The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1916, Page 17

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- -- Per a Daily Magazine, Th ursday: June 22; 1916 —* - a a aaa aaa aed Have you ever wondered how many pulls ) human stores lte hidden behind hosvital walls? ROMANCE } LOVE JEALOUSY } Enter 1.ito HATE H ‘K” By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART NEXT WEEK'S COMPLETE NOVEL IN THE EVENING WORLD Mystery adds to the absorbing interest of this story of a Great Doctor and Rival Nurses eeitic, By Maurice Ketten Vou Bom By}. RIDER HAGGARD. 3 Ave 2 he Miva OTFORK IA OF rhe Ptr 4» CHAPTER acid wurfacs, was aly face me ered apon ita outs ot le ne formic wilh a! © tenderness upon her few atoning something beneath with her ohewtnut soaks fall- | or right anoulder, 1 aed in & oe voice ones more t fel! much disturbed thls moet treommen eeht she Leo asivep.” said Ayesha tn heent voter: “why, that ie ‘lion’ im the Latin tongue, The off man hath named mepriy for ones, \t ta very strange.” = feeper<f don't know how of propriety and the domeate ont on—"very. Mo liketut it where wi w and ues ; i not poate, With af impatient with «@ low wall of “Enough of this wanton play.” ee 1 gteture whe paged her hand over | an 1 could Judy mid, #1 a touch of aternnens, “TF water once more, it darkened, and ie tee of the apa + Come atid eee thi th the Lion, the tmage vanished silently aad myn. . eof Mt Pats, and when the aa the old man Bilal © unly an it had ariwen, lainps were held up t saw teat It Waa came with tee and who ‘Hast thou aught to ask me before nothing but one Vaal charnel-lous, geek, now, « presently, when I guest, oh Holly?” who anid after WOT TE Boss being literally full of thousands of pave made the drug ready, | will tobe ements re eetl ha? Tne e ay humon skeletons which lay piled if, low thee ye, one thing, yesha,” | aa WANT HIM see tin an t «ieaming pyramid, Accordingly IT went, only to find me boldly, but feeli y ho for lipping down the Jou i x mate ee ie Canals BOA Ae A trust 1 looked, HOW MUCH | WoRK bodte apenas Trea Ones Solat ina destin whet bee Gee ME ere. fi hasrinamn, ol the Zo nee, 54 Gt iy — tir wae - | were dropped in from above, In MY the throes of death. 2 r i 6 jay out in her “Hike avtoniahment T made an ejaculation, — She, and abe alo at Bieta fal be is th eins 1 ‘ vaulted place disturbed a skull belle t had been accurately balanced tor 20! f, oi Anewered—"bethink ther, It wanting a tbat Teo hie had. doing ti that thou knowest the old myths of o-could save him. 1 would ko and implore her to come. Aa LT the gods of Greece. Wag there not ny Heol years fear the started to do a, however, Job came pits (ol Bernat Ue ore, Actcon who perished miserably pile: Down i came with fying into the room, bis hatr itterally Ah ied hm commibale Mish 10 he loo! on too much A Gr conte Srpine oF fy standing on end with terror. poe beauty? If I ahow thee my face, lanche of other bones after it, ull at SUATiME on Gad win enters ejacu: | perchance thou wouldst petish mis- lant the whole piace rattied with thelr iiaa'in @ frightened whisper, P 1 . erably also; perchance thou wouldet movement as though the skeletons 22 ® oe japer, “her ‘ = upon eat out thy heart in impotent desire; Wee Coren ub ce ieee oe a ee” ee 4 a for know | am not for thee; | am for save one, who h been, but We left the place and entered Lge ntaane the i, Sl, reer comest in a good time, | others. It would be too long to de. of her cave Sue resstves Belly, 1s not get” jacrite the many things 1 saw In them. {\yeani’ 1 paid, “tor my boy len at CHAPTER XIV. fear not ‘thy beauty, 1 hare rut m five hundred aiu O80 years (hue Mba suid, softly: “provided he heart away from such vanities ae e 1 between the completion of the 2 ud, it ie no matter, for E (Continued) woman's