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He Tries a,*Shine’’ Foke\ Ne deaasanas ahh and Hits the Firtng.Line, Kahles By Roy lL. McCardell, 1 ; Pe tne sering: : . ‘RS: DPBB was to see me to-day, Mr. Nags, Tt i ~ r STO SE =| would have wring your heart to hear her te.) J > i ae | YUN DITY IN MY) out her troubles. She says she might as Dale : ! \..well’ give up and secure a separation'from Mr. Dubb, Hepdoesn’t even attend to the furnace for her, and _ be takes things out of the house and pawns them, } and tho boarders complain about him coming home | nervously intoxicated and singing: ~ i * i “Ever eince he Heard about Father, al Uncle's quit: work, too!” " . .) » Of course, T did not like to saya word to her, } because it was fone of my affair, but I adyised her to get a separation and make him pay her $60 a week alimony. He hasn’t done a stroke of wotk for years “© or made a cent, and nobody will give hilsh a position. ‘So it, would‘serve him right if he had to’ pay $50 .a week to Mra. Dubb. = |» And’yet Mr. Dubb fen't the worst man in the world. If hé were treated homie Ifke you aré treated in this house maybe he would try to bE * “ Dettor “As I sald to Mra. Dubb; if she had some of the troubles Phxve—and I started in to tell her what I had to put up with, and there that. woman sat; not listening to a word I sald, but clattoring away about wlint shgghad to/ endure and how she had to work and how her heart was brealing—as st _ she was the only person in the world that knew what sorrdw was! 4” = Tt made me sick! Some people are so inconsiderate, all\thoy want to do ts to tell you their trouble, and if you go to tell them how you suffer + ILM it fx * generaily / known eat Caruso, if he should ever. Joxe hin voice, might get & job) a8 & newspaper artist, few people meh aware of the fact that Mrs, Lealie Care ter oan) do tricks with pen or pencil The acgompanying works of art are jpxoor that both can draw other things than bourses. Witle appeafing In Philadelphia the two stars lived at the same ‘hotel, the Bellevis-Stratford. Richard farm, man she had to We to Dee a Bet rite seem they don’t pay one ma attention, te : ‘Ni hy f ; ac oe > v > 8) Mr. Dubb would all right {f he was treated all right; tut the poor , f } % “M SION" ts dead and but man dare not call his soul bis own, and from morning till night that woman } FE Is isjeWing aud scolding him and Hhiing fault and worrying the fe and soul i far ag Arnold Daly: is cerned. No matter what the outcome: the case now in court—oud it wi doubtless bo dropped—air. out of him, so that it is no wonder the poor man has lost all ambition. » Ah, a man who has a good wife and good home should appreciate it! i ‘Ob; you needn't hum a song, Mr. Nags! You might pay some attention $ when I go to speak to you. If you were treated like some men are treated Yoil would realize that all women are not so kind and forbéaring as I am! + As I told Mrs. Dub>, although she wouldn't listen to a word I said, but fat there Alking about her silly Httle worries; as I told Mrs. Dubb, ff she had masricd into a family like I married into, with doublefaced relatives, pretending they wanted to do everything they\could for one and then going away and talking about ono; or.if she had married & man who had friends like you have that are trying to keep you out,night after night, breaking down your, health playing chess and other forms of dissipation, then ‘she Would have cause’ to complain! ‘ And look at Mr. Terwiliger! The life that man led with Susan ‘Terwil- iger.was awful. She wouldn't speak to him for-weeks at a time, and he-had te sleep on an old horsehair sofa in the back parlor, that finally gave him spinal trouble, and no matter who came to sog hep she had no pride, would tell her family troubles and how Terwiliger ‘treated her until it was no wonder he went to Derver and becime a swwing-machine agent. - Bui i never belisved it was Mr, Terwiliger’s fault.. He had the loveliest ak compl-xion, and could play the piano beautifully, But that’s always ie Way iu this world. “I suppose people think you ‘are kind at home, Ah, art te they ich Little do they know, Mr. Nase! I never tell how my A Group of New York Types eR - & ‘ By Maurice Ketter 1 “ (The Evening World's Angle-and-Curve Artlet.) * fT into hot water ager of the hotel, prides himeelf on & pints Bare bien valuable collection of autographs, which enter upon them in April. ho has atcumulated in a targe book, and Curttok Theatres chicago. He Bt ie when ho found Mrs. Carter and Bignor / dramationtion Moukey'a tH Caruso both under his root, she asiced | WW. Jucgba't giant ig Lemon’ them for thelr autographs. Caruso Was % the first to comply. He wrote his name | «1 in tis flowing Italian (hand, and then deftly drew two profiles on the page— one of himself, and the other of his brother singer, Signor Scotti. ‘When Mrs. Carter wrote her name on the opposite page, Mr. Ham said: “Won't you make mo @ sketch, Mrs. Carter?” “How do you know I can?” she asked. He smiled knowingly ag ho answered: | Mr. “Aay one who can write a name &#)° igi pa ‘HE Braialey diamond's Ufe is to I ocean anne aeeenennaeaeanaaenmanaaoel here's No Place Like. tall pe By Albert Payson Terhune. to speak of the |” " in just two min- 1 } H AN you ‘magine Mrs. Carter play- .. ing Adrea to an audience of one tn a barat Well, anyway, nare'e ' n story that she brought back from | 3s : ‘ ; automobile travels in the Allegheny EBAY aa ; : the spell with the quite audible cone ‘ i : "Was it t , he wise tal ivan ee Poor OF weg, ARLES DARNTON, Notes of G. otes of Grand Opera _ Bessie Abott will appear : ty Sea e bY DEAR T 2 WOMEN AND TIPPING, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. "enna ‘outcome of tt was’ that YOUNG woman returning from a Western oe « May Manton’s Daily Fashions, GEERT Child’s Droce—Pattern No. 6268. all or send by mall to THE ® PON FASHION