Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
"THE w EVENING w WORLD'S w HOME w MAGAZINE. w ies ‘DNA May CHATS With CHARLES DARNTON and TE. POWERS drams some P Recelved a Mountain of Telegrams, Including . One fra! Aer Dog—Found Celebrating Aer Birthday, Miss May Tells Her Age tor the Last Time, attracting any attention in it, It never worried me in the least. But.T worried last night with all those people out in front expecting “A number of your Loudon friends were there?” “Tons of them. Came over just on purpose, and some are: back. But more are coming on the 18th. Hats off to the gallant gentlemen of the Walsingham Club! # devotion which should distance the field. Still, when I inquired, much delicacy as I could muster, concerning the respective places Englishmen and American men hold in her affections, Miss May; that tact which looka well in print, answered, “I love them both.” °° * "| “But what worried me with every cong last night,” she resumed, leat. ing Englishmen to thelf.sea voyage and American admirers to their fi “was whether my voice would hold out. I've had laryngitis for four and my throat.was operated on again only last week. But st managed to take « B fiat last night.” I wanted to ask it it did her any good, but restrained my with a respectful “Indeed!” j “When I leave off singing and go into comedy, as Mr, Frohmas te ning to have me do next season, | may get over this trouble with throat. Meanwhile 1 hope my voice will last the season with “The THE SMILING SPHINX doe Star of ‘The School Girl” Aappy Because She Aas ‘Re yeo@eemed” Herself—Shivers When She Remem: wr’ bers the I¢e Malden of Two Years Ago. . LONG maid, with a wide smile, let us in and eat us by a window from which we could see a steam roller romping merrily across the virgin asphalt in the street below. She was nice and tidy and white, and her smile was really worth dramatising. She didn't Speak, not even say “Miss May will be here presently,” She just smiled us fand then smiled herself out, leaving us rather forlorn and Mr. Powers Fogretting, as he afterward sald, that he had not remarked the steam-roller was apt to get stuck on i's job, or something similarly light and amiable, Gizi.’” * ™ 7 ‘ Our lonelincss, however, was soon over, There was the rustle of a “I hope 20,” — andes. 7 \" aletrt; a light step, and Edna May in all her morning glory. * rfl ss / “Noon an early hout? Nota bit! Routltg the dit? Nonsnset Why, P BYP nS eee Tivo been " ‘ * SThere b Ay aa dae a Americanism for you! Usually, the suc- A DEL ICATE } QUESTION, { ceesful Star, Alter her “brilliant opening,” appears with a hand pressed to her throbbing temples, and with a little, fluttering sigh, sinks {nto @ chair , tell you how quite worn she is because she could not close her eyes until she had seen the morning papers. (Oh, the crimes those “morning critics” will have to answer for, sleep-stealing robbers that they are!) | Wrote, you remember, and I had @ small part and sang in a trio with rd r a a a ‘a | Eleanor Elton and Marie Walton, I never was in the chorus, as so often UT Miss May, sensible girl that she is, didn't “wait up.” She a 1s said. From ‘Santa Maria’ | went with ‘A Contented Woman,’ and when the sleep of tle successful and looked as fresh as an English daisy. || ~~ ~——SSSSSS—S—S—SSS . Ble Wwoked, too, quite like the dainty schoolgirl in the second act of ie ’ ‘ play at Daly's the night before. Her frock wal white, with narrow strips. of embroidery playing across it, and on her head was a baby-blue bonnet} Of straw which reminded me of one of those Indian basketa-you buy at a MASCOT G ON E Summer resort and wonder what to do wth when you get it home. "| jyetSiverybody has been very nice to me, and I am very glad,” she sald, \ biniply; crossing ‘her hands in her lap, and a grateful light in her eyes, N'm glad, first uf all, because 1 wanted—oh, #0 miuch!—to redeem myself, iif from the fallure 1 made when last here, Of course, ‘The Girl from Up % There’ was a bad piece, and try as { would I couldn't make the ice on the Tee Maiden melt, It froze and froze until I felt positively congealed. They aid lot of things about me, but dothing which hurt me so much as that owas no longer an American girl but ‘sickeningly- English.’ That made whe watit to go back on the very next boat—for'they were, and are, kind 16 me over there—and the memory of it made me atraid to come this time, Ldreaded that they might say again that I was ‘sickeningly Bnglish;’ but they didn't, did they?” ‘NO, they dida't. I had been on the stage less than a year I was given the part of the Salvation Arny girl in ‘The Belle of New York.’ It never occurred to me that this was anything but « small part. and I was greatly surprised at est tical ata aaa Fay Templeton as the Widow | In ‘‘A Little of Everything” 15. A stage hand was eent for the dog, but sorrow descended on the Ca- sino when it turned out to be a false For the person who finds Lutie there will be a reward beside “i bleas- ioe ph every pretty girl in “Pift. Part, oe HI® PERORATION. The Scotch clergyman was expounding ‘the story of the destruction of Pharaoh and bis host; “And Mossus and his people crossed _- “And don't you think," with a flickering appeal from the drab orbs, | i=) po a irl biccodara that it was rather unfair to charge me with having turned English? at ‘ Ak een dae didn't mean to be, really I didn’t, It was—it was”"— f "i re his eyes and saw Mossus standing safely “Unconscious?” , ee on the other side, an » < “Yes, that's it—unconscious, Perhaps I had changed. One {s apt to b] get into the habit of speaking and acting Ike poople with whom one is thrown. rarkesertiy we year ghd saadh land But now that I am here once more I may find it again.” Tt you find the missing twang, please return ft to Miss Bdna May, Saree OS ig ogy sai ‘Pharaoh, _ Sehayler. Apartments, and no question will bé asked. Meeting her will te] Has anybody sven Lutie? ah ee P ASTOR’ ; jas hearing him, And he cried again, and said, ‘Oh, Mossus, safe me. and I will let the enil- dren of larael go!’ And Mossus turned Everybody at the Casino from Alice sive Us lahegoaties g Fisher down to the smallest girl in the ————. PROCTOR’ | k Pony Ballet wants to know. EN ROUTE. case oat x Walters, : e ¢ 4 4 sa “ Lutie' was the mascot of “Pitt, Paff,| Hl Tragedy—How did vou like Towa? teak wa Arthat Due with oe \ - 188 MAY was found celebrating.not only her press notices and con- Pouf* and now that he has been| Lowe Comedy~Weil, ther: gratulatory telegrams, but her birthday as well. stolen. there are vague sugeretitions| town there Il hever forael.’ We oe RAS YD Stas anon on bat * MAJESTIC tire’ $° #5 ‘© and what's pile of telegrams there’ was on her writing desk! Uhat some Black Hand of a theattiea! |simply carried away with it CHECKERS ma ¥. |p cyan o"There's even oop trom South Africa,” phe sald, with a glaage out of | nature trYing to cast a apell on the) TM Traxety cxow don ‘Siebed anidie Prices 2680,78.81, Mats Tay, Wed. 2"By 8.18, ont the end of her eye which left me wondering whether it was from a soldier| Lutie in a Boston bulldog with a pedi-| about an hour after we 4id.—Philadel- BEL ASCO" yauavne. T0-NIGHT, AMERICAN Bt se | en's savage. Anyway, what's the difference? rr yhen & soldier and a| sree that would put a Back Bay family | 08 Presa + n HENRIETTA | WHITE TI mean. chame. B it he hi ist " Mh Dovid Belesso'e New Pray, theese ; pve ry stat: peas tat Gat wer s ; CROSMAN Sweet Kitty Bellairs. | ig | Aid fancy! ‘There was one from a dog—her earn Nosey, walked past Denny or the mighty Foley Fa rakae FARATAR, area am [ES t SBe'p the dparest Uttle Blenhelm spaniel, and he dose express himseit| a1 the stage door, watH STREET THEATRE, ot 0 Aye [itt a of ia po nicely. Juét read what he sent.” Latie Stolen, 0° tenred-the worst—doggerel—(Ouch!) but it wasn't. [t was: Lutie is th ft Jonn Hi j= . SYRACUSE, N. ¥.., Sept. 2 aie laste po Fie Ga “Disease ry.ra a me a BET HO + . Xe te L yn o AMA utoma é am visiting Ella. Of course I am happy. first Henains ween the lle alidos Root ara 1B Bie Yeast KEITH" Sit | Panis Sa \hee yr 5 je ’ ! ~ Wish’ you encoess ‘to-night. Love. pir rye digg this tes x ENS,over New Ansterdam MINER'S ! “Waeny T THEATRE NOSEY. changed last Sunday, when Lutie, who 7 FERS |, Ottendact pen Riba Peake Vins bo sabes wilh to Nernst cat | ah a ee ie HAE ott ym Fata TOM . intyr the - A Ye a 4 o _ A a bro was Gaon iy hm | Amsterdam Monday, | 18 Petia RPOe a F-course we weren't the least “nosey” about the numbér of that birth- Pr yrvistagst ede seage Aponte 'NEW YORK THEATRE 23.4" Saas iil sroee Se DF ay, 11 yas 0 casd, an Hoguenheimer has it, ot ‘PJvost may someding |*it Minds of Towards for the dog's re ‘iy PAU |jente rue MAID ANB MUMMY ast TEND Nat, Willy, ke ema fo und den it cooms oud: volte foree have been put om the search : ‘ on |e Sane | Oe ‘ona “ET am twenty-six to-day,” sald Mins May, “but,” she warned, “after|of the Cusine mascot. to " Al EDEN & M Ay. ‘ier Weiner ate ee Lhe notitell-my age. It gets to be serious once « woman has passed| May Die of a Broken Heart, ye ae ; MUSBEE [natre aturections, Charenachtvtle| CEHGTREEL PUP, OUR ©. here am I with another birthday.” _ “Lutlo will die of a broken heart,” ya = B. ye ay might have added “And with another birthday present,” for ween gtty vo bd ois ain te ay ; fated m8 Se DEWEY ena MAT. TO-DAY | HARLEM) Fagin Mg dew moment the busy housekeeper ‘Dustied through with an interesting being Sablahed in The Evening Wort, m ‘ ; . Bast 14th 8, (“ONE THOURAND WIVES." : ——— cot “for he never tet Johnny Hyams out of . .* > 7 hes tala Ba P : Ses me Soot 1 we metal St 2 a, 7 ; t ; ae eee, th 195th et, & 24 ay. « night an Italian called at the ansounced