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' Sayings of...... | MRS. SOLOMON Being the Confessions of the Seven a » | IF You pon} \Te it Two | }HaRO TLL! OME LOOSE | AGAIN | MAYBE. | a Hetto dimes a Excuse ME Hidde — You = ime 5 1 DIONT See Hal HAL ME & POR Re Renee The Evening World Dail my SIRE HOW i You MusT pe in YouR geet!| | AS Sots A OO on ’ Kriowt |) OLD PALS Wn Hondrecth Wife. string. Yea, the Eligible Thing and the Confirmed Bachelor, ake, ehall tag Copyright, 1411, by The Drew Publishing Oo, (The Mow Fork Weeld). Daughter, and men shalt follow thee all the Hh’ my wisdom ond tide my cownesl, Oh my days of thy Ufe, even as a kitten followeth a after thee, even while they look upon thee with fear and trembling. Lo, I have known such men, Yet I say unto thi not one of these scek- eth a constant woman, dut @ woman which 48 @ constant SURPRISE, Then, I charge thee, let thy moods be as a vaudeville show, wAtch changeth every twenty minutes, and affordeth a man infinite VARIETY, For, a8 @ small boy yearneth for the COMPLICATED toy, which requireth muok skill to work, 80 a man seeketh after the CAPRICIOUS woman whom 48 Qabeth TWO HANDS to manage, and ali hie wit to understand, Let no man find thee tender for two days in euccession. For because @qnon desireth champagne to-night, 4s that a reason why he shall yearn for cheevpagne to-morrow? And decouse he hath had roasg deef for dinner, sonst deef for breakfast? to weep, a time to flatter—and a time to put thy foot dow Vertly, verily, there is a time for all things: ‘A téme to smile—and a time to frown. A time to be fond—and a time to be cold, ‘A tHe to be witty—and a time to be atlent. ‘A the to be formal—and a time to be sentimental. 4 time to be “at home”—and a time to be “out.” ‘A theme to laugh—and a time to BTOP laughing. |, @ time to sigh, a time to sing, a time ‘4 te to coaz, a time to quarr ! Then let thy programme be eo variable that no man shall eay of thee: Lo, I UNDERSTAND her. Yea, I am SOLID!" For, that which fascinateth o man ts not continuous devotion. but a con- tewoue OHANGH! Selaht Betty Vincent’s Advice On Courtship and Marriage A Loveless Marriage. man, subseq' Sere OH) i eeare ceee” 1 Reta paced nd down the| this external suggestion of epirite, with has before thinking thet you really do love him, and wently a —— to interest. 1, ea T| conditions very olear. Only on one paced nervously up and do’ r exter 0 o a Ae find aut ae se pape ee ‘much as you thought you| SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING OHAPTERS. | think, and a Ladies Te er eant| DoLit the has not been a. to inform |room, A chirp and a rustle made me | its continual reminding of her trouble hat to thts Aid, tt 4s fa: Crosby & young college professor, falls in lovel or perhaps there ie here some little |me wholly: It a:p ars that Mra, Tabor |notice the canary hanging in the/and the unnatural strain, He arkues unds pretty wild and theatrle r better to break your engagement than to carry] with Margare: ‘Tabor, known to her family as 5 ae t ae od | ali il cert t Maio will only make the rest of your life mie. put eons known semi-paychic force disengaged |has attended meetings of sy urther window. Finally Paulus looked | also—and I am not at all certa sald 1, “but couldn't we reagh ee ae ere -* § fram the living persons present, Of the| habitually tn , Which ae | up, that he argues rightly—that this prac- the root of ihe trouble by making the 1 ore e. a PPA ine arte A atom e MB. dead there ds little cause to apeculate. rive 7 ursions of which we know it y I neater to have my opinion in bd this Siperaition of here gd po Bree] ie same source? We ) ‘ou may, you are ous. to New York. en However tt be of all this there is with- | lately. How long ago may we possibly | private ne as! e cause Oo! jeterioration, > r forever tl her wicked and dishonorable not to keep your word and to infiiet | thei find Nin me, Bille Caruee, Out any doubt acute nerve-strain very|date the commencement of this prac- "Tabor wa: king older than I| by removing it she will grow better or, Were false and harmful, and shea oni 1 pain upon @ man who loves you. But just remember this, eaby fe her fy, [bad for the neuropathic, and aggravated | tice?" ever seen him, “Your opinion] perhaps well. it 1s #0 far clear? feel that we were profane, But if the " my Gears: a marriage where true love does not exist be- T some sort of a|D¥ dellef, Yes, dt is perhaps cause| “She was interested in spiritualism a great deal to all of us, Doc-| “Quite so, exactly,” Retd broke tn, | medium herself denied them—these vise tween both husband and wife is bound to be an umhappy | thrrat over the father, Crosby | enough, and perhaps effect only. carelessly and as @ sort of fad before he suid. Retd stopped a moment| “Perfectly clear, Doctor, perfectly. But |!08 and voices must be at least ona, sooner or later, anyway. It te better never ¢o marry | Crosby tiesto, ‘The train wae pulling into Stamford) Miriam's marriage,” Mr. Tabor an-|in his pacing tots Recast atte hen Makeua ati: 4 we or Kai af, We can persuade oP j Margaret, but fai as he ended, an was not uni 5 ar As now she . o 5 . 5 ‘ we ; And certainly it 1s detter to tell e man quite plainly before tt ta too tate that| Tabor believes herself to be iu amuritual ©om-| nearly, to the house thet Doctor Paulus|then; and @ho hasn't spoken of it for| facts. ‘That is the fault with all our tlon’ with the other world, because the | Press ter—then sagnt ont me you do not tove him than to marry him aad let him find out tne miserable truth | fuuspagon wth fee dem) daushicrs NArithe “he |epoke again, years, She might, of course, have kept | opinions, that we never can base them/mind {s unbalanced by 1o! Huston be dispelied once for al? T afterward—as he surely will. ‘ ret of the family fear for her panty Be “T think,” he ealé, ‘that possibly, I|!t secret all alorg; it’s only within the| upon wholly complete data. Mra. ‘Tabor| “I think that is to place the horse ret Beales. xe Mahi ts a fake er j —— Favor and Crosby are in New York feet (at |eay possibly, Mr. Crosby, you have made|iast few monthe that we have ¢ried to| we have thought in And there was] atter the wagon, aa we aay. It te cer-/ Non, “int sie be made to undo the om her arror jearos oo” wh ls her with he Crosy, i that @ valuable discovery. At |! we know | follow all her movements. much to bear that out. So if I had been |tainly a vicious circle, but etill"— ane » ang iscredit the Does Not Work. His ‘Intentions. I, Trane! Pauiun'e tatwour nerve | now eho giacerctanoes better, “Hut on| Dr. Paulus settled heavily into «| certain that all her filusions procested | “Precisely,” exclaimed Reld, “wut the/G\ixerous belief she has taught? man you do not love GIRL who signs her letters “B. 6." writes: Y dear girls, do not under any ciroumstances marny a I mean, even if you have promised to marry a MAN who signe his letter “D. H. L." writes: shall he also desire Th Nor much oF How'o YUA | A SAlon-BuT LT: Go You. sous Hee M "WA On Yes! me & Jimmy's €a)| [Beer PaLs FoR Years every i) fone. He WAD ARN THING | WANTED 1 GOT ta & ANYTHING f \ 0 THAT WE WANTED — \s oO G-o-o-d N-i-g-h-t! Shere AAS HAL DIO diam Even TELL You AsouT Tre Time | Sneaned IN] His ROOM, ONE MIGHT & GAGEED Wr & Tieo Him, vite Jost 1S NIGHTGOWN OM) & ARAIED iM DOWN His GIRLS HOUSE LAD AIM OH THE PORCH AHO RUNG THE DooR BELL Coparight, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World). POLI uxe J? Zz GO_FOR A DATS SAly (ari EAC By Ferd G. Long . 2c) G:0°0'D OPN GETS CALM LIKE 7A. GUESS WE'LL GET A BReEDE IN A Few HOURS. 1 AInT THIS CEFUL 13, 1911 ‘Yes You WPreared vWacRncn | THEM WAS HAPPY Diets! =: Me a iw) —Notes Crossed in the Mail —— By Alma Wooaward —— Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World), From Jack Hart (salesman) to Mr, C.K. Brown (sales- manager of the Spiderweb Hosiery Company). BAR Brown—tIn the last week I've met more frozen faces than I've Middle West. Fred Cooper, who's out for “The Silk Glove Company," told me last night in the Perry House, Peoria, that he'd throw @ fit if any one handed him an order over a dozen! And the man who’ Going thie territory for the “King Sho: people has been on a wild and glorious bing-bing time for two weeks on ac- count of the drop his sales have taken! I hear most of the houses are cailing the men in for a layoff of two weeks or more—and that sounds pretty punk at this time of year ‘With all this in vi T give myself a gentle pat on my manly bosom every time I look over my accounts. In the last four weeks I've fallen off only f per cent. on last year’s sales and with business in ite presemt estate that's golng some! Of course my expense account is a trifle more than usual. You have to coax orders out of these yapa now, and @ good dinner and a few “soft drinks {w the prise little coax I've found! But, taking all in all, I'm pretty we’ satisfied with results and when I come back to town, If you fellows don't hand me the glad palm with @ neat little Untng !t—4t—I'm afraid there'll be some That— (From C. K. Brown to Jack Hart.) Y Dear Hart—Put on your Pa- M nama, pack your samples and t the first train coming Bast, © & little vacation, without aay coming to you—and {t's coming, Just as soon as you ihit the trait. For unvarished nerve and rosy @tpe dreams we certainly have got to hand you the blue nibbon—and then som Every other man out has sent in @ 10 per cent. increase in sales over taet year. Not only that—from reports of other firms we hear that business fs dooming so that amen are turning down orders right and left because the factories are way behind in filling. And here you come along with « pla and green fairy tale about hard times to account for your punk emanshtp. You missed your vocation, Jack. You should have been either @ novelist or @ Girector in the Standard Ofl—in either of these places your powers of coness tion would not have gone to waste, I never believed in hypnotism, Out tm looking over your record for the pat become a firm deliever=I hypnotised when 1 ¢eek you on! By these few, foregoing words, I trust you've gathered that, when once again you nee the white lights of the Upper Street you will be jobless—fired—ous in the cold, cold world, &c., Very truly, c. K. BROWS, —— GOOD YEAR FOR CROPO? Bunday School Teacher (telling of Ge woking. Yh be in @ week from Thursday. Yours, HART. Deluge)—And then tt rained forty éays and forty nights. Johnny—Were the farmers satisfied then, air?—Tit-Bits, great a man es Lombroso found much the ome hand these visits to seances may be aggravating cause of the un- ness, Dr. Reid besides has made the chair and fell to drumming on the arm of {t, Lady etood beside her father, 4er arm resting upon his shoulder; and from within her own mind, I should But have aid that ft wae surely « By Wells Hastings And Brian Hooker now Mr. Crosby makes known to impulse comes"—— Doctor Paulus hela up @ white hand. Mr, ‘Tabor was leaning forward ghalr se T finished, Reid was wall ne the floor again and shrugging balancement, and on the other mere re- shoulders; and Lady was looking Vo | “Walt @ little. I do not come to con- sults of unnatural cravings in the unbal- clusions hastily. Now, I conclude that “Tem in love with @ man end “Do you think that calling on Mrs, a supposed to be Miriam’ "grt 1 with eyes of absolute belief. been engaged to him for three |a young lady once a week would give! the “spirit” if Crosby fs loved by Margi anced mind. Ut is a circle, and we seek s§ Mrs. Tabor is thus far no more than| “stay iol * agen Matas settee [tare nora my mao | ene” HRS eI SS eae ee er *| Summer Resort Puzzles. jini so ma iat), uh wit raul ep Decause he does not! to earn che cane, broken,’ rat to ny naj t@ nodded, frowning. of im scans tie dose fothies Pe se sare mertewel (0 pct Wish her 1 tohe chem Ms. Tabor met us at the door, and as By Sam Loyd. superstitious influence.” The Sail voice “Oh, but this whole thing's abeue@* 7 tie people havo money. Do