The evening world. Newspaper, February 18, 1909, Page 17

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| e- |Panhandle Pete COOL iO Mother Goose w= In Broadway Guise ie | we nS DIS IS ME ~ BIRTHDAY, DAT'S Why 1 GOT DAT | 1 WISH T KNEW HOw OLD T am | By Helen Rowland COO JPSOOTOTODSGSTCOS A Helpful Hint to Bo-Peep, a TLE BO-PEEP has lost her beau CECIL, IF L HAD MONEY ['D OPEN | NOTHING BUT WINE | And doesn't know where to find him! Just call on your Best Girl Chum, my dear, | And you won't be far behind him? The Simplicity of Simon, IMPIE SIMON meta maiden going to a tea. S Said Simple Simon to the lady, “Won't you flirt with me?" | “Are you married?” quoth the lady. Simon doffed his hat. but nol as much as THAT!” 7'm something of a fool,” he cried, " iriter aid Simple Simon prettily, “My dear, will you be mine?” nh, foolish boy!” the widow cried, “you haven't got a penny!” “ofcourse not,” Simple Simon sighed. “But YOU have got so MANY!" imon met a twidow—took her out to dine. , i Conscientlous John, | TDDLE, diddle dumpling, my son John | D Went to bed with his dress suit on! | And when he awoke the nert morning at ten, Je muttered (as usual), "Never again!" | GEE WHIZ! a) y Ver that very same night, as he passed dy the door, \. T heard him sigh cheerfully, “Just once more!” But, alas! do not ask how he came to do it, For he'll tetl you that MRS. John “DROVE” him to it? OR nee The Subway Bun | e eo Fe Discovers the Subway || Has a Dining Car Serbice | 4 oe) ® WW I indsay Denison at we all street looking like an attenuated T haven't read ar thing about proprietor, chef we By George Mellans | 1'D RATHER HAVE € DRINK OF WATER ANYWAY | Ti quad YOU'RE: NOT RICH IF AT'S DE way ‘You'D OPEN WINES in th papers fault for r But I guess it’s my ling the Lemon Fudge, | 2 the one they get out half an hour before norning paper, to be sold to Reubs ‘ as the ‘Ith Extra § It Is needless to say that Lam more gratified than I can say, I'm shocked and surprised that the ger not seen fit to patronize generously, But ( ; * asked the Chef, ( the RL DUnch Hints for the \Alsatian Cheese. Te two small Oysters in Grape Fruit. JT grape f: handle b: tel cheeses opped it $0 as eufe entery hey'll get o: at's your order?" n smaii onion c two tablespoons of swe: I'm hungry,” said the subway Bi and a litt! 3 ice on plate and serve. AINDSAY DENI SOHy. ‘Oysters Creamed in Peppers. {Ribbon Cake. GHeCmaaMcuninarniene ac! ysters In salt and pepper to taste to- on long enough to know bet- Aol Cy (Gite Gey Cianky eel) ay ENB aC) » pay the slightest attention "A¥Ce made of equal portions of lomon jonton Into It. Spread thin crackers of Vibtnelpiavanste nieratinlenties i ulce, grated horser tomato cat- any sort and serve for luncheon. If Ze Ban, MP and speck mustard, Place on shaved red, a Ite appetizing sauce can | sprt Housekeeper. st se EAT a quart of oysters to bolling WO cups of sugar, one-half cup H point. Drain and make @ sauce | of butter, three-fourths cup of wit r, cream, flour, © cups of flour, butter, salt < two vons of baking cut around stems of red or green pep-| powder, Take out enough for two | pers (bell pepp ); remove stems and ers. To the rematnder add one table spoon of molas rants and raisins jbolled telug spice to taste, cur- Put together with oysters Into these cases; buttered cracker crumbs in oven, a steak with some French s and a nice crisp salad jeese and a small coffee. Nido me for a while, It will be a , too, to eat In a car that vibration and noise as this Wake me when | he murmured as he | ) again, “dining Slecping cars next! | tried pota he Subway Bun looked amazement. “Atlantic avenue already?" “Quickest trip I ever made He studied the Lunch W white cap and long apron, “What cert Of a new uniform fs thie they're « You on the subway now? “Nothin' Knights of the Road has as little Jone seems to he re ready, @o wear, ts th come soon.’ ‘Wagon Man, coldly ned the silding door and | “Chef? sald the Subway 2 side of the car with a| stick. T erer wo! “What's that for?” he asked “I'm calling a cop,” sald the Chef. low dopes tn here," Bun looked through the | sr iit saw the naked branches of the! park trees sparkling with ice crystals Jooked around And jumped to his fe moving his hat. Fe ¢ wally and studied the Dlue and red glass win ced around the ures in the “Abraham Lincoln, George Washing: bile ight a ral a Sintey sis 1 again!” he moaned as he a) UU Sais AeA TY ul down the steps of the luach | Good! But inappropriate. Where are! wagon to the sidewalk. “But tt was al Hughes and his whiskers? Where are lovely dream while it lasted!" | nmiston? Where —_>___—_ t hould de a monu- |, | tment to ther nesseanerry a2 I must sce Fruit Cocktails, want to apol having spoken of Frult cocktalls may be served at chmfort of subwe reakta er and luncheon, as a} | He staggered first course at the first and last, and} | mar ed long enc either as a first at hunch, Rapid $ The je or dessert “Who would ever thin the Chef, “that the Inter Transit Company would ever to the extent of putting cars on the Subway? yellous! No longer w ban sstul fruit cocktall must 4 the frult must be freed of all skin and pulp; {it should have sugared and allowed to stand 9x for several hours to | { in express trains, shove juice and assimilate the Fourteer eat thelr shoe la js favors, and soft fruit that blackens, “Say, Freddie, I knows where dere's a guy wots givin’ away turkey an’ and draw lots to wh first to be sacrificed to sati balistic appetites of the rest. will fat men fron shall bo the sie bananas, peaches or cubes of y the cant} seanteloupe, should not be added un- Onger Etil Just before serving. er Harlem arrive, & stuffin’ an’ pie an’ “Where, where! “Don't get excited, Freddie, st |isn't Invited.’ It's up at de next house, but you an’ me ODEO WODODODIAG, POOGOWIOS OIGGHOOSOOOAISSOSRIOORIOG® OO Increasing practice in the city called) cipes with Ellinger on one side, andjwe parted?” Again Brookfeld ifted his} him from the pleasant suburb; Clay's | Helen's boy, who was hovering a youth-| glass as Helen's look of wavering In- nurrery years, when the breakfast had | ful protectorate over Viola on the other |decision seemed to him contesston. been devoted to the doctor's morning | gide, found amusement in telegraphing| There was a second otservation by |Paper and to her care of the china | to Helen a mental comment upon it all, | Ellinger and a general laugh following | ‘hin reach of the infant missiles: ! Under that heavy and apparently phleg- Some pleatuntry of his at, Brooktleld’s | then the stald and formal house in Phil- matic mask Helen could see the play | expense. {adelphia Into which came the reflected of his thoughts like summor lightning) Jo, the colored hallboy in Br jAnxtety of the busy physician, the do- | pening an evening cloud-bank—the veri. lishment, appeared in the doorway mestic communion. unhappily abridged | est ghost of a smile trom one corner of from the brary. ’ i ec or Programme and in the mouth, the slightest drooping of an | peruiced Brook nel 3 Sh phonic and per eyotid at some banality, a suggestive Up- | Beat iSLueU a eet |sonal. Only the sober, the serious, the i | Brookileld begged tho co | dutitul side of living—a long, prosaic ae rae sone Chisels) a aa {/cuse Fim a moment, then rose period of unmitigated strain and streas, |” Indescribable accent of glance that) oii, ana followed Jo, ¥ conveyed assent Looking across the table at Jack, | : Et | Helen's quiet enjoyment of the timpitel A | A Strange Power. Jamtable and expressive countenance to! the tense and severe visage of her late sudden recognition of and astonishment | at the fact that Brookfield’s factal pla yee 0?” Br husoand! Brooktleld’s face was very (Copymadt, WOS, by Augustus Thomas.) The Witching Hour By Augustus Thomas, —=.—— SYNOPSIS OF PRE Jack Brookfield, a le Loulsville, Dler, gives a box party at f Mri y to ox- from the Whipple and her son Viofay and Frank Hard ea to Viola raze of oth seen und is strangely 1n ferested in Justice Prentice, who is a tran: nt vieitor in Louisville, A Cived iy at ¥ k- if the okfleld looked at the or th ning commentary upon he different from the same face, as she} ae & running commentary upon her a bib npatlently. | C remembered It, in its early manhood, one i OMe Rane hth apt) ons when’ the se was | yet the difference was one for) felt herset quest h HM) 4 Ntiventie | 2ark, Jo was endowed with suMetent CHAPTER II. ICH ANG Ua beans HOt Unprepared: |e atin e Ue vue Darel visariaue diserstlon to tuFA RIGNE aH (Ganilndad As she reallzed how often in the Inter-|ComPression of Brookfeld’s lips in the) | i vening time she had permitted her mind |Peassuring audacity of a phantom caress, r Denning, su" Jo. repeate after which, in more overt comm Ss Party. to dwell upon this earller sultor she A Supper Party d pon LH earlier yaulton) abe La seca au Ah nore ote A SIDE from thelr occasional atten-| felt a self-accusing sense of disloyalty Justifytr with sligh Brookfi Mr. Denn ld hesitated, and th to come up. Tho boy sald, ft on his hi compelling demon-| to the father of the boy now sitting at; though silently, drank to her. n found her thoughts; his rignt | This last act caught the attention of rambling. Hardmuth was noticeably en-| She was startied to find that her| Ellinger, ever watchful for any legitl- grossed in Viola, and his perfunctory | feeling of ease and relaxation In her | Mate excuse, and he roughly led the) @sides to herself im present situation was due not entirely |Chorus which volced less intimately ments of general cv to elther the absence of domestic care | Brookfield’s sentiment How unitke this table-tolk had been that which Helen Whipple had tnown or the regained associations of her girl-| “To our fair and honor@ guest.” hood. Much of the purring comfort of| Shortly afterward, when the party had \ during the past twenty years! There} hor position was catised by the proxim-|again scattered Its attention, Helen came Into her mental vision In easy|ity of this powerful man, who had |found Jack's eyes saying: ‘Wouldn't And blending succession pictures of the| somehow and without communication |this have been much better, after ali— breakfast and dinner taole, of the little|never been quite absent from the [this cosiness, this intimacy, tranquillity, | ining-room tn tho red-brick, rectangu-| penumbra of her thought. What com. |and warmth? Wasn't it all a vanity, a lar dwelling at Germantown, {n which pantonship there was now in his very ,Vexation of spirit; the years of strident ehe and Dr. Whipple had lived during | giance! effort in the aggressive charities, the Ane early yoare of their marriage) of t bee |soeletion for civic Letterment, and all there as the doctor's | eyegn his aleter; whe was analyen he al 104 Lurmell elace moved a few steps after! boy, as If with the intent to re- voke his order; and then as a more definite plan occurred to him he called to the group about the supper table: ‘ “Lew—I say, Lew! Won't you Ine dies excuse Mr, Ellinger a momen: A choius of assent, not n Tuncom /limentary, came in rr Ellinger jotned Brookfield. “Want to see met’ BrookMeld took Low by the elbow | ied Rim 4 few eupe from the] OD ‘augustus Thomas s Great Play, “The Witching Hour,” | forn’ By J. K. Bryans ¢ “Here's a penny, my poor man, Now what will you do mith {t?” “Lady, I shall have er hole bored Into !t and wear it on me gold watch {chain for a souventr!” ” Turned by the Playwright 3 Into a Great atu Story doorway and beyond the Ine of ‘AsiHeaipitwery brew them some terrapin.” | of his guests, | “My luck," Denning complained. “Tom Denning's here—he expects a| «No, T think there's some left," Brook- | game, My sister and Mrs. Whipple | feild consoled; and as an expression of ohject to the pasteboards, so don't ‘relief passed over Denning's countenance mention It before them.” Jack felt a sense of shame that his vic- “Not @ word,” answered the discret |tims held among their number one so old sport; “but Tom'—he nodded to- simple as the man before him. Denning ward the hall door—“what of him?” |Was an