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cermceumeerinart carerarerrer cree r i venihg World D Fri “<*S’Matter, azi ne, day. M ay 3. 1912 bee eng ag te gh FT > $ wh anaes aily Ma TM captain AMUNDSING AN’ 1 Just DiscoveveD “tH @ SouTH Po. = S MATTER PoP i Reflections of a Bachelor Girl Them Was the Happy Days % xr) &{ By Dwis || Pars eo THE PE o R q WYLON! Jima! Rememer LETS Wwe ONE NOW, , FROM BA GD AD i By Helen Rowlan Hom we use Te WME Swamy, Just FOR OLD Tes Sma! : Pp gee fhe ten Hoi DM: 4 the enadl to: bear sant other people's ieathaakie cnaatiaty, ‘ . ROL ha G In these days of deauty specialists, 4 costes a man almost as much to keep his wife in repair as to keep ; NOPat! his automobile in repair. SA) 4 nee ee eat vecliyery sinner te only a, saint turned im the wrong direction; and the Diaokest sinner is the one who, might have been the whitest eatnt if he had ‘*merried the right woman at the psychological moment, vows A man is never so doudtful about whether or not a girl will accept him io he. ia-about whether or not he will give her the chance. par any _ “an innocent, trusting yeung man cannot be teo careful about whom he “4 “wdrrics in these days of bridge whist, new thought, suffrage and vegetart ,Qnsam, In, Ria dlind simplicity he may wake up to find himself tied to a «@eoman with a HOBBY, who will break hie heart with her wild weys and oy i eruel neglect. ’ A is z ! i | i g i * H| if No matter how many perfections a man gets in one wife he always im-| 1 PLLow Ggines there ie something else he might have gotten if he had kept on e2- ; fesolutigns, however, aF BR rf f ovperimenting a little longer. ‘ ; CHAPTER XIX. ty, gy eka pip tdgercos eee / Fortune Decides, hed had Mthorto? What should she % Wheh a man clings to a woman for more than ten years you may be ORGE and Fortune Go? Ghe closed her eyes. She would Teasonably sure that it ten't a grand passion, but o grand menu which has ‘oeateg at dreakthet. ware Seeiie, her oe brain Re adeut * @ncNoréd him, - early morning. At ten week eat bee ‘ ‘ i ae to depart for ‘There 49 nothing. convincing stout thts “epring weather;” but then, 1 < f Tae th Alecia eee eee PB certain there's nothing real or convincing about anything any more, from. iove : B about make it, and any delay meant tmaginadie, at numaling to diemonde,-er ‘heses to Dutkwheat cakes: Week or ten days longer Fe itr ne ay Tabloid Tales jiebe BT i Se mae was act to be One “*" OF OLD NEW YORK nid. Soe sted th eaten and lee (fi or o valise or @ steamer-roll!” ““Withuut even @ comb or @ hat brush!" “It'e great fun,” George broke bis * ad Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), e X1.~Aaron Burr Claims a Whip. | ciated y back in 1783 when he 66, IVE me that whip! I owa/| took for his bride another widow, * ‘Theodosia Prevost, relict of @ British H t A d d T that, anyway!’ According to » story which | “Meer in New Jersey. ow to en fo ola, st was with euch words as|., ¥°F the! wedding eccaston of almost Sete that Auron mary marnsdgne dar) SHE Tate age Jamal hie, stood Years to Your Life ish of hia romance with Mme. Jumel—/ the bride convinced tor the step she @ romance which, having had its first] was taking. But there were no gues! Ey §. A. Hosihk, M. D, fires many years earlier, was renewed/ Burr and his new i? [ 1 Hh it i. i E Li if pannaneormnnnnnanannannonnnnnnnpannennnnnnnnnnemnnnnencennccnnnels “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What's the Use of Being Elae? By Clarence L. Cullen, & I i i \her to bother him mbout such trifies, much she needed them. She would '@ in the clothes she wore, and trust that the ehip’s stewardess ‘vaiiiy in tho old age of ite principals, | riage supper Copreight, 1012, ty The Pubtishing Wena, |might hele der out in the absolute with © resultant marriage which en-|old family cat was ordered from the Covreight, 1012, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World), 6 Delle Abela” te tis maeal SWAG ie tons var Want to Apotogize "Sremellee Gining-room where eparkled lights and 4.