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ee — - The Evening World Daily Magazine. Tuesday. May 4. 1915 Reflections of A Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland STAPLICNED HY JOeRI rm ore Publiones Dally Pacem fentey by met ' on haing Co ~ som —-—-——_-__—- Hemered of the Poot Otrive Ceri 6 ie World for toe Crtted #tevee An Cowe the Cerra Wik te The Pome Petes Oe MMe Bee Dos 6 ond Cored wo ¥ Toor on.0e ¥ Oy apPTeheBsive « Mer — VOI ME — ‘ a one , . 4, ' MAN be wever fed vine & Curtain lecture es @bee ble File femerke, “UR well, Dee wot te hal ‘ / \ tac | | ; ; \ \\ ¥ & married man Glee, even the Grote he leaves give bie widow ONE WAY TO REDEEM ITSELF \ es | | sesssaing te best bbvet ts te epiovie the bas eu oot Son SaMeeat - » 4) we bib vids | \} ULLIWING 4 i ' ‘ ‘ ' 4 \ f \ Piirte are bike they either excerd the epeed limit an@ a legislot allt , eS ee ee ee | ( pa ond tn 6 oman up, « so slow that a girl aearly dies of nervous of outlays © ‘ ’ \ } ‘ ‘ | | i / \ brortra all ce for them tw get somewhere ‘ 7 nounoes 4 j ' ' , : | 5 \ | ' @ ining May 1! | q ~*29 wa l\y “ee . i sgt fel any sp ae 1 } 5 esdiimase —— cdgiameiaean . eran cain D meni. & dieeu salad dressing wit This promis f Cat a | ‘ja wa While the ochestre ts playing @ Haweilan love song Perious Blate depert | ‘ et 2 utus 4 Saito ; favished on them by the | gnif ‘ ( Nel mee ACK. SHoE wire FF ; . {it é ying & hee aker tn order to reform hits t* about os effective extent to which aroused pubic of worked jr t \ | a > he Lee t a condemning @ toper to live ih a @ry country, it doesn't cure Bim, tt ‘ , as 1 ve LX {] merely makes him bypoeriticn ‘Administration <\ | ( \ bie Be f WEAR , When, a6 happened yerterdas, G tend tw ¢ er | \ f)) sl eM E Nothing so 5 an old inald to her at j i | <n y eile © y hers biessedness as baving Gail to agree within 5,000,000 bow 6 the Mt to pay out , ba ae’ [ \ + / . 8 coey iittie ining breakfeet with a married couple. fn the first two weeks of tlie month, ' ell feel that it ie ' (U2 Cy ' fe time to chalk wp the State's a ts on @ Ulackbourd where the " / \ saglaltns bie Pt aes A man te alway surprised when one of his bachelor friend# gets mar pablic can get a look at them \ 2 ;*> S | ~~ rie it itis nothing Hke the shock of astontsliment be receives when oo ae = | . sos © finds himect! standing before the Heense clerk 4 actual), ‘eniny EB Lon ondbdlerenpaecbrceteleratlia Mid Bingley ~~ | Liss } | | \ \—” his own name to the death warrant of his ib Ay lt meddle of the Mate budget and threatening to hold up Stale and city for a Lest. | Um > ‘ | / oe entre $20,000,000, 11 has one chance to redeem itself, Let it promptly : —| tall & t ¢ LU PA | ‘xen. swe gucuie. kee Ie {Vhvs O59 inarviaeranysa oF a eee rectify both errors. ae WHY Not Av , yy) & iS \ \ / - fad the still staal © of comiuon wense te utterly drowned in ite sweet- INJUNCTION Bs. MDa \ ness “If you are going to dipcuse this betting lon! lation from the AGAINST ——_ he 5 a ane . 1 « » ST standpoint of ec co and not from the standpoint of votes y : [WANT AR N\A ihe Maelo moe. Vanity 9 the dash of bitters in love's cocktail, which helps most to then we cannot meet on any common ground” Thus a bony 4 - ) J / HUSBAND y J 4 =e ‘ ite head as it once did. | ee ech INJUNCTION EATING Sweens| & y make the world go ‘round, to @ Governor, according to teatimony offered at Syracuse ee ) NX TS SsToP MY Goa I ade Yet folks wonder why the word “politics” doesn't hold up Py ol FROM SNORING J! Nox ? > - 5 ete t Things You Should know U eeammeanananaaananenenanaaaaenananen onto t ' nd halt ago) iol ah oper. | €4s and staph ylococe ee PRO Whon once we Know who the enemy =f jis and how the trouble Is carried the orm in the wound,| fate of the battle in largely tm our and wound «and deaths were | own hands frequent Why ils pus formed| ‘This is the secret of the advances dern surgery—not that our eur. ANOTHER SHOCK FOR DIPLCMACY. ! REMAINS to be seen whether the loss of four lives when a German torpedo hit the American oilship Gulflight was due to neglect on the part of the German Captain to provide for safe- guarding the crew before he launched his missile, | If such was the case, his action comes as a most unfortunate fejoinder to President Wilson's insistence that hves on American vessels must be duly protected. It becomes increasingly plain that Germany’s determination to raid the open sea is fixed. French ports are not blockaded off the Geilly Islands. When a German submarine operates 600 miles away from its base against the vessel of a friendly nation, the act has a Weliberateness hardly to bo mistaken. | We are relying upon patience and diplomacy to maintain frank and amicablo relations with each and all of the nations at war. It! would seriously complicate our tusk to be forced into the belief that | @Y one of them is defying our friendly efforts. — $2 @ The President docs well to stick around Washington. * Things happen—things not contemplated even in Secretary (2% Bryan's temperance talks. 4 TRACKLESS STREETS? HE day will come when there will be no street car tracks inj city thoroughfares,” predicts the counsel of a bus corpora-| pT was very nice weather for this) tion which is ready to put 1,008 electric buses on twenty-| [time of year. ‘The microbes of # helper emerging from the) tiat had come for Miss one routes in Manhattan. Fpring fever were in the alr, and) side door, Mr, Doddie nodded to his Cackleberry ‘ Hana “i A All whom they had inoculated were|coadjutor to wateh the wagon and} It is true that day came long since in most European capitals.| wishing they hod noth.ng to do and fed Gus's with Mr, dary. fm London and Paris tram lines do not enter the heart of the city, #¢me one to help them at it, Bill) Mr, but i i " le «og in | Doddle, who drove the express waren, | aid oth; snibers of Gu pare some terminals onthe edge. The more mobile bus plies in| was wishing he worked a one-hour |the Harlem Business Men's Assoc! all directions over the smooth pavements of the business and shop-| day at puddiers’ wages. Were present discussing the war, They ping sections. “Puddiers’ y “4g not a slang) Were all neutral, including Gus, who rs Burface car companies will triumphantly parade the old, fan:iliar expression, Puddlers were for many | Was tor many against the world, GENERATIO! it was expe ation that pus—or matter would P 2s 2D m | WANT AN INJUNCTION JUDGE, SuUpGe I WANT AN INJUNCTION To EN Ton /[JJAN INTUNCTION MY HAIR FROM AAV SToP THe MoTHS GETTING GRAY § || FRom GETTING —— J TUBGE IWANT TUPGE iwanT > AN INJUNCTION To SToP THe WAR To RESTRAIN MY \ HUSBAND FRomM 1 sla file B no physician Knew. A brilliant avep- | '2 9 tle lkeong are any more skilful with the and surgeon, Joseph Lister—an | Knife, but that they can now. enter glishman—determined to find out, | cavities lik and be experimented and studied un- | abdomen aud the chest and remove ‘i | what ts necessary and with perfect til he discovered that the troupe | eee eee tase cavitlos were came from without rather than from | absolutely forbidden ground to their | within the wound, and behold-anti- | forefathers, on Geaey ig = 60— optic 0 yes, 70—per cent. death risk from pus 1a ptic surgery, vices ite apeete BETAY | Oe eet oisuang: of triumphs, was born ‘The operating rooms of our hospl- Blood poisoning is caused by 18-| tals are the very cleanest places on norance and dirt. Formerly, surgeons | earth, and nothing is allowed to en- and nurses helped to spread Infec- | ter unless surgically clean. tion, as they had not been taught! Even the operating surgeons’ ateril- sterilization and antiieptic methods. | {zed hands are covered with rubber Nowadays one drop of pus in a| gloves, soaked in antiseptic solution, | wound after un operation is consid- | Everything is sterilized—the room it~ (hose of the skull, the IN MY CLOTHES oO 5 > ered a surgical disgrace, self, and everything and every one ‘The deadly intruding germs are of who enters it. Ir. Jarr Brings Home a Floral Bomb To Gladden His Dear Ones’ Hearts, about that, too. Look how they fight| to buy and send them, indeed. Thirty | in them alleys down by Flannig.n’s| cents, collect! coul yard, where all them Polaks | Qw, : liver" Mr, Jarr placed the box of The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1015, by The Aree Wuvimbing Co, (Tug New