The evening world. Newspaper, January 27, 1909, Page 15

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What Ho! “ Kiity Grey’ and That Huntley Chap. BY CHARLES DARNTON OW then, here we are! This timo It's “Kitty Grey,” and “Kitty,” you N know, Is G. P. Huntley, ‘That ts, Were about to say that dear old Huntley is “Kitty'’—but on second thought—good old slow but sure second | thought—this won't do. For Huntley, old fellow, {8 a great many things, but he| fs not a girl, You can be quite certain of that, Quite, And he isn't George P.— Just G. P., to have the first of tt over wit quickly as possible, we dare say. You won't mind, will you, if we ram 1 like a silly ass? One gets the habit, y » at the Now Amsterdam tre, You think tke Huntley, And | | Urs eee pg eerie |The Jollys’ Bull Pup w w w By. Coultas ISAUITTLE Pussy CAT IN HERE, AND | YOu MIGHT _ The Evening World Daily Madizine, Wednesday, TEE DID YOU HEAR) x aL GOLLIE! DAT WAS || | A Good \_ ONE" SrosT 1 i LL January 27, 1909. | DOOD By John K, TOO 00000 110 object of knowledge Is not theory, but application,” says Taine, Some of the principles of static electricity were known to Theles, one of the seven wise men, 600 B.C. It was a kernel of knowledge that) amouldered for twenty-two centurte: Early in the seventeenth century eleo- trio theory was prevalent. It was not until the birth of the prac- | tical nineteenth century that Volta set | Application the Lever : i That Lifts Mankind: DAGAGY Le Baron, > It was all a matter of application. The reason the nineteenth century made such strides was because the world had grown weary of dreamers, Tt had no use for mere theorles. Tt was the age of action, All actentiflo achtevement may start {1 |theory, but in this age theories must demonstrate themselves, They must meet the demands of realism. The proof of a theory {s In its appll- cation That's one for him: n he doesn’t think actor chaps. bi before he frail young ii again, Let us wha He's not one of those New Thought | » Fancy his getting on speaking terms with a shrimp} r, Not the rimp you usually see dancing its | e theatre, Not at all, There's where you're wrong | roughly. His is the seaside shrimp that! the great movement In motion. It was half a century after Davy's The nineteenth century was a cen-| great discovery that the medical pro tury of application, fession put Into practical use the differ« There was aa much electricity tn the | Mt Anaesthetics Juntverse In the days of Moses as there|, Th@ Principle was known, 88 YoU, to din of s but mans Love hid Gold Hae nare eo By Rex Beach, & es » The Barrier OY In the Frozen Klondike @ Author of ‘The Spoilers POO: MOSER LOTTA RANA TO: oP ’ LOSE fitting’ wowns have brought the de- C (Copyright, 1908, by Harper & Bros) as the rsh to the mand for close fitting soon creek is over breed just as good us a white?” 1 “EKnow tt was, but I didn't alm it at: lage at the mouth of the ercek, untili/olso, for as yet the sight of new faces a TI hire a gang of men to get outa fot “Look here,” said he, “What are you her. I wanted that ground next to higi up on the slopes she Alluna | was strange in the North under weet and com- of hou TN finish it in a week driving at? Lee's, and I wanted to throw a jolt into and the litt! The deserted aspect of the town| Ne di ee and be open for the stampede. “Em a ‘biood,’ ' sn» .eclarc., reck- Old Man Gale, I couldn't let the girl them and sea re she could p 1 the cay the steamer, and Sasinaiten? Ines a “Do you think this will be a big nd EL want ‘9 know wh - stand in my way; but now that it's look far out « Ney, upon landing he mac once acy ae corset town?’ she asked, nink of me, The men around h \ I'm willing to be friends with with the great am flow half a to John Gale's store, ned ( HE A Mut “Nobody can tell, but Ui ta have never made me feel conscious of mil neath } She stayed there a trader of t nd of tho poses Rte SOO Bre nes. hance. If It proves to be a false it, but 1 mala nokIng. af