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ae OIRO PTD ARTE OE SEIRE ICT YT RCE + on The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, June 19; 1911: Copyright, 1011. by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). ES ALF, MY LIFELONG PALS Mi DEAR OLO COLLEGE Chum! Them wastae HAPPY, Z& ma DAYS! Mot Ho! Hol say!) He was STune / FoR FAIR! HAL HAS Tyee) VIN THE HAPPY PATS! WAtWAL— AND TOLD HIM A LAND CRAB LIVED Thee | AHO To Jump uP? @ DowH On THe HOLE & THE CRAB WOULD WHISTLE LIke a STEAM BOAT} Ho! HO! NOL DID You Ever SEE A LAND <—\ CRAB? y/ HATHATHA' Yee SImMmY ALWAYS HAS A Litrie PRUNE DID He ever Tew Nou AMBouT THE Time 1 made Him Fig Te = SumeLe Bees? HATHA! You see '0 FOUND q MesT, OuT in THe FIELO, & Tem 1 COAXEO Jimmy OvT 7% IT. satt AInT You ‘Tuts 15 The Last ONE WE AVE: SIR; WILt You anor, Hira YoursetF, tH THe SRC Dish? You Gee, KIDDO, ME @ Jimmy's Geen Pais EVER since WE WAS KIDS 1 Kino & Have To LOOK AFTER HIM ,You Kriow. | WALHA! HA ~~ SIMS dimnayl Suan! Wr! TuT! TT SUCH DISSIPATION ' THs WILL NEVER DO. NEVER' NEVER! - Ht DOrT Thatrne WE ‘AVE THERM) SiR, BUT ANLL hn —.~-\ 7 TT must Pe jm Temes Tinley —~ No= 1 ALAS EAT OM RAM The Trail of the Tell-Tale Letters | And, after all ts over, the words hot from the heart look very cold on paper. At the time of writing, when all seems utlful, harmonious, Interesting, the Reflections of a # # # we ——} BACHELOR GIRL By Helen Rowland neve xd By George McManus You BET? JUST WAIT UNTIL WE WOMAN I'S BETTER SUITED FoR EVERY Position YES - DOWN, WITH MAN! By Sophie Irene Loeb. OR RVERY LITTLE LETTE WE WANT OUR RIGHTS! ° Copynaut, 1414, oy 1'be tress tupusming Co. (The New Xork Word), OST of the “ways to a man's heart” turn out to WE DON'T NEED THAN : HAV! and later makes thoughts and @c- (hought of COMPLACATIONS does not M be just blind alleys, nowadays, THEIR HELP! MAN? seal tions have a con- enter, He of the first part thinks AOE. sequence plainly there ts no one quite as true and Cleopatra dissolved a pearl in wine, and since then shown, Since the TRUSTY as she of the second part, and sible CHANGE of FRELING that the human ty heir to. Go that the love and devotion and faith that seemed boundless become GROUNDLBSS. And the happy hunting ground of the PRESENT assumen the grounds for “breach of promise” of the future. When the Uitte missive of joy Is sent forth in the hove of bread east on the Waters, there is little thooght of the placid atream becoming TURBULENT and returning a stone—or a pistol shot. The “dear-darlings" and “honey bunch- nly * to whom “swect are penned often qurn out to be anything but sweet in the end. And the man who sala: “Think twice before time when we be- gan to have writ- ten language until the present day written message: have played a paramount part in existence, There are more trials and tribula- tions and = COM- PLICATIONS at- tributed to this matter of letter writing than to any other form of communica- the missive that Uncle sam for two cents Is often the VERY that the sender would give s of dollars to have returned many a man has dissolved the pearl of a woman's devo- OWLANG tion in the same sort of liquid. Mhis is the time df the year when the sca is most dangcrous—but more Of the dangers are ~aused by the moon than by the water, 4 woman sometimes remains an old maid not because she has been Cis: Gppointed in love but because she doesn't want to be. 4 man never gives the key to his heart to a woman; he waits until some Uttle thing with enough ingenuity comes along and picks the lock with a hairpin. That modern men can go on winning hearts in the sort of clothes they wear shows just how fatally fascinating they must really be. WHOM WILL love letter, the business letter | you leap once might have added: . and letter, vhink twice as long before you write In these days of fircless cookers and dystiess sweepers the only thing WE GEY To ce ee Ralpsier a thougst in Honea’. Ton, Gevlorations o-word al lacking to make a modern wife's life one sweet song appears to be @ sock writing tt {4 no longer onls* thought, ) Mouth do not cost hwif ax much trouble ese husband, a a line in a lawyer's hand, but a PROOF of a thought. 4 man can't see why G woman would rather be called “cute” than ‘ —bdut he can eastiy see why he would rather have her that way. 4 woman has written a book on Husdonde, we should say, husvunds! E you one of the many thousand New Yorkers who are saving these questions and answers as a own city? Or can you answer all of t Try these, They will be answered in Wednesday's Evening World, 156—What was Broadway's original! name? For what was Frankfort street named? Most men fancy that Dve was invented for ACim to blame his sins on. 0 ee Can YOU Answer These Questions? Are You a New Yorker? Then What Do You Know About Your Own City? over” “What Eight Million Women Want." RA Valuable pocket encyclopedia to your he questions yourself? 4 It was a little letter that made An- tony fly to Cleopatra an@ leave all, A litue letter from Gaby lost a king hie crown, The courts are working ov: time with exhibits A, B, C, ete, and letters of every day become red-letters in the course of time, Wise ts the man or woman who real- tzes that many thoughts in mind are worth one on paper, Of course, nobody in the wide, wide world ever dreams of disastrous things AT THE MOMENT of for instance, @ @o-called en- nt the annals of the court of dam are filled with documents ‘of “two souls with but @ single thought,” which Jater proves to be TWO SOULS WITH NOT A SINGL® THOUGHT, Beautiful letters are the Joys of ex- fatence iF there are no after qualms. You and I and ail of us MUST write tet. ters, but when people prove unkind “the letter that never came” is a BLESSING if tt were but known, If we would but stop and read over carefully every letter we send, the tet- ter that was WRITTEN and the letter that was SENT would be two entirely different propositions, A wi Precaution—that! It vould wave many @ heart ache and many a dollar, At any rate, the safe and sane rule 1s to know that humans are tut humans, who change and act secord- ingly. 6o that: ‘TWICE TOLD TALES ARE BETTER THAN TELL-TALE LETTERS! 157—When was the Hall of Fame opencd? Will Play" from ‘his pocket, and read cu Miss Cherry was slower to de-| hearth, ‘The stage f# all right. 1 Jove| sketch will more than Govtte what beth ARSE TEMES Gh Ghose Now York Ola i ait eee > S t to her ea. Aaeay Duckerings of hor it; but there's something else 1 love] of us earn gow when we get ehaped f ind , was America’s first World's ric IMmess “Read it again, please,” sald Miss | smooth bw and tappings on] better—thats a Mttle country home, | up. Fair held? Cherry. id her sti teeth with the end| some day, with Plymouth Rock chick-| ‘The subsequent history of “Mice Wil 159—To what nse was Madison Square formerly put? EON Auld “then she pointed out to him! of « lead pencil ahe gave out her dle- Jens and ‘lx ducke wandering around Fe Ty of all susceeatal ) 7 clearly w it could be improved by a ‘d t 160—Where were the homes of Horace Greeicy and President Buchanan? Introducing @ ‘mesenger iusend of &| "Mr. Hart,” sald she, “1 belleve your| “Now, tet me tell you, Mr. Hart, Zam |cut It, plerced it, remodelled % o } a A Romance of the Stage and of a Clash|itiisvi:'at ‘ale | mies Hn! pons to win aut.” Phat | teey” husieaae 4¢ Sou une 0 | formed surgieat operations oa, ap * Hero are the replles to | Friday's questions just before the tee, G 4 part fits me like @ shrinkable play, : opposite ware in voir Siaeed ok ae bp Rd Ferry Village’ w: give: he sane: - a E L id M Le struggling for the pistol, and by com-| fiannel after Its first tr lo it. And I believe we e 7 PASSER ORT Rete oe om HERO: early Brooklyn: enttle etween Lobe an lore or SS pletely changing the lines and business | hand laundry, 1 can 0. And there's eometting else 1 want | Fenamed tt, qave tt back the old ease, ar the £¢ streot, , of Helen Grimes et the polnt where Colonel of the Forty to way re's no nonaense in my | FeWrote St, substituted @ dagger Gee the ! ilamsburg was naned for Col, Willams, a United States army officer, Frenzied Finance. " jealousy overcomes her. Hart iment at a Little Mothers’ Bazaar. |imake-up; I'm on the level and I'm on|Distol, restored the platol—put @he who made @ survey of that section soon after the Revolution. In 1792 a New is ded to all her strictures without) And I've seen you work, 1 know what/the stage for what it paye me, just as ee on known ge York merchant named Woodhul! established a horse ferry trom e argument. She had at once put her| you can do with the other part, Butlother girls work in stores and offices, | Of condensation and ¢mprovement Manhattan, to Willlamsburs. RS Set aie Cave ARO) Desieies, Fem Oo) Fon. tho sketch's weaker points, | business ie busiiess. How much do you|{'m going to seve my money to keep ono] ‘TREY rehearaed it by the GA-Gamaiaalll Fulion Ferry was started in 1651, running boats between Fulton street, PART I. Por neretict hg ; That was her woman's intuition that) get a week for the stunt you do nowt | when I'm past doing my atunta, No | boarding-house clock in ine rarely qed point near Maiden Lane, ‘Manhattan. 6UPPOSE you know all about ler kK i he had lacked, At the end of thet “Two hundred,’ answered Hart Ol Ladies’ Home or Retroat for Im-| parlor until ts warming olick at t churel: site, st re nis on Manhattan Island, | the stag and stage people. futek fl rt donot talk Hart was will get one hundred for min prudent Actresses for me. Festa ag he pp 4 : ae n Island, ts 9 Oe vera od a ea Cherry vat's about the natu “tt want to make thie a business | time exactly « St. Mark's-in-tho- 1: eet and Second avenue You've been touched with * Feappeared in considerably le nt for a woman. partnership, Mr. Hart, with alt nonsense {click of the unloaded revolver @hat mel The first t etter men on aan vattan Island were around and by act i hod eo Hear doeq art ring the old and put a few s noleons Ore Kedtehen | Cut out of It, T'm in on it. I know some- fanitng cies Sine eae bs: fort Amsterdam near the Luitery and at Greenwich Village, tlolsma and Sila Rouge TL the pnnial flower tn ti . nder the loose brick In the old Kitchen | thing about vaudeville teame in general, | tri! a ——_-+-___ tthe Rimito| Mie Moulin Roume, And $< $$ ——————=| ut ‘this would have to be one in par-| ,Yes that was a thriller and @ pleoe Bi c ut you know the re t “ aah’ we 4 lient work, In the act @ real girls and the long-haired | po) phot but he P 1 joular. I want you to know that I'm et ee eee red eens xo for what Tecan y aubre Freyo! A ifaw of us know the reat tite of| He tous hn saw that ¢ Summer Resort Puzzles. tit ehh at {ma a carrigge Hele eam ae the stage people, If we did the profes: | 0"! OD8) Ob os ; with nigotine stains on it, | Who ts a ern Ger! O y Bate | stage that he had seen who i ! alo Bullish “4 Just a Giimpse Into sion might be more overcrowded than] \cuy to i Teen Orne By Sam Lovd. ’ fhe cashier has licked the fap Heald = oll ond teas = tt 4s, |in the sketch he had written and kept ve. See ny OE ne te Weck 4, the private secretary and conf- y a | tucl { tray of his trunk. | “ © myself for plenty of rainy | ond, the pr s ry F The New Y rik . tt Sn Tae S00 GE ReAay) Bie | eka away inthe tray of Oe tein) THIS EXCELLENT future, I'wunt son te kaog | dential prospective gon-in-law of her it (e) Ss erry wos an tion, Bob Hart Beth BA WOH 08 AYery OLD’ PORT 15 T don't know what an | father a had been roaming through the Hastern |other normal actor, grocer, newspape WITH THE looks Mke; I drink | m1 and Western circuits for four years with | 4M, professor, curb broker and fi mer COMPLIMENTS OF er spoke to a man | ranch that, Judging by the scenery, ts @ mixed-up act comprising a monologue, as @ Play tucked away somewhere aod I've | in either the Bad Landa or Amagan- e ’ al But Lod Hart's sketch was not THE PROPRIETOR. ; L t ro nd (i ivate lit ANY varieties of the blouse to| Short frills finished off with an em-| Aaatiipd to anata a. glekia ar Ha dice die got money | vings banks, sett, In I, Desmond (in pr e M be worn over the skirt are be-|broidered band {n dainty colored ef- ii | called it “Mice Will Play." He had kept | Aine: Cherry," aad Sop Hart 1 i a eee ee aru pain ing shown in the shops. These} fects are f9 cents each, om jit quiet and hidden away ever since he! mR 2 ogy aN Sy ated a Wg am cives his address as New York walsts have for some time been tr: mn huge butterfly bows, that can be er in mnore than one | Wrote it, waiting to find a partne >| se Pin my note aide euat: [Teaving you to wonder Why he comedl to win a place in fashion's faver and | p sed ready made, furnish the | house—than which no performer ever re- | fitted his conception of Helen : make-up box. Whe ied to the Bad Lands or Amagansett (as @re now belng worn in increaying num-|home milliner with a smart trimming |celved more satisfactory evidence of|And hero was Mole | OL Ache T hlwate ase || the case may be), and at the same bers. ‘ that 1s easily adjusted, In white or | 20d work, [all th BACCO A | ¢ ow on the north + | time to conjecture mildly why a catth ; sat hina’ altel tani tee thince ane A greatest tre actor can have | sprisitliness, yee: y ould w: tt vy A novel mode! in striped china silk! bla e these bows are $3.00. In ma- |, i. ts m ther aittat paevannance shar ji SECA Ja man should Weal. Bal ee a out his has the yoke and sleeves of plain chif- $3.45, Those of black velvet ara] with which all ot actors desecrate | After the over Hart found Pt mu Phare dae erate ey fon cut in one. A nurrow girdle laced | 2 loops and 4.25 for a 6-loop | the stage, In order to give himself this the manager in the box office, and got | ponmed dons “soemen cntininn “inl | nae tas to cn te ae at the front and back gives the high} pivasure he will often forsake the sun- Cherry's address. At five the next after arunieow nan the aide wh, reading | whether, we c.dmit 1} oF ROboamnaen waistline, and from underneath the} The new automobile parasol t | niest Broadway corner between Thirty-|noon he culled at the musty old house pan 9B the side pore, reading | Woe ee Cant ine ae girdle the fulness of the waist forms|movelty that is finding favor, The fourth and Forty-fourth to attend # mat-|in the West Forties and sent up his | thane inte, AertOR Tre te ee eee ® frill which fatls to just below the; handle is really a cylindrical leather | ‘Mee offering by his less gifted brothers, | professional card, ; pated in Africa, was you, Miss| ‘Dhere were only two party and @ | | One afternoon Bod Hart presented his| By daylight, in a secular shtrtwaist , D ; ohh a Bormal waist line, This watst selis/ case about two {nches in diameter into | solvent, serious, well known Vaudevillan|and plain volle skirt with her hair in “Mice Will Play.” Hart and v ' u8. se lets in unen nave |WUCH te parasol closes, Tt has a) face ut the b low window of a rival jcurbed and her Sister of Charity eves * sald Cherry. “What I'm | were the two, of course, and the halt ttractive outing waists in linen have | leather ot attraction and got bis d, h, coupon for) Winona Cherry might have been play the square neck and side opening | ried like a music roll. When closed it|an orchestra seat. ing the part of Prude Wise, the , o tO ABnee trimmed with a contrasting colored |{s about 15 tehes long and {s conven-| A, B, C and D glowed successively on deacon's daughter, in the great (un that the house was surrounded by In- Band. Pleate and small pearl buttons | tent for either carriage or automobile | the announcement oeacen ane posed written) Now Basiand drome hot 3 ‘about’ $#0|dians, and to turn d the gas fire in form further trimmifigs, They are| use, since it can be tucked away under | (ate omIvions liatctiealeilll aid bar as Pant aah ade,” Hartt al eh from the interest atone, | the afete by the MARABae's anna @.%. An additional sum of 8 cents) the cushions or anywhere. The sun-|° But when H came on, “The Mustard’ |gaid after she had’ looked over h t some of the} There was another girl in the skotehins will add the embroidered monogram | shade is of sik and is obtainable in| guddenly sat up straight. H was the ecard Cu “What did: you wish toi wn—-say, tials | & havens. pockety: Sanaa “hae on the sleeve. ]a large variety of colors, This handy| happy alphabetical prognosticator of | see me about?” \ a lor, and make] Was visiting the ranch and ae Patent leather belts with tho closing | parasol can be had at $10.50, Winona Cherry, in Character Songs and saw you work last night.” sald dani sirened Jack Valentine when he was @ ) concealed by a fat bow of the same S EEEEEISEEeeee |Impersonations. There were scarcely | Hart » written a sketch that 1 ¢ #ald Hart, “you've got the at tn low hind ave. material ave 50 cens, They are o AN EYE TO BUSINESS More than two bites to Cherry; but she |been saving up. It's for®two; anda | " idou all right, all right, anyhow poem + * oe Ton \ miutadlas hich “ delivered the merchandise tied with a/think you can @o the other part, I Chere are mighty’ few appeared on the stage only im the pl able in colors, among Ww “I saw Jones, the contractor, at! pink cord and charged to the old man's|thought I'd see you about it." mount to anything at all who couldn't] graphic state—Jack had her Saromy F@arand tans are prominent. These! cnurch,"" account, She firat showed you a de-| “Come in the parlor,” said Mie 1x themselves for the wet days to come | stuck up on the mantel of the beta.can also be used as hat bands, “ He heard that the sfreeta of the | Nalously dewy end hamy country Cherry. “I've been wishing for son 'f they'd save their money instead of Idngerie pleating in white batiate | celestial City were paved With gold basket of property daisies, thing of the sort. I think I'd like to blowing it. I'% glad you've got the cor- 4 en 4 What two Maine resorts are represented in the ploture? “Strong” end “Porter,” rect business {dea of Mt, Miss Cherry. I think the same way; and J believe thie ih or without the colored edge can 6.0 conte @ yard he wants to bid on the ngenuously that act instead of doing turns.” Cleveland Pla'n Dealer, 1 rned at Bob Hart drew bis cherished “Mice Answer to last puzzle; ~ + neem e vc gr