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The Sah AL World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, Decembe Pe The | Newlyweds we Their Baby -% George McManus | 4 é ‘The Batile”’ i Rae THERE BABY MUSTN'T SEE ANY OF ad HIDE THESE OYS HIS TOYS TitL CHRISTMAS! a Poor Fight SO BABY WON'T SEE * . for the Tenements. THEM UNTIL CHRISTMAS | wT tn "acim ao : zs { 7 THAT wouLD . BY CHARLES DARNTON. SPOIL EVERY T was bins I at the Savi. tet Tis 4 tenement rei to last night's audience wher in 'The Bat about the need of h the premis eveland Moffett to d not taken ot It had a gre too Nplai spoke for itself y on kanize a bread in the sec act, and t let capital take ite course, Mile’? was fough: with “doug 1 n seric : & poor fight f he This much v pressed upon you by the au t Was in his ostory ond ty Wilton i Whe od Tithe seri natbilities of the liton. elre in one of hy . a evelations of ted Ww these litt side talk to firsts te ed ye o understand that e theatre by f not den's Row of Fiats ln ice lone Tarexinbinig ANGE HE KNOWS HOw ios denis. that WHATS THAT a 7O PLAY ON IT! hi st een th waive NOISE, DEAREST ' | frat ts nee ie Sau THE LITTLE SCAMP! resulted in “m hayps” compas JUST LIKE Now WE'LL HAVE 70 | Be Sen se GET HIM SOMETHING | Anda arWe TM oiaslator cle wree uatalie DIFFERENT | rebating tu rushing e life t fa two ‘om s gold-lined i WILTON LACKAYE as HAGGLETOM. E17 HOLLAND as GENTLE WB WARNER as PHILLIP nt old Soctalist named Gen- would for million ¢ hands. He had been so dis that his wife couldn't live with lim, and so she had fled to a boarding-house to ave her boy from becoming like hig father, and incidentally, to die After this you we dy to belleve anything that happer was so! ; time before Jol: tle by the ss Haggleton happened author knew t the millionaire tenement owner ble room in Market street, where he was waiting with the key to his room, with its bedraggled and generally povert fcken atr, was | st thing In the play. It was much more real than most of the characte! Gentle wasn’t a parlor Socialist. He lived in a boarding but he made | the tenement his headquarters. ‘The millionaire's son, whom he had tratned to be @ rising young diver, also seemed to be at home there. Philip didn't know that he had been rescued from a life of ease. He was blissfully ignorant of the fact that his father was a tainted inillionaire. Gentle nad a * on the past The wicked miliionaire “saw it all’ in the “papers” that the unmercenary Socialist had kept all these vears. He was greatly moved. Mr. Lackaye, in an ‘There’s No Limit to the Times a Man May | Vall in Love Ne “corner are able to love one woman after another later, as the case may be, By Helen Oldfield. YW but that some, at lwast apparently, find no 1 loving two women at once | nutomobtie coat—and it is not an easy matter to be moved in an automobile coat— © WOMAN need waste time perplexing herself with the question, “Can a| With what. If not love, ‘e a fairly good Imitation thereof jad a lot of walking Gis din uth came out. Usually it Is the stage mother N man love twice?” Undoubtedly he can. The men who | Hear hal Sua erue aril ellie [eee oer Ae are Ce HETee THIS RE Ie eee pooner’ t TEERESTET etl “Love but ent love and love on till they dle” are as scarce as white crows, | Were ‘other dear charmer coat who cried “My boy he gentle Socialist was “surprised and touched.” His \ | nde wera & Soutels ey maybe scarcer, the poet Gay, and his words fin eohe in aany a man’s heart to- trite speech sounded ws thougl te had learned Socialism in a correspond RISES SE nig AL aoe Pe oeay Eee eee 1 ence achool, buf, of course, E. M. Holland had to take the author at his word. roee. Fake Warmers ; Re MRP RE ‘ Naturally, Philip didn't know his own father when he saw him. But he! me, a vanote meen numevendicnponunlty: Most people have a more or le jal nature, and when It falls ‘to the le } touched him to the quick by saying he would have to do life own loving-that he Tr was a wise and practical woman who said that she man to meet two women who sever peal ; es couldn't get to the hearts of the poor through his check book. ‘This hit the loving | cared not at all how many first loves her husband might | he is ilkely to be !n a decided quandary as jo whicl of the two, both of whom he father hard, He would go In for tenement reform