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> alin wel A th he ee at DODEDDGGOOSDGHODOSOGHOHD®, Soul Colors for Your Flat : Now the Fad : By Margaret H. Ayer. ECORATE your new flat according to your soul colors, Let your window | curtains be an inspiration to suc- cess, your carpet be the color of happiness and the wall paper fill you vith the vibra- tion of prosperity, | Interior decora-| Your tors beware! fleld ts being usurped by a inst! Aecorator. decorate your foul, but tells you what color to choose | for your new apartinent or your new gown, colors whi help stimulate | you to the hig! pment, which | will cheer you {f depressed, soothe you nervous and you with the color elament needed in your general) make-up. | At her apartment, in East Twenty- reventh street, Mine. Zara told me about | this new kind of decorating which 1s becoming the fad not only with those who go in for the unusual, but with peo- ple who like to keep up with the times. | by colors which surround us. And we | should choose euch colors as have the most beneficent Influence upon us. “You will notice that most places of amusement-—particularly of the more crude sort—have plenty of red in their The Evening World D ily | The Million Dollar Kid :-: | G4YDEOD40O0O0OOOO4O0409044OOH 66066446456-06F00O9O00H0OD4HOH-O9 HOHE: | OH, MR. MONK ! THERE'S YouR Magazin DV! 9 9OOD4O4 44049000004 HE DOES LOOK UKE ME HEY? 1S THE mighty person with an | IMITATION LOOKS LIKE HAL beauty that {3 not only external but oes ack (0 Ulings payee, eee MOREGOLD! I Mme. Za > called a payehte | ATTERY | WONDER WHO e, Saturday, O4.466 PEOHODOOS HE RESEMBLES You so MUCH! CLAWSSES APE ME MORE OR Less! Os MISTAH WRIGHT AM SHOLY A GREAT AIR- SHIP MAN! TOOOO0000 lOO OODOU0D! 10, x p x Derareye Trances of the Press Agents September 12, / By R. W. Taylor : ae 1908. Dor -i- Josephine Nye -:- A Woman Who Is Funny OOM 2) By Special Arrangement She Writes Exclusively for The Evening World “One Touch of Nature.” H, do you re-| won't hurt you a Df, time u approach the chalr—his tefes rings had with thar | You ex ily, uy left, and Weave tooth? your umbrella behind Tt commenced to| What an escape! ; You saunter in, somewhere, It doean't ache about dinner- time and gan to curl up matt kill time you eat eam and a plate where, and t you be: a large dish of ral eledi came (oe it e cakes which they call "ese sorter Bae ee Anat 1 now enter a store where you card GIT pik d invest in a pair of arg ek OR Cuan pink and green blocks. suas | Why? No matter, ‘There may be some plasters, and NEW i,iimina! connection between there THOUGHT, and laudanum, and fodine, und the killing of time, But nothing and collodion, and that old rhyme) matters SSpunk-water, spunk-water, cure thls! Noy you get out and you walk “quite pain.” ‘Then you prayed a little, Kind / somo time,” as the Southerners say. At of ashamed, just as an experiment, and |iagt yon drop in and gulp down a long j‘not meanin’ no harm.” |draught of Dr. What's His Name | You stayed round among folks just as) Goolak. jong as you could in order to corral all] This has a strange effect. the sympathy possible and enlarge your (Goolak, Go Rah rah, lst of heme remedies, You didn't eat your dinaer “nd the sight of your trag- rah! ody meant no dinner for the rest, but uu felt they were FIENDS even to HAVE dinner, Then you went to your room, and were so sorry for yourself that {t almost proved fatal, Right here, however, you remember how poor old father had all his teet | pulled and didn't take a thing, ‘That | was when you all lived up on the | farm. And you recall how mother | braced up and parted with hers, and Jet vou go right on with the mud-pie bakery you were making such) a sul And you remember how your brother Wereagin awhil cess of hig when you scheme of decoration. Red Is a very ' : é a j : fodoo ys | little Kld—with wiggly teeth, like loos | exeltine ey ib ise she) color ot By Clarence ls Cu Ilen ~ |popeorn, told you to note string t micees) t's the color of physica fe ‘ ; c it whenshe| vour tooth and tle the other end te strength and vitalli Yet if you Trance No. 1, Author of “Tales of the Ex-Tanks.” paves s Jack's. or Rector's,| the bed-post, and then run “licket should surround @ very sensitive per- a ORG Re ans eeee rE eEIICS VARIA TSETY gon with {oo much of thte red colee i i : a tia pier il Pe a ; vot woud poasthly bring onan attack Which has to do with WINK- aaa . ; imeheon plac to after] Now it secure to youcand you tur aes ei SIE WINEDROP BY WAY OF, BEGINNING.