The evening world. Newspaper, April 24, 1911, Page 15

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, April 24, 19117 “*‘Them Was the Happy Days!’’ * Copyright, 1011, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World.) HELLO! Jimmy. WATAASUA! HeveR Learwr To sone, )|( SAY! You NEARLY CHOMED 7 DEATH! \[ [AND You WAS sick. FOR AWEEK-\ITHAIHA! AAD MADE cAT A Joo litre cRener! DID You? «HATHA: «SAY, Jimmy, wa! WAY HAS @ Aememven tHe Time |) wen You Gor ovT You THRew Piece) OF INDIAN TURNIP A . THWART YOU DOG et Rememter ‘pow we used. To SMOXE. Lmanve You Take A CREW OF TACO /]) wet SPONGE AT ME ,heMISSEO ||| Quggeg GRAVEL IN YOUR HAIR ~ & Te Mens can? CORMSILE ,pace OF THE BARH, WHEN T]]_ swariory A THEN DRINK A Me;, & § BdsTeD You UP IH THE | Heer “you inn A MUO PUDDLE —— BAY ~ r Wwe wWAs Kids ? HAHA! Rememeer cup of SAtT” WATER =. HATHATHA! A EAR & THROW You Leal Aaald WAS HASHA! eels it lab es ; we Time 1 Pur The Aeo Pepper | H\oup of oT SALT WATER ON TOP OF IT! ]\ rape You TAKE, ANOTHE = The DANS 7 : 1m YouR CoRNSILK 2 Hol Ho! Ho! so You WouLd wr GET oni rhsctaly Ge Unni LETS. Go our On THe Rear oF The Trait ‘ z viet ALE, where wi) A P , ] we CAN TAUS (Sgn 5 SeTrea! | ] j Hea iV JN j } H { . ‘ ( } THE ELEVENTH HOUR 4, An entirely new sort, of Detective From ‘'The Achievements of Luther Trant’’, by | Story where a uilt Gauging Ma- gine! forces trath from sealed lips EDWIN BALMER and WILLIAM McHARG J ' j (Copyright, 1910, by Gmall, Maynard & On) own powers t6 apply the necromancy | the matter to be adjusted at the police, Trant. But I see I mi anxiously, knocking at the door neafest)one end apparently onto @ side porch.) revealed; but her husband caught tn a ‘ee CHAPTER I. of the new psychology to the detection | station, then swung back to receiv psychologist continued, at fret nonplused|the head’ of the stairs; and when he| Newberry, now taking the lead, hurried |the darkness at her wrist and drew her 4 | ° of crime, 5 ik name of the oer ai * jby the litte man's stare of perplexity,| received no answer, he flung the door|down the other branch’of the passage |to him, mam) N the third Sun M bh : 1 But the deticate Inst: ta of the) “Ys ‘ou are sending -| which showed no recognition of ¢helopen, ew {past a door whic a hat of , ks “ ) ps: Sas Partita Vea AE GO Welln A pontine Henke ce miblea tavoratory — the ‘ohronoscopes, 1 Ryo; | tective. Bi ert Because ne knows the |rame, and then flushing with the sudden| “Dreadful! Dreadful” he wrung fis |a kitchen, came to another turner down PF dd rigs ubnes'and ieied teenie 3 he, hy hi nh made so? © there haa = been | suspicion that followed ds, 1 down | the passage, tried It, and olled (Betas ag © idee 5 O erties ein ahatosd BMAITIy to Wee oh 1 fn ttauta as Finite’ end recorded’ wnerringly, unc| (rouble there Retoret * °° Teen * *| “Tonight when I” retumed to mylupon ‘the upper. stops aa she #aw the [freah bewsldcement ¢e find Le socked, |4f the draught to relight the lamp witch falteringly, the most secret emotions of |Tell him to hurry, I will ery and get|club at half-past ten, [ was inforr , Trant had thrust upon the table; for rg = . room empty. ‘There is something very It's never ked—never! Something | 5, c ; i upon the walks. At twenty minutes past the hour, eleet and slush /the heart and the hidden workings of|there myself before eleven.” jthat a worhan—apparentiy in great[xrong here, Mr, Trant! ‘This da the bed- {dreadful must have been happening in| (ir rychologiat hed dashed to the b ha@ both begun to freeze. the brain; the experimental tnvestiga-| He dashed the receiver back on the |anxiety—had been trying to catch meall|room of my dav in-law, Walter's |here! he wrung bie hands again| Widow which was letting in the out- \ Mr, Luther Trant, hastening on foot back to his rooms at his club from |tions of Freud and Jung, of the G nis Coat collar close again |dny; and had finally referred me to this| wife, Bhe Jd be here, at this hour! | weakly. aide storm, stared out, them closed it “1 n rea~<i " .}man and French ecientists, of Munst 1 Perea he, iver where he ad een taking ten, observed casually, a8 he ob: |Derg and others in America—nad fired | which was Just bringing another mem: |livered for me at 0 o'clock him tt belief in thi and in the club, fran ded dery ice, through which the heels of his shoes crunched at every atop while himself. Ree a eee Gare Mikal Ue) Ae lm ee | hig toes left almost no mark. y to claim @ taxicad | spe delivery letter which was de-| My eon and wife are separated and | “We must break it down then!" Trant | {Di returned to light the amp whtoh do not live together. My son, who HAs | drew the little man aad . bracing a stecep in the room, as the plaie- faring Ittle} been unprinciped and uncontroitable | himself against the opporite wall, threw |lothes man now lt the other, from his childhood up, made a climax shoulder against it once-twice, and| This room, which Mrs. Newberry had ra thin! Lime, sneffectually, till a {called the biillard room, he saw then, the life of his wite | uniformed patrolman and another man | Was now used only for storage purposes. In the face of misunderstanding and | into the stiffening {ce the chains on the| “oF oc But he noted this then only as a hindrance to hie haste He had been taking |derision, he had tried to trace the|tires of the driving wheels bit sharply; the day “off away from both his office and hia olub; but fifteen minutes be- |criminal, not by the world-old motiod | go it still jacked ten minutes of the hour, | @, I can see now that both] to his career of dissipation two months | ey ur telephone calls and note may have been|ago by t t @ hoax; but—in Heaven's name! What] because she refused—because she found | in plain clothes, coming after them with | That the occupant had taken care to | fore he had cailed up the club for the firet time that day and had learned that |of the marks he had left on things, vut|/as Trant assured himself by another |{s the matter, Mr. Newberry?” It Impossible to live longer with him. | Mra, Newberry, xdded thetr weight to| conceal himself, heavy sheets of brown | a woman—a wildly terrified and anxious woman—had been inquiring for him at |D¥ the evidences which the crim 1} quick giance st his watch, when the! «rhe two old people had taken the} It was a most painful affair; the police | Trant’s, and the door crashed open. paper pasted over the panes of all the h tter | eft on the mind of the criminal himself. | chauffeur checked the motor before the |nota between them. Now the Ittle| were even called in, We forbade Walter] A blast of air from the outside atorm | windows—including that which ‘Trant intervals during the day over the telephone, and that @ special delivery letter |" ,. Gall Hed.ee ancceaded that : i hiand av Hed ; ag a . nd so well ha given number on Ashland avenue, the her wraps only removed,|the house, So if she called to you instantly blew out both the lamp in| had found open—testified; that the occu- { from the same source had been awaiting him since Pees The Med eel tod now he couid not leave his clu even | the psychologist J dA out. had dropped, shaking and pale, into the] cause he was threatening her again, ‘Trant’s hand and another which had! pant had been well tended, a full tray suddenly stricken with @ sense of gullt and dereliction, had not waited for @jon a Sunday, without disappointing | The vacant str and the one dim |nearest chair. The little man had lost| he returned here to-night to carry out} been burning in the room. The woman |of food—practically untouched—and the = somewhere, in the great pulsating city, /iight on the fret floor of the old ‘house, ity and was shuddering in un-| his threat, then Adele—Adete was indeed and threw herself toward | stubs of at least a hundred cigarettes {| As he hurried down Michigan avenue assistant in a psychological laboratory.