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cmprsere era Se OTE ET The E ‘‘Them Was enin World D ily Magazine, Tuesday, April 25, 1911% the Happy Days!’’ #6 #36 By Clare Victor Dwiggins Copyright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World) Rememeen. Tae Time You carried WATER ALL DAY FOR THe LG IRCUS THeY GIVE Ce on IT Anat Rare YOU AND WENT TO Tae. Snow? BALHA SA wasnt You MA? ANd You CRIED & Tor.d ED SARIEVES 1 WAS 2 BIG PIG Nes indecd — AND He [O10 we & 4 ~ eauGnt You @& Kicwed YouR sins & MADE You SeT ON A GENT PIN @ PouRED A DIPPER oF WATER Down YOUR, Bact ~ HAL ue SAY_~ JIMMY = WAS AT em THE ——— Titty “avs ? RF ld eae! Holo iT A HetLe demi! SAL dient Rememeen Tat Five You Lent me A Few ar sna SAI-= FoR OL0 Times = et Meno ee Two MORE. Be Mane T AN ever! Seve — _y Tinsks dime! Thats Goo bef You=— “Now Always WAS AN Ast UTrLE mark! HAS y an SM. RemcmeeR Now useo To 00 You ouT OF EVERN-; Taine —VIHEN NE WAS Kis 2 COME on Down on The. Dock , ALP, & VLC Taxe Your, Prete: ' Betty Vincent’s “A Certain Party” 4 ; Railce (a Laeees Not Very Lively AS RTE 7 ) * i NZ btm A Girl’s Home. Without Its Authors. Wee id yt en | eee ene e ond or Se q Naihdiaiaine . > Ogee | On PAPA by eee . M avhaned of your home er of your pa s9 they are elmple and merely be Wy THERE COMES plain, BY CHARLES DARNTON. 1 | TE PRNciPAL. And do not feol that any one worth while witt ever Ite Bie budding youth, in other words when he was sprouting tits first and only \ SCHOOL, pee appre op aha a helhbaetbe’ @vstachs, Frank O'Malle sense of * atand even | Bussdis > 1 area the rainy Sunday test, wre ain party who is é Du moet Ro! C f, a cannot ask nake fun or the y nan at a dunce and you feet you to your home because you fear be might simplloity your feeliugs are tmworghy # man {ts not worth knowing. [f you are quite @ure any one of your acquaintances: would regard Isto tm her own right and But « certain party who ed tn pce at Wallack’s last night ts Teigh only in her hus y have heard of Mike Donlin, He uped to play cricket on aten Is! . ve w. Anyway, Mabe! Hi had both ga Irish husband aud au iriss role with reaching nee last ik with & sneer el(ies your parents or the home was ber name in the play, even if she didn't look nm tt hes aes a 3 y Kive y nit ta tar bet a ofte r ‘What I'm trying to get at, in my halting way, !s that the play started out a Pp hs eit capi bd Bald bad aed em your hospitality. esp to be Irish with {ts original author—for ©’ Malle pothing !f no : va ce Ganinia , ve ; reverence upon the real things of life. who went to work with a green color scheme in Ma But other aut " . ? veople and a piatn, gvod home are the RDAT, things. nemerous to mention on the programme last night were called tn, dieappointing result that we saw an altogether conventional “musical shoy cept for a kitchen that had @ plano inf ‘The programme mentione! “music mendously silent on th 1t should be thorough plano into a kitchen should ue Barp upon O'Malley. Gran the Authors’ Pre ng Comy Her Parents. should not ca even though 4 n you tf you Itke htm, attentions are mot rt Hood Bow GIRL who signe her letter “A. |eerious, n the kitchen, A BE." writes author who is avle ‘ GAUse T neaeo win | Wah ‘I have beon engaged to al Other Men, 1 for this reason, tf no other, let How 00 You SET HEARD HIM Z a z SAY SHE Wa A DEAR ano) % oung man for two years, but he ts MAIN who signs his letter “TRL it the play as we saw tt was written by OR eos SHE HAD BEAUTIFUL BYES | i_— V 1 é always teling me my parents ar wittes everything points to Mr. O'Malley as Have au i ANG Shae eciKe. Roses | ¢ Wy e. SIDN'T ferlor to Bis. Ile speaks un : for here at least was an idea, HER LIPS Was | Sy} DO NOTHIN table: manne indy I am in tove with @ girl, but the one and only dramatic plano ? Sree as HER LiF ‘ my mother andlz go not approve of her stands X , 40 not approve of her standing end Maveeyiina slae hadavioal tty sh by the pamelees NCE TeArcner? | <r, 4 THAT HE LOVED eae But I Wont | | fare ssabADpY:|Siadas ont te cmcrkat is PERT TEE Te aiemned like the imame'claich ght have been laughs ° { t who | know are not up to the mark. originally were reduced to amiles, A bat #he served t! . If she was there wasn't whole show, not because Miss Hite sv good things remained for Miss Hite, you would be happier} What shall I do? marry a man who 1s young lady you love her, and apabie of the unkind remarks you » her Kindly why her actions the centre of the stage and ar | stray Joke that juote, unless you can make him ne reat, caught and choked to death by the rs, 1 ecstacy of DOE: \ ¥ 5 \ ow devold of breeding and courtesy | finally resorted to “imitath ¢ ich caused George M. Cohan to turn Pranciens A OWS Bulbna ek He Is Mach Older. ‘ ad er in hi RY es, 7 GIRL who signs her letter “B®. sa H orked very hare y obviously. ‘Though she has neither He Cannot Marry Yet. iA M." writes votes, “fixger,”’ nor charm, © 1 to bear on its own aoro Wet" dance with Mr. Do: been @ home run. Alfred Kappe a to @ance well. Miss N GIRL who aligns her letter “t “A man has called on me fre- A M. G."" writes \quently and recently asked me to marry "A. yo man T know has|tilm. He ts wealthy and my parents wen calling on me about once a week, |@pprove. Hut I dislike the idea of be- 1 bometimes taking me to the theatre [ing tled down to a man twenty years m very much, but do you think} older than Iam, What shall I do?” Pehle begs aoe . 5 allow lui to continue cailing,| From the tone of your letter I gather A omarty arly as he has told me he in notpyou do not love the man of whom you “A Certain P. . It would ya a no in not by yo! iow 1n A position to marry?" peak. So tt would probably be better ‘There ls no reason why the young man if you did not marry him, have been much live Author!" | An entirely new sort of Detective From ‘‘The Achievements of Luther Trant’’, by chine’* forcen trath trom sealed lips x EDWIN BALMER and WILLIAM McHARG met hits cyes, “are Mr. (Gopyeight, 1910, by Small, Mernend & Oe) Im to escape from It. with the Ate shot him saw that the key to the grating Was) room shows tt—though a su came too late mae ; : t “a pd ai " y ough his father agd BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMPNTS ay Gees oro 6 " LCiant] "But the shells," ‘Trant eontinued; |in the lock seem not to have known about ereteen or, datecting Pe ales : rt of revolver ejects the) tiring the lamp." he anid to 1 glance In they a and I #ee only | plat muniPandion aitectactes eat me up this morning « s Be HBR ar f ® in ny are fired—ae i eBIY | plat . rar fhe hesitated, then anmweret ; uid h I I . ® flame against the wind—"An ly and collectively~""he had been she said, “Lwas his ped pie bat #) 4 ee Y ; ie Shia thing all | contiaw ok at the ice ora re Kix days. he {9 dead!" Rieter t v Trani i t niuat have been # ou started to tell us about 9 Sho took no heed of the quick ei ber i eae ta kone out this wa uit helped her. "You sald ‘Walter elf that 3 ‘ : aR Eee peated, came } but what brought him Teaity tnt Alen nad, oye) ow es man had squecsed |here? Did he come to see your"? Fiatete the, nose. As a , =e] @ erating swung back, | "No be gins pate cheeks #ud bit “couple. the | , , i aw a “af i wl sad let hinsolt |deniy burned blood red and. went white a fired somarrhere ef tn) H RIK, Who Wan SIRIGE te Hare oralne din arte i , ri pot | Ieessovered walk |aguln, a9 whe made her decision. “Tt Bee petlce ethic nowy he Hest aie was holding tht | was fearmdaudiy fear that drove tm > powder mark ‘ He pk 1 of t ‘ s tounge whi ° window, It woman, but that thirty, whose rat waa marred b) tion, Tho 5 recognition Walter Newberry Trant knelt beside the officers work- ing over the body, the blood had been ce tigi er [Silhouette Sayings r shoes and skirt ar the nelothes man ‘p | these case () By J. K. bryans}|» rant stood for qn inetant ot dying |S ofs the ahect of ton Tr sheltered #f flowing from a t d in the tom- | the shots! she caught | oo. ple, but {t had ceased to flow, A smail, | \ admirable self-control. | e He to! Ags silver-mounted automatic revolver, such | I ran over to the neigh-| 1 f place to fag had been recently widely a t t I could get no one, « 1 hide; ana I for the protection of women, la Frag (ie Peg mua . aay Sones mothe floor close by, with the shells w hare P whe Had ects Gackt nat been efected as {t was fired Pepe I was the 2 uid trust chologist straightened i after your father Wittow {o@ wae my hue I tet him im “We have come too Inte ‘ 4 4 to m hin, wine simply to tho fathe It was neces: t the p fram Trant end ° 1 ed for I wee ry, as he 5 ket here befo own the hall, then 00: . > in at once tate hi, it we woe t » patrolman » store room @end, And pataise with them “ Le doer toned md see that whe aa gratings,” the sensitive 1 ¢ a down the | a “ y, and then threw deaf - me ptain- ; the we n aphl “4 I th at first : tro sey : aiayed there th ite things " : rigger > When he woke \ : the fifth mhei! t tour; find the| put % wae eae other!" I'd never acan before, He rolled of | the couch and half hid under it ti PO pasted brown paper over (he winéow panes—there were no curtains, But Re wae afraid af, ng; and she dc nore thing too 1 she lets him have Then, with a warning glance at Trant, ‘rant, with awift epprect mould bear no more and was! 32 : * : the end of her restraint | iN FOR IT. 0 hed a litte white to think tht 18 8 litte nto to thnk this! wirg Small Boy—-We'd better be geet, one of her | ‘Trant’s lamp f wirl acy you," 5} Rome, A ite over, Mra. Newberry,” the platne psyoholo: man said, not unidndly, “and f guess Second Smet Boy—why? new that fs fon was belied ne and knew ra : yow've seen {ts best t make « clean Miret Smed Bey—I Beard decter a py the nervous pl her fingers at that, naving ere last time there ‘Did you taste that ple | made yesterday, John?” "| wonder if it’e true that the Joneses have a family skeleton!” Dreas' of it Mr Walter Newberry base mother to take pienty ef emessipe. her dreae and her puleness, which sew wea trouble I tmew thet be bed Dees “Yes, dear, | tasted It for hourei” 1 “You'd think so If you ever eaw their daughter In a bathing aultI* been mm that room quite @ welle—the Women’s Mame pa a ” _ eae . cl