Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SS Soe SSS ee The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednes ay. January 13. 107g “S'’Matter, Pop?” = Ba = BY = jaceitha! = BY « BY « By C. M. Payne won < I Dot KNOW WHAT R AT WOND eT YAA Tet RUN AN |PTUM Twice | |ouARE TRYING To MY eet qaearrme | <a Sr ta FAVENT TowSse@R To Sine IN ONG LESSONS, ———P, ia vi) y CLEAN Ve New Pigx Orne ” SchoRcR | Not Like Any Story You Have Read eek “The Woman of It” sit TARZAN OF THE APES Y Ne ” Makes Very Little By Edgar Rice Burroughs. a \ Go a Long Way. The Romance o/ a Jungle Man and a Yankee Girl J y : (Copyright, 1918, by Front A. Munsey On.) burden to his teeth, he climbed rapidly BY CHARLES DARNTON. srxoras op rasomDure cnarrens, “Tye, “Woeely followed by Tublat, VERY thin alice of bread buttered lightly on its comedy side—that was a ‘ nade a lecky monatee ae tee 12m kK “The Woman of It” at the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre last night. dare not follow Bupper for two became supper for four in Frederick Lonsdale's piece ‘leu taunts and ise, but in spite of the second order there wasn't enough to go round titty geet three acts. As we nibbled away at the extremely light theatrical fare we is ae aeons tay him, Ef And then Tublat went mad. With pooned thine with Lady Emsworth, who looked as th . orn at oe . fine cabins gad , females and young, ‘sink hie ‘oreat ranged to have midnight supper with f ) ox ad ee fangs into ® douen tiny necks and tear the ailly wife of his parasitical friend, ‘ ve f < : n ing great pieces from the backs and 1 Lord Emsworth, ‘\ / ee 1 P, . x breasts of the females who fell inte his eleventh hour, as 1 . Mra, " co) i ey . se an , \ ( . ° ol) In the b 4 gg He saw the females and the young band and at once proceeded to pass the then the sreat bulls ia ‘tee tate ne Oe olives. Knowing English society as you Grena felt the mighty fangs of thelr de- do after long experience with this type mented fellow, and with ome accord of English play, you scarcely neel to melted into the black shedews of the * be told that Lord Emsworth was hun. Fee eee. torn man Oh le a : bw Leta a the as TAAL Manone theatre Deside Tublat, a belated Toreale grasped Funniry swiftly toward the tree where asked Lord Emsworth to sup with her ‘Tartan perched, and clese behing her at the witching bour cud the same place set by her husband for his clan- oestine bite, not get along well with tim Bew that ts suggested and op-| Next the Pavement. Rasen ee uation astian - other friends Probably he realises this, Of this charming woman, Cyrij vosephine Brown ano vaiias Ander- _ And now let us yawn, When the 1 plan of @ play is as plain as broad day- the altar-drum, but as he Nght, aow can the author expect . fj . L ae passed keeping his little, Serce, wicked keep awake for three acts? | eg, . x as ; RY ¢ red eyes upon the corpses W. A. Brady must have worn ‘a, i ms, q That ‘Another male (hen spran. into the ocle when he read Mr, Lonsdale's ten- | " ye ™ | uy arene and, repeating the horrid erive uous, inconsequential play. Bright lines; q yyy > a — ‘ tamer) 5 of his king, followed steaithily in bis have blinded his judgment, But a) \ 4 p bys wake. Another and another followed e.ccner and Cyril Scott as wa here and there doesn't \ = Ts L An fr quick succession uptll the Jungle re- Mr. and Mrs. Bayle. y. And why ehould English \ a x ‘ Wy ‘ 4 " icverated with the now almost cense- the famitar “ be accepted in place of fresn . ik! wane notes of thelr bloodthirsty screams nly to find expression? I hold no brief for our own MPAA UN who know nothing but slang and who enjer a drawing-room un rubber «* but I do believe they can give us something infinitely better and more | ‘i ping than “The Woman of It." Frankly, the sort of play offered last] 7g ssss seme warge wvum say wih ere OMHUUEIE YIELIE Mamie HO ALNUIUTLYY 161K LinMUI OI ul HHLLE! BLE UJWIO—WhUEY PU~IJUND Lied hE UIT, fs a reflection upon the ability of the beleqntegpelbtar aN He bee ne Land. Slowly,slowly the pages turned over and over. The children | their little heads and drank deep of the jewelled rain, gh AiAy sooner our managers ren! stared