loveliness, that paswes like & AA the destruction of the race C28 Dring him back to life, my Holly, Ayesha Unveils. flower, T atitently: nufticed to fit these i that man there thy servant? and E leaned back on the couch, . “Nay, thou errest,” she sai ‘that does not pags, + My bevuty endures and once more I felt th® even as 1 endure; still if thou wilt, hidden eyes playing upom oh rash man, have thy will.” me and searching out my She lifted her white and rounded is that the method wherewith thy servants greet strangers in thy i country “He is frightened of thy garb; tt ¢ hath @ death-like air,” 1 answered, catacombs, numberiess as they were, h appeared to have been un- 1 since the day that it was all things die? I tell thee that naught Show its perfect and imperial shape, instinct with a life that w really dies, There is no such aa than life, and with a certain mere Death, though there be a thing cal pent-like grace that was more than Change. |, even I, Ayesba—for that human. On her little feet were san- is my name, stranger—I say to thee dals, fastened with etuds of gold, that I wait now for one I loved to be Then came ankles more perfect than bogn again, and hore I tarry til) be GYCr feulhtor dreained of. About finds me, knowing of a surety that [he waist her white kirtle was fas. hither he will come, and that here, fenel by @ double-headed anake of and here only, shall he greet me. gold gqid, above which her gracious He will find mo here, and of a fpem swelled up in lines as pure as surety his heart will soften toward [hey were lovely, til! the kirtle ended me though I sinned against him; ay, Qh ine snowy argent of her breast, even though he knows me not again, Paled above, hve Prod abe i yot will he iove me, if only for MY Shrunk back ‘blinded and io and | meaity’e AAO” on, queen,” 1 anid TPOUEH the face before me was that at last, if we mien’ be born Of ® youne woman in perfect health | in avi again, that {8 not eo with S00 the frst @ush of ripened beauty, 4f shou epeukest truly.” Here Zot, tt bas stamped upon It @ look of Ne 5 > looked up sharply, and once more aequaintance with grief and Peaster’ and Job in English both td lea N a few minutes, following the room—an order which the latter the lamps of tho mutes, we obeyed readily enough, and was glad . y hic! to obey, for he could not in any way came to a stair which led iviue his fear, But tt was other us to She's anteroom, the wi with Ustane. fame that Billall had crept “What does She want Up upon all fours on the previous whispered, divided between day, Here 1 would have bid the Of the terrible queen and her anxiety ge to remain near Leo, “It is surely the Queen adieu, but she would not. right of a wife to be near her hus- } Nay," she said, “enter with me, band when he dieth. Nay, I will not O Holly, for a truth thy conver- 6 my lord the Baboon.” sation pleaseth me, Think, O Holly; — “Why doth not that woman leave for two thousand years [have had us, my Holly?" asked Ayesha from hone to converse with save the other end of the cave, where and my own thoughts; and though she was engaged in carelessly exam- of all this thinking hath much wis- ining some sculptures on the wall, dom come, and many secrets been — “She doth not like to © Leo,” mude plain, yet am h weary of my I answered, not knowing what to thoughts, and have come to loathe say, Ayesha wheeled round and ine own society, for aurely the food pointing to the girl Ustane, said one ores ‘ thou seen enough, my k heart. before—and. oe cae ee WHO 1S THAT FELLOW FIRE HIM } The | stranger guest? 