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4 f \ —_ they are ve and other evils which gutter, re than Hkely that the erud itre on New Year's Five anogers are sure to at direotion, profitale And ¢ @leanor Lawson as Anna Greene. Ralph Stuart as Alibi Bill. Alft Bill turn ‘'stralght” because of his worker’ and then give the unregenera trotting gayly off to Washington as the vice lady who helped him to become a ornamental name of Montgomery Vanderhoft. should live up to his aristocratic new strong-armed Secret Service lady in ‘low-neck’ pret Service certainly do throw on style in t Ralph Stuart worked hard trying to the department, and Miss Eleanor Lawson, who see the friendly sleuth, joomed up in great and J, Hf. Doyle proved themselves Léonel Adams got so badly for longing to shoot him »} Dhe chances are it won't be long before all the members of the company | {in themselves busily engaged tn forgetting their lines Advic anna The Kiss. # EB" writes ‘Is it proper for a ng man to kiss a girl just because y good friends and have} known each of ‘al years?" | No girl is supposed to let an kiss] her unless she {8 engared to him, “T. D." writes: “Two years ago I met @ young man in the country and we liked each other. Tnen I went back to WELL I THINK THIs T3UNCH WHADBET TER START THE NEW YEAR\WITH. A FEW GOODIRE SOLUTIONS “Alibi Bill” the Cheapest Sort of Crook Play. AD as it Is “AIS! Bit" will probadly accomplish some good by helping to off so-called plays of the underword that threaten to drag the stage down to the! en that portion of the publ to he mixed up in th ney the moment he stepped on the stage that we couldn't blame “Gunner Jac! Betty Vincent’s T exploit’ gunmen, white | je, trashy melodrama haltingly acted at 111 discourage further enterprise in th pandon {t the moment they find ft un- that #eeks only the sensation: theatre ts scarcely gullivie| enough to pay two dollars to see a play that a few years ago would have found | its p place at the old Third Ave-| heatre. | is the cheapest sort of} crook play. That it {* one of the pen- | «of the Rosenthal mu asized by the three Ku croaking a guy” with great ness for this ge! phrase, Equally \sug@estive are names by which) these worthy emen are known— “Gunner Jac Slippery Diek" and ‘Stick-Up Jake Among other things) the desperate author, Joseph Byron) Totten, has seized upon the Ma ny sie lencer, first dramatized by Bayard Veiller in “Within the Law." As the proud possessor of the nolseless pistol “Gunner Jack” is determined to “get” the Acting District-Attorney who appears a strange Heht as the villain, z red with whom the erooke seem ng, true-hearted citizens. 1 that the gunman would the hated representative of the 1 to see what happened n| get fiw and master of the “frame up, Miin't wait the last act. It was enough to see love for an over-dreased “soclety mission | te Acting District-Attorney tye slip by willing prisoner of a husky Secret Ser. famous detective rejolcing én the highly It was only natural that Alibi Bill) evening clothes, To see the | was an added delight. They name tn make Alibi Bil a credit to himaelt and | d very sure of herself as Harold Hartsell, Prank Allworth | bad actors as the gunmen, while | lines of the Acting District-Atto: shape. he Evenin WHAT Do; TPESOLU TIONS wright, 1913 e to Lovers naw young man to ask permission to call ming lady after he meets her, or ts tt the young lady's place to invite The sion, or he may be Invited by the young lady's mother. Two Sweethearts. | young man should ask permis- “w. 1." writes: “I am very much m love with two young ladies, a in fact, I find one as pleasing as the over, the city. How can f find out 1€ he stlil| I believe, too, that each likes me equally remembers mo?" well, How shall I choose between Tam afrai| you mus: wait for him to| them?" look you up | If you really have any doubt, you 3 lon't love either Well enough to marry “Ww. MA" writes: in! her, love with a Ses proper for m Vo" writes: “Is the year 1918 @ me before Task her to marry me? ard juck year in which to marry ‘The tWo questions are