The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1912, 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)

wer ee TOWN he expressed it, “Pop, WiLL YA TBE My Horse ?| ] WANTA TAKE SOME BUTTER AN'EGGS TO The Pres Publishing Co, Comrie. 2. Now York Evening World.) MRS. JARR’S RICH UNCLE DOES SOME STARVING. | U™ HENRY, who was used, as ————_ SURE,SURE, LEAD ME To iT! three | square meals a day,” was almost faiat with hunger the afternoon of @owl and song at the Modern Mothers’ : Meeting in the Hyacinth Room of the! It appeared that Mrs, Mudridge-Smith Hotel St. Vitus progressed. After Mr. Pinkflnger had played his beroeuse of “Thistiedown to the accompani dody's conversation, a Tedted “Pippa Passe: Robert Browning years previous to his demise.” Athwart the t of every: | y stout lady a little thing some You D BETTER BE SURE THAT + ITCHING Post $ SOLID, 1 MIGHT BREAK Lo@se& ~~. mean to a lady that another lady had sald about her, and when she had re- turned to tell the first lady what had been said in reply ehe found an angular ale in @ riding costume in her chatr. agi who was president of the Lady ‘The stout lady prefaced the recif{tion| Centaurs, a woman's riding club. They by saying she felt Browning was a Kindred soul ever since she had actually Deheld the palace in Venice tn which Browning died. “The day I beheld that palace ts the lodestar in my very stout lady. This might be true, a She had sipped | on the slimy steps of the old palace While getting out of the gondola and had fallen into the Grand Canal, where- by causing a ne Venice. “Gosh-a-mighty!" ‘Ten "Ain" there no highwater m: tn. Uncle | tugeing at Mrs, Jarr’s sleeve here | “where a dying man could get five cents’ worth of crackers and cheese!” aid Mrs. snorted Uncle Henry. “Bae! “Sseh! yerself! “T could eat a hull can of cove oysters ‘ata gulp, if I knew a place to get ‘em on the dais, rapped for order with an ivory gavel, and her gold lorgnette on the assemblage. | come to order!” Mrs, Stry "We will now she rode all day in street cars and the Fifth | avenue stage wearing mannish costumes and riding boots and carrying hunting crops, The officers of the Lady Centaurs could be told because they wore divide? skirts, The Lady Centaurs had been founded by the lady In Mrs, Mudridge- Smith's seat. Her game was Ima Mann, and she came naturally by her love of equestrianism because her father had amassed a competence manufacturing a patent folding cl Apartment houses. Miss Mann, like many other members of these sorts of riding clubs in. New York, made it a part of her duties to ride to other club meetings “always in the open alr.” By this they meant they always took a surface car and never the subway, one's color!’ This was true enough ‘They tlways applied the color as they ered sharply. And again she rapped to/caniered up the stairs, silence the gabble and argument, “The| “Ladies!” called Mrs. Stryver, “Please secretary has letters to read. Mrs, Giblett, as secretary, rose. ‘The letters are not worth reading. take it that the women who desite to be Me the Cau: ern Mothers have already espoused Some of the communications T have received are from women who say they cannot spare thelr time from thelr homes ani Modern Mothers: ‘Hisses we: to become heard. And then a violent quarrel broke out in the centre of the room between a woman wearing a rid- ing habit and Mrs, Smith, Clara Mudridge- cease the altercation! You are not at home «with your husbands!” “T haven't any, thank goodness torted Miss Mann. “Rut I submit that T am a member ‘of this club in good standing. I love all antmals—horses ° Horse Show “Order! Order!" shrilled Mrs. Stryver. order?” murmured Uncle Henry. “I'm dying fer food And he would have gone, but Mr Jarr held him back. The May Manton Fashions VERLA P PED O effects and skirts that are plain at one side and € to be noted on ve newest and smart- novel. It is shaped xt the left side, and full, the fulness being seld in place by fect is an excellent Is cut owt and 1s ply lappir m 004 effec with py loth plaid teria vin, broad. ade of striped 4al, the panel the blag te the skirt 1 re. or hes wide, with % illustrated, Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second etreet (oppo- site Gimbel