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than it do fo i the slightest idea how to economize on , time—how to do things in the shortest, Intimate Chats With _ Women Gopeetest, 1012, by The Press Fi eo New York Time Savers. OMEN as a rule are skilled in @quandering time. Most hus- bands 11 testify that if there's one thing more than another in which their wives excel it's ng more time to do nothing” than any one they've ever met! And the pinch ts that it's true, A woman never looks for a short cut to anything, She al- ways goes the longest way ‘round, And while that’s all well enough for Lover's Lane, it doesn't apply to dally Ufe. The ave: housekeeper whose maid » goes out on Thursday or Sunday wouldn't havo guests that night for anything. It's too much trouble and tt takes too much time! ‘Why does it take her so much longer the maid? Because she expert? No. ‘Quickest way. eo e 6 2. ee F you start to prepare a meal you must use a number of pans, dishes and cooking utensils. As you finish With each one of these it should be washed and put away. “I haven't time to do that when I'm Cooking,” you'll say. Oh, yes, you have time! Just try it @n@ see. You'll be surprised to find how ickly everything moves when you » Rave only one or two to wash. A stack of unwashed things is discouraging, and it fe really that thought which causes kitchen, + emoothly, without ¢: z at arrangements. u start out to clean or dust, ret Jump from one room to another, giving a touch here, go many women to have a horror of the Everything that ts eat ement, has a ayatem to back !t up; and there should de system in the most trifling house- @ Miss Lizzie, | UP AND YOU'RE Good GIRL — OW, | DONT NEED The MONEY , MR. CONN — I'M JUST WORKING HERE 7 HEEP MY mind OCCUPIED $0) WONT WORRY ASOT My ESTATES — *Gomne To RAIS YOUR WAGES To BUSINESS 1S nak Evening World Daily Magazine. ILEAP YEAR LIZZIE. 3 (Ain't She Bizzy?) 38 (vs VE NO IDEA WHAT A % %6,000,000. AHO A LT OF OLD GOLD mines And RANCHES TRINGS ARE TO A PooR Litre Monday. January 8, ) && By Dwig Pret Publishing Co, "ihe New York World), WHY, MR. CONN mending—I have enough to keep me go- Ing for a week when I once get started,” Cte 8 ee Oe Cay buttons sewed on securely. Why the factories economize on thread in sewing on buttons remains @ dark se- cret; but the fact is that the buttons on @ ready-made waist aro nearly al- ways just about to come off. ‘ow, when you get that watst sit down and sew on those buttons, Sew them on with the idea that that mate- rial and those buttons are going to per- {sh together—that they will never be separated! Don't pull the thread through once jor twice, twist it around the shank a couple of times and say: *“There—that's good enous! It isn’t good enough. %.0se buttons |are going to come off in a day or two sure as fate. So when you have the dle and thread in your hand WHY don't you make @ good job of it on the ot? Tt will e@ you time and exas- peration In the future, Have patent buttons put on your shoes when you buy them! They don’t come off like the sewed-on kind. But do it | WHEN YOU BUY THEM—don't wait @t one room until It ta finished, then’ g0 | until two or three buttons have been to the next. You'll skve time. The to week waiting for a “favo: You'll get to hate thi ing bag! How many times ha’ friends say: me thing holds in the matter of mending. Mend your clothes when they come from the wash and put them away. Don't pile them up from week ble day.” ht of your sew- you heard your off a couple of weeks and your feet look untidy. All these things and many more that you—but trifles are SO Important! The great big perfect organization ts found- ed upon perfect trife: Try to be a time saver, and, as you grow proficient, you'll find that you have also become more thorough—and “Oh, I wouldn't dare look at my more amiable! ee al And How They Receivea Their Names. E New York Streets, NO. 4.—WALL STREET. Avent Amsterdam—hi A fn 1653 that the hated New landers were about to swoop down from Connecticut and try to seize Manhattan Island, | Instantly old Stuyvesant levied a forced loan of 6,000 gullders on the good ¥ED man—Petrus Stu, vesant, Dutch Governor of New rd a wild rumor the meadows to northward, There were | |two parapets, also, at intervals in the | | wall, on wht. te uselessness, | dam's northe was known, fro lw ost thoroughfare and its position, as “the 1 street." When the wail was torn of the money in bulding up @ HY) eat the Colonial Governor, Dongan, ‘stockade of wooden pane ., folk of New Amsterdam, He used most Is and stake: annexed for himself about forty feet of about 3,000 feet long and stretching clear) ity width to add to a big tract of prop- a¢ross the northern part of the Clty /erty on the north elde of the wall that trom the East River to the North Rt $ in the harbor was relied on to i i 4 reasonably safe, ‘~pne New Englanders made the threat- ened raid, But the wooden wall handy as a protection aga to paste? Amsterdam and the little Dutch ‘There was no other ‘land approach’ , 1 off an attack by water, Thus the was net Indian he had secretly bought in, ‘This was the first Wall street deal. A City Hall costing $2,000 was then street. This building Included a debtors’ prison, And in front of {t stood the pil- lory, stocks and whipping post. At the foot of Wall street in 1709 a slave market was started for pur- Wild beasts, too, could be kept out Of | chase or hire of “all negroes and In- + the efty, streets by it, There were sev- BEE eral gates, and through these the cattle were driven cach morning to pasture in (Next: BROAD STREET.) dian slaves \ithin the etty, civic ordinance read. as the ; i | The Chaperon. aperon question for a young girl to go about with a}, VERY now and then some “Is it proper for ] youns man unaccompanied by sonie elder person?” \ srloa the answer to that !# that {t all depends is living. » question could hardly be raised, In Europe . ft is understood that an unmarried girl should practically oi; never be alone with an unmarried man | \ Tn moi ‘ified forms this rule is belng adopted | by an ine: number of American families | ; Fa On the other 1, In many sections of the country, ¥ particularly in the rural districts, the fdea of a chaperon Belty Vincenk Would be scouted. The only safe rule is to follow tho geneval custom of the fyou live. Unanswered Letters ; “ Te may be that she is correspondent. Hut L sould not again until I heard fro ‘%, J.” writes leathers, worn with not paten ry shoes, ¥¢ sult at @ dan’ writes |. but my paying attent, : Wheat shal i lo Betty Vincent’s| Advice to Lovers 1 to ask a yo! os of ig man to take nent if he asking me to marry happily on a le or writes: "A y fond has t me, What shall I do to Go to her and tell her you are sorry f think you are old enough to choose for your part in the quarrel, pour own friends, "M6." wri | i ! Toddles & (-x HEN you buy a walst ready) W made you will rarely find the CO HO You CANT PLAY THIS 1$_ONLY FOR THE BIG GUYS I might mention may appear trifling to | ARE YOU SHOVIN' me? Nites cannon stood. The pal- | {sade was never called upon to with-| stand an attack, and tn time {t rotted | The street that ran east and west just | inatle the stockade was New Amster: | down in 169 the street became so wide built near the western end of Wali! Rew Yort Wo tte. ) Be By P. L. Crosby TO DETMY BUZZER WLUHIT CHER! (Lt HiT cHeR! i HitMe! ¢ ‘Le HIT CHER AW CHEE!LOOK AT HIM BACKIN' UP= SOAK Him, PETE! SMASH HIM, M. Pera! Aw! Yer GOT A GANG - Itt — EG CHER SOME ousez 70 WHEN a ge ie. ME You Nt | you was goin’ to és) (70; FElY l0Kg Bechteak one writes to ask me about | i /0lb Weioht i} among whom | aying her | ends on how well and how | ne | I the girl has known the a | She Is Olaer. CR writes: "To am thirtyesix ane young man of thirty-one has of the bite was iving 40 Sind out how oid © am before | 1. What shall | The average of 1,000 persons showed truth, Your marriage | @ graduated are wh! ried for two ye “Ww. OC." writes to hold his overcoat when ho ts going out after calling on | Too Long Engagemerts, have been en- writes: “Is it right for me to gaged to a young man for elgit years, oi; de ut proper fos & pay ettentions to a young lady with the but'be never will eet @ date for our ™ is Bot done in good society, otsors. n devel- istry LPOUND bile requires a 1 pounds for the inoiar teeth, and ps was 46 these 1 pair of ly spread ach arm tm see with a ruther done. is the levers are forced toward each other, trave! shows the Am T not justified in break- engagement?" , I think you are ould ask you to Walt t young man Ta it proper for me ‘or a young man ‘toward the blacksnilth ah oes ‘wa, the Jaw mus- fered by various f ninety-pound ff he tm sorry for hi lease for you. | MERELY A SLIGHT ATrau OF HEART Faiwre = Hee come To ~ SOME DAY = MACE. $2. please. (Coprright, 1011, by the Outing Publishing ‘Company,) jeviatt ts for Ferguson's fat publicly in me pistol, « ir Al re een thon Hergven fe led to ogee seria te of sate some hand the Jot _Leviatt Ye stot tpenly acetal we to Rarieet' hat further: “inca A ah sary 7 Rishtond ore gl Ae Boek Tattord, her cea a bat ‘ermson v ie erg ra nie ta wi nispecting, soe ridin ‘unatisp become Madtord ts & shot from the darkness belind bi lary that Ferguson + him, Fergus cal Me bo contrnta en with rif a Ferguson, returns ta the ranch am, promigee He couses jooting her nd orders him ay within jer" tho next tweens forte hore Ae the ent af time’ Ferguson ‘roluros to Stafford's office, CHAPTER XXII. (Continved,) Keeping a Promise. URING the months that Fer- worked at the Two guson hi Ex Stafford had not many times the manager had seen him, had he been able to guess anything of the stray-man’s emotions by looking at his face. ow, however, there had come @ change, In the set, tightly drawn lips were the tell-tale algns of an unutters able resolve, In the nar wed, steady eyes Was a Might that chilled Stafford) Mk summer's day Was someth| Ker Into silenc Ho came into the room, standing near the door, his set ips moving a very itth In the man’s whole body that shocked the mani- heard anything from Leviatt urned Stafford, hes! e, talkin’ to me, feel eorry for himsedt. The Two- The Best Couboy Story in Ten Years By Charles Alden Seltzer | ka Ns}attempt the scheme again. Since h seon him as he looked at this moment, Never, during the Hedgeville Editor By John L. Hobble ECK Henderson says every beddy H aught to lave some excuse for livin’ if tt Is only to carn money for keepin’ tp his Insurance, ral for the actor who ts hin- for applause to chew scenery, well attempt to distinguish colors A in the darkness as to discover the secret of the actor's art. | ea Ay LL {# not darkness tn this word; there are a few blondes left. ~ | iia da Got @ burnt pocketbook for Christmas, HE law pronibits all kinds of mis- representations except those necea- sary in procuring a wife, KP REYNOLDS says that if the scarcity of a thing increases it value a thought from David Craum ought to be worth @ fortune, N pantoning erlminals some of the Governors seem to think that a man has reformed as soon he begins to Gun Man But it had reached its highest point when Mary Radford spurned his to he had realized that just 90 the stray-man lived and re- mained at the Two Diamond there would be no peace or security for him there. = Yet he had no thought of settling be differences with Ferguson as m: man. Twice had he been gtven tart ling proof of the stray-man’s qui with the slx-shooter, and each time his own slowness had been crushingly im- pressed on hia mind. He was not fool enough to think that he could beat the stray-man at that game, But there were other wa Rope Jones had d'scovered that—when it had been too late to profit. Rope had ridden Into a carefully lald trap and, in spite of his reputation for quickness in drew- ing hia weapon, had found that the old game of getting a man between two Gres had proved eMcactous, And now Leviatt and Tucson were to interview with Stafford Leviatt had Wr come convinced that the time for action come. | Ferguson had left word with the man- ager that he was to show the latter th> rustler, and by that token Leviatt knew that the stray-man had gathered evi- = dence against him and wae prepared to show him to the manager in hie tru Maht. He, @ turn, hed left a message with the manager for Ferguson, “We'll be ready for him,” he had said. He did not know whether Fergugon had received this messat Tt had been a subtle thought; the words had been | merely involuntary, By “We' the man | ager had thought that he had meant the entire outfit was to be held ready te appreh the rustler, Levitt haa meant oniy himself and Tucson. And they were ready, Down tn the blacksmith shop, while Ferguson fad Ndten tn and stepped into the manager's oMfve, had Leviatt and Tucson made a cold breeze tn the heat of a| thelr plan. When they had joined the group in front of the bunkhouse and ~ had placed themselves tn pos't’ons where thirty or forty feet of space yawned Be- tween them they had been making the first preparatory movement. The mext would come when Ferguson appeared, to carry out his intention of showing Stafford the rustler, 'o none of the men of the outfht Aid viatt or Tucson reveal anything of ~ Li Aln't been «one more'n half an hour.|the nervousness that affected them. I reckon he's somewhere around now.’ You talkin’ to him, you sa: Bula the stray-man slowly. He amiled mirth. lessly. reckon you told him about them minsin’ calves? sure did!" returned Stafford wit! much vehemence. He laughed harshiy “I told him more,” he sald. “I told him how me the man who'd rustled them.” Ferguson's lps wreath Into a acim smile. "So you told him?" he sa Was expectin’ you'd do that If he got In here. That was somethin’ which [ w antin’ him to know, I don't want It be sald that I didn’t give him a chance." Stafford rose from his chair, taking a step toward the stray-man. “Why, what?’—~ he began, But a look at the stray-man's face allenced him. “T've come over here to-day to show you that ruatier I told you about yes terday. I'm goln’ to look for him now If he ain't sloped £ reckon you'll see him pretty soon.” Leviatt stepped down from the door of the manager's office and strode slow- ly toward the bunkhouse. On tne way he passed several of the men, but he; Pald no attention to them, his face| wearing an evil expression, his eyes glittering venomously, When he reached the bunkhouse he passed seve! f the: & word, golng dire a the room where sat Tucson and con versing earnestly with his frie Utue later both he and Tucson ros: passed out of the bunk After @ Ittle they a Joining the gro house. It was while Levtatt and Tuc- son were tn the black#ntth shop Ferguson had come tn, When came out again the stra 1 into the manager's offic: Bince the day whon in the manager's office Ferguson had walked across tie nk » return to Leviatt the leather tobacco pouch that the later had efore ine, That's why 1 stopped In| ured, again} outside the bunk-| ‘Trev listened to the rot laughed when the ethers laughed, they dropped an occasional word of enoour- agement. Thoyt even trughed at jokes in which there was no vialble point, But they did not move from their . places, nor did they neglect to keep sharp, alert eye out for the stray-man’ appeurance, And when they saw him come out of the door of the office they neglected tc Joke or laugh, but stood with the thirty or forty feet of space between them, thelr faces paling a ttle, thetr hearts laboring a little harder, When Ferguson stepped out of the door of the office Stafford followed. The stray-man tad sald enough to frouse the mr there w: Pression that he contemplated something more than merely pointing out the thief, If warning of impending tragedy fad ever shone in @ man's eves, Staffor? was certain that {t had shove in the stray-man’s during the brief time thi he had been in the office and when he 4 down from the door. had received no tavil strayeman, but fm, to follow by the threat In the latter's ey. H of cold r ution ¢ ry of imminent tragedy, he stepped down Sl9a, trailing the sSrey eR at Kuson did not hesitate once in hls s toward the bunkhouse, exeept hing glance toward of two or three men who n the shade of the eaves of the building. Pagsing the blacksmith shop he continued toward the bunk- ° « with a steady stride, to the right nor lett, ' the wroup, besides Le- had seen the stray- nd @s he came nearer d ond a sudden silence fel, came to @ point within ten the Broup of men who were ng the wall of the bunk- prrgate’ Ne depression on the nA Stafford had come up rapidly. ve the gully Where theoM@ay-man © now stood near a corner of the 80. Ciscover edetieres rw) Diamond! bunkhouse In an attitude of intense rwoand her calf, Leviatt had known | attention, sirayeman o hin of | lie Was in @ position where he could aed with the r " #eo he siray-man’s fice and he mar. knowledge had not disturbed! Velled at the sudden change that had Mm, He felt secure becauss of his Come into it, The tragedy had gone, and Even the siray-man would} eto be si boss guilty ul in proving # ral f cattle stoaliny Leviatt had be stray-man's ting Mary vad) been the discovery of Ferguson on the T ford porch in Bear Fiat; by the inch @t the bunkhouse, when Rope Jone: ‘Tucson from shooting the an from behind, and by the dis. that tho latter susy 4 nim of pilokey wind the @attla triaves damning evi-| [is eves ened over)! t {ton the stray though the hard lines were etill around Nt uth, the corners tw! wish move tched @ icon m« Ung mockery, much ke which the mana had seen in mths before when In Dry Bote 1 had told Leviatt that he thought he was a "plum man." a (To Be Continued, THE BANOW RIDERS” tthe hor of “The Twoetin in ‘Thursday '» KVENE Won, "One vs the greatest cowbey tr