—The American Press Agent is sui gen performance e sna to fee instanter—that Mrs, So-and-So n doing a Tore- 4 iene , ‘ i ‘ she goes into (he dack-}died right in the dentist's chair at "1 advocate the use of red in the! 4 \ eris, whatever that may mean. He sleepeth not on te publicity job 0" eneea Bayelaen i 1 valr after room nf & nhlegmatic and dull person,/Ador stunt In South America. whilst there isa chance for him to spring something, In elfin invent and practises enthusiastically at her a i ies ae rit ee ene You W Your H 0! color of i fame place where yours is | ou Wring Your i Ee rose teolet being ee! 188 WINK | iveness, in facility in fashioning fairy tales and gnome narratives, he | bricklaying, AMIE au anortersukicin vou nancel| 3 rooms of sick people, ‘The combination Me: WINE:| maketh the renowned Hans Andersen read like an unimaginative writer hia batted gonehinen Ae ate and pace the floor and say, “My) You are now at a pitch where you of green and red, which you #ee 0 ne pitty mee of facts and figures. Sometimes he believeth in hig hallucinations, Ad- |tytn Wyte one mortar and hand 1) Gawil!" ttt meantn’ no harm. can think of the rl and the dentist's much here In New York, 1s very In- ng career on the i" rey ABA Nite nares aie ° Lae vice | Ghen you have another Jolt, rou\ vain With/equallspancon, teresting from an occult point of view, New York comic) ring his naive cvedulity, som swe believe in them, too, Tt is (nicke up the bricks—which have been) thing of the new millinery you wat up| With a sudden a on of fortitud because red is the vital color and green opera and extray-| with the philanthropic purpose of providing helpful hints for brain eviously arhvet With Csaba until 1 o'clock last Saturday night to (YU Doard a car and go straght to the money-getting color, and’ certainly agansa stage has| fagged prese agents that we are starting this tentative series of trances, (act and holds them unt otis Tasty puta, and with horrible pangs you{ NC Of those wholesale Jerkerles, wher) x e Y ; ar arienall ub is ready to put them in place. | ut Pate ye fina mar ane York represants just these two at- DNEMOMEN ANS A nn nnnrnnenennenrnsnrnn nen RAR AAA AAA AAT AAA RANA AAA Mise Taxicab wears elbow gloves of | BAS Who-oh who will ever wear y put a little funnel thing over youn. Green the Money—Setting Color, putes.” successful, despite : lavender suede while at her bricklaying | Rat when [am gone?” But you say ce, and you breathe, and at first you eae dea ttn ed are she} the land of Monteauma for several )|mbs have been appearing before the tine, qth hair and hat to mateh,|!t over, dased, and ome way “have | i's diamond dust—a twinkling—then ESSE RKA REM E OPEV AY Mina ait 3 \ has never been re-|Weeka past in her $500 private ear American public for many years see tile brick. chimney which ehe| Went!’ sounds ibetter, but you are not | *uddenly eomething in your head govt mendous amount of effect on people. | H H t quired to speak a| (decorated by Alma ‘Tadema) ne eatin Winedcooe wiliMapnenr: wanhnt Oris ONLY TN Irene eu ie : SMIRRGOR TUN aCe ELFSTH RG CURIS? m fe arena ca ohan ; lds every morning 18 demolished dur-|4ulte sure. Reason is surely totterin Every one probably knows that. It la/ O e Ints single word ¢ Ne a oH La nee as aperon: | Cibber & Nvlieals nation, which HHay any RUN retareconclentedtton CHR Antiron’ HEINE) and you're off! possible to assign a spiritual quality to For Busy Housewives. | any production, |On Tuesday last Miss Winedrop slipped opens on Oct, 10, with which company ie peneer operatione on ehe follow: Bea as wo iinutes afterward you “com color and to use the Influence whict y CLARENCE L CULLEN limiting hersel{|#way from her entourage and attende! her pa 1 profoundly Mr to Fane » AU Le you “ing yourselt down on| tq" with a whole Indian -massagra color has on us through the optic nerve solely to ruminative parts in which her|® bull fight. So inspired baad u SR Ee nate ered aR BRCHAT At Warat unlieans ped with your clothes on, and! awake und yelling inside of you, with to Influence people for thetr own Kod Bouttigg for BUTNS statursque proportions converse louder| the spectacle of the unimpeac rable aan WNCalied tNamracavenvorccultt e fies jave “slat round’ for a) Anarchist, vaudeville headliner, anit Gverybody responds ta certain rs, Poultice H than mere words, wag the Agurante in|bravery of the toreadors t e bes T ; Mae