Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
easeeesener | stety TIACOOOG Lovers’ Quarrels a Have No Sweetness NCPDDODOOIDS: By Helen Oldfield zo, In the era of} affectionate and forgiving of disposition A elopements, when, because of matrimonial famtly row her eas rings Inws, perse wed by kisses, until tli t lovers re- en heart burning hich sears, rd rotland 1 bitterness of spintt which long as the “promised, endures under the sweet of reconeilia land,” an old dom- | tion, A tempest of tears temper {nfe, who, from | not often is the forerunner of clear- his point of shining after rain, On the uy, tt age just by far ts more likely to stir up lasting the border on a dissension and anger much — travelled Bem highway, tied matrimonial used to pres sent the brides of } No Sweetness In It. t many eet nots There ia no sweetness {n lovers’ quare rels whieh compensates for the sharp- his making with) ness of thelr sting; one might as well What he called “Wt reach the advisabllity of breaking a card of counsel for c tin married bit of rare china in order to mend it the i Ay WAS" with some wonderful cement whieh shall the beginning of quarrels, make it stronger than ever, In this ae world there are many risks which ; Two for a Quarrel, § not to incur, and true it is that 6 be wroth with one we love Ni MID AACA Doth work like madness tn the brain.” | yer of many years’ st > 1 nny andideep acquaintance wil all 8 After Marriage. t ture, used to tell Scereeeeeeenreren dN Up your mind to the fact that How can it he povsible that love of bands ar r u ny se an be made more precious by pel tlem LNK¢ eu) iting, at! contradic. YOKs. ONS eres 1 contin During make a qua 1 lever one of the the da f courtship ble tha two, and Nat rodlg it may pass fo rplay when best presecyeilips wher OU) hearts are soft and he are provoked, Never forget that you! put after marringe there is danger that take your husband for better, for worse, | each will be ready to assert his or her | and !f, whi eaven forbid, worse | rights, and each be less willing to yleld | comes, at least boar tt like a Christian | ty the other, i entlewoman, You will find the recipe| a . ew V., beginning at verse Nigra meen neon seep enema. Ma ‘ MY ‘ | } Due to Jealousy. { } Tears and Temper. 3 | ‘ : i | Lovers’ quarrels usually are either Seo ee J ebulitfons of Jealousy, mostly due to There {s no bit of wisdom w OS" | selfishness, or else t por om what pective brides and grooms more profit- somebody has called “the leakage of ably may take to heart than that while | yaq temper,” a most undesirable qual: quarrels between rs who are still! ity for elther husband or wife. If a-court Nily be patched | j,vers cannot avold quarrels before mar- up as PTO" | riage thera is small hope that they will vided always TS] he able to eschew Chleago Tribu / Can This Be True? The Living Skeleton Started It, But He Wasn't Really to Blame. }| them afterward,— meant malice, are “a a} By Robert Rudd Whiting ier eetnnareree cere cece: 1 the old thing that aclanaiceedito sd WS Gray (aa ery day and WN yarn y the anakes as fast as hi: t faltly ex. {mind could t em out, “i COmhat) of course, mada the elaatice in Jealous, and he ist as the skeleton e'd let day a very dig ght think, but ght through ndertaking ty nk, you to be Oh, ves, he tried {t al! ri The ¢ started up to take platform he shot out fal a force that would have wa; | put the skeleton In the shadow world if Be ali: ever had landed. But the skeleton president, @|ducked {t, and the blow stretched the Senator—anything but this.’ elas inned n's arm out so far “What's the mat asked the cubythat it snapped back and caught him reporter, ‘That entanglement you were | square in his own eye, Lost his eye, telling me about the other day hetwee had to have a glass one put the Circassian girl and the fat lady| “Pretty bad, you should think? Yes, over the affections of the tattoed man?" | bi asn't the last of it “Heavens, T was nothing at! “The o ay glass eater asked all, This t Tm up against now Is | the elastie-skinned man if mind what the word ‘trouble’ was named! y his glass eye t for the after. Mere trifle that st t all; couple of he after lunch ea’ too sald he cou bear the sight