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arene y “i 0 Ne) “Lhe Gur: Quest.on”’ Has a Lot to Answer For. é J DOVEY, } 1 Mr. i heir ov it - palgn at Wallack's last nig luery of the head walter when » \ TIME FOR he asked the sad wa tress \ | You to 40 anytilng about ha in \ Yo wor ! T waited on S } nme explained jon” as ed musi- / SS ” cal come did not add “t Sometimes « programme knows at that It keeps to itself, ‘Book by Hough and characters and bus the types rattled on with bE. Howard, author me, the Place and the Girl"! | / Question” began to look se) | / rlous, \ And that wasn't the worst of it, ‘The! f7 very wor it was that the head walt-| er and the lovelorn waitress tried to be Hee rv serious al times and brought In helt-| | portions of sentiment at wich the un HH | sentimental audience laughed unfeeling) | _ ly, She loved him end he didn’t know| t, and he loved somebody else and she] did Know it, and the somebody else was the shi orette, and the cash‘ souorette loved Harold, and so st ment and went and went for three acts !nter- spersed with “Be Sweet to Me, Kid," “Waltz With Me Till I'm Dreaming. “I Like to Have You Call Me Honey,’ “When Eyes Like Yours Look Into | es Like Mine,” and other ttle things! e that, It would have been drippingly | sad {f {t hadn't been for an audience ut failed to ce the ead side of restau- nt lifeay a la carte New York, Chi- cago may weup Into {ts soup, but Man- hattan—never! But the complished at Miss once. poor, misunderstood plot ac- ast one thing—It kept! gle Drew Mendum falrly quiet Usually Miss Mendum talks with her eyes and throws {n @ for good measure, but this| he had to dip down Into the deep, Tt was her job to show that a wa cr Isabel D’'Armond as tie Cashier. waters of “d uffie her ress can love in silence even when ag ‘idol of the stage” ts coming to re taurant for meals and rehearsals and causing the head walter to eat out his heart i x to the regular bill fare The res was remarkable even for the White Light District, It perved “bre * with sieathed show girls and other delicacies more or less out of look ant season, toget understudies for ccac gz as t vealy youths In frock coats, wo Wt The Evening World Daily Magazine, arene weds-:-Th (fu RIGHT, > DEAR HEART, IN JUST A MINUTE ! they wo have Day the che x . The only really n was Miss Ieavel D'Arn she THOOWULUGOE should send to get ino ooo00 000000000000 000 000000000000000001 m raised a to be compelled to pile her le gazed at the head walter y eyes, One 1 of love ve stayed but Mr. Me( A New York Story By Seward W. Hopkins Author of “ Nightstick and Nozzle,’ Junie MeCree would h her appetite, poor gir! dusy with his usual her & single BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | Winthrop Barnard Coues ee: uroker, Her = a istol at his this tlme she was an | etreet aud has a y committer t the lest It proud, She Begala chum. Hare aaron t lest , v | mimnons the po) oun, i, man loved the book eg 4 she had loved merton responds to the summons, He loved k agent as she had 1 Marcla prowies to stand by Besse, But the head waiter. ia is called to Europe by her brothers “The Girl Question” had a lot t ry Hammerton hurt in a riot. A: - LBL, y Bi rd. a Columbia senior, wo Is in i Berure liove with Bi je penniless gir! er, Ay, 4 jad A there w g AE fconds, med extn |mother wl | chavtteur Cahill to sit {na box whe Bessie. Junle McCree as Con Ryan, the) {0% >| ve eten rn HERD to 1 woman fate ® uy a he aD and mado head waiter. Georgle Drew as Jo" | Reatie in rescued by. feo) Tike home Instead of Ciiteago. Forster, a waltrese. Hace iaenieasutamen Miss Helen Royton furnished more Q ‘ Troma: Shae auton than her share of gloom, especially when sho sang. In one of her eongs the! seemed to be getting ready to fly away, but there was no auch luck. Mr. Carl H. George, who played a German baron in a way that brought back tender 3% Fecollections of the sentimental young lover in “The Musto Master,” faced {he | oe fong with rare courage and a sweet smile. Other brave souls remained to ¢ ce] CHAPTER VIII. ne be found. A ragged man late one night the last act. CHARLES DARNTON. ‘ The Triple Man. | Lara +e : i "said Brainard, ‘tel me! Schwab's Story of Old Bill Lush. ND seni eee MARLES M. SCHWAB at the reception that he gave to the Amerfoan ObAE LIRE de Ay, We 6 (G, lermakers during their convention in Detroit, h among ie) busines: eald the stranger Honaire friends all were and that he did not know of with a leer, “What do I get foist?"’ American millfonaire who h T must have “But the millionatre big,” to find fault with him. We are as an old Bil Lu: Loretto, was “"Yes, sit,’ sald Bill one years am never to take Friday was my brthd law conchudet a to-morrow my ol tt, I can’t think “You get nothing firet | some assurance that are playing ous to find flaws in our mi Ires ag | Square, What is your {oformation? to tind spectal cecasions, “Well, I reckon it's about what yuh ight. ‘I faithtally promised my wife thirty-seven | Want to know more than three: iar except on special occasions, | Brainand scrutinized Saturday was Decoration Day, St | fully. sit to us, Monday we had fine weather after a long wet spell, “‘L must confess,” he said, “that you! a new dire to-day, darn, don't impress me very well, But it! of anything special.’ seems to me to bea certainty that you = UST ae would not come here at all unless you} | nad something to tell. What I want to OOHODODOT | got at 1s whether you are trying to get ® | me into a tran or really want to sell | Betty Vincent's Advice § "at"oet Mio ws 3 | yuh, I’m down an’ out.” o his money dishonest Schwab, “and ever loom wants, the man care- dress comes | —Pittsburg Gazette-T | don't | \ “You don't have a very prosperous | On Courtship and Marriage § took, but I have seen some hard luck ECHAEIOTIOOOMOTIOOORIOAE@OOCEDEREEECOOeOR od} MEG ai ries tea ey cea “Yuh say yuh've been up against 2 Well, 1! yuh who me he would listen to friends?| herd luck eh? Well, I'll tell yu 17 Lobes 40. What shail T do? Tam yerp unhapne|! am, and {f vuh don't ike to believe Peer ihave refused tw SPPY | me—then don't. See, I've got a beard of seventeen and am) #84 have refused two good men for him, I take {t off with no trouble, Don't have to go to no barber.” The Disguise Removed. He removed a false beard. “Now I'll continer my nar-rative,"’ he sald, "My name to the police ts Red Sikes. See, I've got red hair." And he pulled off a wig. Under It was a short crop of reddish hair, Brainard was gazing at these light- ning change successions with wide open M. S. The man Is entirely too old for you and seems to have no serlous inten- tions, You are too young to Se seriously one, and I advise | @ man of forty formerly boarded with #: fo a quarre! with my m He always says he loves 1 sees me, which {8 about ever; tour weeks and then only when t write ! to him. I know he has a very lazy dis- Re friends with boys of your own nge, position, He also promised to marry i me, but stated no definite time, He Too Young for Girls, Seems to Ike mo, but his friends teasa| pe™y Betty: him because I am #0 young and he is|| \.. ” He but owing young man of sixteen and very sensitive. Do you think if he loved) | Dav ® Sweetheart one year and | eves, ae - v2 four months older than myself, We "And no Mr. Brainard, {f you will love each other dearly, but people say| permit me.” sald the stranger In a Wo are too young to keep company.| changed tone and different accent, ‘I Her parents do not object to mg, and | will introduce myself as Mr. Timothy jmy widowed mother says nothing} Wiager." |against it. Do you think she {8 too ol4) And he proceeded to remove the dis- |for me? Do you think I am too young | feputable clothing he wore, |to think about girls yet, as I have to| He proved to be a well dressed, well help support my mother? A. J, kK, | Set up fellow, with a devil may care You are entirely too young to think | 100k in his and an air that in a seriously about girls, Be friends with | (esperate situation he could be de- girls of your own age, but until you! ~~ aa jare much older don’t be anything more en, When Very Warm, HBN much overheated In W summer Instead of trying to cool off with !ce water !n- wardly try putting {t on the wrists and back of the ears, Dip & sponge into @ glass of iced water and hold it back, first of one ear, then of the other, Hold the wrists over a basin and Pour the water on tn a thin stream. Do not do st ao suddenly as to be J\t0 any narticular one, ‘The young lady { Origin of Honeymoon. Pa yary is not t6o old to be a friend, VHRe \ ond uid (0 werd uses vord £1 {= not convenient to get the 5 ‘ ’ % cce, honeymoon and few have feed water, hold the wrists under the Do Not Accept the Ring. ever taken the trouble to find cold water spigot ai trear hd 4 d s poets a 0 do with the sup utes. Occasionally lift the hands TUE SOUNE man 106 A Month He 1 Dalila That ik Ac aerOd OF ayedt and sop the water behind the ears pale He Wad eine to Bive ine & rig nd loye which ts granted to for my birthday, Would you advise 1 fh een and on the neck. aes P me married couple by the world This treatment will cool you as M8 i Fees iacthhere t ED. Instead of this, {t 1s called trom a wickly and with much less tisk Bun aie Oi 80. Slant wi! q meh eae Flak Yay acquaintance, You are too vouna cy | Anclent practic® of drinking the w “than jumping into a cold bath when I accept. Jewelry trom men, and a ring | °f honey for ® days following +. warm: Shot HO. be Tagen Wess Its mewn ‘for an engagement ring, lOO O00G0000 0000000, bended on to take care of himself, “Now,” he continued, "I have in my pocket a revolver. I will present Jt to you with the butt fir Tt ts a novelty to men of my calling to reverse the order of the pistol, but you will notice T am trying to prove to you my sin- cert “Whatever clss you are doing,” sald Brainard, “you are doing some great stunts,” “Now, perm me to tell you, that on my princely head there !s a kingly Price af two thousand dollars. I am Severely wanted In New York for for- gery. I am well acquainted with the mognetio features of your frlend Ham- merton of the police. Answer me now. f you don't want any information from me, take me out and hand mo over to Hammerton, You and he can divide the two thousand between you.” « “Get Down to Business |" Brainard stared. “On the other hand," sald Mr, Wig- wer, “Mf you do think vou’ can trust me, hand me over a portion of that money Marcia Le Grand sent you to help you find Besse Winthrop, ‘Then T think we can get down to business.” “But—how dld_ you know that Miss Lo Grand sont the ten thousand dol- lars?” asked the emazed Brainard. “Well, I don't want to make too long R story of this, I might have been seen by the police, And I've had trouble enough. Now we wit! explain our knowledge of the draft from Miss Le Grand with the simple tact that scarcely a thing involving good money and that Involves also good or bad banking escapes me. Let that go,” Yi wouldn't be {nterestled anyway, I don't care to tell you.’ “But now, there ts another Ittle story to tell that may convince you hat I am telling you the truth," a yard of additional mat Pattern No, 6044 {8 cut measure. aew te Obtain These Patterns, OO GAGHEEEOHDG eir Baby 7-6 May Manton’s Daily Fashions, Five-Gored Under Petticoat—Pattern No, 6044. iilus rial 36 Inches wide if the frill n sizes for a 2, % %, 28, Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- TON FASHION BURBAU, No. 182 East Twenty-third street, York Gend 10 cents tn coin or stamps for each pattern eo IMPORTANT—Write your name and addrrae plaialy, ad i- ways epecify size wanted... otal aston pena. — DOK Bd WITH You! EYE? “You were driver for Kendrick Maple, I bellay “I was’ “Mr. Kendrick Maple has more names than a dog has fleas. To the best of my bdellaf {t la Peter Wieger "Why—yau said your name was Wis- | are a discerning young man, And Peter Wigger and Timothy Wigger were once partnera in the business of extracting superfluous currency from the vaults of auch banks as we could get into. “I trust vou follow me. Timothy Wigger was an honest man—is an honest man to this day, But Peter Wigger, known otherwtue as Kendrick Maple, 18 as crooked as a ram's horn. A Queer Story. Brainard moving uneasily on Tits) sent, ‘This charge of crookedness from one who professed to being a bank thtet and forger, wanted by the police under two thousand reward, was a revelation to Brainerd of wavs of a certain por- tion of humanity he had never met, “Go on," sald Brainard breathlessly. “Hurry up, because my mother may come !n at any minute." “T won't hurt her, but I don't want| to nee her or have her hear me. 1 trusted a woman once, I never will again.” “Well, go on Bessie Winthrop.” “But I've got to explain something. Somewhere In New York there Is a crazy man from Austria who calls himself a doctor. He's a doctor, all right. He's got whiskers ike a mop, eyes that bore holes, and a temper that wous make a Jealous woman sick with And he's what they ca! pert in nsywhology, Catch that? That means brain study. “J am not’ through yet, even though with what concerns an ex-| LOSE-FITTING | absolutely es- tential to the amart | fitting gown at the, present tine, and. the five-gored under Petticont makes a desirable feature of | the wardrobe. This | one can be laid in Inverted plaits at | the back or gather- | ed as liked, al- | though the former | method {8 to be pre- ferred unless the figure {s exception- ally slight. It can} be made from lin- gerlo materials and rimmed with em- broldery or lace, and It Is also suited to flannel skirts. The quantity of materia] required for the medium size Is 81-8 yards 84 wide with 3 1-2 yards of embroid ery 7 Inches wide and 2 3-8 yards of insertion to trim as Hlustrated, or one s made to mateh, %, 8 and 3 Inch waist Tuesday, eorge DOO WHY DEAR, You'RE LATE FOR | WORK! WHAT'S THE MATTER ‘Winthrop, Pl : a re) McManu 1 4vess WWE Got TIME FOR A NAP! Se i} | | SNOOKUMS MUST Y) RAVE KNOWN IT) /J I WENT TO SLEEP AND RE Wore Me uP! R I tax your pattence, T whs the first to know Prof, Blinknachter, I travelled with him from Burope, Now, the pro- fessor {8 not only one of the wisest mon in the world, but he fs the craz- fest loon that {sn't {n a strattjacket. I know where the lair of this man Js For some reason he has kept out of the hands of the police, but he eught to be there as well as I." ‘But s something about Bessie said Brainard impatiently. “Tell me where she 4s,” telling you, In Blinknachter’s “But what did this doctor ‘have to do with it? It was Kendriok Maple, or Peter Wigger, who took her away.” | “That ts he started to, Yes, he suc- ceeded. It was my loving brother who knocked you down. It was my loving brother who started off with the girl. But—she had been 111 in the automobile, I believe," | “Yes,” replied Brainard, “And all her troubles had ao de- pressed her and weakened her heart and general vitality that Peter Wigger, known to you as Kendrick Maple, was afraid she would be feund dead on his hands, So he took her to his good frlend Prof, Blinknachter.”’ “But why did your brother run oft, with Bessie?” t “Because he wanted te marry her,” “You Must Be Crazy |" “Wanted to marry her! You must be crazy!" exclaimed Brainard, “IT am not crazy—at least not more than nine-tenths of people.” But Maple had plenty of money and teen Bessie Winthrop’ but once, then she waa {ll, and weak, and from the fire. He could not possibly hava conceived @ eudden desire to marry her then.” “He didn't.” Rrainard’s eyes bulged more and more. “What rot {s this?” he asked angrily. “Haye you come to waste time In this nonsensical talk? He had never seen lier before, She did not know his name till I told her I was going to drive his automobile,” “Yes,” said Tlmothy Wigger, in a weary way, “and you wouldn't have got that fob had tt not been his pur- pose to marry her. Brainard rose from his chalr aa ff to throw out his strange guest. “Then, the nonsense you try to tell me is that Kendrick Maple liad made tp hisymind to marry Bessie Winthrop before he iad ever seen her, and when she was a penniless girl.” "Not quite. He had seen her often. | He had spent evenings at her teher's | house. Hae had plunged deeply business with George Winthrop, ruined him,” Brainard stood still and with a white face looked at the Imperturbable Wik- | into | and the tale” he said drick Maple, my brot As Peter Wig- But as Finish Ag a rich man about town ger he was a common thief. Willougfaby Thorne, he was a specu- | 1 inventor, financier.” loughby Thorne!” cried Brainard, | The man with the bushy brown beard, the pecullar accent, the cool, calm man | “iMone | sinking | “He was my cat (To Be Continued.) all the vagaries that men Stockings for Bridge. 2 O have designed for women to wear, the most remarkabie are the new bridge stockings. They are tn black, in tan, and the openwork designs over instep and ankle show diamonds, clubs eart and spades. Thes tn the same ss, but em more cc the designs color as women ave made ¢ by outlining aspicuous with adl running stitch of colored silk floss, | | well-established firm which ts recognized | | We Livea - of Little Things And Our Days Are Marred Not by Wonders, but by Our Vexation Over Trifles. By Lilian Bell. | F it appears to I any one that the total depravity ot {nanimate thiags trivial {8 too of thoughtful pub it seema to him that the| thingy which more nearly concern our are and tf ae ness are g S sues, sich as life and death, eternity, ap “gga fate and the Stand- ard Oil Company, let me cail his attention to these questions: \ Ww ) concerns Mis !mmediate happl- ness more nearly, the problem of life or the ‘bursted water pipes? ‘The ques- | Uon of to com slippers It 1s a life of HMttle things that we iva, and all that we commonly call fate and destiny can often be reduced stiny or that the tceman failed ‘The oversoul or Als misiald ‘to the fact that inanimate things are totally depraved, Onr days are marred, not iby wonders, ‘ut by our vexation over tritles And while that may seem unworthy of great minds, yet in the very con- solousness that a man's mind ts great and his soul mighty Mea the sting of looking at @ uttie, weak, ronnd collar button, lying so demurely on nis bureau, and Knowing that not with any force of his own, no physteal nor chemical attraction, not with pliers nor forcepa—not, Indeed, without a miracle— can he lay hold of that button and fasten {t In Mts place without dropping it twiee, ‘Tho inanimate becomes animate after Mt drops, for ft rolls, bounds, caroms and hides with an agility born not only of long practice, tut which must. come from a diseased mind direot- ing {ts motive power. | Much energy Is wasted tn self-control. | If self-control came easy, much wear and tear on the nervous system would | be done away with and the whole world, would be as affable as the Blarney | stone. It also would revolutionize the