Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
» v vp, a a a eae 8 i ee eae & THE EVENING TING .# WORLD'S .» HOME w all Styles InStage Lov bs ARVESTER.” pl ‘situation where “silence ls golden,” neltier Otis Skinner'‘nor Lizzie Hudson Collier speaking & word Pale Shade of “The Divine Passion” Is Very Popular This Season—Zoraya, the Harvester and Kundry’s Kiss Provide the Only Dashes of Red—Even the Breathe-It-Down-Her-Back Method Has Been Discarded for the Cooler Oblique System, AVE you noticod—or aren't you interested In such things?—that the i pale shade of stage fove-making is very popular this season? A welrd green seems to be entering into it as surely as it is streaking the fall fashions, ‘When one speaks of green one involuntarily thinks of Mrs, Campbell. | But this isn't about her—no, really It isn’t. She and Pinky-Panky-Poo have had enough advertising for one engagement. No, Mrs. “Pat,” with the Oriental Zoraya on her hands, is hopelessly cut of style, She is so com- paratively strenuous that the firat thing she knows she'll be frightening ‘some of o.> most cultured actors off the boards, But, to repeat, this isn't about Mrs. Campbell. If you can’t make out what it is about, the art loan hung about the top and edges of this page may help you to a proper understanding of a truly serious subject, For if the present moonlight-make of stage love keeps ou we may catch it, an¢ then where will be the joy of living? } Even Benedick has caught the fever—or rather felt the chill. I couldn't help feeling, as I watched Mr. Sothern on Monday night, that there were times when he “acted like a perfect lady.” Perhaps the modern stage lover tries to show by repression how deeply he feels. That's all right for him, maybe, but {t's hardly going to keep us warm through the long winter evenings, is it? When you hear a woman say (provided, of course, you are a “mere friend of the family”) that love-making ts a lost art, nine chances in ten she has taken her cue frum the stage, To the modern man it {s an ordeal, but that’s no reason way the stage lover should look at ft in that Hght. He's paid for it, Perhaps, us with most of us, it is self-consclousness that makes ~ bim appear so culd. But no man, on or off the stage, can be self-conscious » and in love at the same time, This is equally true of a woman, even though her back halr may be coming dowa and her complexion coming off, However, this is neither here nor in Harlem, The stage lover is the culprit I'm making charges against. One might ¢ MAGAZINE of “smacee TORANKIE. you kiss me? KILLE RET DA ey be an en es quickly “4 KE OF \ mon oo soar wou! E ( mt ‘without It ‘ADDISON~ or's ge over well, LINA (MME. SCHUMANN-HEINK)~ Nay, then, I'll treas this es 4 Joke, i A little fun at-him Pl poki, ; ‘His manner strictly stern and grave, Conviness.ma ha will bebave, — ‘SQUIRE SKEFFINGTON (W. 3f, THOMPSON) The poem ahe recited, By Hervey was indicted! Since make Delievé is no offerss, I'l, pretend 2 Jove intense, say, with Rosalind: “Cupid hath clapped him on the shoulder, but I'll war- rant him heart whole.” Only once this year have I felt differently, and that was when I saw Miss Marlowe and Mr. Southern in the farewell scene of “Romeo and Jultet.” | | That seemed eo sincere I almost felt I hadn't the right to be there, John Drew, in a come-to-my-arms scene, always harrows up the awtut | thought of a possibly wrinkled shirt front or a disarranged tie, and I should much rather see him lose the girl than suffer either of these calamities. It looks as if Mr. Drew has been setting a bad example to the younger set of leading men, for about as close to real love as any of them get in their acting these days is a patch of powder on the rhoulder. The strategic, | cajoling stage lover has replaced the impetuous, importunate one, Don't you sometimes hanker for a Maldanado to desh in and break the furniture? Otis Skinner {2 about the only stage lover at