The evening world. Newspaper, April 7, 1911, Page 23

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ele ) The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, April 7, 1911. ‘“‘Them Was the Happy Days!” ege = By Clare Victor Dwigsins Copyright, 1011, by the Pree Publishing Co, (Tue New York World), AitMo0T Howey, Jimmi! Howdl, hovel! ‘ Sia 66 ey hae’ te xl Spama ye Tue eve Wel LEFT A DRacceo " ALWAYS GLAD % See LTTLE TAAL - - ‘ tot EVERY Time | meer Recoticcr’ the url Wie Nou & Susteo (T-HA-HA- | pd > cae Sok pe i A co You t Recar. Trem tape SPLIT ne a one Never teT You HAVE Nothin, DID weKeo You ~ With You wa? wy For mas. ” You Gor crazy MA0}|) B& YouR DAD Warned you FoR GETTIN Wag Cathe) annibel bath Pro You A Dotan @ You) |] 1? — AND { e he WHAT FUN we USEO To HAVE! A) AMD CALLEO ME AM OLD CHlicKen en wer & Sent Yoo COME ON DOWN a AMO | Pasteo You one uP it - Steet with ME me EAR WITA MY RIGHT & wv” Reflections ofa % & & ‘Bachelor Girl By George McManus Copyright 1911, by the Prese Publishing Co, (The New York World) Can YOU Answer’ These Questions? Are You a New Yorker? Then What Do You Know About Your Own City? + paatatncaeni HIN: - | et Aaah JOHNNY- ' | rem EVERAL million people ike to boast of betng New Yorkers. ty the Press Publishing Oa, (The New York World). ‘WILL You ) WANT OH! LET | A New Yorker should know the interesting or important fects OOD lines are more than trouserettes, and trailing | 0 To THE ‘ou To GEORGE Wt aes wou. olty: G frills than harem skirte.—Fiirt'’s Motto. STORE FOR BRING IN oo'IT! | Does the man at the next desk? ES ME? Some j | Glonce over the following questions and wee how many of them you ean i . answer, A man never realiees the golden tworth of Ris wife's | woop' | phen try them on the other man and on your family, and see Now they etand affections until he starts to sue for their alienation. : J tne teat If none of you can agree as to the replies, look in next Monday's Evening World for the correct answers and for a new Met of questions, 1. How did New York City obtain ita present name? 2. What was the northernmost limit of old New York City? 3. Why were Harlem, Brooklyn and the Bronz ao nemed? j. How did New York come to be an English-speaking city, and what was ‘its “opictal’ language up to 1605? 5. Why are the crosstown blocks longer than those running north and south? Look for the answers and for a second set of questions on Monday. In the moan time try this Het on other New Yorkers and eee what percentage of cor- | rect replies they can give. | Diworce may be an “evil,” but it certainly has some advantages over ground glass and strychnine as a means of putting an end to an intolerable matrimonial situation. It takes thirty years to make a man of a boy—and one chorus girl to. make a fool of him. | Who says there are no “great martyrs” in these modern times? Aren't there men who take their wives along when they go ‘o Paris on a business trip?” paceneaenes A amall boy's {dea of showing attention to a particular girl is to pull JOHNNY- THERE'S A ; : her heir; when he grows up it's to jerk at her heartstrings. \ COME HERE MAN HERE THAT W omen in t h e Oo rient. ' wi The woman who looks as dainty and attractive to her husband when she Ay py LET Sant tou ie | LESEO USE 0: BOC eee pine oy ce ~ haar eps eg rag Tikesdind obat le cook biota, bestia a JoWhiesiwhen ahe le bendina over e ORGE RRY THE to women fn the Mohammedan lends, aays the London Graphtec gion is In many respects a] As the lawa governing the relation- jad one, yet it must be remembered [Ship existing between a Moslem mar that the present treatment of the & nd his wife place the lady rather at a x by Mosiems was not tnver disadvantage, when a marriage is eon- by Mohammed, but that It was an a plated the relations of the womaa Jent Arabian or Oriental custom, As riy always insist upon a civil con- @ matter of fact, the Christian women | tract, under which, if the husband de- lof certain districts of Asia Minor, as| sires to divorce his wife, he 4s com- of other parts of tle East, |pelied to make some provision for her ally voll as carefully as do thelr] future, Lite in a Turkish harem te, Moslem sisters. With the exception, |of course, largely dependent upon the |too, of the fact that a Mohammedan [education which the woman has re- woman has no free Intercourse with|celved during her youth. If she ha: |men other than her husband, when she |been educated by a foreign governes! has once put on her yashmak (yell) she ite is most irksome, If; ‘oan come and go as she chooses, The nan knows nothing bet- |netter-clasa residences aro elther made a high lup of two entirely separate dwellings, piano crooning a love-song, must be a hypnotist. | DOIT: BATS FOR pritis P THE GIANTS’ A man's conscience is Hike a small boy's stomach; it never pains him until AFTERWARD. And, cven then, he doesn't know thy. Penny wise—and found miserly. t pene well Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers Hasty Proposals. H vr the gentleman and hia compantons, Y year young men, consider your feelings well before | ~ = = M you ask some girl to decome your wife, | Do not meet some girl at a party or the theatre} and convince yourself you have fallen in love at first sight. All too soon tn cases of this kind the young man finds he really did not care at all, and then there ts the humiliation of admitting the mistake. * I write this little sormon because of the letters I fre- By Gaston Leroux faa GRE ok Ee EE, Author of ** The Mystery of the Yellow Room,”’ etes | | | Guantiy: weaniva hore yous ten: Jenn Gall cali cie: (Conynaght, 1911, by the Robbe Merri! Co.) Heir Mongotfier balloone, which carried to what one might think, “can't open thie door: ts it always 20 jon Behalt of the kidnapper. so But Ps tol to the other i li toes ae nea é jelr incendiary proc lone to th n connection with an opera- | almMeult?” vhat a funny ‘0 Kidnap a performer | ha ra 1 met a sirl two months ago end thought I was in love] S¥NOMsia OF PRECEDING OHADTERS, nents, And a. stato prison right fan if Holm musical ine | —‘The_stage manager forced tt open [ort the stage! * * * Send for the d my tett hand.” with her, I paid her a great deal of attention, but now I i 2 the hottom. At that time ele with his shoulder, Ho saw that, at the} ttre, please.” And Mifroid rere Persian made this find that, after all, I do not care as much es I thought 1 \pori-Hous The Porsian went on his knees and put | ¢ for a very » time, he was pushing a human , “Curlous, decidedly curious er was certainly pot did. And I want to cease calling on the girl without hurt. i)" a ind. He seemed effe 0 bells, 1 and he could not keep an is jea »w oiight Into the ing her feelings." and suddenly | by exclamation, for he recogn! the ttle room, ad- oun brain Now, my dear young men, | am sure you can see that such an attitude toward Baay at Ontet th Mada Qual” (Poeien wate atin Go te nae Gas nGR OF an aehina eee a girl might cause her a great deal of embarrassment, or even unhappiness, Be f CRTICIA ELE Ent Ae ee LE eoe att sure you really DO love before you say so. a SDA i ® the nothing surprised, was stooping ove What do you say to all this, ge! to marry for five or #ix Talks to Others. ret . [Years and he ‘supposed that by then sew MAN who signs his letter “M. B."|'7 would have been married for a long | jy writes while.’ Please tell me what you think , “Lam very muoh in love with | or this & young Indy and I think she likes me! y think the young man does not love |} but she receives other callers as Well. | you enough to marry and was trying |! Would she do this if she cared for me nt down a few steps and | Th t at the young to tell you #0, aici Xe ere is no reason oung =“ 4 jady should not receive as many callers) Hep First Name. thw agers bodien, ‘The tas J Ani the twa fn fas she likes as long as she ts not en-| GIRL che signe hen letter (an |e Muiclees cements. Miler ane Bau ioe @eqed to marry you iA D.” writes Wi _———_ It I have 1thata d@ » : a ure sound eo said. | 7 * ‘A young man has been call- . ae , econd | ‘*N urtous person te wae i tanto. ling on me steadily for some time, but! CHAPTER XN. | r » comin pushed t torte 4k whtoh MAN who signs his letter }he still calls ‘Miss Blank.’ Don't > Ce e . LJ Libs and f A peas ne fale ee me An the Cellars ot the Opera. Tsay," he sald to the stage person un " 3 e “Tam very much in love with y my firet name?’ | JOUR hand high, ready to = a girl, but I do not think she loves me he youn only. showing you| fi ‘ How can I find out whether she does|the proper re in addressing you G ry I ; or not?" as he does, If he @id not like you he nate Justa limpse nto asked 3, siteta, (PASO wan bin If you love the girl enough to marry| would not call upon you. DOOR tah eaecaice ea Les e a her, tell her of your affection and you) Potgpned Letters. closed again; and the two Into the arma of the the New York Shops » pide ng ago 6 @ will soon find out whether or not it Is é 4 nen nless for @ moment, | 1 him to He down flat, Ww , mitt © © © It was the > | MAN who signs his letter "J. H. | | ‘ eee t returned, ss h him and « aaa ke shadowe gid: 5 , | PF" writes 1 tried ee ah , asc when ¢ you know, Mr Changed His Mind. | “I have distontinued the friend- rerstan’s present pronounced vogue Of sade wold look well worn w FAL pet i Acerca Topseont RL who algns her letter “A, | SMIP of @ gil with whom T was tn love Vand he heard a nging effects in dreas places) straw hy i ight when Carlotta ya CMa Se Pee $ sed aw that of satins z Theme n 1 t ack’? 1 wr ing her to return my lettei e, Ww r popu ’ f iM ng his gleaming | jor A man me he loved) qt jy quite insulting for erase warmer | 1 é fited the paral ‘ ne, although he would not! a girl to return his lette veo egh oe aut 3 PL Ay ate ome vag hardly Gre) ‘ be able to marry a year or two.) quest implies distrust of the girl's mo- ata qn Mek “po ayy alair suciair taken anatt, does het'| outaiwetoned Handa, looked: or Gann Now, a few nights ago he said he did tives in keeping them, le t . * to shut. 4 ile ned ink wae (irnad ne uy | ae r f ‘ nd promi , Pe ® ee oD © great enuf: | oharttable management had taken pity, A 1 d s direction and Raoul saw that the floor, | distinguish shape of thing . 6 season | exquisite gown that . i | seeing thea katdeb 80 ont feed The Fe Gaeville Girone. 5 iil ces cal ike cig ray Gl ltt hed oe cout ae county ; broad, dainsy Pompaious compe haw a white "SSo am 4" nad Miccold and put the| Eborg and Below the stage "hep west LT seaterainate ened takan he ak ta ped ane in it ie of | kround covered with tiny black dots and anuff-box in his pocket | about tnee ly from top to bettem By John L. Hobble SC rin erenmrrcar See a ee eee eee iehet nn ine baile nest} Bar DIS GR Bd | AB SOrHek Jb Ri HOS nRe 5 ieeamaaiygn | MURAI on to bese & pose upon her innocence, And Raoul, of the stair- | fringe now ‘ogue, or tt ta simply one, tionalized vis crepy all ta nyaerved, watched the removal of and they were also called “the draft remembering the Persian'’s remark Hohe e@ of |end ela tely trimmed forty-two Inch eand sella at 14a * ree bodies by a number of scene-| expellers,” at least at that time, for Copyright, LVL, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), the hat !t had been mysteriously | the two. po. ret passing Mi as eT eifters, who were lowed by the! have little doubt that by now they F ‘ 4 by the ghost himself | tin 7 1 3 fl alia Roeauecs arte ise mmissary and all the people with|are all dead, Drafts are very bad for OY MARSH says that although ing her eyes and look only at the good | VRE Pi Sh Au ae e back borfered fabrice are elr steps onnd for a few) the voice, wherever they may egme cons. Niten dlotates that he |in people for a couple of months, # | at hiseaae:| Ht ' 1 1 he} 7 € r A droene the above. When! from, Me, he car vesiar the temptation of | —— Vy aid Cons | KAve Une Word r . . ian made a) ‘The Persian end Raoul weleomed telling the wicked truth. | PP KE REYNOLDS says that he doesn’t | ¢ Col ! ft Ra Raoul ata | this tnoident, woich relieved they ee think it worth while to speak tol n 1 ‘ tor * © did noe Lift hie hand fs | tpeonventent | witnesses, for some ef $i ican iat lany . tamil " thelr pr dungeous # the m tr eo his sly to fire, the | these door shutters, having nothing BING poor {s all right If you are injany of the Craum family wu ne} oe on A 7 7 ue Popa resume that attitude to do or nowhere to lay ¢heir ircumstances to afford it, mects at least two of them at once, hn We 3 J ‘ A ; an erie and h od, | heads, stayed at the Opera, from MMle- eae the collara; for the roa i as anager modistes are including ing Dags in © bodice shows tha border ae a. * a » vied the opera house immedi after ed. e » therefore, must 6 ly," | Rese or necessity, and spent the it b ” y ? f 4 ttle d: TURNER, the oculist, has ad- |THE foolisher @ humorist t2 the more} the eighteenth of March and had made|be In the * or ite immediate | the orders for apring costume, plowing and the handsome little dress l@) wiisnered Tao! , Tahen't wieed Hetty Tellings to quit strain- the wants to be took eerious @ starting-piace right at the top tor | neighborhood. & Dovelty vell of lace tn the new rust Ralshed off with « atts belt, Ie gure of my aim," > Be Crntawsd) mth NOES TEN LT TE Te CL EE ET TN DEEL LLNS A A AD A Saeeeeaae eae

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