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Pepmicpey Sow ee oe - + THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1912. } OH, SURE! AXEL HAS LOTS OF FINE TRAINING! 4) oF By VIC OUST LAY On your BACK AN Supe AXEL ry Nong WEA! No MORE CANOEING — “GET CUA AT Tin BoTtoM DONT AY TUMBLE OVER DAS éE SSP, FAMULS VESTER DAY AN’ BUIOE ont HEM CHUTE ; . NEARLY, DROWN ? Geta? (Tu 6e GREAT = 2 stuck | lay CANT iS 1 Guess fu AY WEARLY CRoMHED! ALA mei sf “TRAINING AN’ ote : SuUde wana ALL AIG! ih - Have. pth i) F i hs Be SEE ee b bread; for, in place of freedom, he sent |his soul, who to-morrow would be grave mer, \they ventured out, but, fnaing the! “T have always loved this room,” @e/me death. Could 1 but be Blive again Night had fallen, and the electric While his eyes beheld the sun he |iad | round saturated, and that the rain was A gi MAN - ‘oO In thought, “but it seems to me now tke |for a few momenta!” But, with a bitter caot, thelr’ white rays om’the [!mauined the air felt warm and baiiny. [again beginning to fail. thoy returned ta! heaven. smile, he again remembered tho words! sroung, arhile the stars overieal shone |e now sw that this had been « fal [whelter, prepared a dinner of canned | ¥, aot He eat down in an armchair from fore: bishop, “What would @ eoul in [rane ctemal serenity and calm. ‘Then {licination, for he was chilled throweh | meat and made themsddves ax comforta-| © D lof habit, to await his flancee. Sthelt not give for but one hour on earth?” |\, thelr eternal eerentty and calm and through. Ho also perceived that he {ble ae poesivle for the night. eae “Oh, for a walk with Sylvia by twie| Sylvig had seated herself om a amall| iat ‘he was a opirit, for darkness ana {cast no ahadow, and that no one obe| “I am surprised,” anid Cortlandt, § B Ment! ne thoughts ran on, "for ahe |sofa, of which, and next to her, Be Bad igi ‘ware allke, amd. ho felt the be. [terved his Drewnce “that Diok 4!4 not try to return to us FS need not be at h en pat. ‘Her gentle eyes —————— since he had t " A Story of Four Explorers’ Startling Ad beyan.m OSE ome Again tir AEF lTRouhrtul took, while ner face was tho neh the shop. ned spoken. Passing CHAPTER XXVI. ed Roar | ry of Four Explorers’ Startling entores Presently he heard the soft rustie of g tsoniication of intelligence and beauty: |througn some of the club - ’ arse Int Among the Planets. her dress and rose to meet her, Though |She occasionally glanced at his photo | |botonged, he saw hie name sit upon the Hic tile Jacet. ss “ae oe | uld Not ne Jooked in hie direction, she did not | raph, which she held tn her hand. st of members, after which he went to T dayhreak the thunder s}mwer| the mackintoshes If we remained under | a) @ |seem to ace him, and walked him | “Bylvia, ylvial” Re auddenly cried line pisces of amusement he knew so Paswed off, but was followed | cover, dectded to put back Th B y Col. J Oo hn J aco b As tor fo the Window. ‘She was the picture ot [rising to his knees at her feet, ‘T love, | wh by a cold, ‘drenching rain. | liste is, of coures, ne ante . Pibvsh ho Tr loveliness, sifmoustted agninst the sky. jadore you. It was my longing tere wih On atl sides were familiar face: Supposing Ayrault hea hope,” sald Cortland no harin sheab tl ths ae ) je went toward her and gazed into her |you ny ‘what Interested him most was the «1 i in the Callisto, Bi come to him on the way. It will te (Pubs y Autho tty of rusiees Clea Astor Es. bod deep-sea eyes, which tind a faraway [oan Neither ate nor hear me, bat on Aeteion incessantly wolng on. Ter ndt did not fopl ang-| &@ weleh? off my mind to seo him mafoly DP |exprossion. She turned, went eracetully [NOt your soul communicate with mine™ ‘Ty Deomte enjoying ite and playing |! ing to be wet t with w (Conpright, 194, by D, Appleton Oe.) match, whereupon pope te eee to the mantetpiece and took a photo-| “18 Dick here?” eried Syivia, becom- canta who, his foresight showed him, ve, “Bhould he not turn up in the morn-| sro. the phosphorescence or bluish ght. as Sfaph of hereclf from behind the clock, jing Geadly pale ant, getting wp, “or am with the wood they had cftiected. | ne.” replied Bearwarden, “we must be fOPSI1S: Sool DING CuArT EES. fe came still nearer—so near, in fact, ‘ound—}i! yard evenin, win « search for him vitzht and early. is me that moment a peal of thunder awakened ® y, Bett oat erenex. Cortlandt, who eat up and rubbed hie h Be Seer eeeet Or the Juliet.” tonday known aa m Q thinkiog (To He Continued) RADWAY & co 58 Etm $t., N.Y. ao Be. | eee. 9 - wie | 7 thin" ald Ayrault, “Twill go to 4 eank to the floor, burying hie face in his Si yr oor in apes BS : ma | ir arent to aivier what strange aaioal ig the Callisto and get our maokintoanes |*eT¥e and self-control, hy hence, % foe exits thee. They, find weind Varesture, act before the rain sets in.” Whereupon he [&Tasped at her hand: Unatie to endure thie tonger, and tet c i \lteft his companions, who Were soon |knees, and then, dumbfounded, strug. |Inm ae if his heart must bri Hora maammg:iehataes Swregt re . into the at wishing he might Ae thes do \a charges through | again fest asleep. sled to his feet, Her hands seemed tojout into the a fe forest, toward suet and they fire urom the The eky suddenty become filled swith |sP through hi was not able to|soothe his anguish with a hypoderm! th geanioth's mignty Sody itersts |clouds, and Ayrault ha touch her and ahe was still unaware of infection of morphing, and that he had a ly a y it hastened toward the nich te rt and suppress coll i Bsterious foe, Ty , intending to remain there, if| his prenence, body with which to divert and supp: until the storm was over. For| Suddenly a whole flood of Nant and moth, caused Sigentic ant. about twenty minutes he hurried on|the truth Hurst upon him. He had through the growing darkness, passed painlessly and unconsciously | bee on ale ground te mate core ne trom the dreamland of Saturn to the THE CURABLE STARE her eat re then ae e e e fn Narrioane "rho endorer | Me earteaes Seo be tat eeerea racks [ahadowiand Of eterty. ‘The myater? Srnec 22 ter ‘te = oe than half the distance when the rain|WAe solved. Like the dead hishop, he ex iy ragons eal which mi get came on in a flood, accompanted by brill- had become a free spirit. His prayer tbe tant Ightning. Swan answered, and hie body, atruck by CONSUMPTION | me. fox, AT Baeuel Seeing the huge, hollow trunk of a Ss a far away on that great fallen treo negr, and not wishing to be | ringed plariet. CHAPTER 3 XXIV. wet through, Ayrault fired eevers! soltd How he longed to take tn his arme ' shots from his revolver into the cavity |the girl who had promised herself to from home tn the hope 4 Doctor Cortlandt Sees Hie|th72,{or, hi revolver inte the cavity |\he ctrl, wee, Bad promteed terest te i PORN ee aaa 6 at uae bo 8 Grave. might ‘be inside, and then hurriedly| With her whole heart; but he was only Consumption as a die : ia la * ne orled, |cTAM04 tn, feet Arst. He next drew in|an tmniaterial epirit, Hehter even than jeaven, he cried.| his head, afd.was congratulating him-|the ether of space, and the unchange- : x rT eae el self on his enug retreat, when the aky |ebdle Mws of the universe seemed to him | thet ‘Deoame lurid with @ flash of lightning, |but the irony of fate, As a enirit he } would abisin thelr pre-|then his head Arooped forward and he [wan intangitle and invisible to thore In |main wall: while if you tmpro met tT tf t f tp ff ii Geat.ned ending cutld tiey| was unconscious, the flesh, and likewise they were beyond | climate, yoo return to your home only See it in advance. May the [MMs control. have the disease break out egsin in & 8 ‘yell not again be raised, lest I faint be CHAPTER XXVI. The tracedy of Mfe then dawned upon | more virulent form than before. fore it! I looked in vain for my soul,” ° him, and the awful resuite of death| po not waste time with doctors whe he continued, “but could see it no-| Dreamland to Shadowland., ||~ate themselves felt, He elanced at] nave no meand of finding out whether you ur come whe: S Ayrault’s consciousness re- |Pvtvia. On coming tn she had looked’ | have ung trouble or If you have any “The souls of those dying young,” re- turned he fancied he heard |"*tlantly happy; now whe seemed de-| symptoms of Catarrh, Asthma, Hay Fever, ’ Plead the opirit, “sometimes wish to Puss: Thane AuNat das and even the Mrd stopped elng-| Hronchitis or Coneumption, heed the warn. pre call hover near their ashes as if regretting distinct, and ecemed to, ring |'"%; Ing and congult Dr. Anderson, th at an unfinished life, or the opportunities ped ‘ Oc. |, "ON" he thought, “could T hut return | spectaitet tn Throat and Lung Diseases, it:—buying customers — but that have departed; but those dying m the ether of space. Oc- | fe tor one hour, to tell her how tn+|and an expert in diagnosis by special X- " 'y it sounded even more remote, after middie age are usually glad to ve | castonall'y ceésmantly ahe has heen in my thoughts, | Light examination, whereby he discovers freo from thelr bodies and seldom think | DUt It waa rhythmical and continuous, |ang how T love her! Meath. to the aged. | the very earliest signa of lung trouble be- | what do you care? We of them again.” inspiring end stirring him me nothing |e no lose—in fact, a dlessing—but now! | fore the tubercle bacfili appear, and in) not, tha append the lines now tn my beet alba) eo on Lit en Ad and he sobbed mentally in the aneuiah | time to oi | frankly admit that we are to my history, eal rtlan eo ore hi i al i pressions upon his other eenses, and of his soul. Tf he could hut communt+| ais many rimanently cured cases are, “that where {t goes they may go also. 5 cate with her, he thoueht: hut he re rence in his office, where Whey can scarcely fail to be instructive | found Nimeelf wabicing in the streeta Of | vembered what the departed hishop had ea te invited to inveatixate. | making these wonderful offers thy om the conclusions of a who has | hie native ay, Ht roe renee sald, that {t would take most men adit cured cnses are the real proof in beyond hie grave.” Whereupon he Gheasenat ¢ pty Be centuries to do this, and that others] of any treatment. | to make new customers for next te a Stange in his note-book, and | Sma" tneearay, but the clear aky gave (Ot Rever tearm. Ry that time ghe,| tt costs you nothing to investiaate fer| @osed it without showing his companions too, would be dead, perhaps having been | yourself, because office consuitation an what he had written, Air was warm and balmy, Scature was |the Wife of some ono clse, and he felt| examination are given without charge, Dr season. We got into our new ay ghey taal ina ened ro ote |edit hie ana. geamae tae present Jniou oven orondthe| Rederen, osetia fe a RS oe : 3 claiming that the cold was past. , LJ ‘ store late, an ousands of new the reward in the resurrection morning |°M{!minw that the, Sold mas Poet he met [7 the floor Ina paroxyam of distress, he| street (between Sth and 6th avenues), will vastly exceed all your labore now.” | , “ri. ora) procession. zed at Syl New York, Houre—Dafly, 10 to 4; Mon- me wh Ree: snnuaht, mockery!" he thought, |day, Wednesday, Friday evenings till § customers look better to us than CHAPTER XXV. mre Oty he thought, “a Man |tninkine of the spleit. “Ife eave me o'clock; Fundays, 11 to 2. Vaiuabie book Ayrault. hand! worse than a stone when 1 aswat for oa Tubsroulesis sent to any address. stock carried over for a year. We 8 the night vecame darker | He was also surprised at the enness ’ they caught sight of she [Ot hia sight: for, Inclosed exe eal” Bet don’t propose to keep it up, be- earth again, ining very the dead man's body was W faintly, and in his mind's e¥@ | cage without m bird. He aleo read the cause we are not Rockefellers or Ayrault saw bls sweetheart, thoughts in thelr ‘minds | C B ‘and tho old, old repining that, since] “Now,” sald a ‘we man fn the car- feason “and ‘love began had Deen in| riage next the hearse, “I mey win her, arnegies. But for one season men's minds, came upon and almost) since she is a wido @rushed him, Without sp i to his} The widow herself kept thinking: @onipanions Ayrault left ~ beste Rai hah cud it hee Led oi bios Hidad ead M4 bed d h sing through the grove in which the|sential ta the children, while I shou _ ; eran had paid them his second visit, | scarcely have been missed, I wish I had | spent-——an ere goes Went slowly to the top of the hill about ities here, and might follow him @ half a mile off, that he might the more 5 eastly gaze at the faint star on which) W pondering on these things he he could pleture Sylvia. reached @ylvia's house and went into A fire burned In the mouth of the|the little room in which he had go often ve, within which Bearwarden and|seen her. The warm southwesterly ‘ortlandt lay sleeping. The specks of | breeze blew through the open windows Mica In the rooke reflected {ts light, but/and far beyond Central Park the ap- i to this diffused phosphor-|proaching @unset promised to he beau- ence filled the place, and the large, tful. The table was covered with flow- | E. K, TUMLINGTON, Vice-President, For one week, in addition to our extraordinary offer of any Jod-covered stones they used for pillows |ers, and, though he had often seen that 25 or $30 suit fabric in o . @mitted purple and dark red flames. ety, he had never before noticed the % & ae ur merchant tailor stock, made ‘da that you, Dick?" asked Bear |marvelious combinations of colors, while to your own measure, for $15— king and groping about./the room was filled with a thousand . Son, nS , AD . Five but up the fire so that you should | delicious perfumes. ‘The thrush hanging en! ur emi-. nnhnua We will give away, FREE, an extra pair of trousers bi 4 In the window sane divinely, and in & of White Flannel or Serge (Plain or Stripe), or Natural Gray a ltken im: 0 OCR SEE CCS Te French Flannel (worth regularly $5.50). Just the thing for sea- e shore, vacation outings or sport. WW. L. DO U G LAS rt a e tarts O- ay This is the greatest tailoring offer that ever came down the Pike, and there are no strings to it either. The offer goes just as H SH CES } it reads—Any $25 bg ha suit pattern in Mo place for $15 and an extra WS i‘ pair of trousers to jot. One week only, though; so get wise to the ©3.00 83 30 §'4:02 f ( \ 4,900—-1.50 Shirts Cc ; cinch early, If you don t want a suit now, we will make the flannel weer ¥ ve re ag $2.00.8 q trousers for you for $4.25—-worth anywhere else $5.50. wa Bost In the 3 \ . ° i All Orders Ready for the 4th. .50and $4.00shoesthan No need of buying a cheap hand-me-down because you want a suit for the Fourth, fat me oc, ne ASTee in the | K Any order received before 9 P. M. Tuesday will be ready in ample time. world. ‘ be, ® r EDN . EN E IL 9. BECAUSE he protects the wearer [/ 4,500 2.50 Shirts . THE ABOVE OFFER EXPIRES WED! IESDAY, JULY 3RD. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL ela high prices ane inforios ¥ shoes, yy stamping name a This, our Semi Annual Shirt SALE, i price tt ‘ q starts with a Bien on the botioan and guaran. ‘ J bang. This sale is two weeks in advance, caused by bad BECAUSE for style, fit and wear ‘il weather, 15,000 Shirts in this sale just before the FOURTH i. mad are superior to ordinary f 3 Percales and Madras, plain negligee with tiff cuffs, ma es of shoes, Don! takes sub- f plain and striped mercerized Pongee with soft double cuffs. 4 euitute for Ba bg vig oe ag H é And silk and linen with RUSSIAN cords of EX ses sass Secrettre bal'ort toornad prihel ; CEPTIONAL quality, re "Call at ea ‘ rani Eh : ph Sere ee ap ae ba it looks like money well Ee Broginy | UI Broadway 119 W. 42d St. | 125th St- Con, 13th St, New Beosdwey | Near 24 Ave Sen fr fe rs at2e"St. 91 B’ WAY _