The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1911, Page 11

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IF THAT'S THA NEW VACUUM CLEANER VEL JUST START JAND CLEAN The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, Monday, July 24. 1911. iClean Sweeps 4% By Steinigans WHAT'S WRONG} IT STOPPED RUNNING! 'M ANKIOUS TO KNOW HOW MUCH OIRT AND DUET THIS CONTAING His Victim’s Voice 3% By Gene Carr I+ MUST oe =P) 1 HAVENT | nie | , SIT uP THERE uary, UNDER Gean Asim AN Git SOME To GET UNOS HER@ WITH A BROOM! j H 4 The Dam Truth ts t n¢ the big irri The Mount Painter fle Love Songs ofa % @ & % BACHELOR GIRL By Helen Rowland Her Rubatyat. N OW summer time, reviving ol@ desires, For those who courted us with ardent ecst, And those who loved us tenderly and dest, Have, one by one, found “something just as good” ‘And joined the Benedicts, like all the reat, And yet—and yet I fall upon my knees And thank my fate and Providence for these, the right to think, and say, And eat, and do, anu wear whate'er I PLEASE! My “woman's right: Od maintenance of ro. England. The hends of all Chinese bat shaved when they are a month old, wspaper pu ation di The “Unplucked Flower” to her den retires, And gazing round in meditative vein, ingle life” admires. @ window and a door, 4 row of booke, an “art rug” on the floor, A ded by night, a “Turkish couch” by day, ‘A Gideon picture—these and nothing more. ‘A photograph or two the epace to fill, 4 Jug of milk upon the window ettl— Ah, you who sang, “Oh, promtee me!” come back! I rather think to-day I'd eay “I witl!” Look to the married ones adout me. Lo! How dlithely to the beaches now they go; , Fling wide freir purees and, with careless hand, Their Ruddies';cash upon weird daudles blow. But we who talked of marriage with disdain, And still upon the famtly tree remain, Alas! to no euch aureate earth are turned, Aa, once passes, men yearn to woo again. The trophies of her Four Uttle wall: | something symbolical, something of far | taciturity maddening. | greater significance than the unexpected | | called every d d Facts From Everywhere lons a year are spent on] Australia !s a wonderful place for the occurrence of rare minerals, and a com- been recently formed to re- cover radium from the earth, | theushe perhane 1 would be better tol Jo Learn if She Loves You. | Two Men. Talks of Another Girl. his clothes, Ho belonged to her world Phe death Guties collected in France ng 19 amounted to $5 i ‘The children of Japan are taught to| estates concerned numbered 379,418, with make use of both hands equally well, | an aggregate net lue of $1,107,904,218, the average value @ share being about Experiments were recently cond at a Flori@a educational institutt Rosewood and mahogany are so plen-| the purpose of determining the freezin: tiful In Mexico that some of t there are timbered w wood, while mahogany 1s us tor the engines, polnt of the futces of the different kin: ranges and similar fruit grown tn ; 1 an cael | the State, the temperature of the frees. | Yourself only 1f I ring the bell, or when the same variety, the range being 19.40/ where Saton was waiting in the hall, of South! degrees to 22.44 degrees Fahrenhett, e8, to ask her. | young men for the past. atx | with @ youvg man, but when he] #nould be beating, that the dreath ne wo Wat ey Ronee, vane feoyenly But just vember this, too: You nave no right to} months, One young man takes me out] calls on me he spends most of the even- | should ce sobbing torouay her Seema have prescribed for her with a smile, 4 ret ‘Y ovens! y, bi wer oone om 1 y He wae a creature to be ! J m ask a girl whether or not s eturns your affoction| cea, Hy, but t it never) ing talking ut another young lady | M4 | Pauline Bnew “halter nen te ded. fah unless you prepared to ask her to become your wife | 40e% Which ong shail I choowe who Is @ friend, of ours. What shall I ralsed her head and told Diss @0, one, She knew very well what was the ,, ‘ LA It Ie unnecessary 0 ther | gaz fighting #!l the while with something matter, She was afraid! Fear had as well, I do not mean that you must necessarily bo In| ving man, es neither one, perhaps, | ¢° ; __| greater and stronger which seamed t0 come upon her like a disease. The position to marry at once before you tell a girl of your! UNE) MAM As Weiner ii ay retain | If the subject of the young man’s! be tearing at her heart strings. memory of that one night racked her| love, but Ido mean that you should care for her enough | tne friendship of both. conversation bores you do not permit] “Lf that is what you came here to | still—the memory of that, and other| to hope to make your wife some day before you ask! K him to call #0 often gay,” she please 0.” things. i e e rk | ile rose at once, She saw the anxious Meanwhile, the servant stood before Her if A Kiss. , OLR y AT |iignt with whicn his eyes been ~ Do ne in your love, Do not beat abit w her | " " c np her in an attitude of respectful at Wi in 9 abou ) 1 DIDN'T WANT MUCH, | filed, fade away. He turned almost tention, Belty Incen& the bu e & girl prove her affection for| “ nOW * man! Youngster—Will you let muvver have| humbly toward the door. | Iw see Mr. Saton,”’ she decided at you be ya are willing to tell of your affection for hér and we are 1 friends, although quartern of butter and a penn’orth hagas Inst. “You can show intm in here, and | Go to her In a manly manner and r all that #ie means to you, we are not in love with each other, He-| og eheme? And she'll wend a ailing (To Be Continued.) remember that until he has gone, no| - cently he went away ona trip and 1/1 Oner eather comes he ——_-—_-______ one else is to be allowed to enter, Come | ars. |* pether or not she returns my) went to the depot with him and kissed | | Has Loved for Two Ye 1 eer Went to the depot with hin art lered | “ghopman—All right, miasle Sous Weeks of O. MEME One mite Renee MAN who signs his } R ei ger See eer ot i aa Sa | Youngater—An’ she wants to know If | ges, Im Fhe Evening World during | ing varying in the different aamples of |>"r,9 man bowed and went back to writes: “I haye been In love with ‘9 the Young Tady and tell her you)" vou certainly should not have kiased | You'll #end the change now, he | anguet. ‘Fhe flotion treat of the fa girl for two years and am anxi-| love her and aek her to become your| ne ours s inless you were en-| Wants to put a penny in the gas ti season. “Her Iadyship is at home, sir,” he| ous to make her my wife, How can 1! wite Greatest Summer Novel of the Year The Moving Finger oe oa " Copyright, 1910 and 1011, by Litue, Brown & ©! announced. “Will you come this way?" | “I came to see you. he answered. 1 & i and me te that if 1 Ny; Mmoney only!’ Pauline exclaimed, with @YNOPAIS OF PRECEDING cHaprens, | A certain drawn expression seemed to! “I am not well,” she sald, hurriedly. [fT was 1 ertce, [corn trembting In her tone. Bertrand Saton har bees betriended in eatiier| Vanish from the young man's face. eto tind im ay into you He|"I am not ft to see people or to talk 1 " ais be-| “Absolutely for her money onty!* days by a cynical Englishman named Kochesier. | followed the servant almost bitthey./at all. I thought bat you must have! friend oe has m n none. |Saton answered. “Now you know how be npeness., Hochwter's war, In @ few seconds he was alone with her some special purpose tn coming, oF 4) when nt me out into the world. | vou cok ia why f Uesite t6. Kill | Doer a. thine T ark: Sout Vall Sen, Cee finds Herself oddly attracted. to Baton: ‘hte “an-| In the firetit drawing room/ The door | should not have recelved you.” The sting of his voice was like a lash. | h | have had only one desire in my | all men have a bod spot in them, T tell nove Hochester, who vaguely dislikes Seta. was closed behind him, | “You wish to hen, about that} Creatures of the gutter he called those | Ife stronger than that, one thing In my] you that I am dependent upon that wo. Rochester's “antiorance increases when Pauline | | n to talk then, | & y Mariel, s Soung widow wiom he himself ade | Patiline was sitting upon the couch. |nieht?” he askel, Who hhad failed, and who dared to live |{ife more Intense than my hatred of/man for every penny T spend, and for Pale ef ciation tak Robe oleae d For ome y net he —and yet, yest {on. L tell you that unti the tin thie man’? + the clothes I wear, When I tell her that dent of oocul ‘and In the proiexe of an & moment they neither of them ‘0! she anawered—"and yet, yes You are both in the wrong,” she}T will not marry Lote C ® int’ rama 'a | SPOKE. She, too, had been auffering,| She eat upright, She looked him in| When T looked « Siatg'af fore ta sg cation ‘violet, the sil then, he thought, recognizing the signs the eves. and ated wh in on D Ip charge of one of these places, ty tn live with of fichealth in her colorless cheeks and| “+t have not dared to ask even mysett ot ie sinew. remcastrates in vain, languid pose. this,” she gald, “but since you are here, with Pauline for Uking atoa's companionship #0 | “No!” ahe sald, “I Go not think that T vince you have forced it upon me, T Sethe eae he Baton Wetmaitiog troueh the| Wioh to shake hands with you, Mr. shail ask you and you will tell. me. bah tan eal { , we aRerven inerview | Saton. I do not understand why you That might I had—what shall I cail it? eee io ye Tee ae a ie rer BONN coma: \ALOT Brits |Tesy Caeaeeineae reanih Petae ate in distance. | have come here. I thought tt best to! . onte Roch. | t¢ other path could never possibly come Into sym- | Lois Champneyes, I will break with tht eaeeeuns | ace you, and hear what you Bave t0| exer, Now sou are here you shall tetl| “YOu adinit, then'"—she pegan, |Dathy. Me Iv wrong when he utters | woman, notwithstanding all I ove ty Lois al | once and for all. je if what I saw was the truth?” T admit nothing,” he answered, “Yet | uch threats. Yet you must remember | her, and { will go away and work cnee a Jo coorince er, tha “Once and for all," he repeated "He Gad, he Anawered pn T will tell you this, There are things |that there ts Lois, He has the reht| more, wherever I can earn enough t” le ake her to ampneyes, she enry Hochester Is a stralght-| will very ilkely throw me into the ring ving, Godef 4 little nar-|atreet. What ts there lett for me to de: row In his view da little violent tn] 1 have tried everything, and failed 3 his pres. «You are a person such} have not strength, T have a owtted as he would not understand, auch as/|taste for the easy ways of life. Yet ery acth ry effort T had ; in” — “Certainly, : in my life which T loathe, and they are w keep me, And I will tell you why. 1 mere 7 a A IE a viehet nad LB Sho drew back, shu dering, there becnuse of Rochester's words ¥ Saton repeated. | | haven't a good qimllty that I know of ceqeok, setpee, ,nenene,, Wire Between us I think that ft ls not n “But wh: he asked, “Ile has never) yer bad though I am," he continued, 2u wish to marry her, don't you?) 1 am ag weifiwh as a;man can be. T ; ; he arked whole party ‘meet at the 'g Duchess whe | exsary. What do you want with met” [Cone you any harm Lat Pha Cie me Age tad arp am a murderer at heart, nactor moe ( ; ; ; he question seemed to madden him. ' deeply int Ba |" “You know," he answered calmly, ‘On the contrary,"* Saton answered, to me w 1 see hi i of the time, but In one thing I ar hess’ teaver, ¢ y ‘me is my enemy, With all my heart | W Hecat hag ancestors | Suddeniy ho throw aside the almost un=! honest, I love you, Pauline Marrabet ine. |. Fhe, Setter, Sag. See, | ane pauees dt Nie as, oe and soul I wish him dead!” behind him, good blood in hts natural restraint with which he had} cast help It. It Is the curse of ms } Boianr "Phen he Fataea, transcendental of follies. Yet {t seemed| “It 1s terrible!” she murmured, the tricks of & man of breeding, the beer nee ta pias Lt Fae Ife, 1f you will, but It Is the Joy of ft y : wpe | carriage and volce of a gentleman, why, | {nto the rod jo rose to his feet. Hel «Rochester knows tt, and he hates me Cade gal ryan Tots a voce senay Posen (tt A Tp la ahi sw ered tig {in. Heaven's name for these things | stood before her couch with elinohed|; know thet Rochester loves you. atu CHAPTER XXVIII. Something had conte hte the rose ee | why peopia wo often evade it. Listen, | should he look ‘upon me an something |hands, with features working gpasmod-|t nace nm. Listen. ‘There ie & mat who * I was only a boy, @ sentimental boy, rawling upon the face of the earth— y je ‘Wore pours i) belleves in me—a# great man. I'll «ot Spoken From the Heart. prieggvocsteg oe ree, AN | nen I firet knew Rochester. Perhaps | something to be spurned aside whenever |1ipa. him. Vi work, Tl study, PU write, 1) Sly) AULINE took the cant from : wee he has posed to you u# my bene. (it should cross his path? T have lived | “LAsten,"* he said, ‘I have no money. factor. Certainly he lent me money, |4nd spoken falsehoods. The greate T tell you now, though, that upon {Men tn the world have lived and spoken | adopted me, and party by nofartoua| Anes, Tl make @ better thing of m: every penny of that money, was a| falsehoods, But Tam not a charlatan, |means, Science a great, It 1s fascinat-| sexe, 1¢ you'll walt. Mind, I don't ask curse. Whatever I did went wrong.| “I have mastered the rudiments of a [dng, It Is the Joy of my Ife, But one! you'to touch me now. If you offered me Howover hard 1 fought, I was worsted. |great and mighty new sctence, 1 am|must live. I have tasted luxury. Tcan-| Sour hands, I wouldn't take them. Tm If I gambled, I lost. If I played for |not a trickster. 1 have in to ve, [not Ive as a workingman, The woman | hot ft. Hut there is juat this one thing safety, something—even though it) as: he has. There ts in tho| who adopted me tm all the time at my | in me. I know myself and T know you. She found his! might be as unexpected as an earth-| world for me, tod elbow, telling ine that T must marry) Cive me the chance to climb! quake--came to wreck my plans, It was | You know what he has t Lois because 0” her money. The ehtid| “‘pime seemed to stand still while ehe “Your visit had some purpose?” she! like piaying cards with tho Devil him-|know with what he has threatened moe? {t= willing, I bmve been wititng.” looked at him. Yes, he had ‘been hon- name which confronted her. asked. self, . He has told me that if he even sces| ‘To marry her for her money—for her | ew! She ripped of all the “I told you, Martin,” she sald, “that I was at home to nobody except tho: upon the special list.” “I know it, your ladyship,” the man answered, "but this gentleman has for a week, and I have refused even to bring his name in. To- day he was so very persistent that I gon “Am I to understand, then?” she satd at last, epeaking in a low tone, and with her face averted from him, “that ward with a fixed and|/you have come to offer ~~ some explan- steadfast attention, as though saw|ation of the events of that night ” in those copperpl letters, elegantly| ‘No!’ he answered, traced upon @ card of superfine quality,| ‘The seconds ticked on, lve the thoughts I want to live. T T have lived partly upon the woman Who | shape my life along the firm strateh: the hand of her servant, and Blanced at !t at first with the {dlest of curlosity—after- whim as he w: creature, who having fatled on the mountains, had been content to craw! through the marsh He seemed in few moments to be stripped bare to her, Ile was not even a gentle- man, ile wore his man: wore y bf ith “ ” o more than the servant who had Pauline was lying upon a couch. She| ay. Y dear young men, there is one sure way to find GIR who signs her letter “A. 1 | GIRL who algns her totter “T. 1.7] 00 mare ttn tate clenched her’ fin: had been unwell for the last two or| saab M ut whether or not girl loves you, and that ts writes: "I have known two writes: “Iam very ood friends| gore, It was ienoble that her heart three weekg Nothing serious—ne | . | waged tom him, le Cuts. wen! wer! wer FT awit LITTLE OL weir! weir! wert! ‘YesTe pont - a25 pennies ARAN OOS ‘i ees eat ae “ < “ 3 “The the H D od m Was the Happy Days! : ‘ Courright, 1011, by The i P.vushing Oo, (The New York World), TaD HA Same Litrue | Musi /BrLioon en! Hala’ [Remember 1 snow useo fe @& AMT You? lust LiKE You, dime — jOAY VOID, ALES Lr Canoe a BIT! LOOK \ PWNS UP IN THe AIR! rate : Rare tormee ABE Dio WENTY “Years Wa' ita! HoT BAD, En 7 wl igigs ey - peri OF ISN Aa Athyn / , THAT ARSNiIP THAD! Nias iy up On OLD MA = pisircatey § 4 U Aint. seem You since 86 oH sta IRemnemben How | used 1 Mave out oF Ate Bivins Beak fet COLLAR BONE. —IEGY) Rememeen Tre Fun we v To GET You vr in THe Ar UMBRELLA 8 lanp. Then Made IWOECO ALF —— VHave olimret 2 Tern Was Aim, BACK IM THE OLD an ELEC TAG FAR Ae car HEM WAS Th —e 2 sie / tou G - lows, wasrr Ther Owes 2 HA‘ Hat HA QA 8 ft Orne i LASHat HAPPY__DAYS! “ espe bak on BOvES — er lM Fe 3.) WAT Ano Y | Ar f slag & Jou OF } ao hint iT Hor! \ 9 4 ees “ne WY OH ALF. j | J) Si, come Vn r eee see if j » irs me & ' 216 800r,{ “ } PPT | ou cars t pawime (ue Tne = lew ‘vel \\ ; : Vt any ‘ou BALLooH Es he i , pei Lue \ FARMER Ride p 00? \OmG— — j Ip vinERe.

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