present fn this neighborhood | who seoms to take any real interest in his work, That embrace in “Tho Harvester” is almost as long and convincing as Kundry’s kiss in “Parsifal,” which. if it were set to music, would probably be played in every home blessed with a piano and 4 daughter, The other fellows are so painfully polite in showing thelr affection. There’s Henry Miller, for instance, who pulls down the corners of his mouth Instead of the blind; Mr. Faversham, who cheers Letty on her work- a-day way by amilably raising an eyebrow or two, and many others who | might be mentioned if it were worth while, not forgetting the very yourg| | type of stage lover who stands eight or ten feet away from the muslined object of his affections and “devours her with his eyes,” like the hero in the novel. The really correct form seems to he a sort of oblique system— in place of the old breathe-it-down-her-back method—the lover taking bis place slightly to the rear, and at one side of the flutteing female, 60 that he can tell her and the audience whgt he thinks of her without the slightest inoonvenience, Perhaps, after all, this 1s best, and If lovers !n real life would follow this example there would, at least, be a great saving in clothes. t| CHARLES DARNTON, NOVEMBER 6, 1004, © Making By Charles ‘ anbae | q | scant means of support. The blunder- {ng argument ts made that all the sick| | one needa fs to get to that country and| his condition will permit of hiry doing Nght work, which be can easily find But the facts are that this incapacitated one ts going to @ country swarming with people looking for like chances; that it is essentially a ranching com- munity, where the bulk of the workers to be of any service must be plough and sow and reap and herd cat- tle, often stending in water all nignt long to irrigate. “What few chances there are for light work ought not to be accepted, Vecavse they arg tuo contliing, Mere as Wherever consunpi.ves have laced up work in desir cclimat have t and their num es down ¢ & point w arcely earn enough to live. of life by reason of high are much more costly than in other communities. +"Out on the desert, of the irrigated part extending to the footh tents of All sizes and des INVADE ARIZONA Soores of Health Drifters Who} Crowd Streets of Phoenix Are \ |mpoverished and Four-Fifths incurable. Under the title of “The ITealth- Drifters of the Great Southwest,” Frank D, Witherbee writes in che cur- rent issues of Charities of the great Migration of tuberculosis patients to the Balt River Valley of Arizona and Of the life they lead in tents and shacks in and about Phoenla. Our of & winter population of some 15,00, fully 6,000 are health seekers, drawn to Ari- gona by the dry climate and constant | succession of sunny days which are) ‘essential for their relief and cure. s re A mg SA ot Fully per cont. of the days in|offer furnished tants or Phoenix are cleat and bright, and the 1Se the constructed relative humidity of the a sphere | Hea "teak Pratereat epee, | tb fe far below that of the average churches, the county aims) snouse and ihe “On the one hand these conditions oe . sanatorium > fend to & remarkable percentage of out, Many coveries,” writes Mr, Witherbee, with 3 om the other there ls an amount of | \raveliing expendes, eoeial and spiritual suffering which ' munity which has not not generally understood, As a matter and where of fact, a great majority of people co han tee late to be helped by any power on earth, A Phoenix physician has said that fully four-fifths of the visitors are inourable, The stroew are Alle! with them, thin and wretched, homesick and wuffering. At the outskirts Hardened Indifference. of the ranchers near Phoenx houses but “This ls not Phoenia are | ings which pro but because the cast and Miidle Wert her lack of forethou: 4 putting upon then a burden whieh gente bol them. The sup re say the because residents of ; BROADWAY SCHUWANN-HEINK | Px: Few Chances for Light Work. “Heedlexs phyniclans and relatives | and payente to Phosnix aiqne end with or in the althahauas eoat the county ok vear, three-quarters ot this Is spent ta the care of ailing con- owmptives.”” AMUSEMENTS, READY FOR GAELIC GAMES. | ~- Everything {s in readiness for the an nual football and hurling carnival of fphere the Galway A. A., which will take piace 1 in Ce Park “to-morrow afternoon. be wept ‘The Gacllc mateh, in which the Young MOPLAN, Ww relands ad the O'Cennells figure. p-om- to be one of the most bitterly | the season, and ¢ | n reorgan: "doh "P. Daiy, the Other Acts noved Irish oxen ag ref-| > paved fier much quivbling, and thie In- sures «fair field and no favor, —— FOOTBALL AND PUSHBALL. An interesting game of football is promised to-morrow at Equitable Park, where the Wanda and Manhattan Square cleyens line up. Precedin football scrbmmage there will be a I ball Fame between members of a local yb and the Oneontas, of » THE GIANT, AUGER. M JOHNSON, HI ines Bowls Per Lady. fought of hamed feam Be WSTHHLS Twenty peerts punday AMMERSTEIN’S YSTg8ts, 445 Waiinae krery Day, iba ‘bee aaa int yey the "Sitiam ‘trio Clara Bala re. a¢ Apusr OF MUSIC. iith St. & Irving PL y Thos. titiune CHECKERS "yf oa 25,00.75,61, Last Mat. To-Day.2. By. 8.16. ‘ wwe WIZARD OF OZ! NTGOMERY, and STONE. May free. Elation Day. BHATS ON BALE 14th % ‘Tried! Unequatied! UB and whiter, the Musical Par Lath V'A N lid ERRAND Bot Theatre. and 0 others | Mate Wed Fran Andeow Muck in his cew ps ‘The Way to Kenmare. Xtra Election Mat RUBBING on. “iuury, | AME MACAN LAST TIME TO-NIGHT,S 15 "Van Bile oo. Hs hy {‘MARIE JEANNE.’ ken, N. J, | COMEDY CO. by mal}, 12 cente Next Bunda Ted Marae’ Big © His Last By Next bare Higeine t WEBER MUSIC HALL fu.",4 WEBER & TIEC"ELD coup HIGOUNPY-PIOGLEDY MAJESTIC. |BIRD CENTER sci Mat | Drtra Matinee 46-DAY, Ph ECTION DAY, Manhatta MRS, ae ‘ wecky SHARP er & Taught Mra King Keith's 28 EDEN ev enee D at "i ws" Sinliatt” HER MAD MARRIAGE diet, By MME e'n Lottery To-day Mat. To-day nL ASS NEVILLE. ;| Seay |, Lee Av, 10th Mat Fergie Dy ete Bie tsa peer anday YORKVILLE Sith & Ler. A A Bo Wer Mor may, af Cana: « Wat To-Day. ty We V eek, Peet fee H “y + f te Ti A Wired ee ‘abt, BIG SUNDAY concent, | a HUBERS MUSEUM maT soit * oul ui ys AMSTERDAM CD NEW YORK 4 incre, (yd. tit. PRINCESSU:4#: 3 CHARLES HAWTHEY 0 sy CASINO Sit #} Now Weeklin The Yankee PASTOR'S OBEY OATLOR, P BREN AMO BILL THIS APT | BIZOU eat anne » MAY IRWIN AMUSEMENTS, To-day-To-nght, 25e,,50¢. Res. 7Se. MILLER KE. pa VAME, ey, Isabel S ocher ante MAT BAL 3 EVES He noc BROT sich t TO-NIGHT at 7, 13. PA Rdieat f on 81, 82, S41 no higher, LYRIC 2h hee Boer Be JTIS SKINNER “nal PSTED. fay & Erection De * Piff, Paff, Pouf. a Harlem Suna NGiT~- Ga iy ) ONG tIRAYMOND HITCH, o¢ wht y eyes i SEATS NOW In the bew Go-und: fMO MUsiC MASTRN AMUSEMENTS, 40H fa F Herald sq. 1ahaTae ee rath Sak Edna May ;\\, School Girl KAlckerbocker Theatre Bey 418 we Tues & RH SOTHBRN- JULIA Maki Neat Week, Much Ado About Nothing CRITERION" HR ATR ‘ie i & Boa WH. H, CRANE” MfoaNsiss )} Garrick UCATRR | a5e 820. Mat || Henry Miller | || HUDSON Mer WM. PAYERSHAM SAVOY Fe Tans, wivds ¢ Lyceum \ysiney.e 4 Mrs, G. Hi, Gilbert in GRANNY DALY'S !a7 Aes 200s THE “GINGALEE is near it ve AT. TO-DAY Hurewmae THE DEWEY |; . VL Git AN NINETY } } | wut nn AYP NINE CROCKLYN AMUSEMENTS. MONTAUK ¥\Te RICHARD CARLF In THE TENDERFOOT, | BILLY (FREDERICK TRUESDELL)-Do you know, I’m falling in, love with Chis part of ‘the count fi ry~everyehin, here {a older, its, JANE (DOROTHY TENNANT)=1 beg your pardont PATER ‘A (MRS, CAM «cual and b PELL) reading en * these cross. DUt of « we rere hand MY lore fe on erdens tovese linea at the base ori’, Waveri of Your thuma SMange being-the 0 te & yore ming Into Nt you~p D DLIET! roa EO A, nance ® thin evar meet again? -1 doubt ® net} ROMEO (E. SOTHERN)” pees In Our vos shall serve for sweet discou