The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1908, Page 11

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WHERE shall I go * on my va- cation? A. If you take my advice you will stay home, Q, But I want to get out of the city and off into the cool tains for a@ couple of weeks? A, Get @ mer Home book. Turn over the pages, dodging the alluring pictures of real cows, &e., until you come to an advertisement reading like this “An enlarged hen-coop in the moun- tains, Mosquitoes in abundance; fickle and smoky lamps; flies of all sizes, ages and descriptions; canned goods from our own cellar; real straw beds a la bump-the-bumps; ancient eggs served at every moal under nine dit- “sum: ferent names; milk watered before your eyes. Terms: Whatever we can get.” Q. After reading the advertisement in Question what shall I do? A. Lose no time packing your grip and ely. e of that de- you will away on yvaca- “Turn Over the Pages. A. Hecause the pirates who own sum: mer hotels need the money Q. What for? A. ‘Yo disp mselves In Florida all miner. What s there between he country e of the c ynver fon usua 2 on the porch The Vacation Primer By Joseph A, Flynn. moun-! Q. But if 1 were a marrted woman, ind did that, I would never wear the same dress twice, would 1? 's what you go away for, and, y, your husband would ba put down either as an insurance ¢ jtor or a defauiter are plistered feet, empty pockets, dam- aged tations, tered faces and Jan aw/al ” & genuine square of a summ 000000000000000000000000 00006000000 0000000020000 Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship and Marriage ODD ODOODOOOOOOOOLLOY CUQQOG0Y CO00900000000: The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, Ju ly 13; AW, DON'T PIWER' HE PLEASE GIMME A DIME, MISTER ? oe | A. Very Mght and edifying, especially OLD PA for children; such as suicides, business failures, money, Gress, fashions, millin- ery, ages, births, deaths, marriages and a vivid desorption of every disease ever invented, Q. But cussed? subjects dis- are no other THOUSAND, ‘You ARE So kind, MR. BE A RES A u! P eS, IYER HONOR, HONOR , hy Gave ME \2AT: F000 Biew! “Start for the Place.” A. Oh, yes, To relieve the monotony, murders and divorce scandals are oc- jutroduced into the charmed castonally irele Q. Does the change benefit a person? does. In the elty one us- dresses twice a day, while in the countr minimum is four trips up- sto the trunk. hat articles of wearing should I take away with me? rything you have and can bor- the apparel Q, Will L return to the city feeling im- proved? A, You mt it, but the usual returns {s noth: ing more “pleasant and diverting than DON'T BELIEVE you!) 30 DAYS HARD | LABOR! eee ernr ener cae fDAT'S dE GuY wor GOT ME IN DIS TROUBLE! TAKE wouldn't such yi A ee of New York Theatrical Life. the end of two lifted to be ght, but at weeks you would be qu a member bf the Boi -- | Copyright, ius, by G pany. conte:ses to Tu WW, Dilingkam Com: | a) Q. You seem to te so ver er | DOGHWOALGOEDO: OOOOH. "I sant with the subject, where would you| Tha Novellzation of “The Chorus The man thare wouldn't us 10, | suggest that I go on my vacation? Lady” Was Made Ol raised ste a shit at they AI ye 3 Up. 1 am just as mu rj , :. | had to take notice av mebo gy ou are trying to find some) By Jolin W. Harding. J sent down an iligat lady, « Mise Sip- | - son, She sald they didn’t know where Patsy was, but that maybe Nora had | SYNOPSIS U1" gone to—to Crawford's, She gave me Dan Ma.lo thee inst we we @ place Where they live e@ Was no one there. Tin O'Brien was for comin’ J here with me. but he's an’ Oi from his | thought he m ‘ight offend so UO! een told him to walt at the theatre for Xo and Dan : Evasion. a (hy | jather’s hau ny +00. nue ( Over-Sensitive, |A Suitor From the Nay, | itisusy'n scuer Wo"yay stones meow aa Dear Bet Dear Be: ; Se if . aM ying company with AM twenty-two, and am deeply in ity rear lameness at ' RT ere lever althvalvouinelinavterneietls ‘ vin s 1 am unable to 6 for the last nine months. I have | to whom I was introduced recently apartments, | C. Leahy bie rages oy 7 on every Wednesday, While in the navy four years have Fe ee mralnisiecaese titel Tae eer nna yaad Saturday day ol d save ce Nttle one ia aiden. Mra hall be very glad to do Saturda day. I told her I'd saved up a nice lit n of mon Yo) th eAcaboMUoiee akan ATPaICOWrlehue Good! evens be up to see n Saturday ev and at present am at work on shore at| witha Nerehes at yi ry t ng. but on avcou e rain I stayed at/a good salary and feel well able to sup-| band and Mallory to see them.” Hearing Kos | nd Crawford, ane The old wo vho HAL also rise home, expect her Sunday,| port a wife. Some one passed u re- MA part ; The old woman, wh also risen, snyhow, W dat house mark to her that "a geJlor has a awe ee ee Gunday she had made another engage: heart in every port,” and that my’ fecl- rama o ee Ta Nee ne | ment with her ledy friend, and didn't pwand her may change as cud- CHAPTER XVIII, Hace kaha. ee expect me on Sunday because I didn't they came to me, My reai (Continued. bpd show up on Saturday night, She asked me if I wanted to go along with her and her friend. We went. Do you think she did right by making a different engage- ment with her friend? A.M, The young lady was a-trifle hasty, But as she asked you to accompan fher friend and herself you should not resent her making another engagement. You should have telephoned or segt the young lady a telegram Ing that you, could not keep the en ment, A Natural Action, Dear Betty WOULD like to know the meaning of the following: A young man gots married, goes in a coach to thé bridesm: id's house, turns around, goos home and changes his suit, W.G. Isn't that a perfectly natural thing? There |x no superstition such an action, to do, attached t It ts simply the thing vin their own religion. {ment toward her is one of pure e, and I think myself capable of dis eriminating between love and fascina The Climax, n, your daughters on the stage," “Ol did not, an’ for They wasn't there, O! was so skee O! couldn't wait for Danny, an’ me found our way to the back d $¢ the theatre, thinkin’ they might in their dressin’ rooms,” “And weren't they?” If the young lady refuses to keep com- pa wny with you, you ean only accept the decision, However, by Ing her at- tention you will prove to her that your feeling for her {3 serfous and lasting. and will prove the fi y of the friend's remark. ‘Two sensible persons of differ- ent faith can make matrimony a suc- cess, for there will be no unhappiness resulting from religion if they do not | infringe on each other's right to belleve| @ good reason. 80 O'Brien ‘On, that's merely 8 I've r da hip to you and O'B! tried to ers because of of na 11 suppos be nice t amin UNEL US Weel) n ; 3 seated himself to lis! . n of her atiractions. How can No yank eee p this to her? She seems pleased H Do yer know ougnt of me) inate set the others talking. You mustn't | to sue me when I call, and | oS h take any notice of such things.” | me jn every way hav Crawford looked puzzled. Mantas aie aie Olin ate Mifaiion to. "keep compan Mae caaerelenun RES aala {is meant koindly, str, Ofm sure, but kne has refused, claiming her| i: ‘ : | but ft has done harm, phiwer that youthfulness, and intimating that we| Mallory was here jist now, wasnt young iady told me mac > ashamed | have known’ each other but a short! he?" MOPEITGR FI eae Pied me. SI sald her father would not “Yes!* . iy vies ‘ 4! sanction marriage of ty daughter] wo vag Ga Mr. Crawford—she e's prob: | {to one of a different faith. I am a} “Yer was here whin O'Brien tills | ably gone off to a spree supper main Protestant and she Is a Catholic. Would| phoned?” her lover an’ is wurrukin' him for tips Mash esenartiege ghoves ere) "Yes, He sald you didn't recognize | or diamonds \The old woman reddened with shame and confusion. Crawford's worst susp were confir remark of the $ “lm very sorry }said, reddening also, but wit j ance, “I meant no red is of Nora on by this npson womar ned beyond q oor be nh annoy- nd t's a rel ‘The Million Dollar Kid GIMME A NICE Bo! COLD QUART Take Dis Mm pretty an't ey such things being said.” A New Complication. “Tt Is ad She an’ most lo! ‘Quite proba you sald they goin’ al ford, for He sh escorting her peared was at trainer termina plained oud to lory. “Phwat asked "Yes mean IT ovT oa Buc! en Ind oO Pat ki We ook and the de tough thing when a gentleman} ve po! ade am to sy's Ww n Wo ir koindn hands ann prusied p owed ade nes. me here to ¢ he's not 7 the old woman announ) “vm not e and an a on hi yo lress “O'Brien toh Nora,” i so gur dye Td Uke by Crawford ra jot like F had such with, r s partn fiss Simpson come | eatd things about with her that, If I thought was true,| Va'— “What Woman?” “You'd wh: r | she has This was I'm sald off somew nted here, any \ig she was posiifve that the girl a," he|come here, By R. W. Taylor } A THOUSAND QOLLAR Bee! Huw! vue / SHONG “THE y ~ Povice Ve mS WHO 1s DIS GUY COMIN’ 'N DE AUTO! HE LaOKS FAMILIAR TO me! J Based on the Play By James Forbes. 2 without | Cooled down, but he was not satistied. ‘Then who was the woman in that room when I was here before?” he de- mand Crd d was astounded, How could Matlory have known that anybody was in there? “What woman?’ “The won ite to a girl ‘An’ fi n't here, sre together she agreed foind sh ' he asked. ou hid when T was voman who, thinkin’ L Was gone, came out of that room wille you Were at the (elephone—the woman Who slink back again when she saw still 1 saw her hand the door,” Are yea decalyin’ Wemanded Mrs. For the love ay Nora's there!" already “T think ‘he agreed n't expect to surproise thim, he theatre, but it, Ol'll just be Mister Craw. | 1 wo rd at wa ya, ss." with when punced that , Mr, Crawford?” O'Brien, — pitifully! God don't tell me her and was valet ap- Mallory € spoke the |i togers and en-| "I ‘There was wrath in] O'Brien, ¢ s expression of de- | your 3 face. Mr. Mallory's tating nonsense," Craw 1, mother,” he ex-|ford assured her. “Besides, if I did 1g Mrs. O'Brien tn} jaye a lady tn there, it's none of ils told me you'd | jus ' | “Sure, 4 Ww ved. Revelation. she| Mallory, was a man who ‘when once aroused could not be easily what you appeased and hesitated at nothing 1,” gaid| What the Simpson woman had told him or, He did| had stirred him to flerce anger, and ihe ude at al was determined to get at the truth 16- ositive wardless of consequences, He argued and that 1f such things were sald there rryings on {must be gome cause, There was no smoke without fire. ‘I'll come away when I've look through that other room,’ doggedly "You'll not look the Even a have told you, Ww noth Nora's Mrs, about or here. rast da Danny, Mr. Crawford's given id," she sald, “Come away, bhoy.” Danny, praise the ou once more e of that,” sald Mal- howeve mean, “Danny?” know that she to see your yo nad a he sald Miss Simpson } ach agsertion through that room and jor any other,’ repiled Crawford, ugly had}in turn, ‘And you'll oblige me by get- that|ting out of this house altogether, and ‘at once,” such emphasis | 1 no just as positive with (To Be Continued.) yoere iv MAMMA LEGHORN-HEAV.ENS, CHILDREN! WE Af&-7; — 1398 ADOAMS = Listen to the Birds # w w By Bob Addams NED BY THE BLACK HANDI. goasees eal 5 Told by CoryRi suT UNOERWeOR Ane | NORRWOOD my. 1905: 1893, by G. P, Putnam's Sons) under arrangements with New York and (Published Y. Putnam's Sons, | | (Consrient, |G | London) No. 16, “The Best Shot I Ever Made.” making quite a long t With the wagon, and we were Supplied with game determined to make A off back of the river after black- tall, for though there were some white- tail In the more densely timbered river | bottoms alluvial river bottom it broke off short into steep bluffs, | Western pony could have climbed. It is really wonderful to see what places a pony can get over, » with which !t regards tumbles. en In into a wash-out, and then led our ponles along a clay ledge, from which we ‘steep sondy bluff. My companion was ahead; Just as he turned off the ledge, and as I was right underneath him, his horse, tn plunging to try to get up the sand bluff, overt Janced {tself, and, after standing erect on {ts hind legs for a second, came over yack ward, _ | An Exciting Chase, upright, gave me time to make a fran- tle leap out of the Way with my pony. which scrambled after me, and we both clung with hands and hoofs to the side of the bank, while the other horse took two as complete somersaults as T ever | bottom of the wash-out, I thought {t was done for, but not a bit. After a moment or two ft strug- jeied to tte legs, shook fteelf, and looked round In rather @ shame-faced way, ap- parently not !n the least the worse for fall. We now got my pony up to top by vigorous pulling, and then went down for the other, which at first the strongly objected to making another but, after much coaxing and a took a start and 1 deal of abus went up without trouble. At length, as we came out on a round- led ridge, three black-tall bucks started 1p from @ lot of sage brush some two hundred yards away and below us, and mada off down hill, It was a very long shot, especially to try running, but, as game seemed scarce and cartridges plenty, I leaped off the horse, and, ine went low, striking {n at the feet of thie hindmost. high next time, making @ wild shot above end ahead of them, which had the effect of turning them, and they 1908’ Pres. Roosevelt's Own Stories wnting Big Game | up the fork of a plaing river in | Western Montana. As we were oul of} | food, those two of our number who usually undertook to keep the camp we had been unable to get ADYE Pe Where the nfily country joined the! up which none but aj and the Indiffer- | [ wetting up from the bottom wa went | ned off and went straight up a very | Thé second’s pause while tt stood bolt! saw, and landed with a crash at the! feet uppermost, | I wag very | Himself went off round a shoulder of a bluff, yetng by this time down In the valley. Having plenty of time, I elevated the sights (a thing I hardly ever do) to 400 yards and waited for thelr reappear. ance. Meanwhile they had evidently gotten over their fright, for pretty soow one walked out from the other side of the bluff, and came to a standgtill, broadside toward me. He was too far off for me to see his horns, Ag I was began to walk toward the first, A Double Killing. I thought I might as well have es | much of a target as possible to shoot | at and walted for the second buck to come out further, which he did imme. diately and stood still just alongside of the first. I almed above his shoul- ders and pulled the trigger. Over went the two bucks! And when T rushed down to where they lay I found I had pulled a little to one side and the bullet had broken the backs of both, ; While my companion was dressing jem I went back and paced off the ance, It was just 431 long paces; rds, Both were large bucks , with the velvet hanging | in shreds from thelr antlers, for tt was: tein August The day was waning and we had » long ride back to the wagon, each with, & buck® behind his saddle, very f {Long Range Shooting. Tils was much the best shot I ever made; and it fs just such @ shot es any one will occasionally make if he takes a good many chances and fires often at ranges where the odds are tly against this hitting. I suppose I had fired a dozen times at anitnals four or five hundred yards { off, and now, by the doctrine of chances, happened to lt; but I would have | been very foollsi if I had thought for a moment that 1 had nearned how to bit | at over four hundred yards, I have yet to see the hunter who can hit with any regularity at that distance, jwhen he has to judge it for himself, though I have seen plenty who could make such a long range ‘uit now and | then, And I have noticed that such @ hunter, in talking over his experience, | was certain soon to forget the numerous misses he made, and to say, and even to aotually think, that his occasional hits represented hfs average shooting. One of the fines biack-tail yucks I ever shot was killed while lying out in a rather unusual place. I was hunting mountain-sheep, in a stretch of very high and broken country, and about mid-day, crept cautlously up to the edge of a great gorge, whose sheer walls went straight down several hundred feet. A Strange Feat. Peeping over the brink of the chasm I saw a buck, lying out on @ ledge so narrow as to barely hold him, right on the face of the cliff wall opposite, some distance below, and about seventy yards diagonally across from me. He lay with hig legs half stretched out, and his head turned #0 as to give me an exact centre-shot at his fore- head; the bullet going in between his eves, so that his legs hardly 60 much as twitched when he received It It was tollsome and almost dangerous work climbing out to where he Pg have never known any ovler individual, even of this bold and adventurous spectes of deer, to take {ts noonday siesta In a place so barren of all cover and so di It of access even to the most ‘e-footed climber. ‘This buck was as fat as a prize aheep, and heavier than any other I have aver | ied; while his antlers also wero, with. two exceptions, the best I ever got, IRCULAR skirts C are exceeding! fashionable just now for the Achoolgiris as well as for their el- ders, and this dress combines one with an exceedingly attractive ’ plouse, In the flus- tration the material fs and there white ‘nen, t oft many so that can be available as to render the lst a fong one. Linen {s atways hand- some and {8 always durable, and ts deing much svern both tn colors and in rhite, Cotton poplin and the Mke are much tn fash ton, while there ars also various dighter weight materials such as batiste and lawn, which are appropri ate, The quantity of ma- terial for the medjum size (12 years) {9 61-8 yerds 2%, 41-2 yards f& or 81-8 yards 4 inches wide, with 3-4 yard of material 32 inches wide to trim, Pattern Na. 60386 1s cut in sizes for girls of eight, ten, twelve and fourteen years of age Call or Hew te 7 ways specity size wanted. Girl's Dress With Circular Skirt—Pattern No, 6038, nd by mail toTHH EVENING WORLD MAY MAN: TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 132 Bast Twenty-third street, New York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattern erdered, IMPORTANT—Write your name tof scenes plataly, und al raising the rifle another stepped out and ,

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