The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1908, Page 9

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‘ The Evening World Daily Magazine, . = - = szennaeneiaaerssarneserss “The Stronger Sex” Like Very Weak Tea. By Charles IX uinictal ICOAT vule at W s Theatre, where “The Stronger Sex ™ to stir up any real interest in the pia at Miss At brought over from London yf After all, the subje f international marriag ne espectal dramatic value unless it involves at aan story, In itself it has no wide appeal for the vet od reason tha freots only that very s “ 1 part of com Munity that labels itself “Soclety"—with the $ usu ‘ s the capital 8 Aside from {ts n vical insignificance this class ts a negligthle quantity, therefore os sts matrimonial point of view and ite aetion the matier can muke no earthly (te iiterest has never yet sufficed to make a yt ; 1 | 1 The kind of people who migh nek 8 Stronger Sex t eption room of Claridge’s . Hotel don and chatter until yo ache with it all. One and then another has her little say, ‘They put sugar n their tea and lemon in their talk. the etlken ski isa fringe of n There is a great deal of rustle, but no — ~ bustle. dawdles, You get merely t th of the Hon, War- ren Barrington’s marriuge for re: « Nothing happens until the heavil Mnanced American bride comes in wit er wedd ve trading through th aste of words. The unhappy bric Kroom gets rid of h s svon us possible by sending her upstairs to change her ress. He is horribly bored. So are you nless thi vsphere happens to. br the ath of Ife to you. Jt is a relief to find the ¢ ftallzed sband and Jou Forsythe togethe They couldnt afford to 80 an did the next} best thing poor Werren by bringing er dear friend Mary to the sacificial altar, Annlelnsselllavlnarys In spite of the matrimontal transae- ton, Joan tsn ad sort. In fact, Miss Oswald Yorke as Warren Barrington. ima icruger, ull, falr and truly Englis) in her lanky awkwardness, makes you like her, But Barrington ts an insufferable ca His trusting bride ts no sooner upstairs than he goes to the sofa and reminds Joan that he “« © does her best to make him ash ed of himself but he ¢ sc h furthe leclarations and 4 is m abe o s self when Marvy slips downstairs tn her travelling suit and sees wha going on. noshe shrinks back out of sight and hears Barrington say he mar er for her mone A moan {s her only answer Before she 1, she steals upstairs again. When she comes down to start on her “h Barr! marks that she chan her dress quickly “Yes,” she "i > changes very quickly some times.” Rows "i ' ht have more to say on the subject aaa ae ee But Mr. V Mary go at tha ee ae “Home Hints equally sagreeable Ile takes you Mary's } 5 afar For Busy Housewives. are made still more ur Barrington ight Retoraie ae Stuffed Prunes, @ groom f 5 it Mar ELECT large and horse for } ) A Wash well in warm water. she walks tr up ar ene hour and lated to open her eves still sto ff with He complains t everything, while lisa walnuts and she merely smiles and pute him on ah sugar, Fiil therm full, shape nicely allowance, She has the upper hand be rol in powdered suBar. Cause she holds the purse-strings. Miss ter if made a week before using. Russe! acts firm! but gently. is a delicious dessert or confecti makes the best of a bad play B expensive and healthful. she gets on your nerves wit! Fi ; Warren’ this and “Dear Warren” that English Plum Pudding. che to hear Mary tell her NE pound ralsins, Ml-gotten husband what ste real! rants, one cup finest brown suga thinks of him. two cups dried » She agrees t eKes, one pound finely even agrees 10 settle de three ounces mixed candied peel, rind of | after their enuagement. You see he two lemons, one ounce nutmeg Ground), tickering with two greedy moz e one ounce cinnamon, half-pin era. You see her tam st brandy, one cup flour. 