The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 1908, Page 17

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J The Evening. i Seaees ere Daily Magazine, Thursday, November 12, 1908. OOOO OOOO OOOO OOOO OO OOOO DOO LO GOOG GOOOSSOIOHNE’, (The Newly weds-;- Their Baby -técorze iicmanua DOO OU OUUOUUODUOG TODD OUOOOUODUU Is “Love at First Sight” “The Submarine” | WHY, BABY'S J must deT Only an Exploded Myth : | D BIG poy DON'T LOVEY | IT'S Disturbs Vaudeville’s NEED ANYONE THE CUTEST y Helen Oldfield. Pleasant Waters. / ' BW fallacies more generally are entertained, few, also, are more pernicious: ue) HELP HIM ! THING HE ) F than that which teaches and exalts love at first sight BY CHARLES DARNTON | EVER DONE | That there have been, and probably always will bo, Instances in which and staid th at least for a ume, is indisput As a rule, affinit e developed rather than created, as was the world, “made out of nothing and ail y None can deny that occasionally two people at their first meeting experience a strong mutual attractic n, which, encoura and cultivated, becomes a since nd last claims that Its ctrines are as old as life itself, hoid that ach every human being possesses an auri, that Is to say, a pe onal atmosphere, formed by and proceeding from his or her thoughts and feelings; in short, personal magnetism, or the reverse, and such aura attracts or repels according to the nature of the aura { ATS aven't the only theatrical horrors that are ent hore from Paris. In the | H bandbox theatres where you are made to feel like an exposed nerve they take delight In giving you the creeps with harrowing Httie plays that make | r a fine art of death and employ all the lutest improved methods of physical and mental torture. No pains are spared to create @ new sensation, Meanwhie we have escaped with nothing worse than one or two mild forms of French theatrical insanity, in whieh Mr. Arnold Daly has figured. But now one of the torture-dramas that realiy put Paris on edge ts on view at the Colonial ‘Theatre. ‘There “The Submarine” disturbs vaudeville's more or’ less pleasant waters, It gives vaudevil e a queer “tt \ note on the programme informs you that “Mr. Thomas W. Ryley purchased the American rights of this Play and has produced it in the Interest of International Peace." Aftor that, even Chartle Case must find it a bit hard to be funny. As an In- ternational peace manager Mr. Ryley stands alone in the theatrical world, If he keeps up the good work we may one day have Mr. Erlanger and Mr. Belasco | walking aria in arm through Worty-second street. Let us have peace, but first of al tet ave “The Submarine.” You see the interiwr of the submurine, and through the port that is moved to give the boat the eYect of going down or up. The MIlu- s very well munaged—it is as realistic as neyd be—and while the actors are hot whoily convincing in their plight, they give vou something Bense of loss of aly, and your s which {t encounters. This equally accounts for the sudden and appa ind dislikes which people sometimes feel for others, says Helen Oldfield in the ‘hicago Tribune. However, since there are not many theorfes which hold wi er with not even a tiny leak, {t is to be confessed that such Hkes and diy ikes by no means always are enduring or prove justifiable. pathet!e imagination finds it by no means Im- 7 Genuine love at first sight is ‘are as, or rarer than, radium—so rare in POH to chokOlald gaKp willy the dodmed| cre cOmME Quich| THAT ISN'T tact that few people of any experience in the ways of the world believe in it. ! ture of mechanics, phl'osophical JUST TANE : A WHAT L INTENDED Girls in thelr teens, scarcely emancipated from the schoolroom, with thetr Fentiment and a truly French cynicism. Only a Frenchman would dream of | F ow deas of love and marriage chtefly drawn from silly, sentimental novels, often \ Jumbling sentimentality with the scientific realism by which the boat Js made to | ALook AT cS To Sh » so, for tho unsophisticated girl usually is ready to fancy herself in love «lor vise to the surface while the oplum-nerved captain revels in the dan- PRECIOUS | give - vith the first agreeable stranger who pays her any attention: to trust in the rently unreasonable likes es water-colored the sickening f marine’ is a curious theatrical mix pf tle tests and takes an ecstatic joy in rubbing elbows with death. Only a ruth and sincerity of the first sweet nothings whispered in her ear. | Frenchman (or Bernard Shaw) would offer the eynical travesty of the “official” | First