Ba facte He th ter eae sleet U1) move on—l've done ‘t before,” “You're afraid of these maw people tor Nec her ainbsiied up hail fin mine th fiains for the “You've been In a great many camps, Who are coming, eh? Well, don't worry tt By She's as al pate oF ras follow, t t r u yracefi 1 fro: 3 - “bad ine T suppose out that, M It wouldn't make graceful as a fawn; she's white iateaedrii Daven: Fescem see aiar kane : said that he had, that for twent y difference to me or to any of your Novody would ever know she was a FloHENGramRWor ‘pes aed other ruttians tp the acene, and, by outwit: | years he had been on the frontier, frends whether you were red, white, i have my outfit put ashore?" He was 1 1 frills but batiate Rina ate “ant ‘his feierda’ atruings HAaW ITORLWTaAL axan: (eo (He ieciad | blaie of: yellow She's a good girl," said Stark, m foilowed by a group of fellow passane and) all the matectals “And are they all alik But it would make a difference with ingly, in a gentle tone that Runnion adela similar request ny beams L Out, “Burrell {o1ls th “Very much. The land les different, , £0me people?” insisted the girl had never heard before eis igocdienoumnitorsme” ae me ie ee FRaRAP RHA aTH Ia nent Rae lbut the people are the same.” “Oh, I reckon it would with Eastern “Getting kind of mushy, ain't you? as sine ana Rat Pere rel will be diag raced Ihe rie | “ve never known anything except people. They look at things kind of I thought you had passed that stage another (voluniteered: o=nnia ate, svarlling meet Stark and fale into talk with |this.” She swept the points of the funny, but we're not in tue East old man." in Is new and) weve LLL H ake clinging, ——__ compass with her arm, “And there ig so "That's what I wanted aR know.) "No, T don’t Like her in r ow WEA USL) 1 A great many a r much beyond that 1 want to know Nico people back there wouldn't tolere “Well, Edo, and I'm ¢ ha hove # tal thir ead en had crowded SN ‘ ire using the CHAPTER IX, bo a ytil Gite girl like me for a moment, would so U AIRCHIOEIEEE ; ; * women are using th * about—oh, I feel so ignorant! Th ty S e y able China and (Continued) Jsomething now that perhaps you coula | they? They wouldn't consider two good) “She's not your kind 1 Stark, A f nd w und Ww 7 Ar ado silks that The Awakening. tell me, you have travelled so much,’ | Cnough to associate wit eae bad man can't hoid a good ttle comy mad so pleasant to HE ran had exercised oul Let's have it," said he, smiling at| He shrugged his shoulders guess can win one easy enough, but he can't at t Bes PMG eat anes y MeAlaneR un oehte ; lreccaarlounn you'd have a hard time breaki N keep her. [ know \ t they}, : my | ence up her from the her seriousness ; 4 $ ; J among > ‘bon-tonners mT nat's ‘ 1, ' t | ahe first saw him, but It wast She ated, at a loss for words, | “Monk ths ‘bon-tonner HUY Nobody 1 fool wor ur heard t \ 4 the use of thinking about it? This Is scopy one. - pa Ny t 1 (rages for definite feeling, and she had finally blurting out what was in her t 1 there are your peo- i My pecially a x hellevers, i Neen too strongly swayed by Poleon and mind. ry eOUILEE a) Oras i a uy ttle ca 5 wit . It \ her father in their attitude toward him My father is a squaw-man, Mr or we ( ujeue HERA She's just woke up to the fact t t 1 (0 be conscious of it, Finding him now, | Stark, and I've been raised to think that ae J she is a squaw i track down this intangible riclal dis- white, She's worried a4 Hed jowever, in a gentle humor, she was such things are customary." TESSA. Gui BRE Srey " every 6 lrawn to him unwittingly, anc an Y are, in all new countries* he | 1°" Hatt aee oward Ell lay you at ght to five e vt iverweenin: do her Lec , 4 ih Burrell has thrown her down, } A ni es: ere s - them, so thanked Stark hurriedly and a‘ ae ‘ y ae ven at the hazard of of Hut low are they regardea when an on her way. Runnion ‘ a 1 $ ew Pattern No, 6225 yeople. The encounter with leiv ion comes along” “Been making friends with