usually askea| Certainty na ny idea aa “i is » time a foolish superstition ER RS ie : writes: “I was introduced to “Hf, D." writes: “When ts 1t proper] young man four months ago, and T for @ gir to take @ man's arm know I am in love with him, Would ‘When they are crossing the strest, or|!t be proper for me to let him know le there { some impediment in their | this path. Certainly not, until he has shown —_— some desire to know the «tate of your “Mf, N.Y werltee: ‘Ia @ affections, — - ae The Rat a Menace—Poison Him. HE rat ig a menace, He ads I discs notably the vont plague. Ani health authorities are advis ‘ tion by polgon. But !t afe or easy to do the poison © ave some hints on the suolect ma » Medical Review of Revlews Do not | palsoned pieces of bread tn the <0 thoy may taken by © 4 on anim but put | plea, whe they canuot ve Bol at by human beings or domestiy ais ui When t's practicable get mall box and pul snl plover of pole moned ‘b Jin a bowl, cover the bowl with a vox, ani , hole two inches fa @iameter | each end of the box These holes are big enough to admit theeate will keep out the-cats, dose dl chickens, Keep track « y plece Polson put outs then it has | en out long enough you can collect ploces of poison which remain une | ta will not take poison tn plac where there is plenty of other for vive to be most successful in rat] polsoning the premiges should) be thors cleaned and all foodstuffs pros ed from: rats the use of metal pserecning or metal containers. Garbage ould be placed tn water ta! sarbage cans only, A starved rat takes Polson quite readily _—> | MODERN PUGILISM. | ' want to he a prise fghte Son—Fasy! Because 4t’ all prizo and no ftighti-Judse, ILE Big Ones always Pass Up that Game Called Leader!” re SI o Tella Us Things en when the Old the Hardest Against wu that we had a Chance, gan to Feel Sorry for The Castaway who Never Take M World Daily Magazine IT MEANS WEWIL! WRITE Down THIN'osYwe SHOULDNT; DoVANDSTHEN PROMISE (The New York Kventng World.) ) Compright, 1018, t by The Press Dibtishing Co, Thursday Januwa oe “FIRST LET US RESOLVE NOTATOAELY ORF are HAN DUEXABOU TILT AICe NNO YANC ESZAND, yMISTAIES™ HMMS ‘ollow = My Worrying never as the Prelude to Winning! When you give Habit the iate, Happiness slips in! we oh tock in the Chap Somehow who Places @ Con- fdential Mitt ur Shoulder and Dur Own Good,” Game was Going 5 we always I UNTIL we Ourselve: BELIEVES the Chicken-Coop he Clings to ts an Un- sinkable Boat is the One who gener| vated was Adelaide ally is Picked Up! We Gain Light to 1 Path in Helping to Dispel the Dark for Others! Numine our The Trouble about New Year's Ieso- lutions is that they're too Cut-and-Dried to be Convincing) Not #0 Very Long be will be Here Again! We can't Quite Year, but we're The Organ and a Jewsh which we're Consid'ab’ ‘There tant Much to an Apostate from hi a Renegade from his 1 There's a Fine £ wae n Frequently were Inclined to Be-| eho lieve that a Fellow is Downg ¢ he Can—until he » Makext ay. From ¢ 0 A Lot of us who, teomania and fure the Blossou Make a plano this e with @ Mouth upon Both of le Performer! Choose b * Prinetpl Tribe tween and e Best s So! ta Cover Defeat, i Cheer Up, Cuthbert! By Clarence L. Cailen. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Kvening World), Jon ust | | | tle Middle-Ground | he be olf-Deprecia- | Point of View, | ix T can't understand why you! we're All Ticket-of-Leave Men! | newspapers arouned tho tnteramt of the [taking lessons nbarrassed were Pulled Heit, would be Mightily if Moving Picture Eviden: ‘The Boss says he has Fired a Lot of Fellows who Made Good in a big Way later on, Elsewhere—but they weren't the Ones who Tried to Beg Back Their Jobs after being bounced! be @ Warfare—but the old life may Band keeps A-Playing! LIfe Your FATHER fy 2, 1913 Dino tas | DING DING{ S47 Ae » was: SOME “TREE CLIMBER. WHEN HE Was a YOUNGSTER | aa Household Electrics By Stephen L. Coles. Conright, 191, by Phe Press P Electric Sleep. ABLI despatches from Ger- y recently announced that n physician had pro- duced a modified form of electric current