instead of going off on his havo had so long as she was certain of being his last loves, after a fashton, ts the one whom he preters yacht. He would live there and show ‘em what he could do. He belleved in| It has well been sald that the heart of the average man) There is nothing ‘1 whieh men and women more rad differ than in this being practical. Of what earthly use were two marble clocke In the room. He resembles the pigeonholes of his office desk in that it Is ability to love mors than one person at once. A mas be "a vers w | looked about the place and saw $3) worth of useless furniture. He would sell the! Sed with memories of past love aifairs, some tender, some ercock,”” ax Shakespeare put it; she may change ler mind with the rapidity and | stuff and demonstrate what could be done with the money in @ business way, And otherwise; some forgotten, some faintly remembered; some | fickleness of the wind, but, like the weathercock, sie points to but one point | rar " i : 5 which, when recalled, bring @ s' of regret, some a feel-/at ence. | @o he proceeded to start a bakery v n recalle F Be A Ra ea ae Haggleton to make money, because he knew how ing of thankfulness at a lucky escape. It, Indeed, Is rarely that she has any doubt whieh of the two men she prefers, But why should an author draw attention to this fact when he has a atory, to Yet each one while it lasted was a love of a sort andjuiways providing sh- 1s in love with either of them, Like the servant In Serlp- tell? Philip was really the centre of interest. Margaret Lawrence, a trained believed to be genulne and lasting, says He.en Oldfield in| ture, she is unable to serve two masters without hating the one and cleaving the Chicane Lriyune, And with all these memories tucked away he still 1s ready | to the other ideals, Jenny Moran, a daughter of the slums, who had been ruined by | for Gnother and fresh jove. woman was ever truly In love with one man yet fancied herself in love| Margaret's uptown brother, also loved Philp for himself alone. Father wasn't Indeed, there are cases a-plenty on record to prove that many men not only| with another. the only one wifo wanted Philip. Jenny wanted him so badly that she put a stain 3 a3 z | of some sort on her chest and perfume on her kimono to get him to pay a ltttle ) attention to her. But a Kiss that started weil turned cold, and when Philip saw Betty Vi ncent?’ Ss Advice on Cou rtshi i p a nd Marriage; nurse whose father had been ruined by his father, loved him for his beautitu! through her little kame, she put on her coat and hat and went back to her old| sinful Hife, This caused her father, who was on Haggleton's st of victims, aA take @ shot at the miliionatre, but Philip, whore eyes had been opened by hin! 4 Lowelorn Young Man. Jove vou ere whom) does he go out with other ladies. 18 ‘ln or a pair or two of gloves would | Qrained swertieart, got in the way and saved his parent. As boy dropped caer ne now love and this girl doing wrong by giving eae ne r Pilate f A pale to} Maggleton called attention to the fact th emental| fleah'” had asserted Itasit| 'Anr aceriy in iove with « girl, 1 tola| tee" fiend a present of a pin for his birth: an fe departinent stores will help A and was satisfied he had won the battle for the boy, her 1 would ki it she 4 Birthday P, t day? It is not very expensi Geltoes [seule ue matter, sar eu will find | ad ) By this time Philip had become the head of the East Side Bread Trust, and as! Perea amin ie nean te Nene urthday Lresent. Under the circumstances it ts perfectly | mans Chil fan tem, viliieh ar he)was) working) along thelsame lines: thas his Catien) followed) in business, /the| jayoe ras aecniy ct Necertielece ener te beat Batty Sie seeping /preher for the gitl to give her friend a | fit, 5 erpliieob irae (Hay Joab tall) in Bum ut abe hwentsiack \touliite (inithollastiant| steerer eng juovere eet Risa uss) Beep ikeaplne | InUCOE ie Bint nasy: even oui Ta aid ®, ase oR a For his share in their affect » Hawgleton began devising ways and means of |iows calling her ‘dear’ and “love sical) RAY PA OUR RD ee etal aay ease Reply, | expending $19,09,000 tor the 1 of the poor Ponti Auth EES: ‘or one year, At her bt f or eae the Umer careee 4i1 the millionaire was worth, H. B, | >? 