The evening world. Newspaper, June 24, 1913, Page 17

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eeads y. June ‘a4, t SAID TWAS NO GOOD? WHATS THAT GOT To DO Witt YouR APPEARANCE! WAS VERY SORRY BETTY VINCENT’S ADVICE TO LOVERS To Love and to "Be Loved. THANKS FoR. T te @ fine and beautiful thing for ‘THe ORpET2 teeeive love in return. ~Qut, like m: ¥ fruite of life, thie one puckers the mouth if it te tasted before ite time. In pfain English, no girl. should) attempt to have & love affair when she te too young apprectate i. 5 nmi Ya MR. JARR STARTS ON A P C = oy AaB Rar $n oat at's le jak sal Ser ee man ete tin ee cov ht ene ar bombs ever and anon. he said. ; “He felt @ flerce reactionary hate detour to the back : FAS Gifts of Jewelry. U3) aol “3. HL" writes; “A young gmitten the porter, But now # sinister Working for a living, *y Paying rent, menials, he was admitted by * Betng in debt, | ways to the desk, Doing favors, “Who fort” asked the clerk. Thinking or speaking kindly, “The party has just come in," said Five cent fates, Mr. Jarr. “I think he's in one of the An@ ready made clothing. dining rooms.” hated especially because it} “Front!” cried the autocrat of the one ingredient of his existence | hotel office. “Go with this—” the clerk that had turned the milk of human /| looked at Mr. Jarr searchingly and add- NO use ' THESE ftort—' “gentieman’ and see ELEVATORD ARE NEVER- ON THE JOB WHEN * the wooden handle, he still carried the 4 Dig pastedoard box that had been . But anything can happen in A big hotel. Only the day before clerk had nearly been rude to what * wished on him by the walter In the sdewntown restaurant. The box that * contained his friend Rangle’s qeuit of | thought was @ dressed up clothes. it had turned out to be a South Ameri- * Hed Mr. Jarr known it was not a|can Dillionaire. You never can tell, ‘new suit of clothes, had he been aware| At the door of the cabaret grill Mr. It was now a second best sult of clothes, | Jarr sighted Mr. Rangle sitting at a he would have gone raving mad and|table with the stranger and being have bitten himeelf in the face. He dig served brolled guinea hen and cham- Know, however, that the box bore “} pagne with s mixed salad and other doth sides the words that drove him | kickshawe ' | . g : 1 dwelt on his artistic pace, : “Me? Wants to see me? Who te it?’ “a (Ss a4 WH oe bie Likewise tis hard-won hoard— asked Rangie when the bel’boy glided " \ . ‘omg well,” he cried, ‘to-day I grace in and delivered the message. | wy, = ‘ Duke Humphrey's festive boant.” t For-Phat Wobby Suit at $19 : “ his name is Ivan the Terrible! ip ry and he wants to hand you something, : ‘ , 3 ¥ ‘Then, ao 1 passed a tavern door, ol said the bellboy. . « t I met, quite suddenly, 3 : ¥ : Mot Over Your Byes! : t But at this instant the young man A A rising painter famous for Oe ne ++ |with Mr, Rangle gave a stifled shriek. | > Hie pictures of the sea. Mr. Jarr had started to take it home| Mr. Jarr was approaching them, bear- Ly! ( “i I tried to talk of cruel fates, with a wild idea to confiscate it, but|ing aloft the fatal packare. oot But be would only say: after the attention it had at “Take it away!” oried the young man “@o long! my bost, Duke Humphrey the trouble it had brought him he hadjin agonised tones, “I've got friends! waits, 1 ‘ never to pause till he had|coming, in wholesale lines. That pack- dine with him to-day.” caught up with Mr. Rangje and made fase will ruin me! I am Sol, the Square ‘hich eat the inscription, the box it w: ‘4 .v fel sald Mr. Jarr in a hollow e : jour sins—I mean your suite— hd S weewet"4 Great Summer Sto bundle-carrier that was attached to it.