example of a type numericaliy “Till attend to Tom," said Brookfleld; | increasing —that wasteful intermediate you rejoin the ladies. [generation between shirt-sleeves and shirt-sleeyes; the pampered son of a of the father apochryphally opulent. The class m the ito which he belonged had not yet arrived at the distinction of Imperial denuncia- tion, and Tom was an only child; had there been a sister the family co 0 Oo} regained the doorwa ‘oom Denning entered fr o, Lew!" called the new-comer. er paused { jelgn nrince As Brookfield regarded his guest ther passed vaguely before his mind a pk ture of the s e of th foned that by a law of n one iid feed upon and de vour Then, in quick rec | e that 88 80 fash- 1 front of the p auHat eRe ey cles si another tlon of his own inability to rey ladies kfeld started te eaplalnvand 6 owning, Inter- |}#W In the time now at his disposal, Fictedit mit s face, added, in an easy, patronizing protec My sister—and her | #0" friend of he “I'm going to @ a long chance, the measured | Tom, and Introd you to these Indies only I want you not to say anythin And then he adde faughter—and a lad There was a re authority of the ut “No game?’ Deni asked, disap. | before them about poker or any other pointedly, | game. Not unttl they go." Denning protested. “Why, I thought The young man, who had changed hig | YOu said your sister”— sition so as to catch a glimpse of| “I did," Brookfield replied, his tone up in the next room, exclaimed | slightly hostile. that sudden alteration of mood| “Well, she's on, tsn't sho?’ of the [mmaturo mind in| Brookfield nodded. ‘But she doesn't of new toys | lke It, and my niece—my niece—doesn't “Oh chafing-diah|" Me It, “They've been tp the opera, and had] have been reconciled to seeing her a for- | but | ture It Beemed | (To Be Continued.) uigue | The pucmne World Daily Magazine, Thursday, Februsty 18, T909. By Martin Green, The Cellar Diggers. VACANT lot enclosed by fences bright with bills, A Whioh cry performances enriched vy laughs and thrills; Surrounding buildings stretch hard fingers to the sky And passing men tn motors point as they pass by, For this bare patch upon the city’s rugged faco— This wasto of refuso—w laggard Income's pace, {ts some One day arrives when eager enterprise t 3 hold; Down come the gaudy billboards, showing backs of mold; A field {s open for the human grubs, Who sow Concrete 1oundations where apart- ment-hotlses grow; A stony surface bars the hun.ble worker's way To where with plek and shovel he may rend the clay, A single blast demolishes resistant rocks And jars flat dwellers in their ornate caves for blocks; An urgent, swarthy little man invades the hole And leaps to toil as though toll would preserve his soul; He smites and digs and sweats, and others join him there, For some must delve in mud to rear a palace fair The Manhattan aL imer. UH, seo the man In the menu ap- at-ten-dance O par-el and the plug b | din-ner s aaieh He k h he's u Ing to the af-ter rs, a few af-ter din-ner ud they are al-ways on tho don't know where 6 only e's on his way . but rve the bun-dles tn his arms, P ay-er ge O-ra-tor of that class Al-so the vhic; his must which 's not In t an emp-ty a ban-quet hall lle a fire arms, bi dence. 1 | a-lovm Has he deen on a shop-ping ex-re-lle| 4] aousvernira Hon 80 ta ven sou-ve-nirs will fail soon No, young Gam-bri-nus, he Is «.. 1 Way home from a pubrlic t ve-ni they lock the doors and hold Ne soli-Ve-nirs until all vho speak- bun-dles he is car-ry-ing ares Sof the oc-¢ er do a-way peak-er? ap-proach-es when they will with the din-ner e time They are get-ting 80 now they give @ sou-ve-nir with a-bout ev-ery oth cen eyrety Other have ‘to, or do aeway with pub-lle dine ‘ ners. And why this gen-e-ros-lty? | Is af-ter din-ner speak-ing a had-it? Tt {8 to com-pen-sate the per-sons in! No, llt-tle 1, it is a dis-ease, ——_—__+4+« The Art of Observing i Is Knowing How to See i By John K. Le Baron mahi u NDREDS of people can for one who can; could not teach a man to bea good ERIE NMLaUen thousandd |Cecone aoe noua Hed pach An hour's Intelligent can think for/one rh might teach ‘him much, SAL INGE) Aaya USE: ™ | “Mediocrity can talk, but it Is for Observing Is one f/ genius to observe,” remarks the elder the arts. Disraell, Many men who haye been denied a! Men should not rob themselves of the good schooling have educated them-| best pleasures of lite by falling to cul- selves by observation. tlvate to thelr fullest the faculties Many a college bred man has lost the} which enable them to enjoy. real essence of life by not knowing how) //umboldt and Herschel were won to see things. derfully proficient in } Segrals tells us that La Rochefoucault sta ut te erase was not a student, but that he was en- dowed with wonderful discernment, The whole world ts thelr legate, Tho Duke, however, saw everything | Xingsley used to flatter himself that through satirical glasses, ii Perea peeneet ito be roth i belonged to the landlords. Toybela) Good ovserver|one/ must belisite aa maatarsalthalartia? observa. honest with himself. tlon and knew how to profit by it. The savage 1s generally an expert Goldsmith saw no beauty In the observation observer, Scottish Highiands, regarding the scen- “The Indian," says James Freeman|ery as hideous and dismal. Clarke, “had no better eyes than the! The poet had not learned how to ob- white man, but he had powers of observation till the woods escaped him,” In our schools pupils are taught about what others have observed, and they should be taught more how to observe for themselves. Seeing and understanding is knowl- edge first-hand, He who acquires all ‘his learning sec ond-hand |s only an echo, Kipling, In his “American Note: has taught us how observation can de trained his no sign of serve, Mme. de Stael declared that she would go five hundred leagues to meet a clever man, but she would not lake the trouble to open her window to see the Bay of Naples. Keenly allve to much that was worth while, Goldsmith and Mme. de Stael had neglected to cultivate that glorious gi{t—the faculty of observation, There !s much in Lubbock’s remark: | “You may see in the shallow pool either celve when distorted by prejudice. I; Sin Pe ying) at a5 bottom or tha Assuming that all British customs) !#8¢ of the sky above, and Standards are the correct ones, he eae ridicules or condemns all that he finds | Woman. n America that is different, | Max O'Rell was more just. He, like BD Perse Ueuaeee CnSEmuag, tle, but clever, and his honest praise| Cay atiteanttecsatee CO tempered the severity of his eritictsms, | In every written tongues “He reads much, he Is a great ob-| 97) HON0 Of tien Me you server and he looks quite through the | ii always eave a iret eae deeds of men," says Shakespeare, ot in gnorW All the libraries in Christendom | —W. J. Lampton {n “Success Magazine.” F] My “Cycle of Readings,” By Count Tolstoy. Translated by Herman Bernstein. ——= (Copyrighted by the Press Pubitshing Company, the New York World, 1908.) (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) The italicized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's original comments on the subject Self-Denial. 9 the greater his in nn HE more a man is selfdeny fluence over other people. The flesh is the cover DD mh, hiding the divine FEB. God and despise only yourself. Noth my Father love am beca I la ut T mig eth it from mr nd T have power to tak t. John, x, 1 t take it again in tak but I lay HE {gnorance of man as to what will hapr agitated a noble and religious sou’ nto him after deat never The highest bliss is given to him who seeks only righteousness, To be ying 1s to be strong, anc world {s at the t of him whom annot mlel VERYTHING will be easy and good, if done willingly, with self denial. Puen eeee renee, T is but necessary for a man to begin thinking of himself in the middle of @ speech and he loses the thread of his thought. Only when we com pigtely forget ourselves can we serve others and influence others.

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