The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1905, Page 13

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“THE GREAT FEWEL MYSTERY” At the American. the c t actresses, the Russell Brothers, was not well enough to partic ate he Great Jewel Mystery’ at the American Theatre kat night. Manager atrick brolse the news to the audience, Mr, James Russel @ more emotional of the chambermalds, was lying | 5, Beross a trunk suffering from a rush of blood to the head. This ts not an un- common ailment in the prof ft does not keep th ‘ fever for the cen ssion, to be sure, but under oniinary olrcumstances paticnt off the stage, It usually ts accompanied by a high of the stage. before, ‘Butts, th iS Boy Detective but adjusted her hung like a t bull his bride's ab of wearing a swung | the sy! two hi There was dhep yearning {n the volee of Manager Fitzpatrick to give beck | the beard. ht feel t gem, > Mr. John Russell, jr., would step into the breach. I might eay bre for in thelr latest contribution to drmmatic art th Russells are wearing them for the first me since Maggie “saw two dollars.” |», What is, they come out tn male disguise as a portee and engineer, respecti' , until the star boarder at the hotel fs robbed of ‘her ‘' ¥ back into their familiar chambe: ne “Blinkey” Stokes, w has trouble with his No actress in the paimiest days of press ag fwith more neatness and A jovial widow, who ts as rich as her laugh, | buys them from a lady sm r tor $2,00). “Blinkey,” tf an undershirt and a foom across the hall, opens his door to call for a chambermaid just in time to wee the transaction. Putiing on a porter’s coat and cap and smutting hie face mith Iampblack, he knocks and {is admitted to the widow's apartment, and a Money to any one who m paste without its t by the announceme ut "The Great Jewel Mystery” would be but whereupon they c ig ever had her jewels stoll to spate’ films! a run on the box-office was neatly averted | ‘The snar Chaun paid clothes and start on the trail of the thief, | ene cried the Chauncey. c eens s now Mr auiton the en “Stop, or I shall enjoin your | not mei beard herself on de. Author of “The Wilsri or, Hot Of the Bat Pritce. 2 it down and reached up fo: of a woman about pounds thick. thundered the voice from out 7 | started back in wonde ‘The woman bestia: rushed th nou Sy T. 0. McGill. Lighball,”? Ijte., lite, Scene I. YRIL CHAUNCEY p the back free for the focus of the snapshot men depot, fe 000,000,000 Scene Il. YRIL CHAU took ( hold on the chain of pup and epoke rapidly inte ar a sh ite and the elope flowing a fresh “Fear not; ‘tis well, T sec the sport- Ing reporter of efx papers and the gnapshot men are #0 thick that can't touch off the flashilght for fear of burning some one. All is well.” Almost on the sound of his voice the engine of a special train came 5 and panting Into the stati ort figure | card the ttle fleure forward and e neck of “You are fog’ the Zound "Gad Zooks and WHO ARE | YOU?" he vhouied at the gure -with lot men. ov. ed 1 Now g0 a8 far as you like," s and everybody in the cast. |ehe eatd to the snips! parers Cyril rs ee! | amma’s Boy 3s “ 4 ina (you're SILLY} , YOULL NEVER? GET RICH oe WHY bons f ery AND -— C NOTAIN~ Just HAD, M no) TROVUS cs (WAAT HAVE You} DONE TO THES ERS 2 5 eh - He Has Papa’s Trousers Pressed # Very Economical CWHEN THAT ) STEAM ROLLER COMES ALONG IrtL MAKE A DANDY Way. By F. G, Long| | | charm no end of 5G of dfather ler granc i gentleman di ourse ‘ame fidgety. So leaving the pow fn she walked down the ks, to be wit | It Made Her Tired. N the northwestern section of well for aw he lw and then detormt whic! aisle she sa By Albert Payson Terhune, ANDERING wildly around, W Wearing out temper and boot, Covering acres of ground, | Seeking a flat that will suit. | We who left town in the spring | Gally throug sumer to roam, | Townward our familles bring Scouring New Yori for a home. For !ts—Fints! Flata!! FLATS!!! From Twenty to Ninety-nine per. And oh, for a spot in the whole bloom- in’ lot, Where the price and our income con- our, “Wanted—Fight Rooms and a Bath; Sunshine; Steam Heat; By the Year! Hubby ts grunting In wrath, 2 Wifey contributes a tear. But a smile wreaths the Janitor’s front As we haggle and argue and fret, Mor we know very well what we want, But He alone knows what we'll get. And {ts—Stairs! Stalrs!! STAIRS!!! With torturous windings and sharp, And wa climb ull our ear halt-bellevo bea RS heen yd moment later lusty screuina inform you that the plot of the plece 4a well under | Me bean n front of way, | And as the smoke from the snapshot to the i i jashlight ro} aeauirel awh As a screamer, Annie Russell—not your Annie Russell, but the Russells’ cent royrd felt /and ou i hi ‘Annie Russell—is the most thrilling success that has awakened the echoeg in| 29 for t mtarn= |) Be 0100s. 810, BiBae wit ev faced youth he he beard frei, opislo: it was abou time to wing th. { many a year. She is by no means in the cinss of the ‘ctress who will ba ds Lede Se { <c S Beait.fton his face, and, ratsing a finger that eat var | nee 4 ny a) Mille Blanchard was the confidence lady who smuggled the diamonds, but nage is Pour ovens the) maga 20! Pete eeu a , | how any one could have had any confidence In her'was more of a mystery than | Bow Hagia ny BUTTS THE ina want to eo home 't Tm] ,_Liza—No, ‘e ain't much to look at, but yer sould ‘earyim play the mouth /And we climb t the plot itself, She waa an innovent young girl until she met “BMnkey;" then she | Ss CTIVE [hungry and want my dinner ! organ”? t can he: went on the blink. changed her clothes as often as the box of “di-monds' changed hands, and each gown was more wonderful than the one which had gone before. You felt that “Hlinkey’ had a great deal more than robbery to answer for. A man who leads a young woman into wearing clothes lke hers deserve ll that outraged Virtue pond him in the last act. The key to the was a cunning litue thing down on the bill + Hazel Harroun, who her reputation and all the comforts of “Blinkey’s uptown fiat to get the “Jools” and restore them to the ltather-lunged widow, ‘Thi courageous chambermaids merely assisted in giving a rough-house finish ¢o the A ects in which the struggle for Jools” brought out the full strength of the wp company. All ¢ s to her being a heroine was settled by a bandage which @ncircled her head after the third exciting climax, A customs Insp tor who had loved the husky widow from the time she was | &@ girl—which must have been a very long time—couldn't sce the “Jools” he was wiedthing for, even when they were passed under bis very nose, Thomas G Lingham made him a sad young man, so sad that the jolly widow at one point Qnguired, with otmrming naivete: “What's the matter with you? His voice seemed to have been ®@ declaration. To say that the emotional Mr, to saying that “Camille” would he = ‘before the curtain went up. instead of a trunk. Have you swallowed a hearse? smuggled into his system and afrald to make Russell was not missed would be equivalent lovely 1f Camille had her farewell hemorzhage Let us hope that to-night will find hm on the scene CHARLES DARNTON. May Manton’s Datly Fashions, RETTY aprons are} quite sure to be in| demand oth by the girls who wear them and by the mothers, who| are glad of the protec-| tom they afford, ‘This one ts simple and 40} @asy to make that commends itself ‘ Practical reasons while) at the same time it is) exceedingly dainty and attractive, As illustrated {t Im made of white Inwn| and ts quite untrimmea, | Dut it can be mace still more attractive by the @ddition of iittle fritts of embroidery at the edges,’ whom It becomes charm: ing tn the extreme. 1n {te plainer form it | sulted to chambray and similax materials designs ed for harder usage, as Well as for the white jown, while trimmed 11}, pan for used for aprons, ‘The quantity of ma ten years of age a4 yorda 88 0 a W youre of ago. na ceh) oF send under, | with a. large, A ave aLaugh — with the ' Funny Men Chicago News Man: Mike—Ot've had th’ nolght mare for |three nolghts, Pat. Phwat would you Heommind for th’ throuble? Pat—Yez molght trade th’ mare for wan ay thim automobiles, b'gorry. A woman can make! ze an's life,’ remarked the love lorn youth. “Ab, yes!’ rejoined the married man open-faced sigh, “And what an awful lot of change she re- quires while doing it!" Washington Star Man: “Fie says he cannot live without me,” 4aid the impressionable hetress. ‘Dowk dolleve it.” returned Miss Cayenne. “He w!i live. But he may have to economizo. 8 e “Did he earn a large salary with the company?" “No. Ho didn't earn tt, He just drew ihe | Detroit Free Press Man: Dolly—That new hat of yours is too holly—I know it, but at the rate things are going with mo at present, it'll Mt all right after tho races are over. oe He-I know lots of women that haven't any sense of humor. She—Well, what of tt? I know lots of men that haven't any sense at all, Chicago Tribune Man: Foreigner (as the train stopped)—Hes sees Medicine Hat? Native—Yes, air. Foreigner—Can you show mo ze fao- tory where you make ze cold waves? “Tho phrase ‘gentler sex’ occurs in the lesson,” sald the teacher of the juvenile class, “Which is the gentler eex?’ “There ain't any,” sullenly responded Uttle boy who, in uence of velious Getto and’ ramaarringte taste family, had both a stepfather and @ mother. The Chant of the Flat Hunters. ‘The twang of each heavenly harp, Then it's oh! for @ atairless domains No landlord nor janitor nigh— And & treetop to keep off the rain When a pipe springs a leak in the aky! Where of rent and of tips there are none, ‘Where moving-day ne'er can arrive, And steam heat's supplied by the sun, And {fs turned on each morning ak 5! "would be—Peace! Peace! PEACE!!! * In that wilderness, flatiess and whle. What a life we'd be leadin’ if only old den Wero still the swell place to reside! A Wise Child. D day was small Miss Margery. aged tour, walking along the bluff with a friend of her mother’ compa the family on a day’ ing, says the Philadelphia Led “bon't go so near the ed; tloned the child's companion, ‘as venturesome little one frolicked in t dangerous places, and, was. unheeded, added: fault \f you fall ov ." said Margery, the one blamed for it. EDITED BY’ OMeCN.vraer xuseaw AYER. they shall ‘a Ingres |!) fingering " wea) nd eltting correstly mn B.A44 {9 cut! IH done not only Will shoulder tn alzes for girle put afler a fe Ge Pen lian they she IRLB whose work reaulres that use typowriting ma- chines many hours of the day do app carry themselves well, ropriate fo: hot, as a rule, carry t stig that we nor are their fingers well shaped. of these defoots are more a result of carelessness or tynorance than 4 yo, but It ts so easy to avold them that | the effort Is worth making, In CONS5}*emugotes oniy Indirectly cons chine keys propert, Y Your fips Ww 12. for erdentar: ton hes a @ndeney to make women quire Hesh about the watlst, ‘A person should alwa Up of the spiio ts straight and not bent fore and middle flagers aad thumb It 14 as n rule curved, because | Hoth are worn down ot the side fn persons rarely ait back In a chair, In- wtriking tho Keys and space stead, they ar Unless the latte, be round. be Lary ooeul wit so phat the about In the middle of fingers are also % fens rn es ulders ty mus, evslly avotded by holding the [take B saan tbs wetah ef the arsyek Sasees ey ry ste difterent "angie. as! As no person can keep in good phys with vigor Both hing WEARING DOWN THE VALS: ‘the spine and neuror to ti ame tim d with whieh quite as rapid work can | 1 thout ud effects, e time, who ts chained to 4 mlition without some de at orcise fs of Aly Use Unless It ts done Betty’s Balm for Lowers. A Deserted Wife. Dear Betty: HAVE been married ten years now. I My husband left mo eight years ago and has not given me one cent, Infted Bt es Navy I do not » only seen He has been in the for seven years p Know where he Is. him theee tines i have one little girl old It is hard for me to work all my life, as 1 cannot get married, Mrs, K. 8, Write to the Secretary of the Navy at Washington, D. C,, atating your case Give the name your husband enlisted under and mention what {f known to you, If he !s still in the Navy the Secretary may compo! him to contribute to your support. The only way you can get a divorce ts by living in Jervey City for two years, when you would be entitled to one on the ground of abandonment on, shin he was | shirt