The evening world. Newspaper, January 22, 1912, Page 13

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n a . - a I TE The Evening World Daily Magazine. Monday, January 22; 1912 Fables of |B Toddles 3 (-x@Btir) S@ By PL. Crosby iy The Range Riders Another Great Cowboy Romance WAIT HERE By C.A. Seltzer, Author of “1HE 71WO-GUN MAN” AND ILt Snow YER WHAT Hit AW! | ceaprest, 1911, ty ontine Pot GWE YER WAIT FORME | | ne a at yma Hoth at thom Coprright, 1912. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), The Misunderstood Husband. wife doesn't understand me," was hi favorite cry, and no greater joy ai O's upon a time there io H corsa WHAT YE t TOOF WIF TAKE FORGT ye @ hue | have than pouring into the ear of some R? YER? oH! DIDYER CRY? band. He Was Of the MIBUN- | one the datly cross of his existence, DBERSTOOD variety. For, a mieunderstood husband has the LETS gee 010 IT Horr? AW THAD A He told you and | @YMPATHY of all the widows and old iT WORSER me and all of us|matds, while a misunderstood wife is TOOF DAN DAT AN’ 1 NEVER Nea Co) J apenking with unblushing curlosity, “8 Te WY oaiey cette, ride tao] “Well, now, that's what 1’ call real ne where a letter haa clever,” aaid Denver. He smiled drilfs Hk T ain't sayin’ a word until I know where that two hundred an’ Atty Je comin’ from, That settled, there'll be In’ doin’ at onct." HURRY uP! that he was mle: |looked upon with SUSPICION (but for- understood, re few of the latter). That's how wo! One day the misunderstood husband | knew %&. Yet he /forgot his mental aflment in an affile- | made @ “secret tion of the body. That ts to say, he be- ~ oy ¥ afer pal Wn two lundred an’ of St—the kind of |came til. Tt was not a malady that , nen Sone ae I met the reward," returne & secret that &)kept him away trom folk. But he was a CHAPTER I mn’t be till the horas thiet friend tells A Not @ #0-called “well man." He circu. OTHER friend, lated among his friends as usual, but | He had married | trange to say, they did not recelve him | his wife away jin the same CORDIAL way as they Contiouet ) lIvered to the Shertff of Conejos Co The Messenger From Conejos. | fr shut his lips with decision ANTA FAQ glanced casually | “Then we do business," he de= back in the/ were wont, over the other's @houlder at fan yee et heel ee <= BARLY 4a To them he had become “grouchy”. the sheriff, who was in eare- ' when many @ one{even the very ones to whom he had might have sald “I knew you wiren"——|poured out those maudlin, ‘“misunder- Those early days when she took him | stood” murmurings rather AVOIDED for better or for wort The daya when | him. it Was mostly WOKSE. The days when | Secretly they called nia CRANK. there wasn't much to “go on''—the days | Now, he afd not laugh with the world, “ when with difficulty she | qd kept the /and the world WOULD NOT weep wit | My bringin’ this note was Just a sort cf | personal Allen, the Sheri® ‘or don't include the hosa thief. I reckon you me aln't goin’ to hitch on this here est conversation with son a “ SS - Mon grouped togther noar the door of the High Card. “You don't happen to know who brung him ¢ news?’ he sald evenly. “I reckon you could put your hand yater shifted uneasily, There wes on the man right now,” returned th /aiways the fear that Denver would 6? other quietly, to Lenehan with the information that 00 TAN AH'ABAT'S * Aebit side of the household tedger from | him. BETTER WA WE WOULONT HAF DER TORG- : Santa Fe folded his arms over hie running away with the credit side, ‘The| But the Mttle woman, she UNDBR- DorG OWN A MUTT AN’ A BONE TO . | ont chest and surveyed the other with ontg: |" Appeared to punmens, Aden N Ho it AINT We've made ho sald su days when NECESSITY was really the | STOOD—#1 knew, she knew. She =] Sure! LIKE THAT FEED 7 matic eyes. ty and with ferv ‘you get the two : mother of invention and the mothor-in- | quietly did®many things for him, per- / o ¥ YER IT WIF IF AREAL TOOF reckon thate right entorafisin’ of you" | hundnsd an’ Arty when T get the hes 3 law of prevention. fectly as a matter of course, and only bah Bho thief, You c’n do your talkin’ whenever ‘ For, many times sho had to do|because she understood him only TOO GIVE ME DER GIVE ANYHOW He rocked slow! k and forth on his heels and toes, gravely meditating, ‘An’ | Youre ready.’ so you're the man an brought tho news| | /There ait @ tucruble lot, te eage of this here hose thief?” Again he med. | TOU ned ene eee play itated, something very near to humor | tat to-night Tm go yey, ae ates oe with #ome ren In the High Card, WITHOUT many things that might | Well. have been hers had she married one of | She remembered his creature comforts her OTHER eultors, But, of course, | 8nd the little wishes that he had had HE did not think of THAT, That was /!n all the years, Bhe did not overlook TOOF ME THE “LT hore do,” he said, presently. ‘An’ | take hi this, that and the other thing for the) t® worse as none OTHER would, sho pr y. a thing of long ago. them now, but she LOOKED OVBR ) to know that ho tow aes alway is tob mais ae r 4 ‘Tre times when she bore his fancies |™ARy other things, She was the real ‘ = be thed pornetin there's one round. Some time ’ H and folbles—the times when she listened |*urvival in the game of the FITTEST, Ny aaa D (~ & slowly trom Santa Fe to the sheri the game I'm goin’ to reach over en patiently to ways and means of doing ‘or whe was taking the better with ‘ Ss hande whi I examine thes) ; e when the thne comes the sheriff'll know | for @ wart that's on his wrist, 1CCE So it came to pass that he awoke one A him, too.” owner of thet wart is the hoss . | ai CCEBS, And now mi, 4 7 | When wascees had come to o eeriain {Morning to find that even those who L fp 4 F fad Santa Fe kicked with his boot tip at a| I'm, warnin’ you that hee eome degree (and she was largely responsible | "#4 agreed with him that he was mis- U i ta) mound of dust, his face @ mask of in- | With @ sun an when t [ah q { ; ; TFER. [Understood found It agreeable now to 4 (| nocence, “Well, now," he returned, let+ y to get your guns ou | for it), things were a little DIFFER- e idete | Mgld.. tf you don't f recbon Sow Wont leave him SEVERBLY alone. Ss ting his hands fat! to his sides, “five ENT. But he sew the one UNIAILS és S) hundred dollars for a hoss thief! An'|live to, be the @heriff of thie here He found other Interests, new ideals hdtsel dds a oe — — ~ All the aheriff's Kot to do ts to tako him county,’ that is) and she belonged 1 to Conejos County—altve. reckon . Hushiantdd isthe PAST —the part " ri right there ‘on the job.” ‘Then a ray of trae Ube havin’ comeccdy abd yOu Mr. past that was not easy to forgive, And | {bereclation plerced his martyraiike five hundred dofars.” At the tabla where the four ent play- Ile turned and walked away from the |!n@ poker there was an alr of singular man, brushing shoulders with the sheriff | quiet. Denver eat opposite Santa Fe. aw he pushed Ms way into the Hikh|The latter was dealing, shuffling tho Card, The man outside had stood per- | cards delfberately—as though he an:t fectly quiet watching Santa Fe until he) Time wero peacefully engaged in the Aisappeared within the door of the aa- |task of prolonging the game. Sante Fe's loon. ‘Then he grinned, broadly and ad- | face wan impressive, yet in his eyes miringly. he glanced at Denver were flashes 0} “Ito's the ame ol’ Santa Fe," he sald, |deep, puzzled wonder, t a ttt different. Even the sheriff] Denver played on, giving his attentio: of Conejon don't scare him none titude and a sense of understand Tata amtony tesa en andine | ome anda arom ecunaoresvaies| $6 AS They Looked a Quarter Century Ago human quality—this not forgiving the| “hie was sorry that {t had not come epaaenaaaeaaaaeamamamamaemeanae eae eT HELPER of our success, earlier, For those who had Hstened to So this man was forever harping | him were as the froth of the sea as avout his wife not understanding him. |compared to the undercurrent of real Ife also carried that sanctimoniow ‘TH. The froth disappeared, e Mke air of PATR. He wore t the undercurrent went on from the the mask of SEL’ ITY until he tm- | time it had first started. agined himself entirely too good for| ORAL: IF YOU WANT TO K Mrs. Lillie Langtry—Mrs. Brown Potter. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World). BOUT twenty-five years ago the;the New York stage. A rivalry between the Jersey Lily | She had gone to London (where Fal- and Cora Urquhart Potter began, | ward, Prince of Wales, lived) to make ST vow wholly to the cards and replying & anything or anybody in the wide, wide| THE TRUTH ABOUT THE MISUN- and for several seasons nothing in-|her actual debut. ie 1, abrupt monosyllavies when addresse world. DFRSTOOD HUSRAND ASK THE UN- terested ip to date’ New Yorkers ‘or the New York premiere, Oct. 31, by any of the other players. Aroun. Ne an atood, For a few moments the man at wi the lable waa the ueuct fines ohne jion | Sted onlookers, standing at a respect that might have beon taken for satts-| ful distance, watching each deal wit. faction. When one by one the men sur- |) Sry ty—as becomes men wh rounding the Sheriff had departed the} Know the danger of interference. pped slowly over toward|, For half an hour Webster had bee? gee about, trying hard to restrab) ts figgerin’ pretty we. | "8 Impatience, yet not succeeding Hous on bein’ Sheriff of this here coun. | Presently he came closer, for scraps 0 ty,’ he sald, bracing himself, with a dana Be aca carried on betweer shoulder againat the front of the High | Santa Fe and Denver, floated to atm Card oe Webster bristled angrily, ‘Phere ain't Indeed, he was a real martyr. “My | DERSTANDING WIFE. ~ > more than stories of their Jealousy, fs Both beauties profited by the sup- Posed bitterness of feeling between| On Oct. 25, Mrs, Langtry arranged a 3 ees ha them, and only the Prince of Wales|matince for the benefit of the Actors’ A ° ee SB suffered. Fund and elected to show herself in the Little Chapters on the Presidents. i ah For the admiration the subsequent |character of the miraculously beautiful é ; 3 ¥ and late King ward was supposed | Galatea. VI.—Personal Odds and Ends. to entertain for both women was, to| And when the curtain rose what eight their theatrical adventures, ax thé milk | should meet her lovely gaze but the puiasat. 4 bath ts to Anna Held’s opulent Cora Urquhart Potter altting The accompanying photograph of Mrs,|radiantly tn the far front of @ stage Langtry, taken in 1887, is of piquant | box , seats were sold at auction, boxes while the wi lingered on his fu then died away, leaving an exp ASHINGTON, Jackso | Buren, ‘Taylor, Fillmc colin, Johnson and Cl Van Garfield was a left-handed P: e, Lin-| Me studied for the ministry, and often veland | preached, though he was never ordained, Denver was saying : Sine aH “back in Chicago I knowed Ms ner nan was| ctor of college degrees than any Brown Potter’e in 130. The younger generation of Americans win thie election.” " that he uned tt for to ‘button hte ani ponane other President has acquired. P * In the autumn of 1887 the first wife!have seen these beauties of the The tall man wmiled. “T reckon that’a| (VE Or eae wag Detter'n a but i the only bachelor) Roosevelt and Taft figure as the only of James Brown Potter, the banker |elgities only In theatres devoted to right.”” he said. And then, admiringly, | (24 qn) Ye eased money on it, “caus 1 | Loa aby babel Bhd Presidents given to regular and syste- and nephew of Bishop Potter, was | inexpensive vaudevillo—and even there “T may, this town has shore gota Sheriff |) oon ten oe oe aie Rp » | ed 30, weve matic athietle practices, about to make her first appearance on | not very warmly recelv land rrying while in office. Jefferson, Madl- son, Monroe, John Quine ams and ' wy] ont her wrist--give him tim The peacock fluttered its feathers. 1) °" tm time. reckon there ain't. nothin’ hereaboute woe men close by anigsered ant e'n tell Jim Webster how to run a bang- | (ooater Grew & deep breath and up Inw shebang. Not even Jiggs Lene- closer to the table, stealthily Sandman Stories \\ Aer esa tds venomously srreepiog. Nia. gun hole reseseaa my nentiments exactly,” re- | SOPped, for there was something vague Washington and Jefferson were both notable riders on horseback. John Quincy Adams, Ike no other President, rose before sunrise in warm weather to go bathing in the Potomac. 4 re and strange about thi: i each held the « " te strated i man. gently. “Much ae! 0? a i conver: } He De ee we er The crowd cheered at hte vigorous Writ and one i turned the tr uated. "youre eee. Riss and none was desirous of mis 5 ieantgty handling of the spade when, in 1828, he By Eleanor Schorer. sie with onty one card to draw. | ord of It, j During hie’ beet Ae a os broke ground for the Baltimore and ¥ ‘ee v be tn the deat with only o But tt came near ator, Governor, Minister to Eng! | 1. p: a ; Onto Rallway. 7 , | Vice-President and President. : van| QUfRS BROWN-PorreRpp a eription of Van After belng Prestdent, John Quincy| There 1s @ pleasant description a all, quick and Adams sat in Congress, Andrew John-| Buren in old Boel caulos <6 : to an abrupt endin It'q be a mighty big thing for you If] ong of the men of the ti ~* Teas < ° ringe, iy of Conese . learn that there are cd Ri tanced quickly at the man, | !earn conversations uaa i _Wenstor glanced quickly at the ™&N.| wich, ‘white held. in publia nem hite hatred, walking briskly through Figen "yout folly td aed son became a United States Senator, | White haired, Walns | | : “Jigua wouldn't have a ghost of @ and tomale, John Tyler was elected to the Confed- | the attest at a rode, but was not fs Fak 7, iy otrnet 2 ; " folded ty arms over #8 most ridiculous thing,” he erate Congress and James Monroe be- yalked 81 lle , Leh PR ‘ ac Than 8 mow came a Justicé of the Peace in Virginia. | an eapectatly active man. i 4 ¥ Yanan mo tin choat and gazed at Webster with | fit) when hie t irth hed cooled eno: So other ex-Presidents have held public! Lincoln, despite warnings, would walk Z } a8) Yi : ugh level, steady eyes. Something unusual , Deny office, at midnight with a single companion n, and Webster ed pad Cleveland was sworn in as Governor | from the War Department to the W nite ‘Ast ® slow glance at the ine shone nt : terrupter, speaking without turning his 4 im Tee Ny, as tell ron omethin’ head, here's places here @ wart's and as President on a Bible given to) House. ‘ Knew the Reason. about that hoss thicf” anid the tall Yorre the fn tha wri he said, with him by his mother in 18: Washington, in / = ‘ = ’ bs CET AVA,” said Ure hopeful youth, man presently. hen ave Pierce was the firat President born in| elght years as = THX vel! meat a natura int Wetter anammnd Mimaelt erect, TAR] nag a, Jaurhea yhkain-biatantty, arabl ; a. = Ot course : proud | ; nte ” the nineteenth centur rl Resbiotat: ale No. X!.—GREEN WICH STREET. j and fetlered ts find that thete was_at ing forward with tiated. with audden Feturned ne h onro Ga c m vite < hi ell his offering." | sh e 0," e ri Jefferson, John Ada: Ene BIN SAU te . HEN Greenwich Village was a') = ~ \ Reis at ehaie teed Mw, | golf-reprowoh; “you sure ought to~you! sa! Denver, “I wouldn't ming, Aled on the Fourth of first two| Jonn Adams wa: | health resort and an exclusive i \ for pap ag sy we Teo what brought the mos: |T knowed a man onct which had @ wart } in 1826, away from the | residence quarter it was situ- % ke < the spout of the kettle, but you don't Know why] sane trom t erift of Conetos, Why ]2" ‘il¥ tongue, It was unconventent, | Washington