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The Evening World's riome TRS. NAGG and MR- By Roy L.M¢Cardell. ‘rother Willie Has Alarming Symptoms. If Anything Hap- pened Him Could Mr. Nags Forgive Himself ? i : j 1, he {s only going on] aty ‘outgrown his strength! ‘This, with the fact that you had secured htm @ position with an express company and that he whs ta get up early and start to worlt to-day, was too-much for his sd san WILLIE fs not at all well, Mr. Nagg! twenty-six nerves! | “When I told him day before yesterday that you had position for him, I saw a shade of annoyance | his face as if he sald to himself, ‘How shall 1 t L am not feeling lke going to work?’ ht of it depressed him 6o that he ate all wbsent-minded manner last night, beut how happy he would be now for his b | hool’ until nearly 3 o'clock fn the that he could hurd et up stat | ! But he tried to carry 1t off with a tose on Me!’ in his usual boyish man- | 4 with a fit of hiccoughs! secured a pass over tell them tl The the the chops in the m word I sald to hiz and could tended and nevar heard a that he had « positl “Last night } mxetning, ard come home £0 We “And yet he never complat merry air and sang Mot Ui 2 i ner, until at top la “I was wo: 1, becat d sco it was his proud epirit sustaining bim was so weak that he had to drag himself upstairs by the, han rail. H pluckily | o strud “Once his gt xed and he fell down half a filght, but he attempted to ri his head and stur having skates o1 iulng. He m hay 4 and said something abou com; ; room witt for ice ater. I hadn't the heart to the poor boy felt so bad about it, ng of headache! | Only going Into | “Do you th @ decline as regar “Oh, yes, I might bitter about the poor for, as he told me hims¢ now, and wo to go looking nething cutting and ated about the pasition, would be able to accept It as soon as he was | , he did not thin t has sable to be about! so brave 4 have been proud of him. . preventing him from taking “He said it ‘A cruel dlow th this position to-day be of But he smiled so bravely! And you stand here and sneer at hi 1 upstairs! | “It may be malaria, but he refuses to take any quinine or sulphur and | molasses, 50, 28 I I id he fs nto a decline, | him, do not break the glad too great for him. Remem-| ar papa, who was | “After this, w: “news to him so qu der, he is nervous a always taken ext “Brother Wil €o he hati me te! open for him. expects to be tion to him “He feels t) about it! T ‘would ste th would be IMEART ana HOME PAG : for WOMEN Nixola Greeley Smith The shor to go to work, and/ ny not to hold the px for he ts so prou¢ not to m f ts to forget all out of the hou: You 68s task, and then you” Edited (HOPE MAMA WILL LET US <0! \/E SHOULD JOST LOVE TO GOTO THE THEATRE, AND WITH YOU BOYS ESPECIALLY! Now {versalp NO-AND 1 MEAN— What WHEN YOU WERE NOU WERE ALWAYS 0ING TO THE THEATRE AND OH, THANK YOU! THE GiRLS. WILL BE DOWN INA MINUTE! 7_MAMA, DEAR, DON'T You REMEMBER’) + 7 A BELLEYOU WERE. PAPA SAYS TO PARTIES! PLEASE ACCEPT THESE Nery Mase zine, Friday 1 JUST PUT MY FOOT DOWN! YOU SHAN OUT WITH Ti HYES HOSE WERE ee T40 Evening, THE ‘JOLLY’ GIRLS—THEY Win! By George McManus. WHY MAMA, DEAR. YOURE THEY THINK BOS zB DS KS THEYRE wf S| ING TO NY BRING YOU JE. " TOO! AND MAMA DON'T FORGET THAT YOU ELOPED OFT) WITH PAPA forty BECAUSE YOUR bod Big, MAMA WAS SO sah { unneasonaate ) HAVE A GOOD TIME! GOOCD NIGHT! 14 GLAD TO HAVE MY DAUGHTERS IN YOUR CARE! te Takes a Perilous Trip With Stanley in Africa. BOBBIE AND HIS BOOKS. «: SOME ROSES, eter 20, 1906. A Tamed Sousa and Funny Goose Girl in “The Free Lance.” 