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al “ 3 ses Honeybunch’s Hubby 3 By_c. M. Payne Copyright. 1011, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Worlds. The Evening. World Daily Magazine, Thursday, March 30, 1911. 9) “, —— > 0 ( LO, RTWEL! bay? Yours T ti) tui WAVE TO . “ (BREL THAT 9 HOw : HUNG MINE Chk Ck THESE! i ‘ / TCH! CIRCUI bse Bled wineys rae. | : ‘WHATS tS? EVIDENCE CAN C] IN THe - — SURPRISE —~, caGhaeae RUIN AN INNOCE PTI SES Coser: Cove erure WE MusT 2) BEG CING., The Jarr Family Give and Take Mr. Jarr Acts as Sponsor to a Genius, By Ethelyn Huston Bat It Wilt Never, Never Occur Again. Copyright, 1911, by ‘Ike Hess Publishing Co. (The New Yur World). irs Copyright, Wi, vy Tue Meese Publishing Co, (The New York World), y| . r =< \\{ JONES = rR Li 2 lives, treading upon the treadmill of | Copyright, 1911, by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York World), 5 ) STORE.’ ; AGE ie uw} mre Heroes.” gray days, plodding to the soul's Dead eyes up, and Mrs. 6tryver remarked a ), ‘S aR love hath no man) March of machine rule and routine, in By Roy L. McCardell. |s7** ¥>. : Me Ol cheat ce eine ag Atma BURNS UP, IT . than this—that a man glve|the salt aweat of labor j CE] ADIES" Degen Mir, Dirkwton. |ane would take the parlor maid to task . . Le : | ltsanomee ns —— Wir his life for a friend.” And these are the men that are all j ‘And Mr. Jarr,” he added @8/ when the company was gone. B)| \SoRPRISEGE ~ AF) © young day# We asso-| around you—the one in the shabby coat he bowed again et the amem-| seme spirit there!” repeated Dink-| B ¢ 2 { ews &. be 4 if this “greater love’ with} q+ the next desk, or the “plodder" over | died expectants iN | ston, “The ANGELS here!” ; 4 WS, 2 HInSELE to Ger {ig » death, Lifo to us then ts the eupremo| there in the corner, or the stooped sibs | Mra. Bteyvere! aftr, Dinkston brought his right arm : Biss Maas oir! gift, the one thing lovely and desirable. | ordinate to whom you have just given ; Grawing room who|gown in a etraight line toward a por- F 5 ———_~ . But slowly and surely the yeara travel] some curt orders. j were enjoying an|trai: in a great deal of oil of Mr. ) ) Lai past and change us, Our early ideas] You do not know them and they do not ‘ afternoon of scan-|Stryver, that the grim original had had F aro disturbed and become detached] interest you-they are only part of the f dei, Ceyfon end) painted in Parla after wrecking a life , from the principles we thought 40 deep- | machin: rooted. And after a while they read-| to Just theme: look: an en : But tt 1s because Life has not cerebellum, %Oljnsurance company. The grin on the proceed to consider | portrait would make a child shriek out the ‘Grotesqueries |in ita sleep to dream of !t | of Goethe’ we are| “The Angels, I say, here! repeated | fronted first with) Dinkston, pointing this time to a com- ves, and we find ourselves} the agony point that brings blood and 1 Upon fe and its standards from | makes the heart human, This you need ly opposite pont of view to clear your vision and humble your who have laid thelr Hves UPON |errogance. This you need to lower the { the entirely en-/panion presentment of Mrs, Btryver i the sacriflotal altar of death must have Mra, Bt t} z of dentin Judginent that you think superior, but grossing subject of/iimned in ¢he days when she had a : their moed of praise—their souls Were] that ts only ignorant. This you need to Mephistopheles and | waist line. ‘Man here! Mr. Dinkston | = great souls when the Ume called fF "rake you see that it is not Pilate on Faust—Man and/eunk his voice to a ghastly whisper Great deeds. is throne that looms great in history the Evtl Spintt, Humanity and ite] and indicated that Man was about as ) But the souls who have lad thelr} pecause of Pilate, but that @ throned Aura.” tall as Marshall P, Wilder, - c Hives upon the aitar of Service are those] pigmy became colossal in the mightiest “Ah, too true!” murmured Mrs. Hick] This illustration, showing Man to de! re who are tried by fire. Death is Kindly |qragody because of a Ci ry 8 , @t, getting in the firat evidence of ap-|considerabbly lower than the angels, 1 DION'T i: —his eyes are those of a friend. His baronet as eee pronase one G Preclation, while Mire, Stryver darted @/ created a profound sensation among Im sorry, S DONOTHIN touch i#@ benlson, and his arme are] Wien ho passed judgment. ‘ 3 tepakelike glance at her. all present. They stared at the altitude JONES, You've = if eZ BuT L WONT fanctuary, and his Kies is peace. Our! Wo vccg the Ithuriel spear, for the i It matters : t whether we consider | dndtoated, with indignation expressed in LOST Your. : . b \| dot, of wor i) GEO | ide ntandarde: are ©. Moai aad Tee the subject analogically, dialogically, ra-| every glance. AGAIN! but wo who are left, Jude nis @ pars y. We need the t Gonally or metaphorical sho contin-| Mir. Dinkston saw he ha “put one] sh the myster- an med, over,” and drew himself crect, intoxi- Thr bac (ee carnitine agony and rack, because without them ‘ “Hear! Hear!" cried Mrs, Btryver, get- | cated with his own eloquence, A rather Ando tt i not Death, but Life, that | ¥* Were hard amt cold and without pity i ting in with this neat and ultra English | unsubstantial stimulation for him, but PAPA SAID 5 fs tho taskmaster. And it 4s not alone |@%4 Understanding. We need the dis- sAmerjection first. at the same time temporanily grati- | ‘ HE GUESSED c es | [the nan who gives hia body to Death, |<ipline of life againat which we battle— f (Wasn't it her own drawing room?) | fying. | ac rll Ra hye art and wout|tt@ discipline that takes us by the “First, then, and of the firstly,” con-| “Man HERE!" roared the speaker (‘4 honored and] throat and alowly brings us to our ‘ n service for others, nied the new made eavant, getting | again, and a sneer overspread his floril Ui NOURSELE > Ni unsung,” through the long years of | knees. i into the swing of Ms gibberieh, face and he sank his hand some eight , that de showlie “great jovel!’ For there, and there only, are we ; just grant me tat a part is less t! inches lower, as though to indicate that| The world is full of heroes whe so] Umble enough to look Truth in the the whole, that two angles of a Man had been nourished on condensed | @ive their lives day after day eyes and to eo that the souls of the fngle are in no sense parabolic, though | Mik and was sinking tn plain alight. linear, and what we may say of neces-|‘Man HBRE! Contempt! The perthel- aity 48 what ts merely assumed, as we|!0n of contempt! Animaculate, sinister, | might a priorl, and not proved, | desploadie, crapulour peradventure.” Applause could no longer be re . Here he paused to drink a sip of | #trained, The ladies fairly sput their water and make a wry face, while Mrs, | loves, and Mrs, Hackett soreeched: Bulinger nudged Mrs, Jarr and whl Good!" pered: They didn't know exactly why Man | —————---——— “This ts en education should bo getting his bumps, but he Va souls is the |#habby are often the souls of giants— a | that the man we ignore and despise ts shoulders bowed and weary—the facing | Perhaps the man who has “given hie of tasks that are irksome, of 1- [life for a friend—who ts giving ser- sibilities that are a dead welght, of | vice before which we would quail—-who duties that ave colorless and thankless, [fasts while we feast with the mighty, of service that is unvalued and unre- | but to whoge life the angels themselves warded, Ileroes are these~men of gray | pay reverence. 