The evening world. Newspaper, May 9, 1911, Page 19

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SR SE SSR AS TE a The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, May 9, 191,1- the Happy Days!’”’ “Copyright, 1014, by Tho Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Werld), (waats UNDER, ‘ |The Lio, dA 2 ‘‘Them Was UTTERFIN T BATHAS HAS CAREFUL! CAREFUL Howey, Jimmy « NE! Ait You ~ HELLO ALF, You — How ARe You: ouch! BUTTERFLY WHICH | Wish To PReseeve FoR NY COLLec- ae 3 @ TRA’ Does & caTs — HAI! HAS = Gots A Good WaT, BUT ITS Legends of Old New York By Alice Phebe Eldridge, Copyright. 111, by Tho Prem Pubdishing Co, (The New York World). NO. 1—RIP VAN WINKLE. gory of Rip Van Winkle ts the best-known of the legends of the Hudson. It has been told by Washington Irving, dramatized by Boucl- eault and acted by dear Joe Jefferson of pleasant memory. Rip was once a real person who lived in the village of Catsktll with ‘DMs shrew of a wife. A happy-go-lucky vagabond he was, tipping at the tavern with his fellow- Yoafars or strolling over the hills with his dog and gun, Tt was one September evening in 1769, as he was wandering over South Moun- tats, that he came face to face with a queer, misshapen man, dressed In an old- time costume and with a steeple hat on top of his huge, round head, while his face shone green and ghastly and the unmoving eyes glimmered through the dusk of the evening ‘The man did not apeak, but motioned to Rip to take the keg of wine he had been carrying and follow him, ‘Cheerful vagabond as he wae, Rip felt dismayed when they came to « plateau covered with men playing at bowls, all exactly like his gruesome guide, except | one, who, white-haired and cloaked, gtood apart. | ‘They offered Rip wine, which he drank, feeling his fear depart as the best axtmapps he had ever tasted put courage into his velns. ‘Then a great drowsiness overpowered him, and, laying his head on a stone, | he slept. he wun was shining brightly when he awoke. The dirs were singing, But Rip’s joints ached unmercifully, his clothes were in shreds, his gun lay a heap of rotten wood and rusted iron and a long, white beard flowed over his chest. Alarmed, he hobbled down the mountain side to seek his village. He found a bustling town instead of his quiet CatskiN hamlet; new faces met him everywhere. 7” When he asked for his old friends he was informed that most were dead and @one. His wife had broken a biood vessel in a fit of temper and hax died. ‘His eon, @ full-srown man, stood before him. "Then Rip knew what had happened to him. He had met me phantom crew @f the Half Moon. He had quaffed a cup with Henry Hudson hitnself, Such was Rip's story unt his dying day, he having found a peaceful home | IN THE FABLE, DO TO RAISE HENS ARE SOME USE IN THE WORLD AOL HERE S| WHERE T DRINK! Abs ABOUT HYDRAULIC { ENGINEER? 2 VING ! HAT? with his married daughter. And in proc ereof one can atill see by climbing the east face of South | Mountain by the old carriage road the stone on which R'p slept, hollowed slightly by his form. And one can still hear the rolling of the bowls, echoing like thunder among the mauntaine when the ghastly revellers meet once in every twenty years, offering etl to any unwary traveller a draught of their magic Hollands, Ané that wine will put the drinker into such a sound sleep that not until an- other twenty years are past and the time comes gos the crew's reunion wi! he} qwaken again. : j | The Day’s Good Stories | } And So It Goes. | Took Them at Their Word. G, WELLS, the novelist, tells a ators of 8) ge AQ NY anicin i ‘gutlomaa next to whom he. ouce as at-a| A Naataas public dinner, The conversat iq removed f had | tt, be al y Vivid tie in the front row. ‘The mal having | disarrangeg the window and brought out the | desired object, the supercilious person remarked “Rather loud, tan't it!" “Well, rather striking,” agreed the Gi @," replied tumed to Imre the chop.“ | You needn't put it tack, Good day,"—St, Paul Dewatch, acaadiibidiats Couldn’t Manage It. HE tor | A FEATURE of the new taflored poses abould be boiled at least an hour. “You ere e physician, 1 presume!" suggested the no it to meet fashion’s new requirements. skirt is the loose panel back. In the best models this tg atitched to the skirt on each side down to what 1s known as knee depth and then !t falls loosely to the end, which should be just . m of the skirt, The I! D tia “Jie, die,” wae the unexpected reply, “I am in the oud! line," —Chicagn Record Herald, fy Excused. ORD KITCHENER, at 4 dinner tn New York, | ‘We are all temperaio made up in simple lines have the col-| figure. cldedly neat effect. such Prominent role in tollettes as eason, W a fashiona ng Kown and Ungerte dress even seen with the simple tad ored sult, and ts worn oth In the morn: ing and afternoon as wall as for all eve- at home. ning occasions, anges she has| A new corset with an adjustable bon- again remodel’ Ing arrangement ts @ boon to the stout doctor had looked the patent ower edge 1! ‘mia, came ihocked wife ¢ garments. or, muilit home, I regret to say, drunk, His aid to bi + Ob, wish you would see ery morukng your husband gets @ shower eto: may” Be: pure a: Reginald, aren't you ashamed? To re nm easily be con- their extreme w ly are one yard BRSEREALLE. 2999 prpeaPRRPP Copyright, 1911, by Tho Prem Pubiisiing Co. (The New York World.) LWHY ~DOES A NEW YORK Man |WRHY-IS (TA GIRL WILL SQUEEZE] WHY= CAN A MUSICIAN Reacal WHY= WI INSIST ON HAVING HIS OYSTERS . HER FOOT INTO THESE- 1G _ SERVED BOSTON STYLE - aiid men S \\ HoT< s ° * oe | Wren) baer ANY OTHER} <*> WAYS & NY a, WHILE ABOSTON MAN Witt onty| WHEN THE SIZE OF HER FEET HAVE HIS NEW YORI STYLE? DEMANDS THESE 2 WHEN He CANT Ger A FLAT? (ee ee COMMON- ay; SENSE W, Size5 DY W.H.MURPRY 9 BPway. NYC. A PretrY UTre BoTreAFLY, EN? Ho! Ho! Hot “ia Dont Touc Ps Tre a3 You %s WELL, vene | ma How | nowoY! JT! pve CAPTURED br Ling te concen The “ou OATS» AS ' You UTTLe PINKEAD very RARE Rememser Now You VSED To ObvecT To MY KILLIN’ BIRDS Caught With the Goods & & by “Crite” I AanRnESNagACTARAAANNAAANAENapARspaNapAaapeeianinimipanenaes 2 © Just a Glimpse Into the New York Shops @ ,; Woman es well es to the many women Chio bathing suits of plain material’ who never can get @ corset to suit their In the new article the bones jar, the turnback cuffs and the cravat| can be drawn out at the bottom et will, of plaid #tlk mohatr, producing @ de-| thus making it possible to strengthen or diminish the boning of the corset by It4s many years aince the sagh played| adding to or removing the bonos as the Aividual figure may require. A flap at .pped over the open giving a smooth finish and tn no- interfering with the perfect fitting » new auto veils, especially those of on cloth, serve a double purpose, hy making them equal- rviceable as wcarts or veils They jo and two and one- One Dollar Each Paid for the Best “Whys.” WHEN THIS 15 NOT A THEN KICK WHEN THIS 15 NOT ICANT Bar ee manana coLDo? THESS Oysters — * THEY ARE NOT [iemenper NR DOG R Time, dimen , | Ted THE FIRECRACKERS To YOUR foes: wn Thi Be Mov Got MAD Aro HIT ME Yes Yes , oud PAL SATA VOIR WAT= HATHA! @ | Rieke STONED Him @ SMASHED ‘ou in THE EYe— Ho! HO! WASNT THEM THE. Yes me, WERE. moeeo! +eAPPY DAYS, aienmny 2 OW.YES ! HE DROP» PED PEBBLES (N THE PITCHER! WELL, WHAT?S THE MATTER DRINKED ALL, AW CIDAH ! half yards leng, amd have been brought out in ell prevafiing ghades and com- binationa, @ new on® being the closely woven border in stripes. ‘The new parasols have @ convenient feature which might be termed « handle i Two mall staples about seven hes apart run horlzontally into the hold the ends of an tnch wide This forma the conyentent and when bow it Is ornamental as well. ‘The incoming summer frocks show an elaborate use of lace, With the appear- laces are tn demand dowbtedly the favorite, Venise '@ un- L le) WHY- WILL A MAN SHOW TH! LAWEMAN Sites POLITENESS Toa MERE ats ™. ACQUAINTANCE = niehed with « large ance of the linen dresses the heavy Betty Vincent’s. j Advice to Lovers p ” “Marrying Him to Reform Him, Y DBAR GIRIA, do not marry some deveving that you can cure him of any of hie efter you are his wife. : If the man you tove does not care enough for POW to Gure any glaring fault he may have before marriage he i @ir Jone likely to do eo afterward t I am prompted to write these few words by « letter I Feceived this morning. In it the irl who writes me says: “I fove a man very dearly. But he drinks. When ihe has not been drinking he Is everything that @ girl could with. When he has been drinking he ts quarrelsome and dteagres- able, However, he says if I will marry him, from the day of our wedding he will never touch anorner drop, it shall I do?" I must ton this girl and ali others like her that ft {9 unfair for a man to esk 4 ist to trust 20 much where there te so much at stake, If there ts any reforth- od to be done because of Jove let It begin before marriage and not afterward, | would tntroduce me, but he /#4 mot. Would it be preper for me to ask him outright to introduce me to the youpe tady?" Ashed for an Escort, A GIRL who signs her letter “Lk. B." writes; “I went to a dinner recently, and when It came time to go home ap- | to ask your friend to introduce you to Darently No eseort hed been provided | the young lady. for me, eo I asked my host ¢o take me —_—— al home, Was thie right?’ It woukl have been better to have fone home alone, and if you felt you TH actor who thinks smal things, can't act big ones, It would be perfectly proper for you Green Room Glintings By Frank J. Wilstach were not treated courteously never to accept an invitation from the same peo- ple again. “Tried to Reform Him.’” GIRL who signs her tetter “B, E." writes: “I know @ man and Itke him, but he drinks. I have tried to reform him aa best I could, Wee it my place to do ao?” Strictly epeaking, ft ts mot your place to interfere in the man’e life wales you are engnged to Him. Yet, on the other hand, it is well to do all the good we can in thie werkt, She Kissed Another, A«" who algns hia letter “R. N. LI. the world’s @ stage, but alt te Avert are not sctote T takes a magnetic acter to get his nama on the electric align, A SarPiC sasy mee 9 Spy, Oi to the puble's businéss to scratch tt. HERE ta no use in saving theatrical programmes. You can always re- member @ good play, and you can’t épg- @et a bad one. 5 K." writes: “E wok @ young church soctable Intely, there lady to « re Pa) T 1s singular that a play which “starving to death” should eat up much money. While we were her for @ few moments and ler man, Do you think done thie ag long as it r to the sociable?" A onpat actor may be likew ft chimney, but ft t# the eritie. makes hin draw. SOME gotora bear up hereteatty, ender ‘The young lady should not have kissed you of any one elne at the sosietie He “Admires’’ Her, MAN whe signe his letter “J. M." wettes: pany N_ector without pte aout "Ge “3 greatty efimire a young Indy 1 ae quite frequently in her office; but AY scttonea “ we have never met. I epoke to @ friend PLAY te tke an artist~eeeh aeume of mie whe knows her, hoping he draw to live, The Professor’s Mystery’ we By Wells Hastings and Brian Hooker The Best and Cleverest Mystery Story of the Decade Will Begin in To-Morrow’s (Wednesday’s) EVENING WORL, Don’t Do Yourself a Bad Turn by Neglecting to Read It Can You Think of Some? Send’Em In. Your Name, Date and Address Should Accompany Each “Why” Contribution WHY- 15 A WOMAN SATISFIED Te LOOK LIKE THIS AT HOME < wets is, » WHILE SHE MUST DoLL UP LIKE THIS WHEN GOING @ HAIR ANY oD way DRESSING SACK—>

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