lan- guage, for most of the anathemas which, when hurled In their mightiest Strength, fa!l to reach and bring back the street car you have Just missed would fall Into disuse from the Infre- quency of thelr requirement, and agres- able compliments on the state of the| weather would take thelr place. As long, however, as the wind not only lows both eyes full of dust and | then, having totally incapacitated you from following it up, or seeing where i Life OS) You are going, blows your hat off, and & crowd gathers to see you chase it—a sympathetic New York crowd, you know, full of tenderness and com- Passion tor your mishap, as all York crowds are—and you do ¢ red-faced, half blind and wholly mad, until you all but have it, and the crowd looks disappointed—no, the wind gives it Just one more ro and, over it goes under the wheels of a truck, whereat the crowd Wbreathes a sigh of delight and disperses satistied—io you claim that the wind blowing a hat Is not in eagiie with the deyll? At such times you feel the truth of this rendition of the ines which declare that § “Phere !s some divinity shapes our ends rour! Hew them as we will! Hor a man to carry but one mateh to ight the gas in @ distant room means The Inanimate Becomes Animate, always to have !t go out. Whereas, to go back In a rage and return with @ handful means that the first one he strikes will do the tyustness. . Did you ever feel for a pin in th dark by running your hand over @ beaded cushion, and after vainly trying to pick off a dozen beads, thinking they were pins, come to the conclusion that there were none there, and light the gas, only to find the cushion full of them? Did you ever get up in the night, per- fectly confident that the rocking chair was over by the window, and hit your ankle bone on the sharpest rocker be- fore you had gone four steps, and then, | stooping down to ease the pain, bang your head Into the door knob? Did you ever—twt, what's (ie use? Ot course, you have Wo all have, @® 4 During Ho OO FI00.0.000000000000000000000000000 0000000000000 DOOD @ : Care of the Baby By Ida Badanes, M. D. t Weather CQQOQOSSS) gether with those that do not belong It Je preferable to pasteurize the milm, ® ILK i the er eat est to the milk proper. medtum for | bacteria of all sorts, Apart from the fact that cows may be sick and) excrete the germs of thoir respective diseases through} the milk, thus cone | taminating every! one who drinks !t, milk has also the property of ab- sorbing microbes from the external world with marvel- DA BADANES MO, |had seen many beautiful girl, He hal Pious mpidity. sanitary conditions contains from 9,000) to 10,40 microbes to each cubdte centi- metre, while the average milk delivered In the cy has half a million microbes to each cuble centimetre, When they reach such proportions they may become dangerous at any time, One cannot therefore be too careful! in choosing and preparing the milk for) young children. On no account should k of a doubtful character be given! to bables, It should be gotten from a| by the Board of Health. City milk {6| usually pasteurized—subjected to a high| temperature for the purpose of destroy- ing the harmful bacteria In case there! are any. Raw milk {8 more nourishing that pas- teurized milk because a great number | of germs naturally make up part of the mil-they belong there and pasteuriza- | destroys these useful germs to- on at home rather than get {t from the; ordinary milk dealers already pasteum ied for this reason: When milk is pas.) teunzed it may bee few days old. before; it reaches the consumer, as it oan keep, long while when It is free from the) germs that sour the milk, and {t {9 vary! essential that milk should be fresh, ‘The method of pasteurization at home’ {s atmple. A bottle of mtik Js placed in’ & pan which is suMciently filled with cold water to cover'the milk in the bote tle, The pan with the bottle in {t Js} placed on @ hot coal or gas stove ang the water In the pan {8 allowed to reach’ ‘| Healthy, nico milk when drawn under | the temperature of 158 degrees; the pan 1s to remain at the seme temperature for thtrty minutes, The bottle of milk 1e then taken out and cooled. Thig ts the whole process pf pasteurization. The’ exact temperature of the water can eas-, ‘ly be ascertained by keeping a ther~; Mometer there and watohing tt every once in a while. Plain dolling destroys the bacterta, but {t renders the milk indigestible by coage ulating certain constituents, while pes teurizated mtlk 1s supposed to destroy only the germs, leaving the other party of the milk unchanged. ——_——__ Amateurish. Last year they wed, With much regret We hear she can't Make biscuits yet Orn THIS SUM SPELLS BAB00N Syn BABY= Y *MOON - M é aoe B | B