The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1912, Page 15

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WATCH ME SURPRISE | &R THERE THAT'S ENOUGH FoR THE STEAM. IF LHAD BURNED THAT: GOOD NiGHT! THERE ISNT A MEAT SHOP OPEN IN TOWN AT THIS HOUR : Reflections ofa By Helen Rowland — - Coprright, 1012, by The Pree Publishing On, (Tho How Teen to Only what he doesn't say. Sa «7 Somewhere, in heaven, there is a pearly throne with , ROWLAND = 1 Cushioned seat waiting for the man sho never comes 6 a top early nor too late but always just at-the peychologival 1 ei:ent dinner. ~~ q Wid lunatickets. net — ho defera h chilly, empty place whence all the roses have fled. easier to live with than a critical saint, . 1 old ones that Eve had to put up with in Adam, thinks so, too. eve A POCKET | VCLOP \ ERE are the replies to Friday's five questions; | “ ir. The bones transmit those vibrations to the fluid cuntained In the ) ¢ piiddle car, The auditory nerves then collect the vibration: V | i]. sound waves are collected by th i Molent the vibrations the louder the sound. | bias Phe optte nerve no power of sensation as have other nen hurt or trritated, {t communicates that fact by flashes pain, That ts why, when a man's eye 1s struck, he e tlashes of ght produced by the Irritated optic nerve. Mightne ia caused by ous exhaus alr te drawn in throv walla drives tt out agi 1. Yawn! manner and aGwriON Of the aystom makes breataing incomplete .or trregular. dlethe lost hair is not replaced by nature, and baldness ensues. eo Mere ave five niove questions: They wll be answered on Wednesday Reeds What is pain? 12, What is fever, and why are pain and fever often beneficial? a. What causes crying? “pj. Why doce cold water crack a hot glass? #15; What causes thunder? 1 Tabloid Tales ] bands of three pretty daush=/ fojowed nim dutifully names to three Now York|tdle began, streets. h, Their {Toad tn old Greenwich, jotte and Ann and Susai father was Peter, known t iat, Commodore, finally Admiral sir |4flerward Baron Southampton, ki duty, won a New York bride, | topher street. nd then built a country |Sir Peter, mn. which Was @ palatlal wonder y.. Brom his broad veranda, EEE ig trom Staten Island well upler. peculiar manger.” Lancey tt Was. whe, re. going .to pay. ub. or propose yootne of the galingt Oy, —_ Bachelor Girl W HEN a man ie talking love a wise woman Netene A husband and wife used to belong to each other; but in: these days of Hmiplifted divorce they are merely temporarily leased to one another. 40 tong as burglars and iunatics are permitted to enter the holy bonds matrimony the world twill continue to be filled with little burglarettes teliar, debut occurred Oct. ‘Panndr's (now Walla tre, agd the farce selected was “The Maskéd Bau,” adapted trom the French by Clyde Fitch. The evening came off very. well for Mr. Drew, but * the “hit of the occasion was acored by In the seoond act, in the dressing-gown herewith pictured, she had the scene of the plece, appear- ing as a young wife who taught her husband a lesson by saying she hid «fhe man who puts off marrying until the autumn of life, like the man summer vacation until September, ia likely to find the world ) a » & husband's manners have 80 much more to do with gomestic happiness an ‘his morals! Doubdtless, a cheery, complimentary burglar might be Maude Adams, No, Clarice, your husband isn't filled with original ein; they're the same Many a man thinks he will marry a girl until he diecovers that she Find ‘Patches Schooldays # |. Any noise causes sound waves to vibrate through the alr. outer ear and sent through the ear canal to the ear drum. The drum Is set in motion by the waves and he brain, This ts the involved process known as “hearing.” The greater the Ever of vibrations the higher the pitch and shriller the sound. The more Now FATTY, (nen You Git Tre WORD, G __ fiColor diindness ts the fault of the brain, not of the eye, and no certaif cure Gor steis known. It ts usually the inability to detect red. A color-blind person Bislakes red for black. Ho seldom mistakes bluefor any other color and never fy @iatakes yellow. Abott four per cent. of men—and almost n) women—are color RpeBIT QUT ox Hole You Site’ JERR THE STRING B snooT Him! f Heht instead of stars,” or, rather, on, It is produced by a spasmodi t of the diaphragm and the other muscles, that are used in hn the vocal cords and an elastic 18 caused In much the same ay be a sign of nervous fat4he or bodily weartness, It fe supposed PVF an invesuntary effort of the lings to fill with alr at @ time when the ex- Pew. The hair is constantly cant off. As long as the papiilae (skin profections of #4ip) from which the halr springs are in good condition new hair replaces Witch falls out. But if the paptiiae ave destroyed or the skin is {l mur- Of OLD NEW YORK Copyright, 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) Veerdn Irish Admiral in’ Green-,!*i#hman. Hers te a family name ta- wich, [miliar to Fea York histary, rae | LAYS Were hers in the Greaawich house, yi118 Ww the tale of how the bus laut wien gle Peter bedame at en | abroad, tera of an Irish admiral inithree daughters to be educated the British service once Bave | here comes in the point with which this| Love and Humor. bit of work!” The Day's Good Stories ««| Keeping Out the Wind. ILLIE was @ emart boy, and ambitious, pout ha Ysa bank, F. > are you getting on o Charlotte Warren married Willough- ‘he threo girls were Warrens—Char- |B,’ Earl of Abingdon. Hence Abingdon most a part of | the service | What 14 nhw Wert Twenty-first street, | do hope you have is Sub-Lieutenant, Ileutenant, Cap-|Arn Warreh married Charles Fitzro: 4 sense of humor! blessed, everything will be #o much} Instead of crying | 4.) over the surprises! suppose you and changes and Peter Warren; in his late years also| Fitzroy road, winding near dember of Parliament. jf Elghth avenue line, between Four- However, It was 1747 when he went|teenth and ‘Forty-second streets. to the old country and plunged |#@nnah Warren married, for love, Col, wteitegiaiation, Before that he cut a|Willam ‘Skinner, without wealth or ae a dashing seadog on Amer-|ttile, Hence Skinner road, now Chris- ratight with his prize-money (taken in Abingdon Square remains to-day the wars ohiefly with the French) a fine es-| Sole reminder by name of the romance of three hundred acres in old | of the three pretty daughters of brave hueband will laugh with you, if he's the right sort, there won't be any quarrels Bven * you know how 10 take care ig the Hudson, he had. a vigw| . ‘*Dhat new boarder is acting in a rath-| of the fiat, as I sincerely hope you ~» | \fKea,” geld the landlady. ‘He is either, '—Kanses Now For THE SPuDdS AND ALITTLE GRAVY AND TLE CARRY THE As They Looked a Quarter Century Ago Old-Time Photographs of Stage Celebrits Copyright, 1912, by The Press Pubtishing Co, (The New York World). MRS. FISKE—MAUDE ADAMS. BW American actresses hold wore serious positions on the: ‘stage to-day Maddern Fiske and Maude Adante; yet both gained their earlier populagity. as; comedicnnes in farce; and #0 it is of more than or- dinary interest to see how they looked Here they are: When John Drew retired as leading actor of Augustin Daly's famous com- pany, people discussed the diMcuity in finding @ partner the public would ‘ac- cept as any sort of substitute for Ada ‘The announcement of Maude Adams 6 the choice came as a surpriss She had beer known to New York about four years, but only as gone off to a masked ball, and pretend- from $he escapade. Thré@.yehrs before Mins Adams's Grat . in New York, i cured. jwi3@8-in “The Paymaster,” Mrs. Fiske, then known as Minnie Maddern, added “In Spite of All” to her reper- totre. It was a version of Victonien Sardou's “Andrea” made tor her late Steele Mackaye, Mackaye, the poet; and Mrs. Fiske pre- sented, it Sept. 18, 1985, aé the ineugural play of the Bécond season of the old Among the actora in Miss Maddern'’s company were Richard Mansfield and Bben Plympton, then and, Indeed, until the early nine- ties Minnie Maddern wan known as a soubrette, in a type of drama which mingled comedy, metodrama, sentiment and 6 little Nohg and which has dis- appeared. The accompanying photo- graph ehowa her at that time. appeayanc Lyceum Theatre. ——— AN EXCEPTION. “All the work’ loves a lover.” “But not when he's holding a busy telephone for a twenty-minute talk with hie turtle dove.""—Ohicago Journal. end Stringl and think “What a silly kid I am to) you'll meet your husband happily, not mind this little doletully, ordere,”* eaid People that lave oes By C. it not yet quite edber If you haven't a natural humor, do try to oultivate one! Different Stations. “1 love a young man, sense of and 1 have been used to luxurtes, ind clne toe door after) vou think I would be happy with him? open, —— \a different scale of living the home of a certain family since 1 * eight years old? bout my own age to continue my visita?’ ‘There ts @ young | ind his wite, and he stil} perortion| love with @ young lady. She tells me A le lonesome when I am not with Do you think my love ts recipro- f9 |S emetant mar to tat out to 0 ones, ng cone] adventurer, Wallace an am apd MM ina ‘sr prayer a ‘have done. “Good night.” she said. Fortune lay down again and drew the coverlet up to her chin. With her eyes shut ghe watted, but in’ vain. Her |’ mother disrobed and eought her own ded. Fortune Chedsoye. sleep like that! stand, found « wrapped in tat! cloak, his head pillowed arm, motionless with that’ pretended sleep of the wataher. Getie! kept his vigil Miles upon miles he had come, across three night and day, day the soundiess, yellow ‘good to the true be- ‘The night wi 11, tain fires warmed hi 5 All day long he had followed the ac- cursed, lying giaour, he wandered into the native quar- on camels and night, ters of the elty. a day, 9 week, sand. He could wait. Inshalle! CHAPTER VIII. The Purloined Cable. FORGE, having made G Kain with conecience relativ sentimental lapses. ‘The man next science to speak of (indeed, he hi 4 her while pai meridian!), was up betimes “tam very much in | turned (4 at gos he was strolling pout the. atching the entrances. It is ipoon- ivable easily mail may be pur- many He wei “M, Payne FROM BAGDAD} AZ (Copyright, 1911, by BotteMernl! Co.) AYNOPRIR OF PEECHDING OHAPTEMS, | A company of crooks mest at Cairo, Raut. wi the of cemolting rid yoing Americas upon the head porter’s counter. dettly, ie the looked on, the adventurer ren the bulk. He found three letters oabdle, the latter having been George's bankers the da; |. | matied directly to the hotel, had no euspioton that a bold 2 any one asks for ‘say that J shall be at m: a ta age rer gel ett ‘eo, sir,” replied the Dewan to sort te rest of the CHAPTER VII. Ryanne Tables Hle Cards. ORTUNE eat up and’ ribbed — aa wita been lees ecattered ohe might have paltered. ‘The syliable had « Anality to it that reassured the mother more than « thousand protestations would 1 Hl i‘. 1 A Ryanne wae intensely Gesattefied with For once his desperate moot i i i | i I : £ a lt held him simply because tt wae an ex- plott that enticed wholly hte twisted outlook upon life, There was a forbid- i i i } #2 i ii crossed this path at that time when he might have been saved? And yet, would the have saved him? God alone knew. He heard Joued atirring in his room xt door. Presently all: became atill. ‘He shrugged, threw off his coat, awopt the cover from the pack of cards, and Viayed solitaire till the first pallor dawn annoynced the new day. Reclining snugly againat the parapet, hi it i i Hi ‘ut never once to the Yhiordes rug, alept the sleep of the untroubled, of the Just, of the man who had nothing in partioular to get up for, In fact, after having drunk his breakfest cocoa and eaten his buttered toast, he evinced hie eati@faction by turning his face away fram the attracting morning Mght and passing off into sleep again, Aud thereby hangs thie tale. So much depended upon his getting his mail as it came in that morning that enotigh for him to accustom yourself to| Fate herself must have resleted eturdily ‘the desire to shake him by the shoulder. Perhaps she would have done ao but for t | the serenity of hia pose and the Infantile e that Uingered for a while round hie lips. Fate, as with most of us, hag her ing hypocrite, the sanctimonious, the eleek, the Algernon, for no blame of his own, must be taken by the scuff of his aéok and thrust bodily ito this tangled, finitely humorol He had hed « vague Yitiordes, but it him to be Bat at this early ‘That he would eventually appens anne never doubted. He knew Mohamed-Bl-Gebdel cromg, every darrfer lev effective than death. If he returned to the palace at wae not possitte lounsing-room, Se aaa tic.

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