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(“Them Was the Happy Da HELLO ginny! AN WHAT HAYNE WE How 0o | oven! { The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday. April 10, 1911. You like my New white WAT 2 ! ; HAL WAL How You useo To Yeu wert VD Kick YouR SHINS) HA YHA! LAW, 1 ys!’’ Copyright, 1911, by The Prom Publishing On, (The New Yor World). | ARSHA! SIME 3) AUwaAYs Live To MeeT You~ You MAKE Me THINK eT You - Ho! Hob Wi Rememsen pm vp & You Feu IN moTer {TAT WAY = and = YovR TH Mov \ Rene 2 PRETTY Roses Manes ME LOOK LIKE OF THEM OLD DAYS $ myst) WHAT FUN wel Wace } ROLLED You OVER =| |liave To LAUGHS —— @ YOuR bik FOR ouR LITTLE KNOWED SOME THING fe! Po You REMEemeER v GoT MAD & SAD Come ALNG @& | PUSHED You | 9 t ike 7 WE DID HAVE! 0 Mita MY FOOT-- & YO MASHED YOU You MUDDIED HER alsa hl Lal Tia THe, Simm, WHEN tvs tun OREO OO Nin eat USKT / |] AGIN HeR GY MUN Ol ey ine he Liat ine — -——-- t e EAR CRIED es ° y caibadniehal retro a) GOING To DOLPH HOENS Hiaa Ne Ms vp “LONG ‘ey nioee THe WB press & SHE t ieloalein ree ALF! \ | ice vou won) || | MRS ET OTE ee e_ HOKE! Wwe sits —NALHA! }|{ To Take ter Home. ~ REmem essep WP Ql Mi OR Ae Xe KICKED You ON = Nes! 1 How fecal. THE K INCIDENT , ALES Them Was THE HAPPY DAYS! Reflections of a % % % Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland oprmght, 1911, by the Pres Publishing Ox, (The New York World). OHELORS will happen tm the best regulated fam- des. Providence gives us our relations; but we have only ourselves to blame for our husbands and wives. 4 romantic young girt expects her lover to ride up on a charger and carry her off to some fair Elysium; but lates ehe te satisfied to have him ide up on a street car and carry her off to a Harlem fat. 1A widow ought to And @ lot of consolation tm the thought that at least she always knows where her husband ts nights. ‘A bise exchanged te no roddery; but t's very often a confidence game. ‘A quorrelzome wife may de foowsh, dut é requires a strong family far now ond then to awaken a husband to the reahsation that you are still, Mong. ‘A git may have a lot of strings to her deou; dut they won't hold Mm im the house after she marries him. Most of us are merely “supers” on the Stage of LAfe, our only value Deing to All out the picture by making one of the crowd, Too mony hooks spoil the husband's disposition, Le OOOO eeeennanaaal Can YOU Answer These Questions? Are You a New Yorker? ben What Do You Know Abost Your Own occa § OU are a New Yorker? You are fond of boasting of thm Gact? Most New Yorkers are. But it is well to know al] abeut @ subject Sefore making too many Ly Y ‘What Go yeu know about this tremendous home city ef yours? For instance, how many of the following New York questions oan you @mewer? Try them on your frienda, too, Then look for the answers (and for a Rew eet ef questions) in Wednesday's Dvening World: 6. What were the former names of Now York Oléy end State, and why were they so named? 7. Where ata the Orystat Palace stand? What became of #? 8. What part of New York Oity was formerly claimed by New Jersey? 9, What other State wae once a part of the original New York? 10, How did Cortlandt street, Wall street, Matden lane and the Battery come to be so called? Here are the answers to last Friday's five questions: 1. New York was named in honor of the Duke of York, brother ef King | m, Charles I. of England 2, The northernmost Mmtt of oM New York was Wall street. o %. Harlem and Brooklyn were named for the towns of Haarlem ané Broukelen | [, fn Holland. The Bronx was naced for a Dutch settler named Bronck, district was once known as “Bronck’s Farm." 4. New York became an English-speaking city after its bloodless capture from This the Dutch by an English fleet, Up to that time tte “official” lenguage had been ft Dutoh. 2 6. When New York City was Imtd out mo one supposed ft weuld extend | 1 The ‘orth and East Rivers were the great arteries of trade, ets were cut through fram river to rer than to accommo- Gate north end south bound traMc, Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers A Girl and Her Lobe. M dear young men, if she does not o: love a and flowers, or because you have taken her to the thea many times, A girl may like a man very much and, as friend merely, accept his various 4 5 she does accept them does not ne bound to love him tn return, That is & man must take when he is trying I am always rather disgusted wit write me complaining that they have ¢ gifts and taken her to many parties a you cannot make @ girl her own accord. rve yo a girl z, ? x bare? Vincent them, t is quite wrong for a girl to acc 1 does not care fo! ‘tg ve sure, ! whe notually disiikes, but, on the other ! ane love man whe may care to try to win her Should He Gide Warning? A MAN who signs y answer ng while to in and, A Year of Suspense. MAN who signs his letter rat >| ing on a young pas r ry dear friend o I kn oh makes & worth: a it 1 y duty to te long while to| friend what Jk but maybe you, Your main difficulty, my over-zealous can persuade the young lady to shorten | young man, would be da making a de the cme, ems eort of man believe euch tales, Se ENR RA eam: Let George Do It! w By George McManus Copyright, 1011, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), ’ if 1M GOIN FISHIN’ Rung on Rollers! It's all right to be asked to Play You Ly Gey A LOY OF FISH IF YOu Do ment {f they don't Request a Rebate! We know some People who are so Particular that they seem Petty! We never for get to Knock Wood when we Begin to Believe that we Can't Lose! We know a man who spends so much jtime talking about Putting Over Big Propositions that he can't get down to Earning the Price of @ Shave! We've known many a Wall Guy to turn WHO'LL 1 GET TO HELE ME CARRY THE FISHES Home around and becon an Artist at the Bunk! You can't Pay the Fiddler with a Promissory Note! A \ of Folka could take resh Btart |f they could Shuck thelr Fixed ideas! Our idea of Nothing to Roll the Crusher Over is the man who says that he'd be able to Do Something if [he wasn't Held Down by his Wife! fy Responsivle for tts Deflation! The Man with the Ability to Tak e & Return Engage: | A Deflated Bank Roll doesn't care who | “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What's the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence L. Cullen TO DAY -10 THE NOU SAY 1 CAN YEP" THEY ac TUALLY PLACE You CATCH ALL HeINDS JUMP OUT OF THE water Conrright, 1911, by the Frese Publishing Co, TOLD ME Cray b THeRe 7 AFIER THE HOOK! IEN some of ua try to Stand on W our Record we find that It | { | us that when we (The New Yorks World) @ Wallop generally Doesn't Have To! The La ortune, all Coy Co- quettes, n fails to fall for the Mas- terful Man The man who ptr an ‘fake generally buying him one! ays that he c a or let it alon There are plenty of cases tn which It In better to go Ahead than to Come Back! Frequently we've been compelled to Believe tn Ourselves against the Evi- dence of our own Senses! Our {dea of Brittle Re: kind we make Hang-Over! tions is the Nursing a when w Green Room Glintings By Frank J. Wilstach cd Where does nd the display ad? LAYHOUSE mysterio the bill board GOOD many our song writers have plenty of gas, but no meter. LITTLE wheeze and then is relished by the wisest theatregoer. T ts a pity that some women who are Well off don’t stay off the stage, now A HE actor who never settles his muz- ale in & nosebag of ideas will find a demand for tmprovement to go “against the grain.” By Gaston Leroux a eM Eh A dh Aa Ll ES Author of *' The Mvstery of the Yeliow Room,” ele rte 4 | Dy which they had come down lately. |#4", and then dropped down. disk of Own words, as set down In They went up, stopping at each Ho felt himself clasped in the Per-| 5 this which he lett benind whonfoves née ‘ang | Peering into darkness and ¢' j alan's arms. the I copy verbatim fo lisatnde on. an faitnd | Jence, till they caine to t ‘Hush! wala the Persian alpen i 8, Which seemed etiil moved his mask disclosiag | Here the Persian motion inne Ne Meat me | with fis leaves; and the CHAPTER XXI. sf fom his 'poner by a] KO on Wis Knees and in this wal Wis Nancknesa maa (ies acouaale Kht up the é wae AAT, oman, Christine | & ness wi nick und} y Aaleue rae rawling on both knees and one hand } . ) ace . - : od aber eregite Ls | oe ae cthes hana ere them, the ailence heavy and terri f the snaiiness of the} The Persian’s Narrative. oe position (ndicated—they reach Phen the Persian begun disk, !t was uit at first play with the dark lantern a T was tho frat time (1 quote Copyright, 1911, by the BobbeMerrill Oe.) eagerly. But he heard aothing—noth-; Iie crawled a@ little farther on his someth ng, @ Kort of 4 he looking-glaes'"* Peel Se Sel: ing—except distant steps sounding on knees, then turned right around. and ined for # second and flung away! "Yee, a lo * gald the Per sakes the floor of the upper portions of the | suid: - wan, in a tone of deep emotion. A Das theatre, | "4 em going to hang by hands | lasso" he muttered, | passing nd that held the pistol | The Persian darkened hie lantern /from the edge of the sive and let my- asked Taoul, ‘som forehead, he added again. {self drop into the house. You must do| un shivered. “It might ve dropped into “Look out!" te ea. “Keep your exactly the same. Do not he afraid, 1| the rope by which the | chamber! hand up! And allence! For we shall) Will catch you In my arne"" ged and which was looked! What the Persian knew of this tor ty another way of getting tn.” Raoul soon heard a du - | ture-cha’ and what there befell } And he led him to the Iittle staircape [Gently produced by the fi esh anx-!and his companion shail that there was no humming In the ears so harn the singing whisper that fo Ww attracted me, Had 1 «d to superstition, I should have ¢ ly thought that I the tomure-|/had to do with some siren whose bus! ness {t was to confound the travelle: Who should venture on the waters of house on the lake. Fortunately, ! 4 country where we are too fantastic things not to know and through; and TI had was face to face that I i tion of Erik's. But so perfect that, as I leaned out of the boat, | was impelled er its trick and T leaned almost over- leaned turned the be ing the rays over thetr heads, looking ¢ wa ae Sudden w Agatnet thie wall tool « large dis- ne Fay Ne : @ branch from the Persian's narrative) |, Suddenly, two monstrous arms issued carded ecene from the Fo! de Lahore. | fF mes PaAIne Et ann Mono ena Waal and 4 4 & Ms barter, eat that I entered’ the house on |from the b of the waters | and cl to this scene was a set plece Be- | ene ‘ Me ae so rah and, next to it, nothing at a’ the lake. I had often begged | se! ms vK, dragging me CHAPTER XX, tween the ecene and the set piece there | yi Said. “The etone has closed) nothing but the ray of Hatt that seam. the ‘trap-door lover,” ag we { ny. have teal (Continued,) Was just room for a body-—for @ body And the ight of the tante: ey po seh used to call Erik in my coun-|SOoe |} ® Pry 'e Cellars ot the Opera. The body of Josepi Buquet The Peralan stooped and picked up! “aul Ney “The wall ts a| fle always refused. 1 made very many |}. “> ning me, ‘ee N this way they gradually ar-| The Persian, still kneeling, stopped | . thle —— | attempts, but in vain, to intention, he rived beneath the huge cellars {24 listened. For a mome feemei! | Vance’ Waten ‘nos carte ye Seat ate Delow the atag yma ai] 18, BORIS ANG loPKed AF AeOUlT then) ° | frst learned that he had taken up his |th Sang mand cdurwnnsrauncecne | JUSt a Glimpse Into | permanent abode at the giimmer of a lantern, through a erann # too thick to en-/ two boards. to trouble the Per: ast lie tossed his he @ worked the doo. the New York Shops that part of 4p his mind to act, He ell | h 4 toward ¢ ® Persian. to the partition. |the set plece and the sce HE keynote of children's hats !s % edged with a one of the wall through whic wall anarneia Rol de Lahore, with Rao I simplicity. ‘The narr ped satin and finished oe ee tr 8 tsa wall! es ED ISR re room shapes are fa a knotted bow of satin are 60 cents, guarded the approach $0 the oUne | ey upon "Che wale dunt ae ie OeME horn with « band of sat The now rd 6 mandarin ainst the wall in Christine's ter Of ribbon roses at t em k, are One day, when forgetting ing can re ortk himself."* I had now no other hat I already called not! Nk one gave way, | typical style and very pr at the reasonable : , ia $. et alr band ty nd the p ‘ «his pistol! tiandsome new har Deauti- 128-4 inches wide are ornar 1 I 1; / from his pock i ful tapestries are be y etal spang - i silver or tr Iaoul to do as he d y F sll piricl are silk-lined and ample po Joscent effects arranged in pretty de *|" And, resolutely, still on his knees, he| These bags are favorites now and sell {signs ‘Those of the wide black velvet “| wiggled through the hole in the wail, {at § t er decorations, that SOD seats Mlechian Hanetioe } Ry | Tees YeNe 1B ie: £0Nse | Geer ble minute rhinestones, tr tran, in my longing to ap-| He laughed and showed me along | ‘The hole was very narrow ware are yery caine T rn are extremely pretty source of thar reed. i at ete acreen cove d sell at “It’s the silliest trick you ever saw," # Who eara him Hl Small slive sted jardinivres holding ® plays an important part in w we sald, ‘*b very seful for breath: 4 her Ay Peeremrr age = eeting with a anann thle fi " ging in the water eorned ack \ HOR aera soped to: : J ; Ae ee ae ; Sy this |{t from the Tonkin pirates, who are able © ott 1 beneath Blosptatad eileer'l nn eaten ate >at tn the [to remain hidden for hours tn the beds « me Bulshed his 7 ; " . or it was |of th ‘i i Raon! heard him say, in @ wh: } ann pores BEA Yer. % hy neon | ut aii’ We shall have to drop @ few yaray, | attractive and only $1.2 A eof hair orna . ase, ff !) without making a noise; take off your hn belting that 9 90 nice and prac | ba: te and mib to m t Sinietes 86 88 Am be r summer wear ts } displayed the assortment are the anon 2 oh pasea sheaias saat ofa k wall, Yersian handed h’ 0 ) . ri 7 he : nate r 1 0 3 ment aid ans [eT aream handed Mis own shoes to ls naw denigns and colorings at prises |and some have ® spider in the centre, he airhole in the Rue crite showed me its, MAK? No move molar: oa in thickness Ntitaes aileide thei malts na Fanging from 10 cente to centa a|'The barrettes range tn price trom 2% ooth and black as ink. f shook ‘he asked, putting on hia most amt ene reriey serine Son goa aioe amet etn yard cents to $7.00. The combs are $1 and > alr, to get rid of a possible hum: thim@eaf against the wall and Listened leave’ Chic low collars of satin in light and upward, ut I soon had to accept the fact t ’ (To Re Continued.) &