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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday. June 29. 1912 © = WILLIE, ENTERTAIN LITTLE ARCHIBALD AND SHOW HIM ALL YouR TOYS LATE FOR YOUR DINNER~YO !—T'u TEACH You wyo's BOSS “Did a college education help your son get a job?” “Certainly. With his football training he easily landed a position The Papers Say By John L. Hobble Copyright, 1912, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World), IVAL gang fights stopped by| uaually please both candidates. One “R police." These gangs have| gets the votes of the people and the been so successful in kill-| Other the delegates for the conven- ng people without interference they} tom imagine that the police will even go 40 far as to permit them to injure each other, Politica 1s perplexing to the voter, but think of the poor job hunter who doesn't know which band wagon to climb on, In a recent investigation it was tearned that the Loan Shark is the : wost cold-blooded of fish and sur- “Truste to be investigated.” This vives on a species of the sucker that} WH! please the people; help the hae no backbone. iticket to be elected; and tt won't hurt the tru , ena ' This is the time of yee hen the) sizteen-year-old graduat¢ *e forced} wile arrested wth husbone who out into the crucl, cruel world, stole gems" The wife wasn't ec cused in the robbery; she was ar. “Banks to be more carefully inves-|"8ted for permitting her husband tigated." Why interfere with the|*? Tun at large, we pleasures of others? If thia ta done it will force the banker to ive withe| wyny ae TAAGE OUR, in his income instead of according} “1 am no exasperated! 1 atiended the to his position, meeting of the Soclal Equality League land my parlor maid presided, and sho "had the audacity to call me tu order ‘ i ‘**S’Matter, Pop?’’ WELL, 1 GUESS WERE GOING WE'VE GOT THE BOSSES MORE BOSSES FORME! JM TIRED To PUT AN END To ON THE RUN THIS TIME- tgs a» egy » ee) ) IS NOT THAT tind) |GIVE IT 1S Mi "s WILLIe HAS NEVER pe Aaah ik PLAYED TRICKS ON sblledinia-s ANYONE $0 FAR. 4 -——, OF A Boy, BUT on To M&, Seis SPACAL OCCASION -ETC ATC! HOORAY | HY WIFE'S GONE ON HER VACATION = Novy FOR SOME FUN f OFFICER, WILL YOU KINDLY SHOW ME THE SHORTEST WAY TO BROADWAY — mY WIFE'S AWAY To THE COUNTRY ! NORE OOP OOIEP LAL LLEL AOL LU ALLLN OLLI he Man in the Brown Derby #{4,67" 07", (Coppnight, 1911, by the Bobbe-Merrill Oo.) GYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. | “I got along very well by my- “I hope you like try anything whe laughed. I was efraid to more ambitious, Besides, there wasn't @ great variety of things in the cup I shall have to do a great deal Bhe hesitated a it” advertisement he of marketing to-day.” “Have we any money?" the question her color came, asked it sweetly and straightforwardly, Pe juries are to he, told tha jn payment for his sal and te fh ‘our uncle gave me suppose that more will be coming in I wish, though, that we weren't ong | going to have to use that money; I hate the thought of at t her|the fifty dollars 1s my own, about all I “1 don't think you need have any scruples about using the 1 em eure that you have been doing ail that @ man could Uncie Qphraim never pays for more than Value recetved." “Let us not talk of him,” sald I, “or at least not until after breakfast. me help you. I think I can make cof- fee,” Nancy laughed. CHAPTER VI. SARE Tener Adjustment. AWOKE rather | glance at my watch made me epring from my bed in hor- ie Nancy paused abruptly in her bustle of setting the kitchen table. “Take off your gloves, one ever heard of a man making coffee ‘There had been no sign of any servant about the place the night for all I knew, might have been up an hour or «9 and waiting for breakfast. and bathed hurriedly, rapidly and smoothing out my rampled clothes as best I could. One of my pockets bulged insistently, and I put in my hand to find out the To my surpris out the collar and necktie that had been so suddenly left in my hand the They were much torn, but seemed to be of good make. 1 put| Shamed ones, them carefully in my drawer, with some | #48. vague {dea of looking them over more closely in tbe future. that the bruise on my forehead had blackened during the night. But I had no time to waste over my she said. “No “But"—— I stammered and stood hesi- Nancy came over and atood squarely in front of me. over this foolishness fi off your gloves.” urbuttoned one \very frightened me that she should see my hands again. “Oh, take them off!" with her honest eves looking Into my “1 am not afraid of your put not afraid. t as well get ‘Then softly and I am very sorry, Tam glad that they are all you hav your Ife to be ashamed of. too sensitive about think too much about them I wondered why she thought that 7 had nothing elae to be ashamed of: nev- ertheless I took off my gloves that new aMght of broad daylight of the groat t have come to her with something hock, in spite of herwelf, but she lmade no sign of distress, unless, per- for a few minutes, wif the harder with th 1 was irritated door, I ran downstairs, with the gutity feeling that comes of the conscousneas having everalept. Meht of heart, very thankful not to find Nancy wait- Some one was buatiing about in the promised weil. Ephraim Bond had engaged us a ser- At least the fire would be Mghted, I thought; that was half the With a fire I could make abift to get breakfast myself. A Mttle woman, done up in a great was standing over She turned a very rody face to me as she heard my atep. It was a new, changed Nancy, the most absurdly delictous Nttle housewife imag- We made a merry breakfast of it. Il of myself | ncqua Af vant, after all 10 that Nancy fried the eggs more beauti- fully than eggs had ever been fried be- French chef produced a more delicious brown apron, loup of coffee. range as I came ready for the long walk to ‘ancy had got a litt \aays, that she had kept because she had “Good morning,” I stammered; of b’ ealaiedl halr she looked - “L @id, OF course! there was no one| simply a bewitching achoo! sir! as she se awake when I came down.” “Primaries satisfactory.” They Ghreg Umen'wLipplacott’s Magasine, seemed faintly emused at my copfu- I said as much, She pinned it on. Ghe looked up at me, her face very A Great Summer \ se By Wells Hastings rosy, “A young lady must look t," she laughed, “when ahe tak | as he ha th “that In pride.” Is there any difference.” and should have hidden away thin In ference between sorrow and of the night's unpleas- great happiness,” I answered, 0. jaw too late now, but f thought that some of my ne: Of life was reflected in her ey So we chatted happily with 8 We strolled down the winding sweet-| something of a hurry,” 1 suid. hess of our own long lane. The day was| Nancy ‘could call up no @ golden one, a wondrous Jewel in the | smile. member it long, crown of spring. Yesterday morning--| “You make too much of that little laughed. ‘ow the thing out of sight, mething tifu) as 1 had sat amid the cramped| else, Your nerves have grown too acute; a few minutes of the sunshine, country stretched] though, will put everything right with yes, only yesterday—I had thought, even | disturbance, young lady,” 1 in my weary loneliness, that the spring | “I will was very lovely, I had thought it beau-| and then we will think of burgeoning of W To-day with before me, a panarama bounded only by| you again.” the horizon giimpsing ever and again through the tremulous foreground of the] little breeze atill rocked tt trees, it seemed as if I saw spring face) dust, and tossed it behind the clu to face for the first time, Perhaps one vdrangeas that had sheltered may never see the greatest beauty from lonely eyes, but must share the seeing with another really to see at all. Per- haps one is always partly blind, until some added greatness, some unselfia’- nese of pansion raws the vell from his eyes. I drew a long breath. “In it not won- erful?” I asked, Nancy nodded, her eyes blue as the hills that held them. “To think that this ts all ours,” she simhed at last; “that we are ee to look and look, and draw rest and healing from it for as long as " I bleased her in my heart for the trick she falling into of saying “we.” If things could never grow from the level that they were taking on this our firat day, even so, I could be happy, perhaps content It seemed strangely unreasonable that I should even dream of love, wh great a boon as companionship hai been granted my starvation. [ glanced/at al) Twas very litte whan whe 4} ington Squari ur walk to the villug But the bri things, the close joyousner together had passe ‘ond recall, I did my way the cloud, to bi things I said; but we eation Nancy on p: «# that I wanted to k “Perna atier all,” I sald, “y trust a stranger to down at Nancy, wondering if her! (nti) I was thirteen, my father and thoughts travelled at all the same road|1 lived alone together, alone except as mine, She was very pale, and her}my governnes. We were very hi eyes had lost thelr reflection of the| rite fora hills. and his bu for these recurrent fears of hers were| bis sorrow he dropped it beginning to make me uneasy, in spite |dropped his friends and | ntances. I wee now th y ” ” him, that he should ne “Noth! nh td pounin, Lit Sa ale “a be to ane NR ut himeelf away from t front a year by year he became m¢ I looked quickly about us, so nervous | use. man, I think was I growing; bi were absolufely ne in her own lane, crushed all that out of him. With the meadows, and, of @ sudden, I saw. /mainepring of hie life hi In the path before us brown derby pred, ‘Then when I was hat was rocking softly !n the dust {my uncle Ephraim, father's I cursed myself that I had forgotten brother, came to lve with us to look for it after my encounter of almost from the day he came the night before, Now that I rearched began to change in the house, my memory, I could see very clearly (To Be Continued) ; the black silhouette of my assailant, stood and fired, and he was air with the lord of the manor, es- | bareheaded. No man would havo gone pecially when he himself looks #0 great | roaming hatloss about the country, If and strong and haughty.” T had not been such @ fool, had not “That is not haughtinegs," I said; | been #o atartled with the roar of his revolver, I should have thought of this. determined that Nancy should not re- “My friend seems to have been in But answorkng I picked up the hat from where the in the cht before, and We went on again tness had gone out of ot being for the time, be to drive olor back again to Nancy's cheeks, and she tried er best to hep, to amie at the foolish wld not manage thine, » tie inevitable, and dectded {t could not make matters had better tell me now why you mar- ried me, why you were even willing toy y “There isn't #0 very much to tell,” Nancy eaid, as 1 paused uncertainiy ‘I Uved dike any other girl until about 8°! five years ago, When my futher lost his mind, My mother I scarcely remember y, was an old inherited one, s had never been more “What is it?" T asked In agtonishment,|than @ half-hearted ovcupation, With and ft was r have | e world; for “ore cluse, He was active and spirited ax 1 saw no one; we| ~The blow of my mother's Aeath ander the bright May sun, Then my|he was never morbid nor gloomy, only} eyes dropped from thelr searching of |aweet and imild and gentle, as if the bee 1) Why, gentiemen, from the thme I was twenty to | late You BAD Boy TELL THE WIFE To COME BACK HONE, Doc’ “Father, | can beat anything In colleg “Well, don't worry, son. I'll see to it that you'll have plenty of rugs to practice on this summer.” By C. M,. Pamne, Silhouette Sa Spotted Him at Last. ber how Little Red right and early with lange, shining white tee. you will us who Mite ed inet in the woods.” ont koow, mamma,” replied the sa it was Theodore Hoosevelt,"%-Kaasas ( nal, -_——.——_— = Simple Explanation. 0 tiustrate a point he was making—that hie with & past-tt T. Washington ‘told He was standing by Its door one prt | h 2." he said, done been _—_ On Prison ACwer of men gathered in U ack. car of @ train from Little Rock to ‘agher point in Arkansas were talking mi best calenlated to sustain health, | arid with abort | ed air, was holding lever © day's And ail due to simple food, shed forty yours, 1 lived a regular life, None of teen effeminate Melicactes for we! No Kvery day, pummer end winter, 1 went to bet at O o'clock; got wp at 8; Mred Principally on comet beet and com | bread, Workced har}, gentiemeen, worked bard, from 6 Yo 1 o'clock; ‘then dinuer, plais diuoer; theo on bate ‘ stranger, “but what were you one-time neigtror of his, @ man noted his perfect patience, ving emght out the vel Well “IL hear you lost all tuner through the forest fires,'* your other place, T got aluiost discouraged ee Sherlock Jr. o hear the evening sermon eupled seats im the gal not to let his attention wander Dut jt did, He eosmed to be to & family who sat in front of him end when the sermon was about balf ‘Hew do you know?"