The evening world. Newspaper, December 24, 1908, Page 9

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, December 24, 1908. , ARR D RAN AAR PAPA APA RPPA ROL AADPD DARPA LAL PRARARAAAAN RAY BALAN mAnnnn t 4 4 " OOO OOO OT OCG OO i ye , 4 Vv. K i | - OOO , ° ‘ - j . \ bb é i A Victirn of Tanocence «te -t- et YS. V7 6 NAMES § Mi a gs nei Gab aias SaAIAe OCS each Mastasce ac TN itations of { lamee=aee \EDE 5 ‘gl (oul S5)R' GAMBLING AND STRONG DRINK IS U ° ‘ Maude Adams Makes === GRACIOUS! HERE COMES Sa} | (1 QUITE ACREF XE 0) Mae rried an of m —| JHE MINISTER! | MUST UNITH You THE ve} WAAAY GURL oF SUPER TARY Reon. a a ," ie MES APPING Su Rk = " You Believe “What pv HEAR OPE TERT ECTS sors peer Un tt a ldudactideancelck me Pe li Mi) OF LAST NIGHTS UTTLE ) " t { By Clarence L. Cullen. = | nee wi fe Every Woman Knows. ETSI EDT DOONTSS) DSGOSOLDSSSOONG! Op. ER version of self to go to seed a bit oxteriodly, and BY CHARLES DARNTON. fort candor |into a slouch © your pick and lose Which should! toth ways HAT uncanny Scot, Mr J. M. Barrie, dors not xpare the rib and spoil the oxtat Hetween man and wife ta that you i le? iat you MARA womans, On the contrary, he takes the tunny bone out the masouline hould tell her all you know whilst she when was in her nty-elghth. re and gives Woman, clever woman, tho ecnse of humor ao long denind m hould be at 10 y adoring beaux she had ARE TRK A Scien =. oe whatever, In her opinion, tt won't dlse | jor 4 eT CS ] her by the shaving sex turb or excite you to kr sh mu to kno: Af 1 for years about When Mics Maw Adams, as Magi Wylie, announced at the end of;the pl She ¢ unces as a humoristte fletion | preti nod looks of the at the Empire Theatre last night that “Every woman knows that Eve wasn't the notion that women put on their pret-! yay yer eh ele 1 for you, vou ace made out of Adam's rib, she was made out of his funny bone,’ she told all about tlest een on rainy or muddy days, oidentally meet up with that marvelloup i ‘ ‘ : ‘ Rut whew Keen to ascertain what the! jooker and find out that he's crom-eyed % Barrie play itsel What Every Woman Knows made out of the ‘ K 1 t y the Barrie: pla weather Ix going to be before she chooses | and pigeon-toed. Then she endeavore Barrie funny bone, and, oddly enough, it is full of the feminine charm that Maggie her footrear for a shopping trip to persuade you that te became: BIRGONS: velleved she didn’t possess. In fact, it is feminine to the last curl, old-fash |. Did you ever notice how she sort of| toed and cross-eyed because she DID feminine, that ss, not suffragistic feminine. To be quite up to date, Mr. Barrie jreens heracif and exhibits a kind of) reject him r A i introduces a few “new women” of the | furtive twinkle of the eye whilst she's You never quite appreciate the amount political pattern at a committe tlt jtelling you about that distangy looking | of patience which a woman {« capable but it's a “Wittle brown hen" who writes masher downtown who stared and] of exhibiting until you try to write @ the speeches of the man who cha: 5 [Stared and just stared at her? letter on your wife's wabbly, spindly Tie pettoontedleales (Ni PAFIAT | No matter how seif-tmmersed and ut- | writing-desk. Rarrie’s play might almost | Ned jterly neglectful of her husband's com-' she refuses absolutely: to listen to 8 brie? for the man-supporting woman— |fort a woman may be, slie's bound to KO, what you have to say about sociaiiem, and Suffragettes will catch him if 1, FOR ONE, WOULD VTEte YOu, WE MUST ERADICATE THIS 0v0 Pa! LOOK wnat) jthrough life imagining that she waits/and informs you flatly that Soclalists he doesn't watch out i GREAT FR R PRIVATE LIFE! Y jupon him “hand and foot," “like as if! are brutes, who toss bombs around to : NEVER PERMIT IT IN EAT CURSE