that “T never thought of tha You may Ing the , at a ebeliious mood, for there were things | “Well, they aren't regarged, as a rule aquaw, eh?” remarked Runnion, cas be right e hi : eet f ft : esulted in . |he wished to know, things she must Squawemen are pretty shiftless, and) Vay. | “If it's true Pl shuffle up a hand for oy Call 6h Land by Mall to THD E ING WORLD MAT MAN. 1 ind out from some one win knew the | people don't pay much attention to|” myas, replied Stark. “She's a nice that soldier 5 es flow TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 18 Twenty-third street, New yorid and would not be afraid to answer | them. _E guess if they weren't they’ | iiteio girl, and I lke her. I told her I Tt T were you [ wouldn't deal pipe plead bate : ae : itis TatKil Rand 10 ustaTIN (Gola Ge: Slacbe The) oboh pAl een bebaRERl lar questions candidly wouldn't be squawemen."* didn’t have any part in that minere’| dim,” sald the gambler dryly. “He may rp thee lleadiih tg | Sue ibe epettes apis TEPORDANT SW Hite yoUe masse end /adaresn, plalblyy( haa) als ‘I'm going to butid a big dance hall! “My father isn't shiftiess,”” she chal- | meeting affair. {not cut to your break." ‘ Saat abd cope w larg Pe | eagetgeucite alae Wasted. 84 saloon here,” said Stark, showing |lenged, at which he rematned gilent, re+ 12 had passed on out | #'* : us. terns, beat) “Huh! What's the matter with you?| Dieanwhile, of the @ the stakes that he had driven. “As fusing to go on record. “Ian't a Dalt- ty was all your doing” town and through the Indian vil-' tows Dorado, and unusual! (To Ba Continued.) i \ imagines it lias settled « for Ii All of which goes to show that some 7 Naltovday \Kind makes haste slowly, shrimps are very shorts Hut he knows how to approach a shrimp. He GOLuie GOLLY THERE It only needed to be utilized | Professors expatiated. upon ft, olinics Goes strolling along at low tide with a net swung Kally over his shoulder and 1 MISSED i Application was the missing | ieiioustrated tt and yet no move was when he sees a nice fat shrimp he which the nineteenth century appl mada to allay thé sufferings of mans makes a highly personal remark, where | The ancient Greeks had some knowl- | kind ipa and shee looks ‘round to see edge of the power of steam. | The era of theory must have tts ine Hts i i Bet u a Pare ras Gate k as 12) B.C. Hero tnvented | ning before apelication can be given er chap, Hyitle le does a \the acoltpite. | ‘ ‘ | lac 06 sorts of things ; pout alarueS|HR | Hundreds of schoolboys had} ® meee tory of Wordsworth in the least, You can't help : sa ketile| cottle narrates @ story of Wordswor w who treats his mon- | watched the cover on the tea kettle) wna Coleridge attempting to unharneses: consid tion. He | | dance, and dreamed great dreams of | their steed after a drive, 1 to It and let it hang possibilities before Watt was born Neither could remove the horse's cole w ominutes, He sticks to But hey were only dreams. ilar. Coleridge declared the animal's h thick and thin, Ie knows a! Watt got busy, head must have grown after the collar: ¥ mo le when he sees ¢ > He took his rude tools and set to | Was put ¢ ‘ him losing It in work to shape his theorles Into realities. teeing, thelr predicament, the barmi je! | Ha was a soldier In the cause of what | from the {nn went to their rescue, mes you can't catch him at| wo now call “applied sclence |turned the collar around and easily res n again’ you can almost under- Much of the teaching of the anclent | moved It, H 6 s. ¢ ° e Stole losophy of theory 4 athe says. H to ha Stoica was the philoso ft the | Many men go through Ufe without with a tis ar, poor The twentleth century deals with the But t eye | philosophy of fact, appreciating the value of application wong talking jus hough he | Michael Angelo worked tn plastic | You can never fit square problems ine ROINEAERTH AHIR HRC OURIAIIE - clay, In daubs of paint er pos-|to round holes, but there are square ff ama netsarl "IVE GOT THAT i |seased form or beauty holes to fit all such problems, ty ur, and so he| é ROOF CLEANER. The application of his art made the) Much tn everyday life is going to! mR a. p “SOME THING ME SECOND DID IT YERY | clay take sity and all but breathe waste c t x * It invested his canvas with figures) It only needs practical application ta ; OL aalhka aN EAT MUST HAPPEN that almost lived. give it value Angs an actress frightfully OR THEY WILL A zs | flowers he has a right to SHONEST! d ror two of PPOLICE, Wey | “ , y i eee ee NLY WANTED | My “Cycle of Readings, uP. Huntley as the Earl of Dulston toy with rabbit's foot \rER HIT THE ; 7 fishing for shrimps in Biarritz," 5 iptan oun Stieeursts: By Count Tolstoy. Hy th " TC ave van aac tiaac inthe ~~ Translated by Herman Bernstein,~~ Bren UL We ak ' the,atich? It {s red atuff=he (Copyrighied by tie Prvse Vublishing Company, ihe New 1 . e's y you! § ripping! No (Copyrighted by Herman Hernsteln.) que hott w r vering the fa imself. What | The italicized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's would th pid ' We all, musical | original comments on the subject. comedy tea 1 hk i pice an Vent orn th Love. \Y ; i ean 7 yeh: Charl i rot OVE for mankind leads to real, inner, imprescripti:, g7 7 Kitty Grey.) ble bliss, for love unites man with others and hat sort of thing, you k with God, JAN. real k plot by a chap n ru Sa eae ald peste eee “ i ! ‘ y George! A domes: 4 a g WISE man loves not becatise ft iy profitable for him 27. e with ‘ r) ’ A to love, but because he flnds happiness in love itselt.— vcore’ | The Widow Says if Wives Are Slaves So Are Some Husbands | 4 ac Ge n act dress eee ai s vt 1 dy vt © not speak to me of repentance; what use !s there in regret? Falsehood: Y va! i > ; en D says: Repent! Truth says: Only love, That which ts removed from God [ ( ' u Certainly you protested Bachelor, | an Independent old matd for the privi- does not abide. Remove all recollections from yourself. Wa are confused F ee Histiwental Ey Helen Rowland. yw soothing \ ¢ husband has to do! lege of being a dependent cide dish by traditions on our way, Speak not of the past; live In the shadow of love and er-he Va fair share of atten- ¢arrM not going to propose to Sou ‘bluff’ that Adam t Joesn’t want to! A/ "But a man,” groaned the Bachelor, | tet a): else pase by.—Persian Wisdom ; \ iy eee any more nnounced the Bach- and then hande lan can ass: f gives up two-thirds of his salary, and ~x~xee=—<—><& >" siete aa ees Pepa f UGGt hens Hen Gti sat down be-| heirloom, It's And no wife has to tive with him,| ALE his clubs, and his good timen with SAGE was asked: “What Is learning?” He answered: “To know mankind," Saale : pny Rane side the Widow in ane ioaan't ‘A wite can ‘go | the boys, and half his chttfonter and was asked also; “What ts virtue?? ‘To which he answered: “To love ee hts § : in ah ns i) a the coziest and wa touNTot srted the Widow, | titee-fifths of the beat coom, one the jankind."-—Chinese Wisdom, ° e a nge dimmest corner of ; ea heme 4.) Dtivilege of reading his own mall fi OI W ind iw D igesarlen tal tireem lesara coming : ND Baca J smoking or drinking or pl a ir \ es Julia Sanderson RUAN + fils a h maeiiel : ¢ nds the law pursues " a HCInCR Ot OVE, love him who hurt you, whom you censured, whom you did not teat tt 2 har ex- his shoes in his nds heh (| ards—and—and iat do Fy Woe say perhaps Miss Sande back to us the claimed the Wid- | stay out after 12 o'clock, and to hear an stop d e cook demanded, flercely. love, and all that concealed his soul from you will disappear, and ag light of a nes bo tby Ot ae ently f 1 maith (alnt alarm) | Hin miunbling (excuses overt cand faking are OF the “A gad awakening! retorted the through fresh water you will see on the bottom the divine essence of i re woul ay fe He é rd Pa a Do you think,” pny en (3 afraid he w but a husband can't stop doing | Widow with a gurgte of Joy. "A pain: | pfs Tove, and there will be no need for you to