|@ appeal to hii for heip in troule. |toid Trant the police had not yet ar- ed fear. He seemed to shrink'l in danger fome object on the floor which the flare |fung in the fireplace made plain, { now, he was considering how affairs The very professor whom he had served | But as he turned at the corner into the | rived. a but stiffened bravely “But why should he have written mej of (he failing lights had momentarily (To Be Continued.) | had changed with him in the tast alx| had smiled amusedly, almost derisively, | entrance to the club, he put aside this! ‘Phe porticoed front and the battered hoax? 1 fear not, Mr. that note Trant returned criaply, | — months. Then he had been @ callow! when he had declared his belief in his | thought and faced the doorman. fountain with eupids, which rose ob- man gathered hiniselt “However—it we belleve the note at all \ —— <> “Ss - a she called again sotony [Securely from the tce-crusted sod of the] "This note is not from me; but it is, T|_ there is surely now no time to lose, Mt. e last time, sir, was at 9 o'clock. | narrow lawn at its side, showed an at-|must not deceive myself, ‘undoubtedly Nawber We must search the entire e ry £5 She wanted to know if you had received |iempt at fashion. In the rear, as well lfrom our son Walter—Walter Now-| Nenpert’s We must goaneh the anil B t t V in Cc e€ n t Ss Reflections of a % GB B fiiiiercsrymarey see eh a Trane could wee te in the indatince erry, “rite writing, eiough broken -| evar yeas Walter, Newberry ie not th e€ y soon as you ne in. ‘ 4 glare of tp street lamps, the bullding]yond anything? 1 ta seen from his} some other part af it { The man handed it out—a plain, coarse | ceomed to fall away dnto a single ramb- dissipations is undoubtedly his Recents ‘ envelope, with the red two-cent and the] ting story. Vat WUIGE ib GOL Tata Mt Creat You are right—quite right”? the 1 blue special delivery stamp stuck askew 7 n pattered rapidly from door to door, ‘| As the psychologist rang the dell and | n I mean, he should not be here!| Man Pattered re 4 above an uneven line of great, unstendy | was gdmitted, he mw at ones that he|There have been reasons—we have not] throwing ihe rove open to tue tmpa: characters addressing the envelop '0] nad not heen mistaken in belleving that | seen or heard of Walter for two months, | lent seruliny Of the Payehalomill; die Trant at the club, Within 4% ten nest che cab which had passed his motor only | He cannot be here now-surely he can- adele spread this wild appeal across he d come from the|not t Hate. HOw, Unlesn—-utleabed¥ A upon the upper floc Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland Advice to Lovers a tail clock | Accepting His Attentions. PARTS «co regat will decir anne - ; for the mild-eyed, white. | wife and I went to a friend's this eve- landing of tho ataire struct Y dear girls, {t 19 not fair to accept all a man \ Copyright, 1911, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York World.) Mr. vibrate at fol oa: haired dittle man, who opened the door | ning; this ts though the writer had ‘ . attentions uniess you feel you can learn to care one unknown to him—the greatest Meat bators theiban tad ecopped rapa: | iar were going out! We left at ronaly Unk Mis renee eo tor him eome day. vee had not yet taken off his overcoat, | half-past 6 and have only just returned, pt that, at the signal OST of us could endure love in a cottage; it's; possible service—to save perhaps @ ; ife—a Ife! 1 beg him to come to—— [ne had not yet te | ; he ALDBEA MOAT ane Cite I mean the sort of attentions which very plainly show la tel d ‘him, in the din ent a/Oh, it is Impossible that Walter could he et Pp ‘ M love im a city slat that oppale wa, Ashland avenue batnera ond y. [shaded