The evening world. Newspaper, February 15, 1913, Page 11

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1 GoTTa TE my HorTHe! UP THUM WHERE 5 ? Copyright, 1913, by ‘The MR. JARR ACQUIRES A who had gone to the doo Mon, for a fa and puffy Httle alk hat with un aggravatingly summons and co: strange my old establish pla when—ahem!—1 nd Dinkston ina nt on the corner, my watch having stoppe: Mr. MoGlew spoke in His watch had stopped, fc at the sign of the thre i Washington at a well t at you had the highest fllkhts of eloau “And, ipse dixit facto, he ments, ae he has the entire edge on obscure point The fussy litte law of law. Y @ writ of rep 1 am at my clients the little lawyer “Joe Chi ot Casal McGlew!"* This was all true enougl the jungle, (re lice build a ride hut, ‘There their | bora, Alice dies, band of Kerohak, invade the ape natnel Kala, whose We gr: an's cousin, Unseen, with east tabi. A. tarch party from a fis dune in search of Jane, Te a’ Arvot's fate, (Continued) and they prepared for the ni lage. ily guarded, wS" Matter reanatny ‘ress Publishing Co, fe New York Lvening World) STRANGE NEW FRIEN 66 Y old collegiate o Counsellor MeGlew,"" Michael Angelo Dinkston, hese words were spoken to Mr dently were intended as an introduce uit of rusty black and wearing an old wf brim, entered with Mr. Dinkston a shook Mr. Jarr warmly by the hand. was in the neighborhood serving neoun had dropped {n to see what time it sincertt some Um wolden balls, Learning of your sudden rise to af- ReGON" explained: Mr, “Dinkaton, vourred to me that if you were catted | Both Mr, Dinkston and Counsellor y time to be iny tigated by any of those Congresfon: inquiries of the Money Power, It were as | vice of counse Casablanca McGlew, valedictorian our clase of "M at good old Braduating with honors, haus soared to had the whole bar envious of his attatn- Judi amazed at the profundity of his know slew } red nove and, with @ voice Uke w bull, |!) Ms magnifeent voared “Bhall it be subpo duc Shall it be a writ of error? Shall it be svin or an order to Know ewspapers know of met" ate ! The Bar Association knows be of the Nand Kill, Grey jopta Alice's baby as in the cht ‘Taran. chines to” the’ cabin his father built, Exploring the cabin's posses I4 an iilistrated primer and several Laborionsly he begins to teach him nd to print, Ting of the ihe and goes to live in hie father A of munitions. sailors land near the cabin, With them are Prof, Porter, his seoretary Hip dauehiee Zane and, her ‘negro Tait and Cecil French warship Attacked by jeut, d'Arnot and beer him jorture, Tarzan saves CHAPTER XXII, The Search Party. Ag T length all hope left them, camp within the vil- Bentries were posted at the barred Association was at that very time con- sidering the activities of the speaker. “Tits is very kind of you, Dinkaton, | and you too, Counsellor,” sald Mr. Jarr, } "But just at present our firm's lawyers j4re looking after all my legal affairs. | “But delicate matters? Matters neat- ing tact? asked Dinkaton, while the | red-faced little lawyer put his hands jon his knees and winked at Mr, Jarr to Indicate he could get a divorce for tim no deftly that even Mr. Jarr would ever know of it. 0, thank you,” sald Mr. Jarr; “I no legal matters of a private na- ture even have, Mr. McGlew, I will bear you In mind and call you on the ‘phone at your joffice, What's the number?” |McGlew gazed fixedly « moment into |the lawyer's narrow brimmed silk hat ;on the plano stool beside him, There was no telephone inside of it, and the lawyer blew his nose again and said: “I am getting a new office. My old one is too cramped—too out-of-date—too small for me" (here he looked hard at his hat again), “but I expect my new ie to be much more satisfactory, and when I move into tt I will send you the number."* “Def e is in his eye! He segs red e at any inhibition jot his rights when he practises at the | at his legal friend. “Ask at the bar Who 18 Casablanca McGlew?* fuge can dissuade! A man who knows | iw rights before the bar; a man who jfishts for the rights of man, and for @ Just consideration and respect for the of usage!" Ask ut the bar about law gates, and finally the village w wrapped In the silence of slumber cept for the waliln of the native women for thelr dead, The next morning they set out upon the return mare), Their original in- tention had been to burn the visage, but this idea was abandoned and the prisoners were left behind, weeping and moaning, but with roofs to cover them and a palisade for refuge from the beats of the jungle. Slowly the expedition retraced its steps of the preceding day, Ten load- ed hammocks retarded its pace. In elght of them lay the more seriously wounded, while two swung beneath the weight of the dead, Clayton and Lieut, Charpentier brought up the rear of the column, the Englishman silent in respect for the other's grief, for D'Arnet and Cha pentier lad been inseparable since boys hood, Clayton could not but realise that the Frenchman felt his grief the more keen- ly beowuse D'Arnot's sacrifice had been #0 futlle, since Jane Porter r b and for strangers. When he spoke of it to Lieut, Charpen- The prisoners were herded tier the latter shook his head. {nto three huts, where they were heay- “No, monsteur,” he gaia; “D Arnot would have chosen to die thus, I only grieve (ues 1 could not have @led for ;. Pop?’ IT OUT OF THE HOUSE! ELL OF ALL THE y : J AINT I CHASED YA OUT 2 ALL FIRED GALL © AoF THat HOUN!C [wen or “@ When the W Wires Get Crossed @ SING DEPT. *OAILY BLAST” alta cn, » You Can Be Your . Own Beauty Doctor % On ves Mm Mark! tHat OPPORTUNITY FOR PROPERTY m Swamey nurst Is Tus Sumner ReartyCo.? Tris is Me GOK at this evening gow WHATS THAT? Are YOU STARTING A MosqvuiTO RANCH? | WANT ABOUT 100 BY 2so FEET VM GOING TO Burro TAAT'LL BE SomE AO ARE. You SuILoING ANOTHER SUBWAY? n contemplation, If I should | EN REGULAR “CHEEK MASSAGE “No, 1 didn't think @ touch of make-up ta a sin, ut the use of rouge is hd have it show what did you mean?" swible to make the cheeks look like @ rone at an evening dance or card party by a certain very simple treatment that la not but poaitively beneficial to the skin, a# It Improves the circulation. you dress for the evening wash the fi ‘Then dry it Hghtly and message the cheeks with cold cream, sof the mouth and rubbing upward in a cireular tele Do thia for ten or fifteen minute warm water and winning at the side: toward the ears. Brease with cheeks, finishing with an ice rub.” should think an ley f bar!’ continued Mr, Dinketon, pointing | and they | will tell you: ‘A man whom no subter- | rub it-on the can stand the ie bowl and save & lust rub just before you leave and you will find that your gly for hours, Jend of it tn a cloth an cheeks an long ‘counsellor McGlew, At this time Mr stand that Mr friend had bee nm re “sald Mr. Dinkston, as the | McGiew, his practice calis him. lar for notary’s fees {n cane you desire to give him power of attorney at any rv did not under- and his legal cason of an astute legal luminary, By Edgar Rice Burroughs. [Tarzan of the Apes. dy Frank A. Munsey Co.) ING CHAPTERS, A with Alice cheeks will glow becom: Not Like Any Story That You Have Read n also make youre K and then to the other, Ing them a rub off with him, or ath you could have known ile was indeed “He did think It or he have madd it,” who had saved v member of bis party nor ever offeret harm to one, # head went reasoned the girl. {t cannot be true know tt is not true!” | One sentence tn the letter I would not have hurt you above ! others in the world.’ hat sentence would } filled her with delight, now it depressed of damp flannel over an officer and but deserved by #o few. “He did not die futilely rd plaster on each for his death girl will make turned and entered the cabin, y come to us.” ton did not reply, there arose a new respect for French- Sho wished she had never met Clay- | She was sorry that she had ever | ween the forest god—no, she wae glad t other note she had | before the cabin the | after her return from the sunalo, the love-note signed by Tarzan of the t a dinner party cetted fellow said to him I would have but within him had passed quite out of sight before he deduced what Sup for a wit! ¢ the other could proceed farther, ‘then, And there was t found tn the grat Tt was quite the cabin