The evening world. Newspaper, February 18, 1908, Page 11

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ni ng “worra warty retgaaerise, xavsuay, repopruary Oo, Tryuo. “Exclusive” Gowns PECEE TE CSE CEE E EEC EECEELESD. & By Maurice Ketten. : ° The Story of the Operas’ * ; cept Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 6 to 6 A Park Row, New York. | a: = nf 5 aoere rou fase Pasi ana 5 | eek poe S\ = Sa Fe0. S & By Albert Payson Terhune. Cara a a war > Gi ~~ ¢ E unas emierOd at tho Post-Offce at New York ax <n AS BELMONT, | OR ALPHONSE ) | Ves, VANDEROILT— FA NO) Ge =DRApSSS aes . < 'DB.! { mae World for the United states | \ ALeHONsE, \ (A \ Most EXcuusive \| 7) IWANT A ff AG Te) | MNOST EXCLUSIVE | NO, 82—-DEBRUSSY’S “PELLEAS AND MELISANDE. 4 Canad; ee eo IN\ OWN - SomETHING }|&— |} Crown ¢ UY [INSSF SOMETHING | are I WANT A He | VERY ORIGINAL oesigNed l ee SH) | NERY OR Ginae indeon of old de sianeo 4 BBE heats ee Exc USIVELY ~~ Oe CA Youwitt S€& ‘) , ae yeties VOLUME 48 ..... F +... NO, 16,082, EXCLUSIVELY] Sane (For ME J SSEORN® TY NOTHING LIKE f pee as i FOR NE 4 S == GSN n ~~ @& entre BACK TO THE FARM. weeping T ANY of the men now out of work in this city have had some farming experience. The European immi- grants of recent years have come four-tifths from agricultural dis- tricts. Especially are the imn grants from Italy and Austria con- versant with farm work. Many of these have returned home and more are returning. More stezrage pas- ns, Golaud me, or I shall throw water!” ich you, Golaud re- ured you?” But I lassured her. | “Yes," she wept, escaped.” r than this she could not be [persuaded to utter a word as to her history or the cause of her sorrow Nor was her past ever kno » Golaud was her past ever known to Golaud, MM t anyone You can TELL IT. MADAME BELMONT : ELISANDE The only information she would vo1 afe Ww At mwas called Melisan She at first was afratd of the pow grizzied, bearded Prince; but at aed | sengers are going from New York to Europe than from Europe to consented to let him lead her away tro: the glade Goloud, though already @& middle-aged widower with a half-grown son, fell wholly under the charm of the! tons and begged her to become his wife. palace of old King Arkel came news of Goloud's man > riage to the unknown woman. The Prince had written tho tidings to his young? half-brother, Pelleas, bidding the youth break them to Arkel; and if i proved the match to light In the palace tower where It wou from the sea, Should no light appe: Mi d_ not tinue its course to some far cou . undesirable, gave his | New York. 5 The men out of work who have come from the rural neighborhoods and small towns of this and other States should also go back home and » go to work on the farms. The higher money wages paid in cities and the allurements of city { life have drawn the younger men from the country, and by diminishing ‘the quantity of agricultural labor have increased the price of farm prod- ! ucts. Now that so many men are out of work in the cities there should ! be a readjustment in their return to the country. In the interior of this State, half a day’s ride by train from New x York, there are hundreds of farms which are not cultivated at all and & thousands of good, fertile farms which are cultivated only in part through ‘ lack of labor. “iy 2 pd kindly ttle Yniold, G her weird beauty marriage. the gloom and age-worn air And so the weeks passed In the paiace gard Melisa air; watching {t flash in the upward 4 er. She was not happy nde sat by a ner wedding ring h golden ¢ ast all h as bade t this she shrank from doing? her hand as she wa thet wile was aroused to she lost the ring} ri] omens foley she was miserably A He told her at @ palaca air fell A golden torrent wit At that yusy tha Lup in hist oused. Hes t so fart Many men have found out their mistake in measuring wages so by the amount of money received. A single man gets on a farm S. $30 a month and board. He naturally thought that $2 or $2.50 a day in| New York would be higher pay. It is not. ! b On the farm the wages keep on every month and day of the year. | *So do the food and shelter. In the city the wages are by the day, with/ loss through weather, change of job, dull times and other reasons. Al-| 5 though the wages do not keep on*every day, the nece: for food and | Does Your Wife Open Your Letters ? If So, Sympathize