FROM GUR PRIVATE LIFE lhe wi baby.” The scenes may be in Scotland and MY HOME VFOUND In THE he were @ baby eal and mangle people, But see to it nplandy Wil tie reat ia Barrioiund) SUF ICE BOX! ~—— Problem in elementary arithmetic. | that you listen attentively and respect- new name for Fairyland. Barrie's se | How old must a woman be before she] fully to her expounding of the New mind works like a boy’s when it doesn’t stops moistening her lips when she/ ‘Thought Movement as she has learned work Ike a woman's, and his latest play knows that a man is looking at her from! the same from having been present at is a curious mixture of both. That it |the front, or before she quits fumbling one whole lectu becomes a bit tedious at times isn't [with her back hair when she has a) Axreeable, isn’t it, after you've Jeops owing to the boy nor the woman ele- |hunch that @ man Is looking at her] ardized several blood vessels to get ment, but to the Scotch, which may |from: the rear? home on the dot for dinner, to find . not be as familiar nor as endearing Why ts it that, although she professes| your wife, with a towel around her to US as the author might wish. » |to be so crazy about her mother, she| neck, having her scalp massaged by ® In this Barrieland, you learn that once oF ets so sore when you tell that she !s| Swedish woman who regards you as ® upon a time there was a poor Scotch “gy {looking more and more like her mother buttinski, and the dinner not even dent who tried to ste education mn LY every day | started? breaking into his neighbor's orna- | | Why fs it that, w She brenks in upon you, without the ital library, and that whe he was | | you a decidedly messy ‘picked-up din-| least compunction, when you're ab- ugh? in the act he sold his future for ner,” she must add insult to injury by, sorbed in reading the latest epithetic not to the devil, but to a “re- insisting that such a scrap-heap food Is message of Mr. Roosevelt or the wins markable woman,” who, like most re- | “good for you?" | ter league baseball dope. Woe betide markable women, kept {t dark how elt No matter what piffling Mttle ailment | You, though, if you ask her a necessary > weet | narkable she was. seizes you~whether {t's housemaid's\ question wh she's reading a letter Mr. Richard Bennett, in the rough Knee or a buzzing In the ears—she in-| from her sister Min about what Min’ \ Richard Bennett as John Shand. corduroys of John Shand, the railway sists upon slapping a mustard plaster|soing to get the folks for Christmas ter who believed that books should e read well as seen, made any ex- | upon the small of your back. But just! gifts! Aordinary future seem*impossible except in Barrieland—though Barrie gets | you suggest a mustard plaster to her| This is a bully period, if your bank- aead of you by telling you that you can’t keep an educated Scotchman down, even when she's downright sick ana rol! is suffering from anaemia, to keep specially when he goes among the English. needs one! out of your wife's hands those aflur- But it’s the education, or progress, of Mr. Bennett as an actor that interests | You don't know whether to accept it, ing booklets telling all about those Bo i ‘e ner e position of the bes: vallo r 00 vhen she $®0us five-day trips to the West Indies rou most of all here, In one step last night he react a the position of th t as a Wallop or as a boost wh n she for sixty-five bucks, all necessary exe voung actor on our stage. He was as Scotch as the cap he pulled from his shock | 7 SEE a tells you that it's quite remarkable how | penses Included. if untrained hair that tumbled over his weather-stained fac nd as he turned | » | praiseworthy your manners are, consid-| Why is it, when there are & Joe oe sie d her three brot s you lized that he hb 2 