4 with the might Olar—and it is net brandy after mixing the ory ingredients, | Jpretty sight. After this, for 4 chanue butter and flour the pudding cloth, tie her matrimonia ze comes hom it down tightly and closely. drunk and surderly Hie raises five hours. Serve with hand to strike her, but she stops halt cup sugar, one sa) a RK olve He doe nit now ft piece of butter size of a small egg, ST RP Helen Tracy as Mrs, Van Garkerken.|tiog” Aau a winegiass of brandy w A year later the | his wife. She has abled him to | ready to use work for his living by ave his salary paid out of her own ’ funds, and you hear that he } vod business man. It only remains for | To Freshen Furs, re him to become a good husband. S$ out of the vexed question. She has been | [F > furs have {7 financed by rich Mrs. Van Gark: 1, so that She can marry Mary’s cousin, Oliver crushed wile 1 Thor ue aarti a the iron-tongucd dowager, |] quarters the best As this unt rror Miss Ilelen Tracy almost makes you believe in the title) ‘sem is to brush with a clothes brush of the play. She ts the backbone of the performance, You are inclined to share| ‘hat has been dipped n of T her good opin As for Mr. Oswald Yorke, he succeeds in making Barrington wholly disagree- able. But he takes his financial troubles too seriously. A MNtlo less strutting and bellowing would help matters. Wh: Mary should waste her time and mi in orpe in the s Brush the wrong thoroughly and dr beating occastonod age nothing more. “The Stronge it Iw like very weal jin me process combed dry, but ft SNOOKLUMS, Please Tet PAPA WHERE TORKEY 19 ! PEDTHHHOODWOHOSHO The Newlyweds-: - Their Baby-: a Metacue caprenmemoanie ee ovem CONES OONODODDSY, Thursd DODODODADOOODODOOODODOSS’ THE PRECIOUS UTTLE RASCAL NAS HIDDEN THAT TORKEY SOME There ts a large ker irrender to that arch relen—cares wh FOR why you Thow TUANEY OUT PE wiNDow ? you BUST MY HAT! doth tt! Whena Girl Thinks Shel_oves Two Men at the Same Time By Helen Oldfield. Uttle powdered | able 10 They are be! Boll tour or be @ passing fanc de * a clever coal hold of tt and keep fast this diMcult gan even mdy lose both way to fresnen| ferent ie Tils hea ewhat stout person of Mr. Robert Drouet, | and then shaken as as possible the open air, "Tribune. | | taming the selfish brute is difficult to understand. Miss Russell wins a mpaty— | Some kinds of fur ' {s a state of mind be carefully suffragette movement. From first to last!) done, or the hair will be combed out aia ila ia tls > A Romance of Mystery $00090004¢006000 oe . % (Copyright, 1908, by Bobbs-Merrili Cos outset her brows contracted and she , bashed fs shook her head in gentle dissent; whe merey SYNOPSIS OF TT Philip Kirkw who has been stud eallre fort throu \ \ Laanns. |“en Calendar’s manner became f ING IN ' i |inperative. Gradually, unwillingly, she} “1 must, J'r ich you art ir Ba ein ant ene |caught her breath sharply, and, infect- | yourself, ” ork. At his London |ed by her companion’s agitation, sat| Kirkwood saw fit j pote Petar d in vine by a stout man | back, color fading again in the round |partly because, out }binte at a mysterio r ich he | Young cheeks. his eye, ho was aware of the girl's un- natd. Philip Tir Mel Wit| Kirkwood's waiter put in an Inoppor- | hehin. ‘That night-at tune appearance with the bil en ool teen Cali dintee | young man paid st. When he looked up | With 8 young and beautiful girl, An wider |again @ ar had swung squarely Woman while merle out ot ihe dining |about in hin chair. His eve encountered | Calendar, ‘Tho girl with the latter turns pale | Kirkwood's. He nodded, pleasantly. (@F this action. Temporarily confused, Kirkwood 16 eer turned the nod, CHAPTER II. In @ twinkling he had repented; Cal- ae endar had left his chair and was wend- f (Sontiaued,) “ ing way through the tables toward Adventures Kirkwood's. Reaching it, he paused, of- ‘ fering the hand of genial friendship. | gogtea Kirkwood. A BRUPPLY the man turned in nisl ycirewood accepte. It halt heartedly | Sed 3) concealed suspense. gaye Philip wo Delleves the im no dealings w me—my daughter! unprotected."