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oxTS Fasy WORK, Ihe PAY You Six PER ‘O00000900000000G0000 000000000000 00000 0000000000000) VAL TASE DE JOB IF “¥QU PROMISE NE I DONT HAve TO EAT HERB 0.000.0.00,000000000.000000.000000, 0000.0 00 0000000000000 The Evening World Daily Magazine, Panhandle Pete Annexes a Job in a Restaurant. Ju OOO® Saturday, CDOOVODOVOOHH' nee VO LIke 5 Now’ WILL YOU QUT IT AND SERVE (T PLEASE! YOURE NOT GOIN’ To QUIT? Yee 18, WOOO® WELa | WANT A STEAK REAL BAD YEP 4 THOUGHT Yuu SAID OS WAS AN EASY JoB WIIO00000Q00U0V0000000000000 ? | aeosooe 000000000000000) Th A ROMANCE OF NEW YORK ollie) @ AND ITS THEAT SICAL LIFE é Chorus Lady. FOUNDED ON THE PLAY OF THE SAME NAME ie ; By James Forbes, £00000 Thie Novelization of “The Chorus Lady” Was Made By John W. Harding. Dulingaacm Com BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING OHAPTERS, Patrica O'rien 1s vader of the onoris, oe oc drotiy ont 2 eta CuDKer eily fiirung With Crawford, 4 maa \ Se tiewar wtord is the partner of Dan Virginia horee trainer to Lah axed aid on Whoee farm her Nore porvows $a from Cray ers Daine to # note £0 Patrica, COOL HES | __ (Copyright, 1808, by @. P, Putnam's Sons.) (Published under arrangements with @. P. Putnam's Gong New York and London.) sonest, his companion up by chatting | gulmatedly, With L.stinctive delicacy, however, he refrained from question- ing her, but talked about himself, Pat- sy bad aot heard of his departure from | ; Maple Grove, He toh how he had been summoned from there by a tele- ram from bie mother to go to Dngland and that he had arrived in New York on Re return from that country that very ys “IL went to the Long Acre Theatre everdn’, but I didn’t see Mise Nora | No, 18, A Peocary Hunt. |yNX the United States the peccary !s I or y Cound in the southernmost cor- ner of Texas, Im April, 1892, 1 made a flying visit to the ranch country of this region, stewting from the town of Uvalde with a Texan friend, Mr. John Moore. My trip being very hurried, I had but a couple of days to devote to hunting. Our first halting place was at a ranch on the Frio; « low, wooden building, of | Mi “No,” fa fs |many rooms, with open galleries be- Of igs More trom. discov i averta No," she replied; ‘we wasn't there.” | ¢y, a mia Gesunde’ Found See eee at Cram Crevtor acres wih! He saw from the absent look in her! ahout, # ° ¢ ber, and te ne after the departure of b eyes that she was not letening to halt| ‘There had been many peccaries, or, Invited guests, desing to think he b duped, Patricia takes Nora sat the rest of the family girl's. absence, thei ut the city, te rust, She chances to ale bey of Mallory's CHAPTER XIX. (Continued,) The Father. ‘ ES, I've been under the weather Y an’ upset a bit," sald Patsy. "1 feel like I'd drop, I'd be real grateful if you'd put me on an Eighth f@venoo car, Tivy go from somewhere hereabouts, don't they?" “Ow now, not a tram, but a keb, hit you'll allaow me, Miss Patsy,’ he said. “But ‘adn't you better ‘ave somethin’ fust? I'm sure you need It.” “Nix for the oab,"” she replied. eould do with a cup of coffee, though. The Duke, however, would not have conaidered It the part of gallantry or the proper thing at all to put Nora's sister on @ car when the unexpected privilege of acting as her escort had fallen to him, He looked around, but there was no cab in sight. *Home?” “There's a plyce just across the wy what keeps open all night,” he sald. “We can get some cawffee there If you'd rather not ‘ave anythin’ stronger.” Patsy refused anything gtronger. fWith profound qifidence he offered her hig arm. Feeling faint, she leaned upon x¢ gladly, and they soon were Installed at a table with some hot coffee before them The Duke was not a little proud of the h done to him and An Idyl. By Cora M. W. Greenleaf. ITH the mercury at ninety, When the sun i in the shade, I can't feel warm and ardent In my friendships, I'm afraid. For me the cold averted gaze Has lost its power to harm, Amd love grown cold these torrid days Is not without {ts charm, These days I'd do most anything To win a frosty glance; For the much maligned cold shou!