The evening world. Newspaper, January 9, 1911, Page 15

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T he Eve n in Let George Do It! Copyright, 1911, by ‘The Press Wublishing Co. (The New York World). HEAVENS! MY LITTLE FIDO HAS FALLEN IN! HELP!) ' PN ileintes MY HERO, HERES FIVE HUNORED. AND CALL AROUND AND * qive You Bach “PAILURE’ A until we've emptic got our money's w Reflections of a % & @& By Helen Rowland ‘Copyright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). elor Girl " is a man who goes around looking for ed the bottle, tired of the flirtation and orth out of the game, The longest way ‘round any man is to hang around hie neck. Why is it that after Jan, 1 the milk of human kindness is always put back isto cold storage again? Nett to a rank imitator the greatest abomination under Heaven is a rank sensationalist, A man never feels quite so blase and cynical as in that thrilling hour when he has just learned to shave and has been casually invited to call ona woman of thirty. Too many kisses spoil the troth, Every sincere author spends his life in the tormenting fear of either being wrecked on the Scylla of Affectation or swallowed up in the Charybdis of Imitation tith the rest of the bromides. Don't follow the crowd and the crowd will follow you. ESE RSES Ss @ SOA aS SS Queer Facts From Here and There. HAT modest rabbit, once it has itself, nowadays, with a soll- tary tail? Its own and three or four alien productions are required to give cachet to the creation. When the head of the beast Js too large for decoration & is customary to out-nature nature and invent one.—London Graphic. Extracts from old records, showing had earned the honor in were read at Canterbury by Alderman Mason when the mayor ‘and ex-mayor were granted the freedom of “e city. One citizen received the freedv.a for “undertaking to serve as cook at every mayor's Michaelmas feast;" another “because he Nicholas Johnson's leg." and a third “becai he married a widow with a large family.”—Pall Mall Gazette, cured The Lancet publishes a statement by its China correspondent that it has been found that since the laws were estab- lished restricting the sale and use of oplum many Chinese have found con- solation in cocaine. The usual mode of taking cocaine among Chi fa by snuffing it. ‘It ts to be hoped, 8 the Lancet, “that the new regulations will be sufficient to prevent the easy pur- chase of cocaine, though in the absence of any coast preventive service there is no country in the world into which it 1s less difficult to smuggle goods or drugs of any description than China,” sympathy when he ought to be looking for a job. | | “Conscience doth make cowards of us all"—but not| « w By George McManus No! You NEEON'T Lay OuT_MY THINGS! \ CAN FoR THEATRE’ ecITHERS SILK SOCKS ? ? THAT WOMAN + HIDDEN THEM L THE MN WTTLE 804 FELLIN ANO AE CAN'T Swim! AND, we CoucD HAVE FIVE OR Six AUTOS STANDING AROUND, y Andy or 7 © Copyright, Wi, by The Wress Pubeniug Lo. (ibe New Lore World), in rs A BIG Bron g¢ World Daily Magazine, Monday, January 9, BR IF 1 WAITED FOR You To HELP ME ——— DON'T SAY By Gene Carr A worol! OUT AND ENvoY YOURSELF EVENING 18 SPoLeD! HED MAN NEVER HAS ANYTHING FIT To WEAR! ! 1) A Mike ————— OH I NEARLY FORGOT TO TELL You- SMITH INTRODUCED ME To TODAY ut You IN THE WAY OF A FORTUNE A DAY | i THINK Tht Go DOWN TOWN TONIGHT | When ‘‘Success”’ Sa) wore sables—some violets and orchide at her breast— the flame of a jewol flashed at her throat—orchids we: in the cuteglass holder in her big touring car at the curb, And there were tears in her eyes. “Down the atreet, just as I was atep- ping into the car, a man a sneered,” she said. “Ho sald: ‘Oh, that the rich Mre. K. But I remember her when she lived over their store and did her own work,’ And he laughed. “Yes, we dif live ever our storett wes a flour and feed store-and they were the happiest days of my life, my dear. 1 did my own work, and when |dinner was ready—et noon, in those |daya—I would rap (a the floor with ihe broom-handle and my husband would come upstairs. And if a customer came in the hired boy would knock on the store ceiling with a hoehandie, And generally the customer wes a@ friend. and Mr. K. would call to him to come up for a bite while f slipped on a white apron. And we would ajl jaugh and enjoy ourselves,” The eyes stew misty again, “The third .0or Wae an attic, with no partitions, and the neighbors would come up for dances and eurprise par- ties, and we would hang lanterns on nalls, and have cider and applea and doughnuts, And there wes no formality, everybody knew everybody, and we all helped each other with our work and when there was sickness, and it was! just homely and honest and full of warm-hearted ways. “And then we grew rich, and the girls grew up, and the old netghbora died out, and Mr. K. became Mayor. And then there were society people. Bhe touched the wet eyes with hi handkerchief and the eyes grew remt- niscent and very ead. “] hardly see my husband, nowadays, hia life is #o busy, And I go to func- tions with the girls, and meet the same faces year after yoar-—but they are al- ways strange faces, They are not the women I would call on if I were in sor- row of ill, And we live in that great manaton, that is like @ hotel, each with You CAN Go Another Arsene Lupin Story Give and Take. By Ethelyn Huston Copyright, 1911, by The Press Hublishing Co, (The New York World), st Spells ‘‘ Failure.” our own apartments and our o ests. And I am ionely, my ribly lonely! “How quickly T would give it for those rooms over the store, I wen 00 happy doing my own and my husband back again, old neighbors who loved us ome She was a very stately and greviouS figure at the opera that night, and emiled serenely when the “dropped in” for ten minutes G@urti® the third act. And many and the jewels and the band, ae ‘And none knew that Success to spelled failure. The lights and the bing music and the diasing sea of and satine and flowers, she would exchanged gladly for the little over the feed-store where Love king—for the eager step bounding the etair, for the warm, strong that clasped the slender, gingham ure, and the voice that told her eke the sweetest of housekeepers and eat of wives. 3 And worldly success but too opells failure. There is a grim compensation that slowly works relentiess plan, There is a@ weird aystem of equity weaving through Life's ajlent forces., Am@ yoare give with one hand, and with’ other hand the years take. " The pulsing music and the horseshoe and the emiling Mpa, stage-trappings, and stage-play 99 | sides of the footlights. -It ie all @ that appeals to the senses, to tions, but never to the heart. heart remaing democratic. An@ end satiety, that ie twin bre success, lays ite frost-touch upem superfictalities, aay And it ts then the heart etire | cries out for the reai—for the home over the feed store, for the bor hearts that were warm and level, for the love that made life and living @ sory. ‘Those on the sidewalk envy the we men with the orohids. But the orchids are costiy—oh, ‘are costly! . ; a aH " (Copyright, 1910, by Maurtce Leblanc.) Philippe de Commes mentions it in, learned that thia castie, standing on the) to decipher the undeclpherable docu-) Four o'clock in the morning, Isidore /the essential page, the page containing anti], cateret the. sueeum togetber, ts Cosased ‘HA DRI. connection With Louis XI, and, later,| bank of tne Creuse, was called the| ment; and that he, Lupin, the last heir) has again accepted his schoolfellow's sol f the problem, or at | we me reoter wae. at once tneneenes, For my son, ‘oft SYNOPSIS OF PRECEL CHAPTERS Sully in connection with Henry IV.:| Chateau de I’ Alguille, that it had been|of the Kings of France, knows the| hospitality. Standing before the chim- | cryptographic solution, was conveyes es bay 9 pve 7 ell: = rrene Lupin, the “thlet genius’ of Hinton [BY the virtue of the Needle!” the good |wuilt and ohristened’ by Louis XIV.,| royal mystery of the Hollow Need! ney in his bedroom, with his elbows flat | Marie Antoinette, who slipped it into Posal, took them 10 the «las case a MARIB 0 te Sire Mebtecnyearold, king sometimes swears and that, by his express order, it was| Here ended the letter. But, for some|on the mantle shelf and hia two fists| binding of her book of hours In tt] ond ee ct ocnement. which cortaiany | of ne eencenly Beautrelet gave.e sey, the theft. In revenge Between these two, Francis I, in aj adorned with turrets and with a spire| minutes, from the passage that re-| under his chin, he stares at his image jn What has become of this paper [Void of ell ors nt, a 'y| of etupefaction. Under the Queen's Teautitul nieve’ of De" Gesrtesi: | MPeech addressed to the notables of the, which representel the Needle, As its | ferred to the Chateau de l'Alguille on-| the looking glass. Ho {8 not crying now, the one whlch Beautrelet has held tp his! had nothing reyal about it, Neverthe | aignature there were—there were two eetiiiten in‘iove:. Isidore, auied | Havre, [n uttered this phrase, /date it bore, it must still bear, the fig-| ward, it was not Beautrelet’s but an-) he can shed no more tears, nor fling "ands and which Lupin recovered from | jess, they were overcome by @ certain| words, in black ink, underlined with’ s. « Louls Valmera ues the two which has been handed down in the| ure 15s0, other voice that read it aloud. Realiz-| himself about on his nor give way 1 through Bredoux, the maguirate® emotion | at the eons reef object | flourish—two words: 5 Varese a iy j@lary of a, Honfleur burgess: ‘TDhe} 1680! One year after the publication | ing his defeat, under the! to despair, as h Hoing for the |“lerk? Or iv It atl in Marie Antolnette's) which the Queen had touched in those ‘ARSENE LUPIN, is, handed. 10 Kings of France carry secrets that|of the book and the imprisonment of| welght of his humillation, Isidore had | last two hours He wante to | oom Staci? into this: What has become|{eate, hat’ looked. upone’ And they | A 12 tune, tant the sheet of erence” kr often decile the conduot of affairs @nd/ tne Jron Mask! Everything was now| 1 the newspaper and sunk into) think, to think and understand “0 self into Sater ery See eee tee see eee and the seme cry encaped from the ing ut @| mysterious huding | plac 7 the fate of towns,” h bis fa buried in his h pe move his eye: oe ¢ ae Garec not take ane ar | of all o: om : where the vides. Kit explained: Louis XIV., foreseeing that| air, with his fa ‘And he does not remove ht oss, Beautrele 0 ey feared fecroted th re ech Ail these quotations, al the stories| the secret might be noised abroad, had ; those same cyes reflected In the glass, as Hoe eee aes | aiciee AE though they feared lest they! «aarte Antoinettel—Assene Ramihe trea ie the toe ot the hiding piace's | Pelating to the Iron Mask, the captain! buiit and named that castle #0 as to nting, shaken with excitement by though he hoped to double his powers fae hel ean ohana ne, M. Heautrelet, its your buat-|, 4, teat silence followed. Test wore on 10 deeerign eltorte that have Leen mace | Of the guards and his descendant, 1| ower the quidnunca a natural explan ineredible story, the crowd had) of thous ntemplating his pensive nate s double algnature; those two names to peuiscover it have found to-day in pamptilet writ e stery. The Hol-|come gradually nearer and was now) jmaxe,. i Ma Ads at coupled together, discovered to Tous tion of the ancient mystery. Lol image, _ cals Gratin aa mn ten by this same descendant and pub-|jow Needle? A castle with pointed round the back of that autrelet the keature. The description corresponded | {2@ Book of Hours; that relio in whitch HAPTER VI. ished In the month of June, 1816, Just) peli-turrets standing on the bank of @ thrill of anguish, they waited unsolvable solution of what he does not |ou> museums on the drawing up of the| with that given by the author of the | tt® ROOF queen's deeper “had CE 4 . before or just after the battle of Water-/ the Creuse and belonging to the King.|for the words which he would say in| find within himself, DUP see ed ea aenee ce ntne| slumbered for more than & century; «Continued.) Joo, in a perlod, therefore, of great up-! Deopie would at once think that they the objections which he would| is thus until €ofelook, and lite | taanie Antoinette’s book of houre?’| ee atts. pr ee nent) that horrible date of thi h Of Octo- \ N Book IIT, of “Caesar's Com-|heavals, in which the revelations which! nag the key to the riddle and all in- | Uttle the question presets fisel! he exclaimed. “Why, the Queen left It to land wander itr the Peat binding ihe vatime| Der, 1798, the day on which the | “mentaries on the Gallic War"' | it contained were likely to pass UNpere) Giiries would cease. aid not stir 1 with the strictiess of an her walting-woman, with secret instruc: |joxther With what a thrill, Meaatrete | Nad fell: all of this was most di edition, Alexandria, it Ia | cetved. rae dalot t Valmeras gently uncrossed his hands | ¢ b , Py Pest a Pad ta an, | eae thrill Bes | oncertingly tragic. ; Os. . ‘The calculation was Just, seeing th equation, bare and dry and cleared of all| tions to forward it to Count t for the hidden pocket! Was it ° tated that after the defeat of |. What ts the value of this pamphlet?! . 6 ‘inan two centuries later, M-Beau,| and raised his head the details that complicate and ob-| After being piously preserved in the|y tale? ©; H 1 | no Lupin!” stammered one of Verttoyix by Titulllus Sa-| Nothing, you will tell me, and we must Tai Yell into the tap, And uate iy es hese Piioate a! ob- | or eine * Faget Ae saad Mecgrtc apn fait ¥ tale? ‘ r won a he Ane te foc iy thus emphasising the i © Culeti» wast attach no credit to it, And this is the 5 h att, ure We aunt's family ih hee Seen, | men fen by Leute > nd bev! thee anaetley tha nieht arth . | Grautae Ast Cher tn sha" |i saan which t myact woul have ig what Las teading upto tn writing) CHAPTER VIL |, tye} mde « mintace Yon, hn) fi Year, nan cu vee oem ther fenven | tag wndenay the na that pps srought before and that, Ra L ‘ Lupin, | reanthe of tia dordmanr la’ all wrone case fon saled the secret of th ed away, if it had not occurred to h S 4 A r \ glans caso?” Bot a 4 | fansom, he revealed th ret of the 9 open Cavsar's Commentaries at | 0f Alfred rane tree na Launeras) The Treatise of the Needle, %% word aiguilie does not point to the n the Musee Carnavalet, quite sim Peryes, Arsene Lapin,” Tepealed MEE The. Hesuy of -sur-Hpte | the chapter given, What was my ae atine Creuse: if, admitting Jl pies T 1s 4 v'clock in’the morning, Isidore astle On Rue See he iva) will tha: sine open? muttered, trelet, “The Queen's friend was un- vetween Charles she Binge and Rollo, tonishment when 1 came upon the | of the Creuse: tt admitting the sucr Tia not returned to the Lycee Jun: Hse pba page ila ae sere, palpitating| ble to Understand Ror despera\ tie chief of the barbarians, gives Phrase qyoted in te ttle oening with | M. Beautrelet, he lodged his two pris-|@ son. He has no intention of return ike diutentoe a every m wade oe a appeal, He lived with the keepsake. Rotio's name followed by all his titles | me! coat Ae ablaitialtaan Roth, wise because he admit-| ing before the end of the war of ex- Put lust page, forcing ack| LUpIn discovered everything, on the A among whloh we read that of Master of) ihe Siobly to Ponicie, “with toe expras uccess of the inevitable re-| termination which he has declared, ‘Therefore all must be done ove in,| Isidore and friend jumped out the Look @ little, he at once saw that | Other hand—and took it! 4 bag, Seoret of the Noel? ‘Ginson’s edi-| ination of Joan of Arc, in short, with |#earches made by M. Beautrelet and| against Lupiu. This much he awore to/from the begining. of a cab a moine the nent was not stuck to the| “Took what? , y otto aro iag of William the all that I have been able to verify up| because, with the object of obtaining himself under his breath, while his! jfow? doors of Mad de Sev 1d man slipped his fingers in bes | “The document, of course! ‘That tos Date Maver that the staff of his | to the present. | the peace for which he had asked, he friends drove off with him, all faint and| Ono plece of evidence alone would pe sion were openit was something-yes, he| document written by Louls XVI; and ceeeeerended: in a. steel point plerced | Lastly, there iy an even more precise | laid for M. Beautrelet precisely what, bruised, In a cab “| incontestibie Hfullo! M. Beautrelet!™ felt tiltigiea aaners {it tw that which t held tn my ha crf ve, like a needle. | fact related by the author of the pam-| We may call the historic trap of Louis! A mad oath! An absurd and illogical pouis XIV A dozen voces greeted | ul, To} 16 gasped, in an accent aj-| The same app , the same . with An ther ambiguous phrase in her |phlet of 1815, During the French cam- | XIV. war! What can he do, a single, un-| his great surtaine, the| mont of pein ls Mt poss | the same red seals, I understand why X In Bee mitt that|paign, he being then an officer under| And hence we come to this undenia-| armed stripling, against that Pv whole crowd of rp Quick, auic cried, at | Lupin would mot leave me a doc t Lred ir] ‘o tell the | Napoleon, his horse dropped dead one| ble conclusion, that he, 1 enon of energy and strength’? € tw low ip “the mystery of are you wait which I could tum to account) ii To which her judges |evening and he rang at the door of a| unaided lights, without’ possess side 1s he to attack him? He ts unas oir Needle.” And one of them excl f sw out | merely examining the paper, the gpqig ¢ we know What you|castle Where he Was received by an old | other facts than those which we pos-|aailable, Where to wound him? Ile | sand | , Fur tt that w 1 read are wo jand so on.” " al and that, Joun, is why you shall | knight of St, Louis, And, in the course | seas, managed by means of the witch-| invulne Where to get at him? Ie |Louls XIV, handed do Louis XV, ;have had the same {dea? Take | t might he: blood— an a " of conversAtion with the old man, be| craft of a really extraordinary genius, is inaccessible. i wad burut by Lous AVL, Buta copy of Arsene Lupin may be among us! pale, faded bluod—Read if): 0 Be Continued.) te a ? ~ ~~ s ¥ > - ~—s Tew ~ -

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