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i \ ‘*‘Them Was The Evening World Daily Mag sexevse me Jimmy! SIN Kid= AINT You Miss SHORTCAKE Caney WORKS ? q No sin! IM Miss JULEP OF Te mint! him scot free—an 1 tempted chatin meany Tea SMOKL mover. 1 Yet cannot be t And he an Yea, v Yet sheepish look “Lo, I have found my HEART, and LOST i One, For, after ALL, love ts the o And LT cried ovt in my delight: WHERE didst thou find thy heart?” And he sighed, saying “Even upon the ST Sayi hen they ret Tsent hi days and sta ngs of &% % %@ Mrs. Solomon Being the Confessions of the Seven Hundredth Wife Zransiut-t By Helen Rowland Aeprright, 1v11, oy The tress Publishing On (The New Tora Wonan And when L admonished him, h T set myself do destroy him? with DOMESTICITY end set damsels after him with the N varebits and BRAGGED of his own f thet the studio of a devotee of ART, And she allowed him to Gnd fo put his feet upon her divan >the MOONLIGHT with ¢ Fluffy Girt and | raed the Fluf'u Girl's hair was not even ) {he seashore for his HEALTH. Yet, after many suinmer whe y the san t good EVER For he was hi ART immune? Thy heart isa thing of barbed wire which H my hands of thee.” Get thee hence! For I We For to-morrow 1 go ABROAD upon @ BUSINESS trip.” he sailed for Europe eturned again, he wore a fan o me humbly, 86 thing!” AMER, after three days ut!” Then I mocked him, saying: “L KNEW it! Verily, verily, there is some subtle thing in the salt air which maketh | ANYTHING in a steamer cap look like unto a real SOUL-MATE, and some: | thing in a ship diet which maketh ANY woman look like unto an A tor Hugo himself Inew not ALL the dangers of DEEP WAT Lo, Selah! For by that sign fell the EGOTIS' —-—--- 04+ Just a Glimpse Into the New York Shops vell a Heavy wt are the cute dol bisque heads the exterior, tume that carr thers da: toppers, with a small de- to draw out the Green Room are only five cents practical kitchen Glintin gs By Frank J. Wilstach granc Milk vic ttl at the pasteboard cov and a handy as w article. Glasses are so frequently chipped by coming in contact with the metal faucet pays to adjust one of the rubber | ts cushions that sell at five cents. favorite volumes can be kept to- gether on the table or desk, where they the use of a book+| orp rack, A neat one that will answer the} purpose {8 of Mission wood and can be ave handy, stampe ents. that Was RAY Mnen ered in wh eabie, They have a jeither gilt or white 4 the edgo and sell at! ‘Tiny perpetual en table cloths have | ave circular a half yards are very handso: $10 and $15 ea us vack to our great pottom squares of natural linen sell When joined to 1 slips embroid-| Small bears w re pretty as|serve as ames, guarded in shape and two) ne lavaliiere ne ) diameter, They | sign 4, ng that sell at) t | drape oline in exquis n and | yordered serims 1 head, has on yard, dainty cre tace-trimmed cos-|the popular crafts These are $12.50, | \QopEsT merit her with} ion and edged with| ()N the stage it beautiful scarfs, and not clea rs, A com-| ‘ fa wreath de- |p actor who rious shades of biu T art is often a s y effective, | Among the new novelties offered as} APPLAUSE fo favors there are pretty pl era in the form of @ cute chicken at 60 cents, ¢ card hold- om a OW, T knew a man of Babylon who fancied him N If modern ST. ANTHONY, For he could not ¢ TEMPTED to marry! mocked me, saying: v time upon ME ob thou Matchmaker; for Lam IMMUNE. Yea, 1 have flirted from Bar Harbor unto Palm Beach, yet have always GOT- TEN AWAY!" house, when it was full of damsels, and sent | i the faives! thereof. Yet he always emerged 1, with the “fishers of men,” he returned kled tie and a the Happy Days!”’ azine, Wednesday, April 19, 1911. +Se Copyright, 1011, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), Hat wal pa: Do You Krow , You Remind M@ so MUCH oF A LTT PenTy JIMMY used To BE Stuck ON , WHEN we were Ki0S, BACK in THe Ol8 DNS — HATHA! H. LuTrue mm | we WAS SURE bert cn SusIe— 19 YouR NAME susie ? NO SiR) (T Remember ,one wiGnT diam |sis TAKIN’ HER To The Siow, AND VY sAW ‘cm —HALHA! 