Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
GET ON YouR DuDS MA, WE ARE GOING DRIVING'R!IGHT Away, Onpretg at Prog Putiiching Tie Noe Peet Were MRS. JARR YEARNS TO BE A RESCUING ANGEL 66 2 must eave him!” oried that | W dashing young Matron Clara! Mudridge-Smith—dashing in) this instance because she was da: away a teat “Yes, Clara, you're a regular Flora! Barton or Clara Nightingale—or who- | ever those Angels of Meroy were one| reads so much about!” erled Mri “L new you'd leave the mid-ne giddy whirl of gayety—as the summer re- sort pages in the Sunday papers call ™—us soon as you got my telegrain. You're a perfect dear!” “Oh, I'd have come !f It was anybody. I'm just crazy about uplift work, and oringing wandering feet to the better light, and all that sort of thing!" gushed | young Mrs. Mudridge-Smith, “Don't you know I always wanted to be a Sal- vation Army Jassie and go around doing slum work, collecting money in a tambourine after the theatres are ou And@ when spoken roughly to by a brute tn @ fur overcont-Marold Armitage, who raved the came for Yale by breaking the lecs and arms of everybody on the tearvard you know—and in the pictures hes fit him so 101 for $18, to measure by mall—would fell sim with a blow at my feet In the row, and then would see me safely ‘ome to my tiny hall bedroom, so neat ond white—p ly chaperoned by ‘his sister, who had married a Duke and rea h him and her four, - children, whom the! took off thetr caps to and ntry | ied ‘the masters'—ana who ways rode on their long-tatled von In Hvery!t* the glad to hein mo save} Jarr, somewhat wearily, | ‘but for goodness gake, Clara, don't! hatter so like a magpie, I've got a! splitting headache, as tt 1s!" | “Oh, you needn't take all the credtt| ana snap me off that way!" erfea Mra. | Mudridge-Sm!th, with some asperity.| “Rven if you ld telegraph me, I'm the one to sit beside him and coot his) brow when he has brain fever"— “He hasn't enough brains to be dis-| commoded by a rise in temperature tn them,” sald Mrs. Jarr, actdly. | wi at's the way ft always ts in books.” said Mrs, Mudridge-Smith. “They always get brain fever, whlch 1s a neat sort of sickness, And if he was stricken down I'm sure T could go nurse him—I think a nurse's costume ts even The pontes ZA a= — Pottern No, 7515—Five-gortd Skirt, 22 to 32 Waist. EVENING WORLD Call at THE May Manton Fashions ‘The ST MET MY OLD Bovdood UM, SLIM HUCHLEBERRY AN’ # Evenin more fetching than &@ @alvation Army limeste's, '¢ anything. And, then, they always are so calm and cool tn the cris! But It's no wonder, I’ be calm and ooo!, too, if tt was somebody else | that was sick and I was getting thirty- five Collars a week—fifty dollars in some cases—and board, and a good chance to marry the patient, if he had money and was handsome.” Mrs. Jart, seeing her young friend's Jaw stop wagging, pulled her hands down from her ears. “Now,” she said, coldly, “If you've run down for a moment, we'll discus the best plan to save him ere it fe yet too Inte.” “Oh, do you think he's marrie@ her!” , wringing her . “T was hoping’— “You were hoping to have Jack Silver to fall back on In case anything hap- Pened to the olf dodo you married,’ aid Mra, Jarr, “Now, I won't stand tt!" the young matron, “I love my hus- band. My Interest in Jack Silver Is merely that of the woman who realizes, when all too late, that she has sent & good man to his doom! “Sent him to his fiddlesticks!” sneered Mrs. Jarr. “You married olf man Smith only after Jack Silver threw—but what's the use of fussing at such a time?’ “But, after all.” she added, with a faint consclousness of the futility of the matter In hand, “I don't see what business It ts of ours. If Jack Stiver the stuck-up, selfish, concelted prig, makes a fool of himself over @ dull- witted girl who talks the slang of the side show, and who poses as a back- ground for magic lantern pictures of flowers, fish dutterfites, reptiles, birds, fireworks and what not—for Mr. Jarr and I went to see her at @ vaud ville show—why should we interfer “Well, I know you'll laugh at me," confessed Mrs, Mudridge-Smith, “but exclaimed Jack Silver was never as interesting to ly manner!" ‘Or to me, either,” admitted Mrs. Jarr. “Which goes to show that men aro