- dev My soul most fondly pants. The marble stare, the tcy smile, Tie manner cool and chill, My young affections could begulle. bure thought makes me thrill rght to | of ‘what he auld. as the Mexicans and cowpynchers of Preps you'd Ike to go ‘ome now,” |the border ueually eal! iaem, javalinas, he’ euggosted, | round this ranch « few years before the Home" she echoed wearily. "Oh, | date of my visit. Until 1888, or there- yes, What time fy {t? Gee, {t's after | apouts, these wilt hogs were not much ated | molested, and abounded in the dense Requesting her to remain where she | chaparral around the lower Rio Grande. was for & moment and to excuse him, | In that year, however, {t was suddenly the Dulce went out and in @ few min- | discovered that their hides had a mar- (ULRaCeEUnned hy isn (ar ceny | ket value, being worth four bits—that “How Could You ?” fs, half a dollar—aplece; and many “You're awful good." she sald Mexicans and not @ few shiftlers Tex- hele her fo. "I don't Know ow a) pont Lg pl thank you," s ne velih “You. can best do that by fonrgettin’) The eon of the ranchman, a tall, well- |It" he answered. “Good night, Miss | Dut young fellow, told me at once that | Patsy.” there were pecoarles in the nelghbor- | He added as the vehicle started in| hood, and that he tad himself shot one | response to his signal: but two or three days before, and vol- “Don't ply the kebby; e's ‘ad ‘is fare,”” Unteered to lend us horses and pilot us She had riven the address of her‘? the game on the morrow, with the home because she could think of no|Nélp of his two dogs, The last were bis. | other place, but she dreaded to go. Her, black curs with, Os we were assured, | parents would be there, and Dan also! “considerable hound” in them. | probaly, What would they say to her?) One was at the time staying et the What could she say to them? They |fanch house, the other was four or five | would renew thelr reproaches, heap/ miles off with @ xiean goat-herder, | contumely upon her, and she could not 4nd {t was arranged that early in the | Glear herself, If only they had not told Morning we should ride down to the her father! The bare possibility of this latter place, taking the first dog with | gave her alittle courage Perhaps they | us and procuring his companion when | had all gone to bed. She hoped so, She We reached the goat-herder’s douse. | was too ttred, too run down, to think Having borrowed ¢he Javalina hound | much, If she could get to her room un- | of which we were in search, we rode perceived and rest her acking head, she | off in quest of our game, the two dogs might know better what to do in the trotting gayly ahead. The one which | morning. had deen living at the ranch had evi- | | dently fared well, and was very fat; jOne Thing Was Sure. |the ottor was little else but skin and One thing was sure, she would have! pong put as alert and knowing as any | without getting @ considerable number | stopped and stood still, chattering her very commonly killed. At| teeth savagely, and I jumped off my | ew was very dry and hot. Whore the java-| horse and dropped her dead with a shot! Iitnae live in droves in the river bot- in the spine, over the shoulder. nothing more to do with Dan after the! yew York street boy, with the same way he had treated her. Another thing| air of d\ereputable capacity, It was also she was sure, she would not D® this hound which always did most in Jable to return to the Long Acre Thea-| ___ tre after having left the stage manager ‘in the lurch as she had done, not trouble her much, She did not want to return there, She and Nora would go away somewhere, gagement with @ company on tour that would take them far from everybody and from New York. Some day they would find out, perhaps, how unfust| they had been to her, and Dan would be sorry, but ehe would never forgive him, | At the thought that all was over be-| tween them, of tho failure of her hopes that had sustained her through all. the years of her trials snd struggles, sho began to weep. “Oh, Dan, Dan!” she sobbed, could you! Oh, how could you!'* he oab came to & stop in front of the house he ascended tho stairs slowly and at the door of her flat heal- | tated, atill dreauing to go In, but feciing Miatrain rie, God" she prayed, Dest Bet peel mi: Wrong. ant dont dewncvo| JAM a young gist of twenty and in his. I couldn't @lve my Httle sister love with @ youn, man of the sate yt" age, whom I deurly love, and 1 koow awe As tad apie he loves me too, 1 have been keeping 900 000000000000000000, She Was Hasty, Dey Botty @ {t proper for @ young man efter he has assisted me up & hill to still koe hold of my arm for a few minutes? He and I have only met twice, He {s insulted because I told him not to get so forward, Wee 1 jus tied In speaking aa I did? VA 1 think ast wore a trifle haaty In re- proving the young man for so alight an offense, @@ he probably intended only to assist you further, Watt a Year or Two, “How aible she opened tha, vn rat’ Betty Vincent finding the {avalinas and bringing them to bay, lls companton's chief use being to make a noise and lend the moral sup- port of his presence, We rode away trom the river on the Gry uplands, where the timber, though | thiok, was small, consisting almost ex- jclustvely of the thorny meaquites | Mixed among them were