The evening world. Newspaper, April 11, 1912, Page 19

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CHAPTER XIill. Planning Their First Interview 6¢ HAT are you writing?” asked W Mr. Gordon curiously, as, drawing ® pad toward me, I wrote several lines. Even the litle we had seen of Cupid drought us closer together and de- stroyed much of the formality which would otherwise have spoiled our early acquaintance. afternoon, and he had dropped in for a cup of tea and @ rief chat en his way home trom the ont ‘am wring the hendiines for our rat Interview with Cupid.” ey ‘emiling, J showed btm what hed n. ‘With Cupid. Aeroplane C opvrapnense! patna Barth an ym A Correspondence Course Opened and Personal Advice on All Matters Relative to the Heart Reported ‘With Our Colleague's Usual Accuracy and Close Ad- herence to the Truth. erne aimeulty, however,” I comtinued, ‘seri de that all editors are 60 hegre ‘eynical and jeeringly eceptical of sent! The Interviews With Cupid By Barbara Biair. Asthor of “The Journal of a Negiected Baildog.”” able to unearth from his dusty old ledg- ers, What stories they must contain! The love affairs of the world!” sprang for the window. don, arm and dragged him off the ill. next he was staring blankly at his empty hand. Jeered Cupid from the room. peering at us over a brass bow! of vio- lets. Evenin World Daily “ait Magazine, Thursd Copyright, 1912, The ime subisnung Co, (The New York World.) ( ) OH PoP 1 JUST FounD A cow! COMB AN’ SHOW me How YA MiLtt IT Wikk YOu? ay. a a a pe Ann a April. 11 THERE YA ARE PoP! Se Se se + “Think of the love affairs we may be “I've got all of YOURS ell cight,” Jeered @ voice, Fired with the same resolve, we doth “I'll get you now," ghouted Mr. Gor- ‘On the window aill, lightly perched on @ flower box of jonquils, daffodils and hyacinths, between the white curtains swaying in the afternoon breeze, golden wings spread and his saucy head tossed high, stood It was late in the | Cupid. his mocking, teasing Ralph Gordon seized one slender pink The “Thought you had me, didn’t you?” er side of the We turned to see his mocking face “That's & mistake a good many of you mortals make. I am sometimes cap- tured by force, but you never can hold me 'e0."" At this moment the alip of paper on which Z had written the headlines for our Girst interview blew off the table. A @portive little breese whised it around the room, and, before we could ressue it, whisked tt out of the window. “Ten't that @ shame?” the window. ‘Womebody € e € the purpose fug merchant me hoy! finda herself att acted bi Yhionles,” SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. A comany of crooks meet jen. The gang comslste ot entre june Ts iano racted 10 Jones, fave with her.” tvann ‘Arabs o rug and,t0 Rill the thiet. Jones," The conspirat inst Tyan knows (hig. sort nng_ knows wrath from himeelf amc ‘meets Ryaane in covert love to her, Bhe dom beyond hi “No, you had better i food man, Fortune, as CHAPTER IX. (Continued.) The Bitter Fruit. E stopped and looked full into “Do you really wish her e¢; to know?" Died and drunk and time, Peretv Ryaane, Ss ha {gnorent Ryanne has stolen f ‘knot ‘Had 1 better?” with a wis- Pve altpped here and the: Why, in my youth I wa LD M BLOT OS 655, &: Next, he reviewed with chagrin irritation the folly of his ultimatum the preceding night. He had had set semblance of Cairo, with Bert, nt Py wo cord shar “d the ilotrend who at once fall savage desire to stir up discord. wag tht. Fortune was above them ail, i Fon feeling, in instinct, in loyalty. Waet as “the Holy 7 are in Srmt of him 40 recover own? Hiarm her! Hi lopped off his right hand first. Well, he had ut little thne, and Par clval Algernon called for ection, ‘The young fool was smitten Mae tune, Any one could see that, shouldered his pathway to the his eyes seeing but not fects, three brown men glided im tween him and the carriage-step. CHAPTER X. Mohammed Laughs. er ye ot, I'm not » criterions go. I've gam- squandered my interviews | I cried. er was Percival. | And Ryann ee | aay Regine CEs oaal ‘We saw the slip dlown over the pave rpoltboae dig hadi seel sarontary, tard pS ered te wil pci htney must think of thelr read-/ment. It hesitated e moment end then Niwas: twe/ fore ‘itronte wattzed gracefully across the street in in the road, F It's what they call a rtune, and many of us erm you know. take the wrong one. It’ a Well Weill . la andafiesh-|the arme of a gentle Mttle dreex one, It's easier going. ait! Sere mae ew ctoer. A ean wo om e them ait |luxurious young idler was just saunter- Fine excuse, eh? Some persona would | “” yo, fendi,” revered effe with a smile that anewered ing down the steps of the opposite house. The slip plrouetted airlly in front of him in an ‘4f-you-only-knew-wha: in its big, bold scrawl caught the eye of the good-looking young idler. He regarded it intently, He pied tt up. fle read it apparently with interest. Then stuff- ing it in his pocket he walked briskly down the street. . “Get it, Cupid! Quick!" I cried. “You can fly down there and have it in @ itty.” tet 1," chuckled Cupid. “Let him keep it and boom Olympia. He will tell all his friends, And pretty soon a lot call me a scoundrel, a blackleg—in way in whioh up to say nothing of the iy some ways, yes, But in the days to manners and customs of the Olym- Hitee and the waike with Cupid re to be reported and iMustrated by Us, Tt was not conceit in his dark ey It was simply the eurencss power which b comiae with ramp of the world's pe at em good work. It is only #0 & qian can do his best work. Recog- niked effort brings with It the power for er things. The suggestion of fall- ure, the suggestion of discouragement and the suggestion of poor work sub- eonsclously weaken @ man’s future ef- fert in proportion as that man be ter ‘The devil must give me these er painful it may be to ‘s ago, only a decad “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What's the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence L. Cullen Vincent's Advice “Winning Him Back.” hed with difficulty. he taken her into his confidence to auch extent, She essayed to speak; the old teri emed fairly » smother he It not what he had told her, but wh: wished to but dared nat ask. 8) like Blue- be ante smoothly, Mohammed apoke Eagtish more fluently. His career of forty-odd had been most colorful. Once & ample By Fohn L, Hobble eet ee iE ui nally weak or strong end the}of them ‘will be coming up every dty vn Copyright, 1012, by The I'rew Publishing Co, (The New York World), OME of you rd'a wife, only she had not the Beeiion pe the period of the handi-|for afternoon tea. . ernie) . me oe MEN who feel the necessity LUMPING After the Crowd means and Ducking the Consequences—just Ac- ask me @ al courage to open the door of the f weak will it | trouble of so many tr: . of drawing attention avi seana and Duck auestion|sgrisly closet, Her mother, her uncle. gepped strugsie. 7° ong continued ef- [next summer perhaps Olympla will be " jon away Getting Hidden in the Herd! — |cept ‘em! which women have |what of them? Ah, what of. them from their faces are wear {2 ekmost wu the most popular summer resort in the gh 4 The crooked street vanishéd; the roar fort, and oven the ay tailor univers ing diamonds on their heels, Resolution with-| Looking Back, thid time Nest Year, eeeeeemane Shane | Mindled away; she wax alone—ail, all ender it sometimes (To Be Continued.) —_— out Resistance |8) yown be Glad to Reflect that you dreds of years, and | ‘!0r®. graduated to the envied position of “T suppose I ought mot to have told like Speed without —-—] The Suffragettes breaking of win- Direction! Loat neither your Head nor your which 1 rather | you," he said, troubled at the misery he| Oman or Kulde. He tired of thie, dows sceme almost as foolish ! Nerve! famy they Will | saw gathered in her eyes and vaguely 4 Colonists wasting good fi vy WY si We've heard a . Kone 408 -Aaking Leek ese ae written it there. |" sound himself stranded 1m CoMstaae y throw. fter they xet| “Your mother and uncle have been very 7 ing it into the Bost Lot of Wealthy) After we Repeat a Lie for the Third . ‘y i dia They know less of me than | “nople. p oc ontee. arter, Persona Acknow!-|Time we Beileve {t—and then we Strive ie yore been tc them a kind of| He drifted, became @ stevedore, @| I N E D I C I N E The roundadout way of telling 1 edge that Peaco|ty Kmbellish it into Work of Art! | ounsatials t en them when Atay tind tbs M ay of telling lies of Mind 1s Beyond rr something Mike I Hasik, M. D. largely reprasitie ier the delays all Pric Beating Around the Bush is a Poor um this; “A With “forced “cheerfulness he again fire, relented upon ie appsiagman , our courts. ver} jtnes: wed Ly y ! used to act aa if he cared her hand and snuggled it under his nger By J. A. Rasi le - Hf rie a ; 8 should When the Head Way to Ward Of the Wallop men Un ' e 1 af Jd oy giving 4t a friendly, reassuring |Com#ulate, After a time he became Founder of the Woman’e Hospital. permitted to say: “On the advice ts working Smoot — . Now he stays away, James Marion Sime, Copreght, 1912, ty The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York World), Ham Woman's Hospital of the State) his father wanted him to take up law he considered prosperous, and lke fanatic pagans of his proposed reconstruct hie religious life oy a srimage to Holy Mecca, After you've Owned Up, it's Over and | ae not angry. Hut I love him, Done With—but they're Gray Days can Twin him back? while you're Walting to be Caught! | My dear, you CAN'T, of counsel I decline to tell the truth.” Then the jury could acquit the de- fendont without further lose of time, I'll not speak to vou of love, child, air of your head to me than all Midas ly we don’¢ Take Anything much to Heart! Perhi Seems crue! to you, but the I've thought of you I'v. ‘a monu-|and his mother ministry; out the boy a ‘The Trouble about that Biding-Your- realize it the ®etter, | “M i T ot Mow 501% Ligaen ne man|chose medicine, much to the disap- Time Thing is that the Show is Liable| ‘The Trouble about Giving Advice | [i'l f ee en ‘at k to the ment to the grea! of a 4 restaurant is to be estadlished in “Hot Off the Bat" 1s that we can't Re- Q ‘who beiped to gir/ evel 6nd slegust of Me Sather, Who to be Over by the ‘Time you Get There! gentleman" {n literature, Hi ‘emulo leviate human mis igint said that “there is no science in it,| New York where assorted nourish- vise our Remarke for the Record! Gert fe WE ant ma ceeds The moving there ls no honor to be achiqved in it,| mente will be served im plac: t's the Firet Drink that Fattens =, If a terrible maftering place of en-| It's the Fire ri “ he wants to go and you try to call of his own shrewdness, pushed "a coon nis |2 reputation to be made, tertainments. the Bottling Average! No Use Telling your Just-Over-It) nim pack he will only despise or pity by ward tll he became in Buddy what to do until you've Staked & Shampoo and a Young Sims studied medicine in fact, the Pasha's right-hand Charleston, 8. C., completing his course Bagdad. you. wet. Your best plan 1s simply—to success through & field of work that “5,000 Mexicans in riot.” We didn't him to @ Shave, Shine! | Yesterday we were Set Back another im honor! Two Bucks by Chipping In toward the oak Wade Ps : ona au parte of |® suppose there were that many col-|Decent Interment of an Old Friend who | eng B.C" writes am fifteen and they walked a. This to practise medicine. | soge students in all Meaico could “Take a Drink when he Felt Like| If you're Hunting for Mitigating Cir-| very much in love with a young man He exerted him- tae ory James | There he established a email priv: : It, or Let It Alone,” sald he! | cumstances for your own Delinquencies! I have written hin many letters, but | self to amu: nd fairly succeeded, pia hospital, and at bis own expense gave vee fap just Cut Out Searching for Damning| he does ngt answer them, What shail | 1%) prenage of imlefortune, sieen th bet Marion Gims | surgical treatment to the needy, treat-| Conditions are no worse than they| qnero'n @ Mid-Path between Defying Evidence against the Other Fellow! — | I do?" "Aad Ah last, ‘when he toon ar simple Rea ing some of the patients for years. It| were fifty years ago, unless, Bf oowres | Stop thinking about bin. You are too carriage and bade her goodby elt Kindhearted ory o| Was in this hospital that he elaborated | 44 ciassity defeated candid ) | TET | young to be In love with anyhody, . a half-formed {dea began to] Without consulting his master im erner, W a method of cure of surgical diseascs | @¢ classify de candidates as at age ba re in her brain atantinople, It is all in the business 6¢ through much suf-) oo up to his day were regarded by | Conditions, r "L. G." writes: “I have been paying | without betraying Ryanne. a day. fering and want OD| 1)’ T eaical profession the world over attention to @ young lady for six months s carriage waa at the other| Next to his celebrated pearls ané ress nie part, finally | the medica! prot e 1 ygrap Ss. cia nan coneiagad that © lave hare N aes ‘rode muliene| diamonds, the Pasha held as his mest ‘wom success and world-wide fame He peyton A BIO Remevens seth: “The parents’ will should be law,” I justified in telling her cious treasure the Holy 7 follawed out snd perfected ens Cordinsly he same to live in’ the Oity | BY &Ma, te suppose, 18 meant that ét By R. Linthicam. Migdag ; turn heed rested bat Instourely hae GLEE branch of guraery, 1 or ito thou. Of Now York, Flare he was instrumen. | (# something people strive fo disobey, "| The First K Team neck. "That his star wae ott ia a8 | brought heat pine: “ ’ 1, J." writes; # it proper for a juded any , ” 4 to fort), gands of sufferers. . Copyright, 112, ty The Frese Publishing Co, (The New York Worl Be gh 04 eer eae ene ‘weeks. “At one of the anniversaries of the ates em Yorks where! 