* cha{r to eummon a walter and ex. posed his profile. Kirkwood was mot amazed to recognize Calendar—a frightened Calendar now, however, and hardly to be identified with the sleek, gilb follow who had interviewed Kirk- wood in the afternoc Ills flabby cheeks were ashen and trembling, and upon the back of his chair the fat the same time that Calendar had re-| «No, covered much of his composure. There| of 4, The dev fly jowled countenance, with less glint | of fear in the quick, dark eyes; and Calendar’s land, eyen if motat and cold, no longer wembled. Furthermore, it was immediately demonstrated that his | lly, It was plain the impudence had not deserted him, plcion, should he be overheard. leve me.” Having spoken to his walter, Calendar | ® for some seconds raked the room with quick glan ance. sumabl isappotnted, he! “Is it?" returned Kirkwood, coolly. “Hell!” exploded the elder man tn an ) @wung back to face the girl, beniing | He disengaged his fingers. undertone. Then swiftly, forward to yeach ler ears with accents| The pink, plump face was contorted his haste: “I van't Jow pitched and confidential, She, on|in # furtive artmace of deprecation. |pany me to the door, Dew part, fell at once attentive, grave | Without wadting for permission Calon: | @nd respdasive. Perhaps a doen sen- dar dropped into the vacant cheir, . “Whdt-again? : 4 \ I throw myself fe he she will and humilia hen why place her demanded eyes burned, tne Offended, he offer changed pre | ‘Phe devil you do!" in the deuce of a hi seemed to yleld consent. Once she |and there's no one I know and sat Ught The |Calendar, You throw total stranger's’ mere in the deuce of a hole: and’ “Ws this way; Um urgent business—imperative business. must Boat once. My daughter is with because you're “One moment, Mr Kirkwood's weather amusement After 4 What did What harm him if he yielded to this corpulent ad- Venturer's insistence? rence and obser valled away on barrassment, I cannot Jalone, nor can I permit her to go home Calendar paused in anxiety ‘That's easily. remedied, A PO RLTA RES axiomatic ti footly y Was the girl Gwha* else was he to dot) remarking at| pyr her in a cab at couldn't think You won't understand, Was now a normal coloring In the heay- |” «1 go not understand, amended the younger man politely. Calendar compressed his lps nervous. the man was quiy- ering with impatience Walle Bugore were drumming insear |with excltement. He held quiet only the eonfiter e most. hi ‘Ater, Mr sald, placing ming BrAVity gantly an inaudible tattoo of shattered | Jone enough to regain his self-control | jy nerves, “Why, Kirkwood, my dear fellow!” he |and take counsel with his prudence “Seared silly!’ commented Kirkwood, |CroWed-—not so loudly ag fo attract at | Ie ds impossible, “Why? tention, but in # tone assumed to divert |must ask you to be generous and be- truth le to be disclo > CHAPTER III, Calendar's Daughter, purring with Calendar halted my de introduce an old friend Mr. encee pared beiWeen Listy Aoi® ‘Ag deae emi’ he Brvseededy Hier “Cae ulate wu i 6 7 wi word. ‘usneah lo to sop doughaan" poune flctileue explasieaien Her an: ‘This ts great luck, you know-to! "Very well: for the sake of argument e#, as If seeking an acquaint- | find you here,’ 1 do believe you, Mr. stammering in he declared. L-l—throw my sels upon your mercy! + ve equally attracted by two men, not loving either, and s0 | she Ikes the best is devoted tn his other easily is he whom sh All women love to be loved Like Shakespeare's Beatrice— I had as lef be wooed of a snail: ior though the small snail come slowly, yet he carries hia| house on his head,” Generally old saying that there ts another And the lover who Is present » over the one who ts away. the genuine, absence wiil but cause the heart to long