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{ “David Dua a Gets Good ea a ent at the York» EN? SHARE eS PaRNTeN Dd 7 k T art f and b wot $ t 4 old-fashlone each and ey week's There ts stage t Noat witho: ge with spe © ts no obylou! to a are oblige Little F renely, nd follows the| y to pull tt along] she were of first es a Biinple, modest noa that wins y seems to shine as a d to mportance. She g he acting throughout {s surprisingly George Warrington has taken from the pages of end haa lost! ere ha ts eg ous fel- eand| | an who! 1 AS but Mildred Holland makes a speech. ,»,. ‘elves David a nose < arge for his face, } t to this soon & ot f isa G we serves to get does. e gets ready to sail him to America in her best bib and pucker, In a ¢ al ttle chat with the Audience yesterday aft Jand to we week she sa ence with Geor ge Warrington as Uriah Heep. anded over the foo -+$ Why Streams Are Disappearing. Is, and rivers that filled _ says the Inde-| that the uppe used to| nis change has been trees, If wate lding ; look ouT | MISTER! The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, March 19, |The Million Dollar Kid ue THAT THE | Nou Have 27 Foy BASEBALL] eect 1909. mann | | SRADOODHODOHODOODOOOOIDOTOOGIIOOOSOGDODOUO DOG OOOO; \iMeditations +g : of a Married Man By Clarence L. Cullen. P L0ODOQO0G00000000000000000000000000¢ HEN a wo- hairs OBA} no longer be ff pushed underneath, | CLARENCE-LCULLEM combed over or rd otherwi | ehe says non-| chalantly: “Oh, I've been as gray as a| badger ever since I was nineteen~a'! after a while you oan order two or three family tratt, you know. alee sults for yourself,” (By “after insists upon drawing you off to that evening? Why Ja ft that, when your wife ts with you on one of these gloriously gus- ty March days, she will force you to make an §-yard detour to avold pass- {ng the Flatiron or Times building? Famillar Quotation: "I want to get all of my apring things now, dear, so that 000 WORTH STEAK FOR VELL NEVER BUY ANOTHER PASE ee Hints for the Housekeeper. A married woman hates to think of|a while” she means next August, If she | wetting to be forty-five years old be-| means anything.), cause she feels that at that age she'll What Most Women Think They look middle-aged, whereas her husband) Know: — That men are crazy ae witl be Just @ young fellow and still! widores, aoe keenly In the game, looks and all. A man can’t figure out whether {t's |a boost or a knock when ho hears a woman say: "Isn't {t too bad that a girl with such a sweet disposition should be so hideously homely?" aginings Some women are dreadfully sur-| Men who are the most severe In thelr prised and shocked when they find)ctiticism of the paradoxical kinks of | out how much men DO KNOW about femininity also are the men who : 4 | wouldn't voluntarily get close enough to their sex—its "mystery" and all, fn unfeminine woman of the “new wort to hand her a pea } What Bvery Woman Ought to Know: That there are plenty of husbands—-not Often, when a woman fondly !magines that she is making a man her slave with her languishing glances and subtle |Mattery, his inner self {3 riotously, raucot laughing at her vain im- If agreeable young unmarried women only knew what a hit they make with [oligible, worth-while men when they | caress, “make over" and act Interested | necessarily prigs, elther—who distinctly |{n other women's babes, they'd do {t/ dislike to hear thetr wives tell off-color oftener, | stories, even If they don't say 80, There are plenty of women who enjoy! T'he man who “kisses and teils having a Iittle affair with a married! a cad, of course. But he hasn't any- man, not becauso they care a hooray | thing on the woman who reads the ' for him, but because they delight in| other fellows letters to the next man @ ~~ » they | who comes along. i Ja cupful of bolling water, one tea-| half a cupful of elther bean sprouts or care still less. | A lot of otherwise open-minded Maple Pudding, spoonful of any good t Fr green peas or string beans, Muffins. Tt is reliably stated that plenty of| women reject the Darwinian theory teaspoonful of salt, black a che 1 fine, or asparagus tips, The | women who take luncheon fn the shop-|because its acceptance would tmply ale three cups of water add two cups of brown sugar, put on fire and butter, creamed together, | | WO table | | spoon butt ether, | one egg, one cup sweet milk, two pepper, paprika to taste and a dash of | See Yu sauce, which ts eaten with this pigg district mako {t a point to pick a} such extreme {mmodesty on the part stir till boiling. Take three table- cloves and cinnamon, When nearly | delectable dish, can be procured atany | row with the waltress #0 they won't | of thelr forebears and forebearesses spoonfuls of corn starch and mix with al done add a amall can of mushrooms, | Chineso 4 NUDsifounD wo) eas poons baking powcel iiaverto tipltior, Respectful Inquiry: Why ts {t that so cup of water. Then stir the starch SEE —- 12 bo added at the last, t Many, many years ago a man we!many women, on the street, at the Into the sugar and water. When thick- 2 ¥ 2 Five o’Clock Tea. "| know, In @ moment of reckless extrava- theatre, in restaurants, every ened mix in chopped ‘3! T h e C onversa t ion of A mericans xance, pald $4 for a four-in-hand cravat ar such an tnexpleably — pee and serve with whipped cream its It makes small pleces, half an ounce of green |make his soundings, The tightly drawn lps and tmpassive eyes cultivated, as i root ginger and two stalks of celery, |think, 0 carefully by th ‘@ to tal ming and depressing as site with Saute this In a frying pan over a hot! fog or night-time to the mar 0.00 Nin cle to good conversation | and one cup of tomatoes; firetladdinelfourstablennos of olive |is the American passion for ideas, Conversation exists to amuse, and to amuse) ang ke 1, one tablesp fy by making spectal appeal to {mayination and sense of wi "tous. ‘Oh, Those Silly Boys! # @ « WiKina) “Hello, Freddy “Fine. How are you getting on at colle I'm taking a correspondence course now, | “T gave the Newly and I hire a man to do all FP’: teaspoonfuls of tea, four cup-| ROWN an onton in bits of bacon; | B add one pound of chopped bect; a fork; » hot for ten minutes; serve on. Ever since, when his wife has wanted | scow!? a delicous dessert By John B. Yeats F es ad AW ae oer to pay about $70 for an insane hat, she| Did any woman ever “make a wish" b i Py “| has thrown that 4 necktle up to him. |on a passing load of hay that the H @ 7 ‘i i a ies died ox heart cherry and slice of lemon Hn ‘ 5 omemade Chop Suey. is raat a Prue ate heath ie ‘got | m each cup before pouring, Whyte it that, then you've hacked | "Fen a roi tation: BT a s wo ch | the distinguished poet ne h nationalist in Harp veekly, , ‘amiliar Quotatic “Oh, only ound 1 inte uncharted seas, who will drop his plummet again and again and ing in the morning, your wife inyali Gath T guess iene thirty dollars pound 3 nto | bly has some party or other that she| will do.” add seasoning cover tightly MY “CYCLE OF READING.” | By Count Tolstoy. Transiatea by Herman Bernstein (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) Wealth. REAT riches are amassed only by tmpoverishing | the poor. M R | A ° HEN the stone falls upon the Jar—woo to the Jar; W 19. | when the jar falls upon the stone—woe to the jar; RT whichever way it falls, woo to the Jar, | ~The Talmud, OOOO THE pleasures 07 the rich are acquired through the tears of the poor, eee the poor because he {s poor” constitutes a special, Industrial form of plunder—that {s, to make use of man’s need for the purpose of secur- ing hig labor or his property at the lowest possible price, The reverse form of robbing the rich on the hight dently because It is less profitable and more risky, Is b tous people,—Ruskin, i ry} D not rob the poor because he {s poor,’’ sald Solomon. This “robbing of because he is rich, evi- rarely practised by caus OOO T is true that wealth is the accumulation of labo: son produces the work and the other accumulates. by