The evening world. Newspaper, January 2, 1914, Page 21

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/ ~The Evening World Daily Magazin . January 2, 19147" e, Friday Copyright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co, (Phe New York biveming World.) No, 1 Don't Re eR ee ee Swarrow OnE ; . ine THREES The House on the Rock Sand on the Sand by Tho Prem Publishing Co, (Tue New York Krening Workl,) Romances ot Models, *§ i/}A Modern Parable % By Famous Artists Copyright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), EVERETT SHINN and the “‘Dual Personality’ Girl. NCB in a while,” began Mr. Everett Shinn, the artist, In re- . lating the romance of one of his models, “we meet in lifo * ry PLISHED to-day?’ And promotions Gay & personality which displays two distinct aides, I think it OF TER BOAD. Never comes to the fellow whe ie ally © very impressionable or temperamental indi- > wa By Joseph P. Day. WAITING for it It comes only ¢: Go vidual who gives evidence of this contradiction of character. - “ Dowt WIRE yousscll te te top) || fellow whe io WORKING for é. “My model Georgia hud a faculty of surprising ene by * 4 - WORK yourself there. 1f you are cdnvinced that you are mudden and unexpected changes from a gitl as mild and | || Bee SRAREER, bus bo 0 FIN. ey bata Ho Jo and knecklo well bred us thege ever was, to a shrew as little controlled } 1BEEB too. 4 down. to work, then you Gam and as ugly tongued as one would caro to see. Georgia | Don't call a joo DONS une te |/Teady to study the further requires THE ROAD TO THE TOP Those Who Are at the Sammit Point Ont the Roate bo Others Who Are Beginning to Climb. Copyright, 1014, ‘by The Press Publishing Co,’ (The Now York’ Urening Wert; .—REAL BSTATE BUSINESS. By Joseph P. Days (Head of one of the big real estate concerna) { \ Copyright, 1014, had @ grievance which incensed her with wild thoughts. lo FINISHED. ments of the real detats bestinee J. “She came of old Georgia stock, but in the family; cupboard wus @ nkeleton Don't COUNT on @ Gea! until it a Tre vert rae oe ‘which caused the girl to leave her home and shift for herself. As described by 5 ve : lo CLINCEED. to bediih peas: aasate OF ia te Sal Georgia, her mother was ‘the dearest, loveliest, gentlest, genteelest iady in all \ “SEX. VS = . 5 : |] _ Better a small MONBOT commis. |} ' "Sh IN tase: a s Y he world.’ The girl worshipped her, and when she talked of her a beautiful ex- ‘ R | a : vet . ton than ¢ Mg DISHONSST one. hen Leagpecss-2 Qreesion glorified hor face and made her all that ehe sald her mother was. “When she spoke of her father, on the contrary (the menace of her young existence), anger and hatre! shook her girlish furm and she became unattractive | and almost objectionable in her language. “ ‘He bets on the poniess he's a crook, a gambler, a diagrace,’ she would cry vehemently, ‘I gave up the only man I want to marry because 1 was not going to take any: chanco on Ed's throwing me over, I cleared out because my father dg & demon. I know it was wrong to leave my mother alone, but I could not stand it any longer.’ ' “Bhe told mo how the oki sport had delved into the family exchequer; how fhe had lost large sume in betting, and she vowed she would never return home uml her father awore off gambling. ‘ Ryrsher was verging on a nervous breakdown when one day good news came ‘There in ome business capacity which | man. wu frem the South. Her father had been trying to retriove his losses by risking ® young man MUST hav. : mere and more. He had lived the harrowed, feverish existence of the gambler Ar i} , » i ‘ isa peta for Wonk Goch Prbeed ine inareanea wrth’ ee tall swho plays for gain out of all proportion to what his efforts deserve. It must Yes Ukg Fim’ and special talent are of no value to} never to make the sane mistake twice, have been to save the soul of tho benutiful girl that fate unwantonly kind. * \ al \ the young man who does not keep them | Decauee you will recognise it as a mis $ ‘With one stroke of luck he won back the money he had recklessly used. \ : g persistently at work. Itemembor what | :ake while it !s a milo hway. ; “Everything was waiting for her at home; the mother she adored, the man " Daniel Webster said: “It has deen said] Yeu will learn, if you are sumciently she loved and the father to whom (when in one of ler better snoods) she wanted x . \ me . I owe my success to genius, It is to} deerving, that one of the areateat mov= to Qegome reconciled, provided ho would promise to reform, She decided to visit oe , 1 LAN : - WORK and not to GENTUS I owe my | '"S factors in successful real estate ope her family. The old man had more love for his Georgia than whe had for him, ‘erating t@ PERSONALITY. and now that the chance came to win her back he was ready to prove his di “plug-| Your personality must create the ime ‘votion. At her demand he signed over every vent of his winnings to his wife. fer.” Did you ever study one of these | Ofession that you are a solid, intelligent “Georgia's humiliation van:ened, She no longer had any scruples about mar- erratic fellowes who ts ab bright he fair-| an with plenty of energy and perse- 7) rytng the man phe loved, for the disgrace of the family had been miraculously ly shines, yet seome unable to. hola|verance. You should be neat in drem,/ (0 ‘wiped out. ‘Ed,’ whom she brought to see me on thelr honeymoon, sald: down any one job very long? He haa| With pothing to hint that you are sporty T'd have come after her myself if she had not come back soon. No man more Kehemes and ideas spouting out of | OF frivolou could fail to appreciate how splendid she is, and nothing that her old man did him than an electric fountain has cole] Furthermore, you must be able to | ho: Would have kept me from marrying her, even if sho thought she could lose me. ors, but pretty soon, after he has made| Make friends, You must be the type | «o* But as it happens, everything has turned out for tho best.’ j 5-Minute Fights With “Fate” J . > | business wi Tsien whosoever taketh the marriage vow and keepeth it, 1) And every oné that taketh the marriage vow and keepeth it not shall Hema p yk leg ple ah mea "by this 1 Piel meas “ec weed Sy Aima Woo:ward. Copyright, 1914, La ‘The Prees Publishing Co, (The New York Kvenig World), will liken him unto a wise man who built his house upon a rock; | be likened unto a foolish man who built his house upon the sand;:and the | doing anything any more to live up to| fellow" as the term generally ts used, £ and the rain descended and the floods came and the winds blew an What This Year Will Bring.) ¥'th a lot of New Year cheer stuf just VERY year pas 44 for that day and then fit our feet to the beat upon that house and it fell not, for it was founded upon a rock. fret of January, |%*Me oid ruts on the following morning. Rather is It to face the truth, no mat-| SYNOPSIS OF PRECE when tho cale-| ter how bitter, on the frat day of the | _Vollce Caytain Turke dar slips up one, year, and vow: the word goes firm where you wilt have the oppor tunity to learn the © matter what your arouse floor up. oe job ts, young man,| Then if you kept on plugging and ent whether It Is lenrn-| showing that you knew a litte more ing the real estate) about the job than the other fellow Dusines oF CArpen-i and kept absorbing and retaining all tering, the‘one rule] the real estate cs < e eo] ee ea information that came . o : 3| Zour wa.-and that you went out ef | ‘the top" te this?) your way to get acquainted Sia Sones ie | Bite into tt. HANG) the time came for a: salesman to be J on and never \et} made by promotion from the ranks, go until you are there, YOU would very Ukely ve that sales- rain descended and the floods came and the winds blew and beat. upon that | !t have never been able to discover thas ipo | Tho best way you can. please your|drinking ts essential to commercial sup hd | bows, and draw his attention to you, | ces TT | ls to attend to his busineay, A day'a| You must know the property you are fej work ta never done until tts every| handling thoroughly. You must have ; Ne q raced the art of salesmanshi; Seveloped: re By C. S. Thom pson| [eran ctanee Tweet 200] theo, Suluere act a Bee an house and it fell, and great was the fall of it. WV) blk, Gd Miah aay aa OO Measure the day except for the lasy| Preach and interest a man, but how man or the shirker, If the: boas looks} When to clinch the Geal; Even at you when It cymes closing time, he | things experience will teach you, ore cB {len't thinking: “How Jong hee that} And when you get to sat Te Mean PDING INSTALMENT, dirty little windpipe and hi the Tenderloin ie. you get black In the face Mit nia 4 THO city editor looked. up sickly ing on Wh) "Keenan," be said, “you d n't know Ing; but yourrwa: Af you bit it ria etter than you ko dong as ee y ain't my way. is What's the differ Burke, 1 know you § 1 una Souran aeaae ; A wetting money ior ellow worked to-day?" He's thinking: harder than ever, so that “To-morrow—not the day after—but mwore. Bo. blsce, the White, straight into the ‘eyes of the SPOM voulsel. | Youre in wrong, and 1 want “"CVowhat hax that fellow ACCOM- SLIP BACK, forth to look for f Aisle you know ft, too, Only you won't say “You want n pa TO-MORROW-—I'm going to hustle as . lo mentioned inc Captain, Never mindj-qn the end, mark ¢ 2 Vou ey? What can you dol <——~ omnerty better things, toy, with the affair, John, a senior at Yai “You ¥ Oe oa my with 4? You can't tak ; I've never hustled before. I'm going to ‘ a : You're the man to do tt, Wurke,"” hes wards, we'll et you.” take it with yout recharge your am-| 4) 4n thera idol, ‘There is little affection anawered, with « sm! “ft wouldn't When you die, What can you fs bitton battery, to | 12 thnss many thingy, and out of the | is toy's art, for Murke and ¢ be the first thme wither that yo b. NWhy, i it here on this earth? Only a foe thre make good, | 2dtehs hy the law of chance, some must | chr comes “wo throat until the man guit breathing!” «(tyr BY, keeptr tA which Jn the end will make yor eyine# avor te ee es ie And every year on the fet of Decom | D@ Successful. I'm not going to be dis- iy the putonion “cf ths Burke held hig tongue. ‘The ine eaa ee wa wwen after me 6° more miserable, I dare may Mou tiine bs. aan ny ¥ A sodbay Foe cem | couraged by my fallures—everybody ha: | declares Limscif disgraced and iaitumaten tha! 1 aside a of copy MBurker We tay. op we may not, be HAY Wit? sll Chis monay. you'll te Able 9 » gust twenty-four hours before that | :nem. I'm not going to bulid tombs on | i buerly ashamed of his father, ‘Come, Burke.” he said, “let's to drive You off the desk. “But 12, nake Ife easier for yourself, or per er’ ca S oremost " date, you realize what a lost hope, what} :he ashes of my misfortunes. I'll use 1 ty business, What cun we do for that isn't the point. ‘The point x we're Rabe fOr your bey, Lent that it? come, |b. " ® falee alarm, you've been during the| them as so much experience, than sola Mieeewant aulokl ; gulng to do something a gobd deal urne ie oan What's in your ind. past twelve months. Yet on th» follow-| which therc ia nothing more costly in| 4 } FTER a while the Captain #at gain “yomobody dawn nae fot meen Mobs: We're ina nosicon to make JH® you, and you've tk, Mite fiht, haven't| dae savorste recipes of jamous Mrs. Artnur A. Biri + ing morn you get off a lot ot the New | tho world." } down again with the knowl- the’ phone thie very mUerabla for you and“youre”| that you, won't jer y Hee eee rer vit) women of the United States are | (President D.C. Congress of Mechered : urself and be-| py er edge that he was driving ai / uld tell them that even now they ‘ et your ‘boy wuffer the . 0. lope is a priceless gem; faith another. || cdg 6 didn’t have some Way you've auffered? Ian’ ’ venti r if || sea lidin't nis lite misor- S2Y, n't that itt] erinted in The Bvening World on Chicken Croquettes. ¥ But hope and faith, not backed am- his boy @way—still further You know—a statement etl, ai eh Biving him an edue; What's the use? What's tho sense in! sition und atlekeuteitivences weet way. He knew that some- Into my head Td come down eee nee te win With, and then you're waltuy tot nang | MOMdGMS, Wednesdays and Prideys UREE or four pounds oF thé mess pulling wool over your owl eyes whan! yo epineless things that beckon one on| thing would have to be done; just things over. them bending to thee MM Over the moneyt ‘That's ail right,| M@ny Of the dishes descrided have of ono chicken, salt, pepper, ene there are ww many people in the world (to the mirages of life's deesrt what, he didn't know, y'wita pencits, and there pounding MY dear Burke; but Haten on national renown, taplespook Of lotion. See Tae " ° J “4 " 1 ia in “Do ye Know what you're y » fourth teaspoon celery seed, Feady to Jo it for you One of the most successful men Tever| ONY Once In his official life had he airy We tynemedtorée the Glok GF SiGe seine youn boy b Get eee — chop th tf Unies you have womothing tangibie In| knew aid it was hls custom. every }Kone through a similar experience. That nashines,. por the, sound oF i teaching him te think. font ia coure tee alt porte of tte eels view, something you know t4 going to} morning to sit down at his desk, to] Wax some twenty years before, when t ,Yoloos—all this aotivity recaHed the sec- pit ions ther sures Sou re ecucatin Mrs. Henry M. Bankhead. ne chicken; then ad Det ith Js y te : : like ond blow they were aiming at him, ang nse of feeling, to m the cream sauce. J ;detter your position, make money for) nick trom the things he had to do the| this samo newspaper first opened fire < filled him with a greater fuer sense of ‘a1 responsibility, and|. (Wife of Capt. Henry M. Bankheed, For the ‘ ’ you and increase vour ease in Living, T! most dificult and diggreeable task of fon him, and hig wife begged him to BER OPnIDg Aer OG eee (aH ine alia Hie at on 2 you know what that means? Burke, U, 8. 4.) Two Soreull, Creme Kanata ree don't see why you should vaguely ana ip tt oat ia) ‘: Spantabeald Ab hae the olty. editor y don't you give JU8t stop and think. [t me t y ‘com: rn 3 : Shea enue eae a eae Jf] aratt & thing of his Ife, His fancy iT rong th In all the workd Nich he ON} EQ IX pods of red peppers cus in small] of flour; when thoroughly mixed add oe a ; ee : you are going y-five, with orkd with which he van tor. | ; shly Snes oy Rise) Wate ree re ho had thought @ second timo he'd have| drificd ty a gentle, white-haired wo- A See on the 1s Hag tanta Seka Mine tlonaapeS Cure HIMAMG, “DO Phu thay haem cies even; three dozen black ponper®.| gradually ono pint of milk, stirring | ee Fe itd lo We | done everything else first and have had| nan, He had answered appeal with SO and sca nae ee ie then—why, then E hense of feeling Burke, it meane| two eyen tablespoons of suwar, ONS) all the time until smooth jike paate, add tan ie fe) from thy, fatness | hat, Dwhtmare hanging over his head! sn emphatic refusal. He kuew better case of slipping sou felons cesethl ant to or ) that every time we strike you a hlow | quart best vinegar, Beald the vinesar|ty the chicken while hot, take, out # ) feearta end spoke from thy fulness} ay day iban she dla ka aad ING, Burka, Whos von tee yous ber we're hitting him in-|in which the sugar has been dissolved; |taplespoon (while warm) onto a board’ thereof: So here's to what I'm going to do in} As a matter of fv he had really you don’t know me, and I do ft will all be der Stow, and one lis’ never) pour over the peppers; put in a kar and ad with bread roll the eros 4 yo Well, Tm lucky to havo gutten Py! | tne new year: answered her appeal with money, He You know yourself. y + und t ue ao pole te FE a steop two weoks auetto in the crumbs, then dip in emg 4 4 Here's to the vose—hoping he won't fire} I'm going to plough througi obatacies | eplled by giving her more money for te troubl 1 ean You don't kn wt Ns eft area Pigs ay the: paint 9 the argument Dixie Biscuit. fixed’ wiih tan. tl cons of water e. me. Here's to the trades NY | instead of walking around them. I'm| ier eeat char! ani one Ceppile Toate a ved ‘and that's the ment went by " a od AF pint flour, half cup yeast, two] (du not vpat the eggs light, just mixp a ~ they not love faith in my credit. Here's | going to make myself KINOW that what { Burke,clung to the solitude of his 1” Te S18 MW ' 1 this world = Keenan then drew up his ena teaspoons sugar, ona heaping} for this quantity it takes two 1 he chokes 1¢ hi ml { suppose you will 4 v air, i to the tandlard—I hope tie chokes ¢ | others hi done I can do. I'm going} private offee, with his black c . ee this little city room, “Only one word more, Burk he tablespoon lard, two ex bait} Rol! in umbs again and drop in \ Wrong, until some one helps you out . Gute me out for arrears. Here's to my to ve able to say on Dec. 3, 1014, In-| ifame, trying to plan a course of uction “What are you getting. at minute. Now's te time, then,Went on in @ lower tone, “You've | pint «tik bolling lard. ‘This quantity will make, Wife—that she may never get wise to} stead of “Hero's hoping,” “I HAVE | that would satisfy his He couldn't “Just what van nating Gurself the question-are you taken blows all your Ife, You are] Put yeast In half.pint of flour, with] twenty croquettes. They are very nice what @ stupendous bluff I am." Drogrossed. I have earned the rigitt to| come to any decisic use he knew wrong, Burke, £ kr In Ketsing all there ts ont of if peed to them.” Anyway, there won't) gatt and sugar. Mix with warm water;| Veal may be inatead of chicken, ‘The remedy is not to drug ourselves hope,” that the terms of # truce with the the bottom of y you hk i gure: Mage no. BIA VEAT,, “OOK AnES WIR SAUER Gael Re Ye urke Bur jet rive, ‘Then add lard, eggs and milk,|or meut, only br butter before © ss = | newspaper were not for him to dictate {0% Come, to it, and ¢ , Eg Mi io an ATE i ginning of life, and. is hee garg eo{ knead in flour enough to make right! he four i and use soup stools Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers | ,hecaedinaly, that evening, giving Up ORT Tt wane capt help tn wro Bufer beeiuse of you? pee £2] consistency. Holl about @ half tnch| instead of mi, . hia uniform for a civilian suit of black, peti atitog vurned’ teh {f you're not going to question to ask yourself, Wha thick, cut with a glass. Put two to- we young «ran In such @ position would not! knew the man with whom he would ¢ ne ak with h « him with a bad handicap, the teav-|}bake in quick oven to a delicate browa, W. B. Cooke, Hauwmood. ind. Coby HB gir) who| have sought advice, At worst, he woulll nave to do business, It was an oll turice yak She F Ae Jest handicap In all the werid-cthe ine |oendia” pata Tend ty Hoot Tastes “atid Grae thrusts her; have Jod the gir! on to making an even| reportesial friend—Keenan, who had you're PRtales asa ChUtE Ceo ane J the Captain, with the heritance of a bad name, Burke, you're eee Unsought at-| Worse fool of herself. At best, he would! since rixen to the elty desk vusiness,"* P am A grifter, and no matter what he docs, tentions on a man| have laughed ut her among his tn-| Keenan was but little changed sinc) “What would you Aavv me do, Kees Whed 1 com shoW no mutter where he goo, no matter “Keene mark my words—-when ho finds oug has only herself to! timates, while politely avolding her #0-!the daya of his reporting. H. 8 ati) nan what kind of a Ife he tries to live, tng heart juat how muda you've done for hin | ety. he Saye Of WM rep ee may a 4 xi Keenan, looks people will forever point Him out as He éoul ot any further, aud as Burke, he'll be proud of him father thank !f sho is re-| ciety. I 4 hi Heth niter ‘Qyit the desk p 4 « ¥ , The most Inviolable of ta Une ethic Ae porepee a iste s “What-under tre?” ood Heavens, Your son. of a wrafter’ His be turned his nead away, seelng bim- he'll come to your arma and May #0.” . pulsed. wAlheg we Mle Of society's Un-lin the cheek; nevertheless, he had the i1. Wasn't prepared Pay such a doing money will be called b Take self beaten, big man that was, 4 Burko was #trangely upse:. Would * Nov’ every) written is that a girl should never! same keen, penctrating eye ax of old: pic, “ty n't ink x ' ( making my word for It, there tan't any exqupe rush of tears came to cheeks. hig boy come to his father's arma? young man as con-| openly show ‘ner preference for 4 mun} “Good evening, Captain,’ he sail, fecurd, tHe eoridn't , t iy for him. ‘This thing wih follow him - ‘L¢ it's tho only way, Kgenan,” be . siderato in his, before he shown hie for her, And |noiding open the gate, “Come right tm, hig re f whieh he « that to the grave Ol! T tell you, theres ‘The chty: editor looked the other way said bravely, “I quit, . Lg manner of repuls-| Uile law has not been modified by ro-| won't you? Donsted—hia untarnished re anon f one thing in this wortd we can't beat, while the telegraph sounders went on ‘The city editor put out his*hand, Ing a8 the one who! cont feminine freedoms, | Burke sat down beside the city desk the days of his kang Ho never leadi " » irke, and Swt's the game of life: beating & nervous tatton and the young Fd Burke?” be eatdy | D wrote to ine re-{ _— Hig stubby fingers were itching, so te shown the white feather to man. will vivo kot to lve tt Figut or vou men tn whirt sleeves kept on hammer- t ] cently asking how! “HK, A. writes: ‘I am in love with alspeak, to get at the imaginary throat If he quit under fire, what would the th y lose thw wway at tholr typewriters, Alling h At first Burke ignored the proffered — * ho sight convinge| girl, but J am very vashdi. Wil pealer this tithe, weak man gang say? And those higher up? mill! Hurke had never thought of these up another page for the morning paper. hand. “ a " " Wouldn't they cal! him a coward? No— happ @tentorwend yeoune Women thst he did /edvise-me how to. 90urt he Say, Keenan.” began the Captaln, not to his face, still, they would think ‘‘ilow do you know, Keenan? Are ~ «tot care tor her, He said he was most) There is one general principle: stop |pushing his hat on the back of his it of him, and hw could never tako them wise to what I'm doing with it? You" “0 gveree to hurting her feelings, but he re-| thinking about yourself and try to/head, ‘do you know what I feel like by thelr puny whité throats and hold been #iving It to me that to. in sarong . t+! @ulle@ eguinet @aiag any longer the 70-| please the girl, m | aonny things, He sat in the warm, used-up “Burké,” said tho city editur at Mi whake,” he aaté etter a mi air, uncertain of his balance, breath- length, “there's only one thing to do, “Hut. say, Keenan—E @on't want ing heavily, ax he watdied the yellow. You're going to quit—yes, under fire, pity.” rf a jah spots of Mght swim around: the #o that there:won't be any more mud Pity’ No, he wi In’t have it! b I feel like taking hold of your on until they were black in the'face” . Am 1” Maype so teyour way of thinks room, throwing, When your,pay Anda it out, fo Chasinen’ on ‘ : ’ P z i ae ’ oe +} : er

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