The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1913, Page 15

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The Evening World Daily ‘Magazine, Monday; November 24, 1913 I'D Go THRov6ed STORM AND FLAME YA MADE THE fe) A atomise N “A GOSH HANG 'T YA GOTTA W$$uS FOODLE SENT ME FORA “POUND oF Corret, AND YSaiw Sue’ GE ME ABIGKISS IN e a Aas Orth Bins Yar brealng Wendie MR. JARR REFUSES A GOLDEN CROWN. ee Gavarday' together with the contribution to Which the judges shall have awarded the 625 prise. OVSESTESIRERRCR RIGKED LIFE IN MID-AIR FOR FOUR HOURS. I was employed as a rigger’s netper and we had to hoist two sates to the seventeenth floor of kyscraper. It was to be done at night It re quired a man to sit on the eafes to keep them from hitting the building. This t# the foreman’s duty, but a the men on the winch foreman asked me to guide the sat while he was watching the rope. It tovk ¢wo hours to holst each safe and I was swinging In mid-alr four hours on @ dark, windy night be tween the ground and the seven- teenth floor, The boss gave me my tiref raise when be heard of the job 8, KUHRE, 66 A 4B, you wish gas?” inquired Dr.: A Gumm, the young dentist who bed Mr. Jarr pinioned in bis operating chair and gagged with a rub- ber dam. “Qursie! had a@ contract job te print 10000 Government envelopes a week for lurge corpora’ on, and the boss told Me to get the s:ock. He made out the usual check, I drew the money, Got the envelopes and after éeliver- ing them I handed my boss a hand- ful of change. He w-- surprised to @eo any change left, for he had al- — = ways made out the check for the ime amount. He turned dack the ube of his check book and learned that the shipping clerk always gave him the wrong price of the envel- opes and hed etolen the change every week for three mn ‘is He was discharged and I took his place. 1 wae raised from #4 @ week to 8 a W. A. SIMSON, lambs, and all eo happy and lovin’ each Gurei replied Mr. Jart.| other eo! Oh, dear! Uh, dear!” ebaking head vigorously, Why, what *y , what's happened them? They "Ab, Gerd money is in your right hand | ain't skipped without paying thdir rent? = pocket? continued young DF. on, Ive knowed people to do it what umm, “You wish me to take it?/n:’ iived as jong in one house’— Why, my dear Mr. Jarr, there was 20] Hon Gonit »: ¥ & word, my good wom- Positively there was no burrY/ an, about rents and sich things!” cried beut it! 1 could have sent in my Nttle| og airs Dus, enberry solemnly, “Mr. billet the end of the month. But, a8} yore wii net jay be more seat He you ingist"— And, light as the touch of thistiedown, Be dipped his forceps down into Mr. Jarra nearest waistcoat pocket an deftly extracted the $. “Why—what do you meant" ‘Mr. Jarr has gone to his long reward! week. He wears his golden crown!” sobbed 620 West One Hundred and Tweaty- Mo B, Ninety-Aret street, afinot bear to see him suffer!” be ne murmuted Mr. Dinkston as the bound|¢.0 u's Dusenderry, “And he was bet: eecond atrest. CHILO ACTR EARNED to me than my own son and darter!’ “His lodge will turn out!” cried Albert, the street sweeper, greedily. “ aad gagged Mr. Jarr made a terrific struggle to escape and also to protest. “The sign language itself, mirieog- faphy at its mightiest, could not visual- ise Buel anguish,” continued Mr. Dinks- ton. ‘“Here, 1 will’ take it out to get it changed.” £88 What's the matter, Mr. Dinks- tom?’ asked old Mrs. Dusenberry, his landlady, as she met him coming out of the front hallway. “Et:wae Mr. Jarr, our dear friend, Mr. Marr seniftied Mr, Dinkston, wiping his eyes with tho five-dollar bill. “I could Bet bear to see him suffer so, ‘Buffer 20? What was he suffering about?” asked the old lady from In- jane. ‘Ab, what fietters it?” murmured Mr. Dinkston. “He will wear a golden crown! How {ittingty the wearing of a| Mr. Dinkston told me sol” sobbed Mra, Golden erown symbolizes the sufferings | Dusenderry. “And well he might wear hes-borse gil wncomplaining! a golden crown, for a better husband, Ané Mr. Dinkatog smiled sa: wipea | better neighbor, « better friend, never A CLER4’S HARD WORK FIFTY YEARS AGO. 1 received my firet raise nearly Atty years ago. At aixteen I became clerk } @ small ‘: serail” country etore, where 1 worked for two years, opening the atore at 64 A. M. and closing at 9 at night. I received Se year. For performing my multitude @f mental Cuties to the best of my ability, for never falling to unlock the front door before 7 o'clock, for deing o in with the ladies and genial with the men on the days when everything seemed to go wrong, for doing @ aundred and o things which were nm‘ really re- quired of me, for bearing everything with a grin for two interminably Jong yoare, my salary was at last doubled to $100 @ year. I earned it, JACOB ENGLE. Middleburgh, N. ¥. ROLE IN TWO DAYS. Im the season of 1884 my mother and I were members of Mason and Morgan's “Uncle Tom's Cabin” co: pany, my Mother playing the part of Elisa ané 1, a child of seven years, playing Little Eva Mr. Mason wanted another play for Sundays, in the West, as it would enable the company to play Saturday and day in the same town. This idea came to him on Friday. He talked it over with the company. It would be easy for the older folks, but how about the ohild? J was to play Mary Morgan in “Ten Nights ta a Bar- room,” @ long, hard part, and had omy “two days to learn it He eat if I could learn it for Sunday night I ygould get more salary from then on, And with my dear moth- ore help, Gi, The next week I. received $11—§3 more than I hag |? deen getting. Prétty good for a kid "li have a humdinger of a funeral! Of course it only means more work for me 1 ain't considered at al. But I'll clear up cheerfully for Mr, Jarr, Al- | ways there with his joke, he was, H had @ good Job, too, The Jarre wasn't the kind 0? people what put everythin, on their backs. Why, rich people would have been proud of the garbage that came down ‘rom the Jarr flat, Ain’ that Mrs, Hickey?” The janitress murmured that the Jarr kitchen waste was @ credit to the com- munity and raised the whole tone of the neighborhood, in fact, nd now he wears a golden crown, bie eyes with, the five-dollar Lill again |!ived than Mr, Jarr. But ob, bis pore UNCONSCIOUSLY EXPOSED woven y 14, just learning (with 4 and stepped briskly toward Gus's place| ™! > and them Dore tamper ANOTHER’S DISHONESTY. my mother ao teacher) to read and oa the corner. eWnats the. matter wre, Deewme The ahipping clerk was taken sick | write JUNO BARRETT. ~' “Oh, dear! Oh, dear! moaned the ola} erry?’ asked Mr. Jarr, who just then ‘Wieest of all things created is this little Indian sitting before his tepee. mended and patched shattered hearts from time immemorial, and @8} 114 stayed home f: the day. Wi No, 8844 17th avenue Brocklya. e lady, struck as she afterward admitted, | came out of the house in @ bound, but) The pedicine Man, he, of all wisdom, to whom the whole race goes for| magically swayed them at his will, To him we kneel, begging that he re- \ paused when he heard his name. “Why, sir!’ cried the old lady, "I thought you was dead! Mr. Dinkston said you would wear a golden crow “1 will not!” cried Mr. Jarr, “But “all of a heap!” And she tottered to the * step and sat down and groaned, “And what ails you, Mrs. Dusen- berry?” asked Mrs, Hickey, the jani- tress, coming up out of the area. “Yor council. To this wee fellow men and maids lay bare their heart-of-heart secr@ts, Hoe is a doctor of large practice and wide experience, and has veal to us our fate. For he could if be would, this tiny rogue. He KNOWS. ELEANOR SCHORER. Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers.” Christmas Gifts. $i Sor bor Ganse 1 che to cngnaes iit Jean deal on good looks 18| business, in society, in love, one of the greatest handicaps in the world, Although pay- | who' chologists proclaim that first impressions | The; been drifters all thelr Jim Gray; ‘@ second time, Often’ when she «union number of convolutions bw gray matter he can carry weight| Mansion House on adorers Main street. averages. he goes into wn cifice seeking @ Jov,!word No one, except one und Still, I know @ lot of handsome men lives. jer thi got big territory ind was thrown down hard by 4 man hasn't got half/the entire trade. Now he's doing one- 4n | eyed towns, the kind that always hat slipping out of thelr geometrical posi- | CHAPTER XIV. collar and cuffs, and was fer long. “I wish you could see Blanche Moody! began again, standing holding the ri with a thin wreath of smoke I aid as indifferently as I “What about Mr. von Inwald?” She tiptoed over to me, the halo trall- after her. “If the Angel Gabriel was shut Miss Cob shrugged her shoulders and in wrinkles like an accordion and his @ouble chin was ao flabby you could have tucked It away Inside his collar, “What do you think of Amertoan Prince's opinion of American women? It's my be lef Mr. von Inwald w y something nice. He neant to, but just then he saw “American women! he sald, turning He looked around and th flewers, candy, books or muslo in re mombering his feminine friends he won't go wrong. But when the young quaintance, Of course, she will have a ehe doubtless has - ., look as though you had had a stroke”|go in there and see if Dr. Gumm can UREADY the! one of two really close friends whom “And I HAVE had one, Mra, Hickey!"| extract his own teeth—I knocked @ merica matter f/ehe will wish to remember. But the erled the poor old lady. ‘And to think! bunch down ‘is throat. Where'd Dink- ‘oman Humorist Christmas! iist need not and should net tmelude i of that dear Mrs. Jarr, and them pore ston go?” APPAR OS preeeee rae beinS | every man who hes chanced to call on co eau (Copyright, 1912, by Bobte-Mewil Oo.) you'a of the other women! drinking the water. He and the bishop ‘Then I think he remem- young men and pala SYNoPsis OF PRECEDING cmarTERs. Breakfast looked lke an afternoon re- grew quite chummy, Miss Patty was not dnt now who he women, if I may e rT} 99 “The Dector,” owner of a mineral pring CePtion. What would you think of pi th but about 4 o'clock Mr, Pierce miled and started to turn- Judge by letters 1] “W. ©.” writes: “Will you please 5 Minute Fi hts With ate ante be ning this black velvet ribbon around my out. preety Sere pccontly re- [tell men cultable Christmas preseat ¢o ae stam net a8 coualon nt Disk Co wandered around the room, not talking ardoa!” he said. “Ie it not bet- rea. And. tno l Give @ young lady whom 3 am going tof? the place within one, gest after st “It might have done twenty to anybody, but ataring, whenever he What do women know of money? me 4 v By Alma Woooward. cane ed, Ylatle, Miss Cobb,” I anawered, “Dut could, at the prince, y throw it away on trifles—dress, young women ere | Arty. 0 seen 96 get money enetan? igh eh Wrath ab, SdVise it now.” 1 was Senator Big ele—American women are exirev doing more worry-|We are engaged, although it will net Copyright, 1019, by The Prose Publining Co, (The New York Evening World), iso over ‘tbe, Glot machine, and f Re Seed Ona ee ha eis Le etauas Jo one result of thelr—of their ing than their |e announced til! spring?” ; : beyond my control, I can't even allevi- | parse %ia% atl, one of ind me as she hung wD: Bay time in the epringhou masculine friende,| A man's present to bis flancee should My Looks. paren giaireter errerree rs yall sussts, tae radia ae oterten te winaee ne aa Gre curtain, Haine teal ae imac, by keobing Ty vincent It really te com-|be an individual affair, Why not «0080 Jo matter what esul-restorers|iney count against me inthe fight for | Sti aftttintgiee sactieontaaat tyeuman’ oho tried the curler Ba Ge courtaic, filled up all the time with water, Me paratively etmple for @ man to choose|® sift in some way connected with the may say to the contrary, ®/ success, They reduce my chances in was too full of ber ubject to be eulky too weak for it; his face was folded up bis Christmas presents. If he sticks to|+!r's own special hobby? “V. R." writes: “I am tn love with a | young man whom I have known since e | ve er head. “Drawn women, Mr. von Inwi e ed, woman comes to select gifts for the Men | childhood. He sees me once in @ while, aren't.wortb a continental, jet them|with @ corset house and made such a ae dears t Tout eee how she.caD ands rybody aay hae studs ot eDough 10 voy titles re capa she knows she finds it much harder. | but though he speaks very politely he remember that nine times out of ten Un- | blamed hit with women buyers that he breathe! I guess there's no doubt ebuut and listened for the answer. As Mr. Dearie, for the purpose of adornment.” | Howe: it te unnecessary for @ girl|never talks of love, How can J find out less you make @ favorable first impres- doubled the sales in a year. Then Mr. von Inwald, von Inwald represented the prince, Mr. vom Inwald and his face|to favor with s Christmas remem-|if he really cares for me?’ sion, you're not going to gain audience | got swelled head, scorned some of his re ise fe ee ert pul tale. Deer wouldn't he be likely to voice the red, M. jae white a2d/ prance all the young men of her ac-| You can't, You must walt till he de check in the - clares himself !n some way, 20," he went on, “when they mai they wish to control their own money, twenty-one, or whatever the cure ts t for \ 60 puffed up with pride that jected. bout € o'clock and sat down | breathed again. But my nerves’ w What chance has a little, tuboy, | tions. she forgot to be nasty to m in with Mr. Jennings for ten minutes nig giass of spring water arcund on the = 4 minute by the fire, Bhe Nearly gone, and when just then I he. -bald, jneigy.ticant featured man, when] I'm not a stunner tn any sense of th “L thought 1' he'd be blowing his trumpet for help. table before him, “they are very love @ abot from the dir sald Mr, Plerce (Carter to a—what are you talking about?’ ‘ in his corner sneering be- 4 the them run!" I demanded when I got by his appearance, You hear people! And, in careful observation, I've never Pierce Disa “About hia being @ m from the hind hie pipe. They looked at each ot was true enough; 1 knew tt. She winked st me from the doorway. way of him, “He has SUCH an alr,/known a really handsome man to loo | rece ipproves. prince to M a NR pana eres other enally, and Robody could mia- —— “Oh, I'm on all right, Minnie: é how.’ or “Whal @ wonders lenin and content, "I f CHIN! ina whisper, ‘He spen take the hate in Mr. Pierce's face or hie ensured me, * ngth of that he attains position tolances. They affect a set expression, no morning, (Bho was dressed Wet aor kod Lily BiEge MBAS IBST® Wad looked Away Ona enraged: Hie shoul, o'tatk to our The Prince, with Apologies, 1s ike s casio whe Sroben springs which, he's not entitled by the law of /doubt, to prevent their features from in black silk, with real lace S!n0st ® aire nean anything,” 10d: gpecche make bis pretty picked up ILLIE brought the i T saw then that she thought I was * feeding Senator ction of the deer park even Till joticed how pal oT her) had started out with a PArk ever fi } Je of a powerfully built, mag- tutelage of the little blind god, could nobody hority here any more, took hold of « fresh wisp of hair with Moody and Mrs. Higgs and FRR Abou F ofclock, we Lot ee edn eiapcome Over Fake { Me eatin The one in rave over my chin or the litt of my |M¥ Carter has put the a put Mr. the curler. a sek, Ons te » and even glanced mo sat but it made mo uneasy, Minnia sho said. “That's only Mr { 6 instinctively by rea of upper lip. But I've got all my limbs, | YO" Inwald In the north wing, I can- ‘I dare say,” she, an , in the spring. Then he looked again at “They've gone plumb crazy over that Carter shooting rabbits I saw ] ‘ S, Cee ue tee not imagine why he should have given Angel Gabriel wouldn’ Mr. Fierce and kept his eves there, and he was in e perfect frenay of rage. Mr. von Inwald,” ashe declared, “It 60 Out aa I started down the path. a pearance t jail my featu 'm not scarred tl him the coldest and most disagreeable breakfast with Miss Jenning: But they are spotled ¢ 4) spotled, When J reached it back to him be makes me tira!. How do they know 1 was Bt! nervous when I put on my } PROVE that.he ha |people shudder politely when they view | part of the house.” kissed her hand before everybody at the They rule their * and they ex- gripped tt until bie nails were white. he's anythiny but what he says he Is? shawl and picked up the basket. But i Un te edvial se vf «. Thoughime. I don't bear the weight of lifelesy| 1 said I'd speak to Mr. Carter and try foot of the stairs pect to rule t..¢ husbands, In Europe My joint ached al) rost of the He may be # messenger from the Em- ¢ ‘Was a puddié on the the floor and’ j wonteA’ may protest that they ‘hate, Iimba to have him moved, and she rusted | “is he handsome?” 3. Leper eurtone we do things better wo aro notwwnat citemneen, paces 8 giclook Mr. ‘Tho- peror of Austria, and he may be sell- te rye elie 9 zeare waa nothing ] ands n,"" vnat they tind homel pass such as ti over to where I was ‘rushing the to know how he w r ie the English?—nag-ridden?” um stopped in long enough to say ing flannel cheat protectors. Miss Coby's £0! © ack for more soup, hone Been A Te BOS | hee sais wc etet hearth ‘and stooped down, women. Hut Miss Cobb had never seen There was 4 aust of murmur among “What's thie J hear about Carter all set up; ane'a talking about getting and J got tt from the kitchen Weinsut / | ick companion pic: |never dwelt on the bitt "4 “Mr. von Inwald is Incognito, of @ 1an she would call ugly. the men, but the women all nodded as making an ese of himself to-day up an entertainment and asking that the chef seeing me. When I opened q the Wiiners usualy Di | e ‘erness they must she said, “but he belongs to a ‘Handsome! she said, “My dear, if they thought Europe was entirely ven't heard it,” 2 aoswered. MM jlummera to recite.’ the espring-house door again Mr. Plerce 4 tures for themselves, unless it’s @ case | feel; on thelr vain railing againat Fate | 14 family in his own country~a he's beautiful! He has @ duel ecar on right. They'd have agreed “What is it?" wot up, leaving the basket on Was by the fire, and In front of him, of bankroll, And it's not fair, | —these people who are REALLY hand{-|noble family, He ought+to have the his le k—ail the nobility have if he'd advocated sixteen wives aitting But he only laughet and turned up his pear th, where. 1'4 left the basket, lay a dead - : I diun't design my own face, I Inheri- 1d, | best there is in the hous them T've @ cousin living Uke the Turks, collar te ‘And wa she said, “you ought to TADDIt Ho was aitting there with nis q ted my eatra small and seagreen Maybe {f I make myself believe that| 1 promised hat, too, and she wont person—and ring at the ‘Jove, Minne, feo that dog now. It's been soakin’ on in nie hands looking at the poor from grandfather; my irregular and|['m somebody, I could make others be. |¥2%: but 1 mado up my mind to talk child of the women of your spirit always dampion in peroxide’ al day! wale large nose from kreat-grandcuther (It|leve it too. It’s only the spark from, ‘0a! Pierce. The sanatorium business nderatand, Mr, the losing side? Be a good girl; give She went out with the peroxide, but k it : 4 3 then), My alim, anuemic|within that can subme [HEE one waar 2Ou san Pit XOur Wa a ‘ nit her mead. tn. nod tance he aly ooking " Ps Meant caste, . My . thal mi outward | kes and kes against the comfort stom of expecting and atuck her head tn, nodd ‘he eald, looking up, “What, stature came from father, who Was/physical defect. And I guess it's that|of the gu 7 husband @ certain ire not going to lose,” I retorted the pasket, “Say,” she said, oe 1 Cobb came out a few ine Wways deitcate; the nervous 44 tnese imperfections are absolutely |that'e Victorys ‘as \ eourse, Minnie,” ebe said, “but J wish round, very effeble and friendly, ee ‘The prince turned red and glared at ety eae S & series of baths. thelr Sfteen, or Wer unt they've had “Leet Bim etarvel she repeated. spark that will supply the current for, Mi definite sum of money and to piace it ang ‘Nobody haa left yet We getting fussy adout thi jerywhere, but the basket 4) figestion that sallows my complexion is | success long after Apollo 1s an honor-| after; she had on her now gr Y pretended under her husband's control, Our the books. In tho diet kitchen, ¥ and after a while I decided — rloom from grandmother, who ary member of the “Down-and-Quters,” | With the white trimming, She @aw me to play cards, but they were really play- wealthy American girle control their He came over and sheok @ finger tn it out soon, Minnie Bf 1 was you I'd that Mr. Dick had had an attack @f > erical (and therefore de nigiteur! I'll not try to conq! because of my | ataring as she threw aff her cape and tng European royal own money.” my face. Jet him tary thoughtfulness (or hunger) aad had eare | her day). looks. I'll conquer in spite of th: put her curler on the log. von Inwald He was thinking of Miss Patty, and ‘‘Nobedy has left—and why? Because “What!” | screeched, and grasped the ried It out himself, ‘ ber Gay? me om. And “11's a little dressy for 90 early, of use and sat everybody knew it, they're all taking of the spring. (E> Be Continued.) ot

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