forgive him—you whit have to as change 1 more thought we may a demanded the for dinner, a murmur! cee j ys surprise! And now th , , , Acts intel ces charmingly, ‘There you are! Now AEEOREG unit when he cant afford to give his wife a re. He has to keep right on sida ae nae eee) he worae (227giwve only yourself for not having loved God in him, within thom God come along with h Not Built Right-o, Kit now that {t's been new vi r hat, or a box ing bllssand to throw In a lite aver, because we'll simply use mat- | 4%, and for not having seen Him because of your lack of love for the mam. “King Hal 1 Rut Mile. Pir proved that wives at the opera, and to watch him pas » extra besides for the privilege of | ‘han ever, because We'll Simply ts privi- Oe 3 with Miss Vat ine f und, O; e that—V 1 Mi are slaves, I'd alimony when she refuses to live nn reo ng i: t ae inch es and—and then we'll have some AM consclous of a power within myself, which will In time reconstruct the sbut very serviey ve dare ike an avtul waste of letters, the Knowingly and! him and i ee eee ete We won't pay taxes and we won't darn I world. It does not push or press forward, but I feel how It draws me irresisttd sn'tit? But w n i < nyt vice, She Is worth It Alt now willingly with mal- t s, either. We won't go to war, and bly little by little. And T see that something attracts me even as I am attract= et of a K als ¢ pal: of Miss Ev : Ke CM v jee aforethoug’ Woll,’ sighed the Pact won't learn to cook, etther, We won't | Ing others unconsclously. I attract them and attract me, and we realize a, sheule I n Ane nA Waenierlean girl, Could any a slave of—-of anybody like hick with re a dras ‘pay alimony, and we won't stay home | striving toward a new unification. Come in contact with the central magnet an@ : NASR a TET; Paty fe ° ' yw opened her pult from his elgaverte, “it's worth 1!" and take care of the baby, either, We| you Bourself will become a magnet, and the more we all realize our purpose vyout mT Pelt wei bi eile : TH 4 Not.” agreed the Widow, with a WH Ie nocan eine sup so much=| want everything we see, and we are | and ow gowers the more ly the new world fs outlined. We become the legis wa ee 4 ti : ' i nye Ne 1S littic one-cornered smile, “if 1 know: Lapa § low pensives | 4 ft! We are going to pat lators @ the divine law, recelving {t from God, and the laws of man wither AGGIE ETE AaEWE ERC SF ee ingly and willingly and with malice COUrs® RlRar thats Mele S BE! cake—and yours, too! Th before us. Cte AN Bi ie) : aforethought saw you trying to, But The kind Is ue tm womar fsn't It?” and she waved her And [ asked the power which ts within me: “Who are you?” ae Ti ee GOK Dun mash Ales add eds OF coutee ee dia GRR CeO, pilates tal vphantly. "After all,’ ack And it answered: “Tam love, the master of Heaven, and I want to be lovey > are slave das far as that CES CPN Ao ae act other ight fully, vife JOT as | ster of earth he mightt eayenly ers 80 1 sbands. 4 i c “No,” sighed the Bachelor, bitterly, | to establish the kingdom of the e. osby. pal of Glasgow Uni . taking a holiday tn the over his birthright for a mess With the ‘lord-and-master and inen for the more or less certain a CREO MaNIDRCF Ghat cere rel eae ps weewcavevew So owe) i Eee ceraRes ta snrelleve i ite i a aE . ane Ban mo i ANehe Manas LV ant tan, Bblope en ey Ga EARLESSNESS, peace, joy which love brings are so great that worldly, My ous nT down and relieve ) “Whee-ew."" whistled the Baohelor|® slave to his children, and a slave to HE. ack ned the Widow : 2 (the love ronle t 1 don't prouise to relieve you, |but T might relleve softy, “and I always thouzht that a/ Pink teas his mother-in-law and exe of having them. pro: fanea Meg Sydow bliss, brought by love (the love of people for one another), is impere. and was a lord and master"— his wife's i i and the privilege of being r ftly, ceptible to the man who has learned the inner bliss of love.

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