by the beach. ‘she called me a liar, had announced to thd. as on the ship that the « been too lat camp ax well What do you to Jane Port the'eaitolath upon the opposite side of . for he wished to apolomize, but he might as well have ad- + dressed the Spliinx a plece of paper and oi! Who could be this new suttor? were another of the wild dentsen: this terrible forest, what might he not do to clatm hei no wonder we all get nervous prosecu- ‘Df what Clayton had man's probable he was thinking » he wrote upon mile or two ot ‘camp, or ed it beneath be fired to denote fatlure, success, while two would kissing the fa’ , dade her good night, CHAPTER XXI1, Brother Men, regvined cons laughing, and “You make mo #0 Jane Porter saw the little note twnored it, for she Wan ve hurt and mortified, » ANd |o eventually fectly well that the world is filed with | efther D'Arnot or the ‘as a solemn party ed their coming, lut-ahe was a wom. » picked tt up thought of the for screamed Eameraidea, “What te it now? A ued before D'Arnot had fallen into the hande of the savages, and again use the service In which be had lost his life had been outside his duty swepr over him onc Thad no re: @on 10 insinuate what is that my nerves muet be uv. strung—whicn tno oxo “Pleane try and think that [Ald not 1am very sorry hurt you, above ull others in the ‘WILLIAM CECIL CLAYTON," rowed silently toward the crulner. Clayton, exhausted from his five duys of laborious marching throucn the Jung's and from the effects of his two battles with the blacks, turned towar! the cal to seek a mouthful of food ani the! comparative ease of hin bed of ra after two nights in the jungle, Eameraida, there | ing, Qo back to p, but you are Infinitely | lying ujon a bed of soft ferne And grammes beneath a little him he blurted out we hurrying to the feast.’ worse awake, , He wee very and ae full lame and sore and Consoiouenens res sharp torture of 4 the dull aching y 1 would not though he did not know What wirall beniuece dat ret was for his basel:se disloyalty te a eee et epee 5 Gou-DING GOLDING PIN K CHEEKS FOR EVENING WBAR, by Anare vupont . 1013, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Werld). sald the Average Girl, holding up s dainty frock of pale green chiffon, shimmering with beads dnd spangies. “It's “What's the matter with Ht? inquired the Woman of Thirty, “It looks all right to me. 'y smart style, I should call It, and the color te lovel; “I puld more for {t than I could really afford,” bemoaned the Girl, “for I wanted to look my best at the club dance to-night, 1 thought it was very pretty when [ first bought it, but when I tried it on just now It made me look like the Chinese flag.” “Put it on," commanded her friend. The Girl obeyed without comment, and when she had arrayed herself the Woman looked her over critical'y, “There's pothing wrong about the frock,” said she, “except that it makes you look rather sallow. That shade should always be worn by @ woman of more florid type than you are, for it Rakes away the Ittte color you have. But as long as you have already bought It you can appear stunning in it this evening if you will only wear with it a pair of pink cheeks.” “How can [ wear pink cheeks? Do you mean out of @ box?” n the box or bottle kind, though personally, I @on't know, the French say that the only iy barman: in warm water until it Owl Oe wie and then wash off the mediately dash cold water on the be worse than a marble heart.” of every bone and muscle in his body as a result of the hideous beading he had received At length he recollected the hideous scene at the staka, and Anally recalled the atr wile figure In whose arma he bad sunk {nto oblivion, D'Arnot wondered what fate i in store for him now, He coulé nee nor hear any signe of life abeut dim, ‘At longth ho fell into slumber, now aid he awake again until afternoon, Once more he experienced the etrange penne ‘of bewllderm nt that had marked his earitor awakening, but goan he Fee called the recent past and through the opentng at his feet he the figure of a man equatting om haunches, (To Be Conitaued) } a ee ———— ? e t t } .

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