The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1913, Page 13

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sarietakareanaasen tcunncaionutersnaieac <aesba io. 5c a aaa amen aa Lead eee Sept cree * Re aha AEN ARE 5 30" att us acs rat eth A NN ER The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday. July 7.-1913 ‘S’Matter, Pop?” eu HE Ace «OC Cee Sa we ~=By C. M. Payne Now Dearie, TU6H, TUSH!? HAVENT Tat CAREFUL ] BREN with em ENOUGH To KNOW 1VE GOTTA We MY EYE ON EM EVERY SECOND? :\ ae sunt oh HERR ATMO A nD KL BE lg NT a || "i ti! Il ii th i il i Wt i | ? WN * (SMATTER rd “PoP ? ik Teal / ~~ 3 Ha 9 iM % . y ii ~ vee ,¢ - Ten Nation-Famous New York Murders ae 4 == /( “HERE'S ONE (66T & SMUe- By Alfred Henry Lewis PIPPIN ! OH H11.—The “‘Broadway-Chambers Street Mystery. CRAWL OVER x ok pf alone Od fo | so if I could berd th sa up and keep of ok the canvas around the body, so as to Pe ies omy Bhons absorb the blood and keep it from run- cy tty but poor dressmaker, ning. ‘apa was on the managing board of a at Broadway ia eee Street." where inci ogeurrad to me if 1 bury oF send through him I obtained an invitation to live down thore for two weeks, BSaakens Wiliam titer sent would frum dencvintions sbcaMllo® ia All frivolity and fun and men wete to be forgotten for two whole weekn, tga to, coleat ame i. Idbatliyn It besatie nachesnty ¥9 okee I Invested in the most old-maidish and unbecoming shirtwalsts with long My Hunt for a Husband 4 New York Heiress’s Butierfly Quest for ‘‘the Right Man.”” By W. V. Pollock. Copyright, 1918, ty ‘The Pree Puttishing Co, (The New York Rrentag World), 6.—THE SETTLEMENT WORKER. HEN a man wishes to run away from the opposite sex he can spend & night at a bar or in a Turkish bath. There are no such relegated exclusively to women, So they, poor things, must solace “within themselves” or take refuge in the four walls of @ cloiater. ttlement on the east side and ‘aboard a ship, Colt, arrested on und dispose of the clothes, which I sleeves and high collars that the shops provided, ecarert aertgeed to, the killing. gpeedily accomplished by ripping up To my utter chagrin, as 1 entered the dining room rather late, I caw eight amd ft he hit Adome (n't ME the coat sleeves, vi and shirt. IT or ten young women in dainty gowns and as many young men, making @ e Sinn Te pulled a part of the awning over the = = ‘ merry dinner party. body to hide it, and then cut and tore ind i (Continued. a plece from the awning and laid it in An usual, kind fate placed me next to the mort brililant and entertaining HEN I heard the knock on the bottom of the box. =s . man I had ever met. I was not to escape. the door I was startied, and = “After several efforts I succeeded in = - : e Ps Ss Ronald ¥., the eon of « Pittaburgh magnate, was a socialist, a suffragiot, am fully conaclous of fing raising the body to a chair, then to the = : P Sey & humorlst, a philanthropist and every other “ist” of modern invention, i bap ret Po key & a8 top of the box, and, turning it around = x cluding an egoint. 10 lock It. jen Bat down, a little, let it into the boa as easy as 5 Ronald with his new fanglediem interested me profoundly, After my twe peck ae on Tos oe palpdl me I cect cavde! Wet ee ei oa ae Weeks at the settlement were up we managed to ace each other quite efter, | mech: i, I went and looked at poor box and nailed down with four or five = He wanted to see me every evening, but I had far too many engagements. who breathed quite loud for nails, which were broken and of but : Papa was going South to his shooting box at High Point, N.C, and grew minutes. In the end he threw hia little account. I then wrapped his =| —==y rather suspicious when I refused to accompany him. % and was silent. I recollect clothing up and carried it downstairs Ronald was a romantic lover, and before many weeks he proposed to me. ) him by the hand, which seemed to the catch basin, and threw them 4 But I qsked him to wait for my anewer. , gon ed Bree wel came over into it. ‘We became close pala and as his influence grew stronger he tried to tm ad ki im. “About this time some noine startiea The Strange Cargo. : Drone his ideas upon me. T fett agitated and frightened, I “Having done this, I carried down the Hin greatest desire was to make « suffragist of mt to the door to see if I had pail, the contents of which I threw into the clinging-vine type and even ) ned it, and took the key-out and t!' gutter—into Chambers street. 