The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1911, Page 17

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The Evening World =m we Daily Magazine, Sm Um ave waa m Sa . «wea Hol Ho! cam see You Yet! | GT You in The swing & GOT You Gon’ AWAY ve &— BING ! DoW swe come t Hara: BROKE YouR WAST, Remerwer? Yo! Ao vol DonT Thal Remo You of Tue wat \ vseo % Oo Yu, Brck in THE OLD Oats , Imm ? Recotect Tne Time | Fixeo THe swine Howoy Juamy! Howl, Howov! Hatwa! Tanin? 9 iT EASY in Tue SHADES He! Bat = Jost As LAZY As You ins WAS » AMT Yes mY oud chum = MY DEAR, Ovo sibel Panter! | Ther Was The. HAPPY DANS ! — ——. > CLIMBED THe OLD waLnuT TRACE WHERE The SWING WAS » AND SAWEO THE LIMB =MEAALY In Two q THEN -HA'HATHA' Then 1 AVATEO You uP — hat Constitutes ° Marital Jealousy ? Betty Vincent’s Advice On Courtship and Marriage 4 \ right, 1011, by The Pree soe oun atari scrape : POUF-mMAn! Youre our, Love Versas Money. ; wor yet u 0 s 1O- © Sophie Irene Loeb. Fors’ incr women be thinks she has ' See OS ie Y doar girir, do not allow yourselves to be interested tm O wile should be peeved at the UNJUST complaint in her action. IN MY M @ man merely because he happens to have meney famillarities of her husband Whether he t# right or wrong te a SS) AIRSHIP enough to take you to the theatre or on picnics or ex- with other women #0 long as matter to be decided later, However, curation in the summer time, od he sticks to the one thing is certain. The work of the If you do oare for a man do youresif and him the justice plural and doesn't green-eyed monster is ever on the rl fe to Itke him for his character and for what he really is-mot centre his atten- ALMRT for trouble. et =| for what he can give you. tione on any one And if all could be summed up as to y) (A w T am well aware that thie ts the time of rear when every woman." JUST WHAT constitutes this envious — young irl in the city who hae to work for her living when Such is the code attribute {t would solve the Alpha and = evening comes longs fot a bit of galety. Now fe the time of ethics of a New Omega of all the marital troubles. when the man who has most money to spend on “roller coast- Yorker whose wife. Is a woman JUSTIFIED In being Je: verry 4ke ere” and “ico cream canes" becomes suddenly very popular 18 wulng for sepa-|ous if her husband pay but the forma’ Yinka among the girls, ration, The self- attentions to other women? Yet, often, | _ Hut, my dears, do not neglect the modest, kindly chap who has little more to same wife alleges very often, a man may even intend to | eve you than kindness, After all, the spendthrift, young man will sooner or later that her husband | be polite ONLY, and thia is miscon- aulogtance; some other girl wil be eating the foe cream sodas he has openly @dmitted strued by my bighly strung, senaitive and even boasted sister, the wife. | Best cling to the young man who knowe what tea! friendshtp means, even if of other women, This is unwarranted scan and 4 | he dora not know how real money looks. friends, but told UNFAIR, We are living in a work | . ere was no occasion for Jealousy, where we come in daily contact with \4 Lovers’ Quarrel. Thin Shirt waists. there was NO PARTICULAR the men and women who create a ATRL who signs her letter “OG. M.” « but @ number. Evidently this world and we oe | soroet Lge | weites: ASS wrt ber, er goes on the theory that “there is fellow men and fellow women A Vs z fi “Tam in love with a young man “TI am engaged to be married. Gade euirabers.” GENERAL SENSE. This should not | )F YOU WANT REAL) o- [and he is away on @ business trip. The|I am @ sten her. flance has ording to him, he was not over- | be CONTORTED to the point of calalns SPORT, BILL- AN G-O- D evening before he left we wont tor 6| reqnesied me not to wear low-necked ping any bonds as long as the bonda | disaster where no harm ts INTE) tah AIR- walk and we had a Uttle quarrel, but | and short sleeved shirtwaiste down- ne—in fact, they were| It is absurd for any woman to think not a serious one. Now he has not writ: | town. Is he rather prudish or is he | aching that his wife now | that in this twentieth century, when the ten me since he bas been away. What | right?’ lear away from them, | highways and bywaye of existence are do you think?" Your flance is sight. Tatlored shirt- I think the young man ts paying too | walete are correct for « business wom- much attention to a trifle, and when he | an. gots home again I should tell him ao. beast x capimmenece | j | He Does Not Write. The Perilous Rat. ; ‘ 4H chief officer of the Vienna iA GIRL who ane her letter "F. sanitary board has sent @ com- 6." writes mun mayor ' “T am engaged to be married | nis sadn ‘eee Pray and my flance travels a great part of | pingue which te raging furiously in tho time, While he de away on bust: | some parte of the world and “whiel: henn tripe he does not write me Very | hag for its most industrious and euc- atten you think he cares ¢or Me? | cessful partner the rat.” He urges the He seems to when he ts» with me. Necessity for systematic warfare on the ProbaMy your flance ta only very | pest, particularly the ship ret, whiok ts ‘musy when he is away from home, Ut easily the source of disease most to de doubtediy he loves you or he would not | ¢, ‘ed. Once on shore, these infected | wish to marry you. Juat remember ‘ats, with their complement of @eas, { | rat, ean soon do much harm, | qiied with women, that the man In the | case must put a wall of reserve around him and not exchange the commonest | kind of courtesies or pleas:ntries in | the every day course of events. This !s AGAINST all human nature. It ts not fair, And a wife who t SO exacting loses out in such cases. But, on the other hand, the man in the case has his obligations in which | he must be EQUALLY broad. No man | who allows himself to de interested in a matter of fact, in the matter of sy, which is the cause of 9 per of the cases before the divorce , where the woman wants “to and to hold until death do then ft is RARE that she has not JUST grounds, much has been sald about how to P a husband in such cases ‘There ever-present other side. As @ of truth, peopie do not get up morning, get down to the break- table and in the course of talk Im au HunKey! WASN'T 17 GREAT! one or even MANY women (as the case above) can expect to retain the wholly beautiful love of the wife. That is ALSO beyond human nature. No wom- qormatown @5d get: dlyorce an WHO CARBS oan encompass that they will tolerate and compromise for jong. And no man who loves his Jole and threaten and suffer long, | wite can do eo, either, mark you! before the matter is finally reached — People more often DRIFT Into these courts, All of this CONTRARY raining this morning. T guess “ conditions against their own bdetter| — + ~ ane Feat Se vee ee aap et neaiie hie ts ‘ the fact that #0 many separations j,agment and then find the answer in| \%aannnc : gous’ the law. course there {8 the occasional) while no codes or rules or laws can iH s 4 Greatest, Summer B E. Philli n BLISH one who discovers a quarrel) govern any of these things, after all It e ovin inger Novel of the Year ° Oo heim nding the coffee cold and from /is a matter for the FITNESS OF arises a molehtiil that later be-| ‘p1INGS, It must be decided by the in- Leeann” : & burning volcano of contention | dividual. oes izger way. These cases are not as Ae | It resolves Itself into the drawing of ea" “Bah! she answered. “Why should) prepared to do me susti Y h | (Copyright, 1911, by Little, Brown & Oo.) But al weak ti ‘ou | features, Around her neck she wore @| know, and T was tir \stioe, ‘ou look mit as one thinks, | ines WITHIN one’s self. The man ii a re. Crea th yeu found jas rf of brilliant