The evening world. Newspaper, October 12, 1911, Page 17

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee See ae ~~ . . . ee ep ty oe The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, October 12. 1911-7 [ Fables of Ophelia; or, Wunst Upon a Time % i 5» Clare Victor Dwiggine ; 4 Copyright, 1911, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), atanarentinll \ve Leaves ANG BARK LIKE DoG-EAREO BooKs BUT, A Much HED ~ BEARD WY | wiett 1 Hao Ves Wacceteo WiisHers LIKE Yours Too. must be WAL NUTS INSINE | & nn, EAsiesT Thing WW) Tue WORLD To GET—, UST OPEN YouR mouTH LIKE A KNOTHOLE ANO TAK LIKE A NUT. very NuTrY,| — — { HE TALKS. moe wy SO He OPENEO His FACE ; AND“ THaTs The END OF THe , Quo PRETTY Soo A SaURREL \ = Ano TALHED LIKE A NUT — HeARo HIM AND WENT INSIDE TALE OF THe SQUIRREL S WERE WAE AN OLD ‘TREE WHAT WanTeD WHISHERS LIKE PA GOAT. S’Matter, Pop? % %% By C. M. Payne | Memoirs of a Commuter Covyriaht tw The ¥ Hobliahing Gn, (Phe New York World) | | By Barton Wood Currie “The Sign of the Rose”’ Doesn't 5” Speil Success. Copreight, 1911, ty The Pres Publishing Go, (The New York World), an My Wife Butts Into the Furnace, “ifave you still got those hooke e@ Game, pink trading stampa?” x {i wmtheriug data on the} or—not exactly.” nesttated mp entie pastime of tooling our| Wife, “that ia I loaned them th Are. own furnace through the snows| Thimble, who has just moved in down and frosts of a/at the corner, She had four and wanted hard winter tn| four more right away to get on deebox. Dogwood ‘Terrace, | She promived to return them as seen | egarde startled | 4% she got {n her coal.” | me one evening ‘ery well,” I groaned, “that means I with the announce: keep that coal.” ment that she had ertainly you must keep tt. taken the problem | Could you be thinking of? Is the my hands by| thing the matter with the coal?’ NouLL Get US PINCHED FOR PETTY LARCENY. I'VE GOTTA RETURN ' AA Tis WITH APOLOGIE W @ EY CHARLES DARNTON. G ‘ TD) BAN is quite rig! calling his elaborated vaudeville sketch, | ¢ Sign of I a chara 2B the Garrick 1 study. Drawn out into four acte at! eatre last night, it amounted ¢o nothing more. rae ing the coal! “Ob, no, there {e nothing the matter Mr, Beban has a sense of cter that justifles his ambition to rise above! and hiring @ fure| With the coal,” I sneered, “and there te the musical comedy spaghetti upon which he has been feeding for years. He nace tender, only @bout four times as much as we! hat every reason, too, to be alc and 1 of the exaggerated Frenchman that| “What kind of need. All I would like to know Is where hee led him Stage extravagances of the * sort. It 1s only natural that | coal and how|they quartted eome of that coal, or he should wish to ex se the economy of acting that has made David War-| BAR much 41a you or-| Where they mined the rock they put In fleld worth more than @ music hall could ever pay iim. In this instance ambi- | Gor? T queried. | with tt." ‘ tion hasn't exactly o'erloaped itself, but it has taken suoh @ long jump that | “Furne coal,| “The rock ts for ballast, tan't tt, Wil- the possibility of janding’’ seems dedly remote. | responded Mra, Wilberforce | berforce”” asked my wite innocently. | | ov co As @ poor Itailan with nothing tn the world but his ittle girl, Mr. Beban | | Sonne uch for four books of | “At! the ratiroads have rock ballast was a convin and picturesque figure last night, but as a playwright he| E | pink trading stamps, The agent for the with their cos failed to make anything more of himself. He simply stretched himself through | ? RON eee a A peat company anid tf you would only put| “You aaid something about engaging four acts, all of which rested upon the stooped shoulders of the common laborer, VERY GUY THAT! IN THIS FLAT OR mY 3 lin another bin he would put tn enough |® furnace man, Tesla when I was able ro Massena, Except for his organ-grinder gestures, which gave Pietro a LIVES IN THE IN THE ONE BELowr 2 | for five books of stamps. And as soon to apenk araln. ‘When is he comiing to humility that eug-| FLAT LOAW ME - fan I get five booke 1 can redeem them crack the coal? I hope he ts t gested the curdstone| Mitit Go INTO ‘ror w Weantiful oak rocking ohair.” | Toad mender and will trim our paths with pennies jingiing! upon it, Mr. Beban| was true to the cha: acter he portrayed The best of the play was seen in Pietro's home on the lowe: east wide, with little Rosa preparing the| meal of botied beet and wa'ting to ride on her father’ ders, The child ter to Santa Claus! ‘phat le all very lovely,” I replied, | with the stuf that won't go in O86 tur- | feeling ea if 1 were about to strangle, | nace.” " | iat what I want to get at firat is how) “There you Wilberforce!’ | aay tonm ai. you order? We are not/ cried my wife, ing to | running @ powerhouse,” keep up with the times, my love? The | “He didn't # ything about the gentleman who will tend our furnace number of tons,” replied my frau, in-|does no manual labor. He ts mérely latgnantly. ‘It must have been @ geod | eort of consulting engineer, Wheg there for they were putting {t In all day. | 19 any little thing you don’t Know bow of the drivers sald it wae light conl|to handle you Gave only to call ‘Aim up and would bo aay to handle I euppese| on the ‘phone. Hie charge |» most rea- the number of pounds will be etated in| sonadle—only He week. the bill.” \ “You haven't paid him any money I went down into the cellar to inves-| yet?” I said in @ faint whisper. ateo) laate, ‘The bine were running over and| ‘'No, but he fs coming thie evening te and Pletro's plane Hibbard! collect a quarter's fee in advance.” or were | should have served a# @ store room. Tt : J exclaimed. “I'm oraay toe very large and very heavy coal and | meet him.’ ‘ep and there I found @ hunk of gran-| And I hurried down és éhe cella? again lite. I hurried up stairs and asked an-|to practise language. ; erily: (To Be Continued.) so human that the| acene carried convte-| tion and commanded sympathetic interest, Kana May was euch a capable and loving little It jan gird that the ne of her death under the wheels of an au- A Great Parisian Mystery Romance, By Albert Boissiere, ** The Man Withoat a hy | then FE 5 Fi Ti E D Author of aoe dls Loa 4 MEET sees Bee ill MM MI MR oe i" audience as it did to party Pletro, ni and ae cee nine to Slummer, pressing agalnat me: from the mob of nolay loungers who | Who doubt an extraortinary fact, one of Prepay ye Sed F ; \ ‘omte de Pulliecini.” Were displaying ane: agant @how | those facts which outatrip expectatio: tween an eye lost for thirteen y Syme whe. | hc iis te meee AIS Wak werualiy ack {of indignation while awaiting the ar-| whore unexpectedn us and jand the aound eye which attll permitted lowed the litte body The New York World.) | to wonder what Comte de £ ival of the police, that @ frantic Nttle we to the Poor man to enjoy the light of day up the bare etatrs | attentive gentleman whom Thad ellght- [old man escaped—-pursued by atreet *, to Prov | gata, tae shot, this one shot, sender completed a picture conclusions. ly known in Rhetms during the great | boys, representing the publio wrath trumped up expressly te gave us the ne: hopelesaly blind the guest of Perey that put the play For {t {s not the trivial moment when | ®Viation week, was doing at this precise| We saw th old ogmming | cosslty of recognizing shat we are net| Ub eaihs ete, Manne a vavuteriously hung |Our @t Maitre Juinot's, lawyer, townrd us, ax white ax death * * */ th sole masters of the acte we @ccom-| 1 have nevar hear! any one anewer frame. But thi artment in the Rue Marboeuf| I anawered, reath and we recognized M. Marathon! | pitsh ie wil not put tne render Ceca an , . But the is the real viarting potut of m Let us fy, tue fiyt Did M. Marathon recognize us im-| When very young we had attended @) 1 will not put the reader thr. oe other sentimental em- sit that tn An unreasonable idea had just crossed |Meiately? It is impossible to say.| hunt of big game, the gunners | wearisome an examination, from , oe bellishments bore the mitted the ins |™y brain, a wild idea had just taken|The terrible moral confusion | are stationed at the edge of the woods | for th wh it many times Have tawdry and artificial rusting me into | root in my mind. [was precisely In the | ¥ while waiting for the passing of the perceived that we are not the; sole -/ mark of the theatre the pres er husband's body. | E the drowning man who | game and the pa directors of the acts we accomplish! a see ‘ 1 {te due, é¢ was reasons perhaps, that Pletro should All this does not count. Nor does th dyer _ vig plank The plan Wal ap A a rhe ay me flaaty, A ewet, & single a A wlanetn » hed — Lee tke to have thie(Mttle Sa erat A die tite Gin hr Bi i id accident which had brought her, as|d utomohile, left by Comte de Pu 10% ¥ atruck the guest of his family. ory Induce the curious reade; be aoe Abel aoten en o uy ie bina Tee + a beslaecke ¢) maid of all work, into the Jutnot house. | licctnt in front of the railing of the |!