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The Evening World Daily Magazine Saturday February 13 1909

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I THE WIDOWIj Says That a Valentine Is Just a

t

r Sample Package of NearLove I-

X Xi

rBy Helen Rowlan-

dlIJlra disappointed man sighed

1 Bachelor as he watched the

kuntying a purple string

from a violet natlnbox Ive waitednil day and no-

body¬

has sent me-

a valentine not asingle paper heartnor a silt Cupid-nor a token oflove nor

Valentines In-

terrupted¬

the Wid-ow

¬

as she took ahunch of vloletifrom the satin box

ROWLAND and fastened them-at her belt arent I

tokens of love theyre merely littlesample packages of nearlove Fancy aman loving all the women to whom helends expressions of undying affectionon St Valentines Day That Is sheadded with a gurgle of mirth fancy i

Wm loving them allAT OVCEHow many times CLOY a man tore

demanded the Bachelor InterestedlyTilt depends returned the Widow

thoughtfully on how many attractivewomen he meets

And on how quickly he can get overIt added the Bachelor-

And on how easily he can fall Into-It agreed the Widow There arefiftyseven varieties of love you knowand every man tries at least half of

I them between the cradle and the craveHe begins with the paper valentinewand

Thewhichr The sweet and simple kind ex-

plained¬

r the Widow which comes earlyand often the kind that Inspires himto write poetry

And scribble a girls name all overhis Latin book broke In the Dachelor

and carry gloves and handkerchiefsand hair ribbons In his pocket and take-a sudden and violent Interest 1 hisneckties I know

Vea sighed the Widow but thatsoon passes like his appetite for breadand butter Its usually superseded bythe tabasco variety which comeslater

And goes harder put In the Bach-

elor¬

The kind continued the Widowi

that Is cooked over a quick name and I

burns out with an awful sputter

And Scribble a Girls Name AllOver the Latin Book

tend leaves you with that horridnext morning feeling finished the

Bachelor And then he added hastily-he has a sickening revulsion andwitches over to the soothing whole

Borne olive oil kind like mother used tonvike

y ThewlmtrThe marrying kind groaned the

Bachelor And that finishes him headded with tragic conviction-

Not at all corrected the Widow1 No man ever stopped after sampling

three brands of love and the tabasco

e vCQ4

lOQS by Harper

OF PRKCCDINQ CHAPTERSUtut Ilurrell stationed at Flambmu a

frontier trading post falls In love NecUa as theWarelrlhJohn rtd andGales Indian tolua Burrell and Se be-

come enraged 1oleon Ooret Gales >

JVcnch narmer secretly lovn Neds Lee aa rich district Necla

out tree claims for thegirl Gale Pol on Lee to the dietrlct accompanied by two profeitlonal bad

stark and Hunnlon Gale raogtrIzee-stark as a nan who am WmNecla Ii warned that Hurrtll will be 111graced If he marrlM a halfbreal Thismakes her mlierable Burred tee to revallure her but iht Ii Hill oppreMH by thedread that their marriage will ruin hlicareer Necla ton Htark for advice Hepersuade her to leave Flambeau Gala goes-to llumlli rooms and elli at an early loveaffair of his own when tit > a Calntornlaminer The girl he then loeJ married onether mm 111trMteJ her and ihi sent

Us tor Q l-

4CHAPTER XIVContinue-

dA Mystery Is Unravelleda j TBliIi you I was thankful that Jay

for the fortune that had rrwtake care of my horse I rode like

Death on a windstorm It grew moon-light

¬

as I rated down the valley andthe foam from thelodged on my clothe and made melaugh and that the morningwould show Dan Bennetts blood In Itsplace I rode through the streets ofMesa where they lived and putlights hI I big saloon where I heardthe sound of devlla revelry and a shrillvoiced woman singing womanlike of which de bad tried to make my

variety Is much more likely to be fol-

lowed¬

by tho toromo seltzer variety orthe chow chow kind

The chow chow kind repealed theBachelor Inquiringly

Yes returned the Widow promptlytile kind which Is made up of sugar

and pepper and spice and all choppedtogetherthe tumultuous distractingIrresistible kind that keeps a manguessing and doubting and hoping

And goes to his head suggested tubBachelor

She Took a Bunch of Violets Fromthe Satin Box

And gives him fits of mental andmoral Indigestion agreed the Widow

Ive got It NOW cried the Bach-

elor¬

clapping hli hand over his heartwith sudden conviction Ive got Itright here

Have you cried the Widow delIghtedlY How does make youfeel

Both ways replied the I

sadly Perfectly happy and utterlymiserable and angelic and devilishandjust like kissing-