ert ow~—er—wel ordinary > eo. | folks present with whom you desire to als ae Ts pe eyes on Mage’ aene her thr br a ized that he had a 9 6 7 Sj | y 6 fi a how r—well, ordinary your p j mak a hit, that she will Insist upon swallowed his part, burr and al sf ny oe % pe we telling you how you stormy and raged 5 is Ad s ed to have mixed a little ho with her Scoteh, and for the i 4 e 4 Keep yourself tidy and well-groomet| last week when she plastered a red Miss Adams seemed t a SAK SS SANS flannel cloth, soaked In goose grease, é first time she betrayed mannerisms Somewhat out of keeping with her role. 1 . re and she'll be inquiring, in a tone of acrid) fannel OU eIneote ror Hine are throat, 4 mannerisms left he however, she & ene ee =} suspicion, what 2 you're doing all land how funny you looked in bed with went from act to act, and her peculiar By Lili Bell. ) Or is the same result accomplished | they all agreed that, no matter how tine ; said you were foxy, too, for by so doing | fastidious -—primping for, Permit you hat unspeakable thing on you? charm exerted its old spell. Her evi- | Y Lian o more painlessiy when the pink souled | your work, the best part of being your | you compelled other people to express ———— —— —— dent desire to make the most of every HEN @ woman} woman says friend lay in the fact of your modesty, | their opinion about your work, and that | Word counted against the shyness that de Iiberate “IT overheard some people talking and that you never would talk about | it was always complimentary a fe le 2 +> was supposed to place Maggie apart choc C6) about you at Sherry’s Sunday night, and | yourself or your achievements. They my own part, 1 love the pin! D 7 t Di h Fo Ch t from the world, especially when she e peasant in this | | souled wom LA her juggle with my | ain Vv Ss 6S or ris mas. “played up" above the three brothers orld, it generally | =o oo a pe ae a ~ | shortcomings and my lack of physleal | oa empn nee fn the first act. With Alick and James ned that she must rfections if she will, I am greedy of setting their watches by the authorita- fa Truth by | 29 the sugared half-truths, the pink-tinted three well beaten eggs. Fill the basins tive word of David. .you were prepared vith a sweet kiss, Some Chrisiraas Verse 2 capsules containing bitter, black veri- | Pork and Apple Stew. Meith the mixture, press down smoothly,¢. / to sees Mag what In awe of all ind take refuge in Ce CAE De, ties iwnicl Ww as candy UT a Joint of pork in thick pleces.| and cover with buttered paper before three. But perhaps Peter Pan had a elicately tinted lies | st an take It is not necessary Peel and siice two baking apples, | tying down with pudding cloths. Béil hand in the game so admirably played of a variety which | yan edior who rejects my stuff “iC four onions and six potat Lay |the pudding at a gallop for ten hours, by Messrs, FR. Peyton Carter. David will be swallowed! A ; Good will to Men they earoled then, — | Write a note saying. “Rotten bad work. |the slices of meat and vegetables to- | adding more boiling water as It reduces Torrence and Fred Tyler. dadly by the vie-, Over the Christmas Cider. Andiwilswanioulidiye ” | Nobody but a fool would have ended a! gether in a ple dish, sprinkle with pep- | in cooking. Miss Adams displayed Mitle atrs and ums, her best ER the leigh-bells Awake, awake, and rise and sing story like this!” [per, wait and powdered sage. Cover with | Marrow Pudding. Braces that didn’t quite fit the won riends. S Smoking on the plate And greet ye every living thing I know what he means. When a leng| Water or gravy, tie down with greased - bie £ “without charm. and she didn The color of such See the luscious icicles For man and beast did greet your King | envelope is in my mafl it is a song with-| paper and bake for two hours. The YAK nine large rusks in one quart of always subor the role to the 4 woman's soul 45 Blazing in the grate! On that first Christmas day? out words—something like a dirge, in| meat should be dipped in flour before milk until soft, then add six eggs | situation I ne thing, her teeth | pink, like her ies, | wake ye, little children, fact. But when he says: If 1 had only | putting it into the dish, so as to give a} beaten light, one-half cup sugar, had too much to do with her words | And who dares complain’ | Oh, therjovs of Christmas— this is Christmas das own tasie to consult, T would jump |Uttle thickening to the gravy. ‘one-half pound of beet marrow chopped Rut she grew steadily better, and when Would you rather be told, plain out.) Driving off dull care December Everybody's, | at But, unfortunately, it does not 5 |fne, one-half cup of raisins. Mix well the moment cane for Maggie to throw |that “treckies always go with red hair) Hear the mince ples ringing |fi the poliey of the magazine, Won't {Devonshire Puffs. and pour tito buttered mold, Bake tn 7) ver Knitt a an hands and nothing can cure thei or 16 hay On the frosty a | pa Se ctl rs oh 3 slow oven. Serve with the following down her knit 1 fold her and nothing can cure them,” or t6 have n the frost you send mw mething mor I smile AIS is an old-fashioned recipe that) .iioe: Cook one-half cup of water, one- M the prospect aiving her hu the pink-souled wom. say, “Women| HearaheRtinicasanelinine F ly T i smile only ten degrees less than when I always find is popular AUC i 1a iP . sand to his pink-and inspira [with auburn hair have skins of such | Rin Gic ies amily les. the small envelope reveals the words of all cane aeie ape [half cup of grape juice, or any other silly Lady Sybil, the Maude delicate texture that they need extra GEC ARGH hist oaar s a ’ Bible beauty and comfort, “Inclosed y Mth sar. | {lit Julee together with one-half cup of erept into your again, Soe: Tah Seng (4 Aloe ao ble mat is { ason The Bachelor's Lamen lease find check!" mix the pulp, free from cores, with fete | S882 nd one teaspoonful of brandy or. r i 2 ‘ I i test of all for mie. rey ificte! ui to sweeten and a little | |, fa - Droll’” Magxie eaile und Miss a baby’s to-day Success Magazine. H, Christmas Day! Oh, time of | Pink-souled men and women are needed |Mlent SURAT tO No ataicel co. ica | onertye thicken with one. tablespoontul dams was . this min- | Would you prefer to have the “truth | haat lin thls) world; And those who quarrel |@7ste? Jemon peel Mal . a me nice | cornstarch dissolved in a little water, ! ! f } chee Wiad had i rt crust, lay the prepared apple on a r) . ing of and \fur? woman say to you, “Good heavens We cannot greet you without sighs th the kindliness of thelr methods are Short crust, lay ; : eicannotierest vow mithoul aisle, | AVL tieseD re of paste, and fold it over so as | Australian Pudding. It takes Barrie to CAiNinit 0 410\ asl MtAgela amyeeitolalaenarat bo vou dare eat candy with your! An Old Christmas Carol. |you pring, wind season of the soar, |ciose Who Would quarrel with the ox. [square of Dasie, and fold it over wo as fa \ ing acing Ie 1h other that Lady Sybil is soon bored tol shape?” Or is it pleaganter to have the seat ee i DnatReIt inteipnveh camilyiiee |celsior used in pucking china, as giving t© £0 i a 3 ay © pounds of fine bread crumbe, ath by the fatuous ¢ Shand. Although Barrie was never harder on | pink-souled woman say, yu are cer-| higeren ea as at iH oe Ja false idea of the bulk of the articles ® auick oven for his BLO mae: ‘ one pound of sultanas, one pound than he is he Wking the ambitious egotist, for Shand is as | tainly growing thinner, or else you must | g Ana tbeleeigoadliechesre Ourialaterslinnuneouniniteolelatata; inclosed. ‘They would have you put {White sugar over and sei of currants, one pound of prunes, ple about himself ax he is everything else in life. It's a blow to his|tell me the name of your stay maker. SN AUDA AME el ADe the iss They come to take us by surprise china and cut glass in a box, loose, just | Plain Plum Pudding. one pound of dried figs, dhe pound of “paler Hath shone two thousand, year, 1sy_ SOINe Phew Welead 1 2 raisins, one and a half pounds of suet eh pride, of course, when scovers that Maggie, with her “Shandisms,"| Black is so becoming to a blonde renee Tigh GAT ‘Ouraunteineniembering the aa In order to be truthful and quite regard: | alsin and pounds of suet, m: great man’ sing his speech ve the solemn average, | Would you rather have a woman say | 4M once It saw a Ittle child Renent agai ounetainilyitioa less of thé inevitable smash which HIS is a delicious plum pudding jone pound of mixed candied peel, one John's laugh saves him in the end, and you are convinced that Maggie has | (Gf you are a man), “Your conceit fairly | 1” at ad Le he would occur if we got “the truth, the and Sf well boiled will be appre-|and a half pounds of sugar, half a A 'little boy” for keeps. Miss Adams makes you believe “What Every Woman’ makes you ridiculous! Everybody makes | AU all ‘about the cattle inil¢ Next morning, officeward we g 7] truth and nothing but the truth”: ciated by all. Take three-quarters | pound of flour, on* teaspoonful each of ws fun of you behind your back. Why | Did lovingly draw near, Goat collars turned up to our eyes on any subject whatsoever, Jeach of raising, flour, currants and suet; | salt, ginger and allspice; twelve pounded Through the Scotch mist of this erratle comedy you sce that Harrie hax merely [don't you stop blowing your own horn | 5° Wane oes Ue Sharan, We find tho weather cola? Ab, 1 © pink-souled Woman disseminates | half a pound each of bread crumbs and jeloves, half a grated nutmeg, two win rned a corner of “Quality but you that he knows more about |long enough to hear what people realy | AP4 be of soodlle cheer We want to hide those family tes. happiness, and thats what all the|treacle and ope teaspoonful of ginger. |glassfuls of brandy and fourteen eg omen than he eight sears ago. Ie has written a clever play for clever|think of you? ‘Then you'd be modest Oh, wake ye, little children, —Blizabeth C, Webb tn Success Maga-| world's a-seeking. Warm the treacle and add a tittle milks, ' well beaten, Mix wit), a small bottle of men and ut the same time shown self-satisfled men how really funny they are. ‘enough! ‘And let each heart be gay zine More power to hei mix all the ingredients together and addstout and boil for fourteen hours, A Romance of Mystery, by Louis joseph Vance. | Ld = “ oe ! = sa a) Author of “The Brass Bowl,” “ The Love and Adventure. To . Private War,” Ete. (Copyright, 1908, by Hobbs-Merrill Co.) 7 "Ow, I don't mean that.” Stryker} Wind and sea alike had gone down ;companionway, for a better reading ppaw, hesitating a moment (o watch nto 4 breast pocket of his coat |#cute and resourceful lady; then again [roads ang aus nt a wi a hamlets DING INSTALMENTS | Bathered the imputation into his paw | wonderfully since daybreak—a clrcum- |light, the skylight being still battened | suest No; Lam not sure that It was not the| turned his attention to the tables. Whore red roofe shoRe Ike dull fre bes Lblaratahelsd toseereit and flung it disdainfully to the four | stance undoubtedly in great part due to | down “Mykes it seem) more ‘omelike fer | left-hand pocket | A thind check had been placed against |tween the dark g Ks f sin’ London, “He | winds of Heaven, “Bless yer ‘art, you're |the fact that they had won in under) ‘The strap removed, the book opened you, T