York Broning Word) My Wife’s Husband By Dale Drummond Copyright, 1015, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Wit, Wisdom CHAPTER XXXVIL Reese, simply because I know, bave HY didn't you tel! me you nown all along, that it would do no ‘ wood, and 1 do not choose to humble had lunched with Lu- myself unnecessarily, but,” very quiet- change from Gus and temporarily @ clus Hemming at the/ly, "what's sauce for the goose is eauce ss with Br, dures | [leviuted tho express deiver'a chronic! THE DOCTOR'S TALK. Bh Milestoner” 1 makes) teas us E please—just aa you do vinsky, Mr, Matacl ORAM inst, By A. C Jane the next morning. sie . Con yle. j, Afterward 1 remembered that Jane branch of | y jan Doyle, “perhaps becattse you didn't ask me,| had not told me. how knew and perhaps for the same reason that Haeeierant gee Miss arnyee B98 how if nde ei 5 had happened to invite her =~ | you didn’t toll me that you lunched at oo son rior ahead called me ap te Ped Harden's with Miss Reese,” #he re-/ ask mo to meet her. I knew neither on fa and we'll get change.” and Philosophy on the bar, He got JICAL men are as a rule very much too busy to take stuck of singular situations or dra- matic events, Thus it happens that had no time to dally, and took his arture, Mr. Jarr picked up the box to take Then the driver remembered that he M ri p J ' of us would e cope: sub; ee ae years the highest paid of American | and made his customers take the samo] !t home, when the wrapping came) tho ablest chronicler of thelr experi- Led are naloouid zac tnpithne | 6 Seaiuded T ancula never eee t that the shape of Manhattan condemns New York to remain! workingimen, Hil Doddie had hat ao | impartial attitude in all discussions in | 2086 4d the Ld came off, ences in our literature was a lawyer, | 1 Was angry and For sone days after thie we ecoety, Hill F “My, don't them flowers bave such flushing. Her manner exasperated y were . 5 sweet smell!” sald Gus, \ | am , 0 where traffic radiates in all directions from u centre, Here the daily | PuAuer Is one who mises lev in a) “1 gee that dye tn this country ts] 4" : PAG) Conover birtnbeds walsh ara in Overtures; ‘but gradually, ‘without F . Jarr handed the box around| finitely m ‘ing) takes something |Of course, I had lunched with Miss rolling mill, It is all done by 1a-labout exhausted, since importations| MT Jar ro y more trying) takes something | 0} : yar ance tmpost tone | and all present sniffed at them. ‘there | from a man’s sense of proportion as | Hease, but that wax quite a aiterent Seas uSnHOnLAs ie) Shute se Oar beck and forth in narrow parallel lines creates a special problem. hot what they used to be, Still, Mt | Malachi Hosan was sayings Tor ate,| Wer? #08 green leaves with the ‘constant strong waters might corrupt | mutter, mine was a business summed our usual manner toward each ae : ‘ ch of them fell o ate, Ti . ly, while hers— other, Bill Doddlo wishes he could earn pud= py oj Balan wee ‘ | roses and a bunch of them fell out. hiy palate, ‘Tho over-stimulated nerve | entirely, 7 Now York's now subway system may or may not solve that! gers wages us they used to be, with: lpaveetar ure is waepnan a tee | ae mon all examined thom curiously | ceases to respond, Ask the surgeon| ‘The cases aro totally differenti"! i had again talked with Mi again mentioning the cause of our ‘and hourly need of transporting hundreds of thousands of people | chinery now, and puddiers’ wages are! trom Germany have stopped," Mr. . ‘ t “i ” this time ut the hospital, and problem. When all the new subways are working it may be that out having to do a puddier's work 48 | thot dye tmportations concerned dia | 824 Smeled them to see it they were|for his best experiences and he may [1 exploded, “I wished e tale elas Se Mnad te cote pital Bnd ehe han Rrackless pavements and oasy rolling buses will gradually relogate tho! ‘t Used te be. For it used te bo very | vitaty, fragrant as well as the roses. reply that he has seen litte that io [With Miss Reese, and by lunching| month of work was up, which would 7 | Hpi , Thoy wero not fragrant, but all/regarkable or break away Into tho, With her we could talk undisturbed.” | be in about ten days. 1 was delighted trolleys to an outer belt. If so, it will be a sign that the city’s transit | eye NAnybesy \abould (he: glad ito “Ble, Papen: 4 Every thne Bil Doddle'e WARN) Oe exhausted agreed they were most beautiful, teéhnical, Jut catch him some night] “Yes! Vole eid id cid Facilitics have at lust caught up with its noeds—a miracle tow Now| neegticted this part of Iarlem, bo 484 be extausted for Germany,” re- |" “phen Mr, Jarr wrapped up the hox|when the fire has sparkled up aad| “A business luncheon with & trained | ""uxticy Reese will be in the office aS ways matched a dime | ™ ‘ked Gus impressively, and Mr] and took it home. his pipe i lit, with a few of big | nurse is quite a different proposition) agter the tirst night of the month.” Workers would prophesy. and his helper always pip h PEOBAGEY: vo eee who would go in to ascertain i¢| S!8v! breathed deeply and sald] “pney're from Irene!" reinarked| brother practitioners for company | from a sociat luncheon with @ man} "Sho is coming, then? F a ges he wanted gent | Hatt Gus certainly knew how to talk] Miss Gladys Cackieberry, the en-|and an artful question of allusion to Gue'had' any’ pa the right words in the face of auy-| gaged. “I'l bet it broke her heart » is half in love with you!” “Yes, I consider myself very for. Allies Fall Back at Dardanelles.—Ilvadline, by express. Gus never had, The ’ again. tunate to secure her, I have never n going. ‘Then you get some! |. : sou that ba t want | met a more capable woman for such a ero always | DOdY: Na viiie afd eAnGiaik CHAR’ (8 0 te. naweol | “i have told you that Ido not want) yo ition, She 18 most tuctful ¢ ight. | packages dispensed there were always | wying and sending then me! facts new-plucked from! you to go out alone with Lucius t 00, DAIS ah RAM 'ond AiptEAleS taken home personally by Gus's cus-| “And fighting in them auleys!"| But Sister Gladys was mistaken. tho tree of lite, Hemming! It was no fault of yours) Which, 1® another great aswet in @ a = — ——= | tomers. Jexkt Mr. Slavinsky. ‘hear talk Tho unengaged Irone had been glad! Yet it takes a long time for a nery-|that you and he did not luneb all) “yoy are enthusiastic," y * a ca ieee iam = Bess } Y alone the other day; even if you did) «1 ye reason to be. She te Hits From Shar W its On this occasion the helper had . ous youngster to get used to the|Mereng to frentice that 1 was ex-| . “have fel . She ts one in P {won the toss of the coin, Mr. Doddle's e y 4 situation, You hear men talk about! jected,” 1 stormed; then seeing her! ® ents Jane made no joins we Bren though a girl may have @|of a man who can, the act becomes| coin, and hud gone into Gur's to in-| t LICE le Children |ehynoss na young doctor ay @ joke, stilt Itipussive, evidently unimpreesed | mary unent her Coming. t continued, beautiful carrioge you will always almost critainal,—Philadeiphia Ine | quire for a package. but 1 tell you it ts very near a/ by my displeasure, 0 ee ‘ucius | “Jt wil be & wteat relief to me." find her yearning for an automobile, | quirer. a mini EES not want you to be acen with Lucius 2 ‘Yes! a don't ob, myself are With you. expect to have aus a 4 object, do you 4 je Jren e in a strange town, He has found it| iy wishes respected,” . Mitek good: would:st Go $8 3(aiae Soph et e Loeb @ trial all his life perhops te talk to a ey Rae nanny rahe sho asked, not looking up eee } woman about lawn tennis and cnurch |asked. “If you hay’ | book. Copyright, 1915, by The Prow Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), icee When e young man yay to say. 1 haven't YET told you that) None, Hut 1 was anxious to know CHILD of fiftecn recently, several. of these children, ‘They| fhe is shyer than any xii, ‘Then down 2 don't wish you to Iunch with MIs#) ye you had becn foolish enough to take ~ : Tako some poor raw y , Jurr chanced along, homeward i M h tragedy. Tako raw young his wife or eee oe | Bir, Jurr chanced along, omens as foster CMS 'S By ene ine kes jure pur up bis one | Hemming, unless either, bis The man who always wante to tet |. Charity suffereth tong and ts king,| Pound from bucking the bres ; Mt all rarely ever makes the world | ® Mt Wouldn't stand for go much| Since the parcel post bas made such any wiser—Philadelphia Telegraph, | OPS*M2400n.—Philadelphia Inquirer, | jaroads on the business of the express y Bray Cet isa i : e e e le it behooves every) em- An undesirable of companies, | It's bad enough for a woman who company: Ia one that crit rane wine | ployoe to solielt patronage for the cor- | can't help it to talk for the benefit o help of the Government or poration that employs him, ‘There was : : os = 2 dislike to her because I once hi | a ee ; seemed to take it a8 a matter of|/ comes & mother and consults him * nce hap~ @ whole street car, but in the case! tho children. —Columbla Htate, {hardly a cafe that the consctentious | attempted to take hor Mfe| (oe when in truth it is a inatter Upon most intimate family mutters. | suddenly condemned to death by the Pened to take her to luncheon, 1 — -- | ‘i ‘The reason, in her OWD) of curse, It weakens them phy: “> shall never | Mr. Doddle and bis helper did not stop rare hem physically | ya abe so to that doctor cerdict of the physician, Sometimes | should be sorry if you felt unfriendly , seed k here were 80] and ofter, brings later bodily trouble | #sain,”” afterwards, "His jp was to blindness or to mutilations ieee ens, will be so closely as- at to inquire tf there were any pick- 1 L was so tired 1] that might have been avoided if they | Manner is so stil and ui a | Wwhich are worse than death, Men and | Saclated with me. Try and be gen. | didn't care what happened to me. had not been forced to help in this, thetic.” Unsympathetc? Why, the boor women, they almost all took it beau. | Sle, Jane, and like Miss Reese, she |many babies, ages. : 5 rs way. lad was stvuck duly and paraiyaed, | tifully, aid. some with such lovely |18 @ refined, educated woman and Parner basi paltations Mee | Everything seemed so muddled UD) wnind the baby" may seom a| Lbave Known general practitioners | unselfishness and with such completo might occasionally—when I can spare " : 4 Ae her—prove @ pleasant companion’ ft . d hopeless I Just wanted to get ‘ athe Y : who were so shy that they could not! ghsorption in the thought of how = OF Cotton Kits. I pressing the i ecaune co: i pi and i - er} small thing for a child to do to ald sail ‘ ; a Bi OU. To the KAitor of The Krening World: |fenewse activities” because of the | from Philadelphia addressed to Miss) ayuy grom it all, All my life 1 have) its mother, but tn realty bring themselves to ask the way in| their fate would affect others that the | ¥ it Is the | os re of babies, she sald] direct cause of much thw the street, 41 little cateh in her} youth, muc and of we Gladys Cackleberry, care of Edward Jury ancy What sensitive |{nan about town or the frivolously| Jane Qaushed, the laugh that 1 to men like that must endure before ing of little nerves | i ning the faculties of | tt Late last summer I submitted to bell your good readers—in a letter which | Yolunte you were kind enough to publish—the | 8) nestly he War ve of your had to take ¢ with a wist cd woman has seemed to change | hated to hea ) angel before my eyes, (adlee’ Wiebe Saal) » and replied as gooi as she could control her voice, ‘e y get broken in to inedical prac- | “Got something for your house;” | \ | “You are very kind, but I nade voice, young bone and tissuo and brat oe very A prefer }readers will incur Heht tro ad Whe exprossman, reaching | : cant? x in at a) oo se 6 | r very much to be|to choose my own compani suggestion that Klis of cotton-made|and expense and send at frente roe) eid the eapressman, reaching | wnig child bad the care of seven tima when they nosed opportunity 19 2 of the body ie baal esac tr none son forgot it be vay : Paniong thank articles sent to the wounded European | of the sugge buck dn the wagon and Hebing oUt AN) tors and brothers and was practi. | build strong | comforts wilelt wilt soldiers would be a godsend to the| Mean so much to | suffering men, # help 10 the distressed |"BCM, Who are depriy but a disease of the mind | {, such a pleasure to do a little good| (1 said nothing more, and in spite oblong pasteboard bex, more or besa! eaiy be a disease