lamp, ‘an TS placid, white-|have come here! But Martha, we havel ers, seeing him, atopped too, and stared sertous intentions. Of course, a sincere and deep friend- might! Waves! For iteny. |fEGeeS Tm. OO er eur faring Om ter |B0r meen Adeiet” at him with blanohed faces, while all ship between a girl and @ man, with no thought of mar- Embarking on the Sea of Matrimony wouldn't be Later ; and their gent es were so} The livid terror grew stronger on his| three Bpretienaly ly st att pects riage, ‘e quite # different matter. In that case there are “a fF AP ifn Id |rosy, simple fa he turned his} for some sound which m y “ q { such @ perilous risk if only we could take a return| sell you It may be worge than wie. [forrest ree re now meld |IEes ee we Oe Me Burned fo Mie cee's fuifiment. SICA Gneccatnrad a itl eee ikiente tei ties 4 ticket along with us. se eae ae numan—help me! [between his fingera in his pocket, that] "We have not aren Adele, Martha, And boarvaly srad Che Meat Geen aro he with her; who knows his flowers and theatre parties age { . if naetes he hesitated bef 9 he asked his ques-|since we came tn! of the r ceased to resound in tii y | You will be expected toni ‘And this gentleman tells us that a hall when suddenly, 8 and with ae her in the hope bd winning her affection, there t@ 4 The average man ts #0 busy backing away from the girls he ought to) wo cnotogiat w “Ig W, Newverry here?” woman in great trouble Was fending for Olt ollier warning, @ revolver shot rank exchange 1s not even, T mean, unless the ett really feels { Ny dacks right into the net of the’ one woman under| awit dy twenty-tive| ‘I am. the Rev. Wesly Newberry,” | him Walter had been here—be| out, followed so swiftly by three oth jown in her own heart that some day she rn (marry that he usually 9) t swittly. ile already twen' tHe Nttle man answered, “I am. no latr But come—|ers that the four ts rang almost care for the man as he wishes her to, 4 Heaven that he ought not to marry. Bh allay exprossed by the] longer in the active service of the Lord, | let us As one through the ailent house, The Of course, I quite realize @ «irl cannot tell a man she does not love &tm ] —_— writing Itself, the Grokon sentences, the| but if it ts cessity| He trad turned, with no further word | ttle woman scream 1 and seleo LE lieniit he ase: ner dtl @hu doen Be Gielen eatiee ofa oe Min Acuiene ome i 5 " 1 "i ed app a I cam of explanation, and patte excitedly {Husband's arm, His ha in turn, hung | 5, Never fancy that a man ts serious until he begins to act foolsh, reiterated app <0, no!" ‘Trant checked him, ‘I[to the etaire, followed by lis wife and| upon Trant. ‘The psychologist, turning | NOt allow him to think by accepting ail he has to offer that ste cares for fim 3 a times in the few have not come to ask your service as| 7: his head to be surer of the direction |More than she does, ‘A man is like a motor-car which always balks on the trolley tracks) word eleven—which minister, Mr. Newberry, Iam Luthe’ the sound, for an inst nt more stared Adele!" the old man cried ae Indecisively; for though the sh ond rune at top speed downhill; a wife is the brake that prevents him from| that hour as thy “5 plainly inside the house, th Asked Him to Call. ers RTE oeyaias ie en going to destruction. which were the same as those on the made it impossible to locate them ex GIRL who signa her letter “A.N." {1 apeak to him about this? rere envelope, confirmed the psychologist’s actly. writes: Doubtless the young man only feels : - “TL have met a young man sev-|that vou knw and like him well enough f fenazatencss, star eral times and he seems to ike me. My|to enjoy his mustc with him. He must The Hedgeville Editor By John L. Hobble sstaranit e'usuials Guster ice |tiatomange aa aus reoney Tesi] Dee geen oe hae Fr sounds, him to call upon me in my home, Was Co, (The New York World), The W nw aad Slane first Imp The woman who clings toa man after love is dead has the same creepy) rr rene ee en ine effect on him as a hair that clings to wet fingrs and can't be shaken Off.|\ spite the avoo thet, fea Navan wits sion that the note wi tne ae ‘A sweet, old-fashioned flirtation 48 no more alluring to a man nowada ‘on the phone? “Yes, he re yt" 1011, by The Press Publishin or ran to seize the 01 ” N | than @ game of tit-tat-to or a chocolate fudge party. | Yes, sir; and she seemed a lady, 4 Covrriett 7 re ante Uttlo minister Fan to segs the this the correct thing to do MAN who signs hie letter “J, 4, TTrant hastily, pleked up th phone Tas Aus GSEREEA MORO GLAM “A a FENIO A RBRAUAS TUN PLLETY: CTE Ea ate ward the rear | Under the olrcumstancen It was quite M." writes: i akties nugevity ie imephans y 3 of the ho 1 wom ed ae { ‘t blind; (t is only near-sighted; and after marriage we get find Tolle Btation? : ( man that any officer! nigh all chil them; but at that instant the doorbell [Correct for you to ask the young man Recently I became acquatnted Love ten't blind; tt is only 1 ny) incu ine older Giaanen ! ought to feel justified in arresting with ae rang furiously and the woman stepped | to eall upon you. with a young lady and she asked me to enough to see all one another's defects without the aid of glasses. trol t cause. ON'T stumble on a obstickle; ktek | in « confusion, ‘The pryeholo- a call on her, I am going to do #0 amd close enoug! dill eg a eee Pee Ve aie |b YanWA dagitsth dara tint pushed her huaband on, however: | d1@ Plays the Plano, would Ske to eak her 40 @0 és. the ene yuble ts, bi ! i 3 Y + of - and taking the lamp from the elder GIRL who signs her letter "C. RB," | theatre with me, Shall. T call When a girl refuses a man his greatest emotion ts not disappointment, | the troulie ts hut 1 und HI6 town can now boast of NOLEN ois hat Heinaven Mate eRe Poe ey Gta | EAs win shane fae Latter salts, NAG came ae Pete ai tea Ifo @ fair lawyer—he is 4 blond, OLD . ene aking hand, he now led A ‘ Dut astonishment that she should be so blind to her own luck. want to have help at hand SRE about his ane because he| ners Into the anesaminy Goalics wnlch "\ young man has called on mel I think tt would bétter Jf you did eal! pata bg Fag Poor kis Bea Pane anachaal ECK HENDERSON says that the| has noticed that ive to be Ml tore he foupe that the j [steadily for about a year, He used tolonce or twice before asking the young The winner at love or poker is the one who knows when to quit. against the other. while he walted for population of the world is go\tng! greater age ty parsage into which Mey 1 cure @ great deal for me, but now when lady to accompany you to the theatre, pannnnnnn AAA AAA AAA AAA AAAAAAANAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAA AAA AANA NNN AARP AAA AAA AAPA ALAA PAL APPA AAALAC) One Dollar Each Paid for the Best “Whys.” Can You Think of Some? Send’Em In. WwW h y —? : ? : ? t : ? : 4 ? q ? ? ? ? ‘a vw Figs Name, Date ant havens Should Accompany Each “Why” Contribution Copyright, 1011, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World.) WHY- WILLA FELLOW SE A WHY- WILL THIS WOMAN Weam | WHY- WILLA MAN TRY To Do WHY- WILL A LOBBYIST Try WHY-15 THIS FELLOW TRYING WHy- Doss 4 O55 HIS WIEE- ype as BOOK AHERE LINSsIST ON (02) YOUR WEARIN® ly \ & DIFFERENT) HAT -— 4 ‘Ss fe -WHEN HE DOESNT LIKE To Boss THE COOK, 7 Dey LIKE To NOK ICANT, TIGHT WAD HER SKIRT So Pog TO BREAKIN TO UNTIE & KNOT- AFFORD In THE am He = KE- Marines Aim. or te Sr —_ —-B MONEY Se 1 ATH! o wet | | enate i‘ ry) fa THIS— x tN \ \TaH YA) . =. ye é peed (Rotten ) WHEN HE HAS A DETTER VOICE ~ FOR THis- ( “hk Maa €: A>) WHEN HE OUGHT To Be BREAWING WHILE THIS ONE WeaRS HERS so LONG ? \ WHILE THIS FELLOW ist SYRE iit TEACH YA To KNOW wHO 3 To TE ONE?

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