| have found you out! And as for you," Oo f N. Yor fe A wild idea possessed him to walk|he added, turning to the astounded ew over to Fifth avenue and go home on , “prepare for death and follow © bus end If he saw any peopl (Copyright, 1918, by John A, Moroso.) again and was even more anxious to “The chauffeur has deserted you," Instead of @ , looked, SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, fiNish his task. Fines for speeding gave she was told by one of the men, mound of glossy, golden store curls and he Imew them and thus disgrace them The | Excelaior ¢ Bu him no thought to bring worry, for “No matter,” she satd. “I must keep puffs there now reared over her head wrecked R knew that Lissie would never have de- ¢his quiet. I am ruined if I don't.” between the pillows a turban of bane parted eo easily without being well paid he to get her crushed tur- dages thag would have made @ sheik in_advance. ban from her head. It envious. § [ag about 's Bilis In thie state of mei the Detrlap Houae diamond. Sear eee eet Go Howson began taki curves , sult of clothes," Beatie te Thor watshiul beetue niet of country roads on two w on and on Piper ype “ue fat 7 Gol, the Square Clothier, wrote a ete 3 ataniee tinyethowe the bias at thet. Lissie was hurled ry aff it and saw herself re- yx portals of the Hotel | order with his gold fountain pen on @, mown to be in New f sone abou in the mirror of the buresu, 1 was that fiend in human/| pocket check. The astounded bellboy . pl Bhe shuddered at the svetarte ond tthe ‘bore off the box to be sent by messenger | }P it ; yey SA | to Mr. Rangle's home in Harlem, Mr. onan , o ewer “J Sriendlate 5: came Greseed young business man, evidently | Jarr seated himself at the table and the owner of the enaypy roadster. then a waiter came over. ,- ir, Jarr wheeled right oblique and] “A lady over there says she's your the @. Vitus not two minutes| wife, Ir," be sald. “She's with ehind his intended victim. friends,’ But & porter barred his way, “Tell her to come over and dine with CHAPTER XXXII. OR ten days Lissie is @ prisoner in that eouatry: 4 aide inn while the bruises t gon cleared and the cuts on her te, great, dazsling lights struck Howson’ ' “Bundles must be eatery we fy replied Mr. Jarr, “and say her ata Ghd Te nenetaie tin eee fie healed, She would have tradesmen's entrance, @ porter. | friends ate welcome. Ah, yes, it's the eyes ! , the high aign and the paseword that : ,At qnother time Mr. Jarr would have | Jenkinses!™ ‘ "Hge ond and unexpected (pend. | tiie mands brings attention and relief vameslatelye r - es ee ent In ike lene Loa oe for the aid of all fel- pais ‘om the road into @ cop’ trees, acters etared at the bedrageie’ The automobile that was coming bp Jungle Tales for Children CHAPTER XXXI. head-on escaped safely at the edge of raiment rally srrgaseh eed toe Ane Trwere was no way of getting word te a By Farmer Smith—— (Continued,) the road Its ocoupants jum Ut then gased significantly at her, SUF Richard save by wireless, ane See 2 66 HAT’S. your montcker thig 8P4 Tan to the wreck. Howson had ‘"tnere is a quiet Inte (np e half mils Of Wand and near wire communteatios time?” he demanded of Plunged headforemost over the wheel. up tne road.” ead pores, 8! f, of them. “They Copyright, 1918, by The Pree Publish ing Co, (The New York Evening World), Tizzie, using. the thieves’ Dut had fallen clear and with arms gon ask many questions” twas glenic day in Jungletown, And Giraffe stood still in centre feld, with language inthe inquiry for nFomn inetinetively over hia head te" Tssie rolled Her great Diack eyes ap- crowd yelling to him to run after her atone Bilan, machine wad folled over on one wide Pfeil . the fly, and reaching out his long neck} ‘Mra. Russell, New York,” she rer goanish Lissi inaids ty , The ‘aa cut ether. Mister Parrott wes ¢o ait 1 &) caught the ball, witle the Elephanca|Miled tantly, Pattored and Dleeding, senecioes,,” “* haute a er Pee er tee PBS oo secre hentia’ ie Me igh tree and umpire the game. trumpeted and the Lions roared in dis | AM TU Howscn, | Owner for ragged her out and put .y'? BAY bowled along, out not mere 4 | rte be: 9004 DY pieck Roman type, running across three Jimmy Monkey's mother hed covered | gust, ‘He had a porter unscrap the luggage, 1@. Tt was an inn where reedy m columns. al cocoanut with some s eotton and sloth warer, that Jim tt very one Rey the] picked out his own bag, found as good shouted louder than the Ten Command. BEAUTIFUL, YOUNG Pat al