The evening world. Newspaper, May 3, 1911, Page 19

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ATR NEI NRT NRA OR RE ENB nos mca eine een oe The Evening World Daily Magazin “Wedne . May 3, 1911. ‘‘Them Was the Happy Days!’’ Copyright, 1911, ty Tho Prem Publicting Of (The Now Tort World.) Hol Ho! sav Time, We WENT FisHeN' OUT To Tune RUM, AROVT FOUR MILES ies ALrosT, EUS a eae YS i} Foreorran THAT TAIL NES Now Listes, ALF— cut wT THs fnoven sure . The Pubuc 1s eck @ TiRED OF SLAPSTICK Humon . ITH COARSE & Of D,We GAva & wrareo You on he WAT Home Wwe FOUND A wher G (Wwe ‘TReATeO Rouen ALL MW Le, Ant | Rememsen , BACK IN Tha OW Hero ALF! oucH! wte RIGHT A me » HOW | seo Sat ALF, We Got GRADING & HASA CAD IH: | Jian — (] DAYS, oi ' Iu ant d Town, ont HOT ORY & I / | osaRow @ | MACE ' SomeTaine To SA Tusence VEN THe YOUNG - (hinnes & To TRim You? — WATRATRA!) |\ ice you pie Car & pu THe You witge. me A Toy You — OTs we Rewer, ALE» AMO) sLAammin’ camp ARE & Tuert GO F =F ‘ Won You ARON! ne $ ) : Derrente we oun. 4 ur B® The FraRmeR 6 Bran & STEAL C66S Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” 84 What's the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence I. Cullen Copyright, 1911, by The I’rem Publishing Co. (The New York World.) . OU'VE got to Use the Old Works| Up and Says, “Pal, that's Just my | when you Start a New Life, but | Dish//" | you CAN get an Improved Modell! Let George Do It! w By George McManus Copyright, 1911, by The Pres Publishing Co. (The New York World.) Dumbwaiter Dialogues By Alma Woodward Capengdt, Whi, vy tue Wires Punuseug Vo Word to the Wise! WHAT'S Your WELL HAVE JUST 1H ‘ Ree cou ONE More! HURRY nome ORINK HEARTY! (The Dew Xorm World), says real sweet, ‘Jus’ let me have rv | little pinie elippers, hon, an’ Pit mateh ‘The base es Aerne he ent tel ‘em fo’ yo’ in stik-—dere’s nothin’ tec tor good for yuh, mah punkin’!** (Manda calla Jessaming—there te cold contempt Mr A Be ‘The Sufen Man ‘s Se!f-Marooned! There's Bvery- —-- | |e God orem} mine—Punkin—for de Lawé's thing in the Way| Whenever we're Tempted to Tell our | aap | you Dust Yourself] Troubles, we remember how we Try to ESSAMIND (anewering)—Yas—| Manda (pouting)—Dat's mah pet off after you Fall Squirm Away when the Other Feilow | Down! Pulls that Number on us! Well, an’ 80, like a big fool, Ir him de two slippers tui match. An’ de night of de ball, I set and sot, an’ dere wasn't @ enitch of dat nikgah tuh be foun'—an’ wha’ @'ye think? Jonsamine (dramattcatty)—Whet? Manda—Dat low down coon went anf wha’ yo! all want? Manda (going straight to the point)—Wha's die I y'heah ‘bout yo! takin’ up wid Chi ter Johnson? Jessamine (reeentfully) — Well, wha’ “out It? | Manda (scornfully)—Don’ yuh know I ‘There'd be Mil- Mons in an Un- guent for Ulcer- ated Consctence! ‘The Boss says that an Employee who | 1s a Good Explainer hasn't Time Really to Attend to the Job! Wo never yet Tried to String Ourself No Beacon ever | that that Little Still, Small Voice didn't ldroppat dat niggah @ week ago Tues ve tem new slippers to enudder gai Burned with the| Snicker and Inform us that our Work | day | Wot had de elk sookin's already, an’ ; Fires of Hate! was Lumpy! | | Jessamine (with sarcastic mirth)—Yo' | "¢ tol’ her he give fo’ dollars ¢o’ ‘ex! Bome of us are 9 Susceptible to the | Salve that we even Believe what our | Most Indulgent Friends say about us! — ‘ Now 'Lt Buy Usually it is the Fellow who ts Cagry- | ONE - THEN | ing @ Heavy Left-Over Package Who | tlsyieak tells us that Life is a Bunien! | co! Jessamine (exploatvely}—What! Manda (becoming tearful)—Yes—en while I wae sittin’ mabself green ta 4a face, waitin’ fo’ Gat ebony biuffer en- udder gal was Gancin’ boles in mal pink sitppera! Jessamine (slowly)—Who was é0 Manda~I don’ know, A fries’ ob tol’ me ‘bout it, but she didn’t know name. y so? 4 (getting warm)—Dat’s jus’ | what I say, woman! Ain't yo’ all got |no mo’ pride dan to go pickin’ ‘round in ash barrels fo’ peopul’s leavin's? Jensainine—Gay, dat niggah'd euttoaly bust yo’ one ef he hear yo’ call him |. vin's!