7° tee I ae hen Ponte ABOh ney ere. net ons tbe leat AA Christmas Gift. pis AT et} ning of the following \ Warner's English accent was agatnst lilm as the enst ale diver, but his ease and} t¢ @ young lady really joved you sho |°f Sere: ; they occasionally tear petty ae % He ape eid youthfulness won him first honors, Miss Elsie Ferguson was not always convinc-Iwould not encourage others to write | WeAt Out to places of amusement. He HAT 4s an appropriate gift to give | Pf reception cura, Ik, § pe? ing as Jenny, and Miss Josephine Victor, ax Margaret, was artifical except when! jove Jetters to her. However, 1 gee no |28Ve her no present, just remembering a young lady vhom 1 have known | A READE she was tn Philip's arms. In a comedy plot Charles Abbe was funny enough for | reason Ww you should regard your ‘t With a card ince then they have about a year tor Christinas? Some- | It. 8. VP." Is I ch for “Reply Vaudeville. He did his best to make you forget the tenement problem, love affair in euch a@ tragic light. Pay | become firm friends and he treats her thing besides books; iso not too ex- pre Aire a Heteer oy I invitations But there are a few things in this world that you can't help thinking about. |the young lady attentions, call on her| very kindly at all times, The lady does | pensive. Cc. at the fest be kno Feeling ever so jolly about them won't do. not gO out with other men and neither | A pretty print picture, a fancy Jer equently and in thne she will probably 44 0422249040000044000-00050-0463.000000. A Romance of Mystery, Love and Adventure. "" “TH B LAC K BAG = r 22, 1908. DODDDOHOVDDSDDHDOHOOGDDDHOHDDDOBODHDOOHOOIOHOOHS The Old Santa Claus And the Salesgirl By Gertrude Barnum. TOOK Oo JOO OCOGG 1 were crushed tn among crowds | same counter to make complaint about W of Christmas shoppers at the a mistake tn delivery. and brass counter of an! “Where's that girl optown department | reddish-brown hair?” store. A half dozen| “Nellie? Why, she'll with the wavy, come on duty aalesiadies’ with [now tn about five minutes.” flushed faces and. «1 thought she was on from 8 A. M. tumbled colffures to 10 P, Mt edged and pushed | «she was until to-day.” back and forth un-| “What happened?” der each other's arms, reaching thelr wares up to “You remember that old Santa Claus lookin’ man she w shing about the As present for a lady of young the two tiny girls | her age? You recollect he went off with+ ina sort of pulpit out buying anything that day? Well, above, who stip: | about half an hour after that back he ed and cheeked comes with the superintendent, wh CcarnuoEe Baroy ANA Made change tollg Nelile she can go for the balance and tied parcels of the day with feverish haste “But that'll Just make tt worse for Yos, it’ something flerce, Christmas| tye post," says Nellle, standing pat. ‘E sald our clerk, searching fer 5 Tcan stick with the bunch." C. OD Danks under piles of +npty e old man takes a good look at boxes, ornaments, crumpled paper, 2. the bunch, then he whistles, and off Louk here,” Interrupted an anxious he goes again, dragging the super with male voice behind us. “WH you tell mes iitm what woud) hea neounrementi {or a) wwe the next thing ewe hear iAlthne ly about your age?” Santa Claus ts the main guy of the A dari room and about twenty-four | whole stock company that owns) this ours’ sleep would sult Ince you're ‘concern. It seems he called all the sup- asking.” ether and telephoned round to a Eh? wnta the puzzied voice, whose the officers and stockholders and and first thing we knew the WAS passed that more girls were taken and different shifts be a white-haire nt look’ owner heetle-t oman proved to benevo! owed, 1g old “Something tn copper?” sighed the we'd all get a spell of Nehing out various — artic! without docking. You'd irdinlere2—$2.98, A tea-caddy? » we cheered Nell when we S148. Pin tray?—€9 cents, e ery one calls her the weary tones died away in a whis; ver since, Here she ned the fat hes on face the Copper Queen, when Rt F “it sure was You're played out, ain't yout? he iy won't Tose much ushed. It's almost closing time © won't be so many id the girls take Not mu said the girl. “We're tes, the word has from 8 M. to.19 P.M that this Is a falr store, ut tt" The astonis cus- dnd lots more customers are coming in r stood for a moment as though all hogs. I \ few days later we returned to the ooo Too Fat at Fifteen. i 1% 3 With arms tn et planted firmly the same position, By Margaret H. Ayer. \, on the floor, twist I Ao not despair over being thé body as tar ou can turn {t from too fata If you ex- | right to left and vice versa. This Js es- pecially good for reducing the hipa. Repeat twenty times, to settle in a year) 4. Lie flat on your back, elther on the or two and the floor or on a couch, and without bend- superfluous flesh Ing the knees, Nft the legs until the Ppear, As feet are straight up, raising your arms for the fattening at the same time. Do this with the qualities of tea,| breath exhaled, and inhale deeply as coffee and cocoa, You lower them. Repeat six times. he lation cer- 6. In @ sitting position, the body held ‘ETE, A pro- erect but not stiffly, abdomen drawn icer, but the two i, chest inflated and fingers placed (ert upon the shoulders, twist the body from However, tf you|the Walst as far as possible, to right like none of thom, why force yaur.{/82d left without moving the hips, Ri self to drink them? ‘The two former |! @t (he same movement with elbowa eapcolallyy aralatiinninntatenanctett high, fingers lapping at the back of the ger you can avoid drinking them the b peels: tapeatiatenct movermentia ten) ter. Take the hot water with the | Mes orange juice or lemon if you lke It. Se In regard to the exere!ses and deep ss breathing, below are some directions Cigarettes in School. which you would do well to follow san mn EXICAN schoolmasters show thetr brenthe always through the no: in a curious manner, ‘The dilt- These ident is allowed to smoke a cigar ent s| loose=Niting nobel Intarrocin wien ue ng the lesson, When the whole frashiaininintsieenintien ass has given satisfaction permission 1, Draw in the muscles of the side pareyen Abdo-) the little Mexicans allowed to light men, inhale 4 deep breath ralse a cigarette for the occasion, Needless ye arn) hove your ead the to say, the s: hoolmaster himself smokes th : bending the body back-|n cigar of a size and’ quallly propor, ward as far pesib: Recoy pos 1 ate to his super position. But, and a8 you exha bring the arms down sa exchange, the scholars are nat in a sweeping cur ward until the atowed to drink, this privilege being finger-tips touch the floor, Repeat six ac led to the master only, On hie avs Keeps a bottle of liquor, 2, With arms hanging limply from the when empty, occasions much dle- shoulders, bend the body sideways as | pute among the parents of his scholars, far as poss! first to the left, then to as ft is considered an honor to be able the right; repeat ten times. ito fill the schoolmaster's bottle. By Louis Joseph Vance, Author of “The Brass Bowl,” “ The Private War,” Ete. CL LOS 29DOELO OVP POOTO DUCED VT LOPS OV FDU PGDO99 90000009, (Copyright, 1908, by Bobbe-Merriil Co.» J other confirmed a theretofore somewhat | pledge of his signet ring,» Was a solld spell of rest, when heeame| Paragraph exploiting the nice little nap?” heywith an; “If you've got any more of, able » and cherished of his belongings. } —— j hazy impression that his dreams were |match-box and cigar case would pr to think of it, even allowing that he ad required four policeme ome 4p) bright and |that tobacco, capiain, Ud be ofa nodded the captain in reminiee | SYNOPSIS OF PREC ‘dignified by a foundation of tact; that him with money enough for a return to had been unusually and bardonably |to the corps of porters to su w, 1 guess’—the em-! pipe.” cence, "You don't remember? Likely. ] Faillp, Kirkwor in brief he was occupying a cabin-bunk | London, by third class, at the worst fatigued when conducted to hile betel Naa mbrongly undsravors dn tee Hand ma war that the captain | An tntensely contemplative expression ‘twas the brandy singing in yer ‘ead. vent Ur Aboard the good ship Alethea. There * * * well, ail events Wate ap He ; Sort aironger: aR cond = igh PARAS IRLY MpUDH SURE AE the. ine Me leved } It to be employ an |erept fnto the captain's small blue You Pushes it Into my ‘ands—almost ean's affections. Under ‘Kirkwood's es Overhead, on the deck, a heavy thump- the Knees of the gods; he'd squirm t | enough—and normously uns RARER ALAA anal oe ae ath tiene me sn 1 80 successful was he | hel . weepin'’, you was~and sez, sex you, Perse ter 'tathor “a tiseterious black Giant |ing of hurrying feet awoke him tolof his troubles somehow. As for the the bargain [had nan Ham Stranger |in his esteem that he could not only got one other pyper of tits) ‘Stryker,’ you sez, ‘tyke this in trifiin® Bet for her, tether & mysterious, Disc Glad. {ine of Pere Aa, other matter, the Calendar affair, he| Abstractedly, heedless of the fact that ang cheerfully haa pald a fine of ten! resist the temptation to improve upon |'ere ‘bacc |, fe announced at length, ‘toking of my gratichood; I wouldn't hine bist Wibhwtigl Meri wine Borg: | Judging from the Jncessant rolling and | presumed he wax well rid of it—with a his tobacco would be water-soaked and |dollars, alleging bx entertainment to tho 1 Nacow 1 gueas yeou're and I earn’t get no more till T Kets sult” you you. sea, "by hotterin’ you ole th Bathe American denies: pitching of the brigantine, the crashing #igh of regret. It had been a most en- ruined, he fumbled in his pockets for SoNTA AHH p jabaout right ready, ben't ye; to hey a ‘ome. I simply couldn't part with @/ money? but this I can insist on yer ace Perothy and hor a Ae bal ara ate cay upon her sides, the|ticing mystery, you know; and the pipe ¢ pouch, thnkng to soothe t ‘hile Kirkwood was emp} ved in peretdrink, x01 under ‘arf a quid. ceptin’, and no refusal,’ says you." fhe Aleth firs Winwood) too, jeldrich shrieking of the gale, as well as|woman in the cay» was extraordinary, | panes of hunger against breakfast time; Male thie’ iiuminating anecdote alatit |! xo, thank sou, said Kirkwood settled back with @ hopeless) “‘On,"* repeated Kirkwood {oftinom ianter senrotect ‘Dori |from the chorused groans and plaints of |to way the least. *.* * which was probably two hours and a bells sounded, and, from the commotion | .,.; t @ wot any Hit of hls shoulders, Abstractedly! it 1 for @ ningtant thought you | i lem enthout and walis gut in wo) iduniehalseandicimshereintiiall ane anys eat Doxat Calendar| quarter ahead, But his pockets were OVerhead, the wateh ebanged, A little : Ror Stryker puffed the smoke his way until) wasn't sober when you done it ® eo eae hal karennedt but | frail fabric that housed his fortunes. the; made him nh again, this t more empty—every one of them. He assimi-! later the companton-wa on Alamned | e you " Stryker dropped |}e could endure the deprivation no 4 10) you're @ gent !f there ever was Biry ker aie captain, that te) wing hud strengthened materially during | violently; sigh that was own brother |tated this discovery In patience and cast | Open and shut, and Capt. Stryker- or ' and glanced at the clock the man to offend you,’ Calendars are not aboard his 4 of forget{ulness—however |to (or at any rate dercended in a dir an eye about the room, to josate, if BNSR rr nN Aunivy op Oe t e announced will be about ten 88 In my pocket id many the latter might have bee: Ine from) the furnace s f the lover possible, the missing property But |down, rather than descended, t ter ‘ ary aan a ‘ame aboard, captain, and) Who captain let the implication pass, CHAPTER XII. LEA pair, derrir eee a had|described by the melancholy Jagues. naught of his was visible. So he rose BS (bau RAEN SR Bue AL seer Mae ere ed not t W other articles. hapa on the consideration thar he Despair. alent long, deeply snd exhausiedy, He And Ne eat wp. bunped his hea a, rope nd piers nal balng aaprali: | imaied ete, so. WRLE A TROH And roMead |G ut : ae you men 4 ford to Ino © iy and sald 90 ONTRADICTORY to the hopetul| fer NOW a ttle emaciated men a A cee ones tneidoon aos ibaked and depressingly gloomy, Its furniture | the name the Iin-commn Aur Taeavoued eunillaiie rose, ambled into his room, | utes, Kirkwood ‘imo 6 C prognosis of Capt: Stryker, Waly ee A numb languor, aot unpleas- into the blowsy emptiness e ship consisted entirely in a chalr or two, | Aas ‘Obs Ne AM RDAs he " glass for K da 4 ed with Kirkwood's posses: | 41,4. Capt : unsceredited passenger wae HOt ant, hold him passively supine, the white|cabin proper, whose gloomy contiies |supplemonting the transoms and lockers {the starboard stateroon ML After Hee si eoh paper of shay, While | Stryker | Trae Mbetter’ whon, after a period of obvlr/ io’ ai, nimeuit over to speculative | were made ble only b, e rays Of Alas resting-places, and a centre-table Pref exchange of comr Ut Ape r , n ¢ insinuated, push was has ait Mi thal tise Ne farey 1] ous rest indefinite in duration, he