautees many attractive - ii yle x mil SS | | arenses tn lingerie st YUL Hey YE2 UNITED < i now, not alone the WHAT!!] |reansrerse TR STATES (SHUT UP.) | | ine betas #0 made TO BARREN ~ the thinner ISLAND! ANSFER ae Coe the very light COMPANY >> weight wools, which } too to ett che (reat: fant equally. welled | | everybody knows who has ever been | mean, to stay awake by. away from home, And I don't know If he has a reputation among the that I blame girls oven when they| boys of doing stunts culled from musio make a fuss over men fools and (dicta, | halls, he doesn't realize that fathers for we women have to put up with) and mothera on the hotel porch will almost anything in the shape of a men |cal! him simply “fresh” if he essays to hat the good Lord shoos our way, ani | amuse the general company, n have to select uusbands from a| You don't think of these things elther, most limited st Tuerefore, we are) you young man who, with the best \trained from the cradle to bmile and|intentione on carth, make these mis- be pretty to every tan who comes |takea and keep an making them every ‘along for tear that we will lose « hus- | year until sensitie people flee from band It we are careles | your presence, But let the young woman at a vaca. | Then, as I know you want to make tion resort rer er that the acquaint-|the dest of yourselves, as I am sure |anoe of number: sucamer girls never | you wiah for approval from the ones S| did a man any particular good, ex-| who count im your life, try getting out- ajcept insomuch as woman's society, | side of yourself, stepping a few paces cared to he would have found some|teken by and large, {# good for any/awoy from yeurself, and getting a 1| maa. bird’a-aye view of yourself through But often the ones who count are the | other people's ghusses, Insignificant, elderly man, who ouly| How do you Uke yourself trom where comes for one Sunday; the quiet old | you are now? n| Sun Baths Cure Rheumatism and Neuralgia. F you want to keep well, take sun batia,” ° the latest health dictum, y r airy costume la better bulld you up. If vigorous enough, cal oe | eu 2 ‘The value of this exercise and hha) been provedita an open alr institwion for men and bo 9 wonderful oures # and nervous are baing made of rheumatism, neuralgia, s! ° h y tn ight bathing asium, tennis anow is on a skirt is sirated h is ad heme fabrics and which tes a full length that gives the 1 effect that ls po graceful, while e trimming sar ange’ to conceal the cram and give & wen- erally went and dainty this a ASKED) || [DO YER QW) | worst! ASROKE!!S BAGGAGE | CHECKED. [Ve nev ve2|| eft In | Persian lawn {s com- ed wi panel of and with required tor sizo fs ‘ O12 ards 4 4 11-8 yards ot embre w@ yards of nel, sertion, Pattern No. 6080 Is cut in otzes for girls | of 1 and 16 years of Misses’ Skirt—Pattern No, 6030, ace ING WORLD MAY MAN [ ae itew Call or aend b rr TON FASHIO? Hast Twenty-third street, New Obtain’ $ York, Send 10 cents tn coin or stampa for each pattern erdored. These IMPORTANT—Write your name and addreer plalaly, sad al- Patterns ways specify size wanted ? | renee