* Manda (oontemptuously)—Bust noth- *'“Perhaps’ is the Unindorsed Promis- | sory Note of Hope Deferred! Gome of us Makers of Good Resolu- tlons know too much about the Reverse Engilan! Ld — Our idea of a Regular Tuner would Yi one who could Make the Head and = Our idea of the Man who Works | in’! I called him wus'n dat, befo’ I let Heart Work .in Well-Balanced Unison! | Without Hope of Gain ts the Cold Bath | |hfm go! He's wha’ de parson calls a . — Liar! | pisonous viper! Yuh know wha’ he All Aoousatory Stuff ts off with us —_ | done? peo'? Law, no, T ain't got no But I'm jus’ tellin’ yo’, woman, fo’ own good, shake dat servant ob right off de reel Jessamine (thoughtfulty)—T Sd all ts right, honey. Say, yun got (4 ‘scuse me ‘cause I'm tronin’, (Manda closes her door, Jessamine disappears for @ moment, Whee ay turns she is wrepping @ pair of when we Find that our Friend the Grouch really HAS Stomach Trouble! Ratiroad man told yesterday that the Reason Why Locomotive Engineers are) [a so Fat and Comfy-Looking 1s tha they're regular Curly Wolves for tha: Laugh thing! Jessamine—-No—what? i] Manda—I'm jus’ tellin’ yo’ dese things as a frien’; ‘cause I doh’ want yoo all to be treated like I was! Jessamine (anxiously)—Wha’ 414 he one? Manda (smoothing her dusting cap)— | Well, he was goin’ to take me to de “It's a good thing the Knocker doesn't Garry a Knife! Break, break, break, al] my Good Old Rocks, O Wheel! nMou're not expected to Laugh Loudly over a Lose-Out—but it's Just ae Well Hot to Let your Near-Friends see you Take it to Heart. Often we wish that we could Get Pullman Porters’ Ball, an’ I was gols’ to woar mah new pink grenadine an’ I worn and much soiled piak alippers in & piece of newspaper.) —— Back some of that Perfectly Good |had pink slippers to go wid it, but 1] Jessamine (softly) Destiny gets Tired of Walloping| Ttme that we used to Waste in Wait- 4idn’ have no pink stockin's ee rea PaaBe ery Rap, Bobs ing for Something to Turn Up! + Jessamine (eagerly)—Yas? ‘y Janitor, burn dis package I'm sendin’ the Chap who, after ev Manda-—An’ y'know dem cheap pink stockin's are oe doguone thin Gat Go| CoS WoL Jun’, Den See ee akin shows through an’ makes ‘em look | no one—an' dere’s @ dime on de waitah, toot ‘Jungle Tales For Children. | “That isn't noise, that's music, Mr. Parrot. | "Tam glad to know It," ead Mr. Viin’ of dusty! So, I tol’ him an’ he °) From “The Achievements of Luther Trant,” by EDWIN BALMER and WILLIAM M'H Pals begs NB morning early Jimmy Monkey said was awakened by some one sing THE AXTON LETTERS E O “ nkey | 1) “for I do not believe all [ M TAte Bone | Planners et F on aa tng wbout a} (OPM, 1019, by Small, Maynard & Co.) |some comment, but checked himself, | thinks Iam haunted, and does not dare there wrote Mr. Axton two daye ago/asked abruptty. “Ot course I tenttte? Qim et emme 1 winked at. him et, 7 sing and hastily laying aside this letter he|to embark on the ip with me, for |teking him of Beasley’a need of aasist-| “Very good, indeed,” the etri anewered,|His face wae calm end showed @& mid ‘re winked | Monkey?" SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENTS. | picked up the next one, which bore a |e believes that the Gladstone will never |ance. It could not have been Beasley.” |rhough it was taken almost immedi-|evidence of his test bitter etruggin t me; | ‘1 will ten you," vegan the bird, ‘1 1 Axtoa i» enguged to marry Ethel Wal-| Capa Town date line: reach England in safety if Tam aboard. | “And there was no one elee with Mr.|ately after the wrec at ‘hte look He picked up al} ul tail feather: th tas, At dawn ove day ® wan bras! —“Mty gtraip with Nauk vtaitor kt y after wreck for the News, I/and I am ¢lad was dus peace bs nd tie | PAG & Deautiful tail feather, 1% was the Notwe “and ra hee writing desk, y ir with my mysterious visitor: I shall discharg» him, Of course but | Axton, except his friend Lawler, who, have the photograp!: from which it waa ful, Poor Lawter! If the @ret part ef wecle AoSyect | most beautiful feather you ever aan | She ves the siar rider, |C@Me almost to @ conclusion last night, | furnish him with his transportation |you say, was drowned in @ wreck?" made at home. I had asked him for @ his life wae not all it should have tesn— ri'get ho eye | and I was eo proud of it I used to bold | Ytt fails to cavture hit. He is for except for @ careless mistake of iy | iiome and leave him to follow at bie! “No one else but Mr. Lawler, Mr.|picture of himself in my last previous as indeed he frankly told me—he etened ay by and bye | top go that every one oouid tt ; own T should have bagged him. Zen't it icmure If he seeu fit”) |ranti and Howard himself saw hiin|ietter, ws my mother had deatroyed for all in his last hour; for wnteubtofar, y ped ne Gay Je 6 toy a 1 my 18, — bewild yes, nd 4) “This ds the first time ave heard of | dead and tifled him, rou will @¢@ levery plete " t br ¥ ny " aie d One day I went to sleep in the top ofa cholo: | Hetle terrifying--he made his appearance {another man in thelr party who might |jn that 19 lever Aes intend i ane nie ata) sree the early pictures, 3 i Waldron, Lawier gave his tife of bed ang] cocoanut patm. And who should eome se Kelongs | here last night in Cape Town, thousands |: e the masquerader, Miss Wal-| ‘Tran? opened the envelope and took| rant turned to the last dette |e P window, pears! tooi ney to my tail feathe: a ¥ toner) places I had encountered him; and he ine’ Ohain to face tha winl Amadt SEA PY Be eth sen bh, ) Miss Waldro! ‘00 ~ | alread yy tree he #aW) pulled it out. I an going to get him it! tums dtiiel Mts | geeined to have no. more.diMculty In| ‘sr, Anton sneaks of him es fh! phe unfolded the Aral pase, & printed y of disaster haa come only ‘telegraph wire that binds this isolated 4. Pareot sitting on a mb and sing-| yet” 4 * writen bers lentering the house of a Cape Town cor | ios, halen gueake 6 M4 Hla PO: tense, Stopes Guy. bee gore wt bon I suppose ne ts already town to the outside world bee deem Ing for a!l he was Pohrou ghodin- never: basamnudccl: © A os to the erene Miesicus |Tespondent, Mr, Arthur Emsley, where | ier. land with Mr. Axton." ie Seis See ee eee | himself that he was laboring for three daye under @ lead ne 4 : silied . eet’ gala eluted “Axten's room aud | we are guests, than he had before tn] sygy. Me, Trant.” ated News showing four portreita| ny mysterious visitor and messages. You know then that Underneath the treo Mr. Elephant) small thing like a tail feather,” said ol had written ther sev) entering public hotela, and when dis rrp with th® caption, “Sole survivors of the 1 the fate that #0 many have teen hours out of 6t, Vincent fire wee the Slephant; “if h i xtom had his in | wey 4 "| “And thereto esent, though ||\i-fated British stem Gladstone, i } was ploking up the blades of grass one| Mr, Elephant; "if you had @ huge | tinier tAxtou had surprised tl ps he AMS PIER ee tasatorloualy nd therefore was present, fated Britis) emer suffered, including poor Lawler. Of discovered among the oango thet the @t a time, a thing which always inter-| trunk like mine you might well bo] '*uder at his sent wort sy ppt slid *'¥ Tnot mentioned, at Cairo, Calcutta and | wrecked off Cape Blanco, January %,"|eourse you will have eeon all ebout St oaptain, confident at frat that the are 4 F i ” ‘ape Town? the firwt portralt bearing the name of the ote head! ¢ ‘ qated Jimmy,’ for he could not see how| proud of tt, ° " This time, however, he took some| ‘*P i : | n in the staring headlines of some news-| would be got under control, kept a dig Elephant could get hold of «| Just then Jimmy Monkey reached out CHAPTER III. autions. He had moved my night] "Yes, Mr, Trant; but he was dismtesed | Howard Axton and showing the deter-|papor tong before this reaches you, I hie course, oe, arawied is Goa ae single blade of grass, of the window and threw @ cocoanut at wae th again at my Pp so that, with his body in shadow oe time by ars gee and {3 now, jmined, a. mrinably hand me features and ain glad that when found I waa at|ward the African shore in case of emer- " sind pd i ¥ sb e ' he could still see the contents of my {and also was, at the mysterious man's |the full lips and deep-set eyes of onee iden though aul!l unconscious, °: : ea japnmy did not let them seo him, but | Mr. Elephant and ft bit him on the writing desk, and rustling (ae; hut Ecould hear his shoulders rulv-|next appearance, in the Charing Cross| man whom tho girl had defied a ener hy es pda Gipibnd gener, Ly 8 very Daaty one Clee a Kept his eye at a hole in the window, | sensitive end of his tr nk and Mr. the pap oF At inen bing on tho wall and located him exact-|Hospital in London, He hed his leg | few survi that you were pee | nt work emong the cargo and in the walle Mr kept on singing. | Blophant howled with rage eee eas 1s 4 eee wt | 1 slipped my hand notselessly for }oroken by @ cab; and one of the doctors tthe anxiety Wallin [oF awa. on ma ASA” daskion tha itadeiaen “TE wish you Would stop that nojge,"| “Ha, hat’ laughed Mr, Parrot, “YOU apie : y revol but tt was gone. TI re Only four of us left out of that whole several milea to the north of Elep > Mr, Parrot ‘were too proud, too." it wot ‘| slight noixe T made in searching’ for ‘ $ tht Lae gage pepe 7 ies eh ans so ‘nati " ys pat Vitarmed him, and he ran. 1 rushed out “grey rhe morning |Gape Blane on & Baten, best Ose petween the root [into the hall after him, Mr, lem e i , e gh ig esd St shut, slammec jand Lawler, awakened by the breaking V 1 n Cc e n t ® S a “On the night it occurred I awakened e behind him, and e. Lcrashed the}of the glaes, had come out of the e y was hdrdly out of bed when a 90 strong a sense of something be- door open. ran across the creaking fl rooms. They had not seen him, and y Uttie man—a German trader—|ing wrong that I rose, partly dressed of the other room eve Lawler, awak-|though we searched the house he had e » tell me that more bodies had | myself, went out into the cabins ened by the s of the doors, had | disappeared as inexplicably am the two A d vice t oO I overs yeen found, and, es I have been called ret found @ wht faced steward : whisked out of bed—and « other times, spon In every instance to wld in identi-| going from door to door arousing N though many hats are seen with black alk and formed into @/into the corridor, Lawler's servant,; “Hut I have learned one thing: It is ation, I eet out with him do |passongers, Heavy emoke was billowing with ostrich trimmings, flowers Jarge choux that {s most effective @8| aroused, but stili dazed with sleep, blub-|not a turban he wears, tt 1s his coat, peach at once, It was almost impos nmin oompantonway in the Jight are now receiving the greatest|the sole trimming of the yiish hat.|bered that he had seen no one, though | Which he takes off and wraps around his No Kiss No Call, could not make you happy tf you mar- realize t this blue and ai.ver cabin lamps, and the pit‘hing ror and will probably continue to 0¢| The small hats and bonnets have|the man must have stepped over lis head to hide his face. An odd disguise ° ried @ man you 4id not love. jocean glimmering un¢ diaging gun |A coling of the vessel ehowed that aS ae? “tor the rest of| created a call for smaller hatpins and | >°dy and the possession of a coat of that sort GIRL who signe her letter “A.| 4 Fe Ri | way tho same white-frothing terr: t th had greatly increased. paaeropniar Wkaring toe Created @ call for smaller hatping and | "A dozen other eervants, sleeping be-| makes It probable he ts a European A 2) estes n Engagement Ring. | wod up all my compantona of | turned a: he season, he enowmic me tH re thelr mas doora In the corri-|I know of only two Europeans who ALAN a tett a.|! before. vit on deck, The sea wae a smother a 4 cht by A man used to call on N who signs his letter “¥. Gy! The now mode of placing the ros. |accustomed to are being replaced by th® | dor, had awakened Mkewtse, but eriod| been in Catro, Caleutta and Ca a pe sy ht al | or Dart of the bodter fount artiing 93 through which for these are {he favorite flowers, 18} modest heads that consist of a medium) out shrilly th hey had seen he same time we were=t me regular! ow he has 9 | . ; A 1 ng had already carried (io (adstone wes wagering at the tu,wire them and adjust them at sized Jowel surrounded by smaller gems, | Lawler, too, though the no! * purselves; @ guttural | Attenticns, I ¢ ot know wi unless |" @m engaged to a girl ar » the bea An ainineg of her engines fo of the crown in one or two hi Those with pearls are the favoi man's passage had brought him out n named Senultz, a fre t {8 because I would not let him kias|4he Weare the ring I gave her, A fow fund the fret wo spon was No ‘laine aa yet Was anywhere vie ano: tbe ¢ . ine eves seem to orga nt | bed, had not seen him, When Lexamin-|agent for the Nord tscher L me, Shall I write and ask him why he| evenings ago an. man Alling |t Lar Tt la ite #lde at ft volumes of amoke were, They are usually made to In-| Sleeves seem to be undergoing a sight ' re Sane: Ther Oe MAURY THANE. 18 | The elvow Jength ts still worn, [€¢ MY Writing desk T found, as betore|and @ nasal American named Walcott, | no longer comes to see me?" on her and #he allowed him to we ° ar a ramKe y cove, half from every opentng tn the fore clne out towar ne < ear th i eachos below | St Cairo, that nothing had been taken.| who travels for the Seric Medicine Co Let the young man go, if he does not |ensakement ring ali evening. I tee! | n the aand, wh waa whit the vessel, The passeugera, in ther with the foliage make a dec.dedly |but the prevailing style The literary delight of looking over|of New York. I shall keep an eye on | : Al nay, IMm ears, the socketa of hia ty Pt TO ert) iH he thr wish to call; particularly if you think hurt. Do you think Iam tco ° Ron group, were Kept effective trimming. tho elbow end {s known as the three-| your letters seems to be all that draws) both of them. ‘ , Pate eyes, And every y of hie clothing on the after deck aa far es those {n second mourning there, quarter length. There is aiso a tendency | him—of course, I am joking; for there For, in my mind at least, this affatr| he hae coased his attentions because your feelings are ely! wero filled wit ie white and os t 2m the fire, Now and then ¢ on h natural and you should ask the y« of the waves; hia! p 4 " c r|to greater width at the bottom, the) ™ be @ real reason, has come to be @ personal and bitter | of the reason you name y avon; hia 4, staring mi many beeutiful ploces of DOCK wORr | ocve. goneratly being the same| “What it is that he tn searching for, | contest between the Unknown and my- M. Indy pleage not to do euch @ thing again ended with | woud hreak through the qual and Fuck in white crepe, Collars of net why It le that he follows me, for holeeit. I ain determined not only to| A Matter of Money, P tt ta Sin te , ‘la of crepe, Jabota com-|width at top and bottom, 4 [tae A Persistent Wooer, ‘What! F % to the cabin in eearoh of @ anaes negrow bands if | has never intruded on any one eles so| know who this man ts and what !s the GIR who clane hae ¥ 2, R.” | iJ | “What! What!’ Trant alutched the |ing joved one or valuables, Lawler and paring net and the crepe are handsome | This gives the lower edge a cuFVINg | far ae I can learn, I would like to know| object of his visits, but to settle with | ho algne her letter R.”) GIRL who agne her =i letter from the desk In excitement and ned that one of us must fer ang some very protty effects in black | effect that takes the form of a slightly |—I would like to know—I would like to! hin the score which T now have against writes F.," write A yo [stared at it with eyos Mashing with ateroom for eur mon abd white crope aro being displayed in ng sleeve, Wis the introduction of | know! The native servants asked in| him. I shall shoot him next time he! “There t# @ young man about De RS Al orent eral taate Gee ant 4 Hé'eh: nd can oasily be constructed we will probably again have |@we-struck whispers whether I noticed | comes as mercilessly as I would @ rabid | thirty yeara old who has agked me to). 10. a mee Well bu tina horrible ploture, Mr, Trant,”” ce Mire , mrenope and ¢ ot ce or chiffon as aif Nis fect were turned backward; for dog; and T should have shot him this! marry him, Now, I tke him very much [Ot (ov Perwate in shuddered Oa phoate aatet | Weitee dort, nes Breer ae It soma they helteve that to be ono of| timo except for my own carelesa mistake | ag @ friend, and am at a lone to know °™ T could never care for h ble—yas, certainly," the peyoho!- | tf.) Rg eee ae eter “led to Overlald effects sin vogue the characteristics of a ghost. Bu through whitch I had let my revolver |. ms i t a h and ga I do no waonted tensely but T wae nv hd miQpery and m novel Sdeas 4o) ts vary in length from | man was flesh and blood—I am eure of| slip to the floor, where I found fy. whether or not I would be happy with | reenpors to connect our names, i Ach tha horror!’ ha. ehesiaa my life preserver I found 1t too Prepesented In tho displays, twenty-four to twenty-fve inches, Some] {teand I am bound that if he comes| “By the bya, wo sall for home~that | !!™ !f f marry him, when I merely Wk | oir gon salt {and in euch «& oondition as made fy fme that 1s extremely etmpte and |high clus# suite have the coats shorter | asain I will learn his object, for sleep | in, Par nsnnte week on tho steamer Ua He ‘a an Lytle young man, of | gona wont C(t ery: Of what, then?’ asked Cary! potnt- au, i iA wher tee to | on she rena if ons now with my pistol under my pillow, | Gladstone, but, Iam sorry to say, with- | «ood habits, end treate mo vory wall, I nd atly ever that he nimeent had or BE) wena) very attractive 1s achat of black | hen this whe ethers are considarssly at (imect shall snot" © tomy Engllch earvant, Beasley, Poor |am eure I Will never get ony One else) 70S Man calle Mat you ere 4 payohologiat had alread ‘laring himself to be a much better 4 with pen, allover, eye-| longer, but the average woman who and next ¢! sho o y * oe: . ys i. ° wet any One a ° it the psyohologiat Nad already re fay crarielé. with, on, ppee, cannot afford a mult every month or Trant, as he finished the inst words, | Heas! mysterious ocour-| that makos as much money as he does,” | home, wil prova! turned to the letter in his hand, the|#¥immer than I-—which I knew 4 @e tet embroidery, Oval pieces of the iat tor have the round, wired edges bound looked up suddenly at Miss Waldron, aa’ ences, hes been bitten with superstitious| My dear child, do not think of the| effect of ma’ the case-end forced me to wear tt, though about to ask @ question or make terror; the man is tm @ perfect fright, money, All the money tn the world ‘ess often, (Te Be Contmued) remainder of which he read with intent two, should avold extremes, and ever-increasing interest: \ ' ' « : {Th

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