of "You see, the strong man felt so good | food after a hearty meal over his t to the fortune e elastic-skin teller th ped the living skele- | {do mae ’ ton on the bark and eut his hand. Sen-| pave taken any high priced unwr! sitive ot es The sight of lawyer to have got-ltn off if he ha blood ups be beat th stloon and took to. dr Engsrpinnl ng. Kept it ir ally zal you seen Barker lately? He's on his last legs.” @® seeing to be taken ‘Bone Lamb Roast. lee " IT "No. Are they as bowed as his first ones? Lippin ott's. to the bug w “He nt The evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, March 8, 1909. RARER AAT | | The Jollys’ “Bull ill Pup ¥ By H, Coultaus et if PUPPy, Do BE Que, | \ Ive ALL MYBILES J 4 Now! you /SIT THERE, AND DONT You DARE \¥O_ MOVE TILL “BINS, CHECKS JAR COVER, AND CARPE ALY SPA\LED Tease atti ‘San DIDNT HOVE, TRON JHE SPOT YOu PLACED HIM IN, Se OH! You WRETCH!! SEE WHAT YOU MANE, DONE _-Home Hints. tur busy Housewivos, Health and Beauty | Hear* “pics By betty Vincent, Questions Answered By Margaret Hubbard Ayer | His Divorced Wife. Dear Betty N ordering a leg of lamb ask to have \ WOULD Ike to know what to sito I {t boned. You will find the carving Hair Too Dry. ; print a tonle which will help restore my alyorced wife tor a pag e much easter, the slices more dainty, i the halr to health. Apply it to the | Can you advise me .E E.—You erred just as far in one ; ssage it It is not customary to give one's dl- and more economical. ieee AEM Ne’ roots with a brush, and massage {t i ‘ direction as in the other) In) yeti into the scalp, vorced wife a birthday gift, but If you Cherry Salad. * shampooing your hair first in, three drama; fluld extract |are on friendly terms with your divorced | ofce a week and) vinaenin, three drams; tincture of| wife you might remomber her natal day WO cups of canned cherries, one | then waiting for? ET ee eT rT conn ateg Chic MarR EIN IO I cup canned pineapple cut in small | six months to 0" aes At if pag) sly pel ae Fee e eat (G BIRTOEIUAGE: pieces, one cup wilte grapes, from | shampoo it. With! 11. Grams: castor oll, one dram; day !et, @ scartpin, a good print or any one Mune a al 4 and scaly! vim, one pint, Add the castor oll to/of the numerous attractive articles you Se ieeneeer es peel ay iemtUaGl tg "say tum and shake. thoroughly, | Wil find for salo at the stores. Crain, OE eee Afterward add the other Ingredients. | Dogs He Like Her? mixeduw ith cream weeks or once a Color for Brunette. | Dear Betty: before serving. This month. If you P, A-If you haye a clear com-|J AM a airl of sixteen and like very seven people put {t off for sev. S Hittin, Raat o? sain Wino | much & young gentleman friend an eral months, the (96 may wear almost any color with| L you tell_me how T can Ane ae Meat Balls. pores of the scalp! impunity, except the oft shades of blue, | Whether or not he likes me HDG C. Rp und on Ds Aten kyon) become — clogged) green and red, &c. Pale blue should be | If tho young man has not told you O cup bread crumbs, one-half cup| "7? *7"% and the hair falls qvotded, also salmon pink and blue gray. {that he likes you you ean judge the grated cheese, two eggs beaten | out in consequence. Your hair 1s turns, Head white is usually apt to be becom. | State of his affections only by his ac- until light, one tablespoon chopped | ing gray in one spot, and also failing) ing, but brown about the shade of your |t!ons. Sometimes actions speak louder parsley, salt and pepper, mx tn ball t, probably for lack of nourishment] eyes would probably be the tint for you, {than words. You must not let him see size of an egg, then drop In soup stock, {and an impaired circulation, What) You could Wear navy blue, dark red, | you are too eager for Mis affection or and boil ten minutes, and then add two! you need {8 vigorous scalp massage, to CAF eres or earn jonormenel pin a naka yoursel itera for aecures et beaten eggs, one spoon grated cheese, | loosen the skin sufficiently to allow) joior one feels most comfortable in {s| Will In time win the young man’s re- and stir in lastly fo: kening e. | the blood to circulate freely, Below 1, generally the right color to choose. gard. Every Woman Has Some Kind of Baby. FD