you think |4™ Mt wi . CHAPTER XXIV. we came up the steps Reid oe esa. 1 wileay to you thai | Reid But In. Cronby's a good fellew then that my parente are tale to him?’ mip. (Continued,) eagerly past him. over, Dr. ae , wi ad aaay te and clever, and all that, but he's @ ' ee ey eenarenta are wise, and | Of course, @ man’s intentions toward "Splendid!" he exclaimed, wringing only tran tT wnow of my epecialty, end | evan and this ts = complicated 4 & eirl are judged largely by his man- The Consultation. the great man’s hend. “Splendid! of thowe. unfort Tauiuer 208 ifthe’ woman'a oiling fe sepeee aa ere booking out for your future happi- c is) ner toward her, However, once Hoped it would be this train, but I of those unfortunately neither one fs men the woman's willing to expose herself, ‘mam, no matter how wealthy HEY all seemed to know how im- here.” waited unt Reid subsided |. 0% ty Lee oom tbe nor how much money his |!8 rather often to call on a young lady 66 | her, and to recognize the eae fine te "Very e004 of you into a @eat, then went slowly on: “Now Dellevee ter, ana. if ‘it this weaie Sea Peetly may have, should work for his |in whom you are not particularly in- voice called Miriam. She |to come out, very good indeed, Now ”" the question ts how thie harmful belief | ny thing todo with the ease aa awe terested. f} Went adout it deaides in| as to the case; mantfestations unfortun- YES, | 1s to be removed, and that te the @tMeult ie woud bom shock, a violent staal @ very accustomed way. |atcly very clear just now. Very untor- matte [a dangerous shock, No sense at all | And before her first disappearance this|tunate, but I'm afraid we have been THE LARGEST! Tf she were im @ sanatorium"——1it, Melodrama isn't medicin » | summer—the first I knew of personally—|Tisht all along. Come out to my rooms ON THE. Reid began. Tam not so isure,” said Dr. Paulas. A moment, and I'll give you the whole matter in detatl Better to run over |the whole thing eclentitically.”’ Doctor Paulus smiled at me dryly. “I shall be most happy,” he @hrilled, and | after a formal word or two with Mr, | {SLAND “She'd worry herself to pieces," Lady | “It ts unusual and what you call thee Interrupted; and Dr. Paulus nodded) atrical, but my work {s unui heavily. ‘@he'd feel tmprisoned, and, many times theatrical also, T have imagine and brood and worry, and the | to act m atmosphere of tinpersonal restraint! tents would make her worse, We can at she had @ telephone message from Mrs. I answered {t, and I recognized afterward ‘‘New Style’’ Notes need h of the time with my gar the silence I ventured ‘been worse after | With individual min MW mreking up the lingerie dresses, the jand embroidered in @ combination of “dome “ ; she has been away? te a , %, 5 a, can At) must use each time an Individual emma i fBome dressmaker should dear in |silk, wool and the tinsela, By the ad. ee ee en tm leg gone, aw | Tor stalked soberly around the house, least help to keep her mind off her ‘his at least strikes at the cause of the @iind chat this season's frocks show |diton of Jowela the now desirable Ort- |i¢ 1° jag merely tapped the current of {21% Tabor and T went into the Hving and make her cheerful. trouble, and might succeed. With your ” , Straightest lines of the classical |ental effect may be obtained, Pell G room without speaking, “We can prevent from now on, I| permission, Mr. Tabor, we will try ft" | the ehtest ' Ms pwn thought “Has Lady told you?" began. think, any further communications, ‘But her heart, man, her heart,” ede Greek tunica. eur! buttons, dyed by a new process | “It seeined at first to me a temporary eo de . ‘But her heart, man, her heart, ‘Panels should, therefore, be straight [to match the suit, are a new atyle fea- |breakdown only, which I looke! to He ORO: ern uae setae sold Mi. Thor, eng at fected Reid, “what about her hewet, en& wot taper at the waist as they |jture, A ult in the new Coronation red w better, 1 a en oe balls for you both. I aun eorry for all of us. mind, eecnes Held; and the shrill] ‘Well, we can dare, 1 think, to risk awe heretofore, had a trimming of these buttons, dyed culncidentiy with dice | "8. Tabor has not been hergelf at all Salon’ of Rik’ sollaamue 06404: that. Every operation ts a risk that ‘straight edge is now the rule for |in exactly the same shade, on both the Sh thes de net know [ence the other day, and of course for That fa partly true, 90 far as ahe|%e Judge Wise to take, and this 19.6 flomeings. This is obtained by placing jskirt and jacket, and the effect wae|in thne to control them, Fo I tell them |e, time everything else te secondary has now tallucinations end recreates | Malignant lef to be extinpated, @ Grill of lace back of the scallops or | quite pleasing. that some harmful practice 1s added to (2, her, But don't think that I'm any- | Rae deen hewen’ inonnes 'tuke* wa Gal @ fold of batiste, but Detter stlll a fola| A most attractive picture hat has the toe orlainal cate, and they etouro me ching Ont very aise personally.” He from seeking harm elsewhere, that rely: 9 the latter ‘ombt= | ful 0 . at no new thing comes int r J 6 o " Of black velvet, as the latter tn comtt- | full crown and thner portion of the /A oe eY sooked at me guizsically-: | 1 took It tn ellence and @ moment tater Ja something; but still even go she fuels! srhat T shall manage, to bring her netion with white in a p r be oat hadow tna young man whose interest in the| Lady oame tn, greeting me very quietly ser yy uid reach that—-but how | morrow afternoon, telling her permems \ style note. lace, The upper brim and the wide | remaining daughter causes him to fol. |a# !f my presence this thme were en- ont gine He fell 2%.% private sitting in the interest 98 Phta now development of black velvet {edge of the under brim are of pearl |iow goientists about on bloycles, T rec-|tirely @ matter of cou Father and to make her pes thus detleve fs 'e fell wcience. I am not often so much b i with white embroidery is leray tagal. A cluster of gdni rosea |ommend quiet and the removal of rem-| daughter evidently understood ench ead ns she vere pene egan a but this case ts of tmportance.”* geen in parasols whero the body of the |and follage on the elde form the sole |iniscences, and attll the irritation goes | other. We sat almost in allenoe untt [prvcming eaeih. .° tae liveaery Yaa: | teen and Inowed, watch, “te sunshade is of embroidery and the black |trimming of this exquisite headgear, ‘on. the two doctors returned, Paulus e ‘hag the most deltberate man in the ;that the motor-car now at the & * velvet forme a \ handing at edge. The tiny little buttons of “Now, as to spiritualism, there I have| frowning downward and Reid more work! : : é On the step he turned to me with | ; ly busy than ever, Th Suddenly I found Lady's eyes upon| his quizaical smile, “It is perhaps well {Bleck Fe Rovaitlas that’ |brle ack balan tatmale ead not made up my mind, T {nvestigate {t|Jerkily busy tl ‘er. ‘The scene had id - t les are Y jo are being largely use asa human abnormality, for © me, like| the alr of w deliberate family council, me. “I think Mr, Crosby haa something | for us all to have our mind stimulated, are Gnding sivons fever, A pretty one |ing the lingerie gowns, They are more ling Roman, nothing human ts to be "Mr, Tabor,” Dr, Paulus bewan, "I to ot and with her Mr. Crosby, ‘Tha. is @ beautiful and In- may be from velvet rfbbon|substantial than the crochet buttons |thought foreign, It looks to be trickery, have thought better not to disturb’ our words @ suggestion came to me, telligent young lady.” He looked ad: abeut four inches wide, The two long | witch have been in general use in the Patient by an interview just now, since Reid snorted, ruptly from me to the midnight sky, ‘and yet that le not sure, but there may eclemtifie ieterest there, Carteiniz sq she te asienp ater ao long & waket@- (De. Paulus emiied very gravely. "That (To Be Continued, { sie | ; , onda should be rounded at the boom geek, ~ i Ce a WH