The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1909, Page 13

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Ing Heinen World Daily Magazine, Monday, March 22, 1909. 12 i | As Told to the Intelligence Lady. Ic a Her Full Name Is Gladys laranssaroventiertant o that even | Stubbs, and She Tells of \iiem tint sista onesie ana apronee- Finding Jealous and Stingy DSFSS) j in my skirt | T showed her what a bfonde coulsl do in | the Salome lin i “Do you know, Mrs. Blowse, she) Mistress | Wasn't a bit pleased? But Mr, Thornton | ay Jana his brother, I could tell they | [thought it was fine. Every time I come } back into the dining room she is saying “Hush” to the men, After dinner she By l.indsay Denison. 66 AIN'T the ways of some women | tetis me to adopt ‘a more conventional nge, Mis’ Blow sald | dross for service.’ Just in them words. | tubbs, ax she rustied |" eyo gay how she had her halt Heross the dusty | dressed when she come in here? Well strips of carpet to how much bet- Intelligence F next night L show her ure and was a And really id to go out alot you couldn't expec t me to “And [must say 1 don't blame you,” | Jas hers wa | break away until she came ba It said Mrs, Bb e. “If I-excuse ine: the telephone’s ringin’. “Yes, yes, this is Mrs, Blowse's of | fice, Mis’ Thornton. Oh, yes. Tm | afraid I can't accom a yu With anpther girl, Mis’ Thornton; you are rather hard to please, That Gladys I sent you was one of the most satisfac- tory gitls {has ever had, and had t best of references, You know T can’t dertake to send girls to people who | keep them for almost thelr guaranteed | time and then drives them: back on me 9 Well, rm 8 the way 1 feel, mad * You will | try to be more patient with the next one? Oh, very well, I'll I jean do, But -peopje like you make it | very hard for one, very. * * You're “| Show Her How.” | very welcome, I'm sure. Good-by,” —_ anything had a happened to that poor an Td always felt the guflt on my For Foot Comfort. £0 “But any It was no fault of | I-KNOWN. chiropodist mine with t ‘Thornton woman. It IX has given this hint for shoe was simply one of the places where ‘ fort—"Never wear a shoe » girl which calls herself a lady | fit Hl not permit the great toe could stand. Didn't you tejl me that! # to tie In as ght Hine.” she was a brunette and wanted a|f} Cramping the toes not only gives blonde girt so's there would be no|} corns and bunions, but so affects chance for girl to look like she|f the feet that general misery fol- did and wear clothes which was above |} lows, her station? Yes, The woman did Never let vanity force you into a have pretty good clothes; that 1s, the » too » penal materials was fine. But they didn't J steep. It at this 5 And I just set n regarding fonm of si but the re have no style to them. out to teach her al liness ta was disappe n of 8 the possibilities of her way of dressing facturers insisti on the correct for a blonde. She comes down to dine J number bel placed in shoes, ner the first night with one of them whether women liked it or not, looks as If sear still b Salome things. Now there ain't much common sense In foot- A poor girl can do with a black serv- | cultivating. ing dress, but by dinner time the { DODDS PODGOOOONG DOOGOC0000) eye, but he did not raise the tone of his The Man | From Home. *OPDOGCPDOOGHIDHCGQINIADOOQODDOWODGAOIODOPOISODIGQSHHOOHGS & Booth Tarkington and Harry L. Wilson’s Great Love Romance of an American Knight. © PIDODDODODHOHOHDIDOGDOGOODGOOGDODODODOGOGDODODIDGOGIOS GOHPDQNDOOOIHODDDIODHOGOGODGHOGQONOGHOOQOOIOODOOQOONOOHIOIDOHO/H/.0% } He looked his antagonist squarely In the} sequences for you as well as for me} would be, to say the least, disastrous, | | The Really Clever Gir] Gs sie 1 ricwrea) By Will B. Johnstone Bow Fad ws ’ ON iMy POOR MUFF! LET GO! LET Got! YOU “0H OH!! WHAT SASSY THING; JUST LOOK \ WHAT YOU ARE DO)NG TO My, Von Grollerhagen Rie} dlere. motioned to "T th OSOODIOSIOD MY LITTLE BEARS WIL ought so Ru fant" in answer to Pike's look of Inquiry we he sald, and COOOODDOOOIIPOOOOONOOOIGE DDDOGOGVDDODODDODOGOODOGOIDGOOGOODIGHOGEDHDOSGODDQOOSOS QWODOGOOIIOOH ; ter a blonde girl's hair looks when It ts] PS GEL £10) ed like that—and felt calted | lon't care what) tbout that, Oh, some women has no don't care wha Pee re Four eayh OONIat enor ty uty uate ; ee Aa ate “vel She is one who can, after arising at 6 A. M. Spend the afternoon cooking dainties, pressing) And who can then appear In the evening looking at narrow-minged anc h Nee, ergy A a | clean house all forenoon— i dresses, cleaning gloves, ete as if she had stepped out of a bandbox. umb