4 ‘That which tries Mfting of each day as a burden up " 1 . WAS getting them, and THAT w: - G WDL) bellowed the acme of as uns! pV BGLN Gellowed the acmeiot |G Aes Mion ant Te By Gaston Leroux to tee the taste the water Is this a hete ox doctrine?” bel- well, the{20wed Dinkston, running his hand The Mystery of the Yellow Room,”” élé mouth. V premises ne thus admitted, I pro. | through his hat “Answer me this! ceed to observe that the concatenation ‘Answer me plainly, T say, for in this “ant > ‘ bul. eran Carlotta, who had guddents name 4s ment at once reached {ts helgit or em run away Ah! And what did you see? of self-existence in a reciprocating |RevUla Of chaotic hypothesis we must al iaey 4 : h tte 44 Lin araaicon dial (“WA aha, Visodiia’ da Co ot} ew abo ; @ura ngs us to the provlematical | Shall I proceed?” . ‘ No one } the Tie a t man tions. H , 7 where Christine had No, with the Count!" | “What do you want me to go down dlalo which some measu.e| “Oh, do go on! What sptendid rea-| Ris’, 4yugauen souet man remained on tis box, and the three| fixed on the stax 1s that instant. The| “Ah, here's Car ital tiara tore proves that the essence of spirituality | Soning! How clear, how lucid!” cried the enaplorens declare, ther coachmen remained « * | eat far a rrupted amid the u're right’ said the stage man- may be referred as the second as- | the chorus Managers take charge af the Opera Honse A shadow in a long black sk and a} Christine Jost her self-assi ¢ Krente : “No, it was the gle . ager, frantically pushing his hands Ma oragn “Wa now coach (in atianl Some—iiem, ah—er, stimutant, please, | tees a lomter squad "Opera hort, ok felt hat passed along the|and more. trembled, § onl wi nad Christine gone? ‘What] And a few. laughed, tally es al through hs rebetiious tain, “You're entrancing cosmic paradox" aid Mr, Dinkston, giving Mix. gare | Coreen te. SOnSIARS we, vement between the Rotunda and the, the vers wn, @* * Carolus | witchcraft had snat away be-|careful examination trap-doora| fight! But there might be some one “How beautiful!’ cried two stout |@ glance of trium ntomes ‘hier i rriages, examined the barouche care-|Fonta we » was ! fore the eves of t and boards had put the idea of an av-| at the organ who could tell us how the Mele ay heven nia, HET AVIA Vary | VAR RUSy Ver orled haraniere teeth Ny, Went Up to the : #| could keep the sa n tio onlookera and dent out of the que ame to be suddenly darkened, ne tine Pigs d Pr teian f i oachman and then moved aw ne warden n ‘ « Fonta h Md this n throug, three men , Mauclair ts nowhere to be found, Min one cried; “And he makes it a!) |stimulant; while the erudite savant mop-| out saying @ werd, The 1 ise people rem tas aicuant sue Anawin & Lee a cere cee GS tne San undarstanae GRthT Wo plain!” ped his brow with hia di anager | 4 belleved that 0 Jow was | phe that had be Carlotta at thel her up “to , tring gesture Mauclalr Way the gas man, who dts. Mr, Jarr, howe ving a sus- (ehlef and the ladies swooped down. up: the Vicomte Itaou : ‘bl pensed day and night at will on the e jon that e Was, as he|him with olamorous congratulations, | wimg! jie nas Jbut I do n agree, +ling manager, and It the Oper entally expressed stalling.” He|AM dut Mra, Jarr, She was too over-|to may tie man evens s: as 1 oX.! They retired to a corner 1s not to be f. ripped the bronze statuette and hissed | come. | done! An wen @ de Ch 4 we nt. [by which the stage commur peated Mercier, taken aback. “We Nar ebhia 4a) BAUat aA: Gib cone by eloping with raid Pay nm event was with | t they stood and argued} ‘There » Mauclalr and no assist- ‘i a hat te Rliaduw \ t ngs paper. | t 4 “properties.” ants! No one at the Hghts, I tell @tudy!"* cried the lecturer, getti HIS DRAWING POWERS. . ‘ 0 knew j ell you * 5 - . ‘ all a , door,” said Remy. | Ye ar amine,” roared the tha hurry, “The moment 1s fraug husband draws I CHAPTER XIII. : p reader wi { p fhe | tevake eathnoa thay | an EH pense tees) study! Mark you, now atw er at landscapes as The Trap-Door Lover. betore @ BE seri uvhed to the that ted | 1 out, they ‘took | didn’t run away by he Ir was @ juxtaposition! The Spirit. there sf i wa ® be @ res. he res the ke and we have to fing Dinkston pointed up as though through | eur artign pe deat ace LO AMA: | EMIS acene was described to the the paregra la an Indeseribable| “Tley” were ob: the ma tit * * © And what are ¢ the ceiling, all present dd their] ching except a salary.—Judge6 examining magistrate by the| “hoaye bac aveney fe | bul my at once.| who had #tven orders, during t managers doing all this time? © © © MS cis Nk Judge. Count himself, who dia not | or #!! eve jl |B « to Auggest on explana-| entriacte, that they we © Was to go down — ee acd aeain’ anni ahi tlon of the extraordinary incident |turbed on any pretext whateve a fireman tn : pear eg egg i t | At las: t 1 rose slowly and| were not in to anyh man's box beside the eedegy i | Carolus I siopped to niue-| "All the ame," exclaimed Gabriel, "a at right?" ° wre Chri ce. , lant | Q 0 trite 1 " The Hedgeville Edit euieaioay haferns USL SEIATNOR IONE UT Ite UR Soa ioa and ieee ahd. end aerisua| tedee Gee Caan Caesah 6] °"hyes, ren aulie ett die righicdae OL F/ Ranow, in tact, devoted the whole day | Hy pussledi an eign’ aa pore le olay itty Ml now or the gommmiannen a ey to his preparations » fig! Me gave te a } "La Ur | “Did you shout that to them?" asked] .T¢ stage manag walked away, horses, the carriage, the coachman, tie | pering behind the fans laante : ero! >utiantly ; shrugging Ms shoulders, fuming, mute | By John L. Hobble portaione: the Ingwages the money re-| Dane met with «rather cold 5 | aentea Meroler, impatiently. | Lferinm inauite. at those’ mmilvenee ae quired for the Journe road to be| That special audience could not arms outstretched, [4% lato ® a Zit Ko back again,” auld Remy, and | Femained quietly. aquattion ina costar 5 tf . : ken (h by | her for aiming so hig with muni ry ale' 6 isappearod 4 wille th aie She ° Copyright, 1911, vy The Press Publishiag Co, (The New York World), babe. (ie Bae ont off the ie singer noticed this ale | of her ing ove i | @teapmeared p 63 and 1 Thereupon the stage manager arrived, | fae, “he Whole theatre was copay GE IRIS ciate that He hes gots | of the people becaue they have every-/MienDi All Sie had to be seiied and) attitude of & gortien Of the Rouse and | aes, ' eL eo PN ron teat doln renee route | vaprlel end Mercier wera not #0 quiet {neubator that will ratse spring | buddy's businees in + provided for; and it occupied him until] was confuse i y spirit longs w " § aes ou two ¢ y o as all . Only they had received an Makara ts the fil we business tp mind. 9 o'clock at nig The ar fred 1 of the opera, f CHAPTER XIV. wanted, Mr Acting Manager onder that paralyzed them, The mane ‘ > At 9 o'clock @ sort of traveling ba-| who pr ded to Know the tr pout “es, ” ‘I refuse to know or to do anything | agers were not to be disturbed on any — KE REYNOLDS says that Old Man |pouche with the curtains of its windows|the Viscount's love. ate exchanged A “Singular Attitude before the commissary arrives,’ de-|account, Remy had violated that order 4 F you have failed to succeed you have Craum {4s 80 crooked that he can’t] close down took its place in the rank ifleant em. An pAReAK: BEHIND the curtain there wael|ciared Mercier, “I have sent for and met with no success, succecled tn learnin’ that you are a] make a cigar burn straight, on the Rotunda aide, It was drawn by] in Margarita an indesortbable crowd, Ar-|froid, We shall eee when he comes" | at that moment ened from dis ‘ole tafure. on two powerful horses driven by a coach-| show of tur ints, soene-mitters, dancers,| “And I tell you that you ought to #g| new expedition, wearing @ curiously h ‘ pee oy man whose face was ost concealed | de Chagn supers, choristers, subscribers | down to the organ et once startled air. i) j Jeera sak ue oR mas mae Seta married Decause lin the long folds of a muffler, In front| "fT wish I could but kiow who was ho me of her? What was| were ‘all asking ‘uestions,| ‘Not before the commissary comes,"'| ‘Well, have you @een them?" aske@ , BYNOLDS says that wimen fe two can live cheaper than one Was] or this travelling carriage were three| That addressed ma that Ail exchanged giances| shouting and hustling one another, || “I've been down to the organ myzcif| Moraier, better fitted to vote for the interest not got muchwps @ foresight, broughams, belonging respectively to If he was noble, or, at least, what his without understanding and the excite.’ ‘What became of her?’ atready.” . 2 5 (To Bo Continued.) | Ag ; . ’ ed you with “its Ithurtel spear— —_—