1) | ~~. objected to going out unescorted ai | 3 atood- for: 8: FUSDNS ever. pelle Ge Ng sed firet to arrive for five o'clock tea and he bewan to alr his ideas, . ; ny a thera, inthe anne cincetion Farrage He surprised me by saying he did not belleve im automobiles or the selfisti ried a pail of water upstairs, and, after i ro) luxuries in which wealthy Yorkers indulged, “ rinsing the pall, returned ‘t clean and | ¢/ I looked at him tn frank alarm Horrid Situation.” two-thirds gull of water to. the room. | Did he expect me to Hive differently from whet I had always been aeous- “The blood was spreading all over After whieh I opened the shutters a: = tomed to? floor, There waa a rent quantity, Usual. drew a chair to the door, leaned : : : = — 1 assured him that in spite of what ‘he considered very fine clothes ond soca the ‘doe, na vent atiowoe th ihe = ~ . 2 = extravagances I was poor in comparison with some of my friends. Washington Bath House in Pearl street : The next thing he sald made all discussion futile. He believed that var "rated 3 ~ man and woman should have e life work end my becoming eco of tn of the. sleevon en bosom that ; E or an actre: Now, I was sure he had peobbgpeverigeler fie rey Md abe athe room for a piece of parte of the sleeves and bosom shat ¥ = ; ] | cr,en sotreas:” Now, 1 was ure he had gone ata writer ‘ound, in a box which s vw ewhat stained wi : ‘ terrer entty the room, aft artially ltt was*ing the floor. I then went to my =a 7 3 T rushed from the room and sent James, the first deotman, to aay tims it some awning which was in it, a It wanted, when I got there, — = = Wis trnlty phvelelh han Reon pemmnaned. of cord, which T tled tight around ut five minutes of 11 o'clock. ss . = Bical sig ipsa psp l.secae ee - ‘sane neck, after taking his hancker- ‘In the morning, about half-past 5, T = = — Papa. And a short time afterward Ronald married a self-supporting Detip f off—and his stock, too, I think, Kot up and was nearly dressed when Lad It was then I discovered so much the girl came to wake me up. T went) The fenr of its leaking throygh to the office and found all as I had left e to take a to: it. I went after some nails, and got them at Wood's store ge “That done I went down to the East e s 1e@ersdere River to ascertain the first packet to New Orleans. I found the Dalmatia at e a oe) « yi ng A 1 BODOO: A Summer Romance n g e l ot New York. Destro the foot of Maiden Lane. turned to the room, marked thi My horrid situatt ined till pose oisig AEOOn wees 2 WOOO ELABTPARAR CAR, 2 oobi. oe . orrid situation remained til (Copyright, 1912, by Louls J: ‘Vanee,) smoulder t hes between hia fingers, cruelly true to admit of further argu- Cause I wanted freedom and a little “You mean beg my father to take me 4 tk—a nllent space of time, with still f thi by_Laouls Josh Lets . hn A yy Sy Recree peters h Dacte, “I'l dle fret!" lepending on just that hereid reflection. SYNOPsIa Oo} DING CHAPTERS, ‘At dusk of the evening I carefully Carmsn. Hugh Whitaker, Nera speculation in a painstaking analys! At a loss, he fell allent, knitting his eppiness. “Good Lord!” he murmured beneath mustn't be any more talk, or bis breath. Ne 4 find even any thought, ing iike that. saw a tnan passing the door as T/ 4, tin i of the girl's position, hands together as he strove to y ght, or anything like ‘at bien the. door and save uy I a was going out, and requested him to 0 ee Wee pores nee ‘iz months Subconsciously he grew aware that other words wherewith to comfort and ‘ Sond Goi he murmured beneath hie I understand too well to ask the im- sensibly yieléing to the t~4 I crossed into the park and help me down with the box. He got|to lire, He leares the consultation ‘room, feeling the storm was moderating perceptibly, reassure the girl. ther s awed by contemplation of the possible of you. Hut there ia one way his will, ed up and