xID- that it wouldn' players and Mister f@ stood in themid-|4 room as the hous afforded for him- nd ments. No better haven could have arvaD {€ struck them in the eye, le of the field and caught all the files|#el, and then had the clerk give his bend the of th ‘order the been found for the injured woman, Kind, ith “4 — Moctor Baboon was playing centre| that came in his direction. mistress the second hort, all Sxpense8 woman tauen Ne a hemsttak, ministering hands would be busy with 11 "politude was torture itt commie vox promis fe Oat fold for Mister Diephant’s nine, when| When the sun went down the score| ‘9,20 chang-d to her account, “The chauffeur haa cleared out,” said her aa tong ae her purse held out—and S aoee pyerey got tired and had to stop playing. | stood 1 to 9 im favor of Mister Ele-|uaiane er cone across with it, Wel “*g,o%e, of the Tesousre, Bate Pe gy wa! : In Franch, @pan- FAMOUS CAOOK ONCE KNOWN AS a players bad batted the Pall ao hard|phant’s side, and when Mister Girattelte gone in the morning’ eH | The party noube as ghe was halped up's dain sii santer “Crook whoeg OUR RICHARD CALVERLY STEALS at the poor doctor had nearly run his | passed Miter Lon be outs th Ha lett his mistrote to the solitude of | Howson want to the wreck, stripped entrance, She ordered « physician sent eo had belé for WOMAN HE LOVES. trai leas off. “You mea + Old long-|@ diamal room, there to peck at her 4¢ of its loense numbers, stuok them for and ehe gave the bellboy a 6 to et within (The score was 9 to $ in favor of Mis- | necked fellow, will you?’ food, empty @ bottle of burgundy and inside of his overcoat pocket and ‘unt up @ trained nurse. J ter make 4 thr Lion's side, when Mister Elephant] But Mister Lion was too tired te| {Ty to beat herself unfairly » imped away, The rescuers departed suddenty and sho fully fected. Mister Giraffe for centre field | answer. while he lingered in the cate On the way Into the city in the var t wishing to figuro in any had been onty one thing of holding ine take Doctor Raboon's place. meal. A, of her rescuers Spanish Ligsie regained might mean t nd that was her af- She read throug! ‘4 ‘With that lasy. old long-necked fellow toudhed a drop of strong drink, but She mumbled to the two men state by ol} loom up suddenly with a (B, Tam sure to roll up a dig score,” looked on this task a4 @ biight. In her in the seat and they tried demand for an explanation from hig out- came to her eye as Ly 11¢ was Mister Lion's turn to go to >a, summer it would have been @ holiday. to stanch the flow of blood with their raged supporters. ad tacked on ¢ ded ob Simmmy Monkey pilenta him © In winter it wes just about all that he handkerchiefs. Lissie managed to transfer her fortune ing as an English ot ball he tnocked it high in the eky eal a a, s She finally managed to make herwelf from her person te @ spot between the nobleman, and that the thrust wes Resse for ares babe” Bieber Gnd len she gots to Spain,” he suld to intelligible. mattresses near the head of the bed be. and oo for firs himself dourly over his nightcap, “I ‘Take mo to some private hospital as fore the physician She was ex- higher the ball went, Rope she spends all her money on a near here as possible,” she asked amined and in due time the pronounce- ‘The Baby Baboon was playing right eastie, that the be 4 revolution and them, nt made that no limbs were broken Geld and he ran toward centre, while bai) the sevolutiqniste will knock it She was fearful of a report tying made and that all ribs were still intact, ema all K iN to the police. ‘The nurse came and took charge of DI 4 a in no more amiable mood the "I can't explain,” she said. “It will the patient. Cooling lotions were appiled ne {rained nurse ‘had boon dlarnianed id bi alps Mister Zebra, who was playing left ’ nex. morning when he took the wheel be al! right. I have plenty ef means.” to the bruleed and out face of the former and Spai Liasle was entirely alone, Her eyes biased ag she read through ‘ Bela, also ran after (he ball, but Mister

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