for him whose presence {s as the sunshine of day tory suitors. “An @ lover be terdy, mind.” a great If love ar and tear d te needs sympathy and companionship, and {f these are not given bim tn suf- ficlent quantity by one woman he rarely hesitates to seek them from another or ings which a who studies h The masculine point of view there {s no good reason why that atate should not exist | for ¢ two when the two are not in the same place. Love and Adventure. ** Te oe = LAC K BAG DDODDOD- 940990009909 0090 HO 00:59 I am in danger of arrest | a If my dangh- | woos have to endure in hope. Calendar af considered her, In the process thereof Their gl She looked away hastily, erty empl 1 way, room, Beauty Hints By Margarct Hubbard Ayer. Jiu-Jitsu for Two. Here ts an exeretse portion of the body at once. contestants should armg extended ell which case, when attention and the other merely ordinarily courteous, gratified vanity at open ra Uration on the one hand and pique at indifference ades her that the lover who has apovenl feet planted upart as possible. nents should clasp hands, and with this nd few care much for dila- | themselves forward, Jof one touches the eiest of the other, heads to the The struggle shoul? ) striving to push each other to the wall While the fight ig golng on the arms settle the question, In spite of the when the clasped hands on o the other hands in a sort of s hould be vigorous this exercise If, on the con-| mastered {t will be foun: Nothing | exhilarating and e: a sluggish circulation. to urge his sult The movements new faces, new scenes soon will efface It tte who successfully can play one man agalnst another m both. Sometimes tt happens tat she who tries to ne ends by losing t! Jt must be a strong love which conquers pride, and any man ing his sweetheart with another man, for the man, when he plays the couble game, he regards {t 1n quite a alt- that he only can tnd room tn it for one | Piercing the Ears. having the want to wear earrings. Inflammation sometimes blood is not in good condition, and it Is best, of course, not to have the piercing eruption on the face sinple and !s not so smal done If there 1s any | Otherwise His heart 49 large enough and warm enough for more than one, and since) painless operation also to his vanity, the woman| rings to a piece of says Helen Oldfeld seems to be that thread and tle them © making the decision Farrings are n and acts accordingly, (ry a CT, about plercing the not universally becoming, and often de- {tract grewtly from a woman's looks, Trewern gp elit: | Ber 26, 1908. | Worry May Be Your ¥ w Master or Your Slave By John K. the Baron BoOoOOOgUOOUUD SOO OOOO OOOOO ted It would be found that about ninety- y has beet over “the ghosts of troubles” that “It ts not the revolution that destroys the machinery, dut the friction.” Ho $e tnd. whe pes worry on the philosophical grounds a Caesar, the greatest genercl of his-age, “the foremo an of all the Fear ts worry's ton, v Ales aro tho foo worry moply ta James Freeman Cla the i of fear.” enaster maself, Tt ts nemy, borrowed trouble. “uhe troublesome trouble ds the amall n is indorsed by Prof, William M over great cn} 's eplgrara Moe fear of Ll exceed Every man 5) evidence of wen ness ta ews, who says: “Men rarely mities; it 1s the petty vexations of life that tease and fret nnot we vanquish these Ittle pestn? Charies V. faced great cares and handicd mighty 1 sat Ughtly on his crowned dead. ntary retirement bo Mterally worted timself to death over ther affairs during his long After his vo | most trifing affairs. Cha ays Dr. Mathews, “te the child of leisure rd IL, might have exclaimed: “T wasted time and-now! no waste me." It does not do to have no thought for the morrow, but fearing and fret: ting will never provide for the future. Don't atte when you get the. they won't be rickety. The wo: heep on the sunny alde of the atreet. t to cross