red, the ends of which| “You have been spending your time] you and T play with words? We know /at me through Rochester's eyes, id defenses for divorce are ag nu-| who OVERSTEPS those ines DOES| SYNOPSIS OF PRECHPING CHAPTERS. | Gooaby, ittle’ girl © fastened with a great topaz, alone?” one another for what we are, Give me! T » quit ¢ that all his days _ as the quarrels, petty oF other-| NUT recognize the fitness of thingy | 4, roi ina lite ‘mulpus We weinical gourd | She Would have called him back, but ton bent over her affectionately. | “Nol he anawered, with scarcely a )your hands == =) | Rochester will belleve that I am more | that make them, | that in reality makes him ft and eo he| cwintry gentieman named Henry Rochester he had no {dea of lending himself to| He Kissed her upon the forehead, and] second’s henttation. “I have been once! He held them out | She took them | or jess of @ cbariatan. a when jealousy holds sway there) becomes the misfit in the marital arena. ist anything so inartistle. With head | remained with his arm resting upon or twice to Beauleys eb Your paper was very wonderful, Mr. ” . 4 z _ re thrown back, he left the footpath and | her ulder, She did not return his To see your fri Henry Rochester ' in Suton,” she said slowly, “I am con- tragedy that perchance even as) ‘The green-eyed monster is alw { "Kiss me!’ she commanded, a caso MIGHT HAVE BEBN| th “yt 5 4 climbed the hill round which they had in any way, T suppose 1 Yee tg at once. “Then she thrust) Yiiced that Mr. Rochester would have lo ghlliee - the Job and often consumes where there | siter this Beton § been walking. Not once did he look you've come back,” he said,| Saton's fa a Ho obeyed at o {admitted that himself if he had been TED to the resulting good of all is little or no need, But the most tm-| jdchester 1 marmalsing to dinser | behind, “Not once did ho turn his head | speaking with a siarpness which would| “No!” he answered. “C would not|himaway. | fatal s ned, portant of all is for each: tons Ale af matory, fascinates the arner guests 1 tilt he stood on the top of the rock-| have been unpleasant but for the| move a step to see him. I hate him, gow said “It te well that we| “He might,” Baton sald. “He might this man does not agree that he) RDASON, AND DRIFT NOT INTO] ism, Ho attracts Lois Champneys, & pretty pro-| strewn eminence, his figure clearly out-| slight foreign accent and T think he knows it.” | torn ites toxether. 1| have admitted that much, with a super- tus wife. He may even| UNNECESSARY CAUSES FOR JBAL-| \ Site 'on the Rocheuter estate: Thats heat | lined against bine sky, Then he} “An you see,” he anawered. ‘I left} “Who were the ladies of the party?” | should somelinin oe alee vote re my |cillous emile and a litte shrug of thew TER than any one in the | OUSY fin ‘elderly. withered woman whom no straightened himeelf and turned round, | iis atiernoon and came atralght here.” |the woman asked. "Their names one) Niall le shoulders, Rochester 1s a clever man, 4 ia ' He down for the season. | Va thinking all the time how wonderfully | That woman Helga has been down | by one, mind. Hegin with the eldes pte you wi” Go aid, with|I Delleve, Hut he lo abeclocery taurine comes” a quest effective his prods fnust seem in that i there, What did she want?’ she de-| “lady Penarvon leecre: satlafaction ‘There ts A belt of prejudice around him, © - “ Salve Loninrtiss’ toe fasie pare wave oom vat hy HF eho shows Have the | manded ta gee ohe ead, “Why not? she declared. “Y never|to the hardening of which centuries @ ¢ ero. gilt sl Bho did look, She wan atanding very | Siton strugged hie shoulders slightly, | 10" had a son, but I'm foolisn enodgh to | have come and gone. You are not, you & 8 ge Ss ut °o ashion cannot quit the cire nearly where he had left her. She was|{nd turning away, fetched a chair) iit Om ag are for you quite as much as I could | cannot be like that," he continued with 4 Baton’ gree a talk 0 tem, dit waving her handkerchief, beckoning | W!ich he brought olose to her side, wy, ei the w a ankea for any child of my own. Go and get | convictio There ts truth in these # ? +t fam lives ot “tom almogttt once’rjs| him to eome down, Ho raived his hand |“! 4m afraid,” he anid bluntly, | ieee ae 2s rendy. We dine at 7.—No! oome back.” | things. I am not an ianorant mounte- ; SFU! c jeasure- dead, A. 'few days rd Seton Tat, f farewell, | "he came to seg me. | She placed her long, clawiike fingers; bank, posing as @ Messiah of science, « REPUL atudlea and monmure: _pratielytow, etuceted saan. en Toman | cedetiuay ant mre to her, abave nie pend ty though tn farewell. |e rhe woman'e eyes fiashed. | lupon hia shouldere, and kissed him on| Look at the men and women who Beaches CiRIUCIKY BAe Stream F | 94. Early. Or: the: Ganeeut, ot -Oty CHAPTER IX. he wee gaits eure that he wae out of] Gtr Oot Gen and: ond neld i be | “A Votimm Pong ris ay res society “Seaaeat ey tie,” The, Sea , rt! : é p . sight he took his cigarette case from| Saton d Be | ee 4 the arms, as though there was some-| They understand ttle ey aro © fh in physical proportions, such as| What with steady epread of regular (Continued.) his pocket and began to smoke! tween his, It was dry and withered, a tee also,* he continued, ‘my | {ing elee she would have eald—her lips | only eager to seo a little further ‘| welght, and chest girth, t# much | vacations and country or euburban % but the .nalle were exquisitely man! ei ° + | a little parted, her eyes brilliant. through the shadows, I do not ask you # ban formerly supposed, homes and walking clubs and golf and | ¢ A Sentimental Talk. CHAPT ER X. cured, and the fingers were aflame with |omteas at iy iota Madame | ,.20 and get ready gue anid abruptly. |to become a convert, I ask you only WILL answer you frank}; / . Jew BY pha ty q °| “Look your prettiest. ou have &/to believe that I speak of th: i A of reaching, as was at one | gardens and automobiling and travel of oF br “ h ” | * oak 0 @ things in & ? . ve : “ “ ust declared,’ "Did she f | 7 ateee A dently stated, our full height | all sorts, those who would have been she said. ‘Yes, they have The Scene Changes. q Peer Rechieal’ De gold,” rah ea a eNot with me, at any rete" @aton an- | mand? to make friends to-night. which I have faith, " een, our full strength at twenty- | considered old once are now only seven- meant @omething to me! Rear aaet ite OS. | remember that when ne tn area SS reangpicgmanl 1 am quite sure that you do.” she » ee aust Susan SYierraniz: | GONE Geel Ve near mak Fa a And yet listen. Tam going PFOA haa couniry an ths kendan sealing We heae from You! tian: experiesced, Madera re: | CHAPTER XI. newered, with & marked accene of 2 at a Not only is there no defin riod to @ay something unkind dQ aigl Pts mr a af r the | marked. aps too good @ judge of yy Gordiality in her tone, leve me, it . aia fomiter of tect we eR Re Tare Ba ie Se 106 | There is sometiung—f don't know what at St. Pancras soon after 5,| Sho was ilnd ty me, and wae fF ar sie A Busy Evening. | was not from any distrust of that sort we slowly, It le trum in al fr ne aila at Begin bur tha ft fa—between us, Which troubles me and drove at once to a large, | means wh a etm afraid, he| ‘lady Marra HH conversazions was, tn tts | that IT perhaps looked so strangely at , pepects until Marie hye tye apes bie po mae gis viene le Oh, I know that you are much cleverer Toomy house on the north Wty Rneuaney lw that Ewan no | "A. very. beautiful woman, T have way, @ brilliant gathering, | You When Ft Reis We You muat even forty years of age, says | no perc *| than otner men, and I would not have| site of Regent'a Park. ile was admit- hace ied is Madame remarked "A There were present acien-|Temember