love, according to her notion, 1s the only true love, and to fall in love i funers service with the Minister of Sts ring himself grandiloquently on t first sight is too deliciously romantic for anything. So she constructs en the patito und devotion of the i dea}, and hangs it upon first moderately good looking youth who stands when as at stter of fact they ¢ to be counted tand the wear and t {1 long enor ud in her folly belleves that her fancy is Itted to with of lif Genuine love of the sort which lasts co s more slowly; tt is the growth ice, of friendship ripening Into thorough sympa- hy of feelings, tastes and warm affection, Complete understanding of each ‘ther's weaknesses as well h other's good qualities is essential to a appy married life, and these things are best learned before marriage, rather han afterward. The Italian proverb, “Who goes slowly goes safely,” applies to most emere sencles in life, and marriage by no means {s one of the few exceptions to the ule. f time, of intimate acquaints spite of the I vogue of long sleeves, a great many women cling to those of three. quarter length and they unquestionably will be worn for in- door oce asi throughout the sea- fon. The model aj- Home Hints Scr ee Beauty Hints. For Busy Housewives. tees Vi ncen it’ Ss Advice Dy Margaret Hubbard Ayer. on Courtship «nd Marriage ‘ & CDBG ns Pineapple Tapioca. Skin Too Dry. ' lowa a cholee of LQOODODOOQDOGGOOOOGEOOOGIDOOGHWOODGOQOPQGOOOOSGIFCOOGOOO A. G.—Below fs the formula fo: that length oo. Ae | (\NE cup tapioca, soaked over S a cold cream, Cleaase your fact sleeves that are es | aad cooked until clear; three « | He Failed to Answer. [entirely too young to marry. If you} WJ® with this cream, applied on @ tended to tie | sugar, one large lemon, one can of | marry in haste you are likely to re-| soft cloth, bathing {t In water as ittl- Canny heeree INTERIOR OF THE SUBMARINE “FEU FOLLET” DURING THE | Pineapple, ppped. When cool add| Dear Betty Pent at leisure. I advise you not tol as possthie, only once in the morning Gad ito Reon ven CATASTROPHE. whites of three eggs, beaien stiff. Boil] ] AM seventeen and have been keep-| consider any man seriously until you! at the yery oftenest. until the dry con Fie epee together — thoroughly, Serve witli ing company with a young man for | are old enough to recognize real love | aition disappears. ; TY useful In “Arms and the Man” Shaw humorously revealed the folly of “heroism” in| whipped cream. , about five months. I received a/when you feel it, that is, when are| cent aah. yeaa ECD CAP Place in the ward- War as against common sense and the first law of nature, and in “The Subma-|_. y letter from him, which I answered, but | twenty-three or twenty-four. Most cer-|4 ounces: on oll, 4 ounces; sperma- pega 2ee $8) mo) rine” you see the failure of “heroism” in the face of death as against the primi- | Rice Custard. got no reply to it. I have this young |tainly do not marry this young man|ceti, 1 ounce; white wax, 1 ounce. ressy than the tive passions of the brute in man, The captain, with the faise courage that his favorite drug has given him, force the crew to tempt fate. The suspense is ev for a moment when he yields to the men’s protests and the boat goes up for air. But the worst ts yet to come.| yan with one When the war machine descends again, an accident renders it he ples, and the | nived jy and etal men in the forward chamber shout that {t Is sinking. They are left to die MWke| ooo util th beat whiten! of ems rats, the captain refusing to open the door, But his authority 1s finally defied by | “OOK Ut! pee ae with a INtle sugar, put on top, and the four members of the crew who are with him in the inetal shell. Gases begin | poo in oven to rise, and the imprisoned wretches, choking and reeling about, are soon strug: : giing and fighting blindly with one another One shy them to their an's picture. Shoul hes 7 Dal Oran ‘ower, Mlac, violet’ or elder 0 scnemsunior abated ince jaddiatao sith a ie am a CER eTREL CE ete [aaa PONS Been aeDr Ley, Pe R Oa peTeanttenaunintituted| for the eu k 0) oO two e af ‘ di EON 2 * le ure, nd the add Ty as OT 2 to) OS tal are ie coh Aa Cn Te to | Does She Love Him? mleasuren at i of tincture of benzoln Juice of half a lemon, one cup (of tincture of benzalt infulsoe Hour cream from becoming ranold f but let Plain waist and i, } not over elanorate It 1s adapted to velling, to cashmere and to simple woo! material. It would be charming made up in any of the soft silks that are 80 much worn just know what