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: The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, March Il, 1909. cab de i% YOOE —~. > | ax OO0UC 000000000 0000000, ODODIHOISGGGVGOOECHODIIOOL { s Py @ ? The Million Dollar Kid & ByR.W. Taylor]: Wedit eo fF | ry As hs ay edita ; an is Be True: ; AAAAARAAA 0} Ti we ie an § | Id It : a Marri ng 7 7 6 ; The Dime Museum Man To oERIGaTRERTS CARGAA TTC N/MM RENTON CIRERTO CRATE CULDIETUSG fo) 5 And Surely He Ou bt to Know. HORE Vou TAND 700k Be FINE, | [TAKE You GorH To SUIT MARGIE ! | . GIRL TO THE ST WARD! = 0} t n ) g" UB. ate tes a AECL Monk ! THE THEATRE AFTER By Clarence L. Cullen. 8 va a @ (lodoon OG OOO CD O00 000000 O00 OG0000000000000000000000% | H un down and wasted | EN amar Rich jallier it they Whiting, S21 was att run Al HEN aman that Richard Le Gallienne way By Robert Rudd oe ay, But as he besan to convalesce| overlooks | could’ get away with It. { ‘“ HEN a man Js tn love with! and take on flesh ¢t ce on his chest | anoppor- | Get this; Only about one woman out i a woman ft Isn't really the! naturally filled out with him and cea N “ a tuntty he either |of fifty cares for a genuinely clever woman that he 1s in love’ came more rounded and doll-like. Fac) a . repines or curses. | mar, and that one out of fifty usually with—what Tmean | “Dig that n im care any less for =| CLARENCE L CULLEN \ woman, similir- | looks like a wind-tossed bird's nest, j 1 | " i ice us st is, when a man! the picture n your life, Instead, =| ly pla rvs) What few women understand; That really exer ee no en ip ndra began to ~| | ‘iirt on the char-leven after a man has been married ] woman s! cool, Binally he got 7] | ncter of the opportunity and says that tr ‘, } f ‘or a good ears 5 } woman ho really bear to have her it didn't amount to much anyhow ra good many years he is still sus: loves so much as)" ‘Do you kno The young woman whose ideal of |Ceptible to disillusionments. {t Is—oh, pshaw!""| me, with a fu ve at his chest, | Veatty 1s the Impossibly lovely | All doubtful women smugly agree broke off the dime) ‘it seems to e's changing. | »~ who illustrates the clothing | that the way of the transgressor 1s t museum man {n She ain't as good-looking as she used | ads. of the House of Splookenheimer tn when the other woman gets {t f | despair, “Let me to be. She's getting thin.’ H the magazines generally marries some » Minnehaha wore the elks’ teeth, tell you the whole, “But that wasn't the worst. By the} | thing about as handsome asa string of | When you an obese woman say sto You'll see! time he was strong enough to get back Nsaitkcat nan that she “just doesn't care how tat what T mean, on the job again that face on his chest Would Aphrodite herself have looked | she gets," you may safely figure It yXOUNemeniben i had Aled ol unt AIC looked likelAlto) Hke anything else but a hideous hash- | that she hasn't any fear of her hus my telling you last | balloon with eyes, nose and mout! |eesh joke in one of those tloppy-woppy | band going astr summer how our) painted on It, and—what do you think? AND THEN 1'D JUST BE GEE ,BUT YoU ARE | drab-colored union sults What a woman Ikes most about @ tattooed man, the Human ion, got|he actually began casting sheep's eyes | If you want t ny 7 conjugal row ts the chance it gives her 01 oO see plety exemplified | consugal r L & Btomaine poisoning trom eating gold fish at Mignon, the fat Indy! | SS a iar you NICE TO US, ' Jatuty the saintly expression of counte: [t0 tell her folks and his folks what @ ee prenve, Satins sips sty tlie tes) fy cere? | mafunnya Uulnads he} told) thea |PSUs te MONK , OLD CHAP. DURING LENT! nance your Wife arsumes when she goes [brute beast he has been since the day ) Well, Cassandra, the Circassian girl,| RIASS eater, glancing first at the ft! | BALL, LOO1E —— ; lto church on a Sunday morning and{Uiey were married, and then later dee nursed him through that indy and then at the pleture on his SO LONG! | you stay at home raading the papers, Nving that she “ever said any such @ “Aside from being crazy over pictures! chest, ‘but, do you know, I really be , ‘ thing.” I think whe really loved him for his| to think that Mignon 1s getting to look| | When she can't possibly pick anv" ne man who, for mistaken char own sake, while as for him, he cottoned! more like Cassie used to look than Cas- [assis ivalcals Ania eride Bree eg ity's sake, permits his wife to coum up to that hempen hair of hers wit! sie does herse! | man whose looks you praise she says: | (3 i th btful a : el) the ardor of a drowning man grasp-| “Mignon, the fat lady! She's “But have you ever noticed her per-| enance doubtful womer doesn't needy ing at straws. nough little group, ¥ 3 412 | risa 3 feat it) | later on, to look into a thesaurus te “To prove his undying affection, as/ pounds with nothing on her mind, and, eee ee ee Les |find synonyms for the word “mies oon as he was able to sit for ft he had like most American crowds, ts good na- No husband who likes peace is going feet en artist come and pick a pen-and-skin| tu But as for tntellect—why, say, to observe to his wife, while she's en-| Chief. Portrait of her on his chest vt eat t 1 food gaged In sizaling her hair with the} If some wives only understood that Ucead tigen needaiven Castandrac Had aslantGa tele curling trons, that It’s funny ail wom- | iiey merely held their husbands by the oné of those strong, clean-cut faces, full ver there’ was only one way to en's halr tan't naturally wavy like that] brittle thrall of everyday habit, Instead of Intellect and character. She made alcon him of that. He too it. Yepi| of a girl he ance knew. of by the enduring leash of love, mighty striking portralt. The Human|they got man There may be meaner women than| they'd be a heap more solicitous for BAee ise iltineae tron feasting | MLEL You see, Mignon] the one in front of you at the theatre | t future welfare, ’ [knows well enough how she came to win Who Keeps you In suspense until the} And then, too, Isn't It odd how dise i) haratcomeswhaceLawaal| d she's scared to death for fear| curtain Is rising before she removes her | mally a fellow's anticipations are reals i In the frat. places|/helll get sok and get atuck on Cassie at, but show us ize), or not realized at all, when he y loving that ple-| e's thin, In fact, she's Most Id make thelr hus-| looks forward to a bully good time ands wear thelr halr flu(fed ‘up in! while his wife ts away on a Ilttle visit? y I Started . u i cing MO UERUEE CHUDETD | worse Than Earthquakes. | My “Cycle of Readings” 8 oman + E old a oe aly oven 22] A MAN, now middle age, was wont Charles Lamb and His Pipe. ae ipcirolbniacemes| | ; ) ; make it with ocall ery severe freshet eiadt F ; mibge that at § i at i e ol seit ase in Charleston, 8. C,, several years By Count Tolstoy. ct i if = xy : away REATEST among the votarles of the pipe was Charles Lamb. He cantenlece ; —-— Translated by Herman Bernstein, ——= ae. ane And the next thing T saw of father.’ furiously, Incessantly—smoked with an air that commanded the respect of hig|_ A resent of the shaken elty, while he | (Copyrighted by the Press Publishing Company, the New he would say } |felt that his duties required him to re- York World, 1908.) , would soy at at friends, Dr. Parr, who watched him with amazement, ventured to ask howl ain there to do what he might for the | (Copyrighted by Herman Bernatetn.) Ip 0 t e afta C te t S Hat De EEA had acquired such a marvellous p: I toiled after It, sir," replied | xusrerers, sent his six-year-old son ont The italicized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's Tana Ra aaa some men toil after virtue.” i Iways on the point of giving up | I and contusion to the original commems on the subject, When Ci b Mi t ote : tobaceo, but he never quite succeeded late as 1897, when he had long | Youngsters trea Ine New, Marks Hey wome ee “Oh, T accompanie since professed to have abandoned the habit, he said that, though an extinct vol- {eqn cary TAKOTARGILA KO BAGH 41 pine: ae u N a —Wornan's Home i cano, le still emitted occasional pufts, your boy.""—Woman's Home Companion : h Se Soul. A ENR RARE . ? Le Ene dl : — E are conscious of something in our soul that is nor By Edith Sessions Tupper +14, ae - subject to death, Bw eee ben cscennnfo as Nae eee Sree 3 taresanvad cai . F who knows other people ts wise, but he who knows guests with scandal saute, snrved wit | he Wisdom of Youth ~- By J. K. Bryans Hanser °, us ice, anent ot inh wea | IN ae SiGe THA cece 2 eo teeee een e eee eee eee He who conquers others 13 strong, but he who ! faletealtalt a Gili STANT worms | conquers himself Is mighty | Gra era mnt hadley s He who, dying, knows that he will not be destroyed 1s eternal.—Lao-Tse, ) e sald, “I should ¢ EOPLE are born and tive, like certain manifestations of God, which on to ket out of all club life as fast as | do not have any significance without God, and which therefore can- } up tn bealble | not be destroyed—they may disappear from our sight, but they eountry,” sald » cannot be destroyed. ‘ ae ae (ify HE fact that for a longer time one man passes across the field of my Buch ks aracte | ngs and vision, and that another, man passes it more quickly, cannot under ; women as I have in certain clubs | a woman's club any circumstance force me to ascribe to the first man more actual Ayithte tow af mn " | and the con- life and less to the second. I know beyond dowbt that if I see a man pass a See erate crue aap ny window whether he walks quickly or slowly is immaterial, I know bee @scapes this sort of th but the moe! fering a: A club is as yond doubt that that man evisted before I see him and twill continue to eas qent she as a candidate the | touchy as Teddy Roosevelt on st after he passes from my sight. furies are loose, Her f 1, Last yer ch eeeeeeeeeeeey ecraped as with a tine tooth comb, in a cer ITEN the world began to exist Reason was {ts mother. He who knows Cin keticcnal niliseretions aome | h has received a lot of good W his mother knows that he Is her child, and knowing It finds himself out } sca will drag, natured chaftlig at tho hands of the of danger, When he closes his Ilps and the gates of his feelings at the K them fort dtd 1 skeleton in! press, the c| endeavored to keep al end of hls Ife he will feel no uneasiness.—Lao-Tse. ale, gossip will details from reporters, But | (ee eee some way the news of the row leaked | IFE is indestructible, it is beyond time and space, and therefore death ive heard women In and the furl was fast and fi can only change the form in which it appears in this world. eat of little girl repo: made a pi ‘4 ae Sash pening Pbiletdr et tanicg oeth AITH in immortality cannot be acquired from another. One cannot wind! ot y, 0 muck. There was no name convince oneself of immortality. In order to have faith in immor- Ot cou " an takes these| they did not hurl att tality it {s necessary that it should be, and in order that it should Blanc ‘i onsider the | be it is necessary to understand that your life consists in its being immortal, Mora! and tr 1 atmosphere engen eee de and Hell i i IVE by that part of your soul which is conscious of being immortal, } efreulation for days must have an effec: “Th rl cried and begged me not to which does not fear death, That part of the soul is Love. » minds ready and eager to be-/do this,” stated this kind, charitable Ay lady, “but I shall, and, what's I ’ WEE nt-|don't care a rap if she starves to| > 0 ’ . : fea marie y| death,’ | “Wanter buy a dog, mister?” “What's your Ittle brother crying for? Ma Manton S al ashions. nil) upon two man's clube Would pects the! “Why, what would I do with him? ywan! Dlg ain't me brother. It's me fiance!” ° e thowling sucee: | “Oh, well, you could give him back to me!” | — - “ : = =} HE small boy a0 WSCOBBOOETONS és needs overalls @ O @ , DODD HD HOGTDOGIDADIOSGM: SOLGOSSOSOHOSEDHEGSOCOHHNS OO) 3 A quite as much as bs 9 Turned by the Playwright Saye garment that he Ss 5 re a lay he | i tte in Jo ul [, wardrode can contain, ly Into a Great Setial stony Tn them he can be DIDOODSOIOGHVOOOOHODOODILOHOSOOOHOOSEQQQEoaooacoos OIOOHGQOOOOHH.DLOOOOSOISGSOIGHODOVHOOGOWOOHOOSEONOOSOIOSOOSOOSEsE? Tce Wal AGC a of clothing, and, what | (Copyright, 1008, by Augustus Thomas.) | interpreted tt, the essential oneness of |he returned his tmeplece to his pocket, book bound In Imp morocco, | who seem to come about me more tan-) money, coming at mfdnight."* is equally. important, all Iife, the essentially same significance |he looked up with a new interest: “I'll] ‘When I get home from the Capitol sity, or as much so, as they were In’ “I set him the example, Besides, mid- | z h Wit hi H of all things, By {ts Ight the years! play a rubber with you, Mr, Justice, {ang you prosy lawyers, I'm too tired to lite.” AGH la HOMETERMS ASO ae Paine Regtatieremtas E WIC ing OUP | ot what ne had been pleased to call |and its result shali decide your position | read Browning and those heavy guns, so Tho servant crossed the room with for Mr. Brookfleld—he's supposed to be his mother many anx+ Intellectual !mprovement and growth jon the Whipple case,” I take Bret Harte—very clever, I think, Justice Henderson's coat on his arm. In a sporting man,” fous moments. These By in culture seemed years of arrested de-| “Why, I'm surprised at you! AyI was reading ‘A Newport Legend,’ be- dolng so {t brushed from the table! Prentice coughed warningly as the INustrated are simple, velopment, even years of retrogression— | United States Supreme Court decision| fore you came, Do you know it?” where the men had been playing a small | servant opened the door and ushered In | i ae Augustus Thomas, nothing was of value that had not made | shaped by a game of chess! We'll bel "I think I do.” object which fell to the floor with a Jack Brooktleld. It struck the Justice yet shapely and entire- } for spiritual unfoldment; and as he re-| down to the level of Intelligent jurymen| “It's about an old house at Newport. metallic sound as he greeted his visitor that he was a ly satisfactory, They Seana Mewed his Ife Brookfield felt that he|soon, flipping pennies for a verdict.” | that's haunted. A young girl in the “You dropped your tobacco-box, I trifle pale. He extended his hand cor- } 1 be made from blue SYNOPSIS OF PREC hitherto walked In Cimmertan night. | “How about that point, Mr. Justice?” | colonial days died of a broken heart in Prentice as the servan | ( eepeaanirdentn apy htek, Brooksteld. a this new thought, this new con-| Henderson remarked, becoming serl-|the house, it seems—her sweet! is assisting Henderson with his oyer- evening, Mr. rd pa Jean or bre eis are iy ye life that possessed him, the| ously persuasive “W, ht as well | sail: left her—and here's coat AS he met the greeting. “You efor trominenyys nen Oe i olay bis for wether cied small and stifling. Brook-) admit and remand the 0 way Bret Harte tells of her conl- “No, I think not.” Henderson patted | Khaki cloth, or they nd Prank Hardinuth, al iawyer. I hat and coat and went) "Oh, no; there's no constitutional back. his coatpocket to make sure This 1s Justice Hender-| can te from Renata: Ave any Ase Into the street, went from) point involved.” ‘And ever since then, when the clock "It was this picture, gir,” the servant $00." 1 or, Indeed, r : 1, the painted and printed} «\ man’s entitled to an open trial." She Wake unbldden trom room to room, | €XD!Ained, lifting the fallen object from “I hope I'm not Intruding Brook- Bud hy) : Steet 1 his room into the ehill and) “well, Whipple had it.” And the air {s tilled that she passes through | the floor. tleld began, but Henderson took him m any sturdy washe f “gion Beto P tne house, for’ ie is ", under the denuded moving) «No, he didn’t,” contended Henderson; | rHy bette lis | "My gracious, my gractous, it might | UP thee able material, There !s j {Glay, finding himself 4 s of the trees through whose “they wouldn't admit the public.” ud and gone bouquet, | have been broken!” exclaimed Pre: m Just going, Mr, Brookfield.” The an abundant supply of and ice tracers: and etherlolbiualthe atara were : her story ye $ ays om the Justice buttoned hls overcoat. and] Mra, Whipple's hand. | As he 1, come, now—the court-room was of a sweeter way? He took the picture tenderly from the suelanlanditne ey nk, ett ay hin. | shining in glittering kinship. Waid RATA palFSeniadvadin Pade TRAnRGh cheap aia lear crossed to the door. Prentice followed P pockets, and ¢ UB ieael hes taciae 7 B crowded, (ige refused adm| F anner of ¢1 and light re- {mar | ate care j ‘heavy paver As these bright luminaries paled In| sion to others only when there was|lief, he turned to Henderson, “Your mother, Mr. Justice?” | ni | garment 8 altogetiior é n before the mtrlal | the winter dawn, Brookfield, physically ait iy allk ( 5 | uttonal point al 17") rt dle one. t danger of the floor breaking sn’t that charming, eh?” “Oh, dear, no; a young girl [ used to} B A | most desirable one. weary but mentally and spiritually | jy ; H ( " eet ae t made a last appeal for the} ut, my dear Mr. Justi persisted Henderson an-| know, Oh y't smile—she's been dead } The quantity of ma- calmed, found himself pacing the stde- | prong that fathavauGeenal hidicialee fi ‘ rte «. CHAPTER VII. Wal nOAca thellJall swhersl CIAY \was lareertaiiittiiietg taananen icin ot on Beautiful ‘stay s naeues : B BOOG ANE BAD wenty Year tnart ies EG EEN EAD i (Continued.) confined with so many others for whom, | Sevan shes nn tte ute pe TPLGATT ATRIAL EG Cenoa| Oey ereo eee medium size (six yeare) eu ay a A hom, | “well, that’s all he did her," Prentice urged, with stimulating ery sweet—very sweet Indeed.” Dark Days. field had tb Rauheart TETRA “Only he did it by having the sheriff enthusiasm. And then, after a mo-| “Isn't it? And se too— ards 24, 2% yards ROOKFIELD had one quality that | | sion : Sh COM | issue tickets of admission. That placed | ment’s retrospection, “I suppose it ap- | how pretty!—the mamm nds, you yards 9) inches B distinguished him from most ot | ™ 4 the atten entirely in the control | peals to me especially because I used |see, They used to make the walsts wide i his fellows, His power of visuall- , Jot the pr jon, and the defense {s|to know a girl who was foolishly fond | with just a piece or two of whalebone.’ mr Pattern No, 6208 |s gation was greater than theirs. Such CHAPTER VIII. |right in a rehearing.” ot mignonette.” The Justice closed the} Prentice’s servant entered with a Wi zes for boys of oO) « . ij | sens stice Is tend Prentice re: he d sal tn sizes for boy ideas as were capable of graphic repre- Could She Think of a nsense! Justice Is a little slow In book tenderly. P card. Prent read the name and sald to six and eight ntation he saw in pictures; ideas that Sw. Way?” my old State, and Iam impatient with] ‘Well, you don’t belleve that stuff, do|he would see the visit sara Ot AES might not be so represented he saw In weeter Way? [technical delays, It is now y you?” Henderson questioned, “A call?" querted Henderson, when Boy's Overalls—Pattern No, 6268 ears of age, diagrams. Washington, one evening in No-|they openly assassinated the Governor-| “What stuff?” the servant had left the room AAA AD SAI IADR ASIA AD, Whe truth which Brookfeld felt he I vember, Justice Prentice sat at ajelect, and the guilty men still at| ‘That Bret Harte stuff—tie dead com- The man owns a pleture that Call or send by mall to THE EV: G WORLD MAY MAN- ) Nad grasped, the truth reconnoitred by | & game of chess with Justice Hender- large.” g back—ghosts, and 60 forth.” I've been trying to buy—a Corot,’ | at TON FASHION BUREAU, No. st Twenty-third street, New his recent psychological reading, the|son, an associate of his cou “Why should t killing of Scovil| “Yes, In one way I do. I find as I get| “Oh, another of these ‘perspective’ fol- Obtaln York. Send 10 cents in coin or 3 for each pattern ordered. | truth cogently expressed in the book] “Let's look at the enemy.” Hender- on this case?’ asked Henderson, | older that the things of me be- | lows, eh?” pay IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and ale } | from Justice Prentice, the truth Insin-|son drew bis watch. “By Jove! Quarter| “tt bears on me—I'm concerned for|come more real every day—eve | “Yes; his call doesn't surprise me, be- |} patrons, $ ways opecity size wanted. | wated by the objects of art with which |of twelve! I guess Mrs, Henderson will | the fair@ame of Kentucky.” Why, thera are companions of my boy-| cause eon i mind all day | @ peer reeehnnnnnnnnnrnr nner nnn AAA | \ | fee bad surrounded himself was, as he'be expecting mo soon.” And then, as! ‘diel!’ aid Henderson. nicking up @' hood that 1 haven't thought of for years! “Seems to be in a burry for the