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unky Hernine Gives Nor- dau Play Weight with a plaid = _——_ UNDS GF VILLAINESS, 1 Malaria Dramatized, with} Platitudes for Its Situations, WHO LETCHE IN, CHIMMIE 2 By Irvin 8, Cobb, Nordau's “The Right to Love’ Played at Berkeley Lycoum last it and this morning. To be exact, @ Right to Love” lasted until the of the evening was about all Wp, and then On the Road," a one. drama by Clara Ruge, helped the to forget that midnight had come | ‘was going. Those in the audience ltved tn far Harlem didn’t beat the an to thelr houses by many he | Progressive Stage Society ts ro-. ible for the produotion, ‘The ob- of the Progressive Stage Boctety le te the drama. It vomes rigut 4 (00 vo PLAY] @nd ways 0, thereby taking no un- x Milka Air advantage of the unsuspecting! ', Tt {# admitted that, #o fav, @ émama has eiown an unaccount reluctance to Lelug elevated, but @ woclety keeps jacking it up, right) Wong, Aw Jullus Hopp, president of tie pociety, said in bis curtain speech, “Wo! fo nO merely undertake w poe « ace where people can go to forg belt thoughts, which they haven't gheers), No, we want to i jem think, Bit to do this in takes money.” en he invited all hands to } @ad pay the Joitiation feo at fo that there can be more per. | of morbid dramas by writers the blue<mass or Ibsen school, Morai Malaria Dramatized. @ Right to Love,” last night's DIL, wae evidently written by Der. any at @ Ume when he wus hot : the best in the world, Had he! deal. Hol 4 down to brass tacks, the ‘ etiing | MtOrY Suns Mike thin, ought at the tine to take somets 8) Fray Berth Wahrmund, hie iver we should probubly never | jus ast she is ¢ had an opportunity to ate moral dramatized in this fasbton, One| {Sh 2e @way impressed with the convic-}the lesser in that Nerdauy, even in happiest, | band Is 1s ooul: A sad du ne lived, She wan’ ryest momenta, could not have turned | ("Ot A yay. OO, bul it & fawhionable comio opera score. Onto that way, being wis Yor this piece begins nowhere and| !? ik him to death tr week ¢ knows It, Besides, she has there. Barring a lot of high-tem- akes trouble for ured epigrams, {{ is whout as ex-| her ting ae @ set of blue prints of a Care| ,, ve ny my bc ‘? jo library. But every now and then! wasted the ( He me chanuter or other passes out a! sends for rand proposes that om isi. of conversation on marriage or tree! he." ove whieh makes che asbestos curtain | duel, j2a like a hot frunkfurter, Te rest of the woman after a divorce. He js willing to fight a ot accommodating otherwise henti while yet his footgear fonless, durable sort of a way, so that) #hall be that she mu: ‘ou rift off into mber and dream | = COM ASS LOT SAS ADORE Pa one forth saying “The in spots fosmgn’ a, vise virgins with nose glasses and t . ’ ! alr pulled back from the faces | Bride in “The Pearl and the lofty, gloomy, he-children of genius! | Pumpkin” Not Happy in eal Married Life. {th brows like the domes of Georgia | vatermelons. Also there werg tnelnded | fn this division a number of real jemians, A real Bouemian ts a person | Bo- who forgets to wash bis ears. | eae | ‘ na Roi 8, the bride in Some Expected a Pinching, leg : { he abet Hieegle uty The other half was more diverse. It| vate life as Mrs, Henrietta Augusta ook in @ sprinkling of the unemployed! Lots, was tae leading figure in the regu ‘uh, who had got the idea that tt would| iar Weunestay divorce matinee which ve a smart thing to toa Nonlit| was resumed to-day in the Supreme 4 a lot of fell © had dropped) Court for the winter season to find Mr. McAdoo pinelie| Dhese aire the uncontested divorce rio something eX-] onses. fore were forty-six of them ou Anda garnish of news calentar before Justice Victor J. r reporters around Ufe edge Of the] Howling, b tly a dowen were ready So far os the boxes were CON] top trial med it was an even vk In the) When the case of Mrs, Lote wis called t-hand box wit Furzy-Wuagy, WhO) che demanded at lute divorce from ke a British square Wing & OPA Broderick Main Lok manager of @ } Yuntleroy neckit He never could) ie dairy company at Long Braneh, ¢ his light under a bushel—Leastwiae.| ce. jtobinson, her attorney, called unless he got a hairout first. With Ross, of the Sothern-Marlowe ) was a youth, alsu extensively haired pany, and others ¢ We little r, who gnawed his proxramme fie Fdna's ‘allegation that Lots, who © cxpression sugsesied a COMC-SUD | Cronies Lane" at a Long Branch hotel PaMement build mm Maybe, though, th#t/ with a hyphenated name last June, De- cision was reserved Magdalinn Hermann asked to be di- ‘ vowed from Charles Hermann, to whom box overflowed WN & ie was married in Philadelphia seven ind women in evening | teon years ago, Mermann retired from looking absorbes me just hia way of ind interested The other punch of men } ” rospero' y udgin motive business y $s ago, and now de- Jothes, all prosperous enough, J ai) RATS (RUFIEME VeATS Gf, nad now Ge the looks of them, to keep @ of his own tenants, while Mra. Her- yw. These Interlopers into the at | mann, wealthy In her own right, lives ofr ought played spire|at No, 1 East Bighty-second stres phere of real: thought played The (Boe charged hor hushand with main- @d conversational opposition to th@) taining Amanda Lerch in one of hie ctors’ part of the time, and nodded | at 1463 Third avenue, where they ne rest of the time, One elderly ¢ rere. Mr. and are veg 1, , w nite to | Geotge Hermann supported her chang: hoger, who had evidently failed to) eons Herniin sue ision Was Te: ve a vall for 1215 with the head | gery Oacel all, dashing and hand- “Hk gown and a ble d with @ white sea- ked dom from Jacob Jacobs, Mm she was married Deo, 12, 189. her, almost got left beliind when the veak-up came. f The drama itself ts so simple that one | gun nders how Dr, Nordau had the to w @ to string four soggy acte on euch |Jaeob B. Bab oe Lvs A aed Jaco) Jacobs, and on the night oI fgoreamer theme. His olothes-lines| Juiy' 24° surprised iim with a strangs iat have been able to stand a good| woman. who smoked. cigurettes, In @ — Reines Law hotel, Deelsion was ré- | gerved. | “Decision wag! also reserved in. these «Lucy M. Perking ys. Frederick n Berking, on a charge of cruelty; |Carlo Moszo, vs. Amelia Mazgo, on |etatutory rounds; Robert J, Hamilton ve. Lena Hamilton, and Henry D, Rock well ve Mace Dillon Rockwell —— PRISON PROMISE FOR ALL REBATERS | , /United States District - Attorneys Instructed to Begin Prosecu tions at Once, WASHINGTON, Dec. 13—Attorney- General Moody seeks not only to fine ‘all radiroads which grant rebates but [also to imprison the railroad officials guilty of much acts, With that end in View, and also to pav® the way for the olesale pi ‘ton of he yesterday sent out drag-net Instructions to the eighty-five United States District- Attorneys scattered throughout the In his letter of instructions the Attor- ney-General first directs the Dictrict. Attorneys to seek evidence of rebates jwith @ view to prosecut under the Biking jg 9 provides merely a {fine, and ai that whenever possible tho thdictments be found under section 3400, of the Revised Statutes, which ous Mas EVEN-TIME Dealers in Cameras, Typewrliors, Cash Kewl ters, Desks, Safes, Dla- monds, Jewelry, Musical Instruments and ail such mine etiancous art particularly sateable du- ring the Holidays can bent save money and Increase thelr wales through « World “For Sale” Ad, ordered published for 7 -Consecullve: Days--7 os | iC HAWMING) ic pu THE WORLD; WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 13, 1905, i IGHT TO LOVE” JACKS UP DRAMA AND HEATS IT TO TORRID CONDITION WROTE ER OWN THRILLING CLIMAX IN THE “RIGHT TO LOVE.” By Charles Ray i I with him and to care for and the curtain goes down right wh that every dozen very lon platitudes snapp few ones That is about all a proper amma, tw prop dren and a md palr of lovers, A edy to a stuff in Act IT alled a pike an he Uke a oushion, Can't Play Villainess by Pound, R. Chr Langfonl, who played got damp all around and wife, Is realiy a cle ad a tete-d-tete with somebody a little mite to for | the p of the second part looked like public demands that 4)a person undergoing treatment {n @ a good deal of past and no abinet ey certalnily were future to speak of shall be serpentiny ot successfully and alnuous, You cann: play the villlane: ¢ pound jougiaa Stanfield, handled of had a style of de ymond Macauley, srt. When he talked at random th bath 1 «his John were, Drew, His 4 8 n his necetle. remains reasonably intact, The hus very | diamonds he time It just drizzies along in an ac-) hand elects that the wife's punishment geste] 9 Chinaman aquirting | There was no banal music between continue to live ) the hasom of a holled act Music would far Upon the make: i} {f John Drew sent to wear shop-made bur ot Brazilian] a mosphere { the production. ‘Things | od abit during the waits ,“e were given to understand yur elapsed between the thind i Jana four acts, Tt seemed fully twice that lon , ‘And yt don't dare to go out, either, Ana tah a cooktall, It wouldn't’ seom Het. f @ man could go out and take Dig 2runette liver pill, that would be mre in accont with the festal sniritit the occasion. “But not a cock- a} ie | ACTRESS WHO SUES FOR DIVORCE. : POSSE CAPTURES ELUSIVE BEAT A ~WANIN ODS TERROR TOW Assailant of Woman at Cape May Caught After Flight. MAY, N. J., Dee being hunted all day by was caught just at and is now CAPE Bimes, afte deputy sheriffs, dusk jast eyenin, up tn the city Jail, attempting (o aseault Miss Olivia Roth- ell on the railroad tracks near York avenue, West Cape May, Mise Rothell ls about fifty-five years old and fought wit her assallant. was badly beaten by him, and when he ran away on hearing the approaeh of several persons Miss Rothell collapsed and had to be carried to her home, two blocks from the scene of the struggle, 13.—George locked | He Je charged with | She | Westchester Residents Turn Out to Hunt Something Like a Lynx, PURDY'S STATION, N. ¥., Dee, 13 —The wild animal through the woods in thisieinity and } causing no little alarm to people here- abouts has not yet fall before the parties of hunters that mre after It. The growls of the beast vere heard in the woods around the hime of George Butler, the artist, near Croton Falls, Monday night, and a bigparty, headed by an experienced huner, ts out for Simes, who !s about. forty-five years | the game. old 00k, 1, the, mona a eovaral | “The beasts fash tras have teen m ; Recked through ‘the woods until the |8een and they appear t//be those of a afternoon, when he was sighted, and after a chase of several miles was cap- tured, ‘The case will be presented to Grand Jury tn the morning and Sim lynx mther than of @ pmther, which at first Jt was thought tq be, J. H, Roberts, a \asiness man of Omton Falls, last nigit saw the ant out 8 will probably be placed on trial Thura-|mal at a distance on the outskirts, but day or Friday. [pou ass make out a apecies, that fs roaming} 17000 ON CANAL: NO DIGGING DONE forse Than That, Will Have to Do Wallace’s Work Over Again. WASHINGTON, Dec. 18.—Genators Tilman and Daniel are collecting ma- terial for a canal fight to be made when the Appropriation bill is before the! Senate. Secretary Taft and other wit-| nesses were before the Senate Commit-| tee yesteriay, and the Secretary ad-| | mitted that because of blunders, al-| though 17,000 men are now on the canal work, not one shovelful of dirt is be-| ing dus. ’ Forty-one hundred of the men there age engaged tn sanitary work, and the| remainder are engaged In track wark| and the building of houses. ‘Nhe ex-| eavation work stopped on July 2% by order of Chief Engineer Stevens Both Serretary ‘Taft and Chairman Shonts told the committee that this! work Was stopped because the former |Chief Engineer, John F. Walinde, had | committed a blunder, The purpose of the work done by Wallace was to fur- |nish a basis for estimating the cost of excavating. Secretary Taft said—and | the statement was confirmed by Chair- | man Shonte—that all the dirt dug by Wallece was deposited in such a place that it will have to be moved again when the work of excavation Is renewed. Mr, Shonts told the committee that Wallace had excaptionally fine weather for his work and that he selected an easy spot in which to dig. He went to the tup of the cut, where he had gravity hauls, and he deposited the dirt he dug at the nearest place he could find for jt, Then, Shonts said, Wallace misled himself, the Commission, the President, and everybody else by mak- ing his estimate of the total cost of the excavating for the entire canal on the) cost of this easy work, Both Seoretary | Taft and Mr, Shonts told the Commit tee that all the excavating done by Wallace was practicully wasted, @ committee will hold a final meot- ‘ing to-morrow morning and take action on the House bill. It ls the present In-| tention to Insert an anendment restor- ing the amount carried to the original| gum requested, $16,500,000. At today's session the first section of the bill re- lating to bonds was stricken out. A bill containing this feature was introduced in the Senate by Mr. Teller, and it will be dealt with by the Finance Com: mittee, The bill was amended further! to provide that in future no expeadi:| tures shal] be made for the canal ex- cept by authority of Congress and when | appropriations have been made by Con- gress. einer lence BALD EAGLES FOR SALE. WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—A local firm has six bald eagles for ale, ‘They or- rived yesterday from the North Can: lina mountains, dejected and tousled Same wild geese, mutilated to act as decoys, were sont by the same ocon- signor, The web of one foot has been itt, andl the bone of one of the wings wed so tihmt when the goose swims is ina atrole, and it has to k_ to the point tron ag “WLAN HOUR AREA iMrs, Sarah A, Walker | Wa a Business Woman | to the End, [DEALT IN REAL ESTATE, Known Among Brokers as One of the Shrewdest Per- sons in that Line, MADE T\WO FORTUNES, |Dearly Loved to Drive a Bargain— | Was Once’on the Stage, | ‘The strange story of Mrs, Sarah A | Walker, of No. 123 West Morty-seventh jatreet, whose will waa filed yesterday Wis told te JAY to customers in all of the big real estate offices In the city | She was known as one of t mewdest revity operatons in the busine wtial her sudden end was a befitting on rio life. for an eceen | Just one before she male her will, leaving her phystolan, Dr, Diomaa M West Forty-meventh ard Alfred §. Maloolmson whom are named in the ecutors Of the esta ther this odd chara relatives living no one seems to know hour died she ty to Acken nge will has She hey a husband, but was separated | from him about fifteen years ago. name waa Paul Walker, and jin the theatrical bualvess, Por a time the wife took small parts in the vart- ow companies that her husvand put n the road So far as His he wa | any one in these parts knows, Mrs, Walker was born in, Charleston, 8 C. At any rate, that le where she came from when she arrived i this co! about fifteen or elghteen years ago, She then had something like fifteen or twenty thousand dollars, part of it In cash and part io real ostate in the South. Her Early Speculations, Just as soon as she arrived tn town Mrs, Walker began speculating in real estate, Bhe was soon known as one of the shrewdest manipulators in the busl- iness. Twlos she made a forme, and twice she lost it, C, 8. Berry, a real estate broker at No, 61 West Forty-seo- ond street, who is winding up the estate for the executors, mys that i will probably amount to about #2 when all of the debts are paid. Outside of Ousiness Mrs. Walker was & recluse én every sense of the word. She cared nothing for clothes or for friende aside from Dr. Acken, who had been her physician for the last ten years, and Mr. Malcolmaon, of No. & Beaver street, who more than once had helped her out of her financial dif- froulties with a us loan. Bhe wore the eame queer Ifttle hat and the same black gown year ig and year out. She was afways trying to drive a bar gain, and would keep dickerts with the Various real estate dealers with the patierce of a professional horse trader until she had Won her point. Often men gave into her entirely or compromised On a deal just to stop her dickering. Tn ute house where sne died, and wateh she had owned, she lived all by herself, having never employe! a servant, even when she waa {ll The neighbors know little or nothing of her, They had heard that {nm years gone by she had been on the stage “She was a very energetic woman,” Mr. Berry gald to-day In speaking ot his dealings with Mrs, Walker, “and was known to all the big concerns in the city. IT was with her just before éhe died. She had no idea that the end was so near, although she had been suffering for a long time. She wrote the will herself on two sheets of paper. she started to write she pleked up r glasses Her sight was dim se cannot be my glasses,’ whe sald, 1 assured her that they were hers, I didn’t realize then that the dim light War @ sure slen of the approaching end, Her Ruling Passion. “Why, only a few hours before her death she was dickering wit real-os- tate finn for an office, She that her business was growing so fast that the time had come when she must have a place in. which to transact It, The terms were put at @ low figure, Dut that didn’t suit her, Ghe was never happy unless drivin, In, She was continually tradin, ua prop: e for holdings In tirls of oom en = y trading that back for Sout op erty. bn, ahe was a wonder, omen told me about her husband, but whether he ts dead ‘or alive I don't know, J am naw trying to get her affaire in nape that the estate may soon be set De Acken was indianant to-day wney ne earn t ho had been pecuses ol practically copa | Pf an hour woman died, beter now Wite"or ‘aoaning, about th wane whatever fo do mith the mak ine of the will, ten years, I had heard that at one time in Yer life she was on the stage, — Tine, 18.—Baron d'F da Constant has received a letter from President Roosevelt acknowledging phe gift from the Parliamentary Arbitration Roo PARIS, “ivoup of @ tare edition of the ‘“Me- moles’! of the Duke of Sully, Chiet Mi ister of King Henry lV, The “Memoirs’* explain that the King’s design was to form a pacific union of all the civilized nations. ‘The Inscription reads, “To Presklent Roosevelt: These memoirs of your precursor. |} COFFEE DOES HURT (some people) HARD OSTUM ut overboard, the the geese fy ng about om to alight, so chat the 4 good shot. The de- oad prices, $100 often brings begerdegy old good”? any | | MISSING BOY'S Lad Vanished Eighté Avo and Has Nevé Been Heard Of. For years a quiet tle, aweet-spoken ed every night at dusk down Fave court, Brooklyn, and oalled to such boys of the nelghbore ¢ found playing abo Cap in hand, every you went to neet her, for they she was & nother in great sorrow Roys,” she sald, "you know my son | \ fs lost UL Bee m bring him ( vfe home, 4 4? 1 know he will ye some d ihe \ nv - wi I 1 ul Y ] Voy E Chicago Doctors Say That) "8" He Three Cigars a Day He ren Are the Limit Sa Nee a and o CHICAGO, Deo M="Dion’t ka | Upon ye more than three cigars a day, t of M “Don't go beyond two plpefils of to | take t \ bacco a day if you smoke a pipe. His t 1 iat “Don't 1 your clwar or 4 on erty Ty slid! stantly In the same part of the mouth, |“ ware of damp tobaceo, It often talkod These “don'ts” addressed to the man i me of Une of average strength and normal nerves (4 lepomitesd v ere voiced to-day by Chicago #u in discussing the case of Frederick Wi piahay Power, the actor who lost his tong. eabtp, ba from cancer, While it not known aly Op, Ai ‘i that cancer was produced in the Power | 1) Ie te a eawat case by smoking, all surgeons agreed Ib ty for the appolntment was @ contributory cause. { prop Dr, Zenn, who perte the opera. | mong the bh pn theldedetshnd tlon, sald: “Cancer as far as scle 8 revealed It is due to a constant trrita- tlon in a certain spot. For instanve the man who smokes a dozen cigars a WAGES RAISED $1,000,000. American Woollen Company Ine ref ie S eteae ie led ht Le creases Pay of $0,000 Hands. left wide of the mouth, This naturally) 1AWRENCE, Mass, Deo. 1A teles, causes Irritation in just @ particular, gram received » Willlam place, and in some cases, should there) Wood, Treasure Wool. be any wugmeation or #ign of cancer in le Company, Announ at at a meete the system, it ts Ikely that the growth | Ing of agents of the company yesterday would be attracted to the spol where) it was \inanimously such Irritation was caused the wages of the | Jan, 1, 1908 in the (Prom the Baltimore American.) reas ‘ompany ha: participace W Urtanite-I eay, old man, how do} len ny uf you mange to keep that tine ook of| ing ow at Bul tone yours go long out (her? n Now nd Ruralite-[ deeded over the cottage eet and lot to her, and we rent from tier 100,000} 1 raise on us ad the month so sho © he feels too wh ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? Thousands of Men and Women Have Kid« ney Trouble and Never Suspect It. 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