The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1911, Page 15

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Reflections ofa «wewe —— BACHELOR GIRL By Heien Rowland Copyright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Ce, (The New York World). OWADAYS it requires an imported husband, as well as imported hats, to give a woman a real reputation for “smartness.” The masculine heart may be an “organ,” but it ‘ould seem more like a vegetable, to judge from its senderness in the springtime and its toughness at most other times. LENROWLAND. 1; When a man begins to suspect that a gir! is in love with him he ts torn between an impulse to swell with conceit and an impulse o collapse ba fear. No man would marry a second time if he had to give references from Me former “boss.” Oh, yes, there is ‘Iwaye a key to the heart of a bachelor, but he takes reat care to keep it in the safety-deposit vault, Tt de not difficult for @ woman to keep herself beautiful enough to fascinate her husband; the difficulty consists in getting him to took at her now and then. 4 man is never as jealous as a woman, because {t's 80 hard for him to Believe that any woman who has got him could possibly want anything better. Betty Vincent’s Advice On Courtship and Marriage Y dear girls, do not make too great an effort to induce men to Ifke you if they #how quite plainly that they are not particularly attracted to you. You have no idea of the number of girls who write to me for advice, telling me that they are in love with some man ‘who does not love them; and asking me how he may be won. Only this morning I received a letter of thie kind, which Tam going to quote to you: “I have met @ man twice at dances and I have falien in love with him. I must admit he does not seem particularly interested n me. What can I do to win him?" Now, my dears, if a man !s not attracted to you, stmply because you are your own eweet self, he certainly will not be if you assume qualities you really do not possess, And certainly the average man feels no admiration for the girl who pursues him, My dear girls, just remember to let the men of your acai tance do the et, 1911, by BobbeMersii Company.) | With one accord the women in the/ well he's all bark an’ mo bite, tf they) “Then Mirlam was his wife, and) was watching me closely, as if to fat ove ina ease; T had not the courting, rN OP wane | doorways, the lounging men about the| weren't all crazy afratd together, an’ al Lady"—— tha ola vord Jo's | rellet of taking arms against my 3 Oe ee ee cote te tore| lamps and the scurrying, screaming| truer man anny day than that Mag-| “Ye sho answered, “it was Mir-| dhrunk halt the time, poor divi, an’ he|nor of any better business than to brood He Is Engaged. | Other Girls, iMate Masala hegre youngateraundeitooe cuit | Yard Mody match’ pilrnier "Hix own| Ian "hut gherdtdmot_test' my ayes | auyeopn tine tovigyyan’ ove, -m0r any temamver ating misty. the " Cy lpia: t ” ” dy"), up the Implication and began @ babel| guilty heart it ts, whisperin’ over his) Then she ‘went on h pefore Never ye mi e irs in hopeless search after some Dee rarne enna bus lettee Lh) GIRD who signs her letter “, of jocose advice and criticism in al shoulder, an’ me poor lamb that he| could speak ag Hut there mus: have been somethtng |” i HA writes: yritea: i 1 wi pd | BFain of decision; and the heat and rod | writes: from her Samford summer home dozen languages, And although I under-| married an’ murthered, and the ohild| vye seo, sir, ‘twas Ike this: When | for him to go on, - Poraistes : hurry of the city. rcke any CH T am engaged to a girl, and A young man has been court- They, #0. to « tenement stood but little of it, and was some-|av his own body on the one day! An’| Miriam died her mother's heart nearly | Refd have some affair abroad Fe) asleep and. wet to mekeie niehtaenann ghe insists upon going out to parties and | ing me for two years and recently ha nities what preoceupled with graver matters,| the poor mother they're callin’ crazy, | went with her, an’ go because the poor | !ts marringe, or not ee al . - to the theatre with other men, I have) asked me to marry him, But I fust| tind Ine drunken sey. Phes yet I was fain to dive hurriedly into the| with the soul av the daughter she| dear loved her more ¢han enough she | She hesitated, her apparent natred ot) my days ne site Tepeatedly asked her not to do this, but| heard that during our courtship