Oh well broke In the Widow sud-

denly that sounds like Itbut It maybe only nearlove There are so many

I

imitations of every good thing you

knowBut I never felt this way before

pleaded the BachelorWhat waysThis nay said the Bachelor lean-

Ing over swiftly end kissing the Widow

with sudden vehemence-The Widow rose and wiped her cheek

with a cobwebby handkerchiefIm not going to ask how or why or

what you did that for Mr Travers-

she announced coldly but It couldnthave been forreal love

Perhaps agreed the Bachelor with-

a sigh of satisfaction but It was Justa i joodand anyway I got a samplepackage of near love

A WHAT7A valentine explained the Bachelor

with a mlle of triumph

Brown Breadanother delicious au

THIS bread Indigenous toEngland To make It

properly one should have the freshsweet yellow cornmeal and rye mealnot rye flour which a very differ-

ent¬

product To make a large loafof this Boston brown breadsift a cup and a half of yel-

low¬

meal the same amount of ryemeal and a half teaspoonful of saltAdd quarter of a cup of molasses-one cup pumpkin juice one cup ofmilk and a half teaspoonful of sodadissolved In two tablespoonfuls ofmilk Beat the batter thoroughlyturn Into a twoquart brown breadtin and steam for five hours Whenthis Is Intended for Sunday morn-Ings with baked beans It should bemade on Saturdays then resteamedIn the morning This makes excel ¬

lent toastL a

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It

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Ii never skulked or sneaked Inthose days and no man ever metake back roads so came up to hishouse from thertront and tied my horseto his gatepost She heard me on thesteps and opened the door

You sent for me said h Where Is

he But he had gone away to a neigh ¬

boring camp aod be back un ¬

til morning at which I felt the way athief must feel for Id hoped to meethim In his own and I wasnt thekind to go calling when the husband-was out couldnt very clearly

because of the change In herShe was so thin ant worn end sad sad

i der than any woman Id ever seen andshe wasnt the girl Id known threeyears before I guess Id changed aheap myself anyhow that was the firstthing she spoke about and tearscame Into her yes as the

Poor boy poor boy You took Itvery hard didnt you t

You sent for me1 said L Whichroad did ho take

Thirt you can do to him

she answered back I sent for you tomake sure that you still love me

Old you ever doubt Ut said I atshe to cry like-

a woman who hu worn out all emo-

tion

¬

Can you feel the tame after whatIve made youiuffarr said and Ireckon she must have read the answerIn my yea tor I never wasgood at talking and the sight of her

ehacjsd bad the speech out

11

YOU KnOW HOW It IS Yourself By Walter Wellman

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Beauty Hintsb-y Margaret Mubbard Ayer

For Thick Lips

RIC ho lips are thick from

M constant biting thebelow will reduce them but

you must give up the jiablt If youwant a permanent cure

Astringent Pomade for ReducingThick LlptMelt an ounce of any ofthe cold creams add one pram each ofpulverized tannin and alkanet chips let

for five hours then strainthrough cheesecloth Apply to the lipswhen necessary

Marks of Pimples

GIf your complexion Is nowCF a clear and healthy condland you keep tt thorough-

ly¬

pith the complexion brushand a good soap there Is no reason whythese scan should not be absorbedeventually especially If your circulation-Is not sluggish If they are really verydeep marks the cuticle will have to beremoved by a dermatologist

The Reason-

WHYdoesnt Smith call In hll

physician r lies heconfidence In him

No the doctor has lost confidence InLlpplncotts

Identified EasilyL remarked Sir Cane Is

4THIS photograph with my twopoodles You recog-

nize me eh-

I think so said Miss Soft Youare the one with the hat on are younot Philadelphia Inquirer

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Copyright

SYNOPSIS

with

made

animals

Bachelor

genuinetogether

makeI

house

thinkhowever

thebreathed

she

much

macerate

cleansed

Smith

of me leaving but aohts andpains and ashes In Its place When shesaw what she wished to know she toldme the story the whole miserable storythat Id enough of to suspectWhy married the other ahecouldnt explain herself except that Itwaa a womans whim I had stayedaway and he had come the oftenerpart pique and the mans dare ¬

devil fascination I reckonbut a monthhad shown her how she really stoodand had shown him too Likewise shesaw the sort of man he was and thekind of life he lived At last he gotroujh and cruel to her every wayto break her spirit and even the babydidnt itop hlmlt made him worse Ifanything till he swore hed make themboth the kind he was for her goodnessseemed to rile and goad him and hay ¬

ing lived with the kind of woman you

have to beat ho tried It on her Thenshe he> fight was hopeless andshe sent for me

Hes a fiend ihe told TTItood all I cn Hell make abad womanof me as lure an he will of the littleone 10 I have decided to jo and takeher with tne-

Where said L

Wherever you sayshe answered-and yet I did not understand nottlll I

saw the look In ter eyes Then M Itdawned on me she broke down for Itwu a terrible thing for a good womanto offer

Its all for the little srlrll she cried

G8I

1 tlxQ

By Bell

Saturday In company with aLAST woman author who writes

of and for women Iwent to the mat ¬

ineeOurseats were

third and fourthfrom the aislethat Is there weretwo women be ¬

tween us and free-

dom¬

It so happened-that both my friendand I had out ottown dinner en-

gagements¬

whichmade It Imperative

ffi l that we shouldza 1h fairly fly out offjji the theatre themoment the cur-

tain¬

went down In fact we chose theshortest of the plays we felt we must

seeButwill you believe Itt Those two

women who were between us and theaisle kept us standing for ten minutesafter the curtain fell a hlle they adjustedtheir hair put on their hats remadetheir complexions from their vanity boxplnne their veils all aroundthelr hatsand In the hack slowly drew on theirslov gathered up their glasses re

re34c

daughter

Merrldy

wouldnt

nothing

sobbing

formula-e

nothing More than her life depends upon Wemust get her away from him

She BW It was her course andwent her heart was cilllnf

The Lieutenant met the look of ap-

peal In the traders eyes and nodded toInnis his complete understanding andapproval

Wo love some women their good-

ness others we love for their frailties-but there never was one who combinedCljs two like her and now that I knewshe loved me began to believe again

I there was a God somewhere Id neverthe youngster so she led me In

where It was sleeping and I rtmenvbtrmy boot made such a devil of a thumplug on the floor that she laid her slimwhite finger on her lips and smiled atme AU the fingers In the worldto choke at my throat and all the bloodIn me commenced to pound at my heartwhen looked on that little sleepingkiddie The tears began to roll out ofmy eyes andl bemuse had beendry for four years they scalded likemelted That was the only time Iever wpptthe sight of her baby did

love her already I whispered-and Ill spend my life making herhappy and making a lady of her whichclinched that wavering doubt themother had and she began to planquickly the fear coming on her of asudden that our scheme might fall Inraj for riding away with both of themthat night back through the streets of

I

Mess and up Into the hills where Id

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FhALN Jt oUt To nun I

gHYiNoUH JinJ rffJf MY THIRTY PRI CHN7 lJraZlRr A1o lfdQ-

STherl

Matinee Girl9 and Her Failings

LilianV

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packed their handbags helped eachother on with their coats and finallywith triumphant glances surcharged-with malice let us out Into the aislewhence we were followed by a row of

equally Incensed who had beenpenned In at the other end by two wom-en

¬

engaged In the sane disagreeableoccupation

Supposing my friend and I had beenmen Do you think for onethat those two women would have kept-us waiting while they exhibited theirbad breeding so publicly i

Never With a coy upward flirta-tious

¬

glance they would have grabbedtheir wraps In both hands risen and letUs pass

Cant anybody see that to a womanthe only friendships which count are thefriendships of other women

Suppose you net Into any sort oftrouble thone of you who r m con1sUitly looking for 1 WM It io youany good If fifty masculine voices areraised In your defense but the feminineare conspicuous by their absehce

Then If you know this why will youIn one short ten minutes run the riskof getting a dozen women down on youbecause you are showing yourself In I

your natural colors and not being thepolite hypocrites you always are tomen 7 I

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me

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for

began

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metal

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have held them againstman or God or devil but she wouldnthear of It

We must go away she ald a longway from here where the world wontfind us and the little one can grow to

without knowing She mustnever learn who her father was orwhat her mother dll We will start allover you and I and the baby and forget Do you lovo me well enough to doIt1

I uttered a cry and took her In mythe arms that had ached for her

all those years Then I kissed her fur

tw first timeThe old man tried to light hla pipe

which had gone out but his lingersshook so that he dropped tote match

without speaking Burrellstruck another and held for himThe trader drew a noisy puff or two In

silence and shot his host a gratefulglance

Her plan was for me to take the I

youngster away that nlgnt and for herto join us later because pursuit wascertain and three could be traced whereone might disappear she would follow

Iwhen the opportunity I sawthat he had Instilled terror Into herand that she feared him like deathbut as I thought over her scheme-s tmed no agreed was toride West that hour with the sleepingbabe and conceal myself at a place weselected while she would say that the