6 ced the gin? AS, T eee now, I “Oh, man!" sho said at last, speak- withdrew some fastening beneath SITTING NEAR THE x DARN t01IoT ! PUTTING |, Rave seen enough, O Queen,” T 4, aie of whom thou didst peal to ; ing very slowly and deliberately, “it her hair, Then all of a sudden the Ly rd , HIS DESIR RIGHT IN ' me. Well, bid them both to jecve aeoms that (hore are still things upon vee, Cae ole! wrappings fell from _ FRONT oF THe Door ! | up Avista itl ate 00 te 4 the earth of which thou knowest form now only robed isc a | CHAPTER XVIII. should perceive my wisdom.” naught. Dost thou still belleve that clinging white that did but fest to | The Balance Turns. Thereon I told Ustane in Aradio | | ensanilaraetionlin hat memory gives to eat is bitter word, and one only, but tt was quite caught the flash of those heirs Suddenly she spaused, and through to the taste, and it is only with the enough, for the tone ia which it was ee—"'Thou,” I went on hurriedly, my fingers 1 saw an awful change light shining through curtains! she flung herself prone upon the the entire crowd instantly preoip!- done this thing, because yo havo teeth of hope that we can bear to bite sald meant volumes, ever died, come over her countenance, Her | was at the curtains and they did ground and sobbed and wept till I tuted itself upon the ground, She Striven to put these mon, my guests, it, So draw the curtaja, and sit here “Go! 2 mounted tho dals and sat down upon to death, and yet more because ye by my side, and we Will eat fruit, and And gullenly Ustane crept past her the chair and spoke to me in Greek, have dared to disobey my word, this talk of pleasant things. See, I will on her hands and knees, and went. and, tossing back her "Come hither, Holly,” she said, “and 18 the doom that [doom ye to, ‘That again. unveil to thee. Thou hast She glided toward the couch on long locks impatiently, swept across sit at my feat, and see me do justice Ye be taken to the cave of torture and brought it on thyself, O Holly; fairly which Leo lay, with his face in the to where the figure lay upon tho on those who would have ‘ 4 to wroik have 1 warned thee, and thou shalt shadow and turned to the wall, ic he cried, and T gut; Watrenmed the captala of her Pee ue Mba eee ead. thar on call mo beautiful, as even thoae old “He hath & noble shape’ she eald “Oh, Kallikrates,” she cried, an ui ble: "Li ; Gown of to-morrow sun those (ows pl v ihe bent over him to loo! on fifty thousand years in the history of — “Mai she half whispered, half S2e/f with a little ledge to it three trembled at the name, “I must look Setent betes ae ot the man Be oF yo who yet remain allve bo alain yoke ed ag Rlicete Be y ” life? Dost thou wonder how | knew hissed, throwing back her head itke a pehiee see high, ke on the shelf upon thy face again, though It be Woe heard the tramp of men coming Py the hotpot, as yo would h vlaia phy! i" Pp ‘Next second her tall and willowy that ye were coming, and so saved snake about to strike—“man, where wy pg BA gi te on & pGel Over agony. It is a generation since L along the passage, and in filed the the servant of this my gucst.”* Rha without more ado she stood up form was staggering back across the AT, On queen,” I answered feebly. 4 1 OF BY. of Life : f with mine own hand.” And with cur would- rderers, to the mum- yin Ung) Hie Oey or Amo. tHe du , Mt stabbed, staggering back till at law ted to the font-like vessel, and and she took one lig foward © i a ‘ bid d or nelr dootn, thelr se ‘4 Te tending forward, held her hand me, and from her eyes there shone ering flame, Suddenly, as L was try. Der of the wrapping that lay over the have cast themselves down on tho there burst from her lips moat she said; “and it {8 80 great eyes suddenly fixed themselves not hang close, #0 that I could see thought her heart must break. because 1 i » half by chance and into an expression in which horror Clearly Into the little cavern beyond Suddenly she ceased, raised herself half by learning, solved one of the seemed to struggle with some tre- them. It had all the appearance of to her feet, great secrets of the world. Tell me, mendous hope arising through the being a tomb and was lit up by a stranger —life is——Why therefore depths of her dark soul. The lovely fire that burned in its centre with should not life be lengthened for taca grew rigid, and the gracious, Whitish flame and without emoke. In awhile? What are ten or twenty or willowy form seemed to erect itsetf, | deed, thore to the left was a stone ain thee.” Kiven over to the tortu he h stocism forsook them, and they flung She bas cast her alowany 67) oo 4 thly scream that I . 2 ing to make up my mind what to do, 197M upon the stone bler and then floor of the cave, Ike the spectators, themselves de Tiger ont 1 fixed her wonderful eyes ‘upon awful and uneasily, oe over its ig tnatantly the Ginoet Like a flame—that I fell; then With @ convulsive movement that paused. When she spoke again It wus but She stopped them. And wept and tinplired foc mecedtay memory deadly than any basilisk’ ever heard tn all my Ife yy ee ee eee an ita ing and there, oi the ground before her, somehow gaye an, impression of de- nie Hindine wed olsber, a8 tHCUEn | Mpcat thou, ob, my guest, who art way that was dreadful to bebold, 1. witht thee rats ee ee ee ue ne We oy ig a ~ babblini nfusedly in my terror, M4 » the woman rose to her - ie 0 + known in thy country by the name too, turned to Ayesha by op With their beauty, and sent ber light 4 i ‘ * OUP cange of manner, aud speaking In was She hersei at men?” their fate In some less awful way, Chines of silver bolls, “ i rth) boat upon that horrible canal, There Tit ver wot voice, “I did affrisit , Her face caught my eye, and held thou standest thero beforn mo as of “Ay, oh, Queen, nearly ail of them," Hut sha was hard aa-adamant about ,,"Eher% my Holly, wit there where wine 1g ee aie ne the hips Soe, 120 lying at the bottom aaicoP thee, Forgive me, But at times ob, Meas in a vise, not this time by the old? 1 can do it,” and she held out 7 said; and I saw them glower at mo it. thou canst see mo. it iw by thine Whisper, w ‘Olly, the almost infinite mind grows force of her beauty, but by the power her bands over the sheeted dead, while as 7 said it My F te keep off the mosquitoes, in such Hvlly. the almost infinite mind Brows ootfascinated torror, ‘Te beauty waa her whole frame became rigid and ters “tun toil me and this company the Ink In Greek, “it cannot be. Wort blaine me not it @ fashion as to hide his face, and Hupatient of the slowness of the very cit thore, indeed, but the agony, the FIbIe to ses and her eyes grew fixed ,,/Then tell me and this company the ie ean ot ae waivers your Fest of thy” litt fayself, Job, and Mahomed towing Jt, Wt telthaer vexation, Very blind passion and the awful vindice fd dull. T ahrunk in horror behind ‘ip, wheriwt | have hears : lives would hot be mate nmece ite & sick pain at the heart that th Mtoe bank Boe Ot oe need but Tremen®, tiveness displayed upon those quiver. {he curtain, and whether it was my , Thus adjured: 1, in as fow words as Oooo Mr Toe ei noweat them wouldst fuin have died before @ 3 started back aghast and oried ov; But the ‘scarab—about to Ing features, and in the tortured look !magination or a fact Tam unable to Cy onibal feast, and of the cttompten Hol. They are tigers to lap blood, and {hy curious eyes were set upon ine, HYEly that it was magic, for I recognized scarabacus!” of the upturned eyes, were such as #4, but T thought that the quiot form fanninM feat, and of the attowpted Oe now thay Tuner after syour ‘Theres ail wy, cand tell mney for in 4 AD!" sha said, "perchance Hae { «4 2 y 1 « cS . ; ° y hd 4 ” is! ot now, earn, G Pegs cameras wee one (AL BAS 1 sloked $9. up' t gucatods feebly, SULpAss fay poweta of Geacrintion. benouth the covering began to auiver, Thad done, Ayerha called upon Ril- !Ne%. How thinkest thou that T rule truth 1 am inclined for pralsew—tell Tim) “itary tiee—there lies. my 10a i UNO, no, on Holly,” sho anawored, A2, Sot on fo my feet again and it | Fon & moment she stood sull, Ber though it lay on the breast of one Walk, and lifting his head trom the Chie Tronled 1 Bare it aes ee not ay, spe “tt is'no magic. That ts my glass: qj ; . . sonia Kallikrates. Kallikrates, who has 4s f polo fet CAR: Tay lee Menta ana ba ate dhtteo toe wie fies MEO elect Suddenly ane withdrem Scusd. But WAlaUL rising, the old 7) iene teas may binding, sere as Loe teeta come back to me at last, as T knew ry eme, ery 7 © of a snake; “why didst thou hide this ne net ie chow act te ty. frou me?” and ehe stretched out ber wane apend tho arm, and T thought she was going to u sl oily," she said, again speak- ?" me. What?" I ejaculated, in the moat ror—"what’ i d LE bs ons, pont: take me feature by feature, ; (/ tm it I eee what passes, if I care to remember nothing else about the ring slipped from her down to her golden h@P handa. par alah Pe ad cn euriier NO MATn ERE lntranta ale eat forgetting not my. for me and ing he would—as I i ew pees bed wummon up the pictures, which is not Except that I picked it up in Leo's girdle, baring the blinding loveliness , “What Js the use?” she said, gloom- have said” ‘Then turning suddenly bands and feet, and my hair, and the #he Dewan to sob ane : often, And so saw the boat and Gf her forme She stood there, ner 1%: “Of what use is it to recall the ),"¥@ have heard” eaid sh three men and one, whose face I “"‘y jn very strange,” she naid, with fingera clinched, and tho awful look 8¢fMblance of lite when I cannot recall 16nsth. in @ cold, clear voice. could not see, but @ youth of a noble a sudden access of Womanlike trem- of malevolen| onerally to Ko on like any other to the captain of the guard, “My wonk Whitencss of my skin, and then tell &eneral : iv spoken—let my doom be done." me truly hast thou ever known a WHO) te a little upset, Jnurmuring, Wh 4 the spirit? Evon if thou stoodest be- Bave ye to say, ye rebellious clilldren, semen woman who in aught little “Wallikrates, Kalllkray ‘athored and deepened Faieeatoe H ught, ayy in one Littl M Sloe, sleeping in the boat, and 00 tiine ana agitation that seemed out on ber face, Pp fore’ mo thou wouldst not know me, Wh¥, Vengeance should not bw dont CHAPTER XVII. portion of her beauty, inthe curve .)“Cpless thou canst Help, nim Ane I sent and saved ye. And now fare- of place in this awful woman, “but pown came the clinched hands to 2P4 cguldst but do what T bid thee, OE one time rick ke KSUAL . of an eyelash ev or the modelling 8)4 cet LN aR fp ane be far Hee well. But stay, tell me of this youth once I knew a scarab like that. Il her sides, then up again above her The i eo i thee would bo my ity and guar ome, time there was no an- The Tombs of Kor. Of a whellcilita in Juatined te hold mthy, Kalttkrat cia ea eT ~4he Lion, as the old man calls him. hung round the neck—of one I loved.” heaq and, as | am @ living and honors MO UbY Mfe, Kallikrates fine, broad-chested fellow, said. that FTER tho prisoners had been “ }/kht before my loveliness?" ond thy cs I would look upon him, but he is sick, and she gave a little sob, and I 8aW aiie man, the flame of the fire leaped ‘or @ moment she stood there, and 1 could stand it no long: Then even the orders that they had received, thou sayest. that after all she was only @ wornan, then cast herself down on her k: me faint will have left him!” removed, Ayesha waved her and there 1 fell upon my knees I rue,” she said, with a start. “Ob, atter them, ‘ 4 were not to har vhite me i ape y eon by arate ‘ot voine before! ef “He is very nick,” I answered sadly. uitiiough she might be 4 very old one. towing a fierce and vivid glare upon Leside the form, and began to press nothing was sald of their bluck ser hand, and the spectators fore her and told her in-a gad mix. Why did T not come before! am vee “Canst thou do nothing for him, oh “There,” she went on, “it must bo sho perself. her Ups againat the sheet and-weep. vant, so, exged on thereto by a wom- turned round and began to '! languages—for such moments hervediny bane easy, Here, thou queen, who knowest so much?" one like it, Also in old’ Egypt many digee an who was now dead, they proceed. crawl off down the cave like confuse the thoughts—that I wor. (and Yet ee ee ind whe Pros “Of'a surety 1 can, can cure him, there were who bore the name of tha Down came the ivory arms again, CHAPTER XVI. ed to try to hot-pot him after the shipped her as never woman was F any gat of pottery from the but why speakest thou so sadly? Royal Son of Ra. The scarab that [ Md as they did so she epoke, or . ancient “and honorable custom ‘or *,sattered flock of sheop, Thinking worshipped, and that { would give duced a tiny Jar ve Poe cour eh Dost thou love the youth? Is he per- knew was not set thus in the bezel Mather hissed in Arable in @ note that Ayesha Gives Judgment. thelr country, with @ view of eating thls & good opportunity, I axked She my Immortal soul to marry hor folds, of has RRO ta eaape Tt wilt Gypnee thy BT Boh cata try is, eurue hae Hou HERI tact ere: ee HE next thing that { remem- lin In duo course. “As for thelr at- te como and 899 Leo, telling her of hia Which at that ‘line I certainly would Mad Ih MGM Mt ead, Swit, Bee eee e sttonttiicers” hast looked upon Ayesha's beauty,” "Curse her! May she be everiast- Wer was opening my evo" an uoceas of eudden furan ches Corious condition; but whe would not any other many oF ail the rics of men ROW, aWitt! ‘The man deal ‘ t e ver and, turning from me, she flung hor- ingly accursed!" and perceiving the form of deep r t Y saying that he certainly would not die d into one. For the moment she 1 glanced toward him; it was true No, How long hath the fever and, turning rt pe iB th deeply regretted it, He’ ended by Leo was in his death strug- taken him?" self. on her couch and buried her face The arms fell and the flames sank, Job, who had now practi- humbly praying that mercy might be before the night, as people never died ed a Uttle surprised, and then enough; Baa wee i oe ining ashen “This is the third d in the cushions, i P eey Aid aoe one ane pear cally recovered froin his at- extended to them, or at Jeast that Of that sort of fever except at night- a lau and clap hi gle h eg le Mh Teaab to retiie in Te “Good; then let him le another jongue 0! Pp * they might be banished into the fall or dawn. Also she sald that it “ ood Ee throat. ‘The Vial Was stoppered with day, ‘Then will he perchance throw CHAPTER XV. then again they fell. tack of fever. to live oF die as it might sould be better to let the fever apend u, Oh #2 soon, O Holly!” she aig, throat. The vial wes Senet Site it off by his own strength, and that A Soul in Tor t pcurse “her tmemony: Acoursed be “How is Bir. Leo, Jopt” but 1 saw on his face that jis course as much as possible before wens DOW, Tlany minutes tte eeech and a drop of the Auld with ts better than that I ghould cure hin, ‘ in ment. the memory of Woe eyeian “Much the same, sir." pad but ite » hope of pho cured {t, Accordingly, 1 was ria. would take to bring thee to thy my ce upon my tongue. It had ® | eae ESO ne Te Oe tO eee iF waa neemy isn o'clock at "the fair daughter of the F Went and saw poor Leo, who Was a jow voice that gradually gathered jus, to,teaves when ane Dade mo foley before me for xo many days, and, sweet flav A for a second mage ever, by to-mofrow night, at that night when I cast myself Nile, pecuuso of her beauty! ,. Guite off hin head and did not even power as she went on, till the | SE ee ap uua ab ua Gevee lieve ine, to @ woman's heart the my head swim and a mist gather bee hour when the fever first took him, down upon my bed, and be- ; “Curse her! because ber magic know me, While [ was in the room Pane with tt, “eaters of human fi 1 was too much involved in the sieht *, nwoot wy wisdom and ore my cee | analy -, root he doth not begin to mend, then will gan to gather my scattered has prevailed against me. Billali entered, Wo things have ye done, First, eb of he tal fascinations to HN RUE Pat od ete eb 1 thet. p ‘ r Nt 0 himeand cure him, Stay, wits, and reflect upon what oles, Ber! because she kept MY — «He will die at night,” he said have ttacked thene etrangerm, we of of te * Papinaiane ia eee dleur nlewmure, whi Wy 16. OUP ONE ATMA Tents alge t pouead Who nurses him it, he whom Bil. 1 had acen and heard, But the moro “again the fluo fell, and again she anKiod forbid, my futher slain their servant, and) for that mont AG Bake weoutaat thou hat wouldst thour—what wouldst tie contents of the vial in > bia lall names the Pig: also" —and here f I reflected, the less I could inake of it. covered her eyes with her hands. nd away with a heav alone death is your reward. Hut that vane maids woulda, (hel thou? ‘Tho dost not know what thon mouth. net E spoke with some little hesitation" Next I bethought me that [had not | “Lt’s no use—no use,” she wailed; ‘She-who-imust-be-obeyed’ i¥ not all, Ye have dared to disobey in pe andere OF on deat, Have fo thee that € fre 4 amed Ustane, a very hand- 4, . “who can reach those who sleep? Not Mands thy presence, my Baboon,” said me. Did { not send my word unto working how many Am not for thee? I love hut ona, and | then icon -drawa Urea Oia woman named Ustane, a very Rant been to see how Leo was, ao 1 crept vn Tein Swagn them the old man as goon as We got to the ye by Hillali, my servant. and. the ee OTR Coy any ar iw not thes, Ah, Holly, for all thy looking down ved a line of some wed raged iit when frat ane down the passage to the entrance of “phon Gneg more she began her un- fUEAIN. "She In aliting in the Kreat futher of your household?” Hatt it ee eat ‘che guiieries Wixdom—and in a way thon art wise color creeping Low's face, then ‘ : , 3 cay! ° lo justice upon those who not been taught to, ye from ehildho na ‘ * , thou art but a fool running after r nother, and then—won- gaw him, and hath stayed by him his cave, He was lying on the couch, holy rites, would have smitten ay the th a4 ad Pe 3 b 4 e man we had ever since. as I understand Is the tossing reatlessly in his fever, but But at length sho scemed to wear Tion, ‘Come on my sont soome (rat ang Wkw.of Sho is an evor ‘ane a of thousands,” I anawered, folly, ‘Thou wouldat took into min Prat Te. OO as ae fashion of thy people, oh queen, ¢ asleep, By his side, half lying on tho herself out and ceased. She sat swiftly.” so much as one jot or tittle mhall per. » O Holly, This people wae tei iieaaeth thee, look.” and she bent I whisper, y people! Speak not to me o down upon the rocky floor and shook I turned and followed him down ish? Ar t htest. wor an old people before the Egyptians ale i nA Axad han dari a hastily, floor, half leaning against the stone 1? And is not my lg! word a : Be heraelf toward me, and fixed her dark nawered |i I. : the dense cloud of her beautiful hair the passage. At last we camo to tho law? Have not your fathers taught Wott, ‘This people founded the clty, ere on my owen May 1 / aves are no people of mine; couch, was Ustane. bwerved Over her face and breast and com- head of thy cave where there was a ye this, I say, whilst ax yet ye wera Of Which the ruling yet cumbor the ON) Vine wn ti wilt. for, hanks ! ry i they are but dogs to do my bidding | Keturning to my cave, Lomserved menced to aob terribly