which, when Properly applied at the base of the brain, relieved insomnta and induced sleep, ‘This 18 probably a variant of the well known ability of the electrical cur- Tent to tnduce local annesthesta when Of ADELAIDE NEIL * *k Memories of Players Other Days. By “Rober? Grau. oh Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), HE greatest Juliet, perhaps; John iolingshead, advising him to that the world has ever|come to Lon and sign up known and probably tie most} with 1) atle gentus beautiful woman the stage Of} who fad 1 playgoers off the last sixt ars has re-| their foe Neilson The te kosch'a hasty trip The story of Adelaide Nelison's sirug-|to Londen was the debut of Mist Neil- gle, triumph and tragic death 1s too sad} son Hooth's ‘Theatre in November, for full recital here, She lived but] 1872, She was now tn her zenith, at the thirty-one y¢ Yet for nearly ten|age of tw Dur, years ahe was tn her own y the} Wonts really fall me in any effort to absolute leader of the English ing convey to the lay reader of to-day the stage, and never has had a rival in such roles as Juliet, Amy Robsart and Rosalind, Born a waif of the street In Leeds, ngland, in 148, ¢ ne to whleh #0 answered was Hland Deautiful child, the sham the sta soon beckone away from the of the factories, 1 up to the age twely sho studied a books ition secre elilld had lea birth and this mea y fn the employ of a family in her native village. Finatly, in an effort to hide herself, | 19 a barmaid in London, and | at fifteen, as a chorus girl, was well | on the way to stage opportunity. At Soventren, instead of remaining in the the young is had reached fet wtage, At twenty, at Drury Adelaide Wetison was hailed as} “ane, the head of the British stage, And} when aha came forvy there as Jultet triumph was complete, | What the cables sent to American American managers, In 1870 Max Cletm that we've been Hit Below the/Gtrakosch received @ cablegram from brilltancy, the charm and the mag- neti with which this Bnglish girl tn Vosted her roles. While Jullet was of course her finest part, I ha F seen ne her equal as Beatrice in “Much Ado," and her Vi and Rosalind were clanste studies which left an impress never (0 bo forgotten. In a’! the five or eix yoars that Ade- lalde Netlson was ntted to relen as queen the sta T do not reca ng one oriticl4m of her work that not toed. Witten ont emanating from He be regarded as Winter acknowledged that the divine Neflson bad held sim over her beauty A oute reserve spark fast, aleo raved as minh as ony of us, On Aug, 18, 1482, the entire Engiieh speaking world was shookel at the news from 1” that at the age of thirt . stew Tuller dad ex Dired while drinking at a oda fountain, Heart 4 Was the dingnowte of the Miyst tan Looking lack inte those few tri unphal years 1 remember now how sad this Juliet appeared ta be, eve when bowing in response to the public's amage. wang Co, (The New York Kventng World), used jn connection with special parat No one should ever submit to eleotrical treatment of any kind for any reason unless at the hands of @ specialist of known ability and experience. A great deal of harm may be done by the appli- cation of the wrong kind of current or the right kind of current in the wrong way by those not thoroughdy trained tn the proper use of medical electrical apparatus. When your family phystelan you have an allinent which electrical treatment he will be able to give you the name [Petent specialist to whom you should go. |The dangers from electricity are as great as its benefits and should be avoided by following onty skilled advice. The Electric Broom T™ latest type of electric suction cleaner placed on the market not holstery and wall ol only does the usual carpet, up: ing, but by }means of spectal appliances which |furnished with it sharpens knives and jcleans the silver, At @ sinall extra cost it may be equipped to operate the wash- ing machine, the sneat chopper and the bread mi: It seems that are gradually but surely approaching the beatiMic day of the strictly electrical servant, | Electric Cooking in Nai 11) sanitary advantages of electric cooking and operation of kitchen dey finds that calls for deubtle we #alleys. ‘This deeiston comes as [the rewult of extensive teste made on tho Wyoming, which recently went into } commission Coal, ashes and coal gages will bo ninated by the use of electric: Th \pecting of vegetables, mixing of dou &eo, whl all be done by electrically operated devices Instead of by hand, as the perspiration from the body be prevented from coming in con- ptact with the food. The galley and sur- rounding compartments will be rendered more habitable when el: yokin ts installed, as heat im used oniy « 3 {the wctual operation of the cooking ranges The ship's electrical power plant easily "an mevt the demands for current with out any tnevease in capactty., ‘The new Dattleships will also be provided with ectrical Ica cream freezers: having a capacity of 200 quarts in two hours, ot @ com-| led the Navy De-| partment to order all the new battle- ships lo be electrically eqitipped as to \Goppright, 1912, by the Guung Pubiisning Co.) BYNOPAIS OF PRECEDING CHATTERS, Kent Hollis goes to Dry Hutiom to take charts of hile deni father's newspaper and th Ne Fanch, ‘The law ts openly dofiel ly the Cattle men's Amciation, headed by a bully named Dun r Hoilla timasies Dunlavey for inulting Net No Haxieton, a’ preity girl who lives on a nearby ranch with ber brotier EA, @ young man subject to Gite of dmeanity, Hollis takes up t duties an editor of iia father's paper, Tew Spot," one | of Duntave Kicker offion to murder him, Hollis overcomes “Ten ape | turme him from @ murderous foe dato @ frien Ben Alle ernment agent Hottom to Holl ct comes to tl capture f ng Chvele Har cattle, Hollis aaven "Greasy Iynching and takes him to the Sheriff, Jil Watking, one of Dunlavey’s heelocs, ‘The Sheriff releases the pris: oner despite Mollie's gritenta, On election day the clash beworn Dimlavey and Hollis comes to « ol mat when Allen and Watkine are opposing candi ‘dates (or Sharif, Allen, Lefore tho polls open, locks the door of the Sherif{’s office, where the dallite are to bo cust, and adlmita int one soter at atime, Buta wang of tousia, led by Ten Spot,” break into tie rovin with the intent of running the election to mult themselyas, Hollto's amazement 4 elect Allen, Dun: | iavey tries to etir up public opinion against Holl Ailew, bat fn 1 Norton vee ling © herd of fifty cattle, Jollia natifiog | Allen, who reveives from Ube Governor full au: therliy to aot, who promptly catches the thieves, Mollia, alter the raid, etarte back toward his ranch, CHAPTER XXX. (Comtinued,) Forming a Friendship. pH filed and lighted hie pipe, ] smoked plactdty as he leaned against the slender colump, his aze shifting to a clump of dense shrubbery that akirt 4 the trail within twenty feet of the cabin, Ife sat quiet, his long legs atretched out to enjoy the warmth of the aun that struck @ corner of the porch floor. His pipe spluttered in depletion and ho raixed himself and looked around |for his pony, observing that the ani- mal waa contentedly browsing the tops of some weeds at the edge of the porch. Then, resigning himnelf to the sensation of langour that oppressed him, he knocked the ash from the pipe, filled {t again, imhted tt, and resumed his former reclining position. During the past few deys he had given much thought to Dunlavey. He was thinking of the man now, as his gaze went again to the clump of #hrub- bery that ekirted the trail, Some men's mental processes were In- comprehensible. Dunlavey was one of these men, What did the man hope to gain by defying the law?” Would thera [ast bo profit enough in the cattle busl- ' noss when conducted honestly? He felt @ certain contempt for the |man, but mingled with it was @ sort of «rtm pity, No doubt Dunlavey felt | justified tn hie actions, for he had lived here @ good many years, no doubt suf- | fering the privations encouniered by all ‘ploneers; living # hard tite, | heavy blows to | and receiv= jing some him No doubt his philosophy of life had |deean of the pecullar sort practined by 6 feudal bi Hs Of the Old World, | fore elvillzation had com: earrying ite banner of fusiiee, which, summed up epigrammatically, though ironteally, had bean "Might ts Right.’ But might could never nt in this co: lavey nn this lesson, not hop Hollis vat suddenly erect, put Dis pipe and his ruminations at ‘same tna ant, tie | him, dealing nust le, his eyes narr wing coldly | For suddenty, from ening ¢ jDery that skirted the « had app 4 the man avout y he \nad been thinking’ dt was evutent that he had not come upon Hollis unex pectedly, He relned in bls pony and sat wh “THE TWO-GUN MAN’S” Greatest Novel By Charlies Alden Seltzer motionioss in the saddle, his face white, his e ight with passion, inwtant neither man spoke, Hollia realized that the great moment Yor an for which ho had waited many dayohad arrived. \Wnd tt had arrived unexpect- edly. It had arrived to find him tired after his activittes of the ntignt end ta No condition for a fight, He drew @ deep breath and got torhla feet, a @rim smile on his face. He stepped off the porch and stood by ene of the columns, watching Duntavey closely, As he watched the grim emtle his (ace slowly faded, his lips curled his eyes chilled, “I suppose you've come to collectahat thrashing?” he std Dantavey dismounted quickly, tie. rheht hand flew to his holster, drawing his revolver, He caine toward Hollis crouching, a cold, meratlese glitters im his eyes. “Yes, you tenderfoot —— ——,""aw enaried, From the moment of Hollis’s arrtvat at the court house the night before Ben Allen had been constantly in action. It was late in the morming when te ‘had returned to the court hause wih his prisoners, The men who hast been eap- tured with Dunlavey were atill with the troopers, there not being auMoient reem. at the court house for chem. Wethine had been roleamed and Dunlewey had taken hls place tn the little room ¢het Answered for ® jail. Shortly before noon Allen proceeded to the station, where he telegraphed to the Governor the story of the capture, He had then deputized a dozen punchers and sent them to the Otrele Cross to round up a.thousand of Dun- lavey's cattle and hold them untél @be Inte afternoon wheh, according to Ad- Jen's published programme, they were to be sold to the highest bidder. Then, tired and hungry, Allen sought the dl- hambra and ate a hearty meal. Dry Bottom was swarming ‘witheviet- ors that had come in for the sale, But by the time Alien had finivhed eating the exodus had begun. ‘The tral lead- ing to the Circle Croas ranch was dotted with probable bidders, curiosity neeters, {dlere and mere residents of ti. tewa. Now that the law had come there ere Many who discovered that thelr eympa- thies had alwaye been with the men who ha@ champloned 1. Allen found his way to the court- house strewn with men who halted him to express thelr good will. Many peo- ple gathered in front of the Kicker office, eager for \ giimpse of Hellis, Those who gathered there before 13.30 #aw him seated at his desk, tall, angu- lar, serious of fuce, absolutely un- affected by this thing which’ had caused @ sensation, Passing the Kicker office on his way to the courthouse, Allen hed paused to look within and sheut & Kreeting to him. Then he had @en- tinued on his way Arriving at the courthouse AMen looked in at Dunlavey lying on the floor tently asleep, Allen did not disturb him. He went out, threw the saddle on his to the grove wh quartered. At: courthouse t that Dunlay Allen did not stop to y, and rede over the soldiers were talking long with the eap- o'clock hi irned to the be greeted with the news tain, rad ence, escape bad been a F He re- mounted his pony and raced down to the Kicker office, ing that Dun- Invey had gone th Potter Informed Him that his chief had departed for ghe Circle Bar fully an he nd a halt be- fore He had taken the Coyote tratl— Potter had watched him. Allen wheeled is pony and returned » the court Louse. He was met at the door by Judge Graney. ‘The latter's face was w and drawn with fear, (To Be Continued.) TARZAN of the APES By Edgar Rice Burroughs { WILL BEGIN IN NEXT MONDAY’S EVENING WORLD, JAN. 6 BS or.