that tt ts @ very short tim pods Hutchinson in Hampton'a|celerated or start to progress at @| you different! Yet thera ia something | ted by a trim parl M in those days, to nave found 1 enum since our last meeting. One does not : + ed Di; Parlormatd-—Parking had|any one who was kind and talked} believe, Also, € presum tists, men of letters, artin J e. more rapid rate than before, Would you be very angry, I won-| been left behind to auperintend the re-| ietentis to me that T may have tr with a very fair aprinkliag| (en come face to face with @ tragedy ivi healthful, active, happy| In fact, the extraordinary paradox {f 1 told the truth?’ i page y . not kind of you," Baton pro- | aan Itke that 4 ing a hi ” Joi" om moval from Blackh ‘8 Nest--and he} per here has been a Mttle t 4 ety people, always anxious to] vy, ” ‘ “ It our Interesis| exists, that what we term old age is of” he assured her, “Go on, ‘ wore atayting tr You are right,” he answered, “It keeping Up ai ow . tina ah ittarie’ eile aa ane meee, | plMeaa!! found himself asking his first queatto oor twice wince, T have tried to, Cine has to make. onenolt | 2080rD any new sensation. One saw/was awful. Yet you saw how they.» | grow and develop and adjust | the time of lite if PS eH ie fast sometime she continued,| With & certain amount of temerity, | pleasant and friendly with her, Shey lle lime ole |there among the white-hatred men, | drove me on. { spoke what I felt and” and feel that we are growing | ing old least rapidly. {aa though I could not trust you. ‘Madam 18 In? he inquired seeme—forgive ma if it sounds con. | ik ree tn the |2assing backward and forward or talk-| knew, It is not often that those things We are one day suddenly dead, | The only thing that makes it appear) Tiere, don't be angry,” she went on,| “Madam {# in the drawing-room, snes 0. w a een. isang ae fixing her |. together tn ifttle knots, professors} come to one, but that there was death © | it ever realizing in any distress: | otherwise 1s that we pave ir shane laying her fingers on his arm. °F know the maid answered. ie the old Indy declare brilliant eyes upon hia face. “Home one Whose names were famouse throughou:, in the room thet night 1 knew as surely painful way that we are growing | growing old all our lives long and the| how horrid it sounds, but it ia there! “alone?" meten ewked, jshall go ae as y coat mind thane Kurope. as I am aitting with you here now. © | thousand imperceptible accumulations |in my heart, and tt I@ hecause I would) gin Qiong, aire at gang hee mye. de bared, re Lord’ Guerdont” @aton| A very great many indeed brought | They koaded me on to speak of It, a 4 ‘ one quite out of | have mounted to a pitch which we oan| like to believe, tt 1s because To want) ot sev} 2 ore ‘6 AP BABA Rently, OF Her Ie Saton up to Pauline with # littl word) I could not help tt * ah age Dee gone. recomnise, there to be nothing hotwoen ua of dis], OAUN atcunded the stair and enter may Ht en array Sie Teele ere” he sald, nodding. | of explana It was very terrible and very won.) | trust, that have told your | arat floor, unannounced. At the furth ee women lanka ob Dimiand # er he-dlt he’ recognize | “Tam sura!” ne anid to, her—ahe was derfuli” she aald, looking at jbim with 5 hey walked slowly on, side by side, p ” © par a : * oldest friends"that you will’ troubled eyes, “They say that Lady ef. | His face was turned @ little from hers. | end of the apartment @ woman w ave no doubt it was,” he sald - R to meet the gentleman whose| Mary ts still suffering from the shoe.” # * s sitting, her hands folded in front o ra lke that, you know uve done aton has in a 7 | © She was bending forward, as though are like : had not died, He was yas Interested us all so] ‘It might have happened at anv ical Liltings of Lonesome Liz} |«is'o cris gions of Ironton Sayan ued. pone wall | a til, tna it “hav ad not diet, Mo wan euch Thiele hady Martabal atom | mottant* he tettinget hers eee 1C. | Rene eRe tans: oe Suton advanced with outstretohed asked for a day's holide Teese eee ane ‘40 futher waa professor at Oxford | had heart disease, He had had thie 7 of years, her voice for a moment] bands, ‘ nto puntry tom a as hefore 1a warning. He knew very well that the By Elizabeth Gordon seemed to have found tts way back} At Inst!" he exclaimed ,|and T find her going to see ak no questions. | che 8 passed on Pauline's end might come at any moment,** cy fe |into the heart of the boy, to have The wo nh made no reply Her # hind my back It cannot he Pe Tat fire rf eon to A out b That t# true, I suppose,’ she » | (Covyrigot 1V1U, by Geo, W, areas Art 9 brought him at least a “momentary | lence walle he, cronned foranie| ted. 7 pa ahs 1, buts M1 Immediately withs| mitted. “The | medical examination ®d . . * par af 9 realized, with a pass space af vould have vren em towill not happen again.” he ae 1 » men and women wh " rontente naelt | peor account easily enougl A A An’ sable furs, an’ birda o’ para: (ringe as he rea hs r “| eee i nay: Rapes (j men “men w ah a ~ ret, the abstract ty of the m ng to a less aceompiinned) aured bh T fee ao 7 ein ou are a born devetvear of; * w \h de Yet there was someth!n, Lilt Six, | Whon T seen that, my heart fumt tumnet eee aie i ite, Those few minutes | She wan tall, dressed inn gown | iyiame SeARGT AE lev tha sole OhIOn natine tral, Lady Marrabel.” 49] uncanny about tt." husiih | fo the herds erase, that's $0 168 | were effective enough, They helped his | in black allk, and her binw have no dount,” whe said ant you to play, You can turn t at you are prejudiced against| “tne party broke up the next @ay, ate where I belong, On, Gea! The girls T read about in| nove, Tho rewret passed, A shadow of| withered f s@ seemed one of thorn) you are en y to blame, hut ¢ you will, tnside 6 hepa y 7 i Nat. | | Suppose,” he continued I have heen’ @) ght have known that I was in rool | pain. took ite place, He came to #| Which defy allke time and ft reckoning, | not the quest! Unfortunate eo think you da the same ne. Let svat | down In the country, but T have heard *| et ry Murs ‘me faded off the map for ndattil and took her hands tn hi | y white halr was drawn back fran are other tiles to be eonale 1, OF that go. And remember this: Have as 1 FOURDE nothing.” ag dead wrong, t have me faded Dp ee M Niet Bare PONE. ] , x : ‘Pour lttle girl’ he wald, “perhaps! orehead and tled in a loose knot a would have heen nt op Ite to do with mon as posalhle, Your the terrible iPren: “You yourself should read a Weth {t queer, I never got a hunch looks, 4 w * > bali ° finne inti hat kina gal A to trottin'| you are right, 1 am not ‘altogether! at the back of her head, Her mouth! new me, Vertrand very strength with womer NA be a few days ago.” sepnten | Shout theme things,” be. onlées nie my .WaeR T Was out to luAoh. | Tt ain't the Rind he's used ) honest, Tam not in the leant Hw tha! wae cruel, Her eyen were hard nud kept you down In the sountry your very weakness with men. Ttemem-| "An ¢ once.” ne dectared, “whieh | sits and think a little. You would Anse walkin’ with Her on Bread | with, sort of man who ought to look at you brilliant, ‘There waa net an atom of! juni faw daya? Om 1 have warned you.’ Re one. ¢ regret aa greatly asm mi ant you," % I'm just the cheap stenographer, T'® and feel toward you na T have looked softens, or of human weakn: of any 1 wanted a rest” Ne anewered "You don't flatter me,” he sald, a fit it apart from that yn vi'leis like @ baie o' hay, Smith, and 604 “uring theae wonderful days, sort, te be traced im any one of her have te read my paper to-night, you Betle unpleasentiy, Marrabe!, Tem afraid that you ure sot Wo Be Continued.) ‘ /

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