—EXERCISE. during the worsing year and then de- when you're Right, “Full @peed |for Things you Don't Remember Here the ¥ wine for two, XBRCISE ts use. It is the use VOr® thelr eutire vacations to strenuous Arern” when you're Wrong! | Done! \George. No one but Ryanne could PN ersanred prea had been driven from the Jumel house, Gally playing of tennis or golf or base- $ wean -he domended the whip, rey aie aipe dee serengtn jal 1a foolhardy, harmful and Geager- Habit hes @ @uc-| Trouble itkes to Gcarchlight [age erttont, Yule envelees ane Meal asta Se + Cae 08 +Spo more to the big mani Hartford for a honeymoon which never and power, Through the use|CU® The bodily organs unused to such ‘who Try the contents, Fortune coun! not reaisti ye © ee 8 dngton Heights. Entrance had been| reached ite full. of the whole ar appa- ‘watching him, for she gresped quicay , «forbidden him there, It in 1884./ Histories in brief attribute the part-| ratus of the body the ait laternal Jn the spring of $8 he had been| ing of the Burre to the Colonel's in-| organs of the pela cabeged brougnt * @oming up on the fine days, @ lover in/ discreet use of Madame’s wealth. way, through his mid-seventies, to press his sult , Exercise must be carried on io an atmosphere pure and full of oxygen. Outdoor exercise ts, therefore, the best; a 5 Pay the Price the “she.” that only Ryanne could have wrnten &| oryye the wil achieve great Ao hwnen iietter here in Damascus At Aret the |qninge’? fightiy, eseuee her wert’ eee ' (tan upon George's cheeks darkened—tue — ‘3 as Owig 19 Bent oo be the @pree sudden suffusion of blood; then it be-| ‘Teettuny he reached over and eweot | the Mehter, and the mouth and eyes poh’ @, widow still alert in her aix- and walking 1s tho surest, safest and Inctined! jeeme Bp the money. ws 8, ne tn a renathy Vigor |the simplest way to obtain Ht Walk-| Gear Remetns! ‘and nose became stean. emnail hove be able to repay yout” ‘Ah Ampetuous lover, too, was Burr w Mre. Burr gave her husband | ine Mt Yee everson $0) ‘she svesite |i they| 3 1 Singular how Some of ws will) «1 aii depends upon how you loom at | "tyes LE ee tr leteatee ta Nie to buy. a fine equipage ewe]: None vena ai PRET. ogee of oxe|°f,th® Body, ie easily regulated and ; eee ing| Ask our Friends tor Advice Solely tor|n ‘or my part, good riddance to bed|,, Tow bY let ington ran we tend ig, but when that broke gown on one & carriage and all the out-lercise better than did the Greeka of old, | wiini® sbeolute reach of all. A long Sh ; tha Perpane 6 “Sepperinn” ti Tupi, Sete. coed, onreelts” by letting me Beep tn touch « eccapion, legend has it, he hired a and that only when she got|They trained thelr young in their tamous | V2 slong @ country road in the pure aMp strines gf... tela with you, whatever your ultimate de farmer's An in recurring the bill 4i@ she learn how the Colone!| gymnasiums, not only to give them|teron i ina suennine te not ony fnew the Meaw| Adversity Rerety Deals ue a Gheneing |My Dear cision ‘may bainet tente areeh, WER to legend, “Madame,” he te reported to/had put the funds in hagd to other| beauty of form, grace and suppleness of |enent t© the body but @ rest and in- tng of Peace! | Mow—tt Pretere to Come Hend-Oni | Mee se io the Guiness of your elive| me Oromee emer ‘ave said after one repulse, “I will|than thelr specified purpose. movement, endurance, strength and| “igre 40m tthe mind as w ' posi ee, ; Groves I shall send the five hundred to| 1**™ PRES Ny © come, again and I will bring @ min-| A ead old dog, the Burr of those late| power, but also to ald in the develop- ‘tc gay’ ten sonra te seus life, ctoreiea| Tt ten't Wo Hprd to Get Bark to Bale ‘nay Won't Paget yet ® SME Tou when T reach New York, With me| 412. O00 SPOT OT we ortet ee deter.” Gaye, mentally, we may believe, the|ment of the higher faculties of the mind. Say ghd” coterats a ith: seonacie lance when we Leave off Jogsling the canbe ashi! {t ta ae it was with the devil. When he! stianite Hner homeward bound. Anyway, he id come again on a|mere shadow of hie earlier briillant|For the one aa for the other the Greeks °°” eT ain te an ae hg ve was ck he vowed he would be » saint: | Atlante Hner homeword Soumnte i June occasion, and he brought that|self, Two yeare after hie claiming |are renowned to thia day SAA CASaee AYO VOUASS O06 SPA? No Use Blaming Some Other Cook for but when he got well devil e saint waa) ohh? ie fe had picked up 0 pees ray a ia AD UR TE I a Ten oned te this day" | pody, there. MPAInINE, Never permit the exercise to pak Throwing OUR Fat tnto the Fire! he. There used to be a rhyme about it, | Fork by ten gaye. He nad poked Sp t hi La | Dore or to bring exhaustion and fatigue.| Another Bane of that Next-Morning —_ but I have forgotten that, Anyhow, | ® it Athewt gop to Mareethes. From. that use of. the working. parts oF the hoe Generally the Nerve ten't “Lost” at there you are. 1 fool that Tam conced: /iRa ete. "Ghetbourg wes @ ting ‘man body) 1s essential. It must be an—tt t# Merely Burrowing in the 166» poiat 4 Lahey = Ft « By BE Scorn r e ® thoroughly understood and properly =< © KET Tat of Fear! the United Romane meer new the onotate an6 tne an B e t t V incen t Br te ree u a Campeny te refine, ee known George's father before him. The of the heart; it strengthens and vital- ae If Gome of us would Work as Hard hold myself to tt. went to the heart of the izes ita every fibre. Likewise tt venti- ae we Play, we'd Soon Know the Feel | + and when he had fin- © lates the innermost recesses, the deepest of the Coupon Scissors! lee int do rons one remarkable tale the captain vice to Lovers | usrmncnccz, 8 ised [ngeege he 4 eer agi | ni, ace lee a of oxygen-laden, pure red blood to the G1—Why is ice slippery? Never Go Back to « Job ore Rewerver Tiny a @ott duffor, if there ever was one.” | “And all this happened Oh oe year Femotest portions of the body. Exercise loos tion that you've Once Jumped! 1 fu! | 1909-1910! If any one but you, “Ww, R." writes: “I am 4n love with a1 asked permission to call on her my only |etimulates the digestion and tones up G2—-WAY ere our veine dive, though owe Diged t9.r0d? une ae Aly te H for your} at told me this, Td. have sent young man who seemed to return my free night. That was twe weeks ago,|the skin, the kidneys and the bowels to| 09—WaAy does a dog turn around several times before lying down When the Lid te Off for the Fun Thing| “On, hang it! You're Giffereat; you're |aslote af @ tusatia, You have reported affections, but he has lately grown tired and ane has not answered. What shall; healthy, vigorous tion. It prom 64—-Why is it cold in winter? it fa Bound to be ON for Effort! not Ike any other woman tn the world,’ itr 14s 40, We eve + of me. What ghall 1 do to regain bis| 1 do?’ sleep; deep, sound, refreshing si 65—Why are the edges of gold and etlver coins “milled?” — \he blurted: and immediately was ectzed| “What hry rey Be ee love?” nie 1a | 24 sould write once more to see if nature's own sweet restorer to vigor, Taking @ Chance doosn't Necessarily with « mild species of fright | | gut Oi It Ant ny ‘one to know What There 1s nothing to do, but you should] she received your former letter, and| health and life. mean GQending @ Tap! | Fortune ootpe. o .. throug! apape: tle thankful that you discovered the| then tf she {s till ellent you may con-| But exercise has dangers as well ae |] ihe Soregeing quetes wii be emewered AMangay. ore are she rontive ‘am catcly scooped up the ewirling circles} we've been three. oud be mo tive, young man's ficklenese before marriage | clude that she does not care to continue | blessings. Violence during ita perform- + ec(Why ta tho ocean never still?) The ocean te never stiN dooause! We've son a Lot of Perfectly Gane 051"). atte call that money,” he said apaifne GF Afters Tour saa yuintanen, bons late: to Injury: sometimes irreper some Sart at ite great expi is alwaye agitated by wind, And the) Ze put all of their Eggs in One Basket understandingly, eager to cover up his ‘ou leave ft S Raiell said the tia. ' ot fatal. The ki f ‘em With 1 Ipey, hearted German, “From here to Naples “ip 1." writes: “Tam very much in] “H. G." writes ¢1rl has prom- Hep ineend ene gr " waves thus formed travel to spots where no wind J blowing, Thus, |" Market ‘ern pie ym regen ol Mg siya she al be as mine own daughter, Jove with a young man, but lately he} ised to marry me, with the understand-| to suit one's needs, The length of time| th® ocean may be disturbed by waves from @ wind that is many miles away. It Takes a Lot of lumps to Consti- tea-cup.” You have not told me allt” has not called or written