The evening world. Newspaper, September 13, 1912, Page 21

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)

nore, SAY, wat Now DONT CRY wr er ‘ohaw: THis 18 THE HAT FOR THe LOVE | HAT ON DONT YA ‘BREAIING SEASON OF PETE, ware KNOW IT 18 Too LATE TAC SioT HAT ; \S FOR THAT ? SEE To GET EVEN Deep Water Doings & % (-seeta) 8 8 By C8 dedell! “My Best Girl’’ Is Pretty But Dauil. BY CHARLES DARNTON. T HERE'S a lot !n a name. That's the best thing about “My Best Girl,” the (Coyrright, 1900, by the Prank A, Mimsey Go.) ay already atiffened in desth, exalt TNOPSIS maviC jerk thio jite again. Me gat on tie éee iinormme. gp wuavione quarrime. 25% iconed sent ties hie ppeee toe where be bee been serving & life sentence fee seated himself on mab of foot am was calmly smoking while be al Mia horse to nibble at the spots of turage which cropped wp here aad amongst the heather, Hollins was ing along at a quick rate toward @s farin; the other warders were advancing leisurely upon the contre Lioyd at last heard thelr volees; @e sound was gratefal to him. The eet ing of oppression passed off; be am autumnal newcomer that tried in vain last night to take the place of “The Quaker Girl" at the Park Theatre. No one can deny that Channing Pollock and Rennola Wolt have written a fine title, It's @ title that may be depended upon to take any man back to his bugsy-riding Sunday afternoons, with the green grees growing all ‘round, just ‘as it does to-day in the park from which the name of the theatre on the Circle has sprung. The ead part of the story I am obliged to write is thet “My Best Gri" ts pretty but dull. Cufton Crawford alone survived ‘The Quaker Girl" lest night. He returned, vather than came back, looking somewhat careworn, posetbly because of bis new down again, and thia . by sheer ts Teeponsmenities ae 8 Foe ifindy ‘stfengiad. Soseona advertence, on the spot where Holtim ‘star. jut in his old, the nr stabued tal ieee and ifs iad ant while they talked. And hap familiar way he did hie! best to take his black-/ typed honora easily. Rich in his own name—| dead tove, Gut ta ode, suet te Ha Ae pati, aad “waa iu Might whee Vamaili pening to look around him be euddenl) ame Upea am, saw something that made him utter The couric alter secogising tM dimen te quick cry of ustontement and emothe the cody Lee t tt in he own throat. t Viymouth, Puraved oy prison, guards, Lioyd’s eyes nad faflen on somethin thanks to th OAR Gea Be ihad the that shone and alittered in a deep fia of the autho: — sure of the rocks on which heysat. plece—he changed places CHAPTER VII. thought at firet that the things he eas with « chauffeur and) (Oontinned.) a bess drops of vegy fire th: at ‘had fates then joined the arm: hy some mystedour cane apon th Just ‘ show that al Things That Glittered. cool green of the rocks. ‘Senty Get at beans] ‘VE been thinking,” eld Tt wana full minute before he reatines has @ certeia he: 4 166 the big man, “that ite that he was staring at a necklace @ are | | possible that J've pad @iamonds the brilliancy a value. To save his starv- though of this wort. of Which suggested even to tutores ing soul, Dora Lane Ing. there'a nubody can (nd the notion of vast wealth. Hy followed him to Gov- Lorin Abe 5 looked and looked again, and his head y that rine ernor’s Island, Ro- mance, however, went; farther than the lower day; it climbed to the heights of a toboggan slide and rang out in| song. Not only the, weather-proof hero, but | other singers who were| not afraid of the cold stood in the snow and exercised their Jungs. | Gong after song defled the frost that nipped the last act. Miss Har- ‘ret Burt, for on “obliged,” but it must town Is exactly the centt® awam with the joy of the discovery and of the unive I don't know but what of tne posabilition that Ine ind te J shan't chuck it and have @ taste Of dite eyes grew accumomned to. th, civilian jife."