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——— ~ The Evenin World Daily Magazine a “Them Was the Happy Days!” Conrright. 1011. by The Pres Publishing Oo, (The New York World), ges was A LITTLE PRunet WAtHAY RemembeR BACK im THE OLO Onts , JIMMY, HOW we VED To scrap? ALWAYS GOOD NATUARED THOUGH HA'HAL HAHA! HolHo! HELLO JimnN! | <PO'HO! HO! Ho! \NHO's DEAD ? You KNOW, AS MANY HUNDRED! OF Times AS | LicKEO You Don? RECOLLET EVER GETTIN’ mao at You~ HAIHAIHAY B' HA’ You look A FounTam Pen ovr of Ihe} RATA UTHLe Peewee! = You're CERTAINLY A Queen LATYLE TRick, Jimmdt! Thursday, July 18 1911 By Clare Victor Dwiggins ool Nes THEY were — 1OW Tart THeY RE GONE — YES —— THEM WAS Harry DAYS. Mind! How | used To SMASH Tuat POOR LITTLE SOFT BABY / Enace of YuRs! watnn! Gee. Twat was tore ‘Fun! | can see You YET— LATING it THE OIRT, CRYIN SAY SIM Them was THE HAPPY OATS | [ee } 4 ALF = 7 5 Co—) Sey, 6 v { } le iSummer Dreams # By Wheelan “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What’s the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Left. By Clarence L. Cullen. The New Yore World) < OM ISNT He pe ceectay STUNNING «4 THINK HESJUST Geancl' etwer - THERE GOES Cec ADAIe Copyright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The New York World). | y TYAT woupee Drawback about a ‘Soft Snap" | Inventorics of ourselves if we weren't We that it Keope you Standing | Afraid of Finding so Much Damaged @un! Stock! Resting on our Oars doesn't get us Very Far, but it's Better than Rocking Life ts just one Panned Thing Af- ter Another! the Boat! Success doesn't! Several times, after Reaching the Know Much About | Jumping-Off Place, we've Refused to the Siesta Make the Dive because there wasn't any Springboard! The 60-Caiied — essary Lie" | Whenever we read of a Belated Re- always has a Self- pentance we think of the Skipper who {sh Motiv Tried to Make Stipulations with Davy Jones when the Ship was Sinking! Better an In- and-Outer than an Cu CULLEN iwaya Also-Ran! The Knocker's Version; ‘It's Never Too Late to Rend rhe Elastic Conscience has some rn Bi ‘ We can Decide upon our Destina- aging Snap Backs! tion even if we can't Pick our Path! ‘can't Hold a Havit og on the Rein: Down by | All the Members of the Cirrhosis-of- jthe-Liver Club with whom we are ace quainted Exude the Wheeze that they “Can Take a Drink or Let it Alone!” Time to Show ‘Em ts : Benched! BEFORE » tong Shot Player some: kK, but Oftener he V inget We rare! he Had see “The Good Fellow When at the Conclave of the 3 gets eara tho It Come-Backs! When you're Different “They that you've got Filtter-Mice in Car pantle—but let ‘ea! “Getting a Run for your Money" ts a Sounding Little Phrase, but it Always Means that You Lose! You can Atm High without ‘ the Moon! Say" Shooting your Some of us Pass #0 Many Pots that the Kitty Ea: The Man tr a Rut has a Foolish Dread of Getaway Day! The Boss says that the Man who — Doesn't Worry about his Average ‘The Promise that's merely iro ‘:istory |ign't Delivering the Goods! doemn't Gtick! —_ Better to be a Mutineer than a Ma- Perhaps we'd Take More Frequent Ungerer! Betty Vincent’s Advice On Courtship and Marriage The Vacation Love Affatr. MAN meets a girl in an office, or in her home or at @ome socia) function. They are both more or less thetr real selves. A few short meetings will give each @ certain line on the other's character. couple meet on vacation. the other a second time. In town neither might look at But in the country, under the Copyright, 1910 and 1911,by Little, Brown & Co.) Moonlight in @ forest glade with a dead tree across its Sure, was a detective. He didn't get| But Madame must kx 4 your centre, or in @ canoe on the lake—there 1s a glamour that Pats OF RENCEDING CAAINERE, | Our! CHASES ONE OF Se Bee eee ee ee cere ee 4s not of real life. It ts unreal as moonshine, fickle as the| , Bertrand Baton, has bean betrignded Jp eariier | 700 their knife Int Sal Carr for a Nttle tim vant ai ” days bye & cyuieat Bnglistiuan ogmel Wochester. | 4ot their knife into us You reme: or a Uttle time 4 late fogs. Tt raises idiocy “to the Nth power pin etate bias etn mets Loe Okeme: ihe trouble down in the Marylebone Road running Fiske | As tong as both understand this, no great harm {s done. But when elther the Peres, pL when you"-— | “The oid lady must have made a t man or the girl takes at its face value the infatuation bred of such idle hours Tile Miter thovvanucly ‘Don't! he interrupted. “I hate to|pile out of tt declared, Sour there ls apt to be heartache for some one Ghellkeos, Upton... ocheiter s, annoyance increase’ | think of that time," | ishing an ov andker 1 Back come the vacationists to town, Each sees the other tn the humdrum, , ufeve there ig} she takes my * will go quiet every day, subway-and-clevated, crowded street life. Each seoms to the other ; aC ia apy so ee at ee ene Oe different. The glamour fades, as fade It must. If you must play the vacation | fi) ums a chain Of fortune telling, atudios. | pout it later on, Hast few . love game play it with open eyes and make sure that your opponent Is doing the With Bertrant bacguail The waitress brought thelr tea, which| “It {s very good Violet, to same. Fair play is as possible in love as in tennis, Heartacnes are pretty in compromfsing. letter from i Violet carefully prepared ave Kent for me at once,” he sald. “I poetry In real life they are cruel to have and far crueller to give. fe. and demand lush me "Two pieces of sugar,” she now yor t mind if I hurry awa her is not worth kiss Th f Fey ay Pete ee ie with | ‘'and no cream, You sce I haven't f is very important that T see Madame" , . er is not wo issing. The sort o Lessing. bly compilelty with ' Dba Kent as J 2h Her Mother’s Wisdom. nan for whom gira care Is not Usually ees Na guar | otter, although It is not often eee akelns one tk ciniaeh to writes: . ‘queste. thei "comes ¢3 ‘lash with | powe," whe addded with @ little fr Tosmorrow nix ne promised, eng “My mother insists on chaperon-| 4, aK mublects You know it isn't that,” he an-|ér to escape anything happens tha ing te on my vacation. Bhe slao says 1| “Lewrs Eoth, se ewered hastily, “It's my_work, noth- |! can't, Tl tet vou know." cannot remain out rowing or walk ng who signs her name “G, B. CHAPTER XIX, j ing but my work, Go on with Du la nd upon Me arm as with any man In the evening later than es were telling me, . > re. i G0 o'clock. I think sie 4 old-fashioned vere are two men In love with Trouble Brewing. FTOL FARGILE GOK 40, oated BR eee ry were rad and silly, but I wil! abide by your ad-|me, I love them both, At least when I ATON turned out of Bona| ald, slancing round Lh fr vice." am al ne th either I think that is t street, and climbed the stairs! thing 4s that Madame must be at Your mother is w and you are man [ love. This puzales me. How can fw Httle tea shop with the}on-e, and nal av“ to are lucky to have her couns o guide yy u, I decide which I love the better of the depressed feeling of a man a littl t I shut up shop if more mothers were I-fashloned |t > is @ ng an offense e day as soon as I tumoled to | papers. in ; and silly’ as she, there would be fewer] If you can't make up your mind which tterly repents, Violet w ving ; b ¥ oat into unhappy love a‘faire. of the two men you are in love with, it Nini atone oe tne tanleal in wonder Af thie ie dooheatera|e08:. Hou have bad ! A Kissless Swai neither. When you m the main room by & sort) 42\nte te and‘ot the lady?" Violet in«|\“tielga has Just sent for me.” he ~ af ‘there will b eons 1 edd quired | answered. Pi ad st himself “A. I e no doubt in ur re ned his stick and ha i . with a sigh to one of the trim wait-| Saton nodded ne oF 1 yeete ’* Ring. “He is my MAN who A writes | An “Anon: mous “There are several men I know | resses and sat down opposite her. \ my | von : he | GIRL who signs her totter "A, Mu | "My dear Violet,” he sald, “this ts an| Would make him ie [ace was & gets , who boast of the nu i er of girls w } araee unexpected pleasure, I thought that Ae pone At Aaah a | neokaal H iss them, ed | ednesday Wa one of yo -] and to identify us with the ein any | Ta anid ca Af the girls of my acquaintance let me young man and T think ie cares for} + snaraiteit? ie I don't see how they could do that," {office in the Charing I have to say no. TI tried one It {8 generally," she answered. “To don't seo how they u “ry pen | eg Renin bur | me: A few weeks ago a diamond ring | tell you the truth," she added, leaning | #he said meditatively, “IT should be] Huntley actu win cn nm discouraged, | 8 left at our house addressed to me, | across the table, “I was Jolly glad to|the poor sufferer, J suppose, and vou | Ilr Mt up at she slapped my face, Tem discouraged. 'y 1 with no name of the sender, Yet 1| Ket Away, I havea kind of fear, Ber-|may be sure I shouldn't be like the wen What do you advise know the young man I love sent it. Wi) | {ands that we are golng to be @ iittle| other girl, who Kuve you away. You are | Paris by the mor Bear a few facts !n mind for your je youn nT love sent it. NT too usy." not afraid of that, are you, Bertran¢ Saton sat down comfort: The man who ts of the | it be r for me to thank him and | swiat do you meant’ he eeked| Things are different between us, We hands, ‘ girls he has kissed is beneath contempt, |Consiler myself engaged? sharply. aro engaged.to be married. You do not} “Rachael,” he said, “this must stop Ne eelf-respecting girr-should allow any | .%o4 May the young man if he] sho nodded her head mysteriously. 4 I cannot bear the anxiety of it It is ¥ Le abet sent you the ring, {f you really belleve| “There have been one or two people J he answered to fee day that one maa, unless she is engaged to marry | that is the case: ut you cannot consider |in in the last few days asking ques- we won't talk a ng out toward the great thing: him, to kiss her. The sort of rl who yourself engage! until the young man|tions which I don’t understand,” she the past. You are safe so far as I morrow that one is finding the wi! ellew any and every man to kiss definitely asks you to marry him. told him, ‘One of tnem, I am pretty concerned for the present, at any r money to live by fooling people, by +|Fashion’s + - | | | ‘Aman meets a girl at a summer resort, during vacation. |} Pach 1s out on the year's “lark,” each nas holiday cloth: e e Greatest Summer (i E E Philli re} < holiday manners and—far more leisure than is wholly safe 7) : (ike Satan tn the old poem) finds nilschiet for the idle. A eee ? Whispers. Canvass 01 Women V age Earners’ Literary Tastes T™ woman who takes advantac Shows Interesting Phases 01 Feminine Nature :: of the bargaln she mee with In her shopping tours will) ‘# do well to Invest In a sheer robe. Very now be had at 8 emoroidered In | What Do Girls Read Copyright, 1011. by The Prem Publishing Oo. “1 Enjoy Natare Stories,” Saya SUE WINEBRAKE, (Saleswoman). ' (The New York World), handsome ones may yandings are excellent. y THINK I lke almost any sano, well-written book. since they can be worn all I 1 don't care for the silly, cushy love stories, but @ love Interest is pleae- } and it :f quite probable that ant ff it ts properly handied | they will rank high In favor next sum- Then I tnd historical novels ex- tremely interesiing, for they usually ombine @ capited story with useful in- ' formation. Tho pres whit t strong vogue tn Paris of millinery indicates that thie wil be a strong feature in fall hate, Milli Perhaps if I have a favorite style ef ners are laying In large supplies of lotion tt is the nature stories, white felts and beavers, as well as Jack London's “Call of the Wild" white uncut velvets and ribbons, white ippealed to me tremendously. The ostrich, white coque and white wings Herce, fine struggles of that great dog, There are also various substitutes in his unswerving loyalty to his master— | white for the heron atgrette & loyalty t remained faithful even The woman who ts getting a navy after death—were in refreshing contrast blue dress—and what woman hasn't at to the conventional best-seller beati- loast one navy gown in her wardrobe tudes and platitu | should combine tt with white, ‘hts Jack London's Engiteh was simple combination will be very fashionable ind nervous tn that tale, quite with- and is used by miliiners as well as out the earmarks of exaggeration dréssmakers, In fact, navy blue and which sometimes score his more ambi- tlous efforts, ‘The nature stories of Mra. Gene Strat- ton Porter are also very delightful. white has already superseded the black and white comvinaion In baris; hence we may anticipate an equally strong vogue for blue and white for fall, Possibly it is because I have to work The leading idea in all coming fash-)'" the dig hot city that I am stirred by these tales of cool for and the dwell- fons {8 Ortentallsm—not the sort we | ¢t@ therein. . have so far been accustomed to under| — Sometimes I have fancted that I aniffed the piny woods wind as I read of It. that name, but the soft, and colorings of the Par Ei And so the new costumes, wraps and dress accessor °s wave the form as well as the coloring and trimming of the ex- quisitely delic.te and refined East In- din” effects. Fans are ornamented tn cut steel de- rich fabrics % I Itke to read al about the animals, too, and I am very fond of Ernest Thompson Seton's books, Perhaps the actentists are right when they aswert that some of th writers err in the exact detalles they narrate eo convincingly, but I'm not a actentist, and I don't of I want the atmosphere of outdoors, I want to feel as if I had taken @ won- erful country walk and watched rabbite and crows and red foxes. I can't take such @ walk, literally, eo I ike to make the exoursions by wey of the bookshelf, signs and the favorite decorations on purses and handbags are of steel, ‘The only troutte with nature stories is that eo many of them end unhappily, In fact the steel snows off most and I do want a pleasant ending for the booke I read. stively against a plack or white bi It leaves @ good taste in one's mouth and makes one turn back hopefully sround as well as those of :e prevail. | to Uving, ng sha with favor and so tt will probably 1 —_— —~———— It Depends. By John L. Hobble. u oR you see a man with Green-Room Glintings + W trace | P71 politictan tm for log-rolling, the) beyond the reach of some of our po- Of thought or sa on his | actor for menologing. lcemen of the drama, who would be face, Pretty sure to club thel ook pretty a ud their heade off Rush up and take h Ae wa inas k, OMT actora must be grent if it {s| could they get at them, 7 And slap him fondly on the back; S true that It requires great clever- — And if he's sad and friendlew too, He'll give his open hand to you. ness to conceal o's ability, Y the theatre as with friends:' Dull- sn is never excused; brilllancy te : 11 sound actor makes the least never forgive into high wind of commends. wv ton he need not be surprised 1f ows away Hut if the gentleman you caught Way Just absorbed In deepest thought, And trying hard to t his brain That some success he might attain; | Fey @ mighty lucky thing for some And you, then, all his thought undo, of the old actors, now Immortaltzed | He'll slip his folved hand to you. and » that they ar HEN a manager pushes an acter luurel-crown ~: variatanism, Think if we| Nothing! Don't refuse me. There arelyou and Madame are perfectly safe wer er wo plncos,| limita to patience as there are lim-|At the same time, take my tip. Go if got wbout'| its my gene and my affection. |slow! Um off. Ive 4 minute for Th e was be-| If you refuse sa be but for one rea. | the boat { seven stood’ son, and that reason you will not dare, Saton Iatd down the rece dock, and escapel to tell me, Do you refuse? Answer 1 Te itn be," he cleverness and @n now; I will have no more evasionas.” Rachae t with go wn te happen asain.) She would not iarry me,’ he wald, |Nest to-morrow 1 | “RAVE not ween her for days.” | senpuerertiag she answere | “Where tx she?” Rachael demanded, ) > 2X self first. It ts well! “In the country, at Heauleys,” ho ¢ HAF RX rirand, but you and /answered. “The Rochesters ave ail lett | First Blood. af atmple tninies, town yesterday oF to-day, and ahe went O18 came walking down the he maid | nto the « a 4 1 extrava- | ( It is an ; Wives gant! r y should We shall be 1 foate ange no a ars come t interfering people, [ aren | I ca minal rooms | do not you again, Bertrand, whe houghts appar or cheap serva ookit vq [OP you wi wil not marry this girl 1 © came to We ha oft.” he oaid: | vor the first time | exercise my rights ne to her with me yuntry. Wel over you. I demand that you : t fo little. Soon m, \ rs bari cy | Be as faithless as you like, You are as! soto} ' : « W mney tate #" | Make love to her for @ year, and ye 8 oe 1 pe baat Pa eae ono | her as these Englishmen trea cir} feet of he » i eon? | housekeepers, If You will. But marry her) "Y 6 ex 1 y you , ‘ 1 > tore, | Mut! Ih lathe BaaAy wi ! 1 y at Lon y at at fo ‘ What ts that \é Ne - bell was ringing fy 7 . pea: BALA at {upon the table, Ata | . . aid. 1 ho line ¢ W ton waited na familiar voice sha a Ne | oar hundred and nty thousand pounds | is that?” it asked su 1 te antl our cme! «erteand Saton,” Saton anewored, | Us 1 cu this) Listen,” the velce maid. “Tam Hunts b ley. 1 from Folkestone. Tain ant to ma sata roaming to-night to Paris. Dorringtoa| He tow An ac \i4 already on ahead, Some one has|her A fa ©2986 hoon employing detectives to track us| seemed (0 ng the arm of the | qawr 1 with that letter~ r other fingers the you settled terme .' fhe satd, “ took you from |yourseif, You hear? t itter, I saved you from starvas |” “{ hear, Saton ans Was it! ome, tion. showed you the way to ease and for you, t | she eaid at leet, toe T te you things whieh ha nnot Hun answered, | prnelf from hte. n working, which shi All T know is that T have done pretty are @o many things I want to fa u, If you dare to follow he two years, and Tam net! ask you.” ' oO greatness. [ saved ye (to figure in the police courts. “And 1 too" he answered. “I have life. I planted your feet upon the | thing blows over, I'll be back in| something to say—eome. .ing I cangot Your life is mine. Your future js 4 fow weeks. Every paper of import-! keap to myself any bonger.’ What is this sacrifice that I demand? ance has destrvyed. 1 believe that (hqBe Comuinued) illh