sensible people “distribution of labor!” OCENT wealth would have are not in need, rich man, as in this world of ours, it usually one per- And that is called been possible only among people who But where there are hundreds of paupers to every it ts impossible to be innocently huniatticiv ne bane oem eemtemmerose YT May Manton’s Daily Fashions. eh forests; it has taken half a century to destroy | the work, don'tcherknow!” “What of i ~s storage!” Te drawers aT = that are snug Oe O *eAEETACaCaDE 3 c . DIDOGSEOOS | about the hips and loose about the knees are the ones ooth iarkington and Harr ilson’ S teat Love Romance of an merican Kni 1 el & the greater number @ nae Bol @ ROOK for of women, ‘This 00 avon? | model means just nly and confusediy. Almeric upon the subject of his son's merits” | but 1 Raita gan Pikaranoon camlerety AInCAEP He | that combination and F esr 5 ay | an underfact at T won't talk with you abou von't ta € t's t th r edges or eee sald. “I don't want to hurt 3 1 else ould Lok at you and ; is. In the ' Tevet D fave you after this any objection t vw it wasn't him! [t's the na Pe ae By Booth Tarkington Haweastle glared at him, and was) “Because I've ha St. Aubyn 1 Yd tet you buy ft {¢ It would make ero tie pe and H. Leon Wilsoa. about to reply when Mariano entered | of life" = inquire ing white heat hay ‘ t to take Weak andttieaare with a letter on a tr: which he hand- In Kokomo t ince with Mr, st r eet ye (Copyright, 1000, by American Press Ass'n.) ed to the lawyer, who r 1 ma i: ted nting wine: veers . the Earl's attitude, and as 4 (iityedn de ee ‘ Haute ape w his suavity grew with ft nth s t Whe erie t-and this old t 1 ther matter t Line orn rs i i w ir attent ut nk 1 1 TP Reedy fortune ‘ b R t 1 weal, The ka } nid t | 7 , dl yel'# paid cl t ) [ c is weet Haly 2 4 in to ree) |) i ei ; sg It sed Borrento us ‘ i Wan ; Hadatetnal t £ engused as ae sri . 1 t As t ; ¢ . w t ' c : 7 " } 1 } ‘ CHAPTER XIV. tor, As he pas group he s : Z, and crossert Hees ‘and ' ft g alae in yy} and observed 1 A you' ne, 1 “Ive A t ‘ s ds of The Letter. i ne as if it was goin F T want to read to : i UME $I 1 Haweastle ene ad ye en T got vour letter at home T pie was a younger sor ange Annie's 1 a 3 2b ; garden, where Horace jood a ®" answ Vice and had ears in Rusela In| stand r C 1 Artie y ; k : id hold and of the the Ka and ed the others t hose Hawea ness und ing | work front t Closed Dart Fitted Orawers s Fer the ate A ° ne here how they here in ord ts 8 sty | drink left of old man Hoff. i y ern No, 6277 {3 cut in sives fora 22, 24, 26, 28 5 mig whe : sl nere is head, and cealnat Teouehre ; 4 5 t know tt, di j meas from the direction of the village. Haws | H can m at” she erted, in anger. rteaged to the han ; ‘ m him inal ember sae anewere " castle beckoned t It 4 pity that there should ha audacity to pry into the fe Anished wit Kk oft ph. |andt r la . o” Row Callat THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION “anything sal down there?” he AY: iavingaratanglpg inthe ave Wha 1 she sald \ ! You ‘i BUREAU, No East Twenty-third street, or send by mail asked, t Nlage rs BATU A UeLeortealt He sald scorns t was what you) w ta J © to No, 192 \Vest Twenty-seventh street Send 10 cents in coin “Rawther! Ca still hunt and F simile ounted to x t §-| Ww \ Obtatm § or stamps for each pattern ordered. | that bandit chap, 1 his 8 Ms y ea S ; tak 1 Hawoastle that tora ght on fleld ri ‘These IMPORTANT —Write your address plainly and always lanauidiy. standing,” he sald, and the Barl went Cooley's ° take up the mat- 1 Ak tot . orotate} specify atze wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if ine } “Dpa't mumble your words!” anapped on, to be right next door to mine In Ko-|ter of tho ™ the moment biel Crimea looking aft asly Patteras } hurry, | he Qld lady, and Horace and madam “It would ill become @ father to prose agme. I haven't opened the letter yet, solicitor arrives.” , “wt you won't s¢e much of his an- (To Be Continued.) [are lene AAA AAAS , ‘ 4