expect,’ he observed Quivering with excitement he bent|the train for Amsterdam scheduled to | ¢ WATE Li the Scheldt’s gray shim- salle fo with # named Calendar | welcome; 1 wouldn't let no dorg drownd |the lee of the mainland and were easily, as if by force of habit, at the| ‘What do you mean again over the beok and studied it in-|leave Antwerp at P. M. Momentarily | Hn WIN the” Baheldtlal gray: alk t can’ idur Hilrkwood's escort 'f I could ‘elp it, No," he declared, | traversing shallower water, On either | precise table he had wished to consult ow Bradshaw's first cousin to @/ltenty Agter all, he had not been|fls heart mésgave him, when he mae, | ONL Ones mare At Ae Mpa: om Me | Bomihy goss Saeed oie Lack Gilat | “nor @ loonatic, neither, hand, like mist upon the horizon, lay 4 some previous client had left a marker |halmanack, ain't 'e? Can't get one) viong: tte could. assert. now with |thls, in fear lest Calendar and Dorothy | P aE OEE BAY Re A ae mone bag, hi there, | The | fe thrust bis plate away and shifted |streak-of gray, a shade darker than the | between the pages—and not an ordinary [take Cother-next best thing Y J out fear of refutation that Stryker had phould have gone on from Antwerp the | fore Sine eh te TH Seg wallet | Bete ans . jewise in his chair. “L'ug just won- | gray of the waters, The Alethea was | book-mark by any manne of means, {didn’t think of it sooner; like my pas- j\o4 I ee RE Ger ee er TY tng in the uf arn0on unl A lone Dorothy ant hor fathers with a man ‘named Gein," he pursued, picking his teeth | within the wide jaws of the Western | Kirkwood gave utterance to a lttle gasp|sengers to feel comfy, * * * Now, |" some one had wielded an industrious {discovering that the boat train from Pet is Pity I A ret tir Mulready, sail trom England on a brigantine | meditatiy with a penknife, “ow they | Scheldt, As for the wind, it had shifted | of amazement, and instinctively glanced | don't you go trapsein’ off to Bay Paree ici on the page. It was, taken fi a|Flushing did not arrive at Antwerp ull PAHS ee RSI Soren them: ta°xél the ‘Jewels ‘Kitkwood: tou feeds you Jn them as-ylume, ‘Avin' {several points to the northward; the up at the compantonway, to see if he(and squanderin’ wot money you got ye Tor cee, Ite very head latten tat alphes end there waa no lier Mat ienae ee tene AO: Fs never been juside one myself it's on'y | brigantine had it abeam and was lying | were observed. left. You ‘ear “4 2 ing was iMuminating rain thence for Amsterdam. Were t 8 | sew Meal carliieatnas being) aiethe Hein dragged to natural I'd be cur'us, * ¢ * ‘There waa {down to it and racing to port with) ite was not, ‘but for watety's sake he| “By the way, captain” Kirkwood | jonaon to Vilwsingen (Flushing) and|tatter truly thelr purposed destination, | Ye" SERS Time Homa amma cima [Geek of the brikanting, halt @rowned: one of them institootions near where 1| slanting ded&k and singing cordage moved further back into the*eahbin and |looked up at this, bat ker was al Breda; ithey would have stayed overnight 4nd/iu.y Behind the brigantine a travel igglendars Ore eer et iriceeats, Mathes te | Was borned- Birmingyam, that is, I] Kirkwood approached the captain, | out of the range of vision of any one on ready half-way up the compan: 1 hia | When happened to be the quickest and |be leaving that very evening on the 6.52 {worn Atlantic liner was scolding Itself Bound “for Antwerp. ttirkwood, to re used to see the loonies playin’ in the | Who, acting as his own pilot, was stand-|deck: a precaution which was almost| Cautiously ie re Ae Miptis that most direct route between London andj/On the other hand, why should they! hourwe about the rl of way. Outs Birks: offers him four pounds ($4 "for the | grounds, 1 remember just as well! |ing