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\ {Reflections ofa % % % Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Coparight, 1011, by The Frese Publisttng Co. (The New York World 4 FOOL and her alimony are soon parted, GEE.IM SETTING TIRED WAITING FOR GEORGE —/ Ennut is that tired feeling that a girl has when tho right man leaves at nine-thirty and the wrong man stays until eleven, The kind of “cases” that alter most men's ctroumstances nowadays are either Ghampepne or divorce. A husband can neither be pinned down Uke a belt nor natled to th aon) Toor like a carpet, but a little Nattery (like the moisture on a po vlamp) will make him stick forever, Matrimony ts the eparator” that sims the cream off the top of love. en A thirty-dotlar a week clerk may be ashamed not to call for you with a fazieab; only a muiti-mittionaire has the self-assurance to Iead you calmly, bus flrmty to a street car, WILL ONE OF You KIND GENTLEMEN HOLD ™y GBAGY FOR A LITTLE WHILE The BE RIGHT BACK! A man never secms to realize that it requires a little “fasting” between the courses of the love-feast to kecp his sentimental appetite keen and healthy. A woman teould hate to be as old as she looks and a man to be as vid @3 he feels when he looks at her—vefore breakfast, An ounce of invention is worth a pound of truth in any man's esti mation, ec Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers Differences of Age. RY frequently I receive letters from young people | V asking mo if I consider wong for persons with a decided difference in ages to mar Now, my doars, I most certainly do not think it “wrong” for persons who a@re not approximat of the E Nor do I believe such a course ne nit tt foolish tn moi Coid Storage Is| , 4 “| the Best LB] : By Wilt ing nh Fate. oung Woman, of your own personal Copyright. 1911. by The Press Publishing Co. (ke New York Worlds rested you—or, cases, and decidedly Just stop and think, experience. Reme other hand, bored you-at the age of ton, or again | : Yes. ALIFE AS co more at twenty or twenty-five. You|! Sir powN, MR-EG6, 1 REPRESENT You wavy Yo WALUABLA Ke voons. | — changed, did you not grow older? At each time in Ths GARDEN SasS inSuRE_ My_LIFE? A \ guess 1" your Ife your tastes differed, Now, do yc nis 'e true of every one | | MR.MUSHROOr OUGHT TO Ge HEAVILY UFR INSURANCE COMPANY And if tt 1s true, how are you going to harmoni iwSureo - LET me sce, | ABOUT 4 or Atty? How OLO ARE You? spe your tastes of twenty complish it, And at the best the expe: ds Miserable, | It ts mot necessary to do either. ‘Tel i your parents of your love for the young “ae man--or let tel! them—and explain i writes ‘ that {t would be impossible t) marry ma eeve been oAtlng any one for whom you had no affection, young lady for the past thr Recently 1 met with an ace sa' Less Affection, Was contined-to tie house, Consequent- | YOUNG man who signs his lette ly I had to write her and break an ape A HV hher, T asked if T must ever remain a precarious one. ns his letter | upon year w petntment I ehad w “Iam very Might seo her when T was well n. Tin girl, but lately phe has not hgve not received AY o8 much affection for mo as st latter and I vitnk tie $8/ frst. What shall I do?” apsry. What soil 1 do? « the young lady ff yout have of- If the you: y is ed her in any way, and if she sa: your acct * you oan only pursue your court- pathy for and you had better let Ki 1Sses Her, An Ecverrent. ey SoRRy Guy WE GUARANTEE YoU A THEN VEL SPLIT MY COMMISSION GIRL who sions her letter “R, UTTLE SLICE OF OUR wits You AND THE COMPANY INSURANCE GML, who signs her . B. A Ww. : US DIVWEND, A / ENORMOUS Monev! LO STC A , A young man who calls upon WHICH WILL CUT DowAl With “CE Owing vou nee wae ' an twentyscne years of age has never sali he loves me, but he Your PREMUMS TO AL? find in love with a y tlirns my affec nan Who ree kisses me wheneve. he can. let him do this? me to marry ar I have repeatedly said {t fs a great than I am. i for a gitl to permit any man lope?” to Whom she is not engaged to kiss One Is it right MOST NOTHING A YEAR 1s not good form in New waiter, He looks politely bored, but York to breakfast, dine or sup fails to comprotiend, He tries to speak in your n To yours, and you grow apoplectic at such ignorance. Then you resort to ointing things out oa the card. ‘The read, and of iter’s face lights up, and he begins tands you {8 to|to s ribble frantically on the ordor siip. stamp yourreif as by ssly provincial, | Then he retires kitchenward, and you ffom a menu ecard y @ walter who u s eaietieiodinelehdeleandabaeen aneeeniamemaneaeaaie nae Phe Bvening World Daity Magazine, Friday, Jonuary Dh, RAPID-FIRE. Manus (Another ARSENE LUPIN Story “Phe Hollow Needle” By Maurice Leblane 3 | 1910, ty t t sf } < } oto datnite, j | pre anks ofe t ° It really 4 } bs au th lead tn that® 1 \ | ‘ s tha royal secret of France, j I twoa Iv bebe : A * a \' 1 nt 1 ‘ t ' © carry Ae ‘ ie t c the fate of towns!" \ aig be a hog ooh Kn Diepy ve Havre: the three on ® . Ws Weuace ara f the triangle, the three large mt ; town At occupy the three points. In | a t we, the Caux eountr 7 CHAts te VIL tSam a PM GEORGE | From Caesar to Lupin. | Spr" se "Larveytie mentors a Ga PEAUTRELET looked at ht ‘ tain number fot Jewels and He se ‘ yt way murderers, ‘ea t i e ueh laid? v ‘ ilion At Gail a © town on tar t road leading from Haver Rouen or revehed and ted. | "A year later, Louis XIV. buys a do= = Was towns, vile) main and Chateau de ~ lages, fields or fore simply space, ultle select bus we swallowed up, the Midlands of France, sity > looked at his travelling ne curfous wre thrown) x a lo ‘ time bt : v 4 do not hunt about ing also with a keen wish to real character through the Dieppe, the Havre—the Cau-t =o e And he t ‘| chola triangle: yihing Hes there, ¢ ) a t instances that confned them | On one side, the sea; on another, ti ‘ }/ - « ver in the close contact Of) seine; on the third, the two valleys} ry that » after the excites | that tead from Rouen to Dieppe. ey, ent pointment of the morns) “A” tight flashes across Beautrelet'st re t turn, he too fell asleep.| mind, ‘That extent of groynd, that _ Ss J woke I was reading. | ¢, intry of the high tablelands ‘witch ? wie caned over to see the title of) run from the cliffa of the Sein vs It was the “Eptstolae ad Lu- | to the cliffs of the Channel, al- ir: a eee eers sret | Most invariably constituted the = saleial hese All, It took me ten ¢ of operations of Araen in. |tupint You’ with want ten years, at| Ce, peretone, OF Areone Pepin Busy \t Which he parceled out for his pure | ds, uttered by Taupin after! jones, as though he had his haunt? AAR AA AAA nnnnnnnnnoy le the Chateau de Velines, had nol in the very centre of the region witir< "| iittle tastuon Hane GIS) baat, the legend of the Hollow Needle, , o calr a ain nd closely connected, 23 istone} , aster of himself Lupin.| the affair of Baron Cahorn? On the je wax subject to moments) sans of the Seme, between Rouen and” wonnnnnnlia WRK Aton. OO mete Oe liye. On| ae vee saya eee epg ne at inag ty chy The Thibermentl case? At the other, end of the tadleland, between Rouen? and Dieppe. The Gruchet, Montigny, Crasvitt burglarl In the midst of the Caux! country. Where waa Lupin going when he wast him, cer a boy could easily turn to HERE'S OUR LATEST e Leautr Beautrelet read y admissions htly of wrong! of these Involu 4 poucy rD bOmart 14 , / Mad ta | attacked aad bound hand amd foot, in ¢ cand Aveo | | inte thet phreas eee entitle ao | his compartment, by Plerre Ontrey, the | | 7 He that, ie hide a com! \uteull murderer. To Rouen. j parison between his own efforts and Where Was Holmlock Shears, Luptn's prisoner, put on boanl ship. Near the Havre, 5 And what was the scene of the whole toautrelet's In pursult of the tru shout the Hollow Needle, it was be cause the two of them possessed {den 1] means of attaining th Nect,| of the gedy? Abt : f , present tragedy? Adbrumesy, ecause Lupin had no # of BuL- the road between the Havre and eos different fram thowe possessed by | Diep £ w adversary. The chances were alike |" itOien, Dieppe, the Havre: always they , With the same chances, the same Jents of success, the sam: days had been enough for L choles triangle, And po, a few years earlier, poreost- } ing the pamphiet and knowing the hb. tho: ements, a i" ' ing place in which Marie toinette > Chan eeet ore ee had concealed the documeat, Arsene nail was said, to '@ knowl} Lupin had ended by laying hts hand on of the pamphlet published tn 1818] the famous book of bi Gnoe in whtet which Lupin, no d like the docum tx \ » had found * and settled down as inks to which he conquered country. wvering the indispensable document] fieuutrelet took the fiekl. |in Marle Antolnetto's book of hours. He left Rouen early in the mofping fore, the pamptilet and the docu-| oot with his. face very moat | ment w the only two fundan guised and his bag at thé ¥ upon which Lu had stick on hie shot 1 there he had bullt up the wi tice doing his rows editice, He had had no extraneous Walked straight to T y of the pamphlet and thi nohed, On leaving this tow tudy of the document—full stop—that | lowed the Seine and practically did not, lore sight of tt again, His yatinet) could not Beautrelet confine | sir aed, moreover, by numero cif to the same ground? What was 1ces, alwa brought ‘im back t | Khe use of an impossible struggle? What| the sinuous banka of the stately river. | a4 (he use of those vain investigacons| When the Chateau du Malaquis was} } that he|robbed the objects stolen from Buron} multipiied | Cahorn's collection were gen: by way) Was sure in the end] of the Seine, The old carvings Fe wrest of results? moved from the chapel et Ambeum wa r and immediate, | esy were carried to the Seine ‘bank,! a nt in adopting it he had t: p Any LIFE A PERMANENT in THE Duciatr, happy | fle plctured the whote fleet of plnnaces} | t that he was on the right path, | portorming a wr service betweens |jle bewan by I his Jansqn-ce-| Rouen and the Havre and draining they Salty seh ilging | Works of art and treasures from @ ¢ useless r and, taking | countryside to dispatch them thence to¥ portnanteru wh A ont and in- | the land of millionaires, q : Hed himself after much hunting| “Um burning! I'm burning! mut- ei t, In @ small hotel situated in the} tered the boy, gasping under theg i | heart of Paris, ‘Tals hotel he did| truth, which came to him in a mighty ; r days. At most, he took] series of shocks and took away bis{ s at the table dhote. The] breath . he time, loeked In Ms room, with} ‘The checks encountered the frat w curtains close drawn, he| few days did not discourage him. Hi " firm and profound belief in the thess of the supposition that ng him. It was bold, pera, Lupin had sald. to forget a mombe to place y Mf fovever withou j walt with hoe the result of your com- pate. | bined effort T have eaten a breakfast ordered In| First comes a tomato soup. Then a erloan, @ lunch ors! fish with tomato sauce. Then an en- a tree with a dressing of tomatoes, cast Which ylelés you some Hitt! urishvent in this sea of tomato 1 fellows and then comes a to- Repartee in Black and White- - cuise of a, mato # ad, When, ps a desert, the Matavrant, M4 you diss waiter smiingly brings on #ome kind of cover, that t) some ure! a pink Jelly, you hurrtedly pull out your godly ton; with much watch, murmur something about. an | gesture and Put the nent, call for the oheck Gwhteh chances ave that y do not understgnd he it said th walter eeems to under. It. \etand In any language), pay and hurry Then the bill-of-faro te £ nd | « gotten up so that some You are not properly fed, and ot look a tomato In the face with | dishes shall be perfectly intelligible to; cquanimity, but you reallze that you the waiter bi Jed in mystery to are at least swell, your un vile some other| There remalne one field unexplored by | ishes wil ho. ar tely cloar to’ the keever of a New Yors restaurant you as to thelr provable compostiion Great will be the success and greater | but ter excopt by stil the proft of the man who fir thelr gen Jon on tho card,! opens a cafe where all t > walters Chavs ensucs. speak Hirxtustani and the dinner card | You wy to #peak the ta eof the ts engraved in Sanskrit, eeeiechs naceaeeeunens ‘he liedgeville Editor t an By John L. Hobble a nner rnnnene RS, HICKS ts getting suspicious lumeh at a restaurant, but latel, pout her husband, he claims to eat his | she hasn't been able to find any silver ware in his NDE ono has resigned from his Gover Job and gone to} “How did you persuade your daughter to do kitchen work, | “Oh, | just told her it was domestic science.” R. and Mre, Uenry were happy for six lig Detare any relatives | came to Visit th ae CUSTODY OF THE CHILDREN, MODERN METHOD, O many of Hiram } or ends have quit ney “And are you mamma's or pay “Tam a candidate { in the bank, yur hand,” “Your her, | ‘Phe courts haven't decided as yet,/other young man “Ye KE REYNOLDS says ovory lawyer should Lo s'ven what te omni’ to im= madam, We're in Iltigation."—Chicago| “AM right; I'l run ax an insurgent,* over he hasn't unloss he haw a family to suppor, | Journal. —Husion Chronicle, to worry him."—Ditiavurg ost ia and extravagant; no matter; it of the adversary pursued. tion was on a level wi 1 that bore the” nan With a man like that, ¢ of what g00d could It be to look else-%t ; nm lit up his than in the domain of the enors Ran c the exaggerated, the super- I ¥ ; ies | ¥ i ; § ; ist have ‘ tempate y of thelr Gothte” 2 $ r piendor of their ‘im ety ? ' abt, em 1 ’ | ) , 1 H the neighborhood ofk ) there ¢ 1 like w beacon J He e kines of France secretst st nyatery of | . oy . ie fort | ¢ i} { | t \ 9 on y thet arnt | Ovg " net questioned P+ kin’ t it! Or that forest? Or the houses of this, nt 8 of the ad-| hamlet? Or was it among the insigalfieg ! that peasants yt t . ht hope to saghers ' of the | the one I Huminating wordt which Hes ta | (To Be Continued) si . ,