* darkness of the fissure, ant he reattue What aut’ asked the other. exactly what he «aw, ‘The thing w. “A pubho would sutt me” replied the @ massive necklace of dtamonds, set {1 big warder, “A nice, comfortable, #RU delicate gold network, and tind caug’, port Of pubiic, I have my eye on the on the fronds of a clump of fern tha, pias sort of thing, in a way of SDPAK- vrew out of the rook and bung: daomgias ng.” from it “Then you'd need « wife, Lioya made no attempt to easel, “At thirty-eight i's t I had one.” it hung at lenst ai feet Dolow hie et answered the big man, stretching M8 tt would be necessary to wet something arma out and smiling, ‘I've never alven with a hook at the end If the necklact much thought to marrying, but I'Vo wan to be recovered. nothing against {t—nothing, I'd as #00n — guddenly Lloyd burat int | marry as not, and of course if I go iM a of cursing, He had mbered | for keeping a public T must sive It & Holiness sudden exclamation—wmd landlady. when he wax sitting in that very apc “Where would you go for her?’ asked gid looking into that very fissare, The heart! j apanton, Yorkshireman, then, had seen t Dy confessed that 8 | | I should go tor the public,” ie and would doubtless Fits dn't help sratere, | | other, "To Yorksnire—that's paving found thei Mr. Crawford had no | » I should go, ‘cause It's where L Very well; then it would have te bt Chk (6 KSA BLK Ble Skate—I'll never invite that Octopus to have a drink wey me acelbs Why he wants one in every hand! ang from. Did you ever hear tell of @ |, se of sharing~of going hakwres self and Augustus Bar- mtg sarmesdd | placo called Camiators ts weremere- Tioyd cursed his {lleluok fervently vedes 4 ja manufacturing pince where they make jig breath, Ie h J | where I came from before | went into h pwn partie 7 HC a The Day's eh bony eer alee while the other had evi-| dently gone to grand + CLIFTON wie» STANWOOD 9 opera in an idle mo- ment and come away nd ‘ get mar- y resolved (o spend tt fh fishing expedition Good Stories 1 ce where yout gn becle “There's no lasses like the Yorkshire laswon,” said the Yorkshire man senten Encyclopedia easier th * fishing rod An Ingenue | trot r ni t turns } with a bit of orchestration as a souvenir. It was not an easy matter to “place” bey Sere hie a draw up the diamonds froin their bidtag Mr, Crawford's volce. He sang as he acted—casually. As an opening exercise he| Copyright, 1012, by The Prow Publishing Ca By Alma Woodward CC tie Oe chedie fS''e%m Yoon |OF settling down, Tehouldn't have much jing already know of ‘hem, and foremgy joined with a willing young woman, Miss Rita Stanwood, in announcing “I Do (The New York World), Copyfdht, 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (Tue New York Word) i aver to one of tie negro lostuirry et tbe| bother in! —— nt ils share, Tq Tike Your yes." Miss Stanwood was much prettier than the song, and she Legived . 2 ss 3 : ote! Uvery @abin and picked out Zeke as | He stopped ghort with something Itke ire the priae Balflors 9oked upon Mr. Crawford with something more than favor, He fared petter in| %—Why ia eleotricity excited by other songs that he managed by himself, but his dancing was not up to tts old | friction? inark, Ie acted like a promising student of George M. Cohan, who watched him| 342Waat produces electricity in from an orchestra chair with friendly interest. Songs anda bright line here and there helped Mr. Crawford to find nie way | *#¢ clouds? through @ performance that was made longer than it should have been by the| 8j/3—Why are persons sometimes aay, Object of bin generosity when he saw the! a startled exclamation that was half qroiins came PON a . fl 1 aan th | old fellow shambiing toward him weartng @ palr) choked in hie throat. The other ma: HERE are ao many things 1 Second, why, atter they have Kissed | ct'tattered shove thet looked like setdala | (mane yt ee ee cuted ioe don’t understand, and when I you, do they settle back for a moment| ‘Zeke, whet aise shom do you wear?” be] whtcn hie eyes had been meditativ ask about them, in the sepeland look at you ae though they had! callet to hin | fixed and saw that the big wardor w: § cP Carnal ple| just b | Tho old vero stonped short in expectation, Red ani of gaining tuforination, people | J estowed the crown Jewels UPON) «Aly gise, Cunvel!” he exclaiand, earuatly,/ staring at the rocks beneath him wi meee guy: “Oh, don't bu silly," OF| you-instead of teasing you again and| any alee!” Judy an “For goodne: | sad felt hurriedly s\vuux, Chinkcingg tig © & hook out of 4 Hut he sad nethtne make use of, and #0 he en tne diamonds and one minute and in his pocke he might ta. twig of heuthe that the pression that seemed to indicate 6, ; , s' sake atop ueking imbe- so that your heart hasn't a —SS nARoment or surprine. ohueking over his “i luck the mext bier Pag Wir itien ousciea ‘otti4ie alnatan Ganormanihe Laatuaxsiotcovernst| ne eee clic questions chance to stop throbbing? “Excuse Me.” Rit a sr" neen the. Younger RE oe Oe ee he ae Smiles," although Frank H, Heloher came to the front with his able-bodied voice | S44——-What te the origin of the ring) It one doesn't ask, how on earth isone) ‘ning, why, after they have made, GAN ahs Cavan eacselis arve Gil ORE ha: rman tase stoarecana tasbeh@ cn te ie tones ore ae : rank by , AN who ta constantly traveling over co cleared — ind niuat therefore be of Inmen to a “The Regular Army Man.” At other times the plece moved so sowly as to|in the marriage ceremony? ever supposed to find hae eee t love to you, several times, do beme salltoed ‘hea tecoem Well soquelated | around, ‘dusying bis eompanion's £aee $f ne cnule’ have bear | suggest that “My Bes: Giri” ought to live in the country. The one hope of this| $45—What ie emoke? Men bother me a lot, Lver since MY they become more and more distant and with the porters of the sleeping cai an if to fina out what he had neen. he would have defer 8 title to the 4 hat te smoke debut (almost three months now) I've) tonal “ Me Om @ recent trip he haflel hie porter exubsr cy " waula 2B ! tle to then ae ete | ta pepoleerorine’ hod orinal when they meet you in pubiict | 07 © tent, fe naught,” he sald. “L thought. © with his life: 1¢ te \o-be ebareds o_o met men, so many different kinds Of Fourth, why, when you speak of other saw " ¢ the rocks there. 4 cohe t Why, When you spea ‘1 atk os ae as a ¢ among the ere. Nie would are to it thal he had bie @@ HE above questions will be an-]Men—that ts, they all LOOK different,! giriy they have known, do th WAS 0 eee Eas Some Soot eeree tT | Aa T was saying about tiat public’——~ alr ° | I aworad Santas, ELaes APACE Gas | us TAs you've known them 6 MEA nave o funny Wile teadilies way yout * ty ua, “altace came from the slope below, — He suddenly IWapt fo bila feet raiet é they all do and gay practioally the same vat thetr If 4a ti way look in Matthew grinne he sai interrupting him fo notion by & fear toat Mled hho fener! Mes to Wednesday's questions Avot ir ips and « away look in, “Bfolvine! oa A ett VINCE nt’ |) &, reir Ween dean” [ys wa Rain iy and fara 0 Ih wa a SaaS | AUN RE ans von arses “Ma Retats in oe 3—(Why are some bottles seamed | UEA™ 5 ee ‘i ‘ vee that might mean eny i The two warders rose to thelr feet. ere were t might be dai " i L P Isn't {t strange? You would at least! , thousand things? ped att ea we gee Dien ‘a the: e | along the sides while others are not?) | 9 thatthe older @ man afew the put aside thelr pipes Inoked oF peer About end A d ice to OV ECTS § eames potter are nand-mase, oF | more ingenuity, hed —dleplay Lp ee SER Te SRW: of He: toip Poor O!d Wordsworth! © edge of the plateau, ‘Their a rat whe mor jeamless bottle: nd- i more Ingenuity Isplay; you I don't understand. . perior officer, a military looking man vult not Baws Marriage Without Love | have beon poured into molds, | oro clever than the younrer man far under three sub-tities | ne aa, [Lut Rarae up 19 the varge af the ro ks ae’ aay arr . | ss1—(What wines contain the most |S4ying nice things that aren't tr ia Mattes inate) nelaxcian * he acid, jin advance of the other wordera 4 1 “ aes 0 t " al eng {Making love. But ange to | horedtack, and now sat gauing expect aldp My dear girls, never marry a man whom you do not love because of the mate-| spirits and what the least?)