Bros.), commer Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, New York, or sent. by mail on receipt of ten cents in coin or stamps for each yattern ordered, : IMPORTANT—Write your eddrese plainly and always epecity Patterns. } nize wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if in a hurry. had left her chair to carry something ‘Tats lady was a spinster of uncertain | theshorse for use in} Then they ran up the stairs, so as to} be able to say, “Well, there's nothing | ‘alned|tike a good brisk canter to bring out re-} bables—although children make me nerv- But I've just come from the “Where's a waitress to take the ped at the other st models,and here is one that 4a distinctly | the back ts slightly means of a strap when the high walst line 1s used. Making means really very lit- tle labor, yet the ef- one, When the panel Is used the left front pped onto it, but the plain skirt is made by sim- one front over another, In this instance the panel ta made of the same erial simply trim. med with braid, but contrasting mate- ‘tal would make a as velvet h ssorduroy, striped ma: with plain: or, (the entire skirt is ma-| vuld cut on the cross ‘selves in Position For the medium | 4 ‘dso! ah at varth yards 44 yard 12 inches wide ior the panel and 2 yards of braid to trim BY GoLties IT Does A FELLAH GooD To GET INTO THEIR GAMES Now, AND THEN! - ‘ er | Hee Haw! SNORT, SNORT) fu) Ding AUilltvitns eon Cheer Up, THERE GOES THAT WHISTLE AGAIN I | BET | PULLED THAT Bums waiter UP TEN TIMES TO-DAY HELLO MR-B00B THIS IS MARY THE COOk, WiLL YOu PUT ALL THE SiLver HE“ DUMMY" PUT IT IN DOWN IN THE GEE 1 WONDER WOT st CAN TELL HIM SoHE = SENDS HIS WATCH DOWN} TOO -HE'S AWISE GUY Cuthbert! by Clarence L, Culien, Copyright, 1912, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). Tre a Sort of Mental “Dolling Up" that Helps too! Careful observa- tion informs us that a Good Deal of the Gloom is Wilful, and Not a Pose “Making a Break” Doesn't Necessarily Imply that it as Got to be a Bad One! We know a Wrongheaded Reasoner who Argues that Because a 'Woman’s Gafety-Valve ta “a Good Cry" a Man's ts Necessarily a Drunk! Look Out for that Aggressive Kind of Abnegation that Advertiscs Itself! Tt tsn't Until we're About Forty that we Learn What a Close Connection re 1s between Depression, Despond- ency and Despair and a Disordered Stomach! The Trouble about Meteors Few of Them ever nd the: er since we Drop from our Decalogue and When some of us Desire Self-Ercut. pation for Craven Submission, we Call it “Patience!” The Greased Skids sort of Set Thi the Man who G) Luck he Fixed 1 Against Him! Whenever we Begin to Feel Partlow larly Self-Satisfied, Stagnation Sets Int Optimism has an Open Mind, but Pe eimiem Locks up the Shed after the Plug has deen Stolen! Querulousness is One of the Early Symptoms of Quitting! A Waking-Up Cogitation: “I am 1, I Belong to the Big Scheme. 1am One gf the Needful Cogs, Watch me Work Out my Part Today!” 1 Little of It is a) ; Mr. Trouble emits a Saturnine Laugh whenever he Sees an Unnecessary Irri- gation of Tear Ducts! Some Day they're Going to Teach Simplicity and Kindness in the Sch: and then the World will Have a H More Fun in its Flight toward the stellation of Hercules! The Plan may not be Practtcable— None! Self-Respeot is the Fulcrum from which all Success Gains its Leverege! We've Never Gotten Over our Old Habit of Slipping on the Special Scen- ery and Dolling up to Beat the Band Copyright, 1912, by The Pres Vablishing WARE On 7, | WANT TO THE VAULT PUT WHAT. SILVER, AWAY 2 WHY THERE'S NO VAULT IN OUD Household Electrics Copyright, 1012, by The Press Publishing Go. (‘The New York Evening World), Buying Light—Not Current. HE rapid growth in use of the new tungsten lamps has demonstrated | pprectates the op- portunity to buy light instead of current, A comparison of the old and new will better explain just what this m The old-fashioned carbon flament lamp was purchased according to its candie-|'? five tho same amount of Haht it power. Thin 1s not an exact method of but ANY Kind of a Plan {s Better than| buying, because the lamps give thelr rated candle-power only when new. Aas they age they give less and less ight and the amount of electricity they con- candle-power that the public On the other hand, af tungsten lamps! A Large Electric Range. are rated by the amount of electuicity N eating pla they consume (in watts). A whenever the Situation Begins to Look # Little Bad—and it Always Helps! Why They Retired. WO gentlanen who were playing canis et club recently were annoyed by other mem: bers who stood behind their cbaire and tn. torexted themselres in tho game, Finally one of the players asked a rpectator to play the laut for him until he returned, ‘The spectator took the whereupon the fim: player left the room, Fretty soon the sec ‘ond player followed the example of the fit, ‘The two mubetitutes played for some time, when one of them asked the waiter where the tno ‘ginal players were, hey are playing cards in the next room, was the waiter's reply.—Tit Bits, Would Limit the Supply. | the Kanws City Journal, It ts auntie’s | to distrbate presente, among the ittle eves it turmed out that ale couldn't tell them apart, & ving intended for Mehitabel found its way @o the | finger of Jane, next youngest, air,” | Tat night when Mebitabel oald ter prayer) | the mistake wae still fresh tn her mind, | "Dear Lord," she said, “please don’t seni| Auntie Nell any tore nieces, She's 40 carelons| the we can't keep track of what al ‘ f Marvels of Hypnotism. 66] WAS walking down the street when I { @ man @ block ahead of me to whom whe was telling of hie wupatority a4 8 menmery tet escorting w the Kansns Clty Gens, ‘Sjisi ‘needs anoibes bam," but lightly during tho life of the lamp and t@ sufficiently accurate to form @ | halt feet high in fromt and five feet nigh The Day’s Good Stories | Mraightensd out arm, concentrated my will, vi made @ pass oa and ‘he stopped and waited | Ment is provided with @ four-point til I overtook him,."" You don't call that much of @ trick, do yout" ‘bis Hateners asked, ) 1 think it was « good demonstration, | po het ae | 00D cooks One day while I was to Ba hat the Fr |in arousing the spirit of Dry Bottom's free is the beat method. Wor) ejtigens, They began to take some tn- tavia @ man slipped and foll from the top of a go eo-mtory building, yy down 1 just made a paw at him and} stopped falling quicker than lightning, 1 off without thinking any mon old man, ff you ever ao to Bathri 1 prenume he's bi When he was Needed by His Family. HEN the late enetor penitentiarion oF aylor wan Governor station, recently struck @ new 4 great many) note when tt organized @ series of eleoe men confined 1) tric cooking competitions for school se | girls, ‘The testa were made with the being besieged | * ration of the educational author- relative new ol pero woman mado t | into the Executive offices aud asked Taylor to] pot! pardon ter busband, who was in jail, asked the Governor, © ham!" explained large number of electric cooks would be © qrgea| trained for the near future tout he would The parents of the schoolgirls who ant him out eb dat “Why do you eed him" | I desired to speak,” said the bypnotist,/ pationtiy, OF MY SMARTHEAD SISTER'S ORDERS bro annie By Stephen L. Coies | elati jalert, he heard the door #lam. “THE TWO-GUN MA By Charles A (opyriaht, 1912, by the Outing Pubtishing Oo.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, Kent Mottin, a New York newspmerman, comes My Hotton tot led ty a toihls net Dunlavey, Th ane Nad" robbed ‘Hollis fiber and made is fe a turden, — Holli4 resolves to take wp iy father’s fight ‘against in belalt of Taw and onter, On Dey Ho tiom foto theasda Duniavey for inwulting 4 Hollis Cy with Judge aly local representative, Toe the equieathed to him hy his father Seve Tater wows Hollis a “cromelng” at a creek, ‘away fre vee Wotlie ta th Tanctiet. wie ie eubyect Tamia. a falls tn ‘a. ft betirw hie ‘thd the afflicted man's atster gallos Tecoanives her ms ‘the. ic i ey, Ble ajologines for Ed, on recovering, echoes Tis fsa up ‘hs "new"Citlen ae ioe Inte father's paper, “The Hicker by “an eccentrics componttor named eed calla’ at the. Richer office ant Ki Hat advance agent,” CHAPTER VI. (Continved.) Hollis Renews an Acquaint- ance. JUNLAVEY rose, his ips curl- ing with contempt. “You make me sick!" he sneered. He turned his back an.’ walked to the door, returaing 4nd etanding in front of Holle, omi- nously ool and deliberate, ‘So that’s tho how of it?" he sald evenly, “You've come out here looking ¢or fight. Well, you'll get it—plenty of tt I owe you something— “Wait, Dunlavey," Hollis tnterrupt- ed, without excitement; “I want you | to understand that there isn't anything Personal in this, I ain golng to fight you bec! you are a member of the Cattlemen's Association and not be- cause you were my father’s enemy. I am not afraid of you. I suspect that you will try to make things decidedly interesting for me from now on and I suppor ought to be proper! troubled. But Tam not. ehall net be surprised at anything you do I think that ts all, Please close the door when you go ou! He turned to the desk, ignoring Dunlavey. Sitting there, hia senses ‘rom beyond it came a curse. Silence again reigned in the office; Hollis waa alo with the dust and the heat—and some very original thoughts, basis for naming tungsten lamps accord- ing to the number of watts of electricity | they consume, Repeated and authorita- | | tive tests have shown that, for example, | a fifteen watt tungsten lamp will give approximately eleven and one-half can- | dle-power of Light, If @ carbon filament lamp were used would consume forty-six watts. ‘There- fore, it !* apparent that when we use tungsten lamps rated according to wate tage instead of candle-power, we are buying Mght and not current, only @ amall part of which 1s useful In making light. actually ine @ in Boston has just installed an electric range nine feet threeinches long, two and one ‘This varies in the back. It has two ovens, each of which can cook sixteen chickens uf sixty-four pounds of beef, There are also a toaster ten by twelve inches in ; Size, five eight-inch dine stoves and four jeix-tnch dise stoves. Fach heating ele- ew! «iving independent contro! for zh, medium and low heats. Coffee Percolator. snerally acknowled«e drip atyle of mak- it hait|this purpose the electric coffee peroo- |Iator has no equal. Six cups of coffee may be made tn the standard #lze perco- lators at a cost of only one and one half cents, “Electric Cooks.’ HE city of Glasgow, Scotland, | I which owns tts electrical supply ° about It. day, why just wing there ities during the recent Smoke Abatement wey| Exhibition. The object of the com. 1 Was not Only to popularize eleo tric cooking and heating but to create #uch an interest in the subject that a partictpated took a# much interest as did the children, The educational value of the competition was thoroughly ap- CHAPTER VII. The ‘‘Kicker’’ Becomes an In- stitution. T was mid-July—and hot. ‘The un @hone continually; the nights were uncomfort- able, stifiin everywhert and lighter Passed. Water grew scarce; cattle euf- fered, lowing throughout the night, during the day searching the boge and water holes for drops of motsture. Men looked up at the clear, cloudle sky and prayed—and cursed—for ra: The rain 414 not com Jong, continuous nightmare of heat. The Kicker had appeared four times —on Saturdays—on time. Telegraphic communtoation with the outside world had been established, Potter had taken up his residence at the Circle Bar. War had lared between the Kicker and ¢ jette Eagle. Hollis had written an argumentative essay on the virtues of Dry Bottom as a town, dwelling upon its superiority over Lazette. The editor of the Eagle had replied with some bitterness, setting forth tn 4 tall why Dry Bottom did not compare with Lazette, As the editor of the Eagle mentioned population and civic spirit in his bil of particular the war promised to be of long duration—questions of au- pertority between spirited persons are never settled. And Hollis had succeeded ‘The dust was terest in the Kicker, Many subscribed; all read ft, the “local” columna of the paper might have discovered that many public and private improvements were contemplated. Among these the follow ing ttema were of the greatest Interest: Stove are being taken by the Government ‘ervar’ the erection of @ fence around the Const Howse grvinds, Jodge Graney ts con. templating lawn and flowers, When these Amprovements ace completed there will be no comparison between our Court House and he Gilapkiated hovel whlad diagraces the county seat of Culfax, The Lasette Eagle please notice, Wiliam Duna, the propristor