1 SAW em’ comin’ & Hi0 BEHIND A Fence @ SOAKED Him wiTt A Rotres APPLE — Teer! | Pasted Him WITH A RiPe Tomato , THEN \ Boused wM— iow wen HLL You TARE FoR YouR, HAL AAS | Sovseo Him wit A Tin aay) Full OF WATER — & He come AT. | LLED HIM IN THe Mud & Took Lg revere AWAY FROM Hila —Ho! Ho! & THEN 1 Took susie on TO The SHOW sut—~ “tne. HAPPY DAYS! Sune! ALF- SuRE!, Harry Days! LANDED ON HIS EAR & | Babbling Bess Copyright, 1911, by The Prem Pubitahing Co, (The New York Worl!) I DON'T SEE ANY: WANTS TO. Ger THE STYLES Se SHE CAN ‘TRIM UP HER. OKD ONG (Copyright, 1011, by the Bobte Merri! Oop a SEOEDING cHAPTENs, |#0Und of a rocket! EROFES OF PRMOE NING aunts the} Jt came softly, at first, then louder, hen very loud. But it was not the hiss of fire. It was more like the hiss Tarts Opera: House | punctured backs s can be had cushic by a wee, little Hlok, are nice desk Renaissance lacs: | good favors at 7 cents. 6 of Oriental de-| ! a prime fave pendants are shown. jstriking Egyptian effects are Quite tho newest things {n tea cosies|and the price is rea a Little beauties with| The woman ¥ + adorned with costumes and sell at $1, Most elaborate|mines at 18 cents a costes, that are satin all the way th 5 have the interior of qu 3 Dolly, with the old-/tres with borde n CHAPTER XXV. material will “| The Scorpion or the Grass- | ; | (The Persian's Narrative Concluded.) gan anew e a + * © Goot-| ¢ 9° Hop, grass: | ou swear | ar to me ne to turn? festly a myth. actress who usually @ blonde, IX melodraina the f covers many a b uation is often a Ver or gilt actor for approbation of his manly tis hearing an appalling hiss througa 1} of wat sound: wsle! Gus We rushed to the tra of the water, the barrels, rel! ¢ © © Barrels! Any Yo sell—-and we went down with parche out of the o read over the floo Itself became At Shy. the open trap-door, a hiss like the first ‘The water rose in the cellar, above the powder-barrels—"Bar- throats, It rose to our mouths. And we drank. he floor of the cellar we went up the stairs i, step by step, went By Harry Palmer Can YOU Answer These Questions? Are You a New Yorker? ben What Do You Know About Your Own City? + HERD are five more questions that you, as a good New Yorker, should be able to answer. Inhabitants of smatler cities usually know the histories and salent points of those cities by heart low many New Yorkers are as well versed? ‘Try these queries? -What was the first newspaper published in New York City, and when? —What gilded statue in New York was turned into an instrument of war? ?8—-How did Columbia University receive its present name? 29—What calamity during the nineteenth century killed 4,000 New Yorkera? 30-—-What was the first recorded sate of New York City lots? to these questions will appear in Friday's Evening World. Here to last Monday's Ii % dens pear tree brought ‘by Petrus Stuyvesant from Holland and planted )by him at Third avenue and Thirteenth street stood at that corner until 1967, “—Nassau street was opened in June, 1696, YA slave market, where negroes were publicly bought and sold, was situated at the foot of Wall street, | Tracks for the world’s first horse railroad were laid on Fourth avenue I DIDN'T ‘ in 183%, / DO NOTHIN’ ‘The Sort of Dinner We Ate 300 Years Ago si HE regular march of a dinner of, roly-poly jam pué ting, with soup, fish i to-day, from hora d’ oeuvres to| and meat following. coffee, was unknown in the time| ‘There were no really set rules for the Jof Queen Elizabeth. As one writer says,| proper serving of food at suitable inter- jaccording to the Scrap Book vals, arf more often than not before | “Close study falls to reveal the exist-| the preliminary soup was introduced all ence of any principle of arrangement. | the food prepared was plied on to the You might begin upon custards and] plate of each diner, fish being the only pastry, together with kid, swan and] separate dish. jcapon, and you might wind up your] But then it frequently happened that dinner With @ concluding course of cur-|i¢ fish were to be of the meal, fish and lews and egrets, venison, plover, oxen, | fish alone—various kinds—was served. quatls, snipe and hyrchouns,” Here, for example, is a meal of 1612; A These Uttle eccentricities have not| quart of beer each, a quart of wine, salt quite died out, for in the Fen country | tish, red herring, wiite herring and @ in England {t is no uncommon thing for] dish of sprats. Another time it would the dinner to be commenced with a! be a round of beef, but no fish. for the xun-pow: Turn off the scorpion But Erik did not reply. W: nothing but the water rising half-way to our watsts! But Christine did not reply © © ® m the dark, with Christine!" Mls the we had lest our foothold ng round in the w by an Irresistible turned whioh thrust throats, raise | roared aloud, | wa feet spl t Were we to die here, drowned tn the w iter enough now! tortu 1 had r a that Erik, at the time of the rosy t 1s water enough hours of Mazenderan, had never shown (ur ier do you realize it ! place to do any | tenced to deat! now it became @ gurgling} "Christine!" cried M. de Chasny.