—Champagn she Pema IR bt for this name, except that \t sounds Hike Sater aie (he) am cana im, who gre nite St rlal advantages he may be able to offer yo 1 one of the weakest wines, then Nock, eee et ee ene cae men ‘TRY | PUY feel and these men remind me balit citing hie portey alo | fr caps as thay responded to Lp armftule. 0} Tt i true that th marriage for love, or for what the two] then sherry; port 1s one of the strong- ‘a rT in} of putty) The uldges are young. ded en & Coming tack | t harder to mak a hit, but « jehow o7 inet narnia le lovi , 2 | est her they! oan ‘ \ \green-young, They have been left or he sald qieationinaly, » Sts mouth wit persons concerned think 1s love, doew not always turn out} mone ae with {her they're not nenrly so auacesetal, | Sree yine vic, millions They can dead, 4 mecred us iar } 7 i Ss—CWhy does mille turn 90! H aie Obuia Gel einaa’ Gusta oy aman, | ere een oe 01 ney ° y Teer: happily, Hut [ don't belleve there's ever real happiness In|) oo) ae undergoes fermentation auld only close one's eyes | waaellnvandarcmartaatnan mime slee aa wanker, none end me Breda, ite wat o at narriage of convenience. i ay though they were really lee he , | we both. ni} him—head ang. heart, * pla ‘ the marriag nventenc during which tnotle acid {8 formed, this) "1, ene @ret pince, when they took me| ‘how they were really sane articl Wee, not marra paretter,” the stoners The man on hor: k took his muss Id mow Some not (oo sensitive persons may, under such ctreume| turning the milk sour | blue serve eallor sults and com. (0% apparel: they have violet water tn ried: ‘Only “oid Wordamundh'a uken tache between his teeth end dit tt for t wrein the tances, to a certain atultitying content. But surely| 8%—(Why do boiled emge Mecctor 8) ion pense shoes and swathed mein the, ‘Her Veins Instead of blood; and their seain.”°—Monlgomer teem @ minute or two as if debating some treusure iay oon 1 silver spoon?)~They contain @ small jovn : jnenda are the nearest approach to per- Question within nts own mind Me a tind htm h thig consummation ja not worth the sacrifice of the wr ane lovely, olingy things that drape @ dabu | wie . $ proportion of sulphur, which unites with| , ‘ , | fect Vacuums that science hes ever at | The Cost 4p sieatn arders ot >y that belongs to the unton of two who really care| tne eilver and tarnishes {t ante, they told me that when 3 met oi a 5 sind Vall, you'll have to fetch htm down on horseback, ats © «athere! r : ss men I should be hy and girlish, be 5 5 1 Ty®., QUOnoe DRAPER of + from those r 6 sald “Hollins, their supe Hlotlins Was tom y for each othe’ Wo-(Why are west winds asually | cause T was an ingenue, taid that) 2 The Shrivellers, Mecnuse they ree nate, Giesuading the wo * lyon go over t n there and Ket {nx back from the fur, vut of the @ater Now that the untnarried woman has so many chances for} dry?)—They travel over large tracts Cf the more timtd and dimtent 1 could ap. ™mind me of wppirs that hav on lying fain, wied 900, te nitd-bearing out @ cart oF something the sort and of y at that me “et {tiuining economic independence, ahe ta espoctaily unjustified | !4nd and therefore absorb very poar the more af a euccess I'd ve in the On the ground too long). The shrtvellers ot mnt tha moor near this wall cart, draw mn moist matrimonial bunt, re old and try to counteract thelr old Two women ent ndawept ean. Tl you stay here Hollins was walkin . , lvationg of three montha | dont thin sng aa the law allows, A ahrivelier’s ay) ging «etfull t over th Diue carr : Mg fang W my ee, bi ar g “ m? ‘ T y 1 A his handy in obedience ‘Two war ‘ Too Young. yin my fiancee, » Mt after 4 sent Story of ‘‘Danaide. men lve two nirawe nowadays for any- foundation Ir iis checkbook. Me may wae salt "0 gh pial al Dah ha utaraehdie Nik teacan lane Taney sar Lida 2, 1 f F ama young, oe elie ewere, DOOss REPLICA by Rodin of his statue | thing that looks Ike bread and jam! I have @ recor? t he has no future. | td Oe ee eee d we thane od away to plok up his ade. and carrio’ it down: the, elope. te the Ari of 1 i ae oung man | 0% candy. % reesived no acknow of “La Danaide,”” which haa been gtarted to bo It, but I was almply| He playa the traditional part of the ‘old Wea that! the 4 nuisance to go tramo’ le group Ww, where they lal@ it a Hing Ty mavecitane. ba you thnk | ae" oF my gist Was this right | Purchased by the Brooklyn Mu-| swamped right in the beginning by girls Man” to an ingenue's “darling.” ‘ eahingies Siar. | aerose to yon farm!’ he mattered A, then Unit bap ABE ama i by tad : | Tt was not courteous on the part of | seum and will form @ part of its per! who knew how to smoke and do the 3 The Sollds, The solids are just ‘nhe| " Liovd. wwhy couldn't he send one of uD. Hollins, bls fave purple with Raat, ie (oo youn your flancee. manent collection, has a theme which, turkey wot and everything—and I am/{right age. ‘They have non-callapsibie| Regular Stairs. the mounted mon conte Ve Scant A. Pe eee t ¥ | hough a tragtcal one, is tenderly treat-| sure even the broadest-minded person | muscles and a @irect look tn thelr} UAWYER was cromexainioing an old Gor (en fut ares heals ond. ete ni and- then. a the rocks ateve Saad Hi a = set 7." writes: “Tam twenty years |e4, ‘The Danaldes, !t will be remem- | couldn't cal! golnge-on of that Kind dif-|eyea that makon vou ehtver, ‘Thay have A tnan about the position of the sinom, wine |{ry ue cigar onaer selected m olsen and rived to catch hit eve and favone) In love wi but [ doubt |0l4, end a most admirable young man|hered, were condemned to pour, water! fdent or giritant money-—that t ave made, They 4 so fori in a howe ia which @ bgan to smoke, Everything waa very ha wink, Jip turned aside Srop tate caten't ‘an 1 do to| Wants to pay me attention, My moth: |everlastingly into and the) Among the thingy I don't understand) know something about everything and | Sma tranaction ocourred, said the lawyer, tt in the hot summer air: no sqund Holling followed him, { aps intereae er doesn't mind, but my father says I| statue embodies in a woman's prostrate 1 are these rything about eome things. They are| “wil gout feoigh to ell the Court how broke the eilence save tho humming of he sald.” i : : am too young, I am earning my own | figure, the endieng tragedy of a wasted) First, why do they always let you!men to dream about and pin your faith | t2 stalry rao in the houset™ the bees ng the fresh flowered n them too,” sald Towa," 1 | me to be your {'ving. What shall I do?” fe, A Frenchm jp describes the statue! jjow before they're Kalng to kiss you? | to—they ware men love—BUT, they she Henman looked dased ead rnestties for @ heather, Lloyd, puffing away at his wor 1 what you Ww startled et, aise ah Probably your father cannot prevent |as “one of the most tender female fg-| Why don’t (hey sometimes do it without | have no use for an ingenuie! |e yen,’ bow Wining” Mawr | pine, became oppreriad by this silence, But now I've seen themgi'll have te » Li : Fe your seeing the young man, but he may ures that were ever lovingly molded by any warning, In a sulden, flerce wa ans te Lam hothered | Vall” amine) ther a moment's! ‘The igtdtiy of the Naan whom he hed c a c ona’ “UL AL” writes had a aq make your Mfe unhappy, thie sculptur of the energetia like you read abouss jabout men? yee eal ful to ies ese wiakan thal 4am (®e Be Continues a

Other pages from this issue: