The evening world. Newspaper, August 27, 1908, Page 15

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OOOO COO OO COCO OOO OOCOURE ‘The Vision of Salome | i A Romance of the Herod Dance. + @ @ Of @ & A Ooe¢ By Albert Payson Terhune. Pictures Posed by GERTRUDE HOFFMANN, the Famous “Salome Dancer,” Now at Hammerstein's, DEGIADOCOO BWOEGWOOOS’ The newcomer, Herodias, wife of the Tetrarch and mother of Salome, glanced neither right nor left in response to the salutes of the guards and the deep rev-| evences of the bystanders. Her brow | was clouded; her eyes were dull with! anger. Clearly the feast had brought | scant cheer to her stormy heart. i Ou cume Herodias, nor paused uati) the reached the spot where her daugh- ler stood Why did you leave the feast? she | inauived ‘Phe Tetrarch is enraged. He spoke openly of your seeming contempt for lim and your fallure te honor nis Mrtréay “He even blamed me for your ab- sence Yes, and turned on me tn deunk- | ’y anger when I dented." Salome made no reply. She had not heeded. Dispute hatwean her | yered mother and her ard. inipking stepfather were matters of | eryday occurrence | “Have You No Answer This thine, h istlossness arc rath. : - “Have vou no answer to make?" she| leant Ans demanded, “Why did you"— Con righis She raused no’ for th ime | Sapna A Fant n 1 nottag for the first time| wever, the girl's seeming | sed Herodias to fresh hited. » farmmanncanmacanaary (OFAC TOODOOLODIOOOUOACDEMAMATOMBNNOOO The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, The Newlyweds-; Their Baby rege DOIN CORA WOOONODE HAVA PAPA AND BARBY 40 IN AND GET SOME NICE HUCIKLE BERRIES COIID OIGAETAORUMEDNE * Aug OOOO OO By a rge McManus; TOO OU DODOO OK TWENTY 9 FIVE CENTS: OH, PRECIOUS THEY WERE FOR DOVEY! IM ¢LAD OAT WASN'T SOUP! Gest, Manager uae the direction of her daughter's gaze. | BYNOPS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS Her own eyes rested, in consequence, Herel 4 UPON the aell ¢ and she shivered | bt ever so slightly. Within that deep well | on for a whole year had languished her | ith nd, Philip. Then, because | cae he had not vet wn signa of dying, | Provnee Hered had ordered him strangled, | per te “Why do you look so at that well?" | 3m jdemanded Herodlas, “The spirits of a the dead do not walk.” Ad “He ts there!’ whispered the girl, . to herself, t Hy 's in his grave," answered —_2—_ Herodias, half terrified by Salome's . SEP Te pressed f “Philip ts in his pesee . : look with horror on the spat. I, too Mothér and Daughter. | dread the sight of It. 1 wilt make ire RCTaReAntinte Penis oR h have the well filled up filmy exists ret with | done, the hlootetatnad erin, { cannot be done,” returned Salome $ o~ auisitiveness she bt have bestows jet ‘oon an ely beatles she neored down he moon struck you mad? | four busy Housewives mardiatithe nuda that had se» angrily demanded Herodias. “He ts| fately. been the aptain of the not there. A vear ago he was taken |_ , palace enard, ere ee ‘Wash Silk Dresses. “Poor fool!’ she stoned. “And the “I de not of the man wao aas| i eaila to ‘han al ceith: Aga my fesier’ Joma, utvused | TOR the vacation trip nothing is nicer mils HARniie aclenenitanhiat attalllil| her reverie by the elder woman's | than wash silk for ¢ y Walst Teese Gut A eee brine ie eer pin GES 1] and kimonos for women and gir! fim by the woman for whose sake . f | boys’ blouses mlnonbedinadsnOuiy had) madiy thrown away life and) A Cry 0 Rage. easily laun ed material. To launder | career | o th queried HeroJias hotly.| Wash In Jukewarm water with a goo The muarde had aeatn hurried sersee | “If the ceilfot a prince is defiled tw) soap, rinse well, and if white silk, blu the courtvard With black. scarce co: presence of a common feion, jit. shake out, roll up, and te wil v cealed looks of wrath at the Princess | Tetrarch shall’ ready to iron in half an heir. Tne tron weveral of th endetiy ratsed and bore | ‘It ts no common man. It {s a de-) ing can be quickly done and will cause away the body of thelr beloved leader | mon—or a saint.” but slight onvenience to the bus One dead man more or leas mattere?| “What are you saying?” hostess, (tls durine the reign of Ho od Antipa "The cell i the abode of one whom ‘ Leh Il - {Boiled Starch, Nubtan slaves ran forward with) A half-animal cry of rage burst from! 1) aVving pea several articles o elatia to. ts: Ning dark | the girl's lips and choked her words ET Harsh iavoul einine (ric: (the white marble of) (th to an unintelligible snarl Herodias| Aeahiaitaliney eameeeh yarement But scarce had they bent, jooked at her in genuine alarm. Accu ev irarenmaree umps, and ¢o their task when a fan ushe med as she was to ner daughter's ca-| eee Pas . atthe h nf the stal s prices, here was @ se that amazed| Which never needs g oie ae scurrying uff to thelr qu $ and terrified her. common bulk variety) 2 UE ” | ‘The spirits of the moonshine have| starch required, a small lump of lard “Vell Your Eyes! | seized your brain!” she cried. ‘‘The|and a little borax dissolved in waver ' | court surgeons must""— and sufficient cold water to dissolve The usher halted on the topmost stp. | “x51 ihe court executioner!” mocked] starch, Have ready vour kettle of boll- while a herald at either side of him) coin, “He alone can bring me peace.|ing water, half of which add to the sounded a fanfare of trumpets that 898 / Lot him go into yonder well! — starch, Place over the fire and stir echoingly through the high-walled court! wy oy pave not told me who ts there.|unti it thickens. Add gradually the men he shouted In sing-song LoD iy tls a prisoner who has dared to| neat of the water, stirring vigorously lon: | Speak ili of you'-— v n nei! “Audite! Audite (Hear yo Hear yed;| ep aN OL Yon oo WAtUL Satori. Bellruntit cane: Herod, Tetrarch of Judea—on whom be) «4 propner? The last of them was|\For Delicate Colors. —draws nigh! Make reverence! sai, whon''— and vell your eyes glory consume ye!’ The fact t the courtyard was de- lest the Hight of nD) “He js not slain, He ls there—there, | beneath your feet.” | O prevent delicate colored summer dresses fading and losing freshness T “No!!! wash !n starch water and rinse {n seried save by tie F and a hand- Yes! And a thousand times yes, | Starch water, us smal! brush Instead ful of eu a ded s did not ren-| he Prophet, Johaun He whom the board, solied, Use no der th ers y Mous. Tt! fsraelites Know ay vohn whe Bapus.,| Soap. Hang in di nad room to dry was thu t etiquette anded Wim) yiother; 1 demand bis death, Mis iu: | i} to announce hiy ma approach, | carat rsaaner tots | Homemade Filter. whether to an empty ro: ed market place. a The guards ranged themselves stitly “They 1oid Mele Was Dead!” at elther = side. A double line of} ‘orchbearers filed down the broad white ateps from the banquet hall into the nora crowd-| he Prophet!” Hervdias almost screamed the words. Her dark face went livid; her eyes string, Take AKE a plece of cheese cloth ang make a small bag and put {t on the water faucet, tle It on with « It off every other day and wash {t. You will be surprised at | court, thelr scented, smoky flabemaux ding with the moonlight in an un- y glare that made every corner of the Inclosure dazzlingly bright. Tho guards and {diers made way for this Procession. Only ome, standing hear the blood-stained space, remained | blazed, Forgotten was her concern for her daugnier, borgovten was all save (he Knowledge that the man woo bau| veviled her and had sought to preven. her from mounung the tarone as the Pewrarch # Wile Was sil ally ‘kney wid ie be Was aead,"” a: TOT wk Gucudunauis passion, “Loe said Herod had ordered nun siain, But he snail not ouilive we nign. Hered moveless, her brooding, sombre eyes | ever fixed upon the curb of the dry | . shall avenge tue insu to me. Aud well. U4, Udueuser uf mine! Brom my heart H le (Nauk you at (Ne i0yuiy lO me | that makes you long for this defan lerodias! | acuta “Come!” We Swill ally } “At ky noe tor . Already she had forgotten Halll. Her! gis’ “rhe Whole Worne’ mene se ene | brief quarrel with him and its tragic climax had wholly slipped the girl's memory. Now, once more, her whole mind was concentrated upon the man who had so spurned her; the Propne who had dared rebuxe and shame al Princess, And ever as she brooded her brain grew hot with murderous hate. | Like the deadly orbs of a serpent sleamed her heavy lidded eves, you for augat 1 care | wivhy of my own, A’— olive Palped. bus, (uvguga the lines of swirling torch flare, down the white! cleps, 4 ian wis lurching toward! them, Behind bi -rowded @ meriy,| nuisy rout of dancers, courtiers aud laugh officals, LO Gite Pear-ielr can demeanpr and stately stride a cutting contrast to the tarong of drunken rev: ellers—iiarehed the “chief priests uf israel, esa oe been unwilling guests wt the board of tfe man wh | Out from the banquet hall, in wake | tuelt people, Benes | of the torch-bearers, swept a woman,| Down Wie steps came the Tetrarch, | stumbling and walking unate. + for Tall, regal, of full yet supple eure, eho | PUMVIIK And, WAKING unsteadily, fo avenge @ advanced to the head of the steps and! And at the foot of ti began her slow descent. A jewelled | crouched like an angry gress’ oaths coronet blazed from her masses of red, Herodias, awaited him. The courtiers, hair. Her face was culd and palo; ber | At aE Of her walte, enraged! race, lips very red. (To Be Continued.) | j New Uses for Cretonne. fabric, Each year the cream or snowy white hat appea early in August, Generally it is wound with crepe or chiffon or simply trimmed with stiff white wings. This year such hats are given of cretonne, either in a high soft band about the crown or in di 5 @ charming hat of this sort recently, In which the disks were covered with |' cretonne in such a way that each was centred with a rose. Each appeared to fasten in position a white Mercury wing, of which there were two, one a! each side of the front, turning backward like the familiar headdress of the god. Light, delicately printed cretonnes are, of course, chosen for such pu: poses, and the results are astonishingly pretty. One lately produced model was made in this way, The upper urder sides of the Wide brim were T™ quaintest novelty of the late summer ts cretonne as a millinery moulded with the flowered stuff and the edge finished with an inch-wide black satin binding. The full Charlotte crown was of cretonne, Black satin ribbon was passed around the base of the crown and brought together at the left side of the front—Harper’s Basar, all the dirt and insests you will find. EN are al-| Ways BAY: ing thi reverse flower garden below and the wide-|Heve In it.” Edna grew more serlous, reading nd the distant’ high-|"It's protty hard to define. Ann's rizht: By Marjaret Hubbard Ayer. radiicliv lane atronietner aoa; ‘a person shouldn't give un freedom fori, B Lili B © ae there's one thing certain.” she addeditt. And I think Betty {s right in a, A ‘ then. “Jack and Carrie showed sense|Way, too: most all girls that marry y Lilian Beil. & A Matter of Diet. when they picked out this flat. And|thelr lovers do seem to lose them. If a “I don't see a aingle bureau nor fheteritnendeohiecuraentcanianatiara with sense ought to get|girl loses all her freedom she'll be chiffonier, nor a single article of fur the supper ts whether it will wor| along together.” |pretty certain to lose her lover, But if niture with drawers in {t.” Hor acodcorveviliaGobetencrice We watched the aun set over the she'd make a good fight she reedn't of| ‘The reason you don't tee any I8 be ie! craps, or any of those unwhole-|munt winged shins and after eupper lose either. Women have got to use cause there are none to see. And there yoy yur tempting viands, #ould [returned to find the ttle village, below (thelr brains on the proposition, so's to are but four sheets and two pillow coruinly not be eaten every nigit; | the dark green hills, it up, as by fire- jcut down the drudgery of housework: See neces emeie fie Reese on ae al, Ih the atgeation is Beyond wore elittering sea craft|and men have got to develop the sen: portage stamps, We drink coffee ou! | weax, On the other hand, you over moonlit waiera in a jewelied |Of Justice, so's not to turn thelr w! of those two beer steins and we find) jueit not to go to bed hungry, There ind the stars glimmered above, /entirely Into cooks and cleaners tan that these big studio windows don't! i, nothing so conducive to a sleep- | {Ing the illusion that we were|caterers. if they want to onjoy, there open, which makes {It cozy these jess night as an empty stomach. |swinging midway between heaven and) Oren for a long time vet; but tsn't It ¢ August nights.” | And especially in your case It would be earth. After we had sat silent for some! worth fghtine for—love? of the} who are chronic Kickers, | but while IT must admit that T wouldn't care to spend a succession of rainy Sundays | with a houseful of | Amazonian world regulators, still a word mht be said | with profit con- cerning the wom are easy going and the penalty man alone who hates abominates "a fuss.” men, too, who dislike to put people out, who permit themselves to be finposed upon, who always pay more than anybody else for the same thing, and who always get hats which are unbecoming, shoes which don't fit and gowns which other women have | refused. | | 1 know a Southern woman who, on & | | vistt North last winter, fell in love wita | ltnose beautiful duplex studio apart- | monts, and sublet one by letter for two | |months this summer. | 1 went to see her. you took this apartment “T thought furnished,” I said, the first time 1 saw it “T did," she sald | “Weil, whe! is the furniture? I don’t see any.” “Neither do 1, but she says thts apartment is furnished. “Where are the beds?" “There ain't any. We lave to make these couches up every night and sleep i there.” Isn’t It Always the Way? MEET THAT GOOD LOOKING FRIEND 1@) OF YOUR WIFE'S AND-| Beauty Hints. “T wouldn't stay one minute!" 1 sald firmly. well to eat a light supper before you| n tn, since your work lasts so late. elther would I, but I patd fn ad-| Whether {t's work or hand- vance.” | work, the concentration Is apt to In- Without aceing the place again?" 1 juco a appetite. A glass of milk and aberked) a sandwich, a simple salad 4 ot ‘en 80 tomatoes and tuce, or some st ed Vid like to do business with vou." i | fruit and crackers, or @ plate of spa sald adiiringly. leve you are t ghetti, would make a harmless but very only woman world who Is a] nice b ¢ euppet, Dixger idiot than I am!” | She agreed with me that T could prov Unruly Eyebrows, ably ‘do’ her in any business deal,| » y and we shook hands feelingly. 8.—You should train your eye- brows twice a day with a soft But let no woman deceive herself int el aise in pomren decelve herself tnto brush and elther a little vaseline nang thatan “easy woman acquires (F priiiiantine, Any stray hairs which popularity by her habit of being im. are corsplcuous may be pulled out posed upon. No; even thore wid with the tweezers, having first bathed ‘mapose upon and cheat and rod the|tne prows in very hot water in order to | easy mark despise her for her easiness, | sorten the skin. Her neighbors mock at her frequent i . discomftures, her husband laughs at|Hair Tonic. her acquisition of misfits, and her chii- a saad racy GRRE ani dren easily learn to despise her lack of (; bing brush at any first-class drug assertiveness. Therefore, ake courage, you women , limp © w who klek until you xe, exactly wiat ‘°!? revit a you want out and what you want ea } at exactly Lie moment you want ft, ‘Tye dipped In wa hee men may kiek at your kicking, but tn not answer thelr purpose of cleansing the long run I believe you are the ro spected ones of the earth pores Here is a tonic for dry hi At any rate, the men fly around gor Apply with scalp massage. Castor oj the woman kicker and see that she 1-2 pint; pure alcohol, 1-2 pint; tinctur gets what she Is after, it'only fo stop ot cantharldes, 1-2 ounce; oll of berga- ir fussin, * . not, 2 drams. Color a pale pink with alkanet root, Apply to the roots. Which ts more than anybody, man or woman, Will do for the eas ark, xe & 2 By H. A. Soh STROLL WITH HER THE LONGEST WAY HOME-YOU NEVER RUN INTO ANY OF THE BOYS ust 1908. ({xI ET Ei tu a Mma + Gertrude Barnum’s | i Jalks With Girls. Love and Common Sense. ‘ 4 had been loaned the keys and given the freedom W of the house of @ little Staten Island family woica wes away on ite firet vacation, ci “Well, if anyone ever needed a vacation, It was Carrie! ~ sald Betty, a coquette ef twenty-five, "The way she's na@ to slave for three years would make a worm turn,” “But not a woman,” remarked Ann, the strong-minded, from her position by the book shelves. “Poor thing! Look what ghes been reading, “Ine Care ef Baby,’ ‘Pure booed Reports,’ ‘Housekeepers’ Hints'—deadly?”’ “And she used lo de quite cultured,’ signed Dorothy. “She gave that all up when she Matried Jack, He's se stingy he wouldn't keep a girl. Sentimental Millie had been studying @ photograph over Carrie's desk. “Well,” sald she, “Jack sure is a good 1 guess she's in love with him all right.” “Love!” Ann siirugged her shoulders, “What ts leve, anyway, that @ womag should sell her freedom for It?” “That's what 1 say,” Bette seconded. man tn leve you've got to keep him guessing, marry him.” 27, CLRTRUDE BARNUM looker, ‘Besides, if you want to keep s if you want to lose him, just “Jack is a good looker!” My friend Edna had been sitting qutet{ime, Mille broke silence and returned during thle discusston, untll Mile |.|to the charge for her opinion on this @ “But don't vou really belleve in love, tm subject na?’ she hesitated. ) me!” Elna laughed then. “I) “Yes, of course,” was the reply, "I ‘ think the subject is too deen for ordl-|think it's just as real and realer than nary mortals. sUnginess. It ought to conquer even She led the way to the nretty back stinginess In the long run.” ‘Do you often see it?" Not often; but often enourh to be por vith Its hammock and window boxes, and polnted out the vegetable and : Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtshi SOOO @ }and when I asked for an answer she burst out crying. I could not get a Dear Betty: word from her, I have written her | AM twenty and am very much IN...) ietters, but did not get an ane D000 0000000, love with a young man two years .. 4. 1 cannot get the {dea gut of my my senor, Will you kindly tell m@ y.o4 that she really loves me, though how to find out If he truly loves me? | ane nas never let on about it, What DESIROUS. | shan I do, as I love her toe much to Unlese the young man tells you of hi8 | gig ner up? JACK, love you cannot be absolutely sure Of |” ane girl js too young to be sure of his affection, However, actlons some- | 19. own affections and for that reason {imes speak louder than words, and you | probably does not answer you. You should be able to tell from the way the | gigo are too young to be seriously in treats you whether or not Jove, and I advise you to be friends ly hi i with her only until you are both older, et A ala ta Write her a note saying you will be content to be friends with her and [ nk she will ask you to call again, He Loves a Flirt, Dear Betty | HAVE been keeping company with & An Insufficient Salary. Dear Beity AM twenty-four and am In love with fn girl of the same age. I have known her a year, She loves me very much | end wants to get married soon, but 1, earn only $8 a week. Do you think I can support a wife on that money? AT. You most certainly cannot support young lady almost three years and I dearly love her, I am in no posi- tlon to marry at present and am afraid 1 am going to lose her on account of a a girl friend of hers, who ts quite a fitrt wife on $8 a week. Both you and the | nd tries her best to have my friend girl would be very unhappy if you at- sive me-up. She tells me that she tempted {t. Cannot you find another loves mo dearly and loves her friend tion which would be more remuner- #80, I see her three or four tmas ® Do not } Week, and am willing to take her to | places of amusement, but she prefers golng out with her friend, She saye |she will always be true to moe, but | being a flirt herself I really don't know | what to do. HEARTBROKEN, As you admit you cannot ask the girl to marry you, you cannot expect to con. » trol her actions, However, {f she really cnat I loved her more than any other) joyed you sie would prefer to be with girl I know, and sn one occasion she you and would willingly walt until you Ne nlc marry, but as she ts a flirt is sald Mf I attil felt the same one month) Vor” qoubtdul whether her affections hence she would tell me if there was’ woiid stand the strain of a long eu- any hope for me. That month passed, ' gagement. _AVIARY_PUZZLE ctive than your present one? marry until your salary 1s larger, Does She Love Him? Dear Betty: AM twenty-one and am deeply in love with a very pretty girl of eigh- teen, I have told her several times ot AN you divide the circular aviary with seven straight lines se that every bird shall have a separate compartment? ant f “a 1

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