down, thinking what !t down without any assistance. pre-|dazed and scarce understanding the iaport of the wky breaking. She bent forward, elbows on knees, P bo childish simplicity of her con- out—a perfectly right way—4f you're It was inevitable. a beat to do. P Wht erring to do It Rimself, and T gave him | foal ht las Reard, | He realize that he, must ect¥e Ainlshed,"” the girl announced at head and shoulders cringing. wrest “Oete bared Wie Geen Samastion that hes bese ae brave ugh to take a He wis noarcely lees Geaperate tam “Firing the bul'di ten or twelve cents. I then went dow: | was about wo mary. At his ci that length, urts #0 9 Hed. be u . n ance—a long cl she—and no less overwrought and | thournt. ant ould oe anvels Chamoere atret for» carman, whom | Hire regi ag Bone al Fk eam Ban ne yet iettncd ay Manche es Ant nieianne™ Me Hsemed to ant hope of strung and he wad the eranget ty eo 1 sax coming towar + an ~ " 4 t : 2 se of hie | im flames and wafted tnto Misee Nin te ave the box to the mp za tate re cinta hat et y otathe : there any inline amoral ; " in, t graced forgren and irene ef an’ 5 Cpa Moose dar him with eyes ‘Gh it ann nge will coula th of othe there was quite a at the foot of Maiden Lane. | rent | hie ctw i K “If you wouldn't mind sitting down. tt je was little more than « child, ae ber who slept. ‘Inthe building, .with. him.’ Gas Seren ee fading tha sik is @he had twisted her armchair away i ‘ou're nat . customed to yield and go where thew . about to be ma Hugh saves the ire from the table, Jed or pointed out the path. What After anaering 15 Chey Han park To Colts Rescue Pe deating Sia ewevtbeart bs, ring scchty are, Whitaker took a seat a little di 1 sistance could she offer to the dominesme 4 Pb ‘or more, I returned to my The Colt famity moved as one for thaw wy mitake int) a mon tance from her, with a keen gance ‘lidn't love him. I didn't love him at , ing Importunity man of full stature, ang tT Oe more. E returned to MY the reacue of the murderer. It was| whew 'e soune and teaiiftl gil ie about Kil Sppraising the change In her condition all, and I knew It, even though I meant I'm not grateful ‘rrowant in hie strength, and—houn@ed 1 supposed, unobserved. ‘ Sas much thelr pride as thelr affection | perselt by Mriniang oxalic Cad. Mee scule, and finding it not so marked ax he ( marry him. Kindness,” she interrupted. He paused, standing over her. by flenda? , Whe 5 Hinpulae. It would | 2m sulle, am i, Ladlajea, i But why-—In heave But the disgrace—that can't be blotted “Desperate enough to marry @ man free Cote Sie be wae tn Which furnlghed the lmpulge: 36 WOuld | ue SOP ClaMt net tea ass fatoas etl ome, TAG Ree “Because I wan eo lonely and mis- out.” who's bound to dle within sit ‘one bly. have been acefu _anerys ts x will not Still, whe seemed measurably more d rh i pereeite. guaibiy th yellow-haired seamtresy of | take het tack.) Hugi fake, bow much of er understood and unhappy ut home. Y« ‘Oh, yes, It can,” he insisted, bluntly. an! leave you the chaiffeur fook with him ‘when he left composed and mistress of her emotions und apt ems Mt | n Task. How much more | R2™? Though he had to judge her mostly by don't know how desperately unhappy— “There's a way T know doctora give me six monthe more of Ii “atte 1 ted in my: disgraceful weuld It ve were he fin-| har eiice and inanner, so dark had "NO Mother, never daring tu see my A glimmering of that way had on!y I'm alone in the world, with no one dec * aieek AR AE ted Oth wheaer nally hanged in the Tombs yard as a CHAPTER IV. Haiewn in teltecae sister (ahe ran away, tos'—my friend- that instant let a little tight In upon the pondent upo nothing to look for- her blind folly, out and his lights wi murderer! The thought was enough (Comtinued.) Through the shadows he could see Ships at achool discouragel—nothing in of his sollcitous distress for ward to but a death that will benefit no- ‘The bald truth is, he was hardly a in the fatuity of his soul be it he wae right: fe but a «reat, empty, lonesome hous: dv—a useless end te Mt reapol Du nis sus to madden, and the Colts pourin Mrs. Wi kei little on than maases of light and ! 