to write, PERPLEXED. | Dear Betty: Send the young man’s picture back MET a girl at the country, and as with little note scying that as he has || both of us were on a three months'|Soan on Face. failed to answer your note you take it! | vacation, we had quite a few chats. | = anes to mean he no longer wishes to be When any party took place she always Bestia abe inet al aisaeinians | friends, and therefore you are sending would ask me !f T was going, and if I A. Fee ee tay aval uavaleene the captain for sending | Mince-Meat. back his. picture, said no she would| toll me to try to\go,|/| 7 aoe harm to the complexion, a now, and it can bo om, The rest ends in suffocation . , but when I would go she would be very u ? WO pounds of lean beet boited until! Don’t Marry In Hast 2 is really a tonic to it 1f used in the utilized both for the. It fs only natural to Imagine that this scene was made more frenzied and terr!- renin, ehicae Gah Gisa the Se jarry in ee coo! with me, 7 waa alwaye asked bY | it way, that is, about once.a day in gown and for the ble in Parts. It gets on your nerves at the Co onial, but it doesn’t set them pound béef suet, also chopped fine; | Dear Betty: her tole) outoin shen cance ‘with Her’ arm\ water and rinsed| off thoroughly. odd waist. In thi shrieking. Mr. Frank Mills, as the captain, might better play down at the begin- arasiGhine case crepe de Chine is the material, while the chemi- sette is of tucked net and the trim- ming 1s handsome buttons. The quantity of ; ty S eer aa: e night I overheard her boasting of f leremitanbancicatohonpadita noungairaies HILE on my summer vacation 1|On aflenward,,eo thet. no. Soap remains! te Bing and up at the end. Hyen opium can hardly be used as an excuse for his |® Pounds sppice eloppal: & pounds rats. met @ young man, I went out all the fellows she had after her. Do | *{termard eo thal it faa nitions Te aptain. Messrs. Schuyler Ladd, | . ane f earller acti He is more the actor than the 4 é. driving with him once, but that)you think she cared for me? cream into your skin after washing !! Joseph IK. Whitmore and Harry E. De Lasaux form a lusty crew, but the roar of |°ltTon % Pound iemon aud orange peel| CE St vk wth lull muck oul fas ANXIOUS. |is all right if the cream agrees with loved him. He asked me to marry him| Evidently the young lady did not care|You and your skin feels dry and tn the sea is a Httle too much for their voices and your understanding. The | ‘ut fine, 2 tablespoons clnnamon, 1 t i sanot eg, 1 tablespoon mace, 1 eas “funera.”” ris very hard up for mourners, and the oration doesn’t get all that | Mespoon nusmeg | ie eepoon Mince fright away. I decided not to do.any-|very much for you, but merely wished [Red Of It {ts irony at the hands of Mr. Thomas F. Stuart tablespoon cloves, plespoon allspice, ablespoon salt, 21-4 pounds brown | thing so rash. I am past eighteen and to have you at the parties as an adai-| Receding Gums. But “The Submarine” ts novel and interesting. Some may think {t morbid, just [1 tablenpomn Bae oe Mulder, Boil {the young man is about three years |tion to her list of admirers. I do not BN Ee le een, &s others may not see anything morbid ‘in an indecent Salome wriggling before a | SUS" 2 4 F Take from fire and|my senior. Coming home, he called think she 1s worth cultivating or wast- harden the gums, but you should deous “property” head. If this “horror pl does: ove th al together % hou i 4 a tentior one / material required * Dideous “propor” bead. Af thie “horror sity” dosant prove that rar should be | Aaa tg pint brandy. Seal in Jars, linea vauittan® Ashe) raavleerineLneling dee)and)atianticnsl upon Ai nny rate lose no time In see. Fanéy Blouse—Pattern No. 6158, for the medium size polished, it does sho’ e fear er than a little brief au- : asi e ally tho} joved , dentist who makes a specialty of eaiardel as bs e ye : Clean Under Furniture. | him, to which I angwered yes, He then | To Marry a Cousin. WR er eee iN ETT Haid Est rarde 2h ot MriS2-8 vandal or:214 7ends #4 inches eae, with 1-2 yard 18 pee eee Sebaeto | vould n come for | Dear'Betty r if t The Blue Ribbon of Mathematics. VERY housekeeper knows tigw caits | to1o me we, MOMe RRND COMA MON Mel Dea Aalits cgly qriihlies cousin or stopped in ite beginning Tt 18 gen-| Pattern 6156 is cut in sizes for a $2, M4, 95, 38, 40 and 42 inch bust measure. A | ficuit it is to clean under cabinets him. I am very sure I love him,| | mine, and would Iike to know if there | condition. can be relloved by Grinking | @eeeeeeeeeeeweee ee HIS year's “senior wranglership” at the University of Cambridge, Eng- | E and dressers when you have waxed Tea ean rit it proper to go off and || is any harm in first cousins marry.