Heart Topicsliy jelly Vincent

I

i din Evening WeddingDror Hetly

you please give me some sug

WILl as to the color and ma ¬

for a bridesmaids costumewhich Is to be worn at a church wed-

ding In the evening What Is the cor-

rect fprm of Invitation for a churchwedding when no reception follows

RB M

Silk oronlcloth cWffons or any of thenew materials make pretty bridesmaidfrocks The color of the gown should

with the color of the wed-

ding If the church decorations are-green lavrnio or yellow c thebridesmaids an should be the sameshade or a CJr which harmonizes wellAny shop wi o they engrave wedding

will tell you the corn formof Invitation for a wedding with no receptlon to follow

A Summer FlirtationD-ear lIett-

yWHtLK away on my vacation at the

seashore I met a young man Wegot along very well together and

lie sail he was coming to New York on-

a certain date and would call on mo

When I returned home I wrote to himgiving him my address Ho did not an ¬

swer my letter nor call on me Did Ido wrong In sending my address

P PThe young man very evidently was

carrying on merely n summer flirtationHo hind no serious regard for you Youdid nothing Improper In sending him

as you naturally supposed-he wished It It lie desired to call For-get

¬

him and It he should write and at ¬

tempt to renew the acquaintance nowIgnore him as he has Ignored you

s 44 > 3 002 m 3 + 3 0E St emsQOd0w D0a2 t-i > Love and Gold HuntingThe Barrier By Rex Beachthe Frozen Klondike t Author of The Spoilers 4t r

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Ilittle one had wandered away nod beenlost In the canyon or anything else tothrow Bennett off After a tlmo showould join us Well the little girlncvor waked when I look her In myarum nor when the mother broke downagain and talked to me like n crazywoman

tier collapse showed the terriblestrain she hal been living under andtho ragged edge where her reasonstood Site had been bravo enough toplan coolly till tho hour for giving upher baby but when that cnmo she vas-seized with a thousand dreads andmade me wear by my love for herwhich was and Is time holiest thing Inall my life that If anything happenedI would live for the other Merrldy Ibegged her nsnln to come with me buther fears held her hack Sho vowelhowever that Bennett should nevertouch her agnln and I male her swearby her love for tho babe that shewould dlo before ho ever laid handson her It woke a savage Joy In meto think I had bested him after allgivinglug of tho mine back there that meantn fortune any time I cared to take Itfor things like that dont count whena mans blood Is hbt so I rode awayIn the yellow moonlight with aIng baby on my breast whore no childor woman had ever lain except forthat minute before I left She stoodout from beneath the porch shadowand smiled her goodbye the last Iever saw of her

To Be Continued

f

oc o iff I >2 I 3JB-I

I

HARRY LAUDERS

Says American HumorI Is of Irish Descenta

I SG i jT iX 5 iaS WIBY CHARLES DARNTON

ARRY 1AUDQ3R will leave these remunerative shores on Wednebday with ono debp heartfelt regret

Im IM be verry sorry to go away and leave oil the moneysir ho assured me

After this bit of peculiarly Srotch humor the thrifty musichall Blnger wont on to tiny n good word for American audiences

The grreatcst audience Ive over had was one I played to yesterday jmore than a thousand lunatics he enthusiastically declared It was atthe Insane asylum on Wards Island Ihey appreciated me thoroughly andwe had n gr real time together I had thorn singing Love a Lassie with-

out¬ i1

any trouble Now the first time I told them sing It beautifully asIt you were singing It to your sweetheart end the second time youll singIt as If you had her In your arrms1 That was a verry happy thought r

There was every reason to believe that his engagement on Wards Island hadbeen hlrrhly nuccessful But he hand just come from a banquet and the Joys oflife seemed to rent somewhat heavily on him When It was suggested that ban-quets

¬ >

probably kept him a well fed If tired man he readily acquiesced c

During my eighteen weeks engagement in America this time Ive been given Jabout five banquets a week yes slrrl I was banqueted and feted every daywhile I was away I had no time to sleep except when I was juggled about on I

1 train like a grreat blanc mange I appeared In every city of Importance betweenNew York and Kansas City The lat time I was here I was never oot o th toon 4i

us they say In Scotland But now I know something about the countryA natural location drew him out

Well he reflected I found the West a wee bit different from New York 1

the characteristics of the people I mean It seemed more like home Out there the dpeople take things In their own way Here theyre all In a rush But I dare saytheyll get tired In two or three years and slow down a bit Theres more of a divide jafter you leave Now YorkIn the people you understand Theyre all In a bunchhereyou cant tell one from the other Out of town theres wbat you call a bet-ter

¬ 4

clRsi Here they all lot mixed upThis being mode clear Mr Lauder was encouraged to give his opinion ot

Americans he had met on his travels-I

+

never met an American while I was away he solemnly Informed miThey were either Scotch or ScotchAmericans And as for my audiencesone-

was like another You see Im at such a renlth of popularity at this time thatmy reception was the same everywhere-

Itx

WAS apparent that Mr Louder saw everything from his own point of view 1

but I had a lingering hope that he might have noticed a little American humor to flihis leisure moments-

Noi

was his discouraging reply I cant say that It struck me The humorof the average American you meet on the street Is essentially Irish I could pointout words to you that are as absolutely Irish as the pigs ot Dougherty

Having pnld his respects to Doughertys pigs Mr Lauder next turned his 1attention to Chicago

Chicago struck mo as being like Glasgow he remarked The people Inthe street looked as though they were working Plttsburg was the same ButBoston seemed English or I might say that It struck me as a wee bit between tlEdinburgh and tows In the south of England A person who doesnt get In a

unlcrseMuster Is the Bostohlan Of course I think New York Is the hubbub of the

In desperation I appealed once more to the Scotch comedians sense ofAmerican humor Hut ho only said j

If you come across a funny American just ask him what his parent wereand hell toll you they were Irish or Scotch Anyway that Wl my uperanolloBut my agent told me a good thing when we were on the road Would you like f

to hear a funny rtoryr he asked me one day Im dyln for something funnysays I I havent seen anything funny but the wife since we lift New YorkAnd so the agent told me of a talk hed had with the manager of the thatNI-n Peoria The manager listened to all the puff he had to say about me andthen he asked Do you really think this fellow win fill the house Is he anattraction you can recommend Hes the greatest thing that has struck thug

country since Columbus said the agent After the manager had learned to pro

ncunco my name ho remarked I never heard about this squeeze before trh-

a ho Whos he Roln to fight V

After Mr Landers laughter had spent itsolf he laughed very generourtr janother story was recalled

In Boston one of thoso newspaper clipping bureau fellows came to see me 1They tell me said 1w that you have sung before the King T have said L-

And whats ho like asked the bureau chap The King Is a grand old man 1

said I Then he wanted to know If I had ever sung before the President Noi sold I Whats he like Teddy lies a great guy That struck me as a J

funny thing to say vow you know a guy In England means A bloody fooL

Tho Niagara Falls were heartily Indorsed by Jlr Lauder and America Jwomen also met with his approval

The American ladles are lovely he declared But mind you they most

be very expensive articles because they drew very well Yes I think I am tight jIn saying that they must bo expensive articles But Ill be glad to see em

again wish I come back In the fall Im going to sail on Wednesday you know-

I suppose youll bo on hand Tuesday night to help along the cheering

I really couldnt sa-

yBathing

+ jr in Philadelphia j 0 1

HFMFMIIKU said Mayor Royburn of Philadelphia we all remem-

ber

¬

j

the time when the mildest storm would make our water unlit to 1

liD j

I batho In let alone to drinkThe Mayor smiled J

The only roan In those days who could ever find a good word to say

for our water he resumed was Peter Burness tho optimist of the Court of

Quarter SessionsActually I said to Peter one morning after a storm 1 couldnt take a 1

Irith today on account of tho muddy water It was like brown paste

Oh 1 took a good tong bath eald Peter When the Schuylklll water Is like

tnat It la the best fluid In the orld to bath f In So medicinal you know Better 11

than Homlmrst or Matloilmd or any of those places l

flint Ki rir mull rnld I

That just the point wld Jdir Its medicinal mud full of all sorts nr

phosphates and things Tonight when you get home flit your bath Jump In and

splash about but afterward dont use any towelsi

No towels I objectedTheres a much better way than towels said Peter Stand before the

radiator and let the ivater dry on your body Then brush It oft with a whisk-

broom II

+The Health Value of Butter

UTTER Is sn common u commodity that people use It and scarcely ever think

B what wonderful value lies at their hand in the pats of dainty yellow

cream fatBut this delicate tat It Is claimed Is as valuable ns cod ilver oil for weakly

thin people and doctors havo frequently recommended the eating of many thin

slices of broad thickly spread with butter as a means of pleasantly taking into the

bodily tissues one of the purest forms of tat It Is possible to get

t 3

I GreatFroth a Great

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Love

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