in the torture rock dais, but children? Well do ye know it, yo Plains yonder, four thousand years PaO Tok tee oe cneme of things ret tH the day of my redemption comes: what I had not noticed before, that or a heart-rending despair, In front of the dais were gathored a Wicked Ones, But ye are. all evih Before (his eave was tl M oamat Winnen 1p ara eae 13 An awful flood of and, for thelr customs, naught th was @ narrow aperture in the wyyy ove! my love! my love! Why great number of people of both il to the o aid when first T saw ft, two thousand Kisse AVE No ex i, have to do with them. Also, call me rocky wall, I took up the lamp and gig that stranger bring thee back to Suddenly there ware cry of “Hlyal mies up in ye like a fountain in the was it even as it is now * heart it if thou dost kiss 6 t or HORS not queca—I aan sick of flattery and examined it; the aperture led to & eae ae Hiya!" (She! y of “Hiya! bles up in ye like @ fountain In the Wer on to a Bide passage tell thee of a vy wilt thou eat tad ’ pit dia ih see ete ed a ae eee mange. it Me after this aurt? For five hundred Hiya!" (“She! She!") and thereupon springtime, And now because ve have af BH 10 A Oe AO nt inet enteral ie Vallee Onn aver ab ane He | Hee ea oot wound in mine ears: it fed tora atone stuir, which J deucend. years I have not auffered thus. Oh, great mumber-of stepa and die! and she be further toward nig of it now, my Holly—think Igan echo from the past, As for this ed; the stair ended In another pas- if 1 sinned against thee have 1 not nlong a nd what thar ean: ie tl her soft hair brushed my of the wonder of it) Hw will sleep tane, | know not, T wonder if it sage, When I had traversed some | 4 r nates ng not have been less than sixty feet be. brow, and her fragr h played for twelve hours, and then the fe (ratane, fait who 1 waa warned, fifty yards of space I caine to -an- come back to me, who have all, and § TAKE THE EVENING WORLD WITH YOU ON YOUR VACATION $0 iieiici he surtacn of the rock and upon! my fase, any 1 rt or. : - ¥ vithout thee have nwugh ntilat . . f Then of dden, 6 And then she stooped and held her hom Tin turn did warn? Hath other passage, running at right an- yet withou ight? f f he weekly novel was ventilated curious borings and weak. ‘Then of a sudden, even M 0 and Maye Twill sce,” and bending gles, and here an awful thing hap- What le here that t oBn do? What So that you will not miss any of the weekly novels and that ran upwar Know where, os Tatretched out my arms to clasp, hand upon the golden head, and then forward sie pass a over pened to ine tho "sharp drought SRT RET bd Heron ane may continue to enjoy the daily magazine, comic and other Suddenly t Vand ho sho straightened melt and 4 quick Dent down and kiss nd the brow with ont vate ently ght my iar nd extinguished it, ce pti or pide Oty K ? ; Ited and bade the ty hold up yasned over her enc va chastened abandonment o' * tae font water peony eating me Me utter darkness. { With thee where thou art, and mock special features, Include them in your summer reading. Leen oa and | enw auch oacone es cut hor hand, she held it over my neaa that woul) have besn beautan “Boe he said quietly, “is that the red forwar wn the darkness; My memory Oh, why could 7 not Tame likely to Tan We wer d, and {t seemed to me that some- to behokl had not the sight cut @e aamene turely far away Law something likn die with thee, 3 whe slew tee? Alas Order the Evening World Mailed to Your Summer Address standing in an enormous pit, or rather thing flowed from it that chilled mo to the heart—for 1 was jealous! as: & looked into the water, and there, the faint glow of fire. There was @ that J cagnot die: Al op the edge of it, for it went down back to common sense and @ knewl- (To Be ° \

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