4 man remarks that there is some: cast ashore cn 6, ‘If only I had a clubl’ thought the (Si 1° let ® young man Kise her, if} Mie, | oie eifloncy of cure revolution In Constant the De Adama, | B# NeW world-famed metheds wero car er) : aig she knows he is very nice? They arc SO te Oe cae parte ae ‘Woman's Hospital the Rev, Dr, Aas ir |Fied out with phenomenal success, In thing in life besides money. He has [mam but hia only clubs, the Manhat-| oe engaged.’ vs ones rested upon promise of Gear , Tahoe teoupener tae in @ speech at the celebration, addition to bis surgical work he was| either juet become a father or been ve @ look around,” | ten and Ld Union League, were thous!” . gist iy eupposed to keep her kisses fa ie z per! inventor of an instrument which will] jilted by a girl. Nothing else could Be wi: TE may aria ‘lle! | eenae BF filles Away eae ye{for the man whom she loves well ‘While he pulled those wires famitiar te “ swhen I go through the halls an4/ forever bear his name, and without] equge such a radical atatement. , bere i Lene eee rere @ len teers: oP It cough ta. mA: ‘the mother and aca}. | the politician, Mohammed set out Dra the numbers of sick women WhO] wnich it would be impossible to recog- And sure enough he did, for he came] the Hon wore tamer’ he thought In —— lawag of an le had to recover the stolen rug. He was pre jfave been restored to health by the! nize and treat many diseases. to a place where parallel! rows of palm | despair, when-—- “Dam In love with al kept the child iv ignorance all’ these | pared to proceed to any length te marvellous skill of your surgeon, after] Later Dr. Sime visited many Euro-| A politician complaing that direct |:rees formed « beautiful aisle. _| Bingo! | That she saw darkly, as} lt, even to the homie fe ss years of suffering and sorrow, T feel| pean countries, demonstrating to the| primarics will be more cxpensive| They ‘were date palms, but although He was saved ae it poner] geet aly pbc Terg erro that he ought to be the happlest’ gurgeons there hs own discoveries and| than the old method. Certainly, the| 8°, Was hungry he did not caye « fig for) A Hume cocoa) So HO 500 OF 1b tia t he spectly, for none would believe that man in the world.’ A fine tribute t0) methods, He lived in Paris for several | 1007 laaanses Mi; thie, dates. hol neta, em Striking the Non on the} guch unions seldom turn out well, | Of Te worl Dect ae Hod | Surnouse wae well lined with i ‘a great man! years, where he was a successful pi votere are "5 +) + Bub there are) While walking down the aise on * ne! "eo" or on tne at" “whichever ae pert abel | mbat would become 6¢ ben | Sarpenes! ' 4 ~ James Marlon Sims was born in| {titioner, and @nally returned to New| 80 many of them iste, still thinking about “ile,” he espied | form of the vernaoy as you prefer—| 11 wr ne 1 want, of Knee | At that inatant a grest longing rolled sald Ryanne, whirling Me Gouth Caroling in 1913 As a boy he| York, where he died in 18. For his @ lon lyin’ on @ rock trying to get | “busting” both cocoanuts, ,. | quainted with's carta Mtoe thas ew {aver him to cut loose from all thee al sas sent to boarding school, where he) sreat and useful services to science! «anthracite Mayors urge Taft to| "ne on ‘him. Soon after the man Was enabled t>{no one who can introduce me, How] (yi) webs, to begin anew. somewhere, oe to be ‘The tion roared, the man roared and | desert the desert isle, and now almost) shall 1 go about it?’ and mankind he was decorated by the Ll ft somewhere were but ae Baill Sinheee, TIMES Of a Ps fovernmente of France, Germany, itaiy, |4ct” These must be the Mayors WhO! ine ocean roared: All that was lacking,| any day can be found at the club lyln'| The only way ts to persevere In your | wilderne clearing in @ forest, ong the Soninee two years. Upon bis return |@paia.and Portugal don’ ‘prone, was o tiger, _ ‘ben @ couch dyin’ about the tom Facarch for @ mutual acquaintance, This it Mashed and was gone =i y

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