Comic Artist Will B. Johnstone Says: If it isn’* a canary— Then maybe it's a dog— Or Just a husband, as In the case of Mrs, James J. Jeffries, who} says: “Jim is my baby!" OOO caped convict—a Russian," 4 The Man From Home 4 Story Based on The hovering Mariano who was fit: | ting about ow, the table like a wounded started slightly, and hesitated ard { Milor’ will pardon me—?" The Countess also started, and put down her the Successful Benes Are serie @ Goare over ay e¢+ ber and denger brigan’,” hoa silver cover in his hand, then dlr ) WWEOOS 10.0 DOHA COTHGOODOOODS “What name does the paper say he,a h!ighwayman—not—not an embezzler, ,of her voice and the look In her eyes!an !mmed' which means | has?" Interrupted Mada Helene,” the Countess ran to her, and kissed her | an !mmed! t, and a direct ny with a catch of her breath, an The Countess arose from the table rapturously upon ea eek, °! Marlano bowed again Jerkily In her| and moved about restiessly with her "Oh, I hope you mean—!" she began, Madame de Champtgny picked up a eticn. eyes on the blue expanse when Hasweastle interrupted her with er fork f and examined “It has not to say, Madame,” he re-| “zr ghould be glad to believe tt some excitement 1 That ts au. And will Milor’ | goog ¢riend, but [1 care f "You mean you have made my son at settlement? adame la Comtesse excuse me? ” ene t sum?” divinely happ Play of the Same Title. | fork with a slight rattle An I take the nal? There is Rate nance mhetairvextr up sharply and —By— VA Russian?” she ejaculated, one who should see eam of him—of Ivanoft—bad dreams. from the embrace of the Col i | Janae Yes," grumbled the Earl. "An es-| Hawenstle smiled slightly at his ex- both, my. friend.’ ‘turneu to the Ear Ve. A and fifty thousand Booth Tarkington caped Russian bandit has been traced | cltement, and nodded The Earl looked up in amazement,| ‘Te not every one divinely happy at | Pounds to Castellamare"—he paused to insert) "Vv well, Mariano,” ne sald, and | ot oe ints a haugh eH ENR NT eT From the Countess came a gasp of and the chotcest bit of a melon in his mouth. Mariano with another jerk that was sup. | “" WEee aa erreur nit tines (uate your Berea Hiren Harry L. Wilson jahd Marlano's jaw dropped with the/ posed to Include b ei -Ob Loe ‘i more than @ dream to bring 8 man|laugh ran qui friend she? and she . s + Jexcitement lon appeared with a speed Hida Nec ela bet riveree aiiyuete Popyiient, 140, vy American Press Aue: | "Castellamare—not twelve kilometros was alarming. For an {nstant ti eee Sli ateeonimiylincers ee freee ae elation. from here!" he whispered in awestruck silence, and then the Countess, sharpness. \ tones, and the Earl continued when he iE dpwardlelance’ot hep dark yes) (anarpned : Ae : BYNOPSIE OF PRECEDING cCifAPTeRs, | had niasticated the fruit: ! | “Then I pray been no more} haus Hie Lad ee, put to be the Count Danlet Pike, a shrewd Kokomo nd.) ‘And a confidential agent—eeoret-| [should Ike much to know hie/than dreams,” she murmured quietly, | 0% fll Mace Hindi and Mornce'Simpsom. who are ieing | fervice man, I dare say—aas requested | Even is she spoke lenient i in Europe Pike has always dumbly loved! his arrest from the Ltallan authorities, | smiled and went on with his|tinkling sound of the Moros Oe ye ; Mthel. She writes hin, that she ts about (01 ue tq quote from our grandiose 111 guitars, and Ma her companion e Mattino, ‘the brigand tore himself from | be sure tt isn't Ivanoff," he lemon grove in time to sea a young xirl| "She ilies to her ad this time Thee ne hands of tne carabinier!’ or somes! gaid, put the assurance did not seem In @ fawn-colored riding Ah! That {s good o thag ee eats ital Pike Whole party ‘ars thing like that. I can't be sure, but It! to carry weight with Madame, for she soft felt hat upon her terprise, eh? Liste thither and see if Almerie t# worthy of| read to me——" leaned her c? n her hand and looked | {ng crop in unt Haweastle sat down with a grunt of Meantine, a Russian Grand Duka : ! ; Walawed eval s comes to the ‘Sorrento he Ine: Marlano broke in excitedly, He had|off over the Ba was a aaeae satisfa tion. Pets Uo hh edit al | picked up the paper and was devouring| troubled look j with the tn ‘Iva time! If A anys 1m 1 ourieas of Chanieny, an adventurese | it with avidity, | ¢ reached the terrace she pa a) thing a clumay oat he'd s “If Milor’ permit, and Madame—" ha ~ | nd drew from her glove some silver! her settle it weeks ago ‘ CHAPTER IV. SoneAll abentbau(oretsntmnMacall CHAPTER V. fatch she dropped into the the hand tthe| The woman tur ed her dark eyes {looked ants 4 it she] upon him with a flash t has Strange News. aud the maitre d’hotel went on avidly. OW can one know ft ts not, drew and waved her crop at the two 3 sera e ects ‘e HE amiable Lady Hermione hararleantcterach naal ore “H Ivanoft?” she asked slowly, | Who wore watching her, ‘The Earl arose : W Trevelyon Cr has de- | excitedly, m the hand of the cara-! and this time the Bari laughed With a@ and Madame ad ed with | 1 y A jeuner in her apartments.) binler! and without the doubts he con- id utstretehed hand. i] r le 2 s ete What you find to read, mon cher?’ | ceal himself In some of these grotto] “He wouldn't be called an Infamous “Ah, the divine Miss Granger-Simp- | you that If y per baht Haweastle threw the paper down upon | near Sorrento and searchment {s being | brigand,"” he said, but the Countess son!" aald Newcastle with ralllery Tal Blmceuiadeaiyraeseracel ls ahiai d At ess Something must bo the cloth with an exclamation | execute. he agent of the Russian em-| waved her hand his tones, and the girl laughed with a/ night ¢ would answer ‘It's He 8 b 4 at (ae breakin “I'm such a duffer at Itallan,”” he said, | bassy have inform’ the bureau that this] ‘That, my friend, may be only Italian | happy care-free face But he's too shy to speak. You'r ke the words—a most “out aparently the people along the| escape one is a mos’ in-fray-mose rob-| journalism.” ephe divinely happy Miss Grangare | woman can't press 1 e ine He can urse” (To Be Continued.) “Poon! eal Mawoastie, “This means | Simpson,” ehe @ald, and at the aounu Almeric’s # man,—he cou, oom Wien one of a Married Man By Clarence L. Cullen. OOO 0000000 QOODOIO ZO. Wom- | The favorite dictum of naturally peev- M en can do |ish wives {s that all husbands are a lot of| cranky before breakfast strangely —offec-| ‘Tw woman who employs that antique { unin with! femtnine wittlelsm, "To keep your hus- ra thelr eyes But, band's love, feed the brute,” rarely or CLARENCELCULLEM not many of never knows what It means to gt @ them can really! reasonably decent meal before her hus- Bee. band Aftor a few years of humdrum and) When a woman begins to get those Msappointing conjugality you vaguely | tell-tale ws at the side of her chin wonder, when you sea a ire of She to read those Women's Page whom that undressed lo bey |!tems which offhandedly pronounce that ‘wom, most charming age 1s around A Chleago publication $s conducting | forty er Atty.” ‘@ symposium for married Se Ever notice how the squat, stodgy [around this question: "What 1s the) woman hates the words “queenly* [happiest hour of the day for you?" and “statuesque?” ey, cl iit: fyomen are frank enough wre tg it that the woman who can ‘9, aioe thelr happlest hour 43 piay—at—two ‘“pleces on the plano— non fee thelr husbands start «\sonaytery Bells” and “Silvery Waves [fersworks |—never, never gets tired of ‘em? A woman's tdea of helping her! \nother Houge of Too Much Trouble! husband in his temporary adversity is not to get that $85 empire dress [she'd set her mind upon, but the other one she saw for only $19. We know a woman who weeps dis- mally when she thinks of the win hardships of the park squirre sho never stops hounding her matte old black mald of all work does the best she car No woman orer suffered so acutely from facial neuralgia that sho couldn't smile winsomely at the new man who ing a day “at home" even wher pag her compliments. im |they're in deadly fear that the (1, "hen a woman becomes so fat that | ; ibe . “'!stalment man will drop around a Is that In which the wife insists upon jclapping a mustard plaster to the of lier husband's back even when, sutfering from the earache or a smal gencrally find upon investigas t the woman who complains thi of the “nastiness and inctvilei f department store saleswomen {# e who barks like a performin n she's addressing the saleae