The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1916, Page 21

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HOME PAGE \ Evening World’s' Figure Improvement Contest | Diet and Exercise Lessons in New Courses for Stout | Women Who'Wish to Reduce and Thin Women Who Desire to Develop Their Figures. Conducted by Pauline Furlong. Onpyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), 4 DEVELOPING EXERCISE—NO. VIL Ror Description Read To-Day’s Lesson FIRGT PosiTION ‘SECOND DOSITION Developing Course. | LESSON VII. OST persons who are slender M have some interaal disturb- ances which prevent them * trom properly assimilating the food they eat./ When these, trou- bles are over- come, through a systematic course «of dally exercise, 4 & great tmprove- a po ment fn health as Pewrinez FUALONS well as appear nce will be in evidence. To-day’s exercise will improve and stimulate the clroulation {n the back and abdomen ani also develop and strengthen the muscles In this re sion. A class of siz stout women tho wish to reduce their weight and one of siz thin women who desire to gain weight, for eight weeks are competing for two prizes of $50 each, to be awarded the woman im each class who accomplishes the greatest im- provement in her figure. They will follow the courses of diet and exercise lessons prepared by Mise Furlong and pudlished daily for the beneft of alt EV, NING WORLD readers. tainly do not advise readers to stand, on the heels, ag you claim I ad Os! the contrary I have sald that “when the weight of the body ts throwa| upon the heels, which Is the usual standing and walking position, an undue pressure over the kidneys and 4 congestion at the base of the brain | cause many violent headaches and| many nervous disorders as woll TO DEVELOP—L. w. of course I will ndvise you to “take something’ | ie order to gain weight, but it will| e TO-DAY'S EXERCISE. a your position on the knees and hands, keeping the hands about one foot from the knees fentle, systemptic exerci | meanwhile, While in this posttion,| nourishing food suth as are gives ia, raise the back up as high as you can fee ence in suggested menus and, and then let It drop down completely to position again. Relax and rest all muscles thoroughly and then repeat the movement about five times. This} movement greatly relieve a ner- vous or dull, aching pain in the back and aid in distributing the blood} which has settled in one certain spot; and send it on its rightful course again. A few minutes’ practice of this important back strengthening ex-| ereise will often relieve an attack of indigestion aud cause you to feel fresh if you are wnusuaily tired, Each time you lower your back, throw head} @ possibly a few seconds. This strengthens back of neck and “helps overcome double chin, SUGGESTED MENU, T= glasses water before breaks | BACK NUMBERS—MARGERY T. Send two cents and ask for each back humber of the series you desire, They cost two cents EACH PAPER, MISS WOOD—Please repeat your! query. The reason I do not ulways | nswer certain questions to h! eader 1s because, probably, the an- | swer has been printed many tines | before, or else no namo Is signed. 1 never answer unsigned letters, nor print names and addresses of read- ers. FATTENING DISHES — EDiTH W.. Gelatine ts allowed, also onions, radishes and celery. All dark breads | exeept Boston brown bread, but all! must be eaten sparingly by those! trying to lose weight. 4 ye fast. | Breakfast—Baked apple and! cocoa cream, o@ and cream, Luncheon—Egg, malted miik, Bos# ton brown bread Dinner—Chicken soup with rive, brotled fish, mashed potato, hearts of lettuce salad, chocolate cake., HEALTH AND DEVELOPING AIDs8, Eger three meals a day are BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS, (Copsrietst, 1018, ty the Frank A, Muneey Oo,) SYNOPSIS OF PROCEDING CHAPTERS, Greek Conuiston, rich man's ao, and 2 Hapgon), dilettante, start Weet oo’ $500 whica suggested to thin readers, they are not by any means neces- e@ary in order to gain weight. The truth really 1s that most thin women | {n° Crk aie eaves remain thin from overeating, whicb | »: rl on the, taxes the digestive organs and causes ~@ Constipation, sluggish impure blood, poor circulation and other disorders, which retard the growth of healthy fat on the body. py A good plan to follow is to eat only CHAPTER V. when you are really hungry, even it (Qontinued). ti) have to fast for many hours, vy will not starve to death and the taken will be eagerly relished by you, assimilated by the systom to make the extra flesh youmre trying ao hard to attain. Thin readers must not forget the wonderful benefits deep breathing will bring about and at least twen five inhalations, through t nostrils, must be taken before breakfast. Do not hold the breath; breathe evenly and slowly, by an open window, Dur- “6 a RIEN® of the old man's ! ] or no frien’,” blustered | Brayley, his eyes again on Conniston' ‘if you're goin’ to work I guess you're goin to take orders from mo Hike the rest of the boys! ‘An’ the first order {s, git out'n that there chair!" “Look here,” day never miss an opportunity | quietly. ing “I didn't know that I was to practice deep breath! when you are {nthe open, Hold the Cheat Lou | taking a seat reserved for you, and I head high and keep your mind on the| didn't mean any offense, You can @iect you are t to attain, take that &s @ sort of apology if you . hike; but at the same time I am not POPPE EAL ALAPPLLAL ALLA | ONE tO De bulldozed by you. If you Answers to Queries.. } Conniston replied will isk me. decentiy"— ' “Ask you!"* bellowed Brayley. “Ask o you! By the Lon, | don’t ask men! . I make ‘em!" DRY HAIR—POLLY T. Use cas- He bad leaped forward with bis last + tile soap and not tar goap on the diy| word, his two big hands outstretched @calp and gentlo nightly massago| with clawing fingers. , Before Con- with very little olive ofl, Brush the hair fifty strokes with a stiff brusb each night. Do not be in @ hurry for results, as the scalp was a long time covered with dandruff, perhaps, be- fore you siarted the treatment, DOUBLE CHIN—NELLIE R, Dou- blo chin exercises will be illustrated | later. Head bending, stretching and twisting, at least twenty-five tUmes each night, will help reduce it, Yor the rubver double chin strap also re- duces the fat and holds up the sagging | 4 muscles, preventing mouth breathing aad shoring also. £8 FOR RHEUMATISM— Leg swinging and e'reling eit this condition in the hips and, of course, careful diet and attention to the body's waste mater is also iniportant niston could spring from the chair to meet the attack two iron hands were upon his shoulders, He felt hims being lifted bodily, His weight ren: twployed every pound of it ggered to his feet and flung wainst his burly antagonist, The men about the table eat still, | watching, saying no word, Conniston’s strength was less than the other's, and he knew that in two minutes of struggle he would be lika | tten in the big, powerful hanos, xerting every ounas of his |strength in one straining effort he |Jerked his right shoulder free, swung his clenched fist and drove it smash- ing into Brayle Trayley'’s head snapp th: bitod from his cut mout across his white, bared teeth Con- |niston sprang forward to follow up the blow with another, but Bray ne 5 had caught his balance and. wa ere, SEONCS SIRE co SNR leaping to meet Coniston, snarling ; woigh 126 3 Quick of eye, trained to defend him- should weizh 125 fo 180 pounds. At . he was ea to discount the phewent you are fifty pounds too | Nomentary disadvantage of the first heavy | His hard fist drove througn = | ton'y guard, mt MEART TROUBLE—MRB. F.B. cg, |COnpiston's guard. striking } Stretching and deep breathing, nixo| hefore he could catch himeelf a’ sec- mild walking, are whout the only ¢x-| ond blow causht hat i erclaea you can safely and you and with outflunge s should consult « physi ut these |hackward and fell, str and suitable diet to help r 4 /upon the rough boards of the floor. —— ‘ry one dizzy inoment the world WALKING ON HEELS—D. M. (a. wont for him. And. then. it man reader). If you will more re- | went red aming, flaring red, as he Quily read the lesson of Oct. 21 to) heard a man’s laugh, and he knew which you refer, especially the black |that he had been knocked down. type part, you will see that I cere! Again he knew that he was on bis HANDICAPPED Evening GO AND SEE MY FRIEND BILL, HE IS LOOKING FoR A MAN OF Your TYPE HE HAS A POWERF! FACE AVERY STRONG HIN, HIS BEARD Comes WAY OUT~ AN EAGLE NOSE EIRM MOUTH ~ His WHOLE FACE INDI AND ‘STRENCTS POWER Fix ME UP To LOOK YOUNG AND UP To DATE - 1 AN GOING To APPLY FoR, A JOR AND I WANT To MAKE A HIT World «THANK You ILL GO To DAY, JUST THE KI OF NAN | WANT A THOSE Litt EANUT HEADS fect, again he was rushing at the man who stood waiting for him “Stan’ back!" roared Brayley. "I ain't goin’ to play with you all day!” Conniston laughed, and did not know that he had done go, He could not have recognized as his own voice the beastlike snarl which greeted the big foreman's words. He only we that Brayley had stepped back a pace at he had something black but ng clenched in his hand, oot, you damned coward!" he fol. yelled as he swung his arm out to- ward the big six-shooter. For a moment Hrayley hesitated. Perhaps Lonesome Pete's words rang in his brain; perhaps Conniston was a friend of the old man. And then, as the two men came together, the barrel of the gun rose and fell swiftly, striking Conniston full upon the forehead. His arms dropped like lead, the izzy blackness came back upon him, growing blacker, blacker, and he fell silently, unconsctously, CHAPTER VI. NH day Conniston and Lone- some Pete rode together. Lonesome Pete was deep in a book and Conniston asked him the question he had been upon the verge of asking many tim How does it happen, Pete,” he sald carelessly, “that you're getting so in- terested in an education of late?” sald Lonesome Pete, lke this: Here I am, gettin’ along first rate, maybe, like the res’ of the boys, workin’ steady, an’ a few good hard tron dollars put away tn a sock, An’ some day, in caso I might creep a ways off’n the range, I ain't no more fit to herd with real folks than that same steer is! Now, it's goin’ on three months I'm down in Rattlesnake Valley where the ol’ man’s stringin’ his chips on makin’ a big play. He's goin’ to make a town down in that sandpile or bust a tug—I ain't sayin’ which right now. Anyway, he's al- ready got a school down there, they make the kids ge out, seein’ as them guns could learn readin’ an’ writin’ an’ such like, by gravy, I could do ft too!” “How aboul the teacher, Pete-—man or woman? “Nuther!" exploded Lonesome Pete, ; itain't nuther! It's a lady, as fine a lady as ever walks any- where they’s band to walk on!" “And-pretty?” Lonesome Pete's joyous grin was summer sunligh beam They ain't nono han'somer, Say, Con"--a bit doubtfully-—"[ wouldn't mind showin’ you—you ain't goin’ to bow it off t boys, are you” Conn © himself to sec and watched Lonesome Pe i twinkling eyes as the cowboy put his hand deep into the inside pocket of his vesi—the left poeket. First oved the safety-pin with which top edges of the pocket were held securely together, then brought out @ bit of cardboard wrapped in clean red handkerchief. Whipping the hand- kerchiet from the cardboard, he held out to Conniston's gaze the picture it concealed, ‘ She was pretty, decidedly pretty. Conniston thought that the girl's two chief characteristics were 80 close under the siniling surface that he could not Nelp seeing them, and that they were—first, vanity; second, weakness, “So that’s Jocelyn Truxton, is !t?” He handed the picture back to Lonesome Pete, who, with a long, worshipful glance, restored it in its wrapping to his vest pocket, ‘ot the daughter of Bat Truxton?” You wouldn't think it to look at her after seein’ him, would you?" Never having seen either of them, Cogniston remained non-committal. rs. Bat Truxton was a Boston, girl, an’ 1 reckon as how Miss “But you are so busy, Pete—you don't get any time to go to school.” “She's awful kind, Con, She helps me of evenin's times.” “But {t is a long way from the Half Moon to Rattlesnake Valley." Not so all-fired long! Times when I can git off kinda early, say by 7 o'clock, 1 can make it over to Rattle- enake by 8.30, not sleepin’ none on the road, It's only about ¢ ty mile.” “You mean that after working all day you sometimes ride fogty miles between quitting time one*day and time to go to work the nex “An' none of the boys don’ nesome Pete, know "Don't ebuckled I, you go an’ tell ‘em, When Conniston had been with the outfit for three weeks, at the end of which time he began to feel contident that he could perform what part of the dgy's work was allotted to him, and When his muscles had begun to harden so that they no lon- wer ached and throbbed day and night, he one morning saw Argyl Crawford. The other boys were breakfasting within the bunk house. He had hur- ried with his meal and was washing out @ pair of socks. He had no wish to have her see him doing this sort ot work, Rawhide Jones, Toothy and Bray- ley came out of the bunk houne Co} together, They all eaw her and, as one man, lifte r broad-brimmed hats, ‘Sho called to Brayley, and as the others went down to the stable he walked toward her. Conniston could not hear what sho was saying, but Brayley’s heavier volee came to him distinctly, Tho rirl was asking something, and Bray- y, after a moment's thought, agneed to her request, She turned, smiling, and thanking him, went through the trees, ‘The big ‘foreman came back to the bunk you, called to him, I'm looking for. Miss Argyl, an’ aniston!" Brayley You're jest the man Suddie Dandy for take him to the THE BRASS CHECK + By George Allan England A Modern Mystery Story With a Real Plot Begins in The Evening World Nov. 13 7 Smet ae Ae SN SA RAL DA z Daily Magazine BILL 1 HAVE FowNd JusT THE MAN YOU ARE LookING FOR ~ ANAN WITH A STRONG FACE MR JACK SENT ME To EE You MR BILL, HE Alb You WERE LOOKING FOR & MAN OF MY TYPE Alone in the Big West, a Tenderfoot Finds Himself and Makes Good house for her. hows along. Sho her,” Conniston flushed up, suddenly re- bellious, He sai not gone to work to be a@ lackey to Miss Argyl. “Well,” snapped Brayley as Con- ood frowning, making no answer. “Did you think I uid she wanted you to-morrow?” Ten minutes later he rode through the circle of trees and to the front of tne house, leading Miss Argyl's pony. ‘ As @he saw Coaniston ride up she nodded gayly to bim, cried a merry “Good morning, sir Cow- puncher!” and ran lightly down the steps to mest him, He answered her @ bit stiffly—-with dignity, he would have seid-—and swung down from his sadile to*help her to mount, “You are going to ride with me?” whe asked quickly. “Such are my orders from Bray- ley,” he sald quietly, She tur her head and looked at him wonderingly. hat ig it, Mr, Conniston? What +n’ take your own ants you to gu with Toothy, and the depths that the to approve aniston ing @ little apeak of t poor devils chance. tHandica, struggle, makes you act so etrangely? Don't [Us you want to ride with me?” “f He touched his hat with mock {U% deep leant father has, “I did not know that you wanted me to, I imagined that the hired man's place” “Oh, nonsense!” she broke in tm- patiently, ‘And then, with a swift smile which was #0 faint, eo elusive that it was gone before he could be sure that he had not imagined it, “I thought that you were golng to do the impossib! Lonesome “No. “Then I sumed gravity of “Flattering, | m She looked at him steadily, frown- "11 admit,” rugged physical au @ self-reliance of has Brayley; so, for that === You Never Can Tell cxtmtts., By Maurice Keten | Why Don’t Men Propose? DoES HE LOOK INTELLIGENT STACK 9 d even your frie of her of you, st say.” bit. hem 40." have pped! cessfully @ winning fight, not into Those insight men, AND FORCEFYL By Jackson Gregory some Pete has brought me news, and 1 Brayley. Do you know"—imischiet lurking eyes above the as- her face—"I think boys are actually beginning in "I don't know why you should he granted, “that the hardly had a fair They are handicapped" Can't you see whe it Is that is handicapped in the great race here in the West? Here where there is a fight going on every day, every night of the year, @ battle royal agains the mother earth who bore a noble of man top= ping to ask at what odds, must be endowed with @ great strength, @& d moral constitu. adamant, a the natures things my So has Bat Truxton, so Pete. Do you will tell you. for you to know these things. tter, haw ow how it happened that you were selected to ride with me to-day?” At first I thought merely be- cause you wanted to humiliate mo, I apologize for the thought"—— It ts good He in this land of enchantment where all #¢Dt You bere ep ab pears ‘itn things are possible—and that we Were wom he could spare, Because he be friends, needa all the good men!" ages ago,” he retorted. “Ages before I turned into @ dollar- Conniston fei face go red. Bit- ing back the words which first a-day laborer--before [ went to work ‘ bo for your father, Miss Crawford! Be- ng to bis lips, he said lightly fore I became, to put it plainly, one. “!'m afraid that I shail have to of the family servants!” Wek Hrayley for that She seemed annoyed. ¢ Tae not look upon you as a ser- Again sho laughed her disdain vant. Your going to work for father “Why didn't you do it that frat has certainly not lessened you in my night tn the bunk-house? “What do you know of that?” es, think it 8 brave of you, tar ee any difference at all, tt “f knew there was trouble. "I will be because you make it do #9. asked about it. Rrayley told me. I should be glad to have you ride with = He o unswer, me as a companion, it you wish.” There nothing for him to eay. Conniaton, after a brief moment of She had Brayley's a of. th hesitation, in which he began to see fight, she belioved it, and Conniston that he had been acting rather fool- would not let her know that le cared shly; galloped up to her side. enough to give his own version ' pay afraid f have been boortsh, “"L have not meant to be unkind, Mr. iss Crawford: You must forgive me Conniston,” sho said, after 9 moment. Mis i if I have, You see; my associates hero of late"-——~ He finished with w rug of his shoulders. In three weeks’ time you have 1 learned a great deal, You have learned to work!” Ho stared at her in surprise, you know what I have driving My en fey, a Pie “Did Sir Modesty think that we had work for w forgotten all about him? And here 4re unfit was I, very unmatdenly, no doubt, inquiring of him every dey, Lone- 1 another, father, see? Hapgood’ like about him?’ “He is making good. nd for men whe 4 hich Truxton and A new note had crept into her voicy, nut the anger, the disdain, re- placing them with what sounded al- oat like syinpathy fatner, like every ofhor man who does big things on a big scale, is always looking for good men, for fore: for men ke Bat Trusten, For men who have gotten You could could yourvelf your fathe be ve out the friend part. Ho is shaking ' an education and have retained their nhood through tt. 4 could step from one position to you strong man, @ big man, a man like my r, Don’ Why, even your friend Roger Brow, be a t you ‘What AAA RRAR ARAN What Are the Reasons for The1916 Husband Famine? Are Modern Girls Hitching the Wagons of Their Matrimonial Hopes to Stars When They Should Be Content With Haltering Some ® Percheron Pegasus? : By Nixola Greeley-Smith. N considering the husband famine of 1916 which many young women ] admit In letters to The Evening World and more young men justity there are three questions to be considered. Ia the New York girl on trial before the New York man? M4 Is the New York man on trial Lefore the girls of this city? 0 know everything, Is the Institution of marriage itself in the balance? Is there a love pantc? Have our scandals, our cynl- clam, the preoccupation of our novelists with rital misery, destroyed the fine frenzy of romance the youth of New York? From the letters which have been contributed to this controversy by Evening World readers I judge that our young people generally do not question marriage . itself but merely the fitness for marriage of the other fellow. This is hopeful. . a nccennctenneeenenenemsisais For years I have fouad @ certain pathos in the willingness of mon to Pa be ecimclbpein fae urantinal | o feel that be harnessed if only a fitting mate) ine worth ploughing for any more, jean be found. For men pledge them-| that he has grown wild and wise and selves to marriage whether it suo-| wary. If you don’t believe it read dials he ditia, the remarkable letter of a New Yorle Nora Helmer putting her wedding | Pachelor—Ajax Who Defies the Light- Fins on the tablo and walking out Of) THE GIRLS’ FAULT, NOT THE “Tho Doll's House” hak come to be MEN'S, SAYS “AJAX,” } accepted as a picture of noblqpeman- | Dear Miss Greeley. Smith i ctpation in married women. And in| I am just thirty-two years of oga, fact that ts all a married woman |Recelved @ thorough education tn | eocda tn da. Wan ekartl ¢ her | £204 schools, including physical tratn« 6 hen she tires o} ing in all branches, as well as train- husband—put her wedding ring on|ing in special subjects. At present [ tha table and walk oats am worth about, twenty thousand dol- actual) m go0d stocks and But let Helmer try that tittle trick songs, and am an executive in @ ot and Immediately the courts of jus-| poration, o that, with the incon tice and the District Attorney's of-|from the property mentioned above, fice, and If necessary the Police De-/And what ot Nave eae t La jo partment, get busy to drive him back |Home for a gir but “all neceseacy to home and familly and the grocor’s|juxury, including travel, of which f bill. am very fond. - + many romances bud, ave met hundreda of young giria peeve watched many romances bU4./iq the past ten yeara, all of them aoe eg ieee nants “ets S0Me| “nice” girls, and have come to the morality.” But however they Begin Rute ce without, Gxoepe : ™m, o-day is without excep- | Shey, a es a oS ge 9 mati by tion the most cSnceited and pninter- Foes eerie wae. bones eating proposition of like nature ex- lump of sugar which the woman holds! LoLUTELY NOTHING. hove Aon jout to Pegasus in hor left while #he|T hellove, @any agencies creating thie j holds a concealod bridie m hor right! state, Moving pictures, popular with [fe gets near enough and so°put bim| rn% qmeseee which invariably, de- | nts nes id 8c mi pict the “poor but honest” working feat ieee Paces ate cree ion girl, who after travelling over tha {the rent or paying oft Prresess Or alwa «ends by marrying the tall and j meeting aerate = to he tore | handsome hero and going to live In | for a mo! a some mansion large eno’ or a | the old pastures, dreaming of KickIng State armory, have done more to be- | Up his heels as in the old free days, fiddle the poor little feather brains the crack of the matrimonial whip of THOUSANDS of girls than you soon brings him back to the