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Ge =e) $s ORS Re eRe cae ae Lee 4 The Last of Prince Louis. IWILLIE WARBLER, & & & the Chain-Lightning Poet. By Roy L. McCardell. A Vitascopto-Stenographto Interview with the Prince-Admiral Battenderg, of His Britigh Majesty's Squadron, Bn Route to Gibraltar After @ Porforotd Round of Pleasure in New York City. . i Holo! Is that you, Admtral? A. It's what's lett of me, I ducked on the Drake just In time, * Q Have @ good time? A. Well, say, I don't my ninety-and-nine deserters, 1 wish I could have mayed in New York myself. Q. How about. Mrs. Astor cutting down the 40 to 1? A. Bay, she told me in confidence that tn hy ade ipe i . . ‘to quarters she had no intention of cutting ec crew D of the good ship “Boclety,” ‘The fact wes that the mes y) Yes , those 3 Ms must really go! ' robm—beg pardon, her dining-roon—would only seat 79. y Q. In that so? A. Yes; she told me she was going to They may not be sent up, oye tsiy claro et eame aa But couldrit they be jailed and baila) “Qi op The derfist chap that pulled his teeth Yff! Ard let skip out Tike Keup$ And tried to pull his leg. , / Q. You had a lot of dinners? A, Yes, but the most y I say, old chap, you. must know it was a good thing I put tt off till the last. I want to be considered democratic, you know. Q. What has that to do with your visit to the dentist? A. ‘Well, it brings ous the Prinée part a tittle too much, I now wear a golden crown continually. An- other good joke-—— Q. Weil, what je it? A. You've often heant of the land of Cokayne? Q. Bure, A, Well the land of Cokayne was where my champion satlor land- ed on his American adversary, Rather neat, eh? Q. Inn’t that rather far-fetched? A. That's because ft goes to you by wireless, @ Whet are your impressions of New York? A. Well, the New Yorkers gave us a lot of H’s to replace those our Englishmen may havh dropped--the Horee Show, the Hi rome and a Hot Time, Q. You © up Under the strain remarkably. A, I was in trafning for it. This is the first time, really, I felt anything near like being malt eeas over, us we enilormén say, What do they think of me In New York? Q. As an admiral you are admirable, as a scion of royalty you're « Prince! A. Jolly well said, by jove! P Q. Any last message before you redch Gibraltar? A, Nothing my oom- pliments, I had a ripping good time, a stunning good time, I met uniform politenees everywhere except from—- Q. From whom? A. Your bobbies, Why those aboard the Drake thought that they wore actually the rulers of the King’s naves. My wont! Guess whet one , F , in! [GH The Beauty Doctor has 4 job aS The echoes are wakin of them @aid to me! yy Q. What did he say? A. He ant, in speaking of His Gracious Mujeaty, that Ligge H To fix up little Roosevelt, ht) Ln pee of King Haakon, The cymbals they're whackin ai Va ong ver Deuced good of him, on our own deck, too! 2 . Well, he epoke by the card? A Yes, and clubs were trumps! What? f. il { d Who as a.foot-ball novice learne I n praise of King Haakon, dust how a broken nose felt. Uy The plaudits come Flockin’ Q. Well, good-by! A. Good-by! Glad te include American good will among our In praise of King Haakon. filling thing was my vistt to the New York dentist, And, I British possessions! Adieu! And the Admtral-Prinee went below to splice the matnbrace, The Girl from Kansas. : By Alice Rohe, ‘ Take your choice- Quit yer knockin!’ “a OU heard not missing anything anyaway. nits t1t cana | tron, ey come tom Ooms *6/RROlEr Skating in Bearville. # # ww & — By Rob Thompson, Dard bought for “Dalsy was always inquisitive, | Mra, B., didn't) naturatly she ‘happened’ to find @ mark ' YES, L_KNOW you’ sald the Girl| on the inside of the’ atoll thut Charles JUST HOW from Kansas. W. had overlooked Yea, k gave the i { : HARD. ry. Sj ‘The Colonel's | name of the swell furrier on the avenue, Te. ! , SOME TI the most prominent | but it wasn't Firth. Fa ; IT TOKES AS and respected oltl-/ “Charles Was blowing harder than | iL nen of Waubwnede. | ever when Daisy concetvél the dlaboll- . | Yes, he's been that | cal scheme of calling up the turrier and | | ever since the Wid: | pricing ermine sets. ows' Mite Mortage | ‘Tlow much do you think Charles W.) Company was or- | paid tor that grand $400 set he bought | @anised* and they | for ‘Mra. BT | overed off on Aunt Serah Hardup'’s| «our friend the furrter told Daisy that -acre farm. Yes, the Colonel got the | his highest-priced royal ermine sets m. with real tafls and heads and all (howe Ho's President of the Citizens’ Sun-| embellishments were being old at $160. | ‘ower Bank, owns the dam, is Superin- | ‘Did we tet the Colonel know? Well, endént of the Sunday-school—oh, he's | guess yew, ust great. T tell you “The next time he called Dalay “Well, about the erminy eet: Cot, | Tu#hed at him and when he commenced owhard ought It. ‘The Colonel has| .° Dark about the expenaiye ermine she yeen telling Datsy and me about that | *! Hi on hie neck. in condolence, "01 ‘ 7 shame, Colonel,’ she condoled, vonderful outfit he bought ‘Mra Bat! svouve been terite dine ‘eat ntervals of three times ® day, lasting! orming pet, I just Sought, one 1 ne hour each seasion.” | ‘a at Blan! Bauero- “Oh, what's 40) 40 — man ite me?” pet ape ite ten ead th @ puffed ashe displayed that ermine| they oan size up strangers y Now nu and stole, York, At? I never thought you'd Jot of money’ to you, but t's a mere| 5) ™ rifle to me. Now I'm in New York I'm | word. jel The Evening World's Home Magazine, Wednesday Evening, November 22, T qule.us last night when "The Marringe 0! | ponsense, and emiled an Ashe William Ashe'’ was turned Into one of} Kytty in tte arms and started the most unmistakable funerals of the | her to hor room a lu Sapho, d season. ‘The death of allly Kitty, close on to midnight, was scarcely less sad than | OW the hopeless George and make Margaret Mayo'’a dramatization character of Mrs, Humphry Ward's “best seller’ |!# s8id to have been drawn. B: rine with the minor note ot cracked | hon ‘hty tad nin ult "ut et a wedding bells, Failure clinged on the | ster’s, Grst-night alr trom the unpromising be- x for soe pid tthe Jens sanity than ginning to the bitter end. ts ts were piny Soft words c7uld not lessen the pain | Simouit Bron.» Munghy” rod it that this hapiéss venture epread on |to Lge ay Lert pe ves both sides of the footiights. Pathetic) $8," ou ‘with litte, discrimination, is the only half-hearted Denghter.” the Inet the tui noting won from the first, ‘A dog that loved Lady Kitty with all| Of the newest thing in spanks; hor faults and a “property horwe” that | While the dynamo elastic sounded like evening. “Ot course Iauppose that seems Mke uy, 0 brio the . he never oh pyt 9 Hin other day « very pretty woman became sudden! crazed, her physicians sald from drove. f "Dope!" said one of her Kind frie: heart a Tis, Ly gem said another. — ne “Ot such is the friendahip of women," says sale: the cynic But not so, Both of these sneers came trom men. An {t ts doubtfal whether they could have originated with a Woman, There ts so much talk about Mrs, Grundy, the female sword-swallower, who diggorges knives to rip up her friends, that that very accomplished gentleman and pre- eminent gossip, Mr, Grundy, Is overtooked, ARE THE CHAMPION GOSSIPS.| @ WHICH ATHLETIC EXERCISE IS BEST FOR BEAUTY? & Nevertheless, he {» a far more dangerous anémal than his better-known spouse, for while her gossip very often t of the needie-prick variety that huris but does not injure, his has the fatality of a poisoned dagger. _ ‘There is a tradition that men do not govstp, which | morely serves to add force and credibility to the tales they wo frequently cltoulate, Yet the worst gossips Y have ever ith the worst woman gossip of what F Johnson comes home at 2 @’olock and beats his wite, or vice versa. ~ Jeoman won't send up Mra, Thornpson’s jue until ahe puts the nickel 1 ho, } mereet, most commonplace trivialities, that scarey repay the lis- Aasband out and buy him @ drink wnd in five minutes you know ‘ Jones than Mrs. Grundy dreams of in her it that A sige fea or and a highball to tet "3 that another bad.s glass so eh eww ye rw 2 ii if ulckly y the : of fresh inable, “| HINTS FOR THE HOME. 5 comes for tl impose) and put in hale . 4 dozen of iM cup of water, cauliflower in m doen | cover Ughty and cook slowly ‘ by Rewer uevens ‘and pour | hours, a hot Gish. wn ter to which you er Mutton Cutlets, thay the if @ lemon “Gavel teaaposnfut st Bean wets, TYAVRI Ihe, Motoier oot. wnat aie ; - ee obicken,|a xriditon Moet too much), before re- tin and place moving from the fire pour over mett-| , one|ed butter with parley minced fine. of t, InoWn a8 Bugliah chops, have fine earthen abe re! them neatly trimmed, Broil on a hite furnieiting ‘state, HAT reilo of the theatrheal past— “the book-play"—was given Its/ take out the pin before wheerless event. ole: ized was the 4 Both Miss George and Mr. Reeves- hot that brought Lady “c1edy boos Bimith seemed to realise this before the Brady carey about sav! lat play was half spent, They took their wrong ‘place be will ane me they were given. The pall that hung over the house wes a mixture of Mra, Warren's Profession” and “Lady Rose's |THE NEWEST THING could have been out with a knife. IN MODERN SPANKS, But there wasn't the sign of —o in the amdience. Friendliness flowed r over the footlights lke a river, Miss olitt Dennis, ot Pearle has vented # George was encouraged to a fault, while opauiktng. 4 Mr, Reevesmith, ax Ashe, merited to the\ tintinabutation, ed ‘ea ip henmasydyarid Vie my | And inours parental thanks. William Ashe’ Turns Out a Funeral. at the Garrick Thiatre| hat, ‘The audience laughed Meso Grace George as Lady Kitty Bristol, H, Reeves-Smith as William Ashe, Sait waa manly 4nd natural through- Mr, Bon Webster was aw efforts of Mise Grace Geoffrey Cilfte that you felt he owed an apo Byron, Mr, H. Reeves-Simith to logy tO. the memory of in whose image the word that describes the one thing that the audience \, in the third act. If M: ourtain-calls in the spirit) getting a Bde 48 eter. Tt was eo heavy that it has invented an admiration that his taste- Amd the rhythmic ititubation, And the ewattul concentration se Far Paddles obiigatos drastic tgom Btono, as ue oy ent v On the youthful body plastic, But it almost seems a pity ‘The first act was all caokle, with «| That thie spank-machine so pretty stagetul of hens pecking at Kitty and her reputation and finally discovering | wiy not play it fore and after her in the sinful fling of a Spanis! Bach benign tnevrante @rafter dance. She was rescued from thie dls) i) ing ponent and pAeairied grace by an offer of marriage ff°M) OF the folks who pay the bills? Ashe, who remained In the library in~ stead of going in to dinner Ike a gen-| > ! tleman. Which goes to prove that an sane eet fang that “run the priee empty stomach and @ full heart M&k®) win Keep food and ooal and to up, Cannot visit Gotham chy To correct some local Ills, Ob, t0 watch its paddies rise up a= ee oa Peet oe 4 ‘@ dangerous combination, And who play us all for dolts! att Of To help along the backbiting of her} Bastward rush th’ elediric spanker, | | jo> i fominine friends, the Lady Ashe of|And when here It comes to anchor, 4 wal the aecond act changed from stmple| Crooks (from thug to four-fiush tankery |) 4 giritshness to ® very F that suggested a miraculous scape from the front row of « Klaw & Br- langer spectacle. @he went from bad to Venice after that, meanwhile writing @ book—ike NCB upon an evening dismal the Lady of the Lycsum—which put a O crimp in her tion and caused him to cast her off, But the pla him to herlin her last hour tn the Algs, so that she could die comfortably in Ms arms. The only really tender moment In the pinay wae when Lady Kitty, belated but not bedraggled, returned to her fvurband in ithe wee, sma’ hours after her unconventional excursion and ad- ventures with Geoffrey Cliffe, ‘This “Chicaso News, noone, however, waa ruined In the end May Manton's Daily Fa ashions, HE vogue as much to be noted among the atyles for little girls as among inches wide, material, yodue of nie. show Obtain There iter: yards 1, 61.2 yards 27 or $.4-4 yards di lace and Ti-2 yards of lace edging to make as iluetrated; § yards addional For Chie | 9), g yan yards 2 of 1 1-2 yards 44 Inches wide if bertha and frills are of the Pattern No, 6805 is our In stxew for girls of eight, ten, twelve wnd fourteen openwork costume All whadl get their thousand volts, A. P TERHUNB, Ss i ES ENCORE. I handed her @ paroxyemal Kiss, and spoke her name bap- ‘tismal, Spoke her name—it was Lenore, Ab, she was a scrumptuous creature, | Gib of tangue and fair of feature, But, ala¥!’ I couldn't teach her, Vor she had been there before— Aad she winked at me end mut mured, Murmured the one word "Encore!" Only that-—and nothing more. husband's political ambt- yy ight’s providence brought of the princesse dress ts those of their elders, and exceedingly my, charming are some of the resulta, This , } one ts eninently stmple, girlish and at- all tractive, and tnehuage all the /essential ra charactertatios, while’ it ts so designed low! that there is nothing like severity found . ‘ { in ite outlines, As dllustrated, {t ts made f with the open square neok and elbow ' sleeves that ere so well Mked for dano- gas wh ing | wear, parties and the iike, ’ but the ition of yoke and cuffs makes it sufted to afternoon wear, In this instance the material Is pale pink chit- % fon veiling, trimmed with ecru lace, “~ ail + but the lst of possible and sy Isfactory + Mi |chings t@ lone. Mp 4 The quantity of material required for a the medium else (twelve years) ts 71-4 ny with 84 yard of all-over Girl's Shirred Princesse Dress—-Pat+ tern No, 5206, Call or seni by mail to bined pl ey '@ WORLD MAY TON FASHION BUREAU, No, @ York, Send ten cents in petal Rind als pm i DATOREANT- Write zor same Aad sadrem delat, 698 1