the biggest fools on earth—except women who are fools about them! HE plain five- wored skirt always is @ satisfactory one. This one ts ren- dered novel vy the front treatment. Over+ lapped edges and clos. ings made with but- tons and buttonhol fre greatly in vogue, and the front of this skirt 1s finished tn that way, but the overlapped edges can be made shaped or plain, as preferred, Tho back, gore of the skirt 18 finished to join @ box plait, and it can be stitched on the entire length, or to any pre- ferred depth, with the edges join under the Plaits below the stitch- inge, ‘The skirt, when cut with @ high waist ine, 18 adjusted over a. fitted girdle, but when cut to the nat ural line ts Joined to a belt, For the medium eize the skirt will require 6% yards of matertal 7 or 3% yarde 9 or 4 inches wide. ‘The width of the skirt at the lower edge is two yards, Pattern No, 7815 is cut in sizes for a 2, 4, 23, 8% and 20 Inch walst measure, MAY MANTON FASHION BURBAU, Donald Bullding, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- site Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, New York, or sent oy mai) on receipt of ten cente im cote oF stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and alwaye specify: aise wanted, Add twe conte dor letter postage tf in @ hurry, “BY GOutys SLIM Away: WAS GONBROUS.! WoupNT, Be SURPRISED iF HE A a agente sues f 4 fT Bee Tae Tae Orr TEARS IST WELL Drive UP To THE GALLERY AN HAVE SOME SWELL PHOTOS TAITEN werp Ya Gris THA HORSE? IN Did Ya BUY iT? Can Drive cv? > tT A WILD Ont CAN IT RUN? Witt WE TATE IT Homa, PF. er. Wun pul. THas A ence Dress/\ Mama Mave WiwaT You've GOT, (T QUT QF ON, Lizzie. Ng Lowe FoR MAMA PART PAPA'S SHIRT. Howl tis NuTHN! KYpp0'S GOT A BaTune SOT MADE OWT OF & BANDANA AND A AT RAMLE HAMLET EATING ( SPAGHETTI 5 The Vincent’s OME of you S seem rather hazy on thy question of what may be called sidewalk etiquette. May I suggest a few simple rules? A gentl mn a companying two ladies should not walk between them, but on the outside, reat the street, This ts demanded by cus- the idea being that the man is thus in the best position to protect his compantons, When a lady and gentleman who are acquainted meet, it Is the lady's place to give the first recognition, Unless there ts some spectal reason for it, an introduction in the street is bad form. It Is no longer en regie for the Indy to take the gentleman's arm, or vice versa, when they arg walking together. ‘The only exceptions to this rule are at VERY new activity of forvien women has been duplicated by the Japanese women, who are eager to follow the ex. ample of their foreign sisters and gain the same footing In the com- suffrage movement, they frowned and did not pay any attention to it. ‘The present women of. Japan are pro- gresive and actlye, but they are not suffragettes. Although they are now trying to regain thelr natural rights and protection by law, they do not favor the suffrage. Last summer the International Woman Suftr: Association tn Denmark {n- vited the Japanese women to take part in an international political demonstrae tion and to send delegates to the as- sociation, in which twenty-one European puzzle to the The invitation was Japanese women, as most of then had no of little idea about the woman aut. And those who knew frage niovement. street crossings, or when @ bit of slip. |#omething about this movement In for- Dery, obstructed pathway must pbe| eign countries ‘believe! | an traversed. would be the last country to adopt ft, After jong discuss.ous i i bates as to whether the Japanese An Invitation to Call, women should fight far the rights of “1. M." writes: “Would tt be proper women as the women of Lurepe and for me to write and ask @ gentleman America are already endeavoring to do, to call, who was very attentive to me}or should maintqin the old Japanese at a dance given by a friend? My! oustom of women being tli Ip and not object to his coming, | guide to men and not thelr equals, ft he hoped wa should meet) was decided that the invitation should be declined on the ground that tho cir- Nevertheless, you must wait for him to ask permission to visit you, Or if Joumstancas In Japan were very different |from those of Europe and America as your mother has met him, she might | regards the question of suffrage and tin- Write anid aals Dim U0 cad | position and duty of women, They all — agreed that if they should accept the ‘M. BY writ “Please decide a) invitation and start the woman suftrag: discussion between frienda, A saya! Woveuent, unhappiness inight Lé caused that when a gentleman ia walking | to the community at large. with two ladies he should take the| And Mise Uine Teuda, a giaduate of centre, B says that the gentleman ts supposed to be on the outside B is correct. ' | Vassar, replied to that effect to Den+ }mark, representing all prominent Japan- ese women who attended the several —- nectings and debates to decide the “J. K." writes; “I have no parents,| matter. All these prominent women and but my aunt objects to the girl elucators were in sympathy with thetr choice, Can she, interfere if we de-|elsters in the foreign countries who cided on marryin, Not legally, if you are of age. wish to have the vote, But they did not believe toat the Japanese women need —_ any vote to make them happy and per- “R. D. writes: “A young girl te en-|form thetr duties to the publte and gaged, and her flance cannot dance at | nation, | all, while she {8 very fond of the amuse-; They have a perfect right to ask for ment. When they attend pari to- | the privilege to vote, but they do at |wottr ts {ttwrong for the girl to have| want !t. Politics are considered e- & da,4ce or two with other men?” |tirely unteminine tn Japan and the? rr Not at af. But why aot tema her Benge 1 dances] the Japanese women in politics, | Got A UNION SuIT ANHAT MY GRANDMA KNIT WHEN SHE was A UTTLE GIRL OWL MY UNION SUIT, BumPs » (M GoInc RIGHT STRAIGHT munity, But when they heard of woman | Can YouR. MAMA DARN on Tre MACHINE? a erences, THINGS! PuT Tue ORAW in The FLOO? Japanese Girl Her Daily Lite, Amusements, Work and Ambitions By Mock Joya Oopyright, 1912, by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York World). No. 12—Wor an Suffrage in Japan. “Seven. titty.”” interests are always represented by | can get for thetr husbands or brothers in whom t%. they have absolute confidence. And It ; ig the bellef of the Japanese women that! you'll pay it ty a very fortunate thing for tham | an Ket a eek cutie the Seg Aan't Sem that they need not trouble themmelves tive hrm No. BvT SHE'S cof A HoBmLe SNIRT KYHAT SHE ape v7 OF my PAPA’ OLO BLUE SERGE scvewfifiy for a straw hat? [are fall of advertisements for straw hate that you The Man in the Brown Derby oA Great Sommer Story of New York By ells (Copyright, 1911, by Bobbe-Merrill Co.) Hy voraia OF PRECKEDING CHAPTDRA, teeny Rare gusye Xt”, Xe er hie bande So , ia te san eccentric old H om he tells hile story findiny Tearng thet, Negca ie inipdanpet tna” soni earns that Naney is imprisoped tn #. eanit Fu Winton Wie? ant Wen batho ‘goto A red window ‘Toether’ they try to "rdan some Nancy's. roam, Feminine Economy. HAT 9 new Panamat? “Ww Mee" u did you pay for that" Why, the papers ‘And they're good strew Lats, with political affairs, ~ How m It te the opinion of evi ry Japanene | at! hie ashed foobly. woman that even !f somo of the most) 7 ),7'" Kuss sea ee influential ladies in Tokio should start) wiih cue propre the woman suffrage movement with the) ‘Deisvit Vree assistance of the woman suffrage so-| CCP cleties of all other countries, the move-| Fooled a La ment would fall to Interest any STORY i u exe woman who has no ie against mon and ty satisfied with her we» under position as a mother or a wife an elderly Recently a wife of a Ja zalust him, ‘Tho lawrer t 1 fort 4 ant mat wrote an article jn a Japaneso magazine treating the subject of woman| far } suffrage, She says that It Is a most AiMeult thing for a Japa to understand why the for could not have all the rights they want and assivt the national and municipal government in the interest of humanity and be guides to men—without the help of a vole, She says se cannot un- derstand why the foreign women choose the vote, which they regard ws the B a wergoa woret weapon in & woman's hand, while A oily there are many Kood weapons Which! ty obey the wird of women could use aK t vst any man or against any body of men not been any movement to interest ‘ Prayer. , man's heart # —_ A Wanderer O THOU known, G Grant n nt ‘The dawn arise, the daylight fee, In the far wastes of sand and sunt Grant mo with venturous heart to On the old highway, where in pain And ecstasy man strives Conquers his fellows, or, too Finds the great rest that foek! Grant me the Joy of wind and brine, The zest of foud, the taste of wine, to whom norning oris oD # path=to ave ke | wanderers | wim’ to har The fighter’s strength, th echoing strife, lk The bigh, tumultuous isis e } May I ne'er lag, nor hapless fatl, 5 fi Nor weary at the battle call! \ Graot me the ha land peace A That in my heart's er ie That ancient land of heath and gis | Where the d rhymes and stories fal) ‘There in the hills grave silence lie | Sve tee naat And deato himselt wears friendly gmise:|y/\p wedded | ht wtawe, — | bed replied | “Vrsouer ‘a ams dchenes Bomton By tor until hi pot guilty, took the etand in this be wy that the Judge di fork the Tred rand ‘Tr was bawling mw with h did you pay for your now summer that 1 saved 87 on stood wyer. t how one of fooled by & f vagranc; taken tue waten of eager to appear pity on the uo vavinced: that he waa If and pleaded ‘varged him, mau follow Room to Spare. it his ord sept the ne, Rinsing he eelzed tum be reser ing reersit, 1 jour fe me apart come of that protty bull terrier 6 around to keep Mra, Blafticins “Mad nu agree to t 4 Tastinet. ; JUSTICD OF THE PEAOL who was also perora & "marriage he said, adtrensing ne ttt overt “tar 4 tor har eae oar, Muatne hears Wr “Mayhew {is samtarion, intereats Nanty. Later *Collows, Uraing ber to voarry: iim and, continuch ‘refuent, qriering Mayhem 16 Tork ber io the “fark room.” CHAPTER XXII. The Doctors. SOAUSE Tf had promised Nancy, T olimbed down the ivy again, an softly as TI could, and @nined the toad unobserved. But it wae the mont MMcult restraint that T ever pnt tipon myself. id have had my way I a@tiould, w t, have tried to tear the fron grating from the windo fight my way downstaire and the sanatorium, and perhaps to lay my hands upon Doctor Mer- riton I was mure that, once in the room, I would have been able to take Nanoy away with me, But Nancy wished me to use other meana if I could, and, far ae Iw. 1 was di y them, y own way, a selfish one, and inapired for the moat part by a lust for fighting that wae growing on me daily. But Nanoy waa right; fighting shoull only be resort. For tt was even posal! Nancy herself might come to some harm In that seething turmot! my soul #0 longed for, T found Mra. Lathrop pacing about her Uttle sitting room at the hotel, @ naid, a# 1 opened the door, ‘I was beginning to get @ little worried, T never did time go #0 slowly.” “Thad to for dark,” T explained, “Did you see her?’ aaked Mre. Lath- I said, and told her all my adventure, “Well, what are you going to do now?" «aid Mra. Lathrop. “It looks to me as Sf tt would be pretty hard to harred force,” don't know exactly what I can do," I admitted, “The only plan T've been ble to think of #0 far t# to go up and #k to mee the doctor, and when I see him, tle him and take hie keys away from him, 0 you call that not using force and locked up without using Mra. Lathrop asked, T amiii® rather sheepishty. “Of course that's only tentative,” 1 said, ‘and it wouldn't take very much ‘That Doctor Mayhew looks pret- ft to me." Stull, IT don't think that was Mrs, sworth'a idea of tt," sald Mra, hrop. erhaps not," T admitted, “What have you to #uggent?” Mrs, Lathrop shook her head, sure I "t know," she sald; "1 think @ Mttle while.” So for balf an hour we sat In silence, once or twice I started to speak, but Mrs. Lathrop waved me abstractedly away Well." she eatd at lest, “I have 4t “Well?” T asked, “I'm crazy,” said Mra, Lathrop com placently, re what?’ T stammerod. razy. At least, I'm not, but you y lam, TAsten, Mr. Elisworth, I'm just as we told them here and I'm dreadful rich and np—that §®, yu've got to at Is all easy me ina ¢ab up to ring the bell and gotn with me, You'll hold me by the writ, you know, and Vil drag back. Mra, Lathrop's eyes snapped with the foy of the prospective drama. “And when we're in the office, you ask to have the duor locked so that I an't get away, Then you pull the Joctor over to one side and tell him nt to leave me rae he needn't oragy all, but what he belley a and that is, that you're young man, and are putting me out of the way, so that you ean de- jare me incompetent, and use my money, or something ike that, Money's we ts th se people up uyderstand, 1 protested, “what good would Guppose 4 could manage je only lock fou wi ett Ps sa er home Gods, Miralm © iy throp. ‘ saw @ way of doing It easy, Then a: get any one out of a sanatorium that's Y, Hasting eave you there, what then? ‘They'd in one of thoae foome. do anything, and them i'd two people te get out instead “Well, that's just it,” sald Mra. La- “Most of those, poor peepla have naturally been left Mthoot @ cent of monéy. You aren't going to be ther fmean to me. In fact, I guess you'd better | oa b ag about all the money 1s wicked enough all would be wickec make four or five hu t 18 ie sae cosh (n hand, and the noon a T have bought one of those maldn I'll fix tt #0 that she lets me ~ owt and Mrs. Elleworth too, and all you'll have to do is to wait outside. and Meet us. T'll fix it to get a message to you somehow.” aie theree anothe? trouble,” 1 when tor Morrison isn't there, Un- leas I'm pretty mnch mistaken Doctor Mortiaon fan't connécted with the place at all. They just let him hang arow and call himseif @ Gocter because he’ paid thom a lot ef money. There's only one patient he takes any interest if or i@ a doctor for, I don't see why they ie the tronble to pre that mitch, unless it's because the: #0 long they couldn't do @ thing straight it they tiled. No, sir, we'll just watt until he's away from the place and down here in the village somewhere, and the rest will go as slick as a woose's neck, Well, what are you ehak- ing your head about how T never did find fault, @ to risk that woman, 1 don't belleve that, by the build of her, they let hor take care of any but the ‘violents.' The trouble with you tn thal you want to do this thine all yourself.” heart out In idleness wi jh woman did the dangerous pe adiaaea ‘Oh, It's perfecly natural,” sata Mrs. ‘A young man going after A oats beg ora wants to run er al mak. @ terrible time, Theva the eat 4 there ever wore knights, I guess But Bilewort Lath tl jou take my advice, Mr, Uy ‘ou get the young lady safely heme Grst and then you can go back and 4@ the hitting and knight part of it afterward. now and try to wake up feeling like my scoundrelly nephew. Of course, If you can think of any better acheme before morning, why, I'm per- fectly willing to try it, but ¥ you can't 1 think we o T'm sure until we get her out of there.” And although I tossed half the night racking my brains, Mre, Lathrop was right, T could think of no better echeme. “The only trouble," Mra, Lathrop anid, au I mot her at dreakfast, got to be sure when that Doctor Morri- We'll have to spell each the window for Rim. T write to my stater: then T'll take a turn while you write to that Mr. Ogtiby. You've a lot to tell him, and you've got to keep your prom- ise to him, you Know, partioularly as we're Just going to spend so much of bis money. “I'm writing to my make sure of thin “la that we've sister, Just to T've got to teil ut it; but yen fan't one of thors her not to talk It ocurred to me last night, Mr. Ellsworth, after f kot the Haht out, that you and I ougit to do this as carefully as we can. f don’t mean that I was the least mits scared, but something might happert not according to schedule, and it's J as well to days she's to come on hera with all the king's horses and all the King’s men (which ts poetry for the Governor's) and split that Hum) Dumpty wooden castle tnto kindlin ‘This was ® precaution the wisdom of which I could not gainsay, eo that watched while Mrs. Lathrop wrete, a: i ter to Mr, Ogilby, Then I posted both our letters, and ordered the hotel's only closed carriage to be ready and waiting for Instant call; which mysterious pro- ceeding T think the hotel proprietor put down to metropolitan eccentricity, an eccentricity. which justified ome of tle own In making out our bin, We had not very long to walt before Doctor Morrison came striding down the street, aa gloomily truculent when we fret saw him. him well dat of sight, then hy down and jut to our Carriagé started for sanatorium, in "Bssccaiiastas nl | |