10-8 USER life, ponsidle agent; distracted b; to mo that i might put the body out the family gold like w An irs. Whitaker. shade blocking In a slender fignie hud- and my father to dutty and make and begun to walk to and fro, “Will you take my name to free youre Inke af an eno mutiny int by the rer "@ cask or box and ship It somewhere, ray of counsel was retained, the gr HERE was a brief pause of giea in the big, dilapidated chair—the f 1 behind him, trying to self? Heaven's my witness, you're wel- of annihilation as well am by con i owl by had in mind scom right come to 1 ti 4 tome ht at this time that the David Graham at its head, astonishment, “What do iia" ovat of her face uni the darke w me to Biation of the anl'e wrmanet f whigh wee in the room would an. Nor was ‘Colt imaeit In cold, un- you kndw about that?” #he fee of her wide, Intent ay love--be- and reasonable, "ON," she breathed, aghast, “whut are #aw all things'In distorted perspective, jar; T thought it wan too small and social friendliness in hin cell, The demanded. Boni! whe ried sharply, 'Picase ie clarion sated you saying ile had hia being in a nightiaare world, , as it wan quite open, lovely Henshaw came to see him every 7 know a good eal look at me #0"-—— ro coef apse Be being yet Tit a day and remained for dulce. hours. about that type of man,” he ees eur pardon: Galant mean ile, know! that something must John ¥ “d) Payne--he who had writ- ia ay, menue bream to” 0 lowe, ten i n't have any — Pee cicats the shutters Putas ‘and quent visitor, So, to0, Was Lewis Gaylord | of, but I had some Jewelry—my mother's ane onl orty Some Zee me ee the box to see if I could not Clark, edit®r of the Knickerbock: 1-| —and he was to take that and pawn it thin about me” the body into It. TI soon saw #0, there came other friendly #0 and xet money enough for us to get Mbout me ate he “Um proposing marriage,” he sald with of frightful, Insane realities, He could bls quaint, one-mided ami have conceived of nothing too terrible bETTY VINCENT’S | ste aan Nat's Otte Sa pooner bom ADVICE TO LOVERS}: nged my mind about that ‘The last trace of evening light had ‘* happened in this room has faded out of the world before they were male me seo that nobody has any right agreed Darkness wrapped them in its Sere isan 8 foneiMlNy EAR tee ene a said lowly. : . ‘SrBat f mean to leave the eounteytime Ihe, black asd secntions totes ete To his infinite relief, the walter Ine 1" yaar fe a. Ula wie the obit Holiday-Making. |larious moods let them not forget thelr | mediately—and let death find me where White rues & ieaich and " or. J | manners—and the comfort of others. 1 ave beh ° Learn One Thing Every Day §) ‘iin’: be on) OUI A SE oat «wander Viity ym.) manneemrand tis te dnd’ iilarmantes manith GE aur Gee tmutiarita’ Guzok aft aa ipa f the windows, standing with her back i OF) ANTE ie gr eerriiaas 534 ceivable use to me, Will you take th them to one another, How to Gain a Fund of General Information ¢ 4 lucky _ escape.’ MON. writes: “Lam desperately in| a pi 3 > to the room while Whitaker admitted ‘ ore many employ them to make your life what it ‘The «irl still crouched in her armchair, > the man with his tray But Tm not gied. 3 waa’ a complaints in this |{ove With @ young man, with whom I) Was meant to be? Woary and spent, her powers of contea: Copyright, 1918, by ‘The Hien lutlish ing Co, (The New York Bvening Work!) When they were alone on-e more he P 4 coolly, “f city of the behav: (284 4 Gwurrel avout & year ago, Wel “ery a tittle thing, but {t'll make me tion all vitiated by the losing struggle. 4 ro * he interrupted coolly, ‘from 4 e noken wince, bi c py 4 ¥ ‘ 28.—8UGAR. " Pia them are Weel Set ote ie fixed the place and drew a vhalr for br’ Morini fee, piver ining ioe ior “Of ihe young | haven't snok Neen Bat Senge Be bes feel . lot inane At te ee UNI this Ppleher was trembling with nerveus LASOST all the sugar In the worl machine whic a ‘ yt you're not married to a blackguard.” men and women | Had tothing yo us 1) world—to know | le et one fatigue. ‘ Oo remain 4 1 ar-fetched chance ) ou x guwar cane and the sugar pect, /where they are treated with hot water! tone cheerdul. mney. Ave th, ey pare and other (iy i yunr ei vetwuen two persons each | live. It's @ milllon-to-one hot, but drearily. “If it must be’ — fo also maple sugar, sugar made] that extracts the sugar, The hot water] ‘I hadn't finished wnat 1 wonted to ‘And you have youth, jealth, y places of recrenr| ie eat to letae and’ T thtan [you've wot to bear i in mind, Bul, rer “ti's for the beat.” he inelete®, Ome the sap of date palms and fromjena: poids the sugar in a melted state| tell you,” aid the girl, coming back of life ey : tion, Unfortunate- s a ror | @lly, You can't lose" —— stinately, “You'll never regret tt.” you might write a note of apology for G@ruits, But the wugar we ume Ili cuned saccharine syrup. The syrup| “tty "On, toy ito quantities, the loaf sugar, the Will you do me the favor to wait? you can't halt hysterical ly, too much of this complaining your share this diMoutty, The she implored him, “One of us will—elther you or 1" she ‘o think of marryls ald, quiet! “It's too one-sided, You y jed. I think things will tood."* oun Should meet you halt wa gre She ponsered, soines ihr (Aires a Gail citecwieo hen rou've had wCophere are worse things to gut up ‘s Juatiflable, jEouPe at me eee 2 BE SHO'SORR OER GARR WAR So ave OU and oe setae i 4 oa j - q — : \ marian or, the beet, FHy years ee oO cation fovd." Wie sean vont And Gali AAD Ue, ota y potunig, Does He Care? u've no right to look at it that He hesitated, ith ware ft 19 a necessity Tho clear syrup is drawn off, filtered) Oh, pleane!” he begged with his odd, | “But~how can T live? What am T/ to have @ good time without being »|, ¢ a writes Cr cite love mith BL RAR ey: gaocek: aualle. for ble ‘She had a habit of saying the , | , boy and It seems aw if he eared for : et. bh Begar beet ie white. It grows infand purified, It In then charged witi| twisted smile | rowdy, It ian't necessary to throw the | "| apecious sophistry fool's bargain’—the wisdom of the enniitien in Brogein, Germany, [earbonic sci gan and bissched. After uct head Arvaelny ap t ant ‘posible of wolng Rome?" pemaine of your lunch on the Kran, oF je foo, Bus, though one aight be You're being asked to confer, not to sage from the lips of a ehild. and the United #tates, Almost|thix it in heated In huge crystaliigers,) “47% “Seturned to hia window, rather ‘Have you made eure of that? Have|to laugh and talk noslly, or to indulge | alka home 4.(h ine, the next he may |accept, a fw just an act of | ‘Phen it's settled,” he said, business on tons are produced every where the sugar crystals form and the| wishing that he had thought to ordar you written to your father—explained?" | in ‘rough-housing’’ on the trolley cars.|not even look in my direction, What kindness to a hopeless man, rq wo mad like, ofteriae bis Hane, Foo!'s bargain from the bect root. Millions ofjliquid ts thrown off. for himself am well ax for the girl, for “I sent him @ apecial delivery three | All these things are outside the pur-|whall I do about this, and do you think |!€ 1 didn't know you were safe from it's a barmain. ‘are brought to a sugar tac-| In making sugar from sugar cane the| It Was sudden!y borne strongly In upon Gays ago, and—and yesterday @ tete-| poves uf true recreation, he really carou?” |facuerency of (he madness of thle etter BAe (ose: NRARNStRG same. OO and fF where they are_stored in sheds, (cane ie crushed until all the “Juice In| hm fat he himeslt had had little gram, 1 know it wouldn't do any 00d.) Young persona who must remain in| Hoe probably cares for you onty aa A) Mh ew pho cried. “Don't tempt me! ‘! turn they roll auto: jovi of It, ‘This Julee ty then treated in| enough to eat since dinner with Veter but It told him everytht fe didn't | town during the hot weather ought tol friend, at present. and I wdviso you tolyou've no ret, You doa't know how be good friends and to try not to think | frantic I e|much the same manner 4s the esouha- nee about @ closer relation, ountered, trenkiy. “I'm j 0 14 fF what Whitaker knew of Thur-| b¢ 88 happy ax possible, if only to al Guiling “nhs egpetiin, ‘sak thentet Ni low Ladiaias be felt this to de toe | 8 Weeping well, But in their moet hi-

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