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Tia | Fun for the Home PSX Sketches and Stories and the Ride Home SuaLY Figura, Ivy ives PEABD Arfenron AND TIOUGHT. Pobtieh Now “EN - You Lhave Fon mexico JONBAY To TAKE “ovIES OF THE. WAR . THE PLCKER FILM Company GxeacTs vou Te Tax@ GREAT CRECAUTIONS Te PRCTECT VYOvURSEWGES AGaInsT THe QUULETS CF THe MEXICANS! {Teun va- HES GoTA SNapey eRAN! PRoTecTt us FROM BEING SHOT AT — CeLieve we! ist r JENIN’ To HER S'POSE ALLTH, GENMEN J eT AM READIN’ DE WAR £ BULLETINS! 5 ‘ 4/7 DRESSED UP.AND NO PLACE To Go — Novelettes of New York Streets Division Street Disappearance pale straw, trying tho effect on her (lian, : Bye straw Srylag. Han. And, yee! Soph, talk of Hde!--| quisite pleasure and acute pain (small crowd collected. | Unheeding, @& accident had occurred. A} ]T was during the rush hours oan lore deciding its future. wisht you cud ‘a seen ‘om; they/HATS! Hehind vast plute glass ex-|she worked on, bending the straw this! a ver v nd the car wi cro’ * _ @ritten Raprmiy tor The Rrening Westd The yellow halo became her well. Her| waa the darndest Iids 1 ever did see.| panses, in palaces more gorgeous |Way and that, lifting @ bow, pinning | A staying had given away, @ ; ne sy ae wded to its fyll By Ethel Watts M f a hair was smovth and black as her| They don't care what they wear, them| than the grandest movie entrance, |@ flower, with inspired fingers. ‘The | two carpenters working on it capacity, and then some. ae eee en NTS eRe ME OR satin ribbons; her unsunned cheeks | dames offen de Ave.” they glowed und beckoned. Imagine |resultwis A HAT! fell to the ground. One was serious-| A rather gaudily, dressed young rosy as her cotton velvet wave of longing suddenly over-|@ humble wood carver from some re- ts materials might have left some- |), = fr {mag was standing next to a Germ g STIS, 101A, be Tao Foem Fritiching On, (The How Nevt Brening Westt). Killarney, and her mouth as red as| whelmed Sophie. Motealy euddeniy controntod with |thing to he desired, to be sure, One| injured: the other, unhtrt, imme LJ an, | r 3 . The/each holding on to the overhanging the poinsettia she was endeavoring to] "Gee!" ahe suid softly, “gee! 1| the works of Phidiag; or a atruxuling {cannot, even at wholesale, ubtain| (ay went Guickty mathered, * * * ; id b . ae rt vs ickly gathered. A “the rain falls alike upon the|gorgeous bloom. M! locate effecti wisht | cud "a seen!" fhe wan allent Puinter in some lost village brought |double-faced satin ribbon, five inches | usual crowd quickly gathered strap, The car gave a sudden lurch, One w ked in a loud voice: “fest and the unjust,” so Spring after that, and a moment later, much | face to face with the glories of Titian | Wide, for 10 cents | aWhere ie thevother man that was|Which resulted in the young in her gentile rounds brings ed the doorway. Hehind her waalto Billy's regret, gave them “the|and Murillo, So, before the eyes of [Velvet flowers to by no, doorway. jber av a to be purchased tor 16 stepping“on the German's toes. T young man, with shoes | shake” and walked slowly back to the| Sophie Lindogowitz, rose the com. {cents pe ut the how un-| "phere he is, hold orm: forth the Hat " houlders both ~— presenting | shop. There was strong foaven work: pleted perfection of her Art, {mistakably w Hi “a tid" no! mane PAT re Pd acpi oa cipher dant, on pe att Seas aa ‘ strange protuberances, while his|ing in her soul. It worked all night] In a daze she clambcred down from | more. it had! ""soh, yes! See how his pheek is! “Mine friend,” he said, “I kaew = Waist waa hugged appreciatively by | with auch good effect, that the morn-| her eyrie, Before the first millinery | “chart ad the) putted out!” mine feet was meant to be Paris and in Di- &® coat of tobacco brown. He was no|ing found her full of determination. | store she stood spellbound, In her |Master stroke—It * - B ‘The uninjured man turned his head|on, but dot brivilege belongs to ma.” vision street. ind ribbon: Soph eer, th Billy Gleeson, singer of] “i'm goin’ to trot thin berg over and| soul a glowing flood of color, a =| The young ladies of the shop at last | po wara the. cited woman and said: |—Lippincott’s Magazine. Paris may have|had never asked herself if the flowers | Dallad the Imperial Moving Pic-|lamp the styles,” ahe told her mother, | phony of line made riot. There were [Noted the gathe Kroup before the wxfadame, for your — information, po sateen ns ND other products of |she sewed on the tiptiited “sallore’| ‘Ure and le Hall. In his| who was filled with terror and im-|tears in her eyos—tears of truc in- | display window. Mins Marvin, the i : Spring — gowns, | bad A any counterpart in a qworld of] ine hates Ne loninns ha f iC so8, Rate mediately forbude any such proceed-| spiration. She. too, could rise to |forewoman, was shocked at t nati rowt| it is doubtful al Be parasols, — colf-| ever saw @ daisy or a buttercup; and|%e® “ome months before in com- fures, Ingerie|as for roses when they weren't on|P&ny with Mins Kelly. Mi that's a good chew of tobacco,"— Making a Song. , neue Judge. KE. mete : \c}of a strangely dressed, ‘remarkable Hipphie did not answer, She got] fon Nesnte mane felt it-—she thrilled oouing? irl, who, with flushed checks 66] UNDERSTAND you beve tsten 8 Kelly! breakfast, cleaned up, laid out the ‘ q x and shining @: was trimming a| questioned Madame. to song writing?” 4 hostery, Di-| hats they were on hearses. Bought recklessly, for ahe had won a| work for Lena Krusoif and Belle Be: | from one vision hesutiful to another {at in the iniddle of the street, hare-| "Yep," said Sophle, and in her queer “Yes,” replied the versatile and hoslery, Di-|'"Yet Sophie was at heart an artist,| Pet, and Billy was paying the bill, as|sinaky, arranged the show cane, took| Like a student wandering. in some |Neaded, on Fifth Avenue, at four in| senius-soul there was no surprise at Q street opens upon the Bowery,| within ter breast were quickenings| tbe star of burlesque reckoned up to| five whole dollare out of the stock- the . ‘I'm told thet there oat tea ant a Vast gallery of perfect art, she passed turn of Shine only 6 | AONB, Se Sere es is 9.60- itiously, near an elevated sta-|of beauty. Instinctively colors biend- | & ‘en dollara and fifty cents, be-|ing between the mattresses of her] from musterpiece to masterpiece, till e two important | fatalistic acceptance of her destiny, mand for Ing in accord with ‘Acrosa the way is Chinatown, |¢d vnder her fingers, and grace took) fore her escort came to sufficiently to| mother’s bed—for her adventure] the craving genius within her ‘was |Clients in the “Little French Salon,” ‘Then you are engage. You shall go| the tendency of the time; something Yew indies of which nationality |f0"™ 8 she modelled a flexible brim, Interpone. would take her far—and pallied forth.) surfeited with wonders. where special modes were shown,|te my workrooms. You hafe ze eye, simple and homely that shows the we? nationality /She was original in her conceptions.) “Say, while I got a piece of change} She could hear her mother’s wails| With the ruthlesaness of her pecu-| They mieht be annoyed at disturb- | you hafe ze fingalr—you hafe—the—Je | 4 ot A Hare all street headgear. She would not be bound by conven-| lef, let's beat it, the three of us,jon the golden morning air as eho! iar genius, sho put all behind her| neces. But the peculiar young wo- | ne sais quol—all In jominant force of the feminine ae- ‘Nevertheless, Division street blos-|tion. She boldly attacked a fashion|over to Kane's, and tumble a couple | climbed the elevated steps on the up-| on the spot. What mattered the shop | Man, doubtless a lunatic, must be in- | you directions, You ture and which nevertheless showe sia my b tiny shop | Ot, &2 Ber Iikting, and even twisted it of soothers into ourselves—i'm as dry | town side, and her heart beat hard,|in Division street? What mattered |duced to move alons. Re . She set her| twelve a wen * a woman as claiming ” ts and bent it aggressively to sult a|as a tract.” for she was facing her Great Ad- * ‘os? What (Jaw, assumed her most dignified man-| Sophie Lindogowitz’s disappearance | "Have ry fe. forth its wares of blue and|patron’s face. “Buch goings-on wore| Sophie hesitated. Mies Kelly was| venture, At rere d ~ nee Sobers Femoneteanse! | What to the entrance. | from Division street was complete. She eye vou a tt Fourteenth street she tered Milly, with his empty fi ner, and advanced ey beige, olive and purple—weird | deeply painful to Mra. dogowits,|the atar customer, and Billy-—well—| descended to tho thoroughfare and Lyiry ty the ‘ally renters of his | But to her horror, “Madame herself | dropped out of sight that bright spring |" "Yea, I ‘Reve the fateh of V4 but watch as she would and scold as| Billy was a atar temptation She|continued on to Fifth avenue, Never so? What mattered any was before her. ‘Doubtless Madame|day with completeness. There were| chorus, It ie as follows: dah. inspired by newspaper | she could, Sophie's artistic sense was|calied to her mother in the depths of | had she ventured ao far, except once, | but Hats!—The Perfect Tart [had noted the crowd from the filet: | ripples, v local ripples, Mra. Li “She bit me with jas and department store circu-|forever disturbing the trade. But|the “workroom,” proi hat “the|to Minnie Luna's wedding, over west| Tt should rise triumphant under her lace hung windows of her sanctum | dogowitz grieved, to be sure, but bust-|1 jove her just the sam "4 In the work rooms, under flar- | gradually that touch of reckless in-| girl"—an alias for herself—would in Charter street. She hesitated. A|hand—to be worn aloft for all the | above. ness was good and the two younger | ton Star. “fag gas jets and in cubby-holes, the Geiawality begas to take wa. nae iver the fide at the proper address, | stage came lumbering along, There|world to ace and gloat upon—a dreain | Madame stood - |rirls were dogle and gave her and her Of these inspirations of lovely | vin-Konk Gresler's on tke Bov and selected the moat atartling con-|were people riding on its top. It! of grace, a inarvel of workmanship, |ing the siniula t|hats no trouffe, “Dilly grieved, but his Kon! re fection in the ahow for her own| seemed a diz: nd adventurous! spirit stirring sequence of color, |through the fi f/next songs were very successful and ey's y toil and moll over linen- | discovered the fascination of Sop! use, Its adornments were only pinned | height. The danger of it appealed to el how windo! r he got “moved up" to a better theatre, ds. Lena and Mollie, who hung out|on, but they would hold, and full well | the'ru ed af Bophiots emo. | Woninat berars a particulate gon: |thing ‘happened. “Ming 3 ‘i targely through Miss Kelly's influence, followed sult. Others|she knew the formulae: “It pays to | tions, afternoon, She did not wish a/ this. sir scene, There ra moment watei bleau in the str jess plate glass ‘Then Inaccessible, and y, WAS: the young ladies r|'The neighbors talked—and forgot. isa Constance Kelly from a | advertise.” found Joy perched upon the eminence, crane hia gotter do it, and lauite recovered ; -| ‘Phere is no excuse for Sophie, Her theatre uptown at Fourteenth street} Rut thet little vacation from the| The stage plunged onward. Huge|y ain't never goin’ back—no!” dame opened t | With! whole strange conduct was fepre- eis became a patron. store chi the whole course of| buildings towered about hy Yet on| She was silent a moment, and then |a wave of her Je she dis-|hensible, but she belongs to that home? “Poets are born—not paid,” Sophie was vindicated. Still her ar-| Sophie's career. the sidewalks she saw faces of famil-| trom out her awed contemplation of | missed the loung >| rare class the ruthless genius, the rorya d itp gar init was not satisfied. H “Bay,” waid Billy, “you shud ‘a seen | lar types—fur and ggrment workers |the output of the Parisian ateliers|ness. With another wave sh tluntailingly successful genius, ‘Such | ,Freper care of, the Semame Lever nae Af paid ‘ ia ingers felt that under them, |the bunch er sporta came to the show [from the eaat aide. ‘But ut Twenty: | ghe spoke again. the startled street artist into the |do not dle in poverty and obscurity, | Boy“ ener fingers of the recipient. | unmeshed, to the other night. They was dames} third street a new world burst upon “They ain't not no such it 1 " shop. Jleaving posterity to discover wh from Fift’ avenue, sure; they was a| her sight—the huge tower, the green] Unself-conscious, as is all genius| “Hum!” s ‘® ruthless, reckices Genius is ties fe ‘er wont! crowd of ‘em, and they lurfed them-| Square, with its trees and fountains; | when its fires are burning clear, she|exan Tada Viens!" She|had been. scorned and jost by the | BRADFO modelled hat with, a] contemporaries of the unappreciated. mivremve PRLS - PURIFYING $ cellent ogrrective, 2 eit walks, aelyes wore.” the glittering vista of the Avenue—| removed her hat, the pick of the Di-|kn You haf been appren-/Oh, no! It will not be long before a blind to all duty, blind “Thursday night?” inquired Con. ing on and up, by more wonderful lvision street flock. and there. and tic ”” she demanded. | magnificent palace of millinery, on | Se * ed wiraight on ite way of seif- stance. “Say, I bet that's the sam le structures. Sophie was|then, one eye on the priccless treas- rimsoned, * |the choicest corner of the avenue, | Ings healthe esa pi mi gang blew into our show, They wi 1s with excitement, dures of the display, the other know- she replied, snatching at her! will bear across ite glittering window | sweet street bore such a Genius. and resplen: mirror hung|@ big, jolly fat whirled to e ingly cocked at her own confection,|confection. “\Vorked at lids all me|in golden letters a foot high, the ol " the door of the shop. She! around.’ eS Then all at once he proceeded to model a work of art. | life." Sowers put forth one’ was tilting.and turning © ebape of “The eame,” nodded the vaudevil- ‘Wipe © feeling af enon of ax- The became interested, A legend: ‘Xou are free; you are unemployed? | Teme. Sophie, Modes Exclusite.” ° aR . Ch a eT To ah ae Oa ww - .