he also] {j,(0f jury, wome, (atoct hol Lf’ doorway with @ heated and tingling|cudn’t let free standin’ between her an'|did not go quite casy. "Tis Ko some a strugsling wit nee Saseety, 10 e acLean was with mea & eal, she continues to do it. What can I do?" | called on other girls. What shall I do? | aud a reporter named MacLean go in search of countenance, The little room was ftself|the sunshine, Crazy she'll never be| whites, when the livin’ holds too close ly and her recove ony oar taking me with him into strange corners Explain to the young lady quite firmly| Do not let what you heard affect your | /4fUvh_ (ely to find that two detectives are alo again, save for @ dull spot upon the| until they make her eo, with their doc: | by the dead. he used to talk to her, | Fae eee eet at iast,| Of the town, and trying his best to bring y vq y 0: ect Lae Time astetes, Wie Beery | clean-scrubbed boards, and the canary| tors an’ questions an’ whispers, an’ that | an’ when the villain that let her die got | Woman in Germany,” ahe said at last.) 14 out of myself; but I could not talk that {f she cares for you enough to be- | answer to the young man. He had every GAH Gr lin ie window pause inte ourae oF aeatniteioh Relditprinein’ batons 1a ee eked fike judgments an'| reluctantly, “but T never etghtly knew| me out of mysalf; but Jcowld noe sail come your wife she must heed your|right to call on other girls while he miely,, she singing as I entered face, wit tACOd HObahey On Himi | cela ene poe woul Wa, we [about it, nor Antonio either.” Then to a oe ee vnan ceetase’ tn eurel wighes in thie respect. was not engaged to you. igor but “Shella,” 2 «ald, “I am much| She Pp breath, walking up and | head, an’ ought to ‘be take iH pore ro eat Heaike tee anld| iesonees ‘vitiated tatich of these ny 1d you won't like my new: down the room and twisting her hands. |they moved her out there in the coun- | been, ‘oMby, an I" ’ ’ ‘Well, sir, what's happened him?” she] “Sit down, Sheila," I sald, “you know! try where thed had no frinds, ant] more meself than I mean, She| tried to give. Wherever I might be to ‘ liste ae asked briefly. |this is absurd. I'm trying to get al iept her hidden as ff there was « shame | Pauied ; hing to do with the| SPPearance the sane Spartan Fox was = 5 . “called Miriam appears and asks re right,” Tanswered. “It's your| little truth about people we both care! iipon her, sure the lovin’ soul of the aoe Rote eens o at my breast—Caruce!’s story and Fashion s W hispers Co Ayeiam ste ie name of Reid's hushand, but it's nothing to be alarmed| for; and {f you may things ike that,|dead girl followed her mot ag | OUR 2 et ae es Shetla’a attempted contradiction, and the i the Caruccl affair, but gain no satis; about, nothing at all dangerous. You) how can you expect me to believe any-| said she wa y when she made them | inew ain Vou ambiguous trouble that overhung Lady must"—— ‘| a en thi ar ue my knees were trembling | yoy her dautiter's roo ny aa kept | Near are and shut meout trom heb 7 sane H the love av Go on't thry to} it upin ouse as it had been * r fared not tak re ANY of the recently imported as they are this season and advance CHAPTER XIX, break things to a peak rigat| “Murthered tt was all the sume," she in the old, an’ would sit an’ talk to her i aie aa Lina Ieana cere da Habeete not x, M ekirts are made up In gored ef-| styles state that they will again be a (Continued.) Four. 1fe's not hurt, well, he's| said sulienty, dropping back into a chatr]elere, Sure, ‘tw aul, ly, “It's weary 1 wed hed passed tneciet aii tect or with the panel front and | leading silk in the 1912 season, : i nevertheles Te reer Wate | cueaee Ue DoE um este aan tee the poor darlin’ that's dewitched| agi tutane hie marrinees sh tad had ad- back and measure about 2 1-2 yards In| The econo: 1 woman who {s hasitat- SPINK what I might of my own Hea boon] All she. leant iat goed bevend ie | Biigbane ent yey Prncule ye, but L ey filed, and she shut! ied eo much, and her denial that Mi- width, which {s an tndtcation that this|ing about ve pets need have no | side of the affair, Reld had} TRE SAL CTO AR One Renna a aan Wanna peter ion cae rene. can eee her mouth with a snap. ae eee nt Lady wove ake Sanratiaaee @ for the sea-| fears, She ci ely wear her veiled | onfessed to a personal con- | pede Tha tenia te by go down to the grave speak with the wandherin’ de A good | Would after that. T cod not move) involved In such a maze of surmise and costume throughout the fall season as cern with Carucct; he had | ea tatital Kata tls black murder tt no le priest Mrs, Tabor should have when the | : a ys AMT | Superstition, so evidently and angrily ne old-time a display gowns are made up in 2 flown into a rage upon my| spud t could she rest quiet after that, power tires her, an’ a tytn achemtin’ pe ee by Hie sp ‘irhat was all, | Dut forward a# a defense, that I could @urahs and taf surah, taf-} that asking for an explanation, and the name} anny ay my folk 4 {her life callin’ to her, ant th er by a ro that wants to put eee ee ie eee T rome to wo, “ta| Not belleve what T would of It might feta glace and wil be fash-| ‘The girl of artistic ability can now |f Miriam had stricken him like @ blow. | gily tongue wud do that dil | that wouldn't let her go, an’ had the) her a ‘Twas not much at first | ag yi Bch ih lh } Well be that Mrs. Tabor was cpprecned fonadle © er wear. They are de | turn her talents to use in decorating her |/1¢ had told me nothing at all and had | . ed short, her to see Tis no docthor she| anyho But he turned their heads onnruet’ a if 1 haajeven to ty by the situation, Rea “ . hel : made y | but a priest, an’ no medteine| with hts talk av asylums an’ horrors to . oor y | what was tye situation? If the mother's mo the p ; < up in dlack, nay ue, white and the | gown, Many of the new net and chiffon more anxious over what he} SPER TITEe Cart Ree HRP RSI PERE AGT Aaih Away: som ea Aion waeeeac |e an’ sorrow | * bereavement were at tne black and white 3 robes, as well as tunics and flouncings, | Pefused to tell, IetheR Gobi Narerihne suena: to | slama Me | fell them that made tt # | root of all, what had the family te een As the season advances fichus will be|are more or less elaborately embellished | , If '¢ had been absolutely tn the right dace ie roay aa terre rae Per fae s * a {took up my hat and atick from the] Toot yey * é ‘ I had done nothing worse than to touch talk with her lad that waa dead Is that the seoret then?” Tasked. “Ta 4), | in'tncreasing de nd. These accessories; with painted or stencilled designs In upon a grief brutally; and he would} Dr, Retd who had it done to-day. e¢ y th byre wall, an’ Father} the trouble nom in thetr fear that We will have another talk put this Or why the remaining ‘add a touch of pieturesqueness to the! either floral or geometrical figures or a] jnon cai bagel | ' 5 5 un-| Tr behind an’ sprinkled the Tabor is insane seth’ nd {closed | @aughter marry she chose’ D have said precisely what he did say if, was there, but {t was over before I un-| Pp ’ some day, Shelia,” Taaid, And losed piice bodice. They are occastonally | combination of both in contrasting de-|T had beon Justified and the had been| derstood what was going on.” [kre fy thim, the one he could see an’ | cret? What secret? There's no se-| the dour behind me. |Shetla's explanation of the first wae ab: feen on a coat, This, however, is the | signs. The outlines may be embroidered | lying, Well, Caruccl was out of reach,| “Reid? I shud ha’ known ‘twas Reld,| the one he could not see.” oret they have at all, only a wicked Ite." | es | surdly tent he lust she had height of bad tasts, since a fiohu can in sik or tinsels, thus adding to the/and Reid worse than allenced, scun he 4s, an’ smal | Who waa it thet Giear” 1 asked She was growing careful again. Tis CHAPTER XX. ain. No, there was be worn with propriety only on dresses | effectiveness. chance remained to me of an m that loved him best ever had | sharply oa it Miriam? Did Reid Hel ni) that doothes ave Mu “ ft was thes Die es ‘The midsummer styles tn hate lean|*© my problem depended upon Sheila, tay him. Now, the divll houid his dhirty | 1 ™ he sald so, or did ¢ pe a d 1. 8h ny Woah I Do Not Understand. was the Soya Ce French dressmakers are making up a| strongly to the large hat and pretty leg- |, 1 Nad no time to doubt If I should find) ttle pinch av a soul! For why shud) lie when he sald that Held was marriec a Sih On ie pra thanr et Lae kai BBO tho next few days [ this ‘ane and prestentie large quantity of series in the deap-cut | horns and chips, with the wide brims | her for her window eee Yh 0d Ue Soren oy ment i = It hia s poate talc anioiau let anaroautioun leave ry erty Tmiust have been nearer to a] of th auld find no alee varlety, which is right in line with the} rolling upward gradually at the sides,! far gue to waten the street below net! waid siavat Antonto|## if she had sald too much already,| “Shedla, moe just one ne akdown than Tt) tiye; either Mrs. Tabor was haunted by prediction that raised weaves will come | and when trimmed with a mass of roses, | turned the corner. Whan I was still says about him, and you know'— | and must weigh her words. |thing, How muc th is there {1 ever likely to be anain mediaeval ghosts, or some part of the into strong vogue with the fall season. as they usually are, they make charm- | naif way up the block sve called to me “As far ae his story go ll harm Reid told ye the truth for once,’ what your husband 8 5 All the strain and the ig 4 faiae muat be by nee Foulards have never been so popular | ing picture hats. by name, bidding me co.ne up at once.! no man,"’ she burst out, “'Pwas Antonio Hed. ‘ the says? Shejiety of the whole summer seemed to e Con Ho! You DONT NEVER, NEED WORRY ‘Bour “Cheer Up, Cuthbert What’s the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence I. Cullen. ‘Coppright, 1014, by The Prews Publishing Ce, (The New York World). HF Slough of Despond often has I been filled Int JOHN) «STOP TEASING THAT DOG! 3. Trouble had we Avoided Acting upon so First Impressions! Out of the Maze of | Spurt of Speed! our own Making! It Takes a Lot of Squails to Make a Storm! ‘There are a Lot of Self-Devised Rem- s for @ Depleted Bank Roll, but De+ pleted Health needs the Other Man's 4 qnere's aiways a YS Heap of Reserve Strength in the) Breaking Point, After one or two Turn-Downa most of us Make che Mistake of @uppoving that the World ta Upside Down! Some of us Make so Many Beginnings that we never Catoh even @ Birde-Bye View of an Ending! The Man who Sticks in the First Punch thereby Grabs the Percentaget The Only Way to Sidetrack the Goaa- dal Mongere ts to Beat Them te @e — Telling of the Straight Truth! Broad and Wide ts the Road to the Doge—but it narrows strangely when we Start Back! Some of us Foliow 40 many “DON"H” that we Never Get « Half-Newon a @ Nobody fe “ALI, IN" until the Plumed Wagon Backs up to the Curb! Some of us have the Idea that Deng Our Hest is Saying that we Are! It te Singular how Easy tt ts for ue to Suppose that no Other Lives are monot- | onows except Our Own! “Ag we Journey Through Life Lat Live by the Way" makes Dandy Baim for the Booze-Pighter! (We Knaow—or Did} The Start Helps Some—but they Don't Pay off on That! Wo don't mind Betng Touched ween we're There, but we Hate to Have "Hm Hand us that Bunk Urgent that theyre Gotng to Slip It Back to us Next Tugs day! It Takes @ Lot of Fall<Downs to ap | Capitulation! | Better to be Passed By than to be | ncneevtiiemmanl | Passed Up! UP-TO-DATE WARNING. | ‘The Maxim “silencer” evems to have been devised especially to meet the ée- sire of a Montana ranochman, ag @m- pressed in signboams over his raneh: “No Shooting Aloud”-Pverybody’s Mag- azine. | Never a Solution, but Alwaya a Sur- render, fa the Thing called The Kastest | Way! We'd have been Spared a Heap of 1ey know! she muttered. One Dollar Each Paid for the Best “Whys. Can You Think of Some? Send ’Em In. By Wells Hastings And Brian Hooker do T know edd Your Name, Date and Address Should WHY- 1S A'MAN WHO PITCHES |WHY-WILL A MAN CARRY AN | WHY~ WiLL A FELLOW TRY To WHY- DOES THIS MAN TAKE Es UMBRELLA POR SIX BALL IN GREAT DEMAND CONSECUTIVE DAYS” MANAGER —_——-% ACK Wee NSE YOUA THOUSAND Come wire vd THIS vane) ~——__. WHILE A MAN WHO PitceHEs THIS 1S: NEVER HEARD OF ? WHEN THIS HAPPENS THE FIRST DAY HE LEAVES IT AT HOME / Te) PoLLaRs CLGARS Lol YAWN TICHET [TOBACEO Copyright, 1911, by The Prew Publishing Co. (The New York World) A REST SO LIGHTLY — WHEN A MAN IN THIS CAS TAKES ARREST 50 SERiou Suut uP (ae Gor EN HE OUGHT To Ge MENDING ot Teiaty Bur uisTew YUDGE By- NIELSON COAN 450 GRAND oT vr PAmiATTAN auony. ‘To DOLLARS WORTH OP / Pays / era Accompany Each “Why” Contribution. WHY- CANT A FELLOW wWaLK A BLOCK WITHOUT TAKING WHY=- DOES A WOMAN Loos UNDER HER BED AT NIGHT ————- \l —_ GOODNESS ME f f t THovGHTL \ REARDA Bureotan UNPeR My BED GEC MYrecy MuRT ere HAVE TO Ape ii Ga WHEN HE CAN DANCE Art THE EVENING 7 : Seas Weomy BA pi TEN Mofe Extmas (ei T 16OveD Dance ¢ SLY WHEN A MAN LOOWS UNPER HIS DED IN THE MORNING = |CONounD! THAT Darn \COLcan Sutton) FOR CveR With you myname Br- AS @ MUNRO B54 AVEC BAYOnNG N. J It's Faster to Get) The Stayer doesn't need any Ble”

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