with wide, bewildered eyes, not knowing what to expect. Out The rain abated as the Rainmaker again slowly rateed Ate arme towerd bi. ailing ¢ e004 between him sed Kal follow the plot of Mr, Lonedale’e ridiculously simple play would be a *fepped a very small, shinenering elflike figure. the sky. When it had stopped the sun came forth more brilliantly than ever | same time Nothing could have suited the @erce of space. It is enough to say that after various silly excuses the wives “Come inaide the book children,” he satd. “If you don't you'll all get jand the land afar was covered with the most gorgeous flowers. + heen hy 2ceee oe whens i to their husbands to live more or less happily ever after. The play bap-| wet,” “ChMidren,” said the Rainmaker, “you sce what good the rain does. ne But his eo h Oy 4 in England because it ovens Bobble, Beasie and all their Uittle companions obeyed. Without rain the trees would not bear fruit; the farms would not thrive; | me that nut-brown flesh. a gy er A ba dey esi “1am the Rainmaker of Husha-Bye Land,” continued the elf, “ond the |pretty Rowers would not grow. Rain gives sweet, clear water for the golaen | approsenes SME ig wah Tusceler hand shet out and evacpes that would be laughed off the Hush-a-Bye flowers need drink.” Ashes to play in ang epurkling springs for us to drink from.” the mad whirt r Tea a keen hunting-knife a nee ee . After the first act it does nota- The Rainmaker raised his arms slowly up—up toward the sky and And this ie the reason that whenever it raine two little children look in Terse * Ling the broad breast. Iéke lightning the but repeat itself, and each attempt waved them back and forth like a magician, Suddenly the cloude parted | wonder from their playroom window and never cry. They think of the|borde. thy fat the np 1p form creme Soneath tase mare police Reet and there showered down to earth militons of jewelled raindgope, which | Rainmaker on page 4 of the Hush-a-Bye Book, and they emile, Ae the body rolled to the ground Sgr Written anything worth glimmered and shone like precious stones. Here and there flowers such as ELEANOR SOHORER. pi the on Placed Ns foot i nly possible moral of the -—- -_—_ = er aden ke fs te oneny he Woman of It” makes threw back his freed fest Poe ‘ont go a long way. voiced the wild ory of | generous view of @ poor ‘One, by one tee trite owene, tion belongs first of all from their arborea! retreats end ‘nemet jan jeecher, who ects for @ ctrele about Tarsan and Me vag. | rid as though she were still Lo Fasament I accepted the invitation, but, You certainly are not compelled to call) “K. C."" writes quel toe When they bat Gl come rene Concert.” 8 play T] | Two Lovers. T really have no special tnterest in the |on her and she ought not to have asked | @ young man who hae paid attention to tas eae nts eek te, gin fh eaetralie talents Ove “B, G." writes: “Two young men, C. | girl, Will you advise me what to do?” | you to do so. Me at two different periods, but each Increase ype and breasta were great killer. Lat all respect Teresa of Cansioun trys ond devotes and H., are paying me attention. C.| to gall again. In order to avoid embar- eee @ quarrelied over something be| dripped, and their lipe fhe apes and ‘aia, be mother, @RAriine, lerelehendes and knew me first, and I have told him all |__| paid, Now he gooe with another gttl, to me the weird dance bo Dene OMORG Fou as ae | Te Aeeek at er ie Ue about H. At first C. was angry, but it ~ ~ whom he has yiven many presents, Yet| For balf ep Ooms oot on i san. Lat hie enemies bewere™ } poeen tne! didn't last, Wouldn't he have continued The Hedgeville Editor. he telle othore that Re likes me, Do you| went on, until, at » ole Kem Senet. Si coning full Into the wiewed red open } Sunlight, to protest if he really loved met” think he will come back to met ‘the noise Sgcampering hurriedly through of Kerchak, the youne Lend | A Unless he is engaged to you he hae no By Fohn L. Hobbie. I think you will be very foolish !f you Levy Of dancers toward the outer rim deat wee his wreaae | Hgdt to protest ageinst your having ‘Covyright, 1018. by The Press Publishing Co (The New York Bvenina World) permit him to do 90, as you evidentiy de éefance. oa i — R, WATTS says the length of Life LD FORK 1s tn favor of anything F r Ps depends almost entirely upon the O with good grace and a sen as Lord and Lady worth. "C. 1.” writes: “What does ‘R. & V. D ‘amount of time that elapses be- P.’ raean at the end of @ letter?” posed to everything as % mow! “7, 1.” writes: “le it proper for « of comedy. Miss Josephine Brown, es the wife who found little pieas- Py rencl “Te. | tween birth and death. ° stands, men waikin | supper party, served well enough in the capacity of « feanpot that | tse ent yous, pat). Pinay — — erg hor hie mie 44 = thete, wil 4 4 wae to the 1 ever with tears, She certainly was stupid enough to satisfy the mos: pendie a8 “Roply, if you please.” an B says that the humor in RS. PLANK eaya thet tf her s é jon killed wank “heir late enemy thet they ‘author, Dallas Anderson lived up to the requirements of @ husbang | 7°” pas | this column is @ great deal better M husband was only half eo good| OF on the outsider’ Of devouring ti at | jed upon his wife as a meal-ticket, B, J." writes, “I was calling on « than ene would suppose from to her she would appreciate, He should always take the position | now bey th | ‘at best “The Woman of It’ gives you the worst of it, New Year's Day and she asked me | reading it. him twice as much. next the ment, | errr onoe satiafied his tite for animal food, and so now Mg Ae ofl ; Sopra, AR trie little, body wormed its way {8° fox food. Cabbage-paim ‘ Be ra peg, sails le mass of strugaling apes in 82 ang goitamine, they found in of] e ‘New York Evening Wor ie the mae Share whieh bia sie,cutnmine, (Dey found tm shundance, mrength would h qmail mammals, birds, ages, re and task of winning for bi insects, The nute they between ‘At his side hung the hunting-knife their powerful jaws, or, if too hard ‘of hie uninown father in @ sheath self- broke by pounding between fashioned in copy of one he had seen Once old Sabor, crossing their path, among the plotures of his treasure gent them scurrying to the safety of the : bay? reached the fast-disappear- “s poe sma branch a eer ‘ . he ° Ipon @ low-hanging oat Near "Town = YOU V/ALK tne‘ feast, and with his sharp knife, san, Gireotly above the majestic, eupple | ts Ri slashed off a more generous portion body es it formed ellently through the VG SOR hoped for. thick jungsie, He huried a pineapple at ~ S87 & . ‘Then he wrigsied out from beneath the ancient enemy of his people. The RIG — ANO the struggling mass, ehitohing his prise great beast stopped and, turning, eyed bag = the taunting figure above iim. ‘mong thove ctroting futtiely the an angry lash of his tail he ] outekirt# of the banqueters was 014 bared his yellow fangs? curling his | Tublat. He had been among the first great lips in a hideous snarl that wrin- at the feast, but had retreated with @ kled his bristling snout in serried Goodly share to eat im yulet, and was ridges, and closed his wicked eyes to } now forcing his way back for more. two narrow elite of rage and hatred. | Bo it wee that he spied Targam With back-iaid ears, he looked into emerging from the clawing throng. the eyes of Tarzan of the apes and Tudlat's bloodshot, pig eyes sent out sounded his fierce, shrill challenge, wicked gleams of hate as Woy fall upun = And from the safety of his overhang. CORR WHATS THE fng limb the ape-child sent back the fearsome answer of his kind, But Tarsan For a moment the two eyed each quickly, and, divining what the boast other in silence, and then the great cat would do, leaped nimbly away toward turned into the jungle, which swallowed the women and ehildren, hoping to hide him ae the gcean engulfs a tossed | himself among thom. Tudlat, however, pebble, | wae ch ut int opportunity te seek @ place plan epra: had killed the flerce | ment, but eaw that he would be put to Tubiat, so he not therefore « | tt to escape at all, mighty fighter? Now would he trac’ Bwittly he eped toward the trees, and down the crafty Sabor, and slay him SULLIVAN with @ bound gained a lower limb with likewise, ene basd, then, transterring hie (To Be Continuedy = 9 mind of Tarzan @ great ~ — , ee