anita iaedshens(orlosstanicauthredl linen nsebes they say down tn Matne—| grand opera thrown in That {s to say, one color will make you AKB a poltice of oatmeal and jan unusual adventure tn the Province | sotnrht Gethecoinio, the famous Spanish rance No. 2, Ae HRC EEA Tauneentoe ASE RnREE oe drop off into dreamless slumber ney Wet cdhyk (ete aett CUEW EO feel happy, while another color will whiskey, apply as quickly as poa- of Souora, in Old Mexico, on Tuesday | toreador, who was in charge of ar ‘0 speak of th ting exainple she Blessed respite | want to sing f make you despondent or depressed sible, letting {t remain on for sev- | last. Phiszements).torpenmitshen toxenpeet 0) Se gtaing (oulhecaroneanandsiilernotlaen cee pene Fal rise expecting tof YO Whit, SING What I try to find out is what colors are ' hiskey at, Miss Winedrap, aa ts well known tolihe ring. ’ ! i see crape on the door, but you are dis-| you po SING. | hours; pour on a little whiskey at, 3 Pay Sey IAG. ( . er profession who Insist upon remain- | , . You be 3 particularly beneficial for the individual trees’ ¢o keep poultice motel. Remove |the American public, has ben touring The affable Gethecoinio quickly felt In which TAZIE TAXICAB) et pee tintil the eun risen, CreeteT tc) All_at once you break down and ery and by telling you to select that color ; eke t fin’ with her girilsh suggestion and Pek hey world hover Ent lige the dickens ? apply oil. There will be no biteter hy 5 vs, enjoys many a leisure hour lay- geht on, | But YOU GET BACK THE SAM or harmonies of that color for the gen- @ trom powder fill nol) deave! 6 oaned her one of his toreador outfits, y our lay Un RU RAvAHG WEN Kee Ned eter (Da 3ET BACK AME eral he old decoration I try to sur- round people with the Influence which they need. “You as mark if treated in this way. Rhubarb-Lemon Pie. (): cup cooked rhubarb, one cup of k me how I get at this; how T} find out just what color will be good for & certain person. I first inquire the date of birth and, according to the signs of the godlac, to which have b cribed certain colors, L get a general {dea of the primary colors needed. 1 have found that almost every one ts particularly fond of the color ascribed to them in this way sugar, one-half teaspoon of butter, yolks of two eggs beaten, pinch of lemon extract, one ping teaspoon cornstarch, put In and bake, beat the whites, and add two tablespoons of sugar, put on pie, and brown, Fruit Pudding. Ts 1s an Inexpensive and deliclous salt, one teaspoon en ase “Prof. Elmer Gates has demonstrated, so T am told, in his physical Mbrary that thoughts have color by congealing the breath of different subjects by the fruit pudding: One-half teacup sua, on@ teacup molasses, one nigane loth alamcat iaélivalal apparatua|coasts eeecn mie onemsnc coe: The breaths given forth under the in. | teacup raising, one tenapoon baking fluence of emotion, such as grief, fear soda, three and one-half cups flour have different colors of thelr | Mix well and steam two and one-ha'f or hours. Serve with foaming suce a ma rople can dls¢ % Se sated auch Hl a iscern | FOAMING SAUCE—Two-thints cup what are called auras or color emana- | augur, one epe henten together lightly tions surrey ing each Individual wi one-half wineglass sherry wine. “If we throw out color In this way Just before serving add one-halt cup ft {8 no wonder are influenced dolling milk. | which fitted her perfec all except the shoes. Fortunately Miss Winedrop had a pair of high-heeled 1B’s—her size j—-with her. When she sprang Into the sanguinary aren? none among tie tre- mendous crowd knew but that she was one of the regular toreadors, and when ahe performed the perdous feat of wait Ing the onslaught of the most savage of the bulls, while remaining caimly seeted in a hair, piercing the bull's vitals with the point of her sword while retaining that daringly impassive atti tude, the crowd burst into a frenzy j acclaim, | Miss Winedrop, after thus distingiish ing herself, tripped lightly back to the | dreaning-room, resumed her travelling ‘dress and regained her private where she laughingly confessed successful little indiscretion to her cha lain and chaporon and declared to them that she had enjoyed {* more than s had ever enjosed the study of any jthe entirely Uneless parts In which she |and her remarkably contourish ne’ | Winksie as a ing brick. ISS Tazie Taxioab, the ethereally M gay little Ingenue, who it ix well known recently picked up $3,000, Om in the stock market by 4 mmon, which hasn't moved since the nole War. on the advice of a fa financter who shall be na ere (To L tle Editor: Insert Ananc rame ff you want to—any old big financter's name will do), w Miss Toxi- vb's legal ex months ago ) account of } ious, vet agrees ying Brie ons less o became ana few artless ways. er of those le, fads for wht ‘axicab has become a most nm nt bricklaver. Always devoted nost exacting forms of exercise Miss Taxicab p bricklaying for pose of pry to the public she is capaile of doing something iseful in the worl, sometning that will contribute to the higher and nobler, for which in her snare moments she yearns. since you can remember, | Ea Unae eee But your mind 1s made up. | You dress with a view to looking | A Curling Fluid. jyour e! in case you should shuffle | oft—but you wouldn't admit it to a! INCE it ts the fashtonable thing S to wear the hair in large waves at all times, women have hunted tn vain for good curl- ing fluids that will take the place of the Marcel iron in summer, far, no one has found a fore mula that ts infallible, but the fole Jowing one has been tried with good success. It {8 not simple, and, therefore, the majority may not care to indulge in it, | ving soul | You start “for town!” You go down Into the subway station, @nd as the train comes rolling in you wonder how {t feels to have the wheels gO over you. That's the forceps, You board the train, and tie steady metallic grind {s the electric engine that the doctor used the last time, when it hurt Ike fury to have that same tooth | q,it.,{% made uf fve-cighthe of @ drill nut, dram of ammonta water, two drams of extract of violet, an ounce of glycerine, three-quarters of an ounce of rectified spirits and half a pint of water. The mixture stands bottled tor en days and {a then strained, se. the hair is molstened and tled down in large waves, which are combed out as soon as it dries,— Philadelphia Ledger. You get out tnto the alr and walk | a few blocks, just to get up nerve. | Then you march into the office of your old family dentist, and with a calmness which would glorify the Mald of Or- leans you announce your need, All right. It will be over In a minute, But he doesn't give gas, | Serer aa eee By Robert W. Chambers, - Author of ‘‘The Firing Line’ and “A Ld Fighting Chance.” Sandon Craig and Billy Fleetwood came wandering up and joined them; one or two other men, drifting by, ad- hered to the group. Selwyn, involved In small talk, glanved sideways at the great clock and gathered himself together for de- parture Fleetwood was saying to Cralg: "Cer. tainly it was a stiff game—Bradley, myself, Gerald Erroll, Mrs, Delmour- (Copyright. 1907, by Robert W. Chambers) ETNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALMENTS. Capt. Philip Selwyn, whose wite Allxe bad @ivorced him to marry Jack Ruthven, re turns to New York to visit his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mra, Austin Gerard, ‘The family consists of a ward, Elicen Er- roll, and four childrea, Selwyn has left the army. He now considers returning to the em ploy of Neergard & Company, operators In | and pass the Captain's former wife, Allxe, He {8 overcome, Eileen is. anx ask} and plenty, tough. The Ruthyens Bowen about Alixe but dare not, Selwyn! were ahead, as usual” — meets George Fane CHAPTER II, (Continued) A Dream Ends. ad Be heard so pleasantly of Selwyn, apparently hearing nothing, quietly rose and stepped out of the circle, paused to set fire to a cigarette, and then strolled off toward the visit | ors room, where Gerald was now due. Fane stretehed his neck, looking curi- you! ously after him, Then he sald to Fleet and | wood: “Why begin to talk about Mra. our people have always been on) Ruthven when our friend yonder Is coretel ers ‘ther Mrs. Fane | qpout? Rotten judgment you show, nor I was fortunate enough to meet from Gerald Erroll,” he said," Billy.” you last Tuesday at the Gerards—sucly | ye), 1 clean forgot,” sald Fleet- & crush, you know, Are you not Joln- | wood; “what did I say, anyway? A ing us, Capt, Selwyn?" as the servant appeared ty take orders, a man can’t always remember who! yorced from who In this town,” Selwyn declined again, glancing at pfarmon, whose civility to Selwyn had Harmon—a large-framed, bony young | posstbly been based on his desire for man with b osely trimmed and pleasant relations with Austin Gerard pointed beard, and the falr color of a and the Arickaree Loan and Trust Swede, He had the high, flat cheek- Company, looked at Fleetwood thor- bones of one, too, and a thicket of oughly vexed, But nobody could have corn-tinted hair, which was usually damp a the ends and curled flat against his forehead. He seemed to be always in & slight perspiration—he had been, any- way, everytime Seleya met bim where suspected vexation in that high-boned mile which showed such very red lips through the iblond beard. Fane, too, smiled; his prominent soft '¥: | brown eyes expressed gentlest good Dumor, and he passed his Gand refiec- peal eetate, Austin Gerard discusses with Carnes and the Ruthvens.” Beiwyn the neglect Billeen's brother, Gerard, | “Aver you hit?” asked Craig, inter- dlaplays towar family gies Captain Selwyn and Eileen ride together | eee even, Genald got it good | “You were mighty nice to me, an how," he sald, setting his glass as and lighting a cigar, ‘You see, I we to a dance, and after a ug cleared out, and Jack Ruthve fered his trouble; so half a dozen o went there, I had the worst card man ever drew to a kicker. That wis tively over his unusually small and re-, treating clin. Perhaps he was think- ling of the meeting {nthe park that | morning It was amusing; but men do not speak of such things at thelr clubs, |no matter how amusing. Besides, If \the story were atred and were traced \to him Ruthven might turn ugly, There | was no counting on Ruthven. j all about #1," Meanwhile Selwyn, perplexed and| The boy was utterly un | Worried, found young Erroll Just enter- ‘he wag treading on delicate ground as Jing the visitors’ room, and greeted him) ha rattled on in his warm-hearted, |with nervous cordiality. frank and generous way, Totally ob- “If you can't stay and dine with me,"| |ivious that the very name of Ruthven he said, “I won't put you down. You must be unwelcome if not offensive to \know, of course, I can only ask you his listener, he laughed through a de once In a year, so we'll stay here and goription of the affair, Its thrilling ® jehat a bit." sodes, and Mrs, Jack Ruthven’s blind | "Right you are.” said young Erroll. | juck {n the draw while some pnaclous that aneiy the his very new and very! “One moment," interrupted Sel jfashionable overcoat~a wonderfully u | ly | very gently; ‘do you mind saying |handsome boy, with all the attraction! nether you banked my cheek and that a quick, warm, Impulsive manner carries. “And I say, Selwyn, it was awfully decent of you to"— | “Bosh! Friends are for that sort of| thing, Gerald, Sit here"— He looked | at the young man hesitatingly; but, Gerald ciulmly took the matter out of his jurisdiction by nodding his order to | the club attendant | | “Lord, but I'm tired," he wald, sink: | ing back into a big arm-chal was up till daylight, and then T had to te | drew againat it?” “Why, no; I just indorsed it over.” “To—to whom?—if I may venture'’’— “Certainly,” he said, with a laugh “to Mra, Jack"—— Then, In a flash, for the first time the boy realized what ho was saying, and stopped scarlet to his hair, Selwyn's face had lIit!le color Ing in ft, but he sald very kindly all right, Gerajd, don't worry” aghast, pain. It's In the office by 9 and to-night Billy) “fm 8 beast!” broke out the hoy; “I | Fleetwood ix giving—oh, something or | D¢® Your pardon a thousand times other. By the way, the market isn't] “Granted, old chap. But, Gerald, | doing a thing to the shorts! You're not | MA!" I say one thing--or perhaps twoo? in are you, Selwyn?” "Go ahead! Glye % to me good and not that way. T hope you are | plenty ‘ | not, efther; are you, Gerald? “It's only this: couldn't you and I see "Oh, It's all right,”’ replied the young | one another a little oftener? Dont be fellow confidently; and raising his | afraid of me; I'm no wet blanket. I'm flees, he nodded at Selwyn with a! not so very aged, either; I know some- orale. ‘thing of the world—I understand some- thing of men, I'm pretty good com- gain his confidence without appearing | And of what significance was It, after, was neither necessity nor occasion for ly, Gerald. What do you say?" to seek ft; how to Influence him with- | all?” the two surprised and rather pallid T say, sure!" cried the boy warmly. out alarnring him! No, there was no Whom did {It ooncern? Him? Her? young people to renew clvilities; bur “It's a go, thea, And one ting more, great harm In him yet; only the im- And what had he to say to her, after later, Destiny, the saturnine partner tn couldn't you manage to come up to te | pulse of inconsiderate yc an all? Or she to him? the business, interfered; and some tool use a little oftener? Everybody | enthusiastic capacity for p Not one word. in the smoking room tried to introduce iisses you, of course; I think your) One thing was tmperative—the boy Se FG eee Sie Re PG Selwyn to Ruthven. The slightest mis- sister is a trifle sensitive jmust cut out his card-playing for stakes | About midnight he roused himself and picked up his hat and coat. take on their parts would have ren- dered the incident ridiculous, and Ruths “1 will!” sald Gerajd, blushing. |at once; and there was a way to ac- omehow I've had auch a lot on hand |complish that by tmpressing Gerald | "Do you wish a cab, please?" whia-| ven made that mistake —all day at the office and something | With the fdea that to do anything be- Pered the club servant who held his) That was Selwyn's first encounter on every evening. I know perfectly [hind Neergard’s back which he would |Co@ti “It Is snowing very hard, sir" | with the Ruthvens, A short time after- well T've neglectal Bily—and every-|not care to tell him about was a sort | ward at the opera Gerald dragged him body. But the first moment I can find | of treachery CHAPTER III, linto a parterre to say something aml- tree" Who were these people, anyway, wh z able to one of the debutante Cralg Selwyn nodded. ‘And last of all,” he | would permit a boy of that age, and in | Under the Ashes. and Selwyn found himself again sald, “there's something about my oWn|a responsible position, to y for such haalwehhan bummed nen. ceturnad facing Allxe. affairs that L it you might advise |stakes? Who were they to encoumge graphite Mra, Furhyen. |. Ie there was ardnoss {t was me on.’ | suet Rye ed and dee) 70t Spar A they both knew Gerald, proud, enchanted, stood very | selwyn's tightening grasp on his chair aealied Pa vaaaas pauplesed) Bid ae? | iit e in full view of the straight; the older man continued | guddenly relaxed; he sank back, staring | t1— was sullenty aware that ine town "OUS® gravely at the brilliant coals, He, tuo, had for | yong divorced must ever be reck-| 4 C00! bow and its cooler acknowl- “Dye a little capital to Invest—not | sotten, | oned with when dance and dinner lists |C‘sment, a formal word and more very much, Suppose—and this, I need | Now he renembered, in humiltation | are made out, there 1s always some formal reply, and Selwyn made his way not add, is in confidence between us—| unspeakable, in bitterness past all be- thoughtless hostess—and eometimes a {© the corridor, hot with vexation, un- suppose [ suggested to Mr, Neer- | Hef See ee eeee the chances were amare of where he was going, and Ob- ward” — | Time sped, and he sat there motion- | that he and Mrs, Jack Ruthven would livious of the dis 1d apologetic Oh,” cried young Erroll, delighted, |jess, and gradually terness be- |collide, elther through the forget¢u:!noss man whogs kep: step ‘that is fine! Neergard would be glad |came less perceptible as he drifted, ine or maltce of somebody or, throug’ u the SDE An ey, enough. Why, we've got that Valley- {tent on drifting, back through the ex- | sheer hazard, at some large affatr wed fp dale tract In shape now, and there are otic sorcery of dead years—back intothe where Dest and Fate work buaily | 7 ast 1d time-not count> scores of schemes In the alr—scores of sun again, where honor was bright and | together in criminal copartnership. x ted @ em—Impor moves which nm@y |ife was young—where all tMe world And he hee neat at alt Park Sherry's, or mean—anythin waited happy conquest—where there | mas Aire. as (he ¢ thronged you rg was no wt ow: | mour-Ca tri 4 was in Ka A? 0 e Ause £ ‘ hives 4 re Gerald w t w ad t > alive w i cide ealit ? A t the they shook hands, {t being ¢ eto se ear f daw W and he a x atron, arate. And for a long time Selwyn sat | and where every yeilow star w exchanged salute a and e « fo the there alone in the visitors’ room, ab Awake’ lly melee anma « i ‘ aent-eyed, facing the blazing fire @f| And out of the magic she had come how olose together two peo sud 5 winter, and jeanne) cal. J into his world again! me after parting forever and a night t Manhattan was mot | How to be friends with this boy with- | Sooner or later he would meet her) at the uttermost ends of the earth to be assalied Out openly playing the mentor, how to ‘now, That was sure. When? Wher When masks at last were of there (To Be Continued)