prickly pears, | etonding as high as our heads on j.orse- |@ack, and Spanish bayonets, looking In \the distance like emall palms; and there were many other kinds of cactus, all) and men, tore after chem Instantly, with poisonous thorns, Two or three times the dogs got on President Rooseveli’s 1 Told by Himself -:- = -i+ | | DEDOOODYOOODO’ unting Stories toms they often drink at tho pools, Dut, Moore mennwhfle had dashed off after wien gome aiste veter they 'his pig tn one direction, and killed the seem to live q bly on the little beast with a shot from the saddle prickly pears, elaking thetr thirst bY when it came to bay, turning and go- eating Ms hard, julcy fibre. ing straight at alm, Two of the pec- | At last, after several false alarms, and caries got off; the remaining one, A |gallops which led to nothing, when It rather large boar, was followed by the lacked but an hour of sundown WO two dogs, and af soon as I had killed struck a band of five of the little Wilding gow 1 leaped again on my horse |hogs. They were running off through| «iq made efter them, guided by the the meaquites with @ pecullar hopping | yeining and baying. or boundihg motion, and we all, 4088)" ip igeg than a quarter of a mile they were on his haunghas, and he wheeled and stood under a bush, charging at once catching one, Infiicting an wily cut. All the while his teeth kept going like castancts, with a rapid champing sound. I ran up clos and kMed him by @ shot through the backbone where {t Joined the neck. His tusks were fine, The few im{nutes’ chase on horseback was great fun, and there was a certain excitement im secing the flerce littl creatures come to bay; but the true pecearies would be They could often be this way to kdl! these with the spear. speared on horseback, and wher was impossible by using dogs to b them to bay they could readily on foot; though, as they are vo tive, absolutely fearless and inflict a pugnact nake them come to bay be- fore hounds so quickly. Two or three good dogs can bring to a halt a herd of considerable size. Th then all stand 1 a bunch so with the against a }) chattering the at thelr antagonists, When angry and at bay, they get thelr legs close to- gether, their shoulders high and thelr bristles all ruffled and look the very {incarnation of anger, and they fight with reckless Indifference to the very last. Hunters usually treat them with a certain amount of caution; but, aa a matter of fact, I know of but one case \where a man was hurt by them. Ho | nad shot at and wounded one, was Peocartes aro very fast for @ few hun- | charged both by it and by Ite two com: dred yards, but speedily tire, loee their) panions, and started to climb @ tree; en, old tral and rushed off giving | wind, and come to bay. Almost Imme-| 544 as he drew himself from the ground tongue, whereat we galloped madly after them, ducking and dodging through and among the olusters of epine-Learing trees and cactus, not ies thorns in our hands and lege, Gives fauise don't wish to give him up, but my pa- | rents object to him, What shall I do? M, K. Tf you have loved the young man for Afraid we will not be happy together? | be true, | , years your affections mui it until you a@ year or s0 older, and {f by that time your parents sii! object and your Jove hag not changed pestis the man of your choice, | She Treats Him Coldly, [Dear Bettys HAVE been engaged to a young lady! ar Betty | about five months, I love her more | This aid | Y0.000000 000900000 0U0L000000000G R000 0000000000000 000 DOO OO U0 OUOUE On Qourtship ~ Marriage | BDODODEDOGODTGDOGODODSI|DHAOESHIDHOD 9 than I do myself, but she doos not | She always sug gayi as 5 seem to care for me. gests breaking the engagement, she is sorry sho is engaged, | icould have done better, Sho aiways | euld call, \ company with him five years and have finds fault with me over tritieg mot! be called before che week wae oul. We diately one of these, @ sow, as It turned | ong sprang at him and bit him through out, wheeled and charged at Moore 98{+hg calf, inflicting a vary severe wound he passed, Moore never sesing her but) 7 haye known of several cases of keeping on after another, The sow then) sorseq being cut, however, and dogs ata Indeed, a dog 10 the business la almost certaln to ret very badly scarred, and no dog that fants steadily can escape without some injury, TOBDODHDFOSIOHS OD GOODE worth consitering, Her parenta think | pasted the evening alone, What 1 want re preparing (0 know is this: Was {t proper for this i ood deal of ma aut ae pr i i young man to hug and kiss ma? It yr our wedding, which takes place | happened the first time he called on four months, What shall I do, as i am|me, ANXIOUS. Most certainly !t was not proper, but | you have only yourself to blame for the ng man's impertinence, Unlesa you encouraged him he would not have jady plain-| had You should tell t ly that do not rit tule to) treated you in this fashion, » an engagement which 4 hor, You wouid not Glopes Acceptable, 0 on 80 little love. Dear Hetty: @ it proper for a young lady to ao- capt anything in the line of dress from a gentieman with whom she | Her Own Fault, AM a young girl eighteen years of | company age. A fow days ago I was intro- O88 been keeping for the pas ed to a young man a few years |¢ ? Tam a poor gist ant han He seemed very!T would ask your 4 ested th me and asked {f ho It is pertgctly proper for a young lady 1 gave him permission and pay Peery ‘es vue op hangwepobiaan oi piece af lace, ‘ . them when they came near him, and| most formidable bite, {t would usually be safest to have two men go at one | together, Pecearies are not diMcult beasts to kill, because thelr short wind and thelr JOC, OOO0O00000[0; Anti-Snapshot Girl. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. HE summer| “Carmen Sylva's photograph taught Ie girl {8 @) me something,” said the prettiest girl wise young|on the beach to me in @ moment of thing. No more| confidence, after she had successfully snapshots for her. | avoided the from Saturday to Monday Following the 1l-| visltor armed with one kodak and alx lustrious example | sets of films, of Carmen Sylva,| “You ca,” went on the prettiest strl, Queen of Rouman- | 'T just love Carmen Sylva; she's so fa, who objects to being photo-, graphed unawares, | and of Miss Marte | Corelli, who will) ares sue any paper | printing an unre- touched photograph of her countenance, the summer girl flees from the kodak, Photographers say that the camera can't lie, But ask any woman who | has had a snapshot taken of her when | she wasn't expecting it, and she'll say |unprintable things, | If the camera doesn't Me, why do blondes come out brunettes, and why does sweet sixteen’s face look as lined as an Indian chief's No moro snapshots for the belle of the beach! By very reason of denying herself to the camera she will reign as belle In the heart of {ts gwner for many a g day to come. Eyen the most faltiful swain ts disillusioned when he ps the kodak pictures of his fair one and tr {fn her faae relationship TOOOOOUOUL The ODOQDOODESr develop to the ladies of Endor, and tn winter when he turns over the pages of his whens hs ieee eetaee sae A Few Careful Touches, poetic, And I've always seen photo aphs of her that were just beautiful, with white hair and a crown and things, But I paper. man been and such a noble expression, saw this picture In a Frenoh It was the Queen talking to a and {t mignt just as well have nan, yoked perfectly hideous all done up in a shawl, with her mouth open and her eyes all squinted up and the wind blowing her dress back, showing two great big feet in rubbers. Why, my whole {llusion @bout thet woman was | gone, And though I know she doesn’t look lke that, still I aaw the picture, So did the Queen. They say she was dreadfully peevish about f and won't | have any more snapshots taken, We're not queens, but none of us girls are ever satisfied with the way the snap- shots look, And so we just belong to the Carmen Sylva An Club,” If she sticks to her resolution, the summer girl will have rid the world of many hundreds of worthless caricatures of her charming self and will have sone one step further on the road to art an because she | | beauty, | By the way, that greatest of | Pices From) the Kodak, |Saran Dernaatdt, wo, at the age | bor in instantrneous and ungracefut tout playa EF eri hod | poses will efface the roal but vaguer to be pubilshed without seeing It plotures of her that still float in his and adding a few oareful touches with her deft paint brush to the Pat atl memory, ave That {8 one reason why the worl Tho girl who wante always to b® ciinks ner beautiful. She has never thought good looking !s wary of the| been caught off of her guard even by camera. @ kodak. | HINTS FOR THE HOME, Esoallops of Corn. |Baked Ham. MPTY one can of corn Into a bal.) AVI a alice of ham cut two inehes E {ng dish; add one egg, two-thirds H thick, Place in skillet. Cover to taste, of a oup of milk, salt and peppor with cold water and let doll for Place cracker crumbs and bits. ten minutes, Remove from was te|fprinkle flour over top and bake tn oven for half an hour ot butter over the top; put in modera {1 ora oven and o ightly browned Celery Soup. on to In elery; one nm When it {s done y ball; ld it at all, uid drop {t in some nd but 4a half cups tablespoon | quid; beat one aste, ¢ en scald one an four, ‘Then add celery \ega gut in and serve, brother, —Nixon Watormaa,