and Jackson were the! oat of govern ated at some distance northwest of New | ¢ 5 P ar for what reason it does to, and oe ene|dtan’t 1 think of that before? Why,” | ont it Kept him out of trouble, for he only Presidents to deliver Farewell Ad-) ment ear and [York City. A wide and much-travelied | Wri! - houehoWd. "The Teun the seam tomes out of | he udded, auddenly chaxrined aver his) laws shoot off his gab when gentle dresses [twenty days in | foad connected the village with the/ te kettle ts 9 that man {hougitiensnons, “I didn't even think Mee wae talkin’ | Van Buren was the first Preshlent not! four years. ‘erson left the capital 796! city, ters without your knowing to ask what your name Is ficman | koeutee Bors 4 eft the fringe tt abs 4times in elght years, 1 vich street! —- a It's Denver,” returned the tall me 7. hs and slunk to the ber, born a British subject, This road wag called Greenwich street — 8 eer aver Trcoutdr't never | Where there was none but the were a phe after Greenwich Village. The village Titles in Kentucky. Gute, et ener andic. than that'n. |Reeper to sympathise with ‘tm —_— {tself was named for an estate on whose air. the Kentuckian said, as they wat | Mt"™ t got noth with] \nd now Santa Fe looked u site It was built. The estate ortginally By the tite, Saou can tell a Bay tit ee ecaareniat Denver's eves aquarely. “T reckan geet e ° belonged to Admiral Sir Peter Warre Glib Wo fait Sah ioe Goat et he ae Cle kannst returned tie -O }Be Twas the dude you spoke about." he VIM C|MA FS | [rieriredion ater career or aavai| wre ease cegr tre Br | Aor rue the Slut paotge “ae Zoe make shen Bp e y warfare. There he built for himeelf omel, and if he keeps thein un the floor, he's ant to do it ketch that he Sore TL -ORthe re. An’ I've got @ . huge mansion that stood in the block , Lice a aarauieenatrieae reckon you've got that w ii PN Where you said the thor e now bounded by Bleecker, Tenth, but re got guing to die [Auld Denver, “katchin oa era i Vira y it Bot too dig to t Oo (e) Vv e TS [Jcharies and Perry streets, Thin was Meutenant rr huntnens. f ain't Kot no} oo a bat tidn't make the bu as : / Peat eo leaks thee tedleela' ith. 1h. Bnieee And he 3 big enough to fit around ft arren's country His town house! major th | with ip was at 1 Broadway. | \ ‘ Warren named his estate Greenwich | Winning um Back. in memory of Greenwich, England, \ ‘i fs the sililest and most hopeless thing tn the world to short and his hands he drew f e from the right sclosing upon the back of ig @ Hikantic stad bys —- siloon into while A Lesson on Politeness, ft triends: had disappeared a stor Mm. Taft has recently half the sewn rd now," began T When the grounds were broken up into try to “get back" a lover. streets and bullding lots, the rural se » that if you have quarre |tement that sprang into e: ence on fuse to do y the old estate kept the early name and nvor, Reaching h of Sani and# in @ Vise-like grip, “We he re table he welze ed with som ur share in I do not im young man you shoull Jomatic dinner up. That 18 a different matter altogeth It 18) was known as Greenwich Village, | a hee the Cy neg aan bent { ¥ a question of overcoming a slight disturbance| pYere, when contagious fevers scourged an} t 0 erage” ‘ ublom~e, ne ) in the stream of affection, not of forcing it to return into] New York, people would come with thelr as hoes (ine rege pene h ye a channel from which it has been allenated., families for purer air and rustic # wy polltetens, way the Work 1 oe us they swung to @ level Seton But {f @ man who has been paying you attentions, has|roundings. For the benefit of business . perhaps even been engiged to you, definitely dectdes that} men who wished to go back and forth he prefers another girl, you must even let him “gang his|from the elty, @ stage coach made two ain gait.” Love must be spontaneous cr {t is not love. | dally trips between (ve ©.!iase and Wall And you have to ve thankful that the mistake aw | street. Betty Vincent aiscovered before marriage instead of after teal, wll end this here exhtbt- : wouldtt a he | tlon e sald grimiy; “there's a man The Delay. ret nod with cold Er He Up sheet ea seat el rack tn By Cora M. W. Greenleaf, | ; ; HEY toll me pain grows dull tn Fee 1 wonder 1 t | | to her. How should T begin tho le} | ihe Kissing Game, 11 depenan on how well You know t “VY, BE. writes; "Is tt proper for 9] girl, If y | a young man to escort her to a dance | should she not provide the carriage’ ed to call] I suppose y o referring to a j If It's true? ! 1 ar accusta wean tt row lows Keen, | Wy young man and woman ara en-| her by her first name, write Dear Miss | leap-year ball, In that case the girl) te ft of you? of ld 7 " gaged to play Kissing game! o makes all the arrangements, naUhowe ro : ‘Those wamee pro considered bad form D." write employer often| "M8." writes: “T refuned to see or rem noticed tha w a 1 : r for anybody nowadays. taken tae’ t hip HOM AGT Nave Perl Gate tee ceece Lente see a| The Bird’s Nest. lee ra ‘ rows p time |n ' , wy, He" writes: “I met a young lady] his daughter, But I am generally | friend told me about him, Yet I find t PUR Suigny Ene See Ue On same ales ‘ urns again ’ : F when calling at a frlend’s house, Should ng business, an ems diMeult | still love him, What shall Td p Area BCob ie & ne tof ‘ A ain » mii . she take the initiative in sjymking to) “quainted with her, How shall! You were wrong to ung if | Are y naa 1 eve f or J vin | ghanes eC ane me froth now on?” ‘ | man on hearsay evid vould! i cl ‘Phere taey A ; \ SP ‘ , young lady {s alwaya supposed to| Why not speak to your employer | give him @ chance to defend himmelt, | ee MATEN ; A \ ned and With pleasure ie . ! bow first, for in that way she tndicates| about !t, and ask him if he haw any lots of good things Ni: Ao v7 pick ip. And to z : \ whether or not sie wishes to recognize! objection to your jaying other than] “A. V." writes: "Is it proper for q's i ee vit a e sh | Ny. |W the gentleman, | business calls? young lady 9 attend a dance with @ ‘fs i a ' dies ' w Ms an r \ You — . . : | young man without a chaperon? ellmbec e r ve t mA \ aS eae “A, G." writes: “How can I find out A Fickle Friena:hip. \* ane should follow the custom of the much to th ® s a pa 1 Ite ain grows dull again the roote of his ha didn’t just say | "A bargain’ a bargain "returned if the young men at the business school} “A, B." writes: “A young man haa! young people with whom you associate, beautiful baby ty while ad dreamed, Chey tell am tr 1 ayer aie year A s eatuall anumie“Ailea ie which I attend really care for me? | been paying me attentions for three|in such # matte | Ike a good it & aK Or joy returns rf Denver ently. ah HAIL SREY lle ae Don't try, Just be good friends with| years, but now has left me for a girl — quietly stole down . f Bobble and) 8 " Lv = rena! a Bat ARE I have hae them, friend, Should I try to make up with| "F. W." writes: ‘Who should sat the the litte birdies. veh tren M grow w watting ane. ‘i ; amlBNt he maded — him?" date for our wedding, my flance or my- Every day Bobble ant | ree little robine they oes Pt a Aiea, ve nt glance at “J, B." writes: "I have recently met| No, he isn’t worth tt. Let him go, self?” climb up t to vi nest—* then they God grant I am not wrong Tne kind of a man to let a i‘ It ove t papeJ & @irl whom I have not seen for some It {s always the privilege of the and bring then bread t ui ney never would have found the goodies In hoping you'll come back =f ai yous it eM time, Qua she has asked me to waite = "FP, 8," writ ‘hep & girl esha wompe. were sisong enough w tly, They ‘oth, gal they eaw in thet beautiful dream, us wny delay so lone? a? lemaced the onmaiioncet A O- etemne t fi

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