the rickaty bridges befor you reach them; perhaps treat you better and you will think be: er of the world if you! Avotd the shadows! There is a chance of paying back vorrowed moncy, but never borrowed trouble. “It is not work that Kills men,” saya Beecher; “St 1s worry.” Don't commit suicide! Remeanber that worry never led a man out of a difficulty; it never bridged chasm, You can often work ont of a dilemma; you can never worry “Mistakes will be made in every business,” says a New Y ‘put the greatest mistake of all {3 to worry about them.” Lhe man wio surrenders to worry writes his vwn epitaph. ——_——_+++ HE coat that cove ers the dr is that wear, and thi tractive and novel Sone of the smarte und latest, which eminently childish {a fect the same time nat <4 fally ™ chic and smart the lustration it ts mada “f dark red broadcloth ith trimming of vei- et and bands of oth, but while th js much used for rls’ coats, cheviots nd serge also ara sreatiy in vogue © equally appropri. te, while for school vear mixtures euch ag ‘teh homespuns will © preferred by many. Vor dressy occasions ght colors are much ked, but for harder sage the dark red tl lustrated, warm dari blues and greens and browns are the “pre ferrea colors. The quantity ofjma-{ terial required for the, medium size (10 years) fs 4% yards 2% 2% yards 44, or 2% yards 63 Inches wide, with 5%) yand of velvet for trim- iyfern 6107 ts ont} sizes for giris of 6. is esse: Girl's Coat-~Pattern No. 6167. $, 10and 12 years ofage. How Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANY te TON FASHION BURNAU, No, 132 Bast Tweaty third street, New Obtats York, Send 10 cents in coin or stumps for each pattern erdered. ‘These IMPORTANT —Write your name and address plalaly, ind al- Patterns. ways specify size wanted. = Author of “ The Brass Bowl, DOIPPOLOGILLDPVPIOOGY §@OOPODDDOO GOD FBV OOOH PIDIO PHI POIOG IDS “Miss Calendar,” acknowledged Kirk- | quility and able, otherwise. to possess (1 self-control she seemed very y |, her eves steady up Kirkwood {9 very kind,’ in such a posi-}she said gravely She was looking w exclaimed | gaze probing wuessed abyss of “He's promised of you wil | aloofness assented Kirkwood agreeably, | tion powerfully ed eloquent y running away, polse gripped his toward the matin entrance | hatr he had va- | mi viding 1, tempqnarily elf relieved the », fairly startling ne darkness of his tension of the situati« young man by ¢: Both trom expe- extraordinary e the situation, he felt, woul And, somehow, himself ridiculous in her eyes, little as he knew her fatuously until it on him that he was staring like a like wn idiot, bis eyes sought sounded tn his own ears wrete between curlos- 7 Inclination and dis whieh served to an rose. r hie + involuntary protege, #he ex 0 itarated t sin hunselt wonderin | ents predicament; o nature Were known to her he belleved, prevarication elf, if the ! Was capable e adventurer contidences' POOP VOC DIOP PPO HGOG OOHF OPP OPOOPOO PP OPO DOOD ON By Louis Joseph Vance, 3 ”“phe 3 Private W ar,” Ete. she questioned with an all but tin-) Why?’ he der piqued: percentible Iiftiny of the eyebrows) RAMA SA : “IT don't mind telling you my own nas pee Arreriea ts really Philip Kirkwood.” Why w And you are an frend of my “It not, y« N tine tecenataten ties them without speaking ‘Pho & , ‘atten hor shoulders with er of pagans “TL inew It wasn't I don't, Besides weaithy, In “You know {t world Be hard for a. point of fa bal young man Uke 1 » be a very the vorme Ha KePAT I How long, then, have you known) if mer other regen “Must 1 answer 1 s sams Between threo and four Atnused, shia | 1 soit I sus- course’ @ > ¢ br Sho repeated: “Please 1 r ' tte-case, he it ave to smoke Mt will seom an vera use a stgaretio. “And : ‘ Dut yourself,” ur mia , she shia Ps nena s for the and r Noun treme, ra you ara retailing ready

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