watst set. You are sure to please 4% you give her something oo wear, but stay within these limits. Books and flowers are the most conventional gifts, but mos people prefer to buy their own |beoks and flowere are too perishable, A Vacation Romance. Dear Betty: MET a man this summer while on my acation and «a: d to love him. I also acted {ndifferently to- ward him. He hinted that he would | like to sea me in the chy, I didn’t act any Way anxious and just gave him my | number, Now I wm {n the city and I ain Wondering If he will call, as I left ary suddenly and got no chance to tmake any engagement. He !s coming eet woe Loe eure he cares for me and always enjoyed my company. What shall 1 do? ANXIOUS REDTIB, If you know ‘is address call him up on the telephone or write him a note asking fim to call some particular evening. For Her Birthday. heen going with a young Ja. f mine for about six mont Hod me to har birthday and I don't know what I can What in the best. present T am ‘aineteen and earn a a8 salesman and can afford $3 w $5, L RI wes are very nice Girle always 1 thei nd Ike them. Do not pay ¢ sn $1.50 a pair for them. Or you her one pair of long white | 2, Or @ very pretty um-! give ‘an give? good sala ty apend tri ‘ Kio 4 beautiful elt buckle or | The Gtrl Should Speak. | Doar Betty |p HAVE been goin, I for (wo years an if dozen very fine hand. | f. wih a young man about three months 1 and havamot had a quar since, altho T would " “o renew the acqu an ul he would aly, as he ha: attempted to veral’ times. Now, which one peak first, he or 1? H.M. is no rule on this matter, except ral one, that a woman should I would do tt 1¢ T were you bow firs! Queries for oul | bvening Wor! New York: City. The Housewife’s Exchange. Two Sweet Omelets, ~ 1, Stir two tablespoonfuls of flour in one-half pint of good sweet milk, sinooth and fine; then beat in two eges. Put butter tn the spider and fry the omelet a ight color, Bpread any kind of preserves on !t; roll and sprinkle sugar on It. You can ead finely minerd ham on the omelet, Omit the sprinkling of sugar then. 1 an omelet with apple mar- lager grow larger. At the nails are paturalty sq sprinkle with sugar; or i ping ceases to be straight, and t that Ung, fy bread crumbs, ralsins and currants . ult i9 & poor figure ard bad carria up Ue o Shape the tt and spread on omelet, Sprinkle | PBouctng ungioved bands atrees Uy by pinching them at We eS ny this searon of the year, It iv {i m twto a tapering shape, whi ! : ‘ { iy not dificult to teil a sten-|will be greatly helped if the finger Up. a ALY : Wild Cherry Cordial, Faphur by the shape of the nails of|are soaked Dye minutes very night ta the effort Is a Brpise with & pe Jwarm almond of and then bound sop DEM the AES | eta herr ir n jarately anugly. but not to stop the o- | tip to the shoulders, with tae elbows up, ae soe Hipeun ree he lculation, istently done for ad then throw out ‘he hands a ‘our ¢ sibs pe iv Pete adey Pie ao ah mans) ; but it will | end a& hard as one can ff \s always |into & mone crock, cover and set In the fat the aides, ‘This | wee ampli " | ERA Me amambsred that ho physical eae (ure, Mamene aock, cover and aes in ihe @ quart and # cupful of brandy, sting {t (n well, Let tho mxture acne for #ix weeks, etirring every few days, be- fore straining off the lquor through double cheesecloth, Bowle and seal, Whel ready for use, fill Nquor ginaees W:h crushed ice and pour the erinon, cordia! into them, Ik # an excelien$ tonic and 4s also good for * cough, Blackberry Shrub, | Four quarts of ripe berries, one quart of best clear ekder weegar, ene pound of while sugar, one pint ef One brandy, Put the berries Into « stene jar, pour the vinegar over them, a@A the [and pound the berries to @ paste a wooden pestle, or mash with @ spoon, Let them stand in the @un four hours, strain and squeexe out all the julce and put in the brandy, Beal up in bottles, day them on their sides in the collar and cover with gawdust, Stir two tables epoonfuls into @ tumbler of |) water ‘when you wish to useit, OWN at the Soa Breeze the other + eer ~ rent,

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