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| ” THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1921, | V/oodland Wonder Tales ™ ct No. 40.—Billy Brighteyes En-) 'emerkes to Aunt Aggie. “Terribly.” For Billy Brighteyes the woodland had lost its wonder. With oll its sor Gnd erunds it seemed too quiet and though friends and foes without num- Ber lived near, Billy Brighteyes was | Billy Brighteyes, Kiddie Klub Korner Jonely. oomed a They had come une were in hia tree waiting fhe got back from a bit of a run in the | treetops. When he first saw them/"it ty right that you young folks | J from a distance Billy Brightey intending to ciiase “those three im-| Peaking of the arc lights. The park | They vanish whore we live ts just full of them. I} comes, Pudent squirrels," but coming nearer) aont see how any ono can get along Put retirn again very soon; he recognized his aunt, uncle and| without them, do you?" For when the twilight does ousin and calied “Hollo, folks. How! “I'm afraid that you will are your" “Ah, my dear William,” Aunt Aggie, “how do you do?” om man,” was his uncle's greeting, ‘end his Cousin Mary, when pe fascinating things about your wood- oat Brighteyes told Uncle Evra | py} welt. Bee er 4 : when they lived here.” But then he | lve. ell, well! if that's the ¢ “They did not talk that way The Evening World’s “ril go, daddy,” piped Mary, and | Uncle Ez. tree when a squeal told Billy Bright- | mz decided. nd Mary came limping back to her | Brighteyes, Copertifet, 19M. by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New Tork Rrening World ) Conducted by Eleanor Schorer = | 1 poor darling, what is the mut- ked Aunt Agete, over ty little root By Cousin Eleanor agreed. But Miry said, “1 think weet; T like it 1 “Just ag soon as the: lehts go up and a body can see, we'll go down the lake and wash said Unel % to his family “What light do tertains Visitcrs. | a} | gine, then, how he wel- icy Ae isit from his uncle. “Moon, you # latives! |we city peop: edly and|mvon. But w ‘or him when | count of your Peeping ¢ Are the was | should think of the moon, But | waa With at earn to while you are answered Billy, “There are no ain the woodiand.” are lights here “Why thiy ja the very place ed them most, It's dark as| By EVEL © | front toes to show how the roo “You'd better stay home, dear, ked Aunt vm : ed Aunt) vised her mother. ‘Then in & his vhixper she observed: “The place Is ch poorly kept. I noticed it when we he moon gives the only likht we fter sundown. said his male re she told him. 1 ty to him elite Ugh!" screamed Aunt Aggie. “What was that?” erled Uncle Ez, n, reall MARION y, Come, ; City. hud heard that city life changes peo-|We must hurry, Come, wife, let us| trom half way up the tree ple so, It surely seemed to be true. | Ind the lake before it gets too dark! "That waa a shot,” answered Billy, “We're used to din ui 6" Iacte | to see. "A shot! Do you Kera told Billy. Billy Brighteyes knew that this meant that he must |of the meadow," t things for his visitors to eat and | formed them, fave them ready ‘by that time, but| the was glad enoug) for thelr com- | have dinner ready when you get back | fe ny i) “All right” he told his uncle, “Tl “You needn't trouble % fox," Haid Billy Brighteyes. : pt ? have a spread set by that time.” snapped Aunt Aggie. “I ' nd are there foxes here too?” Ten awards of $1 each will be “Thousinds of them.” Billy Bright- riven the ten Kiddie Klub members, “Beastly dark in here,” Uncle Ezra! oot out of this tree with the piace to they allow shooting “Of course they do Billy was laughing at his uncle's scared face. Whats there to laugh at, young we 1 100k as though you had seen “There's a stream on the othe 1, but T can't be your guide ce it wil too," Subject: Fifteen Months of Effort on The World’s Greatest Telephone Here are the Results! 154,000 telephones for new subscribers — more telephones than there are in a city the size of Detroit, with over a million people. 505,000 miles of wire added to the system—90,000 more miles of telephone wire than are used in a city the size of Cleveland. 620 new switchboard positions—as many as serve a city the size of Pittsburgh. Five new buildings, 17 additions to buildings—over 12% acres of new working space—one-third the area in the Woolworth Building, We are proud of this record. It is the record of a great accom- plishment, but it is only part of the work that must be done be- fore we can meet New York's unfilled demand for telephone service and put the system again in a position to provide new service without delay. Telephone construction takes time. To build a major central office switchboard takes a year. To install it another year. Caring for any considerable number of applications for service is the work of many months. But we are getting on toward our goal, Every department of our organization is putting its utmost effort into the task of building up the city’s telephone system to again provide Telephone service when and where you want it NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY * gaze first at nat And aid the They shine out with th retting gloomier every minute.” eyes was finding it fun to frighten tripped lightly after Uncie Ezra, They | “Guess I'm not so travol-statned vad not gone three feet from the | that I can't eat just as I am,” Uncle yea that something had happened, | “No, you look all right,” said Billy "And now since you all! r. are staying at home suppose you get) the dianer ready while L go out fc e. 1 do enjoy a run before f ng. See you later.” A minute and Mary put up her| Billy was out of sight And |Aggie had to get the dinner. jelse could she do? Sweet May. May, sweet May again has come, that freos the land from gloom children, up and sec merry May. ver the m iittle st the far- yun WYN P, LEVITTA twelve, Brooklyn. td | APRIL CONTEST AWARD WIN- NER. Seven Year Class. , please, don't be rude,”|{ love Cousin Mleanor ad Mary “I'll try not to, ehiid | like the Kiddie Klub too, 2 dreqatal place,” And for the Kiddie Klub’s birthday, I'm sending six members to you. KASSDL, New ean to say that}' HONORABLE MENTION. Dorothy Arundel, Richmond Hill, N. ¥, May Contest. A Night's Dream. Job 2, aged twelve ee Aunt What York ,,|die Klub, No, 63 Park Row, New| ®nd then my fist.’ When I open my "| York City. hand, where does my fist go? ‘Phat | HOW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND Einstein Theory OBTAIN YOUR PIN. * | wiveot iota || Is Made Plain by Wea" and’ 19° aad taal rr Heuaiysptuta || Mrs. Dobbs’s Fist iH ity, + “Now You See It and Now You) : 18 East 3ist St., Near 5th Ave. Ali otuldres_up ‘to, vecoude ineoabers Rssays must not exceed 180 words, | (ured to the Cedar Grove Board ot | Bech member ated FR te roe | sine aa |e eh hog The Talk of New York: » Wa ‘. | 9 sont toon nx to arte chye,| By Farmer smith. |i = “QUR LOW PRICES’ who send in the best essays on “A| CEDAR GROVE, N. J. May 3—| Ls 7 4 Night's Dream.” Professor Immer yon Bibber lec- a Sy Tee . IMPORTED sAPANESE GRAS: The finer weave in Chinese, floral 9x12... . and border patterns in blue, green 8 x 10. and brown, Perfect, 6x9, The work must be original and the| Poultry Trade here last night on the contestant must not accept help| Histein Theory of Relativity. He {rom elders, showed his attentive audience his Write’ NAME, AGE, ADDRESS | open hand, He then closed it and ae ATE NUMBER dis-| opened it, Address N. ¥. Evening World Kid-| “Yu observe,” he sald, “my hand Contest closes Friday, May 27, explains relativity. Now you eee it OER Ay and now you don’t.” | Waille Dobbs was so tickled with the idea that when he got home he | the fout of Bast 7th etrent on Satur | #Woke Mrs, Dobbs and, altting on the day was Identified at the Morgue to-day | CU#€ Of the bed, tried to explain the as that of Nicholns Battagilo, thirty-|Hinstein theory to her. two years old, of No. 471 Cana Street.| “Here {2 my fiss an’ here hit ain't,” by his mother, Battagilo was a letter| said Wallie to the astonished Mrs. carer before the war. He served in| Dobbs. “Where does my fiss so?” | France with the 77th Division and came| His wife opened her hand and home a mental and physical wreck as| then closed it. She did this severa the result of wounds and gas inhala- times and then suddenly punched pale AS Me eieenite has been made for ingune soliMers it was necessary. to hend Battagiio to the Marfiattan State | the bed onto the floor, Looking down Asylum on Ward's Island. He attenipt-| at him ehe said: ed to awkm to the Manhattan shore on| “I reckon you know where my fist) April 6 and was drowned, went that time!” i War lero’ Mody Identified by Mother. A body found In the Bast River at Just think of buying a real Wilton at this price! $ Seamed or seamless, in wonderful assortment of colors and patterns. Also PLAIN COLOR, TWO TONE WILTONS at this price. INLAID LINOLEUM c VELVET CARPET $ 00 Cut roxa, fll ris, ys Bice henry, 37 | 5 Wide, talore rus Wider suitable sor haus © fF SS ai Tha” stairs Meaitul = flory ‘ind patter PREPALD MAIL, ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. Wallie in the eye, knocking him oft ~ Footing it, in a man’s stren- uous way, over the stones of the city streets, slowly grinds to lint the sturdiest of fabrics. But even in these puzzling days Phoenix sales are climbing with an unprecedented speed, because Phoenix hosiery fur nishes a remarkable resistance to that sort of wear—insurance of great mileage at low cost. Ask for No. 284 at 80 cents; No. 281 at $1.00 PHOENIX SILK HOSIERY FOR MEN a cemnanemrinsene seen nse ne sence AR aly ot an pod IM ad oe SE Mate ie —————————————— * Aeneas It