6 si | "The Marot | It eats off t 9 the man ery to th not the b' and bang of his it has Iittle elo Yes inipeeo, YOUVE OFTEN TOLD US ABOUT: tumons goathent, but he from calling himself “a c alee. ing to the horror sohll. Across t the Man.” At | Lees and the M . The Joseph Cawthorn. y him ance, Flesh has come to Miss Lowrie, and with It a sense of humor, As a mod- ern Audrey she ts decidedly roll. She +4 walks off with the honors in a clattering sabots, and then shows thi hag grace und a figure by ge leading an arty his own w just my luck! 1 I have at home." ‘HOW NEWS MAY READ IN 1925. MAN was A / ON SEEKING A WIFE, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. matrimony. . ho says, is thinty a wants to mary, since he has been t he writes, re to welcome one Who 15 aston ¢ and am very home are my principles © a salary o: ft $190, en by ong of a type that ts rap- y York, the type of worthy y in Miss Aus- best, most capable and most But the fact men leads me to at- Cie na \-1\/\ oy ohty SI/7 KY. 4 I fear, ee His 4 mai ter than inst the landlady‘s daughter, he encounters a detached h her young affections, there to che altar, thinkin about marrii - Dloodedly, as a thing deliberately attempted, taken with the Menaheerseecne end system aso pill. Happiness in any form just happens. No system will Buarantes # and no set eearch for it was ever miccessful. It might not tentt to the individual comfort of this sincere and earnest young man if he married a frivolous and lively young woman, but that {s what 1s likely to ocour and what would probably be best for the race, How {s he to meet this young woman? She ought to be younger than he, bythe way, and not his own age, or older, as he suggests, I don't feel quali. fled to ¢ail dim, but I think {t would be very kind of any Evening World cead- Sem who have solved « similar problem to give him the benefit of their exper- fence and advice. ‘There are two great problems of New York life: Finst, bow to meet people yeu want to know; sooond, how not to meet pooyle who want to know you, At the beginning the first seems more tmportant than the second, perhaps, Watgradually the host of people with an axe to grind even on no emall a grind. the huntsman. Let Let him beware o: female who can cmvince will is principles and the lady lead hip vise this young man to qi By Charles R. Barnes. rine ested last night on general pies, FE 6 sale of his ph urers for advertising pur thick of the end, but it is | pretty airs, Mu htee Love brighte: It might be enfir to sry that Mr, B, Smith found his plot in yland," but the fact recnains that * and the piece in Aisports hi If are pan Blanche Ring should once, Felix Hanley brings ot Braggadooia and the Duke of Graft- lana both need the money, and each belleves that the otter tus a castis-on Wasy street, Ono has a daughter, th er a mon, and they co @ mare riage for revenue onl the prin | has tho arrest habit,|cesy bolts and the prince also leaves ue was arrested for| home and father at the critical m t| e's money to the Re-| The anxious parents at once go on & Shortly thereafter an| still hunt for substitutes, with the re- tion for violat-| sult that the Goose Girt !s made over 1s was the bo-| into @ princess and a goatherd pees Niineanitn ce As they are already married | the name of Perkins honest triea to be De Wolf grafting duke, 8 story leads to the | chorus. In tt "The Free Lanc . armed prano, and tater on sends ‘The ¢ oon" on its tuneful way, Her singing ts better than her acting. A emirk that khe seems to have borrowed from Miss r into the cere- i of a Chicago with Jeanette Lowrle. shoults refrata human earth Wit of this sort is painfully propos at a time when every hour of the disaster he other fde of the continent. Caw- orn develops into a comio opens Blunt- obtiging Lump | takes a contract to fight the butties of both rulers and achieves a complete ¥ over himself, Mr. Smith's puna with deadly ammunition. One Une, however, deserves the laugh It wins, When Lump finds that he ts ed 1 rem tos It! first time I'm in- Vited out to dinner I get the eame that he plece grows tedious towant the ned dy several Nella Bergen telis tn her best so- ler be returned at his Hippodrome [capers to the part of the poor but dis- Braggadocla, and Albert Har Hopper as A song with a skyrocket in it i | Bousa’s most unique gift to a deserving But a song with the old Sousa would be more to the point of CHARLES DARNTON. es that he has lost| — oS it 1s Ddelleved, will {st to raise money to be presented to © one he now slee) Bill's case puz: Hoe was wake f ne 4, 1911, On Aug. and on Sept. da fly from <O be a red-rot w tographs to folding emoking affect redus che ous Stre es on Delaney fams- 2 {9 not a color, © of color. but beashade ser May Manton’s Daily Fashi KIRTS that ciroular in ¢ whether 0} 13 are so tn © the favorit leased th a fertilize 0 improve | ‘ y emell stone as one’s salf brings the conviction that the loss of an old friend {s a small | calammhy compared to the acquisition of an uninteresting acquaintance, If Mae young man who seeks a wifo will let his wish be known to his ac @ qumtntinces, # borde of pursuing sirens will at once start on hts tra!l, and one ; of ham will land him tn his desired haven of matrimony before he can make | | up bis mind-whether he wants her or not. But I advise him to go slowly about thismatter. It-scems to me I hear atready the hue and ery. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, Stains from Collar. ae For Neck Stains. ee eas ars fo remove @tains on the neck for Li eee | caused by high collar, take fresh | 16 collar tain sirained cucumber fulce, boll tt for| ‘e minutes, an y vi Mneiccay rea and for every five ounces ‘ake fresh-strained grains, ucumber —— fuice, A Dear ns; tincture of Maja, 2 1-2 oes; tincture e voll {t for Ave min- capt 1-8 ounces; tin Lah iia bea ar ane tac erace: rama; Toso water, 1 pint, Mix thoroughly and apply two or three ive ounces of Juice \dd; Pulverizea vorax, 176 grains; \otate of soda, % Umew a day until the stain ts removed. To Keep Hair Light. was out of thelr Sumily to stay with with me she received a le it wrote him she would go, but to have mo included In’ the inv! swer from him u & Xe Fealous Husband, Betty: HAT would you have done under these clroumstances: My husband upon going out of towh for a few days on a busl- nee & yo friend about her uge—c! m to gO to the t put consult was her hostess, and so she did not reve to @o to the theatre, © xi a mutual friend he tickets, he belay whon he roolved town, suced ‘ : arr rains; tincture o! Ube —Whea you wash your hair! letter he hid invited him to Join ‘qutllasa, 2 Lt Neri thoroughly dry ¢t¢ and mix in party, Senge coe mrere, we fen ene neo. 4 ro: ounces; tincture of & lass two tableapoonfule of per | HOS, Tosxpacety and: wan fiicua . t i oxide and the same quantity of water, main, A-dtama; rosewater, 1 pint MIE! 101 seas roots of the hats ead you ie ; any ene aDely two -or Creel win nod leh, Hah shade or ao | © will not-be aaa dad-untithe stay ts removed. tha to hear that 1 to the theatre with my was golog as chaperon trionda, Both of whom a: t andi her probably from Fe to elght years younger than BETTY’S BALM ou fee any harm in this or any n for his feeling as he does? © whatever, He {s entirely w ny senior, She says but I could not make el very attractive and HINTS FOR Sweetbread Patties. hs ut Into small |, onion juice, a 1! alt, pepper and a}! n of cayenne, Fill patty shells and ¢ hot. ’;|Ham and Peppers. i\ and scrape out clean, Make a Ml!) joily uid a tablespoont all these ingredionts ing of one cup of cold minced ham, | 4 one oup of bréad crumbs, one tabdle-| { THE HO ters of an hour espoonfuls of flour, | the grayy with a ua, Mutton a la Venison. Ts Mix large sweet green peppers | vinegar, FOR Whe nd UT roasted or thin sl! pan fo fetobup, one ». four table uMolent mutton to ughty; add a teaspoonful saturate you malt you to become disgusted with him, If you don't, by all means reject him, Peo- spoonful of butter, Fill the peppers and @ sprinkling of pepper, Serve hot, [ple who threaten aulcide seldom do it hh ts the case h } that suc | Thia one ss mado wit the -pléated fre b gores t among the Jat elties show the sido 1x ure made in two se tions, the seims over the hips doing away with that ter ang which is the objection cular model, yot at times 2 LETTERS from the PEOPLE ANSWERS to QUESTIONS any way of for those who are compelled to walk street from the Bowery til be a red-hot walk. to the ‘This would k. This would the time to plant the trees. A.C. Tobneeo and Growth, itor of The Eventng World: boys’ growth? stopping the er AH. 8 sometimes checks growth, to boys. There rmlegs way of checking growth. White Is Not a Color, ons, Call or send by to THE 'N WORLI Hew to TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 21 West Twenty-thir > him it {s impossible for|} Obtei™ York, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pa ‘hes IMPORTANT. ways specify size wanted. , tb > MAY MAN- d atroet, Now (tern erdered, Write your name and address plainly, aud ab rrr