scour: | — een — loess — veal ei sci ts uba wiht wae te et —— Blowze 3 eee M HL A » throwgh |Health and Beaut pectin Answered By argaret yer eae ectacles y pais Simi Dacis LINDSAY DENISON, romener 00g i | at nr "Glad Stubbs, and is that i . ‘ ' ; a Cold shower while vit 1s still very hot, arm), one ounce of rosemary spirits, Donate of potash), 1 dram; cochineal WHICH uildreinea! nie?" she ashen Gym Work for Scalp. | fatter exercising, not #0 much on Ricuateiietutar heeaueilviurteratuen Catwaarely micvirarea inten scieees young woman's volubility did ne sort of exerc Heh} count of the hair as that the su¢ warm, Tubbing it well into the akin} monia, essence of rose, 1 dram each complish its object, which was to ¢ | makes Hood circulate and} ciange of temperature is apt to cause of the head, Qinse In several waters, | glycerine, 1-4 ounce; rectified spirit, 11-2 OPO IUE TASS SSeS CX * capses proper, deep breathing! congestion, Cool off always bef Yo Remove Dandruff. ture of| ounces; distilled water, 18 ounces Lis GT: M3 TON AGT Will, be good fOr) taking the cold shower, You will find arides, one y Miquid a lity) Let the mixture digest with frequent By Ue ly the ha t00.| thy massage will dram; ls one-half ounce; | stirring for a week and then filter. | Whatever im-| tat to stop your halr from. vil thyme, one-half dram; ary oll.) Moisten the hair with the lotion when could collect proves the health you are normally heal ne-half dram. Mix all ‘together with| dressing. ‘The effect will occur as the ran one of improves the hair Your scalp i# probably SIX ounces of rose water, Rub the} hair dries, guaranteed 01 ; - at the same time.| too tight to allow the blood to circulate scalp thoroughly with this preparation | t Nothing ma | “I Get out Her Cosmetic Box.” uy ality of the] and carr hment to the roots Until no further evidence of dandrutt| To Overcome Snoring. more b than for a servant [Bruker ies neste ntantaweal tae evanine ia absolutely | When it is loosened up by some syste. '8 noticed, Had plied by her to quit so much as halt an{ “89, th Dee Ue cs Vie eae eee endent On Wl matic massage the hair will’ atop: fall . : F.—Snoring usually comes from hour bet guarantee period was! Out en tue Tangle Merona ood clreulation, | ing out, Below are alrections fo Fluffier Hair. sleeping with the mouth open, completed pes Rica ace lshe ea ood digestion a11| siampooing the hair, to» get rid L=The formula beiow wit do] “#* and an excellent remedy for Now, vou know. Mis’ Blowse ee ee ee ae ete ae ey an ability not tol aandrutt, and also a tonlé to stimulate A this, but it should not he ap-|it-one that has been successfully test. protested, “I wouldn't have NCU Ss CRE Eis ORCTD Gs Beet worry, [doubt]! the growth: # plied too often, once every ten|ed—is to tio up the Jaw with a silk Aisappointment come to you | mebe Ute lists Somes Oke aU TATE the wisdom, how-| jee Shampoo; Dandruff Cure —Yolk {#48 or two weeks 1# often enougit:| handkerchief, so that you can't open | world, You know Toalways do my eee ee en oy her do it, and /ever of ducking your head under al o¢ one egg, ano pint of water! CUrling Fluld-Dry salts of tartar (car-| your mouth In your sleep. ¢ ny face like Qs ie 0 ¢ : ihe posed Ber aee 3 oe gies aes Slee ees eee Sh at eS BAL you IM) what does the woman do but come even guarantees in nine weeks since reat Batiraeeolheateealnner Ses ptr sy eee N Denon the frst of February? And I'd a made] 04", te he Br aC eithodieuo uel Gk ; Welght If the lady of the house in the | pinging the doorbell or knocking! ‘The e 0! 5’ B u u W wW wW B ry 18 oul ta u al fifth place hadn't gone to Washington uid sone most unadylike things to visit her mother over inauguration AGT KOREATRO MEAT ees neal + aw eee Y and her husband insisted on taking daiituamuscaiaverdsneal SURE me to a moving picture show or to told her 1 would’ stay tn the house ISS Fussy! Feith Proctor ayory steht became | UA) Pe” 2 monn aay isthe Route file torets “B0-0-0-0. y ; a stin f ver YOURSELF , he said he subject to heart fail- | watked out With my head just as his! AT HOME." @ () 10} @) 0 ¢ “Where ts she?’ asked Pike, “Here, sir,” repl led the man, voice, | Surely you made that clear to him.” | “Appellez le Monstour laf’? he com- on, “That man, your friend, who calls} “Tell her to come right In. Ah, “It would depend a good deal on, Daniel smiled gently. !manded and pointed to the other door | himself Von Grollerhagen, 1s not a Ger- | {n, ma'am,” he went on as Lady Creech which of my countrymen you caught.| "No," he answered grimly, “He made of the chamber, ‘The man « Man—he is a Russian—not only that—, appeared {n the doorway. When he had By Booth ia reeiaaion \ If it depended on the one I know best, | it clear to me, Two years In Jail, and at once and beckoned to Ivar he Is a Russian noble, [ see It In ajclosed the door behind her, she sata he'd tell you he'd see you in hell first.’ if I don't make my mind In fifty, was seated within, He came at once) hundred ways that you cannot." | coldly and dd. Leona Wilsoa For an Instant the Earl looked fixedly | minutes from now to do what he wants into the room where the two were! 47 helped us this afternoon,” sald! “My brother-in-law feels that someone rican Pi ssin.)| at Danfel, and his face went red and! me to do’— | standing. ‘ | Dantel, but Ivanoff did not seem to hear! well acquainted with Miss Granger- Saaee ti Oy ME, Mn ae by turns, ‘There was a danger-| ‘What fs it that he wants you to do?”| “Ivanoff, some unexpected difficulties | him, | Simpson's ambttions and her inet SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, }ous flash in his eyes, and he stepped) ‘The young lady's father trusted me) have arisen,” sald the German The | wt have felt it inevitable that I should | ture should put the case finally to 0) Pike, @ sorewd Kokome (nuana)| 4 trite closer and half-raised his\to look after her, and if I won't) police have discovered your presence by “Siberia ever since I came| before we proceed to extremities,’ yer, is guardian of two rich orpnas : k . Nive predlil near ol one hundred and’ here, and persons who wish evil to my S2°back to Siberia ever since I came} ; Bet ‘and Horace Simpson. who are uving walking stick, ' n hi a eset pm omiee to ate pay ne pees i a es p i s ae hele | sald, fo Furope Pike has always dumbly loved | oath he dropped it, plcked up his hat fifty thousand pounds for that— rlend nave threatened to make trouble. . : u 7 “Yes, ma’am,"' answered Dantel te heetfone Atnere *Rabsne son of | from the bench where he had thrown it, | you've seen it around here, haven't He can do nothing further to save you) “Perhaps egan Daniel Dues ties iro oprot her laiik wins hesitadan: a the Far! of Haweastlc, Father and son are | and walked to the hotel steps. | unless he betrays a sacred trust | other Interruy Awite of ithe etalelot attirsiiand ws Matt dope tuners to “ye sean ‘ "You have an hour,” he sald menac-) “1 have observed it—It you reter to] “it's the truth, old man,” sald Dantel| There is no ‘perhaps’ for me. Ther®! ary ail quite in sympathy as to what citadel S| ingly, turning. “At the end of that the son of Lord Haweastle,” answered) feelingly, “I can’t do It.” has never been a ‘perhaps’ since I met ghoutd ve to you, but In the kind= if Almerle is worthy. of - | time—we will know what to do.’ Von Grollerhagen, gravely. For a moment the Russian refugee! Helene, my wife; she who sent M@ to! ness of our hearts we condone vour of- {ihe a iss an Grand puke ames to fhe! Daniel must havé stood there ten) “Well, if I don't agree to that.!staggered and suported himself with | the mines, she and my Engllsh | foise—it you accede to our reasonable flere ven, Grolle | minutes after Hawcastle had gone, and tyanoff goes to Siberla and you and I) his hand on the table. Then he looked friend,” itelsite: riage settlement aereed | the twilight came dowm and enveloped to jail.” | up. el was thoughtful | ¢ refuses to let Ethel! him with {ts softness, As the lights von Grollerhagen looked at him) ore k you for what you tek : etriends, Iv eee esttacaian kone {came Out Here and there, he turned) quickl | to do.” , ne?” he asked eg Viet and Induces tt and Duke also to} and Idoked over at the windows of “fle threatens that! What do you in-) Von Grollerhagen went on. Peat agnor r 1 Erg: rotate nas | ay MMS three | Von Grollerhagen’s sulte, and noted tong to d | In the meantime my friend belleves See ARE ad otis 1 She to turn Pike over to the I Han authorl} the shadow still on the window blind agree, There woul: be! Naples a safe place for me. And so 4 AAR ih You say dhe HE riloment ANF WIE consent 19 the) at coke to me like Doc's In this thing, thle to it {f It was only me,| auf wiedersehn.”’ wee SOMIRBEeTRE he: Gore ee ues | and ought to be told,” he murmured. 1 land me for two years or! Pike extended his hand which the Ger-|P et} ar reer eteeaca it has prope CHAPTIR | He found his way slowly across the twenty, But I can't do what they want, | man took pocarnent A REG are ES from (Continued.) | grass and up the Henan in Cus even to let you ane tyenge out It) "Good- nye Bee) fod Gee bless you,” ance, I prayed God to : wered : | moment tapped upon the door of the) ain't my money, All I can do Is to, he said, and Von Grollerhagen s ned ¢ mr Veue - i Blackmail. German's Bahie: The door was opened | hint that you get out right away. Ivan- | Pike's fingers. me meet the sere ; eek a MhaMorate. mala ORD Haweastle stepped close to| by Riplere, who Informed him that Von | ofg can't go. They've got a ring around| “To our next meeting,” he sald, and In| he Pause) 06 & Kaw came upon Wl) that got me into L him. | Grollerhagen was dressing. He found) this place.” a moment was gone. eee by range te |You see, 1 know your interest “I this countryman of yours) his friend adjusting his white cra "You could get away, too, my friend,” \preaee vel,” anewered Fike, quidtiy. | U¥@ handled all ts were assured that the law would be} before a morror, sald the German, watching him softly. : -1 Noe ye chanes cd Lok Ai vol '¢ mind, we'll omit all permitted to take its course if a favor-| Within five minutes he had acquainted | "you had not thought of that?” CHAPTER XVI. [noon basis toc rerr Mee rae Se aay | tradesman-ti fees! remarked able answer to a certain question Sr HA other with all that had passed, and| No, air, and I'm not going to think! F7— jg g Russian Noble!!! | ‘0% or hands Into the discaré until | 1} t has been sug not received hotel, what, answer be? Pike looked up from the letter he was {n an hour within that) had received a smile In return. Von) of in your opinton, would the! Grollerhagen refused to take the matter seriously. “Pout!” he sald. "Surely you can) twisting in his hands, and his thin| trust this Lord Hawcastie not to men-| mij look on & aquarer attitude. tion {t. He miust know that the con- “As for me, I shall go," | Grollerhagen standing up. we're raising. Ivanoff had retired, and then op Mariano stood without bowing, it. But you"—— sald Von HE instant “%s a” disappeared Ai Tvanoff ch/ed seridly te the | “Well, that's part of the load off my small table ear the bedrese age | \ oor 1 haven't had the nerve to tell| picked up @ cigtfette from a box that! poor fellow in there, though.” lay there with @ dottle “Miladi called, and I guess we'l He walted a moment Creach—she ask \epeak with ber a few minutes,” he sald. keep on ned the | © you would | ¥ untit | kested that y ave a g lady yc ou make this opp sition be sentimental int: urself, We can grounds. (To Be Continued.) YOO00000000000000000000) Talks on Matrimony | By Dr. Madison C. Peters How to Be Happy Though Married, HERE we Carry over into the wedded life the I pubdliehed)refnement of manner that chatacter- some years ago an Mnglish book {zed your wooing days, Don't imagine that bec you have now won each oy “& graduate of/other you need no longer be affec- he University of Matrimony,” with) tlonate, the alarmingly eug- OO ee Re Spend as much time after mar. rage making cages as you did jwostive title “How to Be Happy | Though Married," a title not original spreading nets before marriage and | with the author, you wt keep the other dear | An old English preacher named Skel-| Charmer away. | ton first used {t as a title for a sermon.) Never speak to any sone outside of ‘The rather startling theme Inculcates| one another's faults, not even to your | the important and frequently forgotten| minister or your @octor—they have | truth that domestic happiness does not|troubley enough of thelr own, Any come aaa matter of course, but, like| woman with ordinary ‘eyes can see jeverything else worth having, has to|things In her hugband she does not jve worked for, like. Never whisper to others your | Tt hae been truly gaid, “You are not} husband's or wife's shortcomings. janarried on your wedding day; on that} Avoid meddlers! Some wretched gos day you but begin to be married, ‘True | sip will come to you about the time | fonrelags, fg an endless process, the per-| you have set up your new home, and petual Interlinking of the souls while| tell you how she manages her husband, Tell her to mind her own business, and | life lasts," When married let love rule, Love| never return the call. ‘There are some people so busy minds ig never stubborn, It never stands ' f te net ia ¥ iness that T woul up and quarrels for its rights. Love. 8 other people's bus e d f UE a: not be a bit surprised on the Resntrey, j toll make each blame self and not tion Day to see some of. these, ev the other when anything goes! lasting snoops getting out of the wrong | wrong. It transforms blemishes into| stave! | imaginary virtues Pay attention to Tittle thinga, I know “It's hardly in one's power to| “8trangements are rarely the work | Keep at times from looking sour,” but| Of one day or caused by one offense, avold as much a# possible all disputes.| They are growths. ‘There is no truth in the jingle: And family jars, rim, : Jit is the Mttle rift within the Inte « we but o'er the) ahat by and by will make the muste mute," Are filled with ‘honey to the brim,” The sunbeam 1s composed of millions Every dispute between husband and! of minute bays. So the home life. must wife forces good humor out of its chan-! pe constituted of little tendernésses, nel rand insidiously, though Insensibly, icind looks, sweet laughter, gentle undermines affection, and at last de-! words, loving counsels, and soon it will stroys that cordiality which is the soul) be found that kindliness will spring up of matrimonial harmony, Re Oly side, Staph eng: tee Se atiitn } » when It’ of temper and irreconellability. o| Never be avhamed to apologize when gnirit and want of mutual knowledge, you haye made a fool of yourself even as we have seen sweet violets {vody is always consistent. ‘The and primroses dispelling the depress- Dine ave Ke a | Ini loom of the gray sea rocks, Ww ao mholneyenenncayeveniitavel ard UO Ha RATaVRET Ine oy kates rine We) myth day by day against this lightning- The most dangerous infernal ma- out) twentieth century, harassed by chine in a home is the last word, ares and perplexed by its in- Talmage saya; “If you must get mad) home, where the mind can be at rest, Hrautecue yearn for the repose of the the spirits bask Jn the peaceful lights of domestic love, Busy men become weary of the dull prose of Ufe and thirst for poetry. Happy is the man tho can find that poetry at home. zea both get mad at the same time, | Take turn about.” Oncein a while let your husband have | the Jast word—It will please him and be | no lows to you, | Incivility 1s nowhere so unpardonable | as toward your best loved, dle. — ” || MY “CYCLE OF READING.” By Count Tolstoy. | Transiatea by herman Bernstein | s (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) Justice. F justice reveals our life in its true light, it is never. T theless better to recognize the truth than to con ceal, Our life may change, while justice will al | ways remain the same, and will never cease to reveal us in our true light, OD E just to your neighbor, You can do this whether yeu B love him or not, and you will learn to love him, But {f you are unjust towards him because you do not love him, you will end by commencing to. hate him.—Ruskin, | eee | N enormous waste of productive powers !s conditioned not by the laws of A nature, but by social disorders, in which those that labor are doprived of | the natural comforts necessary for their work, and thus the laborer is de- | prived of his just reward.—Henry George. | eee | OU push & man into a ditch, and then you say to him that he should be satls- Y fied with the position In which Providence placed him, Such is contemporary Christianity, You say: “We did not push him.” Of course, we shall not | realize all that we are doing and that we are not doing, so long as we will not ask | ourselves every morning the question as to how we should every day do not what js profitable to us, but what fs just. We cannot realize it until we shall become at least sufficiently Christian to recognize the truth of the saying of the Moham- medans, according to which “one hour of justice {s worth more than seventy years ‘of prayer."—Ruskin, I ” justice does not show us what we ought to do, it always shows us what € ought not to do, or what we should stop doing. May Manton’s Daily Fashions. HE house jacket ale that !s loose at the front and halt fitted at the back {3 always a becoming one, and this model Sults girlish figures pe- cullarly well. Tt will be found just as desirable for the morning dress that Is made with skirt to match as it ts for the general negliges, for it ts Pretty and graceful and becoming. {t can be made either with three-quarter or long sleeves, with the wide fancy collar illus- trated, or with a plai Standing one, and 4s adapted to any simple, material. Tho quantity of terlal seasonable required for i$ 35-3 sixteen-year size O84 |9 it in sizes for giris of Pattern No. en and sixt years of age, Misses’ House Jacket—Pattern No, 6284. Pt How Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, No. 132 East Twenty-third street, or send by mail ba to No. 132 West Twenty-seventh street Sead 10 cents In cola @btaim § or stamps for each pattern ordered ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly amt always r wpectfy sine wanted. Add two cantf for letter postage tf in a barry. heart's turmoil Become quiet and © ATP ROR | H

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