any (dingy and sr Jay swinging ViOr| covered with a cloth of turkey-red, Wom Mr. ‘Obbs appeared ne , he i Z the first atr but Fr \ awoke, His xubrequent assumption of wild night, certainty; probably, by|ienily in gimbals from a i 1 whose orisiial aggressiveness had been of a walk ar of cin 1 Sylar rei era eleie tae ¢ iff, the capt manly ( 5 he tat @ Ustless resignation, of pacific acquier at tine, the lithe vessel was in the) Kirkwood’s clothing wor ried kly moderated by utions of liquids, DY & sou weste ¢ fan We Bee 1 a J into his own palm longs | teAred Auta retohing \ Gence In the dictates of hia destiny, War | jade of the North Sea ® * * bound|and warped W {iy out of shape, principally black coffee, and burnt of. wink Out of the state iene onntiaa ge except three large nies. T cae do me # purely deceptive-thin ive of despale oe Antwerp! Lad been thrown ca sely a D> ferings of grea aid tobacco-ash, Aside 4 his m a cla - thatiaar e ve Kirkwood fle t F profound depths of exasperated re. ‘Ohh,’ 1 Wwirkw Vindletive nn near the door. He got up, collected gem compan way to the k, Heap upon the ‘ ia ete ot ith # miscellaneous ass : bellion helt!" em, and returalng to his be our opened inte the room, two witeh he brought forth 9 , K re [inent of articles, which the Am ’ o Blank car! 4s enveloped him when) so he was bound for Antwerp! Th essed at le ¢, thinking heay bably giving u » the captain's and ‘ ty * Vai «6 1 ieee | p pleee by ple and be, i " ped rat he opened eyes to yonder. Then | ayst color of 1 ment ebbing from his | grunded—in humor as evil as the ihe mate's urters, th 1 table, 1 t ur « ‘ rab r , his ae Vhen © { Kradually.as he stared, pfecing together | thoughts left him rathe crested than |after-taste of bad brandy in lis (h. pweudo state-roc . which h vr a theie vou al itt ' SRT yee He a os Q Unassorted memories and striving 10! excited by the prospect. He found that| When dressed he went out ® had just vacated closets lange enough "OW. th ra Heli © had t BHALAD: . nanctinad arated quicken droway wits, he became aware | ho was neither pleased nor displeased, | cabin, closing the door on his tL to contain a small bunk and naught be- | eye ne GR01m ar pring 0 t \ hat af Me erated ) [of a glimmer that waxed and waned, | tte presumed that it would be no more | and for lack of anythng better to do, The bulkheads and partitions | mation F t fA ve nearh 4 a 1 eve \'a var of pale bluish light striking across! qyneuit to rulxe money on Personal ve- | seated himself on the thwartships tran- were badly broken out with a rash of | “Good morning, Capt. Stryke “ ere Was @ black p Phat’ of Rear | the gloom above his couch; and by dint |iongings in Antwerp than anywhere {som, against the forward bulic be- plotures from shustrated papers, mostly | Kirkwood, rising 1 want to a , F sear tpin Pde eames Me dws they, isin one, but * | Of puaaling divined that this had access | else; it has been observed that the flat [hind the table, Above his head offensive. Kirkwood was Interested to you are N"y don't you remember? You gave | Sil Bere nerd Me F Wid. you gy 8 port. Turning his head upon o| ower of civilisation is the rum blossom, [chronometer ticked sieadily and loudly, seud n hait-colern clipping from a New| But Stryker waved one great red paw lt : to me of me ‘evin 8 lead ee ati and vnyieliing pillow, he could the nest the conventionalized fleur-de-lis |and, being consulted, told him that the York yellow journal, des riptive of the| impatiently, wit effect o! with " Twas me wed you the Sia pe ee joa{ Miacern @ streak of waffron tight Lining |of the money lender, There would be | ume of day wae twenty minutes to four; antics of a drunken British sailor whe |eaie and | ‘ast id i ners ard & ex of 6 shag sharpened an " Sea eet ree Very well: ake it four,” Kirkwoe@ aul ny dyorw wb) le. paw nshops, then, In Antwerp, and Kirk- | which meant that be had slept away !had somehow found his way to the bar- wood's in dd speech ¢ AKA, HOF tne th of re. Kirkwood stood it iv) ommented irkwoo 1eNy. | gasented contemptuourly 49 {fie cus ivnotmaaon ‘aken with "the ‘wood wae woundent Unet ‘he eale or some eighiesn oF twenty howe Shel room of the Fits Avenue Hotel, the would he hear bin further, @s jong ae he could then surrendered Sh* pln had been ainong the most valu To Be Conunuedy \ » \ } i ‘ U ptt