|be dead now! jf |"Christine! The water ts up to our} i? door, All our! knees!" thirst, which vanished when the terror | now returned with the lapplog \s » heard nothing but the water rising. | jr s hands Tr o one, no one in the next room, no| y both hung to the branch of tue tron |? “aed Us and | muah pace is wo Gr She Has Changed. le through the Hotle invisible jour mouths to it! defnitely to abandon them to thetr my strength; T tried to lay} deaths, M. de Chagny and his compan- Of the walls! Oh. low those gla#s ton were saved by the sublime devo- 0 Wer whirled v reuna | ton of Christine Daas, And T had the for Ae he to aink!| Pest of the story from the lips of the ind in tho water uxe|* ° ® One last effort! *"* © A last} daroga himself, Bit cudannie’ we When I went to see him he was still ed the trunk of the 1 ¢ © % Christine! living in his litte flat in the Rue de M. de Chagny, and], je, Rugele, xuKgle!” in our! Rivoll, opposite the Tulleries, He was Guggle! Guagie!" At the hot t ; 5 1 of the dark water our ears went, | Very Ul and it required all my ardor e you would rt ‘Gugele! 4s an historian pledged to the truth to r rose wtill higher ‘And, before losing consciousness en-| persuade him to live the Incredible Can you How | tirely, I seemed to hear, between two| trakedy over again for my benefit. His branoh shaped ceil o 8 After | eel?” it must find f fhere, 1 think tM) CHAPTER XXVI. faithtul in to hin ld servant Darius showed me The ga received me at « the garden of the til had his magnificent r face looked very Barret! Any barrels to , 0, haved the whole of his Swim for you le ye] Phe End of the “Ghost's”’ oy ee we roa a 7 Anme it and amused higeelt 4 ay wal Love Story. y twisting his thumbs . above! HE previous cnapter marks the jeeves, but his mind was which escaped, | conclusion of the written n. r, and he told me his story aping through | } rative h the Persian left ect lucidity or othe I behind hi ms that, when he opened his Sturn and turn and turn | (die Notwithstanding the ho: Jeyes, the daroga found himself lying on 1 the rc and then glue of a situation s i}a M ie Chag a sofa, : i seh BW cae eet the Was rel anna After the deceptions and tiusions of the torture-chamber the precision of the details of that quiet litle middle-class room seemed to have been Invented for the express purpose of puzaling the mind of the mortal rash enough to y her absence , However, he never takes me anywhere. | stra t abode of living nights 1 Why not}1 am young and like to go to places, | n the fourth | What shall I do? | As long as you are not engaged to|! the young man there is no necessity |* the waxed ma- est of drawers, square antin ney on the backs of ve - t atten on the mantel> d « D.| ons, Go out w r young men. | 1'the harmless-looking ebony ne be 1 @ h at either end, | the what- ‘ ¢ 4 ’ ai era t th ad ed Doesn't Care for Dancing. |" ed with shells, with red ptm» \e alae rite $ th mothe pearl boats and Mie ee ° For HURL who sig her lette HL Jan e e the whole dis- an G ae A W. B." writes Jereetly lighted by a shaded lamp stands acd | I am in love with a young | ing on a small round table; this collec- t have @ ; , to know See Ryreap rer Sl tion of uxiv, peaceable, reasonable tur : } i P Re 4 dance ma ildered the Imagination. more 4 , whether a @ es r fi = und, as many of my fantastic happenings, | ; : - Ueket tan te thee he did trim little oh a nee Mae antain i sit the Perstan HM : - 4 : een Dy soar 1 Stays at Home. ; at it : oes ea ee: |‘ Not at Home. , F Pep : ‘ \ rE, W.! would go ‘ ° Pe so eurnitare®: Aine H MAN who signs his r ic oD « she does not wa A 1 oblably the your a nave | I that T have left of my poor alent A vue ditall 1 neni miaauie cider (ita For the past year @ young man gone to the dance very gladly had he > ncihenit Bansal tae dace me deal th pan ald ealteanndin’ 7 ng on me freque known! you cared 60 much about tt, AZo Bo Continued.) ee ae a a a Yea Cer Se rseremmanaatoman omen