With Mr. Jarr! | t Shelter does. a ie = ime it for Here is a great difference which makes $25 and bard on a furm| @ Seems to Be Very Lucky When He Gets Mail Addressed to Him at Home. 1°03 27ers ee oe fe latter could peer in through the ver to spy on her. Though Golaud continued to brood over rage allayed by leart plisande « the youn : his wife by the hair rage'n along the ground tn hb wring the truth from her. arkel posed in time to save her life, and shed 4, unseen, + -THE FUNNY PART. IT REALLY HAPPENED. n and terrified, to bid Pelleas a last goodby. Gola the forest bevond the palace, Por the firewy ehe had loved hinrf ed them Pellease a'f-brother. Melise? and # fang 0 0 6 a business fiprint on the « + of the envelope,” sali Mr It's the first time I ever saw you so eager to m+ Hesides, didn't you open a letter that came to me addressel by ha week?" amount to more in the course of a year than $2.50 or $3. a day withov i 1) said Mr. Jarr. “But one’s correspondence should be re A Alea | =; spected, any do be if you had any respect fo: B ous Iliness: Asiphescamer board in the city. | By Roy L. McCardell, I'm sure i Gayo MI con cence ih 1 had One \pardony i 1 lif she had ton much fort it's she sank. n her ears ‘ said Mrs, Jarr, as Mr ause he hadn't heard from jou." The city workman earning $3 a day has little left at the end of the | ¢ taken most of it. More new clothe e have taken the rest. year. His rent and his food hav and the incidental expenses of like a woman's handwriting,” sald Mr £ that ex- F G en LE EME RE) Rad CO" AY LS | The Story of “Don Glovannt® Wil Re Published Thoraday. On the farm a man need spend no more than $5 a month. He wil! he seen Kid Py _ ny “ tome hi y wb it before sald ni | wear old clothes by preference, except on Sunday. There are no tempta- 4 CGH Rane eatiaea meno QUE th aericoundubenindachedoureatiiehentiiwasilonkinel ramnanust as tions for him to spend money. His food is also much better 1 it was important,” sald Mrs. Jarr. f y collar-button?”* Mr. Jur | I Ed £ 9 can buy in the city. The milk, eggs, vegetables and butter are tres ed Mr. Jatt Ry aa eae g thtendl Ce Eee We TS eld : q than any Fifth avenue millionaire gets. ‘Of course not,” said Mrs. Jarr, “If {¢ had been tm- ting those letters portunt le would have written you to your c 8! because T was fr * Jarr, and [ thought I suppose, espe- | it was ‘Mrs.’ Jarr, and so opened t anyway, they weren't , : | importent.” me (hat they would not want , “TY Ptheniningaurealolest OF) sean HN y these mem: said Mrs. Jurr, "Due letter is here somewhere!” ) 00 4, HRs Tea eRe NDN Wee jenoeranarae ‘ know ) 1 respect my urs, Do [open your mait ano formed! 1 tie sideboard drawer thownadsas t f ith Rohe is iaeaeicitets end say ight it was a from a man, or I thought thereby. liealinercon 6 tranaee rs around timt way!" excialmed Mr, Jarre '* W88 fF ‘Mr. Jarr forming power of the Di an. I'm = welcome to read all my mati? sald Mew. Jarr get no Aceording to this new . ely recelving but givin : veHelerel nrinten tol yourenac youd: belasnameate rim earanisiecs ld 1 of. And ['m sure I've often put ietters on yo k an] learning alone but doin e1 and ope Jed. j ; never looked at them." to nal, his exp Ido get an ers Tam ashamed of! snapped Mr. Jarr "When?" asked Mr. Jarr. 3s Kingsley | A nt le bout meeting @ note, @ business paper y “Oh, often,” sald Mrs Jarre, “And if you are go afraid I'll see something to i : lake me wise get ALi, of your correspondents to write you to your office, as H not an edu nan, althou a ve e hat people will protest against, | must of them do now!” Education !s an individual matter t vated alike iy # 3: they wei “Well, you my letters alone!” snorted Mr. Jarr, “No other married manner or degree They respond to difrere: sand « \ siifferent ase ew FIL us $ letters!” Mrs, Jarr smiled indulge ways. One becomes educated by way of schools and colleges life, anothee ack # teur ast sintement but made no remark by life alone. The measure of a man's education is the measure use In. a 2 house rent is free. He has vegetables, chickens and milk, g 350 a month of board. The surplus eggs will pay his grocer’s bill. The propriet (to an ASE beer rm Miss Lonely Now Picks an Athlete for Her Mr, Man, .* By F.G. Long. home. © Mrs. Jarr sighed and winked Mr. Jarr met his friend Rangle. ‘Does the world.—Boston Gl: Do T osen yo 1 open my mal s.outed Mr. Jarr +o The Cleverest Woman in the World, | By W. G. Fitzzerald. iutle black-robed woman steppe@ | n ashamed of neople seating. sald Mra. Jarr coldly | | | have him anchor hi N the stroke of taree an insignitica in, and the vast and brillant throng rose with a thrill of homage andy By saving higewa restart three years such a man will have [— /Sems To ME Lougnt ] (AH. You AREA PERFECT AGEL) Gree) respect, Next moment # roar of applause burst forth, The thmtat enough capital to rent and st ot his own, There are so many \ To Go AFTER AUR) Leaner ereNe = Smire. TAN | little figure wae vistbly distressed, and raised a trembling hand jdle farms and the prices are so low ight or ten years’ work and | HavEA coop <) ( AckOB Aiaerics $> (a | Sa UGE} ute apyeal. Then you could have heard a pole drop. and she beam | } e hI y able bodied r ming ti ill i aA = ee OF THIS \ — » speak, Of her lecture I say no more. But as I heard the greatest perso thrift would enable any able tx Mae in} I ) far ning own — Z a \ y Tuners You. conages from Sweden to Vienna speak in tones of reverence of this woman, Bij his own home and t something else to leave to his wite and c CET IRECY On d to secure her strange sto: This was more difficult on account of besides { re ol ew rooms | Fa nRINAnTEhOiiCe \ Madame's horror of publicity, Not long after the birth of her el child, Irene! dren besides the f e of a few rooms in a tenement house ntl sy ane) Madameurie took . tiny cottage on the Boulevard Kellerman, the Parad r knows where it is, Taw Montaouris, a district so remote that hardly any coch the ordinary Parisian the Boulevard Kellerman ts only something little lese an Timbuctul Here “the cleverest woman in the world” has a little Ivy-covered house tying baci from ti Sand spends her days carrying on her own and her late i husband's work ing her little ¢ whol ls early seven, and who Is two anc a half, A Polish cousin of hers helps her with the chile and there ix also Dr. Curle, her husband's father, to be taken care of—@ very able-bodied man out of | Back to the farm is a ma work should consider, Letters from the People. Regan 1, Ended Fen. 7 ‘ ' HAVRE ar Tare ety , SS pe well over eighty.—Harper's Bazar, | To the El ae ng W i} | ’ Whe Widow tory ts ” Jj S i TY published in Tie Evening World? y Kole aera \ Can You Guess the Singer’s Name? ; ie || E ; 2G {1 cour srAy,} Cs i: N eminent singer of forelgn birth whose appetite Is such that it almow®y ; Interst | { HERE FOREVER Jur ys. ivals the fame of his yolce. dined at a table where ali the women we A OMentn Twister | f BESS el nT eee rt Teehahoe Man Laughed at thts hin he way < ye UTTLE es | . reasonably mature, with the exception of the nineteen-year-old daughter! i i je Fditor of « Wor rout AVE) Chas pS of his host, who sat at the great man’s left, ‘Tike artist paid avid attention t 4 : & t ) You witt, his plate until the latter stages of the repast, when the dishes began to comey 2 tel | (ALONE In (BE MINE slowly enough for him to engage in conversation with the young person, ta ave s 1 (worw Jam ——— whom in the Latin manner he pald a Latin compliment, assuring her in hem f 2 kt M t pete private ear that to him #he “seemed Itke a flower among vegetables,” . He ea ee r fi Ata | “phen I can scarcely hope to occupy first place in your thoughts—at dinner,® of each Love JOHN GORMAN ts ’ evidence: z be \ | she responded, demure nalts Crowding the Subway With Pat. A en Son reas ee | ‘And the eminent singer could not think of an answer.—Hanper's Weekly. Tiss -—}-— 5 | 1 Ver x | | SaRekGne ius Theneare rein Cuarect } | | The Three Chinese Dragons. (nbc t Ik al HERE are three kinds of Chinese dragons—-the lung of the sky, the 1 6@ stre eo all t ke] 1 Lia ~~~ — y the sea and the klau of the marshes, The lung {9 the favorite kind, hows, \ ‘ e vas e Lhe | x I es I has ‘the head of a camel, the horna of a deer, the eyes of no in for clapatns ‘ , as \ f = rapblt, para of @ cow, neck of a snake, belly of q frog, sales of a carp, clawm ¢ 4 i Beat pa daar Gut ea =: hawk and palm of a tiger.” His spectal office is to auard and support th each om takes up a seat and two trousers be black? Y. % tt Taye, | 0f8 bawk and p ( halves, Please don't print any more T.URBENOMR sMonroq iN cee [cea te eee = a “S*>] mansions of the gods and he is the peculiar symbol a§ sy emperor, ~

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