women Some women will persist in have she has difficulty in buttoning ‘her |ehoes she begins to allude to women |create @ riot twhile the callers arai of normal weight as ‘skinny things" present. and “emaciated creatures. Now the suffragettes are complaining# A quaint proof that “Ideals” fade |that “the average man will fight to prog with riches !s the fact that the women tect only lis own womenkind,” whiett} who possess the greatest number of |does indicate that the average man tH {deals also possess husbands whol, mean-spirited sort of a cuss earn an average of atout $0 per we 3 feat: "You know, m: If men slammed storm doors in to pay the milk bill—tt mq ixty-two cane out of that twenty dol 8 you me." leach other's faces as women do the | world would be a battlesield. un My “Cycle of Readings,” By Count Tolstoy. --— Translated by Herman Bernstein. —— (Copyrighted by the Press Publishing Company, the New York World, 1908,) (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) The italicized paragraphs are (Count Tolstoy's original comments on the subject. a The Meaning of Prayer. RAYER ts an explanation, a confirmation of one's FTER this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art In heaven, hallowed be Thy name; Thy attitude to God. A Kingdom come; Thy will be done on earth as {t ia in heaven; give us this day our dally bread; and forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver | us from evil, for Thine 1s the kingdom, and the power, and the glory forever. Amen.—St. Matthew, vi., 9-18 | In this prayer is expressed the relation of man to God and to the unte verse. And it is useful to repeat tt, but only then tohen you can repeat 16 conscientiously. K cause we wish that His will shall change, but because by praying to Him for the fulfilment of our needs we thus acknowledge Him, and by acknowle edging His supremacy our soul Is purified and uplifted.—The Talmud. P am convinced that He is impersonal, for God 4s infinite), but becouse | Tam a persona} being. If 1 hold a green glass over my eye I see everything green; I cannot hel | seeing the world ina green light, even though I know that it is not ao, | iP ator who {8 doing him good every moment of his life; It ts a definition | one's relations with other people, of one's obligations to them, as children of the same Father; It {8 4 settlement of the account with one’s self of all his acta and a review of one's dark past for the purpose of avoiding In the future the end rors and blunders committed in the past.—The Talmud. eee NOW that we pray to God and submit our entreaties before Him, not be+ OOOO CT RAYER Is directed to a personal God, not because God ts personal (E RAYER !s to every honest person a definition of his own attitude to the |P)O not think that you can serve God by praying to Him instead of obeying Him.—John Ruskin. P RAY when you feel inclined to pray. If you have formed a habit praying at a certain time do not give dt up, but see that your pra Shall not become a dead hadit. VERY form E combination Une! dergarment 1 now in vogue, Thig. one {s simple, practié cal, yet comfortabl It does away with unnecessary bulk, The, drawers are quite loos enough for comfort, and {t provides just the snug fit wanted under the fashfonable gowns, It can be made from long cloth or nainsook, from batiste or lawn, or from the washable allk that many women are util- faing for garments of the sort, In the fIlus- tration nainsook is tylinmed with German Valenciennes lace, but any lace or embroids ry that may be liked can be utilized. The quantity of ma- terfal required for the medium size Is 3 yards Mi, $1-8 yards 36 or 44 {inches wide, with 25-8 yards of beading, 11-2 yards of wide and 31-2 yards of narrow laca to trim as {llustrated, Pattern No, 6271 {9 out tn sizes for a 32, HM, 9%, 8, 40, 42 and 4 ineh dust Sure, Oo) Corset Cover and Orawera— 6271, VEMING Wor) MAY MANTON FASHION ird street, or send by mail treet. Send 10 cents tno Princesse Combination, ¢ Pattern No. in Ne to 2 West Obtain § or stamps for each pattern These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always specify size wanted. Add two cents for letter postage !f in a» Patterns, hurry. WP. — ee, eee errr oe oo