to, me, and] ing that we wait until I can prepare|to indulge in exeroise 1s @ point to be! S'—(Why does @ ball bounce?) A ball bounces because ite elasticity makes it) 1, o'er ender! ‘Tell me about your mother,” “Nos only what I had of necessity to though I have sent him several letters! a nome for her. Snall I epeak to ner! considered. It Is better to exercise dally tend always to spring back into shape whenever flattened. When it strikes some SD! ‘To him it was @ theme never lacking tell, Tena! 60 ho has not answored them. What ahall| mother about my intentions now or| for sh fall ti lar, bard object the ball is partly flattened by the impact. It resumes its former tn new expressions, When he spoke of| “Well, you know best, wy A for short whiles only th: t irtegular . When we Refuse to be Stampeded share to make her feet home. She " | with such 4 0 cause @ recoil or bounce, The harder the ball strikes, his mother, It altered the clear a 1. da? wait until | am ready to marry?’ intervals for too prolonged °. | shape such speed ax ti 4 le aa pretty as @ flower,’ ‘Try to forget the young man and) 1 think it’s just aa well to be frank the more it {s flattened and the more violent the rebound. the Trouble makes a Wide Detour! | boyish note in his ae 6 became | 9 ile Geoepe agrecd, but mes.nen Ys @owt write any more letters or he will! about thene things from the beginning, S&(Why has water no taste?) The greater part of the human body te com- pea Ceeeee ee ihateentt waa cet te | DAL think you are running after btm, apt to appreciate such’ injurious, The erercise then becomes Posed of water, The nerves of taste In the tongue are always surrounded by 40/ Sometimes, when we Imagine we're )'r, SUM Man fi oat. |) eae ote steamer weighed anchor ‘et six ome too prolonged, boring and fatiguing, To, ™uch moisture that the contact of water from outside does not excite them or /Out-Classed, we're only being Out-| own impulses, While he thought he at evening, with only e hand- ‘yh R writes: “My flance ts cons be of real good to ano's health exercise lead them to convey to the brain any pensation of taste Queased! oF) sidan ten gat ends ae for the trip to Naples, tinvitly quarrelling with me, and then] “A, 1.” writes T continue to! must be a pleasure to the mind, for, 6%—(Why does wood warp in damp weather?) When wood {a alive it instinct — tion, each praise, was tn fact a na | George had wired from Damascus te dfterwatd tries to make it up with some) pay attentions to @ young lady of mne> otherwiso when forced it turny into a !Vely expands in wet weather, to adngt the moleture on which it thrives, Wood When we peak About @ Man who has) added to her crucifixion, sglf-!mposed, ron Mites pe, Wither giti, Do you tilnk st wise for me tolteen whoso father objects to me? She bore and @ burden. that has been cut retains that tendency, beorbe motature only across the Taken the Hit in hie Teeth we Usualiy| However, ahe never lowered her eyes, Be ey at Bal Bonne mee oe many him?" says she will not listen to him." System and regularity in exercise must ¢rain. ‘This causes the expansion known arping. | Mean that he Is Biting the Neck Of the Tt eet iene ae of hiv panegyrice he | eraphed the hotel to ¢orward whatever No, aot unless you can both succeed] Since she is under age and living at be observed. Occasional exercise only — 0—(Why Js the alr warmer gear the ceiling than near the floor?) Warm air | Bottle! Qnugnt sight of his watch, which he left; but the return wire {i had ; ting along more amicably. home you ought not to make things often leads ‘to overstraining, !njury and always rises, In a confined space, like a room, thie warm air reaches the ceiling — he side of his formed him that Mre. Qhedsoye had in s 8 ol fi hod plagid at the side pias come hard for her, If you wish, promise to death. The habit of Persons in seden- and displaces the colder air. Thus, the bigher levels of @ room are warmer than| Most Salted Mines ere Btuffed with) “iny Jove! quarter to nine. I've got | taken ever; b wrote to a girl and wadt “unt!l she is twenty-one, {tary occupations who take no exercise near the door, Broken Promises! : an errand or two to do, and there's no} (Te Be Continued) “4. 6." writes i 4 4