| plenty. of water between meals, seven | ~~ pc~ Cail or send by mall to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- I a eve rene onors to @ young Hussian Jew. ‘The result of the) 1oors and do not want to move the| marry in that fashion, Please advise (ing. Wo are corresponding, but only in | rafisht glasses a day. Wash for re: fe TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 182 Bast Twenty-third street, New mathematical t#ipos" shows that & Brodetsky, whose father had) furniture and leave marks from the| me what to do. ANXIOUS. |a friendly way. ANXIOUB! Il ouath fea leranters halmito? i Obtain York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattern erdered. { Sought an asylum in England from Russian oppression, has been bracketed | rollers. By taking out the bottom! po not marry the young man unti| First cousins are allowed by law to|grams; extract of cochlearia, 155 grams. These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plalaly, snd al- with Mr. Tbbot of mat! Macerate for eight days: filter; use di: luted with water to rinse the mouth| }Fatterns, { ways vpecify size wanted. ‘advisable. and gums as often as required. ~x=~><->->s+7—>¥-_¥->--$-------- r--__>-_*->>’rnrrs,nmnanmR—_0$_®2wweeereer-~+w! }, scholar of Pembroke, for the coveted British blue ribbon | drawers one can clean the floors per-| you have known him for at least six or |marry in New York Btate, but tt 1s not fectly and with satisfaction, seyen months, and even then you a atic | [A Reoslation oF TE YOUNGER SET be Robert W. Chainbers.) y ich responsibility cannot die while} And long after he had left the house |seif into the Slowitha, ever came to|masters mingled. Certain card rooms | offic Sceeeeeeeeeeetene! those live who undertook it, 1 belleved| she still stood there, eyes closed, color- | commit so gross a blunder as to dri SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALMBNTS, | !t Until T desired to be teve it no longe By Robert W. Chambers, Author of ‘‘The Firing Line’ and “A Fighting Chance.” 4 Copyrignt, 190 treading brutally on Harmon's] So he had come, on various occa- her own that she stopped, involuntarily were open to him, certain drawing | heels sions, close to the unruffied skirts of | occupied with the unusual phenomenons Jens lips set, her slender body quivering, | goon, or even permit, the club to ac-|rooms, certain clubs. Through them he| Harmon fn disgust, wrath, and fear|this young girl—not yet, however, in| “Unless what?” he asked, Raat ft the army because | Hut a man’s self-persuasion cannot | racked with the first flerce grief of @| quire the acreage, the exploiting of |shouldered, thrilled as he advanced| went to Craig; Craig to Maxwell Hunt;|her own house. But Sanxon Orchil had| She was all laughing pollshed surface Ais wife, Allxe ly divorced him tol alter such Jaws—nor can human laws| woman's love for a man, |which had threatened their existence, |deeper into the throng, fired with the| Hunt wired Mottly; Mottly, cold and| recently condescended to turn around|again, “Unless Gladys's intellect, which Fa Mere Mine tulle ta Jove [Confirm or nullify them, nor can a great — is not very clear. contact of the crush around him. sleek in his contempt, came from Palm | in his office chair and leave his amus-|has only room for one {dea at a time, brane Sho ward of his brother ih: | rellilon do more than admit thelr truth, ‘HAPTER XII Once within the club he may have| Already the familiarity of his appear-| Beach. ing railroad combinations long enough | already fully occupied.” lew, Austis f. illeen tover TWP: ur | basing {tw creed upon such laws, * * ¢| CHA HN Ate, supposed himself perpetually safe, not|/rnce and his name seemed to sanction| The cohesive power of caste is an un-|to divide with Neergard a quarter of a| “With what? he demanded Chinen Geral, is involved in debt and in| 4 ois CoN “Pu Aaunder, Ap lems of Her Way. only because of his hold on Ruthyen, | hie presence; two minor clubs, Lut s00d| known element to the outslder. million copper profits; and there was| “on, with that Gerald pboy''—she threytencd disgrace by Ruthven a a|nian undo the burden. * * ® And, to y but also because, back of his unflagging | ones—in need of dues—had strutnod at| That he had unwhtingly and prema- | another turn to be expected when Neer- | shrugged indulgently—"‘perhaps with | ee eee baylt debit Aline, t PERGARD had already begun to) persistence, back of his determination | this social camel and swallowed him.