furrow. probably have a conception of ——<—# |" Shady books, magazine stortes | which ‘should positively be forbia- den by law as they are rotten to the core, such ridtculous propositions as the girl in Long Island who “offered herself in matrimony” to any man who could provide an income of Atty dollars a week, and s0 on these Of the Tistissaness which bas CLUDE '0/ nave caused (hi young women of to 0 co he porn. Father Gay’ the class who are learned Sxl Bit ce pe tae Ane to met married, to place an entirely with Mr, Winston In Craw‘ordaville Sg bed yt “When Thecnest yah: Mr. sto ‘ ‘ : per cent. af them are ‘And he is working—working hard and | absolute disappointment. making good. I point out all this to emphasise nick tees the fact that the class of trie whe “Oh, this ia so simple! Mr. Winston | Shourd. By all etandants, be cares is father's lawyer. Mr, Hapgood has’ ou rry the poor but honest fellow whe riddon back to the Half Moon several) Witey you that he can earn but Ae times upon business fof the firm.” Teen dctlare a week, are planning tm Conniston frowned, little pleased at | 14°) Colin ene AY ny post the information. The Half Moon, ** least m' ‘the ct! range house, thea, was open to Hap-| le « girl brought up tn the ole pool aa u trivnd, ag an equal, And it) £,hAve bean, used to, oad was closed to Greek Conniston as a) Whom T could even, con! ae eee | 1s looking for at least hun RY 1ObOre, | thousand dollar man. | To me the whole matter !s one of CHAPTER VII. linteligence. The working girl who beceppetdls goes to her dally work clad in cheap |ONN N worked hard next | finery appeals to exactly the same day, all day, until long after | class men a do jnviewen, fig h . .| monds, “near seal” coats, an pepe aad BONS gp dekad |Sort of thing, and know from post. id whengie came Up froin | tiv personal observation thet there the corral to his supper, !f are thousands of working girls im he waa tired. if the muscles of his body |New York who fo, to pel che. dic + femen every da dresse: 6 “bu ached, it did n win his steady | Ci ona' ” his ia the way they do stride or in his quict eyes. The sult-| {ttn the “movies” and cheap stories, case which he had left in Indian Creek | and the poor things do not know any had been brought out last week. He| better, it seems. Of course, this is a very large question, and the falee shaved himself and changed his clothes, putting on tho first White silk shirt he situation is due largely, I outlandish views held in this worn for ¢ y. He even as to the true ineaning of eli ipiodiee erage ype neha democracy, — Here, tn this country, found an old can of #hoe-polish and Mt (a. “het Ak @OOd aa ane eee ny touched up the pair of dusty shoes. “so long as they can procure an if itfit of clothes (mostly on credit) toh And then, laughing at the iooks the men t the few Jest-| Which would be enough for ® debs y Ithy man's daughte ing re chose to make, I say that tf there numbers of he walked t tthe trees and tothe y wor 1 who believe that mar- rango-houae. 7 viow of electric , nitractiona for the itent . } them look about and see if there Ilshte through the wite-epened front) i, nest fellow, as good doors ran out across the lawn to meet, as & it heart, Who perhaps and no bim ea which are not Striding along the walk, h und can sport He & e hing in the avel, 1 narveled at the 4 Ne Jor ford had ra the pure sort—is a th i He ran | *. scking thing to say, hut Hefore he ut’ most of the young door, her ’ vas soon as. thelt hat T have $20,000, low do your aniston?" cried ay nal tne cane y gE Hash rmly, the poor young fellows ; ge bey be | , y on them than a Fry V Pietaa ean rey. Tf a ian of meane Sit down; sit down. Have oney, ond oe something to spoke, Tell me about e rhaps $23 @ yourself and how dec}-wot eyes wr ys: twinkling--"you like the Work! : “If you had asked’me a week ago om with, tam nuld have bad to ag@ to be ox Ligt trying to tell you in the ening 6 Of ludies, Lut now _ w asked Arg qul ¥r wIlike i. And Lam geing to gold pieces of $50 each that It atick--unleae I got fired for inec sn't know what to do with, "L lke that," said Mr. Crawford sunand were coined to come slowly, You,’ I ‘4 e the Panama afraid that !t was he o , and they are 1, It's hard work, ver struck in the K hours: id Mttle pay, But Brayley t only halt of them. Ia me that you have the makings of , and the others can’= @ rattling good cow -land,”” tion because of @ ‘Thank’ you, ei, It of Brayley.” (Do Be Continued) was very deeent kink tn the taw t tory for the colns to be distributed when the exposition was 1a programy mad > ‘ _ 4 —

Other pages from this issue: