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1911 1HHOHDOGOTIOINGIOQHOSHDIGOS3G: YUIDODHOOO4 3 ‘ TORIES +0: | LAST OF THE TEDL! io Wee eee ee orien ot : drawing a portratt as wert as a blunt the brash shelter, and foot whee he {] and « tattered thesaurus will|called for It. The praipe sephyve Samer ‘Thus crowned, the long-faced qi if ps aadruped a 11d) Kingbirds at morp a allow. m mildly; mockingbirds at mora an looked more Dantesque than before, and, \ 1 wish you could have seen hin Judging by his countenance, seemed to was small and tough and Inactive be- think of Beatrice. ‘‘Jhe Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, August 12 POOOOGI c 4 . Ho] eve competed with but scar {3 the sweet meiodien of bie Ivrei 4. iar : a om to oon-| fumed atiliness seemed to fll 4 Straight as topography permitted, Sam celve. He an ultramarine-biue | world. While old man Ellison was g Tode to the sheep rench of od man : . woollen shirt laced down the front with tering among his flocks of sheep on Bi 4 R { Eliieon, A visit to a sheep ranch seemed @ poarl-gray, exagmerated sort of shoe-| miis-an-hour pony, and while the Kiew omance ol! a out © | t2 him aesiravic just then ‘There had tteing, sindesteuceule brown du k took bia plete in the burning sunshin > 0 1 Ww ; Py . Grito. on Leectzte too tod Car . clothe Inevitable high-heeled bovts et the end of the Kishen, Sam weul | jem, competition, confusion, at with extcan spurt, and @ Mexican bis cot thinking what a happ ;. as N either a Worker Rancho Altito, He had never conferred 4 wid he Itved tn, and how kind ft fe & 4 ‘e 99 upon old man Bilison the favor of so in Willson the ones whose mission in life it ie & 2 Nor a ‘bar rn Journing at his ranch; but he knew he chalre out , a £ . woul! be welcome. The troubadour is nder the give entertainment and pleasure. They lehiet cima. | Troubedours. Of couve you know (ms, 0WN, pasepert everywhere | The Ma , a |r troubadour gayly touched | ” ‘orkers tn the castle let down the draw- A his guitar. Many of the songs he sang | my + _Covretented oy Dourielay, Page & Coy |GPOUL the troubadours, The eneyclopee. | bridge to him, and the Baron sets him \ ty were the word, melancholy, minor- | pnd endless | @e be published in Loon form alter Sept. 12) | Sieventhy ant the thirteenth centuries | 2t his left hand at table in-the banquet ; | Keyed eanete that he had learned (delight at the sixtieth repetition of | 4 What they flourished doesn't eseea clear | Nall, There ladiee oeatle upon Rim and trom the “Mexican “sheep herders and song or a etary, wan as Kean a at tt 4 a , lear | appiau stories, while | D y ? cqteros, One, in particular, charmed | initial giving. Was there ever @ Www” j PART I. TZU, may ve pretiy sure It wasn't 4 | Workers bring boars’ heads and flagons ‘ aad goothed the bowl of the lonely | badeue of ob Whe Sisuek OOH Os TIER | WEXORABLY Forktul of ppaghetit, bene leaeee ecart, | Tf the Baron node once or twice in hie q . Daron. It was a favorite song of the|a castle in his wanderings? While h , © fous tin Y Sam Galloway Anyhow, Sam Galloway was one of ‘em. carved oaken chair, he does not do it SY sheep herders, beginning: “Hutle, hulle, | jay thus, meditating upon his blessings 4 going away, thom tng neo | 8am put on a martyred expression as | “aicously. , Boca “Ny, fy, fecal ies nei reeech cee near means, “ g iv. ve.” Sam) te ¢ Altito at the end of @ three| he mounted pory. But the expres- on Liv md We oece ore troube- . a y, le dov frolic through the yard; @ covy of months’ visit. It is not to be | son on his face w: vs ee en heard 4 ~ ‘ eang it for old man Biilson many times | topknotted biue au f . } » ‘ that evening, aingle file, twenty be | with the one on his % Praises of Sam Galloway from other Z ‘ 7 . . » plowed mae ones eae a pony gers 00 new fp Ay ‘anne wa ranchmen who had been complimented ‘The troubadour stayed at the old man’s | bird, out, hunting hed with ealeratus, for | 4d {t ts not unlikely that ‘ponies | 5Y his visits, but had never aspired to » ch. There was pe and quiet and | hop upon the fence and salute him wit [haweetreni ed with tus, for | Ae aavures’ and cow ponies | such an honor for hs own humble bar- eclation there such ax he had not| sweeping flourishes of his long tall bay a that, Nick Napoleon, the ony. aay parony be od men Bie nd in the noisy camps of the cattle| In the elghty-acre horse pasture @h: we, mane X jhad never, been | Gon by a guitar player instead of by & leon was the Last of Barons. Of rgd No feuds in the world could| pony with the Dantesque tace grew ts " pod jo make good | “ulta, Once be- | roiiaking, SlMsing, aikwoel cowboy. ‘Ne | Course, “Mr. -Bulwer-Lytion lived. too ave crowned Work of poet, musi-|and olmost smiling. The trouda@eu er Tan, ike was cooking at the | Cass a hero to his weal commoy: Ne | carly to know him, or he wouldn't have aa clan oF artist with more worshipful and| wan at the end of his wanderings. ty hia cuisine, after only @ eix|¢Ven an escalator in @ department store | conferred that sobriquet upon Warwick. C HY, unflagging approval than that bestowed) Old man Ellison was his own racier ay oe, Milani be euteed’ for Eipata aos | fo lite It 1s the duty ead the fwnction of upon his efforts by old man Lliison.|That means that he supplied hie shee Bees Tas wag an exoresion ot toebadenr the Baron to peovide work for the Works Saath wisedelter of teens saat sorrow, deepened with regret and slight-| Oh, I know I'm one; and go are you.| o's and lodging and shelter for the sel email ranc & (tree gee Meads peaieoeees member the stories you memorize ‘Troubadours., ia Le ainetia a f * UNDER THE Rave boo recelved with more fattering | ractere. Oa hes it ts ofa encscieae who cannot be,undore rd tricks you study and that eae qeent, paloucenne veord bs HACK BERRY , On a cool, canvas-covered cot in the| One morning he started for the eam | wales ar Beach tees rt ttle Ara-| and a face ined and seamed by past- , @ Mh TREAEY Suet bbe tetenae mane af Kab cans Qe | fae ctakerape and Mune Ie ta hid setae, |bian Ten Minuto Entertainments that| and-gone amiles, His ranch was a little ( } De Tech tas tach poner Care horn, ted his slicker and coat on the} %% furnish when you go up to call on | two-room box house in a grove of black sheep herders) wii v he rolled tis brown paper clgar-| the week's usual rations of oe = your Aunt Jane. You should know that | berry trees in the lonesomest part of = atte coffee, meal and sugar. Two mis Tas WEL. Ske Merrvdews. (house | © rsona in tres partes divisne| the shecp country, His household con- . Fanch afforded and added to his reper-|away on the tral from old Fort Bwh vee ee Hine, Mini mae Namely: Ba Troutadours | slated of a Kiowa indian iian cook, four |8e¢ you @ while, Notice you've had fine toire of Improvisat that he played |he met, face to face, a t women, children, and servants, vassals, |2% Workers. Barons have no inclina-| hounds a pet sheep, and @ half-tamed (rains on your range, ‘hey ought to fo expertly on his eultar. called King James, mounted on a fier, ) him, aa a slave mintstering to a| prancing Kentucky-bred borse, . lord, the Kiowa brought cool — 1, well, well,” sald old man Bllt- After the delectable supper Sam um-| wate? from the red jar hanging under (To Be Continued.) son, “I'm mighty glad to see you, ted the tion to read such folderol as thie, and| coyote chained to a fence-post. He|jmake «ood grazing for your spring rll tl ote Tiattone, employees, does, an iaut| Workers have no time; 90 I know you | owned 3,00 sheep, which he ran on two {/*nwe, et? Cee es, roared Te tne peauery’, | must be @ Troubadour and that you will | sections of leased land and many thous- at ; * eo understand Sam Galloway. Whether we | ands of acres neither leased nor owned. bag Shiba dihaesb leh IL to the tune of melancholy and grief.| sing, act, dance, write, lecture or paint.| Three or fone times a year some one [52m I never thought you'd take the | ls guitar, Not Per, as the coming of Sum Gatloway | we are only troubadours; #0 let us make | who spoke hie language would ride up| “oubl® to ride over to as Que of tne ee eae ohh Ge to amy ranch, camp, or cabin between | the worst of it. Me a wean few bel | W#Y an old ranch ag this, But you're any other of the tru the rivers Frio or Bravo del Norte oe bereeeee greetee ne gen. on his tours of the way of payment, Galloway nor hty welcome. ‘Light. I've got a lineal descendants of the 1 2 The pony with the Dante Alighler!| {deas with him. Those were red-letter | pay ape ‘ i U Cuthb t Seed fey, is Seprtor.coueed| ace guided bythe breure of ams | «sian eos han i woe | Pot 8A Nats : Fee a, tere, eer VD, ert: AEA Get, during absctute Gfenes, em | ee ee Cnn teria. minstrel oz. | tHumisated, embossed, and gorgeously | “Oats for him 1 Sam, derisively. but often obscure Mother . sept for the bumping of a hind elbow |{n her most benignant moon League | Cecvrat Captinis must have pee wana | oNe a fat as a pig now A Tommy ‘Tucker sane for No eupbe What’s the Use of Being Blue? of @ hound dog as he pursued a wicked | atter league of delicate, aweet fi ve| ten the day on which ® troubadour—a !on grass, He don't Ket rode enough tol appreciation glowed on old man Bills | No true troubadour would do that. He fiom, Gam tenderly and carefuny tled| made fragrant the pently” undulating Gaubenac? who, according to the ency- keep him tn condition. I'll just turn gon's weatiier-tanned £1 | would nie guitar across his saddle on top of| prairie. ‘The east wind Yenwered the | lopeeda. should ha: be- him én the horse pasture with @ drag Ae for nie slicker and coat. Tho guitar wa hie supper, and then sing There Is a Let of Luck Left. the troubadour, he sald to) EEE tween the eleventh and the thirteenth | rope on if you don't. til Ot ned spring warmth; wool-white clouds flying himaelf that he had etumbled upon! | 5s Pecan bongs theta Th Beh the: SbelOGA GIT RIT RFEA, DLS conturies—~<irew rein at the gates of his| I am positive that never during the Deoaant pices Indeed. A well-cooked, , About fifty funny stories and between ‘onial castle! h ce 8 5 direct rays of the April sun. Sam sang | °%5) a ae eleventh and thirteenth centuries did abund «wm & green duck bag; and if you catch! he wignificance of It, !t explains Sam. By Clarence L, Cullen. meal, a host whom his light- | thirty and forty gpngs. Ho by no means! 44 ‘Gem wes nS | Old man Biltson’s enles came back | Baron, Troubadour and Worker amal- est attempt to entertain seemed to de- | stopped there. could talk through —_ bamadshed Eee ee Se = Le prot uh vg Ad Lan reign ae ryy us Nik par- light far beyond the merits of the ss | twenty cigarettes on any tople that you Courngnt 1011 by The Pree Wuptisning Co (The Neo Tors World). * tree? je house allel evening at old man ertion, and the reposeful atmosphere | brought up. And he never sat up when yT doesn’t Take much “Band” to Over- The Man who Owns U; Re» © "Jo his shuffling, limping way to greet him. | son's sheep ranch. The Kiows's bis- tha¢ his sensitive soul mt that time|he could lie down; and never stood J y.ay your Hand when you Knaw the! g 9 Before Re P “Hello, Me, Ellison!” cal Sam, cuits were light and tasty and his cof- craved united to confer upon him a sat-| when he could alt. I am strongly dis- Rect of ‘ian wil) Weaken! lornered always Gete Anothe ~ ew ty e Cc tes ; cheerfully. ‘Thought I'd drop over to fee strong. Ineradicable hospitality and Isfaction and luxurious ease that he had) posed to iinger with him, for I am Chance! Fa 'T 19 @ settled fact now that the skirt Iine. Quite a number of heightened measuring two and a half yards at| waistline effects are still seen, but the bottom 1s the proper thing for| probably by fall the normal postition There's a Spe- — S claily Dowtgned| A Lot of us @ay “We Can't” when we Jumping Off Place | Really Mean “We Won't!” tor the Cry Baby ‘ All practioal purposes and fall models | wil! be the popular style note. with Whiskers! ‘There's Fun im Running First wher 1ro made accordingly. Side frills are a very strong note in ‘The two-yard wide skirt {s still | present fashions and will continue to The Man who ely used in very his models} be a style feature during the coming Conertght 1019 ne The Preas Publishing Oo (The New York World). nd in’ simple evening dresses, the ful-' season. Fichus will be in strong voru - = 5 ‘oe being adjusted by the foot trim: | eapectatly for evening wear. The large |] YOURE FOND. OF Tb L0vE To) Miss, SCARIEK = MR WAGNER. ings, which are elther folds, pleat+| collars that have been #0 popular dur- Wu Yl es WON'T YOU OBLIGE US WI 8, ruffles or puffings sufficiently | ing the past season will continue to be A Song? as ¢ to maintain the necessary straight | largely used on conts and dresses. The 1e effect. sailor, round and pointed effects are all Whichever of these trimmings 1s used | in demand. : should be from three to five rows| For the dresnes the Charlotte Corday 1d each be about two and a hult| ts a favorite, while for coats the point- ches wide. ed effects are preferred. ta the Quickest) cin wo | ‘The @ure- ro! Out is Alway> to Hand Out 4). Unassisted Play! Raw Deal ts the hed one who Bawls| What a Let of Crow has to be Eater the Loudest when |every Time & “Cheese Champton’ he Geta One? | Makes Good! The Man who Roote Against Himeel! We've known many a Slave of Hablt | pays anto the Mitt of thie Jina! - to Regain his Freedom—but they had ) A newly Imported waist whtch tlus-| There is a trend of fashion toward to Want To First! We never had any Luck in Turming ‘ates the popular Bast Indian effect ts] the fancy sleeve and several varieties, ts ear banca Over a New Leaf unless we Tore Up hite with @ stenciled pattern In Orl-| such as the modified kimono, the draped ‘The First Drink and the Final Round |ing Old One! ital design. Over this Is @ velling of|and the boned effects, have been af Jackpots have Put a Let of us Over ight colored chiffon. launched, the Jumps! Even more striking models are made | However, the length ts regulated and * erepe or chiffon tn yellow, blue, red,| the three-quarter sleeve 1s There isn't Much Use in Having en in It DOREN’T Pay to Advertise, un. |t¢ Punch unless you Know How to | een or purple and are embroidered in| gowns, dressy waists and sults, as well less you've Got the Goods! Use it! ‘ight worsted combined with large|as high-class wraps. In evening gowns —-- ds, the elbow sleeve ts» the corerct thing Fow of us can Make our Start as| We've seen a Lot of Now-and-Ther all practical garments the long Ap | Major Leaguers, but we can Put our: | Chaps Graduate into the Now-ordNever te being used. ? < " “ “ i selves tn the Way of Being Drafted! Class! | Darktown Doings. y The new models in dresess show an} nelination toward the normal walst- Wourd “fou In Silhouettev Ile. LIKE THE NEXT VERSE | Ait ; | NERS 2 “1 nope we'll have our new automobile next time you call.” \j “When do you expect to get it?” “Oh, eome time next year!” “They certainly are getting aeroplanes down pretty fine lately.” “Yes, but | notice they have lote of trouble sometimes in getting them up agai és By Clare Victor D\ Tsay kYoD0~ Possieis— You (eT ME See — Tue “Tomes? Ha'aa! LitrLe ditmY! How ve > -Gonts TALS A HAY AnD —Ho!\h (Wg ALE! Bur TLL YouR FACE See | meet Here HAVE | SAW SING SING? Wow Siui0 oF Cops Em ouT 15 MORE'N | CAN see! } HOL HO! AND — Hotho! LighTeo Tert wea ApouT T Has A VERY onrthh ‘ You? LET me MaTTEAWAN ? Mes AT LITTLE SHRIMP. Ha HA’ Dip we EVER} THE FIRECRACKERS ~ HA! HAHA! L ERSONG ee —— Jouet ? AT OintnEeR THIS ATLANTA? 1 TELL. You ABOUT ThE Time 1 Tico FAMILIAR LooK - That MY Face 15 CATCHING IT! OH. SM! Yur CHoKE Some Dat EVENING — ES — ) DLAcKWELLS? ee Him ON THe GOAT & Ten TiED A}]\ THinkin’ ABaUT dimrat! HalHA' PLES INDEED CLO vy, BuNcH OF FIRECRACHERS To THE Alem was sure THE HAPPY Dp: EM WAS THe : a 1 eats \ DAYS !/ 3 Ae NN