|turely aroused some unsuspected force | «ard gave the word. pretty American Grace and tho out Intane Pailin pays for her support at a]telearn this after offering you a love N make mistakes, The first was In /(o shoulder and push deep into the|Card-rooms welcomed him—not the|on which he had not counted and of| Therefore, it puzzled and confused | for the Insular invasion.’ sanitarinm. These expenditures sey, ai /1 had no right to offera life whieh is thinking that, among those | gilded, perfumed crush where purse-|rooms once fung onen contempruoiisly| which he had no definite knowledge |Neergard to be overlooked where the| Neergard'’s apple face was dull anil his ready cash near uithye newly-rian social A to my shame and disgrace, I have hi ‘liverce Allxe. Phillp threatens fo ;20t my own to give." whose only distinction was th wealth, | strings and morals were loosened with | for his plucking—but ieoms where J was revealed to Neergard when he de-|®ay world had been summoned with an | mottled, and on the thin bridge of hia plans to divorce Tia thal cine ala lamang) Paral shoot Ruthven shoul the latter pursue such ke took one step toward her, and his) his own wealth permitted him the same | every heave and twist in the panting | was flercer, and where those who Caced| sired Rosamund to vbtain for him an|accompanying blast from the public|nose the sweat giistened. He did not Fee NO na ne eran, drape (voice fell #0 low that she oguid just! insolence and ruthlossness that #0 fre-|struggie around the raw gold aitare|him expected battle to the limit Invitation te the Orchils’ ball. press; therefore he had gone to Rosa-| know what she meant; and she Aismisses the hope of marrying Eileen, droP8 1) yim: MisieaHarantard aan alii Amaya ; ASMP Ss , out ot his old fe and devotes himself to | Hed shar, vindietively’ patieat, clreum: | D&Ck of the sordid past, back of all the! And they got it, for he no longer felt| It appeared that she could not de so— |mund with the curtest o orton he did not ran eth hinges fa owey |, Be bas lost her mind, and the case| Clever, at nae 4 1 a en! OH sums | resentment, and the sinister memory of | obliged to lose. Aud that again was «| that even the threatened tendency of |h#d remained, standing aren nets As he turned to go she paced him a Ree eee om AY’ golug. Eilean returns, |!8 hopeless, ‘Those to whom the laws of |spect and commercta competer wrongs and grievances, still unbal-| mistake; he could not yet afford to win.| Iilock Copper could not sharpen her | Checked, not condescending to irritation, | step or two across the rose-a) Bhe shyly fenren love fow him, and he| the land have given care of her surned | he had been, his intelligence was not Of | anced, lay an enormous vanity. but mentally alert to a new element of | reception-room, hands linked beli\r Thick in the chance and etreumstance | Wits to devise & way for him, Very in- “ ey oted— : It was the vanity In him—even tn the] of the outer camn, heavily inveived|nocently she told him that Jack Ruth- | Fesi#tance which he had not expected—a | back, bending forward slightly +s And when one frfend of hers halted this {fully make enemtes, Neergard made | itor days—that thrabbed with the « me Ob . «| ven was leading the Chinese cotillon | B&W force, palpable, unlooked for, un- | moved beside him. CHAPTER XI. swiftly ‘upon her, and suddenly she | from under him the propa he used n|\\04 vanity which sustained him in. bet. | Wan j Aorce, meshed ins on eplnning | Wi Bile, PelmoumCRrneR FMR OBR ces sinerary, ‘ToAt force was the 90: TOME Cyr rpeReTeer ee found herself helpless, penniless, aban- | mounting the breach, and whieh helt gays when he-eat nursing tm te (it ls turn the nds a at SN GUTANG! GOO) MAN) GIRGLE: BOB alive “power of abalrant casie. in the |e Na ede EME DIMEN Continued.» doned, her mind already clouded, and | fancied he no longer needed as a scat peer ees thoughts that [strands of Intrigue, vith a dogea men) the others seesotalne th att {| presence of a foreign trritant threaten. | (on, Meneame tales Mer clouding faster! * * ® Kileen, was | folding now that he had obtained a foo d there, His desize faz position | 2 "Seay mortally offended anda wuman| be eaey enough 1 obtain bh ap |ing Sts atomle disintegration. That for {1 oiq Cavalry onde green foras His Own Way. there then the shadow of a doubt as to | hold on the outer wall und power Was