of the soul, Is) qh ‘ carefully Wrapped and bound. Rather | real mother was conducting Cotton growers and others affected, a| VOT#onAl belongings ia the forcod lows carolully in tact, tor the cord | tore In) wn elon’ to oh decided aid to relief workers in Bue |&Mpaigns and furious tighting they) came oft as Mr. Doddle handed the | lo PIAnAINUE mother was] s » Bucl » Red Cro ; must face, dof \ ! Fope, auch aa the Hod Cross, fic, and ALBERT LE box to Mr. darr, followed by the book ais ate ths ude ee ae |the young shoulde estion bore What Pr: r tosier mother, since tho| Mothor, it were better indeed vere | a little | you to let some of the scrubbing and| it not shocking thing~a thing to | pce her] polishing and housekeeping go wad! drive a reasoning man into absolute | 5 a that | met impo. too much on by Vy man should pay for the privi- |of Jane's attitude 1 did not worry Instead of boing pald for it.|about what she might do. When she he has his home to| had displeased me, I had shown her 3 wife and children| plainly that I did not like certain Hj have a fine noble fellow with every tg support, Bur his patients are his| things, would not stand for them in ood: | divine instiiet aud that so bart, | Vaseu of course, ti your boy or} materi to k tha ay | kee} , Me Sdn Teo conepava et ted materialisi—to thin at you may | keep up and r future manhood and wom A litde more plang ANDREWS, rilont should be. o litte friends, or they He goes|fact. But 1 cannot say that I ever e 10 house and h. ing we | from b Whi i as in the oA f step and|for one moment honestly worried \ Vile offen cases a i) Chse oO " -! a Just) wills minute epeculis of bone! pig voice are loved and welcomed in}about Jane; about her actions, pope Taye ane The Kvening World on Aa sper . and avernundened = mothers Shue you fo OL! trom the inner table of lis skull onto euch. What would a man ask for! Women of Jane's type require som ok ‘eine pie problem fo. ~ cents!" eaid Mr, Doddie, n nceds his elp f eir children, s With. astral ae City and elsewhere adopted the sug: | L B simple problem: for reads | cet Ag needs have help fr y ren, the surface of his more than that? And, besides, he is| strong impelling motive before tl forced to be a good man, It is im-| will set aside the conventtonalitie: yot there of instances where child nto ine. Lad pitlable creature, With every low | possible for him to be anything else, |of a lifetime. It is one thing for « breaking point by such ca Any day And you, gentle neighbor, with!and debasing tendency? What a! How can a man spend his whole life| woman to say to her husband, as on the east side, on every joek, you | le: a seman a dollar bill, |Will see numbers of young children, gestion and placed the kite on eate,| ers! th what proportion should a) Ho change, Wo can get it In Gu some of them at actual cost to them- Merchant mix two grades of tea This last remark was prompted eelves, With the advent of winter) which cost him respoctiveiy 18 and) te fact that Me. dare was tenderiag | PS elder) the etfect of hanghig hin r trials, give a let lift to such | satire wn asylum is upon the majesty in seeing Suffering bravely borne and|Jano did to me, “What's sauce’ f serssest te the cotton Kit movement) §8 cents per pound, to kell the results| (be expr | a mother, who, like the old woman {ot men and ho loss upon the ethereal ;yot remain a hard or vicious man?|the gander is sauce for the goo naturally died down; but summer is|ing mixture at #0 cents yer pound,| “it's mighty funny nobody has any | their backs unnaturally bent with|ot the shoe, “has so many children | natury of the soul! approaching now and the need for{and thereby gain 20 per cent.’ nee When I do business With them ‘the weight of the babies they are she doesn't know what to do," \ . . * ° chi @etien comforts promises to be more aD. \ pear Gus's,” remarked Mr, Jarr, “But carrying in thelr arms, J talked with You can do no better thing, . for ‘This is a noble, generous, kindly pro- {but quite another thing for her to © © | gession and you youngsters have gotJtry the sauce, A hundred times I have seen folk !to see that it remains sc, (To Be Continued.) --* 9 ae aati