by the wheel and barking sharp |immediately justified by the clumping of [right fat and held led, cloned wade | Antwerp. Beneath it, in the column{wait for the jatest train, rather than| ward hound, empty cattle bonis, rough Jumatic, |* © * One of ‘em and me struck up jorders to the helmaman. \iew'y feet upon th} atapm as Airyker die which had been concealed, clovad wade | TONG stent the pencil had put el rrrecy be eke est available: in theland rusty, were swaggering down. to | quite an acquaintance “Haye you @ Bradshaw on boar |scended in pursuit of the ever-essential {ded in his grasp—a st ye ‘ sha hat /oneek mark against morning? Why but because Calendar] the sea, with the careless, Independent CHAPTER XII. | “Naturally he'd take to you on sight.” |asked the young man | drink. 2 Anan ag gae mii tase Se nbied MME Quesiabarcugn’ #0 Den, (aie) atl ay eece\toimall tar QUYKAN let piieiarminies air of ae amay (Continued. | “ow? strynge ‘ow we ‘it It off, elgh?| “Steady!” This to the man at the Find it?" he demanded, staring | spotless, and ¢ n " magn aM Uicanely maee ie Al 8 Auris arcliole 5 Despair. }* &.* You myke me think of im, Young | wheel; then to Kirkwood: "Wot's that, | blindly—with eyes not yet focused to the D den a faint nisnminle sregrance, | Aaa Wee aiSlecT laa clseadatt eae |e era ees catag cal OOM e tinidalllLstemie laparacion hs . te y ne / spi't-'n'himage \ change tr |she verlest wraith of that elusive per Mares rf 1a} sty, Mr re appea r Wr" ‘The captain began to) SUMP: '@ was the livin’ spt'ts!n'himage | me bud [change trom light to gipommat the] the veres woe vould never again in-|he had been not to have divined it ere|siryker knew bis business, there wou A} evel far-off sky-lin ere appeared @ 4 ce, |Of vou. Tt don't hanpen, does tt, you're! icirkwood repeated his question, | YOURE man, who was sitting with the |fume which salling that he Alethea had run in to|pe another passenger on that train, in| very miracle of beauty; the delicate ‘ shovel a into his face. | the same man?” hee “ guide open on his knees, a tightly jhale without instantly recalling that) fle eet Li c ee ae he great Cathedral's spine (The author very much regrets ee ae te the devil stryker eyed him suspiciously for @| ood ast resting on the transom at (night ride through london In the in-| nsborough, landing her passengers |gddition to the Calencar party, F . rier) 1, ko to the devil " clenched 01 see aa e a fe 6 fact that |of frozen lace, glowin ea a he has at his coms 1 no more deli a ' nai ariel nely, | teusht lei oy atin a e, that they might make connection! Making mental note of t t Naugh aid the cap erenely ther side of him. timacy of @ | > nd Lon: gold, set against the sapphire yew cate expression that Is literal and {ie | “Naughty” said the captain ei | “Wat d'you want it for jeith wea | He closed hin eyes and saw her again,| With the eleven-ten morning boat for |the boat-train for Flushing and Lon- | spun gold. set against y lustrative.) Kirkwood watched him, | "@sslus # reproving forefinger, "E I want to vee when I can get a boat| 2% feply he received a monosyliablc he stood before| Flushing—the very side wheel steamer, |don was scheduled to leave Antwerp | vet of the izon . i with suspense: It. seemed |HauKhts word. You'll be sorry when | | ane. ee « affirmative: Kirkwood did not look up, |as clearly as sh she si oubtless, which ha had noticed beating |daily at &21 P. M., Kirkwood rustled| Antwerp was in fopsinates F Tee | you find out wot it mean’. * * * Only {back to Englanc |; “You must be @ howl,’ commented | him—hair of gold massed above the dou i i | da ae a eM pepe pen SORE eee nesaia GATS Ld in nin feaporsibie that the man tld oontting |'@ was allus plannin’ to run awye ang| “Hmm. * * * Yee, you'll find @lehe captain, making for the seductive | forehead of snow, curling in adorable|out in the teeth of the gale Just after |the leaves to fn¢ teal mind, acipkeood iooked round the deok? * (m0 to employ his nif without owfting oetinaaetene ahaa Bradshaw in the port locker, near the ao endriis at the nape of her neck, lips|the brigin had picked him up. Had | other coure had been planned, f und | mind, Mirkwaod ‘ : aan Bee OE Tro tne aide. da hin ec, | He wore the joke threadbare, even to |foreerd bulk'ead. Run along now and | +4 ~ qt ke soarlat apleahed upon the immacu-/he not received the passing \ApISAMAR evidences Of hone, and Sarefiilly ter | Out Eo with ¢ andiing of hia jef such manipulation had made him | Ab pare go. | Pi'y—-and mind you don’t go tearin’ out| ,. ta hiteness of her skin, head potsed) thar the Alethea, when finet he caught (stored the guide to th ¢ p h Seinen ieetiee pert, and his guest, keenly disappointed | Nis own thst nd in the end got |? “ A howl, readin’ thar fine print there | late white Bry i sight of her, might have been coming |advertently the captain should ) it ship to be inter inp @t length ceased to hope | heavily to his feet, starting for the com- | the Dykes to myke pyper boatses to BO! 1, “the dark, W'y don't you go over ,sudacioualy tn its s neeer- hurry eA I RAPER Pes em bee ee geser reer iT megiiaad was plenty of time. tween gobbles Stryker eyed him|panionway. “Land you this arternoon,” | #¥ln' in to the light? * ° * I'll ‘ave to ‘ave lure, dark eyes smiling the least trace} ie X ; B/up APS erry eae ater he wind talings ’ Between & ~ My 4 Kirkwood went below. Like ite ad . * y beneath the level brows. © ° * shore ts situate Queensborough Pier An hour ii 19 Pears ian iarard a puke! Rane furtively he remarked cagually, “come three them shutters tyken off the winders enen not Mre. Hallam, going upom he|skies had blown clear and the brigan- the brigant! “Treat you ail right?” he demanded o'clock or thereabahts. Per'aps later, | Jacent ne, the cabin was unten> This was siryker's pie figure of | Unquestionably the handkerchiet wae) Had not Mre Hull a ena eiee nae oil in landebound waters and {crew alert with sheets aud halyard we : oa ow, though, a8 T ‘ad ought to|anted; the watch was the mate's, and 1 - employed to indicate (tera; {f proof otlier than the assurance|! new not what information or | tine y ‘ rer " . he stream ebruptly. }1 don't know, though, as T ‘a wht t speech, frequenti p 4 to Indicate Y 4 eensborough, with | still footing a rattling pace. The rive f Kirkwood started out of a brown | let you loose Stryker a martinet, Kirkwood found | che coverings of the skylight jof hie heart we site, he ha | ier nd SineeanOroUsMls, FRG |etlll SOOMAG A TatIlAg pads Nees Fe ee study. “What? Who? Why, I suppase| Kirkwood made no anawer, Chuckling, |the designated locker, and, opening it, | y'm all right.” Kirkwood went onthe initial delicately embroidered In one |erlan there ( interoep) Besar \aikes to right and left, the countrywide | vas at varying angles to cat “ 1 ought to be-indeed, 1 am’ grateful,” [Stryker went on deck, saw first to his hand the familiar bulky | studying the book Sorat ® D. 10r Dorey caittelummittinaty, he had-besn the mpane ef jeiretohed wide and Get, 8 plaid of | wind : ; Assented "Certwiniy you waved my | In the course of an hour the 4 neriean | rea Yolume with its red garter, Taking| siryker swigged off his ram and/iooked again, to make sure; then hasiliy| unwittingly, | t ee ee serad erik SibGit (To Be ¢ ned.) a" ‘nina. tous he carried i to @ chair near the awiped his lips with the back of © red folded up the treaeure-trove and slipped diverting from her chosen course thas | 1) . . ‘ . deal eat Mines aad - aie aan Behan nc

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