that; even his yeerning (Of {¥@ alarmed or half-contemprnoualy | the atrenge ie eet at Ore Mle sinaye (HE and irritating substance was him. | NMid Cavalry nexle green for “ O right to hope, Others told me) son was named tn the parable, does the | Geraid; thus he had sh uldered F) tia gatistinn atin aaniin an ne the li of Neergard’s intelligence was ; sit SEAT Raine Ge Mn 4 rq, | t¥ that which tn his rawer shrewdness | (10 1. hae mace up N J still had that right, 1 knew) lesson end there--and are there no oth: | qua Harmon out of iis way’ when they |as it was passionless. |cenebeds ile ‘pragent herison unded the) ner for the unbullt house of 3 cieeth |N@ should have remembered. Kternal | 00° 0° yo oat “hey were Wrong: I do notlers as prodigal—no other bonds that | objected to the purchase of Necrgard's | His to have what was shared by those |WOF!d for him because he could not! unconcerned tha vor the deuble pur, | Vigtiance was the price; not the can- wheeled ' t Mean they persuaded me—I persuaded! hold as inexorably creage adjoining the Slowitha pre- i.e envied--the power to pick and chooxe, | M8sine anything beyond tt; and that ad for the double pur | celied vouchers of the servitude of dead | Neergard wheeled on her, ¢ on Myeelt that perhaps iny right to hope] +-sen rpmration a¥ an in-|to ignore, to punish, His to receive, not | MEKing vanity which had ‘suived) pose of getting rid of Gerald and of! yoary and the halt-servile challenge of | hie nose hed become a brix remained to me. 1 persuaded myseif the club tract; thus !to seek; { him so far, hat in hand, now pluchod| giving deserving aristocracy # look-in when his vanity Where did you hear tha: starts to tel of the new bond whiehlon jer, threat ned her with disgr a high order, The intelligent never wil molds him to Alixe, sw Krous f F the bond of love? | & lawyer or two referee—de- | serve, and. its inc cided to remove @ burden; but a higher | tegral port ) dispense, not to stand wait the strange new day rn a 3 ; that I might be, after all, the substar court has replaced tt.” he was op to rid himself of!ing for his p rt i ee freedom of | 2% !t8 mass and ‘eered boldly about tn the freab youth of her and her sell: | hag dared bim to lve, or apeiron Penton yp ° . Rot the shadow, He chme and stood directly before | tuthven for another reason. But he the forbidden, of everything beyond -e Wake Of Its close-cyed master price 14 AD MS | ee He looked up at her her: was not yet quite ready to spurn Ruth- him, of all withheld, denied by this, George Fe Unpleasantiy Involved in| Nothing, so far, bad checked his! Rosamund, smoothly groomed, golden- is ~ ies - P ‘And 80 I dared to loye you." “I dare not utter one word of love to, ven, because he wan’ 1 a little more |bright, loose robed, wanton-eyed goddess | Block Copper, angry, but not ry | progr vhy should rumor? Elbow | headed and smiling, rose as } ard ane ea ie Sat Bhe gazed at him, scarcely breathing, | You; I dare not touch you. What chance | out of him--just enough to place himself from wiose invisible altar he had caughe much frightened, turned asual 1d and money had shoved him on and on, | moved slowly forward to take his leave. pr ins ae ee a “Then,” he suid, “came the awaken! is there for such @ man as 1?” on a secure footing among those of ihe a whiff of sacrificial odors, standing | faith to Neergard to ew sitera until shoulder deep where his thin nose) ‘lo stupid of them to have overlooked |@ilerence which coolly exe . fog. My dream had ended.” ake wblapered. [younger seb where Ruthven Qe hack |there through the winuty years ia the|he could cover. And Nesrgasd locked | pointed crowding aside and out of his! you," she sald; “end T should have | propebilily that he could have been ii She waited, the lace on her breast» jeotition leader, was regarded by ine /aquator and reek of thi | him in the tighter and shouldered ils | way w 4s made to be ¢ romded| thought Gladys would have remem: [any position to hear whe @earce stirring, 40 still she stood, so For a second he stood mot! thea. | young with wide-eyed awe Now he had arrived amon, qut-!way through Rosamund's drawing and going an at off, what- | bered—uniess'— . : Pitty ati guating slabiig, stneas coe na Why Neergerd, whe hed forced Bune lying campo where samp sollowere Yo fo0m 10 the Olid of Benson Orenil's ourer over semaines errogeatiy omevedia Hila goserset ue $0UMOd 09 BOER rie, (Fe be continued.) mm ' Stl deta 4 1 ON Ney eS 1 ee ets eet P80 V8 es fe PRE rs J

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