% Provable he mig it not have recagniaed |" at ty certainly @ very trivial aoct-|me, In turn, « series of questona ark h a , ; parents of the hold, Still lexs the influence of Wagner | little house, was offering us ite empty | at once, under an ‘um at ances: * | Why, at the precise hour that Mattre m for saving us from the very bad acting of upon the overexcited nerves of each seate. 1 did not reflect, [nad no way; With @ leap of ¢ ag lity, #ure inately the accident was Rome | Jutnot, through « fatal error, killed his d Pave Po see them was to realize that they T will go yet further. I will say--and| of reflecting. 1 ist Mme. Grenet|Priaing in & man ’ M rious, The unlucky shot had) worshipped wite by a bullet front a ree nas ANd. T hope my sincerity may not be taken | into the vehtole, repeating hurriedly | Sarath n had apruns to my sid le t —the Biot) volver, did Comte Pulltocint arrty - sh rami ted Suly in weir‘ BAABY aienhanalal ace Mutat tie iia “bate th am, let ue fy!" nd fr I het throat @ faint} ad plerced the! n tn Me automeblie 0-31-47 W Ot a RePaL ei Bnon ehiteihe toe 1 She was wailing yinese unheard of, these nt the moment Mme, Grenet and "4 ka MLOhOLAA tata ead ae is are ne to 40, M. ‘apolar greeter Seer oun flying In terror, determined to trust our- olen ab 1 Ad axel ie be neta It we for the | Stephenson? joing?” | a a Sie! My, onllsren i 1 to the wisdom of M. Marathon, t % nen Pietro came Ina Ind to ane vel crime dut M. Marathon himself, with the ev!- t for a rose to p pon the grave of his dead ohtid OK dent app: mething more than an en rance of a mantac, !t must roughly with t strong arm of the law. Only the ¥ as t tol be admitted, come to us, shrieking: return of little Dy > 1 bee olen the father's spendthritt young Hl s Mi . ve “ ¥ ation for cataract, be Save me! T heave Just committed an brother, saved Pietro fre being 4) mi off to jal, a * 0 C pen J) to ape ne nm that day whol unable [0 ) eetual ertmet Probert gave the play {ts only interest in the begin and although he seemed] ©The Anonymous Letter. | without daring to turn our heads, &| It will be seen whother I exaggerated [a ftendy, and and an eye free yng to incredulous OF StTOng-|tiog ‘will be rendered at angy te the always on the verge of nervous collapse, he kept up his good work to the end sam N opite of ey very keen Geatre| NAAGSOMS aU nied « brill-|just now in terming negligible matters all | MAtUcmations: automobile 0-821 1 perso logic of events, aa far as the desperate With Pietro taking @ farewell look at the home that lttle Rosa had made Doe oe tn onclommestianny | ent Te stepped H he mysteries. which hitherto have en-| CHAPTER VI, “explain to me why, among the hun: | trate ts concerned. bright and leaving !t to go back to Italy, a happy ending was out of the quer to give etomrer . A man of very fashionable appear- 10) the affair in the Rue Marhoeuf dred and fifty cartridges fred that morn "1 \tographic moment Dt : . ' rine vl z tion, The play simply ended with both @ sad and emp: ance, Wearing @ monocle and faultiess-|And tt be secon whether 1 was right| Automobile O—322-—YV. fing. onty one wont astray? Why, among 1 @omewhat pretentious gen: air, Mr. Beban had sali ctar me to a ; yey Comte Pullfoctnt od, cay ines 22, wut Pha bate of tea. Bote” BNL all ocaases {tin well for me to make aM) iy dressed, sprang lightly out of ft, ]1n stating that 1 must consider this mo fare ERE J8 # Uetle story 1 have) ine two hundred and thirty shots on an! igen’, anticipate the PD gf. of . exact @tatemen drawing bask before our hasty exit.|ment aa the trretrievable starting point ||! | often heard from iny grand. |avernge (hat each cartridge containe, a roull, will evertake us tolerabi It takes more than a character study to make @ play Ime. Grenet out of] And while looking at us steadily and }of my adventure | | father, Perey Wedy sre wats |ainate one caused this irreparable mise | Seer all. ‘ably —. nee ~— - the he in a frante I was) curiously, openly staring, he pretend-| It waa at that moment, the moment ||) ia ‘ ted fortune? Why did ohts shot strike the " A ignorant that Mme. Juin a ter-| ed not to recognize us, not to know us|when, having ast the motor in motton, | Jf carrie’ on the business of 4 any other part of the body], A@ We were going at full epeed down Some Queer Bits of Information. Mble coincidence, had been struck by! ot all he tea ipere eee raising Ryeland sheep among {twenty-two hunters] the Avenue de Ia Grande Armes, MM. the ball intended for us Mme} But wa who knew him had recognized | people blocking the way attracted our| thé hills of Surrey. eyes and excellent aight, | Marathen yelled into my ear: N the German text lustry the }fine Ines of Mehter green, and the|Grenet was ant, wing her-| him, and Mme. Grenet had the strength eyes, And {t was at this moment th He related it for incredulous persons tne plind markwnan the} * pass my house, Rue des Ma- | [ecrtenss ts to use female in place|mouldings are black nelf to be dra that which foo ae. I may carry away my lity ofemale labor. had brushed my should | 0 keep me from povegty tn A German ectentist has Invented a | tering ad b | | | In order to handle automobiles easily [tiny electric oven, small enough to be ion Matt | In spite of the frantic apeed, which several railroads have adopted ed on the platform of a microscope, wie the glass of the wind-shield pattle J ome 60Oe) SHOPICS OF The DAY, yle ole! ing doc the |Its purpose ts to ¢ objects te i soldat phased | hyn e he pad med to ae | mi aides and ‘the car hewn E rere the cause, bu |Grenet, who was clirging to thefeace | f} A 4th an the ca nined und e : q ‘and wudden catastrophe, |of our seat i - nich each of us knew me a p agra . Fint.” replied the British Columbian, we) the door without faurtner parley, — tal In ts well done bawe ia ye ona ie had | in Spain. Among the ni railways in|t five principal {slands of Hawa preciate it. HA Austraiiane | rt® « a if the . ill ——_ at any tas 1 the event pidtes 4 ‘ lav ihas 4:7 had Gna eat we im to tue Leg ) -tn'al TAne: t | projection 1s one from Sa to | T ands ail have telephone sys-| It ts certain that if T had u W i res 4 4 Would Be There for L'fe. Strcken With Generosi'y, |vetore. 1: was ain that Burgos and another from totems, with rates about t in | the whole, 4 ama at oN bia na : sii pet we ‘ reco 1 the, non, aginst ey the United States proper, should not have fed, ncouver je tela of a man : s A N geld negro was brought to trial . 8 brought his ° t] wy had issued a new warrant of 2 pea | vo from the house were who went ape. ean Soe the Too Much tor Her. oats, Ogee eee A tae ee: | fon aven to. viet 8 eabiee Re shrewd Inspectors “God tempers the wind to the shorn| The death duties collected in France| dying before her m rae bey ALLING one day to see an olf fi nouneing snieuce am at to we You |p : asked for two w eats, 990- | oft reau had seen, some Jambs"” {8 not @ scriptural quotation, | during 1:0 amounted to over s2,00n0n0, | and distracted with gr 5.7 OE aN RON te (eS 1 k ed oom, 1 inquired | (we pont eevmve, Have Jou om ay riley about te oy. exourstone into the lat Perigneux, others at Roubaix, others | rnental Journey,” by the Rev, Laurence | 07,000, with an aggregate net value! "Wr iets equally cortain that if T haa|! File ai berg: Al Ma dle ue he When te fi epee ine epee tan “seue wheat ii Sterne. {above @ thousand million dollars fulfilled the simple duty of humanity country you bere Bo ” ee areas a y shaven one, which wae dlsagresabie # —_— — dictated by circumstances I should not ¢ suaaeated 10," but handy gripped his arw n, and ove ined, vy Queen Mary's automobile ts equipped | Spain is now the world's greatest pro be writing this sincere and truthful hee," if ‘ m uwlot bie Sad iRigned § nim And overwhel , broken do with a tea basket. The car is of English | ducer of olive of}, Olive oll to the valuc tive, I 4 undoubtedly be pe ‘phen what, may 1 ask, do you do with your chicken, ‘case of | mo a fo this fortuicht past. Mon, " 4 “4 make, painted grep, picked out with | of 4,774,060 was exported Jast yeas, hog noth trely @ifferent ta its] mustrious dead” . 7 shickya | dgne |e twos (og Uae lagu wee mippies ~succem (To Be Continued.) —"

Other pages from this issue: