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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, February 26, 1909. ' TL COCO OOO COD CORODHOOEE ae 5 ‘3 aay aan, | Ufone ve beep eu sewoew My eer, new nA nn 19| HWHADHDSTOHOODOOOOOGSOGOFHODHODOIDOGHIOIGNY ‘ orem ©) 3 B y H. &|Meditations «o || The Jollys’ Bull Pup # @ # By il. Coultaus| | Savings of Mrs. Solomon | i 4 | x a = —n aa B of a Married Mani [S| ffowred ib va oon ee eee Wie OnE & LITTLE TOG J rte 2cRY | {STOP NOW, | 50, of By Clarence L. Cullen. a | eg FOOLISHNESS. wt Rag Ob By Hae een’ WOMANY If you tell her that her new ha f Breat grat-/ it's great she knows that youd Ntude for that | know the difference, anyhow, Duck the OW long, oh Simple One, wilt thou divert thyself H with dilusions concerning MAN? For his ways are as flzed as the course of the stars and of a ‘ which she Is} que sameness like unto that of a cheap d41i of fare, CLARENCE L CULLEN Wheeling It's hard to convince @ woman with | | Three things he satth always unto a damsel at the Heda : Heel neat ankles and the silk stock nd | beginning of a flirtation, even these three: i Gay atter to-morrow she will have for-| abit that it's 80 very vulgar to sit | “18 there anybody ELSE?" pater: Ret cross-legged “Wilt thou go to luncheon with met” he “broad-minded” chap who per-| When a woman says that such-and-| “ , ” mits his wife to trot with mysterious | such a man Is “sot that he Is LG NOLO Marrying men, * For a youth hath no time to teaste upon an ATTACHED maiden, neither to linger near a prudish thing, who shyeth at a tete-a-tete, Yet,,as.a woman | that seeketh for trading stamps with a five-cent spool of thread, and beliet+ women or women with records is the first to blubber his grief when it hap-/1 pens—and {t always does happen bri { No matter how blind she may be, al 'T Kg." she means nkroll the size of an old-fa smokehouse Inat ned ; : same womit matter how l Le eth that she getteth something for nothing, so is HE. wife can always imagine that she's | mic hush t, refuses ty 5 % = | , | catching her husand firting with some | have cabbax “been ; We GRETCHIN® iN \ BO Ne UB ea alg Pea Toa Re seeen acon ims Aci other woman in theatre « ant. | ls up the flat doesn't care , 13 ‘(row DARE ) | /Y8RS JOLLY, Yea, it is a chronic thirst; and from constant imbibing at the sentimental We know an abnormally suspicious} how much of that ¢ plean | fount it hath come to pass that he knoweth not the REAL THING from thd i Kadreied woman) who) Neraelt tleaher|{ahe splatters) ardund that Sanu TAKE a Hove SEI | weak and watered IMITATION, ae | uaband’s bow tles in a taln y inja fire zer Works. — | i ” i the mcrtineh so tl Hi sh i a id | ae aoa who at ets her husband \ Yet on “the morning after” each affair he cryeth, “Never again!" Even they're tled the same way when he! to be affectionate with her when she las the toper he voweth of each flirtation “THIS shall be the LAST!” But ; comes honie In the eve Jhas her hair done up in kids is the it never (8! Maybe you'll have observed that the woman who brags that her hus band “is still her lover” after their long years of marricd Ife generally No woman ever yet mover hasn't many ertertor evidences to} furnished flat that she didn show for it, a perfect hogpen.” You may sat on‘ tt tha servant girl crazy over } When a &@ women's pe terribly sad things the w § Women are going t buy with all that mone Ever not! time, you borrow of one of the meanest your wife for ci whelps we know thinks he's perfectly to you forever t 0 yo stak- splendid solely because he never for- uS Ap rom her the money you've | yels to take his hat off swe hy te Go to, foolish damsel! Seek not to KNOW any man BEFORE mar- riage, for this is no sign that thou shalt know him AFTERWARD. Lo, a | man ts like unto a chameleon, which changeth color with its surroundings ; | wea, he is a mysterious chemical combination and thou canst not tell which way he shall turn, Yet, after TEN years of matrimony all husbands are as one husband, For do they not all talk in MONOSYLLABLES? And do they not ALL smell of cloves? And do they not ALL make the SAME excuses when they are late for dinner? i bout ten to one! Married women publ Pity h ay on rily, verily, I say unto thee, thou canst put ten married men in ling, — MASKED, and from their CONVERSATION and their KISSES thou shelf SAT nea ~ os: | not be able to tell them apart! Selah! ae oP The Senate Again to Blame. | iA Few Harmless Conundrums, | OO eae aummiat le % peenae Gridiron Club dinner tn Washtn, My “Cycle of Readings,’ y > how, whe * proteste aristocrat, ays tak nent (nF OREN | because my RT Ae is @ young 1 aged to a girl like a man sailing for @ port in} WJ on stood up for the Senate, | given her ner when he meets her on the st | crowd of farmers were knocking f el el - siaveic | Because he 1s bound to Havre (have her), [tho Senate one market day last month By Count Tolstoy. ' Vthe road, this gling policeman a Bric aan When an old fellow of only one-horse met Riey the Eee 1 wt iH ‘ ‘i hai ah Fiyiwornen | power brain bustled tato thelr midst, pga by pevoee pernere are Ol eter casita hen t pretty woman, aes f " y the Press ishing Company, the New inher ldestembarraseiielne Well, byes,’ sald he, ‘what's the Bar Ran ent (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) The Italleized paregraphs are (Count Tolstoy's original comments on the subject. Highlanders do most harm at Waterloo? ate tip) to no TARE GERD EBLE EROTIC “Why, aln’t ye heerd, Zachary?’ sald a young farmer, winking at the others. aya see his father? The Senate's went and passed a bill the futher is always apparent \a p In’ two extry months to the win- e@ my guests by refusing rd of honor that I wou court wkthout his escort, he tram un ye e out ¢ The Supernatural Hen Told {63 <3) eben ay a le By ater hey _And Fis Lay Isa Haunting One seve uD ey cous ige, with becom #1 can a blind man a y by draggt 2 t | ter.’ Pruneerisiantiee ster The Power of an Idea. phe tlsrodd Aboue a horse cae Zachary struck his forehead with his ——_——_——_, Ie eats best when b n't a bit In his mouth, redernittenad ast VERY idea, expressed, is @ power whose influence Hs : "Do tell!" he groaned, ‘Gosh durn is limittess, adies bad grammarians? An’ here am I clean out o' le ihe bee sets meee staat 1 4s possible to foel lonely in one’s private sphere, but if every one of our thoughts and feoli..gs finds, has found 26. | and will always find {ts echo in mankind, From some people, those whom the majority of mankind recognize as leaders, reformers and enlighteners, this echo {s great and resounds with a spe- clal power, But there js not a man whose thoughts do not produce upon others’ the eame effect, even though to a much lesser degree, Each sincere manifesta-, tlon of the soul, each declaration of personal conviction, serves come one, for’ some purpose—even if people do not know about {t, even if your mouth is gagged) or @ noose ts thrown about your neck, A word spoken to some one preserves an indestructible influence, just as every motion is turned Into other forms without ever being destroyed,—Amiel, nel ‘THE power of an {dea 1s {noreased and enhanced by moral rules—Seneca, Cee a ead | NNOCENCE and youth are sacred, The sower who throws the seed, the father and mother who throw into the obild's soul a frultful word, perforin’ a sacred deed and should always do {t religiously, for they are working for, the Kingdom of Heaven, Every sowing 1s 4 mysterious act—whether the seed fall upon the sofl or into the soil Every human being {s Iike a tiller of thé! soll; his whole task, if rightly understood, consista in developing life and sows) ing it everywhere; auch Is the mission of mankind and tt ts sacred. And the word {s {ts chief Instrument, Wo forget too often that the word ts at the eame time « seed and a revela- tlon, The consequences of a word, utttered at the right time, are innumerabdle Oh! how deop is the significance of the word, but we are dull, for we are of thy’ treat you as a common offender. I'll By Robert Rudd Whiting. raised the haunt, and to-day there {sn't | you $100!'"—Illustrated Sunday Magaz & ¢ better letter box in the city. We Fi By R. W. Taylor | TTS (KEEP up! \ cor Too { Wey! WoT ARE You JM Save De Vel GET DOING 271M DOING ARNEGIE THIS ON A BET! man who was bus ight and disapp As far as 1 “yever starved to de I figured it out t 7 some place believe in‘ » supernatural! me De hen, ‘out what's more to the point.!° there are enough real, sure-enough|, ae Do you mean to aay there are en people who | In’'— “Not oni i if she'd make ghosts, Ae d A earth! We seo stones, trees on the sides of the roads, the appointments of our, “Of course, of people IT MAY NOT BE SHUCKS! LL NEVER houses—wo seo everything that 1s physloal, that fs matter, But we do not no- Who are the v thelr own imagt-| | . PNEUMONIA , BUT RESCVE ANYONE tice the fights of the numberless invisible !deas which fill the elr and whose nations, t ud who} wings are forever touching every one of us.—Amiel, NOU STAY IN FOR a flash of lightning mistook a ena women are aby IWo Weeks! last tid wu Ned from the shock Well, 1m ong. I'm HOUGHT {8 @ rational living power, which, emanating from man, does eel don't bo goq {OM About the toughest jot w that I've] I either the work of curse or the work of blessing, according to its quality, won't take 1e0 Tver up inst Ise eens pa! d that tt eaten over the next b Not lke “But how do you go about it?” “You can't set down any hard ar fast rule. Ghosts vary so. You've got to adapt yourself to circumstances. “For example, there was that case of the haunted letter box over in the old | © Ninth Ward. After dark you couldn't {TOM F ‘Then how can you tell wh get a mail carrier to go near ft, until |e aarie tigated aeiattees I went down to the dead letter offlee | Fe) foie and dug out the dead letter that had been haunting it. As soon as we mailed. py ft to its right address, of course that, “That's wh ut Mm t I've No clanking of chains, no weird eve a 4 lammy air as h beings, Avail yourself of the good thoughts of people, and tf you, cannot reciprocate them, then at least do not spread your own-or other people's vague, and therefore false, ideaa, ’ If ROUTH evpressed in words (8 the mighttest powertn the life of human May Manton’s Daily Fashions. HE semi-prin- cesse = dress Js extensively worn by young girls as well as by their elders, This one is simple yet smart and {s adapted both Turned by the Playwright ito a Great Serial Story ! Viola, alarmed at the occurrence} “Excuse me," echoed Denning, as he} 1 “A person's thought?" “You say ‘our brains,’ Do you still, took his hat to go ! | "Yes, | include mine?” which had now taken on almost the! held on to the boy, and at the game) to the wool ma- The Mia Hour | “Do you mean that you know what| “Yes.” | character of a physical conflict, went|time, with his disengaged hand, drew} terlals of the pres- I thinks | fe more than the majors} “In what way quickly from the room in search pf her | the scarf-pin from his tle, “what's the g |" t meant to claim any mo-|tt { “I send you a book about tt-lf I mother and Mrs. Whipple. The boy, | matter with that scarf-pin?” ent and to the linens, By sobate of that power. It's my opinion, fina breaking from his tormentor, ran across at's-eye,” answered the boy, chambrays and {es at every one reads the thoughts o | It 1s—ef. the hallway and through the ing: | tr nd I don't Ike them, madrases of the com- others—that Is, some of the thogghts.” , oom as Denning, with a view to inter-| that's all—I don’t like to look at them." | {ng season, In the Augustus Thomas. le vonnabie dees is ie f cepting him, lurehed Into the lMbrary | 1 if he ain't scared of itt” | TPE potic —— | | from which Justice Prentice and Brook- d Denning, waving the pin In an- “T should say you more generally than | majority of men. here was a woman sald someth! ne | like that to me not ten minutes ago. | ‘A woman would be very apt to be consclous of it.” Jack looked at him, not altogether | mys without bew nt, blue linen {3 trim- med with white but- tons and combined with a chemisette of embroldery, r the many weeks of cold weather that are yet to come, however, Why didn't I know Vanity L 5 proximit boy's face do that y screamed, in ut were audible through the {t—"I should be glad to hear from field had just gone. ne see anything's funny ¢s that? nit lke my fpin, (Vell, eit, but my valet put ft on ine at's the difference? h, who had missed the ex- Gateop OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. |t Jack, Brookield, & Loulseit bier, wives a box party it th gucite Hare his, alster, fece, Viola; his Hippte, and her son Ch and Frank Hardmuth, a loc muth proposes to Viola rookfleld becomes aw “Why can't I save postage by just ld, following the Justice out of an t bite you, will {t2” Hardmuth manifest contempt for t n his own spirit as F on f e explosive cong uct of acts the boy, followed Ellinger and Denning It 18 possesses Wherel * Denning. answei Lenya “You really belleve that—that stuff?” whi | avenERGS Faeee LOTTA SOE MEUAC CRETE ET Renee plaid wool mate ROOKAsIa's house follows the opera. There | Oh, yes; and I'm not a ploncer in the | y ae out the probably) tender? My searf-pin,” answered Denning, arki imitat with chemlsette ai ning, & rich spendtbrift, comes, to the bellef The men who declare the stuff tha was reek faa ‘ fi Don't ' buttons of pl Of poker most atoully sol selenite who: have c an tell Which | visitor and. ¥ vf ABheauine {rere enim tel boy colored aialth : given It most attention.” 8 own ae What's the mattar?’ He Bow-wow pers! C be just ag pret Veer brookneld “formerly. exe jow do they prove it?” of his idle hick Trcalgee n't ike your scarf-pin?; and 1 ard G quantity of frie be ist we} to. ise becal hey don't prove it—that {s, not unt- we drift we are can ke 1d ' The lad made a frantle effort to free matorlal require alt a eat ace | Versally Each man must do that for | current Ko against it, or m ¥ aeuit r t tr t fr I gz, and wit t ixteen-vear ir up gambling, iy rejects him, Jus. | “How? most everything less than that Is help- Ae 7 I cheered on 7 14 2 fice Prentice calls to see A. pleture of i Or 1 i Jack's, To gambler’s wonder, Prentice} “Every thought Is active—that 1s, | less Clay Pie: 1 laug f Ha 2 “" can read Brookfield's thoughts, born of a destre—and travels from us Well, T haven't been exactly IDs x 1 ys es wid th 1-2 or it is born of the desire of some one | less.” Jack said, smiling nated i sinha Tear 1 tt s CHAPTER VI. sitet we taWe thamilncthati aint) | ave a Me : : At th Pattern Ne (Continued) | “How do we know which we are d pow ‘ As 5 ; i * , Fj ing? . eard Clay W Struck Down. ecOOwltibocral onan wi Se in nea : Where's he paused to ask » lar “Do you often pick answers that! brains are the play-rooms for the | scart: | Ellinge } yy Misces’ Semi-Princesse Gown—Pattern No. 6,258 Brookfield asked, affecting a| thoughts of others—frequently rather ght to some oll ge 5 t Jightness which he by no means felt. | bad, If we are active, whether beni th scart. " e 1 basen at tater t Salat Patol CPAP LOLA SORT RL ELLE LS , I t..nk we all do at times.” | tently or malevolently, our brains are crabbed the boy by the Inpel struck firectlos f How F sseti08 : all do?” | workshops—power-houses, I was pas-|smiling at the word, “for the beginner.” | + answered, as of the coat as he was g ! et k to 5 “Yea; but we speak the answers only| sively regarding the pleture. Your “You mean that I could hypnotize | he cov s hand. & just ar i Odtate f 4s we get older and less attentive, and! active idea of the price registered, that | anybouy? | "Wen, 1 don't our face," the | sine lignulaa oe sante shove beige an ; mistake2a person's thought for nus |e Aili 60 Gi yeur wih W Kaew where | “MEny persone—yee; dut { wouldn't |young rowdy retorted, annoyed by, tt 4| ; had Bie blo 4 la daa apoken 3 was from” do ne 1 were you.” And the Justice | criticism, Virted to pass him “Excuse (To Be Cont: 1) ban per ’