of the Al- dambra eating house, announ near future he will erect « inquired Taylor.) drectated and the civic authorities are touts,|'® congratulated on thel pary [to be congraiuiated thelr novel under taldog. - @ort the Kicker, Chet Miller was heard to aay thet the a ‘eyes pad.me.ame asscthet, bin PLAY, WILLIE, POP WANTS To READ N’S” Greatest Novel Iden Seltze praise of the paper to thanks for the @p- Pearance of name therein, for all who would have criticised were silenced by the appearance of their own names. In the fourth issue of the paper ap- Peared several new advertisements. Ju- dlotous perwonal mention and ively new locals had aroused public spirit to « point re it Wgnored thoughts of Dun. lavey's diepteasure. Upon the Satuniay which had marked tho first issue of the Kicker under Holliv's ownership he had employed @ ctreulation manager, That afternoon on the stree r the Kicker office he had almost coliided with a red-haired youth of uncertain age who had bound- ed out through the door of a private dwelling In o1 © to keep trom knocking the youth over Holils was forced to seize hin by the arms and Hterally lft him off his feet, While in the alr the youth's face was clow to Hollis's and both grinned over the occurrence. When Hollis set the youth down he stood for an inetant, Jooking up into Hoills's face and a gmin of amusement ove spread his own, ‘Bhuckel" he said slowly. “If it ain't tha tenderfoot editor!’ ‘That's just who it 49," returned Hol- le with « emfle, ‘The youth grinned as he looked criti- cally at Hollie, “You gittin’ out that bt paper to-day, inister?’ hé ques Right now,” returned Hollis. “Bully!” exclakmed he youth, surveyed Hollis with frank adimiratio: “They said you wouldn't have nerve to do &," he @aid; “but, say! I reckon they ain't got you sized up rene!” Hollig smiled, remembering that though the paper had been printed !t was not yet distributed. He placed a ‘hand on the youth's shoulde: “Have you got nerve enough to pass the Kicker-around ¢o the people of this town?” he questioned. “I reckon,” grinned the youth. "I ‘was comin’ down to ast you for the Job while he had not come to Dry Bottem for @ free fight, he would permit no one to tread on his toes, His readers’ compréhension of te marked by a more aggressive aspirit=a spirit engendered by the eympathette ve- ception of the first issue. In it he stated concisely his views of the et Union County, telling his readers the dent Intereste of the community manded that Dunlavey’s evil inf de wiped out. ‘This article wee “Dry Rottom’s Future,” and wom many friends. ‘The third {awue contained stronger guage, and the fourth was en aggressive. As he had decided detere the first appearance of the papen he took @ certain number of copies of eagh Issue folded them neatly, stamped amd Addressed them, and maiied them t @ number of newspapers throughout tors he knew. copies to a number ef his friends in the East—to the president of his college, and last to the Secretary of the Interior at Washington, who had formerly resided near him {n Boston, and with whom he had a long acquaint- ance. There had been @ ¢ of ad- ministration the fall previou he was certain that the new administratien would not ignore the situation. To the Secretary, and also to a number of bis friende, he wrote personal letters, ex- plaining in detail the exact condition of @ffairs in Union County. He had not seen Dunlavey since the day the latter had come to the Kicker office to negotiate for the purchase of the paper. On several of his rides to 4 from the Circle Bar ranch he had aeen signs of life at the Circle Cross; once or twice he thought he saw eome- one watching him from a hill on the Circle Cross side of the Rabblt-Bar, but of this he was not quite certain, for th hill-top was thickly wooded and the dla- tance great He had been warned by Norton not to ride too often over toe same trail lest Dunlavey send some one to am- bush him. wt (To Be Continued) ———___ ’ “RAWTEORNS OF THE U. 8. 2.” ‘The romance of an American's sti wing Adventures in the Balkans, ty Albert Payson Terhune (founded om J. B Fagan's successful play Row running in Mew York), will be gin om one of the news pages of to-morrow's' Evening World.

Other pages from this issue: