Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The E MU CU OVO IU COO 0000 LOO 0OGOOOUUO00U! lOGO0C e Pipe Trances -:- OF THE ’ Press Agenis By Ciarence Cullen. Oo OOOOUOUD Jhave reached this country concerning brilllantly lghted airships seen circling Trance No, 6. 188 BATTIp NS! over South American mountains | ‘ vreaya_ bY. natives M DILLIUMS, ; eh tad It was, of course, Miss Dilliums’s é ore aratJown idea to tise all but undousable yee peeretite | Orinoco lghtiing bugs for earrings. eee ns fy | A tew days ago a wealthy society Furies, her mew |woman offered Miss Dilliuins the al-| Dlece, has caught ost unbelievable sum of $9,000 for | Juie pair of alWways-worlting tightning | bugs, but this offer was of course promptly declined, not only for the reason that Miss Dilliums does not need the money, but because she al- ready has become so profoundly at- {tached to her pair of phosphorescent pets that she could not dear the thought of parting with them. and captivated the town and caused profound perturba- tion In the breast of O. Hammerstein because he neglect- | ed to sign her to alternate with Tet- Hnesu {3 the latest exploitress of the “ive ‘The earrings worn by Mise Dilliums | . at each and every performance, which | Trance No. 7, emit a wan, phosphorescent radiance | that has evoked much puzzled comment | NOTHEN | ehurobesity = secret since the opening night, are none other revealed: than @ pair of living lightning bugs | Miss Jillian Shushell, whose from South America, which are held in | Phenomenal success tn her Place on the lobes of Miss Dilliums's | new production, “Crazyfame," ears by means of tiny platinum chains | almost caused Mr, Henry T. Savage to Passed around their middles, the di-|lay claim to the Austrian rights of the minutive chains being attached to| piece, gave a little party a couple of shanks which pass through the plerced | nights ago in celebration of her twenty- lobei ‘ninth birthday (To Dramatic Editors Miss Dilllums, {t may surprise her Kindly refrain from sticking In any of myriads of friends to know, {8 an earn- | that comedy comment here), and {t was @st and profound student of the Idio- | syncrasies of the little Inhabitants of | the Insect world, and she {s often up | nd about at daylight, “bugologizing,” | &s she playfully calls {t, in Central | Park, always remaining, of course, | within hailing distance of the tavern | {n case of annoyance on the part of be- | lated prowlers who infest that wild re- gion. Recently a globe-trotting acquaint- ance of Miss Dilllums, knowing of her ‘penchant for pecullar insects, sent her the pair of remarkable, not to say ; Weird, lightning bugs. The globe-trot- ‘ter, who is something of an explorer, ; Captured the calciumed Insects near \the headwaters of the Orinoco River. | From the Indians in that savage re- gion he had heard, it seems, of how | the Orinoco Hghtning bugs have, like ||’ Galapagos turtles, a longevity of from | five hundred to @ thousand years, dur | ing all of which time their strangely Mluminated little bodies never cease to emit the phosphorescent glow, and The Camel Cure. | at this merry little affa.r, which ent | @n alr of gladness to Durchill’s until) | very nearly if not quite midnight, that Miss Shushell blushingly revealed the) | method whereby she has so markedly reduced her weight. It's a camel! Miss Shushell recently dlscoyered, \ ile touring Egypt in search of nov- eltles, that ner weight Increasing | alarmingly, When, upon scaling, -he| found that she tippea the beam at| | quite 142 3-8 pounds, she determined to do something for it. It so happened ;that on the yery day when she maue | tals chagrining discovery she was in-| |vited to a camel party. The camel-| | mounted party went the distance be- tween the two oases, O- eedo and Tel-Im-Bil, a matter of some 90 kilo- | metres or saiuevers or something, In {less than seven hours, a desert record, and at the end of the journey Miss 3 nushell, upon weighing (she always Weigis after riding sirange animals), {found that her camel ride had enabied | Lightning Bugs in Her Ears. her to lose fully eleven and two-ninths She immediately obiained fier severe difficulties and hardships camel fr. the faimo and had the ed to this country, Miss used a large tent to be $ tear yard of ner since her arrival back month ago, she has riding camel ata gallop round the ring under this tent for an) our or so each morning. She says| at she does not mind the strange ovement at all, having, through much avel, become ‘used to these things, Miss Shushell now weighs only one hundred and thirty-one pounds and four t unces, thanks to her camel te of agreeable emaciation, She has not enjoyed went on the stage, some e finally contrived to obtain a fine} pair of specimens of the lightning bugs | for Mi Dilliums. These Orinoco Ughtning bugs, by the way, continue | to emit their radiance for a long time after thelr decease, and they are great- ly relished as an article of diet by | that massive bird, the great auk of the | Andes. After a great auk has eaten! fome millions of the all but Inextin- qulshable lightning bugs the giant bird gives forth a startling, almost blind- ing Sllumination through skin and feathers, and this is a simple explana- | tion of the rather buffling stories that few years ago, | A Revelation of Netw York Society (Copyright, 1901, vy Robert W. Chambers.) | left her flushed and rigid among the {dle group at supper? Why had they suddenly seemed to remember her pres- OTNOPSIO OF PREVIOUS INSTALMENTS. Capt. vailip tainye, of an old New York) enco—and express. thelr abrupt con- Teslgned from the army because | 1 has tes ened from the army Deonuse|sclousness of it In such furtive signals uthven, & geullen ooh peated ay and silence? yn frequently meets. the = 8 Mae” Alize still secretly loves him. | Tt Was false, anyway—whatever it ivan, le luring "youn Gerald Erroll to| meant, And, anyway, it was false that mble st hia house, Selwyn begs Alize (| he had driven away tn Mrs, Ruthven's ke of Gerard's sist h event thigy for the mxe vod of Relwyna| brougham. But, oh, ff he had only ref .-- Returnini stayed—if he had only remalned!—this friend of hers who had been so nice to her from the moment he came {nto her Mfe—so generous, so considerate, so sitting what treables her. lovely to her~and to Gerald! For a moment the glow remained, CHAPTER III. then a chill doubt crept in; would he : (Continued) ‘have remained had he known she was | to be there? Where did he go after the Under the Ashes. ldinner? As for what they sald, {t was absurd. And yet~and vet— He sat, savagely Intent upon the wan- ing fire; she turned restlessly again, el- bows closer together on her knees, face framed tn her hands. “You ask me if I am tired,” | "I am—of the froth of life.” His face changed Instantly. he exclaimed, laughing. But she, very young and sertously in- tent, was now wrestling with the mighty platitudes of youth, First of all he desired to know what meaning life hed for humanity. Then she expressed ( a doubt as to the necessity for human Instinct | napptne ther-in-law, Arthur i all hia sister, Nina Gerard, after s Gitnee dance, Selwyn finds Eileen still tp. She veoms worried, Ho asks gently, ‘one |s sometimes led by malicious suggestion to draw false and unpleasant Inferences from | harmiess facts” — “Capt. Selwyn” — “Yes, Eileen.” But she could not go on; speech and | thought itself remained sealed; only aj @onfused consciousness of being hurt jPemained—somehow to be remedied by womething he might say—might deny. | Yet bow could it help her for him to '@eny what she herself refused to be- Mevet—refused through sheer while ignorant of Its meaning, Even if he had done what she heard Rosamund Fane say he had done, it had remained meaningless to her saye quickening for the firat time; and he sad > rea Selwyn went on, very \ @ sald, “What?” But he heard in her childish babble | ° under the direction of | no the lamented Tony Pastor, | touches the eye Itself, Tenain wanting; and race and blood must Interpret for itself the subtler and unasked questions of an slowly awaking makes us all less wise, of gayety, that she would Ilke to study, he sald that he would take up anything she chose with her. spoke vaguel- of a life devoted to good | morally equipped to ald tho: quired material ald, he was very ser- tous, but ventured to suggest that she dance her first season sort agined I cared @o little for It all, one season !s enough to waste. sald, doesn't understand. , duty being bre discovery as| You suppose!—but would It be a breach | sufficient substitute. of confidence to anybody If I told you™’ the minor murmur of an undercurrent | have to tell me “ths H os os ate | 6 BY RW, Ta lor. ‘The Million Dollar Kid rl The Sharp Tongues Of Younger Sisters. Uy KNOW NOTHING OF HARD LABOR! ) THAT'S THE TROUBLE | wun! JusT WITH YOU RICH MEN= {MeL GO RIGHT OUr AND \ HUH! Nou ARE THE FIRST WORKING MAN LEVER SAW WHO DRANK CHAMPAGNE. WITH HIS LUNCH! vening Worid Daily Magazine, TO SHOW YOU DIG A DITCH ON PROPERTY | aX my Friday, September 18, DHODOCODOOS. YES SIR, YOUR PICK, SIR! SOOO OO OF > SESE: VDOGODDOHOOHOOHGOOHOHSS: ty Lillan Bell, HBR BAS W there exists between most sisters @ love made more tender because the same mother, father and home belong to them both, It sometimes occurs WELL, I'VE WORKED HARD IS minutes! MY LUNCH, JAMES! SHUCKS, JAMES, I$ NO USE TRYING TO PLEASE A Beauty Hints. | By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. Perspiring Hands. N expert glove woman says that a j small piece of absorbent cotton put !n the palm of gloves will) absorb the perspiration which | so objectionable in summer, Brows and Lashes. IOLETTE.—Here |s a tonic for in- vigorating the growth of eyebrows and lashes, which you may apply| at night. In the day time you may | darken them with the following mix- ture: Gum arable, 1 dram; India ink, 1-2 dram; rosewater, 4 ounces, Powder the {nk and gum and triturate smell quanti+ ties of the powder with the rose- water until you get a uniform black auld in a powder, and add the remainder of the rose-| water to it. It should be applied iy a @ory tiny camel's hair brush. Here ts the eyebrow and eyelash grower: Co- logne, 21-2 ounces; glycerine, 11-2 ounces; fluld extract of Jaborandi, 3) drams. Agitate Ingredients till thor-/ oughly Incorporated. Apply to the eye-| the brush and to the lashes camels hair paint brush, The brush must be freed trom any drop and passed lightly along the edge of the eyelids, exercising extreme care that minutest portion of the lotion innocence to a wiedom which 80 when she said that she was tired And when she works—of the wiser charity, of being | who re- through as @ of flesh-mortifying penance pre- UmInary to her spiritual novitia! "Yes," she admitted thoughtfully; “you are right. Nina would fee! dread- fully if I did not go on—or if she im- But | Don't | you think @07' | “Quite enough,’ he assured her, “And—why should I ever marry?” she demanded, lifting her clear, sweet eyes to his, “Why, Indeed?” he repeated with con- viotion. ‘I can see no reason. “Tam glad you understand me,” she “Tam not @ marrying woman," “Not at all,” he assured her. “No, Tam not; and Nina—the darling Why. what do “T doubt tt,” he sald; “what Is It you | vonly—it's very, very stily—only sev- fog the manner of the telling. But now listened patiently and answered gravely, | eral men—and one nice enough to know | ob now! Why had they laughed—) touched by her irremediable lonetiess. | better—Sudbury Gray’ why had their attitudes and manner for Nina must remain but a substi-| ‘Asked you to marry them?’ he| @Ad the Giscounected phrases in French ements «2 7 A i lik hid lsd LA ee ee ee wy ule at best; whet was wanting must uiehed, nodding his head at the eat ! An Ocean Traveller. Dear Betty: HAT would be ® nice present to give a person who {s going on a Journey across the ocean? ANXIOUS. Books are always acceptable presents to give an ocean traveller, Fruit and flowers are also nice, Etiquette of Walking. Dear Betty: HEN @ young man {is walking W with two young ladies, ts It Proper for the young man to walk on the outside or in tae centre? HG) He should walk on the outside. The Result of a Joke. Dear Betty: OME time ago, as a joke, I started corresponding under @ name other than my own with the brother of a friend. I had never met the young man and through his letters I have fallen deeply In love with him, a feeling 1 am * she admitted, frankly tonished; “but how did you know?" | “Interred \t. Go on.” | “There is nothing more," she sald, without embarrassment, "I told Nina each time; but she confused me by asking for details; and the details were too foolish and too annoying to repeat. © * * I do not wish to marry anybody. I think I made that plain to—everybod: “Right as usual,” he said cheerfully; “you are too intelligent to consider that sort of thing just now." “You do understand me, don't your’ | !ns ashes she sald gratefully, “There are 60 many serious things in life to learn and to think of, and that ts the very last thing I should ever consider. * © * Tam very, very glad I had this talk with you. Now I am rested and T'shall retire for @ good long sleep.” With which paradox she stood up, stifling a tiny yawn, and looked sm!) {ngly at ‘him, all the old sweet confi- dence in her eyes. Then, suddenly mocking: “Who suggested that you call me by my first name?” she asked. “Some good angel or other, May I?’ “It you please; [ rather like ft. But T couldn't very well call you anything except ‘Captain Selwyn.’" “On account of my age? “Your age!"—contemptuous tn confident equality. “Oh, my wisdom, then? You ably reverence me too deeply."’ not I don't couldn't do {t--somehow Try {t-unless you're afraid.” “Tm mot ater her prob- know; 1 mere honor and hates deception of any sort, what do you advise me to do?) MIL. The only thing to do !s to end the de- ception at once by frankly writing the young man all the circumstances of your correspondence. If he really cares | though I am afrald your act will lower you In his estimation. It Is very unwise to correspond with a man not of your @oqualntance. Ma riage on $13 We-hly, Lear Betty: AM a clerk, My sulary {s $18 a week T also have $3,000 saved up. My age {se forty-two. I am going to get mar- tied to @ widow, Do you think we could get along on my salary and what 1 have in the bank? W. HM. You could live economically, —————— “ Drilliancy, your aptness at repartee, your"— “If it's more than $6, A Mind Reader. can't do a thing for you. HAVE often marvelled at your old man, I I'm nearly sure he returns. As he {s the soul of broke myself.”—Houston Post. -- THE YOUNGER SET - 2OF990000900609-06009669900099000000000009090000 Ling you are, if you don’t take aj dare. "You dare me?” “I do.” | “Philp,” she said, hesitating, ador- | able in her embarrassment. ‘No! No! No! I can’t do it that way In cold blood. It’s got to be ‘Captain Selwyn.’ y eee °° * for a while, any very | Good night.” He took her outstretched hand, laugh- Ing; the usual little friendly shake fol- lowed; then she turned gayly away, leaving him standing before the whiten- He thought the fire was dead; but when he turned out the lamp an hour later, under the ashes embers glowed in the darkness of the winter morning. CHAPTER !V. | Mid-Lent. ba“ ID-L , and the Enemy | M grins.” remarked Selwyn as | he started for chureh with [Nina and the children. Austin, knee- | deep in a dozen Sunday supplements, refused to stir; poor little Elleen was now convalescent {rom gripe, but atill unsteady on her legs: her maid had taken the grippe, and now moaned al yi “Mon dieu! Mon dieu! Ja vais mourir!” Boots Lansing called to see Eileen, but she wouldn't come down, saying her nose was too pink. Drina enter tained Boots. ‘and then Selwyn re turned and ¢ ed army ta with im until tea was served. Drina poured tea very prettily, Nina had driven Austin to vespers. The family dined at seven al treat on a0 Drina could sit up. spe Ne, ‘secount of Bootes pressuce gt tabie Pa Rae A for you he will forgive the deception, | that th very bonds generate a tred rendered far more bitter because of intimacy. YES, SIR, YouR LUNCH, SiR | which enters into the jealousy of the | obtains all over the world of holding |back the younger girls until the oldest Jone has caught husband, Therefore |1€ the elder one bappens to be plain, jor too clever or unattractive to the |uaual run of dull men we women have |to choose husbands from (isn't that word “choose” a joke, girlet), why the younger ones grow restless, and if the uncalled-for bride-elect hangs on too long they grow vengeful and use every jtrick at thelr command to signal from ‘their hiding-place to the uncaught mas- cullnes beyond the bridge: ‘Don't be | discouraged! There are others|"’ But when the older sister catches | sight of these signale—oh, my! Ob, my! Then there are ructions, I put the question to you frankly, girls; Can't younger elsters be besste? However, when they are, they can ‘turn, not only the tables, but moat of the furniture, over on us, by saying we have hung on too long, which only means that we didn’t snap up the first ‘bandy-legged object who offered him- self. 1908. ODODDDDDODODHIDISGIDODHADSGHHDD, 00, Another element! |younger alster 12 the custom which | ———— DOGODD OOOO: OOOO OOOO) ‘The sharp tongues of younger states are hard enough to bear, but when it comes fo tricks-— I heard of one younger sister who took a fancy td’ the best young man | of her older sister's, and the elder girl | had @ good voice and sang quite nicely Bo just before the coveted young man would call the sly youngster wou't carefully mix up all her music and put |a page from “I'm Afraid to Go Home in the Dark” Into the middle of “Tho Rosary," while his favorite songs would be gone altogether, Does such conduct cause trouble be- tween statere? Well, if I wanted ex- altement I'd like to have @ reserved seat the firet heart-to-heart those ters had when the elder came upstairs “oonsiderable het up,” as their grand- mother would describe it next day, if her room was next to theirs, But, of course, where marriage i Job whioh every penniless girl must get or go to work to earn her keep {n some other way, there will be just such eom- petition, and all the more bitter because the rivals are constantly under each others eye. The younger sister, having ber mind free to devote to her deviltry, has many more ingenious tricks than such a kine dorgarten affair a the one just raked Which hol bit i result tw capturin, big alster'e beau, tind father and taothe er are too much reileved to have one mouth less to feed and one more daugh- her method, repretenaible though tay have been However, each Rrpes reads these lines can Carer supply all necessary examples the younger slster’a perfidy in the matter of news from the Hst of her own ao quaintances, Far de it from me to Intteate by the foregoing remarks that all older sisters pi Only {t i not wafe too close together—save In andale which tells about them {n cold print The elder sister anon. HB plain tallored shirt walst ts the one which Is sure to be in demand Tt suite the summer season admirably well, and tt always is well liked for between - seasons wear and the early fall, This one is quite novel, the tucks being nged to give the wide box plaits in combination with groups of narrow tuoks, and is adapted to all seasonabdle walstings. It is just @s appropriate for silk and viyella and the ike as it te for linen, madras and many in- expensive wash fab- rics, The quantity of ma- terlal required for the medium aize ts 81-3 yards %, 81-4 yards & or 21-2 yards 44 inches wide, Pattern No, 6088 ls cut in sizes for a 82, 84, 86, 88, and 42 Inch bust measure. just now. late Home Hints kor Busy Housewives. < effect of 'Apple Dumplings. | JA AXE dumplings as usual of rich | M biscult dough, with quartered ap- | ples Inside, Then take o large |basin that you can bake them tn, put In j@ quart of water, add a oup ef sugar, let come to a boll; then drop your dumplings In and bake In @ quick oven half an hour or until apples are done. Serve in thelr own sauce, Fruit Cocktail. UT tops from gem melons, remove 6 seeds; fill with cubes of peaches, pineapples, orang sour apples, pears; cover with French dressing made with lemon juice, and add dash of nut- meg and teaspoonful Bar le Due cur- rants to each melon. Serve in crushed Fried Chicken. LEAN and cut up @ fat chicken, IG Cover It for three hours with « oll, parsiey, & bay leaf, and mixture of lemon julce and olive Drain, dip each plece In egg and bread joning. crumbs, and fry brown, Mix one cup of ry Callorsend by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- white Atoak with one a of rich milk, to TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 182 Hast Twenty-third street, New the yolk of ee , and ten mushrooms, Manon tad cook CAretunlys and pour Obtain York Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. around the chicken, first adding a little chopped parsley and the juice of a jlemon to the sauce, ¥ These Patterns, ways specify size wanted. IMPORTANT—Write your name and addrese plaialy, und alk Tucked Blouse or Shirt Walst—Pattern No, 6088. Fighting Gerald was expected, but did not come. don't you, old chap?’ | | The next morning Selwyn went down-| "Y-es,”” town at the usual hour and found) “Then you will listen, won't you, Gerald, pale and shaky, hang.ng over Gerald?” his desk and trying to dictate letters to| The boy lald his arms on the desk an uncomfortable stenographer. and hid his face in them. Then he So he dismissed the abashed girl for | nodded, the moment, closed the ,door, and sat For ten minutes Selwyn tulked to him down beside the young man. With all the terse and colloqutal con- “Go home, Gerald,” he said with de- fidence of a comradeship founded upor cision; “when Neergard comes in I'll respect for mutual fallibility. No In- tell him you are not well. And, old fel-| siruction, no admonition, no blame, no low, don't ever come near the office | reproach—only an affectionately logical again when you're in this condition.” | review of matters as they stood—and "faltered the boy, 1 don't really care "y'm a perfect foo his vo.ce trembling; ey threatened to stand. he boy, fortunately, was still pliable ny for that sort of thing, either; but you) and susceptible, still unalarmed and| know how {t 18 In that set’— frank. [t seemed that he had lost “Wihat set?! money again—this time to Jack Ruth- “Oh, the Fanes—the Ruthv’— Helyen; and Selwyn's teeth remalned stammered himself intossilence. sternly tnterlocked as, bit by bit, the] seo, What happened last night?” “The usual; two tables full of It, There was a wheel, too, * * * I had no Intention—but you know yourself how Mt parches your throat—the jollying and laughing and excitement. * * ¢ I forgot all about what you—what we talked over, * * * I'm ashamed and sorry; but I can stay here and attend to things, of course’ — and keep th 1 don't want Neergard to see you," | px who can repeated Selwyn It off. “We-why,” sta Ught,"! sald Selwyn story came out. But in the tel have been; and Selwyn supposed he was| able to stand hls loss without seeking aid “Anyway,” aal@ Gerald, in @ muftied | volce, “I've learned one lesson—that a business man can’t acquire the hab! nternal hours that s take all day to sle ered the boy, “do T ook as rocky as that? | “Beside come can't stand it” "Yes. See here, you are not afraid of | 1 Gerald, naively me, are you?" Neither could mine, old fellow. And, ‘No"'-— Jerald, cut out this card business, it's “You don't I'm one of thoae| {he final refuge of the feadie-minded. long-ftaced uiters-in, do| You like It? Ob ve you? You have fidence in me | sot t ity ° aven't you? You know I'm an average s and If participation {o- viy sinful man who has made] |ates yo other penty of takes and who understands | Idiots gentleman’s| bow others make them—you know gat game, which means s game where no / play the imbecile a ae x7 » ¢ ryevervrrrtye i By Robert W. Chambers, Author of ‘‘1 he Firing Line” ani": Chance.” body need worry over the stakes,” “But—th laugh at me! “IT know; but Boots Lansing wouldn't --and you have considerable respect for him.” Gerald nodded; he had immediately succumbed to Lansing like everybody else. And one thing more,” said Selwyn; “don no matter how insig et in the same t, rotten sport—whatever the ethics Gerald, tainted sy ord can't take th “Ww And, ean red- hog without expect from me, and m A little later he started for bh advice. Bui me at y of ne to see what money him, sopped on the way Avetin would adv (To Be & aurncatsEpe ACAEL Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders, Ww ter provided with a job to quarrel iy we Ne