The evening world. Newspaper, October 20, 1906, Page 11

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October 20 bee | Tivo be out among the mook: live been on the r lets mo out!. Why a! Bisbee mene omitetent | peweON, ATT was. you dye to the:p Jea?. For, Ee eeurs arid kwiped overy + Ate In ‘tho ‘halls. Tua: pakt bullt up tried ‘Le e'd a + hao pf Had signed Char! tate ‘er. “s the one ful CH TWAS GooQ~ They ROY L. M°CARDELL. hop-poles and pumpkins a Gufin--you know the old Tony Pastor turn of Mec azson the : #ats in Tho Red Mill" no musical show | WANDEO A“ LEMONG Te I been for two weeks? gad tho Chorus mot en trooping and town-halllng. 8. I'yo ween {nthe rural dist amber and frult A kid, Im all in, asid tits id T go out on the road with srcces—themontand) Noth y, I went, I guess, becau: Thi making anotse fike rout with a show that w: I've been s, where ° inion Shine er to Ls ule to m, and Mectm: and MeGuftin, the King- al tut ayer since Afohtgom: at prance team {4 Interpolated to tmit- | y+ Handuek, who thinka Marte: Drerslerstests | ny woman on earth because her coréets | f Our Inge ay to t Is yet to come. co she was underst a four- ‘anf Qiey giv it for fair! 10 Was Mazio Montrosser, who hasn't! 9 Oates? and she m if I'd a sung sf, away from m jon plays, {YOU creep up to him grand Vaughn Moody ¢ were on the witness stand. He Very careful of what he said, see, the “You, Mike a rank tem tako @/ acted more Uke a uly elther of LAVA UAV AAU LAYWRIGHTS ‘at one, has Just taugh Ul after the ‘firs you can imagine a The author of « William V. Moody Says: “The Stage World Should Bea Continuation of the Real| World,”’ “America Is Too Big to Be. Put Into One ‘Great Ameri- ean Play.’ ” “Poetry Is the Salvation of the Stage.” ‘T Couldn’t W Order,” stand. Willlam alked as though he was} “he explained, “I feel outsider.” he Groat Dtyide took refuge * p and eke behind hig briar pipe Te yn eles short-cropped beara ts ang ty, BO Meats) anicaay matter Lpket ie, tt 8 tom cons, opinions He eantt Pipe. Bis modesty won my| tia muration, “but alas! -T-cowldn’t usa te} ‘ 3 Ybad expected t | SENS > eres an elodvant. mixture of poet ana. playa Mrlsht butshero waa’ a man\von ths as slope of forty who loo%ed ana} 1 engineer than} BY ny : e * ite a Play to} , ha perhaps you've noticed,— Mr. Gtiiette, tor ug that we can’t tell anything about ‘em un- t act—and then we'd hate to tell. ‘But I was thinking of the dtfferente tn-playwrights -pure-and -simple—it Dure' and, simple playwright!—not of the difference In The Dleywright “close to” {s an interesting study. Usually, when In your humble way, he talks as though he were 1 4 {t-te omy—beitet that when eden Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Saturday AAV VAVAVAAD DUA VATA VET AN AAA AA EAAAAAAASAS *7 feel like a rank ou ARAL WEUAAA CLAN Cee as oman can wnauannoncunennuneneunencuneni ELL enh ey er eenennniyed ; ASMOKE WITH “THE GREAT DIVIDE” MAN @ © 2& Sessa aa MAAD AAD ALAAAAADAADARLAADADAALALAAAMAADAADAAAAAA ADD SAAD ADAAE Raa Raa DENA has if DA \NN i— YAH, he Great American play He-The fread: Meaty @ falr trial in New York, for Mr. Miller told me ha wodld keep It on at the Princess Theatre for three months, no matter what the verdict. has bean Interesting {n some Instances and, rather amusing {mn others. Ono writer asked, ‘How dd Ruth know nm ale made her bargain with Ghent that he was not already marriad7” 1 thinic that ought to be taken for grant- e}, But the question which so many have brought wp, ‘3Vhy doesn't the girl shoot the #man- when he has “the chance?’ 13 a perfectly justifable one. That situation fs the crux of the play. Perhaps I have failed. to make the psychology of that moment carry acroas the footlights.I-had-hoped-to-suggest that Ruth doesn't kill Ghent because sho has already folt' tho influence of the man, Sho has talked with him. a human relationship bas been establiehed between them, and It {s Impossible for te shoot him ir cold blead. Al- TSICEL seating oniy-afan_pawes in the hope of “The-eriticien 1 Charles Darnton, “Then you could never ‘ft’ & ‘atar’2”” i “An attempt to 49 that would j tyme —my—effort.—t-admire-the mt: who can do it—they must be rem= ebly clever—but I couldn't posr write to order. I muat* follow my + tnations, and have plenty of } When I was at: Chicago 1 verstlytowenitwork-tom a few -men——— Lip _stnken arta go—ot to do am T pleased. D It i amusod--matohave.the.newapa; peak of me as a ‘college profes: When {t comes to that I'm very m 4 of aw ‘fay Mry M ly atnailed down at his y Giscovired that it was out and reac for the matches. de puffed vigoro: at tho question: Hasn't Discarded Poetry, “Have you given up. poetry “{ trust: not," he. answered, tak’y « the pipe out of his mouth to make ro~ for the words. “Poetry Js (the eal: tion of tha atage. By that I mean + otic feeling, I tried to put. that. feal {nto ‘The itGraat Dida? tvishout ft play cannot exert any great app. Ihton_{s\ recognized 8 great 4 matist, but I doubt whether most p pie—nee the tremendous: poet 7 stands behind the dramatist. It im | {poetry in a play that makes St gree “Do you think te muph-tatket — ‘great American play’ will.ever be, w: ten?" T asked, “I hope W6t,"" he answered. “Am: ° joa in too big to be put into any cli | play. I¢ any. one should: happen write ‘the great “Amerfcan play,’ would find an audience to make | head swim. ‘The great American: pl- in Hie the “great: American pitmpk! If it did happen to come along st wot oon find that there were other& Stage Outlook Bright. — “Tho outlook for the American ate © seems brighter than ever before,’ continued. "For to first time {n history, the nation $s finding time £ somothing besides money-getting. Ith developed along material lites ant haa leisure to look about. Our sto { | | 4 he candy’ h i who he though dd Duse} And yot © at SUEEL bi p her t | Pulled from the candy ght anil wea he thought tad) Date} And yet every ono haw catiea Mist aie with ‘the regeneration of-a man or a| inducing sleep, but the play kept herl enough sho !a scarcely conscious of it,| Market shows that—Americaa mon whipped tike a t I kno nh a9 a iat Rene hap-tttt-ait No Thought of Boldness." 4 woman we can't begin too Ic It ts} a had finished it: The} the pond on ta to unite their lives | {% belny tnzested Abroed. And a desl: ownuld Bei bat Bomehow the Indian sign on me an dat get h: bt at “Boldnéss. wns, furthest ” f os | Uis end, Hot Ure means, that shouldbe ave it_to her formed, -and-sha-cannot-break+ for the finer things of lite—callit ou 2} tea late! thoughts wh ny erom = my: . kept In view," 2 don Saturday she rc ‘i dor-| ture, or what you will—has manifest " y 5 » 1 to th mids hen I wrote the a | d hoped to make this under- “Phe play awas-iaid-a thousand. yeaa ago sola 1t ould be all to tho orctids | WOvents when play,” sald | Into rehearsal. Mr. he | iteelt during the past few years fap, costumes and scr laid so tong ago was why tt was bad, [yoo 00% t simedontyat athcer- } “Surprised-by. Success, ' ot a of tho long- See ne eee te I ce-—antontahing -tegree OMe spree PEEP haa beens let areatene ‘and we'd be on| ae Se chowe the subject because tt fas tho ‘success of “Iho Grea ; told her to co] ftult must bo mine, A play should hold are ay Nida Sea tne ae = ts ppealed-to ome, just + vane fark Steet aly ote ahd sditer at y pol i 2 Broadway now packing fem against It when you want) 70" aha pes ae froo Divide’ surprived yon? ; ahead. On (jo following Thursday night, | Water At avery pointy whith-peoplerdahed-t6sParsifaneane tagise a plot and an all-star ca Every ono of those hes- . hese tke a grvat} ees 1 dla not expect that ie res Atl just a week after the manuxcript. had Gets Offers for Plays. may not haye understood the f) j beens and hed! ac: a an entra [over ta _urcpe——without rental Mi Anglh. stich fues 1A. a] hauge eeee COae ee ete ean Ua pains into her hands, Miss Anglin pro-| ‘Has the success of ‘The Groat Té-| meaning of Wagner‘a music, but thi anyone of t J the stage alo: what a wonderfil country wo haoel A if eee Fy Dw { qudeas sO erote its pete waniteds indusiryrand—en- {-olher-manageretrotng| wanted to understand, and they. war 23 TIT era Pine tee ators ae Tar pip} hereon ee dy, érsell lo KEEP divVakE peueeee AL ES gedit: Bhe told}, i ii : T belleve, with a real craving, and po thle Kid, 1¢ wase't so 5 heads of the shi Te eo ee pe RTs Ea Ehata week eesrm cived one OF TRO Ol TET EY TOFS BARS Ot Ue aS Aor yaks Ain't iy to anything ma, with vaudey aoa SE SS saeets dent to Keep awake, write Pays" answered Moody,|.say they hod gone. This spirit betWeen the acts, and there tx ho sr SAN GAAS eAgerito know : TShed cron RORAT One Miss Anglin, Pincushion. whut I would not work under’ eon-| bound to make {teelf feltsin tHe dram Sigqqt falra and tk carnivals has them spoiled for artistic repression. nd-led mo to pass my nest Bc Sailers ta ata lac puba | pat ec Earn La ae The vision of Miss Angitn asa human | tract. 1f,1 signed a fve-yedrs' ,con-| It will bring, I belleye, a betten and Lemoniana’ would.) ott ° ut vauatlon Tnik eis Saeed ea a Chee Ay aad to the soul. tract I would alt for five years with| truer play—a play that 1a real, not ar EeaseestanG ioad a Tame | NOTA, with now. laway. new ctlilos, Ried eee ee reaestl ie dent Cotten kehetonad (Ub Minera nya Sadao Hehe ew © was called | my hands folded. It would be smpos-| fictal—a play that while tt pulses wi a ea ‘OF new people. Arernendduelen tad aA AS ibs RT AnIET EE went” on 3 © to do ork: -under+ eion—-will no} emotional mere. i nd McGumn stopped the action of the| Trocady neg yt was tremendously im-) down since then—toned down abit too| couldn't ship, ma sho \ anton Sf aTPIS- Tok> tik to (de. nay -work:dyuier emotion willssob he, smablanel sleet Eel an ola nigger astroe Wvanke Dupree! ana| Peemset, 004 Mt waalsthero (that the idea uch, pechapecand st Have. asked ate ime, whe (Urned to Bsblte ‘and tn spite of the cradities| those conditions. I havo. moods,"? and] for. emotion's safe. ‘or, ca ees : 4 7 r ANE) Of writing @ play of that Ifo came to| Stiller to make it a stronger, now! she kept in a table beside her bed | of Hon, it was given to] ho amiled fainuy, “and I must be| plays deal with Ite, and, Qherefors, tl gene Ines RONRE Fete Cant e MAE RCalGe Soing lon Teed ing that New York has accepted the play| My play d to be on top—tha:| atoa & aidiences for the} guided by them. I can do only_what) stage world should be @ contatartc. ata eeable sian abet (ant atbod : $ : fy vaudee| 23 the epleode of the fret nct based | Inthe spirit in Which If was written, was Bho had intended rema the weak, It was assured | 1 want todo.” of the real world, . ted, = = Te and Tura! audiences won't 2 jhangs Gowarfrom her Gainsbo “tephe press ag i ¢ pa wired In to all the New Yor ‘Our_next date ane and f hot-footed out before the first mot closed In chill papers that ‘Lom he rescues ao Vieneatielan xtatesmas A theatre tire. ooonipitbted York hoatess and wife of h | peas name, | great zuela. silence | A with great} entousiasm -that marked tt as the Mey hepa and copped sr Haven to Beiott, fata hot and the Coast. and that ‘rom. ther anything good on was to pla he Coa, Pech} and wis roceiyved “with unbounded | Shit of th £ “Sewe-was told that there hadn't been ; wae formubicalahoy = SAC that Kid, a8} Was booked Wroil $ th ni “so! far‘as ‘temoni FE **tieten tome, Ka ON THEA ba fartford: ety ascloxa-to Tyoadway-as" the master’ My Jong-distance telephoning {c Jorflandt-from-this-on out to Winer! table tours of the province tor m& Pl) | Uimso-old I'l ask for cha: THE cia if Nahas ‘= voice mut stays by tho cannad noise} 9f a temporary Joan will be from Bry- ctor-patts mysele, it AB Tot, | Pattern 5496 Ie cut tn always upecity size wanted, Syen-Gored Kilt-Plaited Skirt—Pattern No, 5496, 1 Afpon-caredsisl Be LUZ Ware eA AEA ged 12 yards S2 inches izes for a 22, 24, 3 Call or send by mall to THE EVENING WOR TON ¥ASHION BURBAU, No. 21 Weat Twenty-third treet, New ‘York, Bend ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your name and addiovs plainly, and u HERE _js_no_ekter | =} — peter — Hiren —thist = Seuson thea “th "> kileplaited one and none takes more gracetil”jines or ts moro generally ba- coming. “Hera Is modél. that 1s gored sufficiently tagdo away with unnecessary bulk | over the hips and that js adapted to every ; woasonable material, In the illustration, how- ever, 1m ono of the love- ly new plaids, — tn shades ‘of blue and | green, slmply stitched | with alll, In this tne stance the hem makes the only finish, bur brala can alwaya bo applied or bands of| contrasting maternal, as ¢ trimming of both sorts {s greatly: in yoru dust now. The quantity of ma- terial required for tho mediim size is 8 3-4 yards 27, 014 yards 4) or (2 ihohes jwide ir 28 and 39-inch walat measure. al Alicin often, by Sirk partner, te in i roves of her riya) co! ea ‘of EU doa fire-Doat. cups: Alles fy dewstitur mines the dlacoyery. Qucsada, “Something don't oonsider {t my: St dwelling on this answer, hi Ballender, while ap; 13 secretiy atding one of ! Baliender’s yeowaita’ He le ri by. Ballende: Bhe and Jack nicoes . i | ani the later i spporentiy horrified “UF that he wished to tell’ me something tee, 7 Weslee the manhe hated, was, ¢ See CHAPTER IX, “Murder Done.’’ Lae New Corker resumed her course, leaving in the river th wracke ana Weslee tar on to the Manhattan aide, had happened that he hnd been lett bi Idd “hy” the wteamabip, noone of the} group-on board knew, > She-most= excited of: them-al! was_De- “{ snust seo Hallendar at once,’ ha anid to Alicia. ~yere te something —very—_jayaterious + Eehout—thies— "Ob, aay, wouldn't my toucher sy f { 3 Alicia de i the Fenozuelan h nh | habit of having Gleudale, cher New} boards! fathers bus] rou have not Ballender by | iiap | having such gu In 10° dot: atploma’ A ; Vice and S| acting queerly, « ing overboard i vem evs Le y teas id goes | Yacht 10 & grasend, | “Stop where yo | Quesada. | nothing strange easy othe: p “Twill not have tt. i ten. Thi a 8 et etan ad. | 288 Droved himself a hero, ‘Thero was jotly. “I am not tn tho my guests fall over- been In the habit of "sald Ballender ‘oo | With Alaneer, “'The man cume on‘board nd I suppose his leap- ‘&s merely one of the symptoms of his—" uu are!’ exclaimed De in Nis manner oxcept at fe strange Indeed. —Wiat [could a New York fireman have to tell tald | Wesleo | found you? Hallender was alte working more than | Quesada guoss. Ho | know? There was a or his ruin. came to him be futile—unless he FObADIY Se “My ind,’ sald anit, ho w 4 erials. pproa. oped for w. coul TEKS Yor De 7 Quesada. purevrveererectececccercwcrececiccreccneseerey yer) His-prein-wes| But—your wid have De lin which he needed all his nerve, IT | had_mapped out a great campaign, | result of which would be his, elev t tf | While he sat there looking !nto the jstern face of De Quesada the thowspt hat all he had plannes | was nothing—ell he had | destroy Read Romance of the N.Y. tire Dept. ~ Author of “Night: AANA fixed I think will be my win-) Ho went two stepa higher, when’ a ON Pea Niu rAnseent Aer Se ae) my daughter has| Woman met) hin "Ho haa tI —tota—me—thnt—my erates at { Sneteninn raven tueogs ahora daughter was safe. This, {t seems to | ¢ and now Sirs. Jocelyn) yy that time Ryat, Badmearinar, Da | me, fa, somothing: ot wis ah accident. f via and others w pou Into ie to way | Dulld A line of hose was rug to the rs fibet and—another wis carried never mind up a Jadder to tho third floor. T need CROOK | and oo thy parr: I shall. | of a bravo n Will” soon the least, were: to tho scene, und once more 3 automobiles of Way round co oh sl ners and nt -elothes Se Hot sills of ¥ ny maa ing com- od hait ning in ender white, he » wouhd the rear ang rewm into the a wera chopping w s1a| appar alarm, “Yara pour, and ety! forna, By Seward W. Hopkins, Stick-and-Nozzle,* ANTENA DIAS TATE VOTE VETS they could see. : Ir does not take long to, desorthe + DeLana Ae rhe New York does not last long. The fire In the Calliorna lasted ‘hi mhiour, Fivnn was_the first man through th hullding after the flames had~ bee: wabdoed. ning through a hall he atumbled.- When he had picked —hithselfup—h= heart a groan, j tie reached out to _grope—for_th: 7, Gad swung Gils lantern: There was another groan, and Flynn dent a yell through the windows tha; wha heant for dlocks. 2 he shouted. “Here's Wesleo and De Quesada, and De Ques: ada's dead! “Hurry up! ‘There has been nurder do: ntinued.) “XN gf p 2 | Banped, | 6. rigis-zaply, and atuiiod —Batrender s { ¥" Just how it} -FIRt prize; $5, | WHITNEY, No. }iem. ‘Ao I Ravo already sald. | Stevera'a rescus 1 Phina Unuaual’’ dhe replied. “I eriots,!” —Sacend—prize,_ti, UBL FLUGEINR, Ni {ton atrest for his story of Fireman | AWATIEE tO MOWARD 485 State street, Brook. gee for hia story of “Old Tom's’! hero- warded to #AM- 439 Hast Hous- of a whole family, Awarded to MiSs ie Fi 1 ANNA WOLM No. Mant One Huns @red and ‘Thirty: ory of Fireman Behier’s De woman’ and-entid.— fourth street, for her rescue of a TO-DAY’S PRIZE WINNERS IN : -_"THE FIRE STORY CONTEST TE OUITN priza; $1, WAS C. SMITH, No. -2 Brooklyn, for! hey ‘Vaughn's work at fro— SES 8 Stockton of the West Bhore fire rescues, Sixth piize,— Ai. vawarded LOTII®. KNOTH, asreet, Brooklyn, for man "Marke's her Mtreot blaze: i INO BIBS My os t street, Firemans} a beautiful woman," faltered Daily Knitting C “But haa my plan disturbed | eitenta th hats. ByLaura La Rue, 1_opera_cloak_{n_our—plictura ho walked That © Yor ti Soul h Rallender “fs as-_hindsome-as—one-of chiffon The yoke 13 -almost—s Koop it" Tron) 1ook=. ign painiys— tate front the lines run tite duties > ed for a oe ty silly ‘Way, Jolinny, thera ata no lonves in &, ek now then, ayraay AEA Kid—Oh, ng bookworm at Din T prougtt nim Ald me, ge: Teachor—Whore are your books? dust ADOUt Kids; www By WJ. Stetnieans: “ throvgh tt. urred of a freman’ nt fire da 1 of the populace ran answer, give one. the and | nang Flynn apr welletrat tpugh the crowd that 0 into was on “This ts go- sald thd ong ounding mulldings, construction, ‘of the Ww noted aw one High above the su modern in t for the hom: a was apartment “five was of the York, rose 1 ped ty ) ahd grasped tio Kreat brass nozalo, | @n apartment such as that, why wealth can find a home, tharo aro | r children, Weslee knew this !i ht his way up tho stairway, man in pajamas came tearing dows, ing tin box. here’n tho door? he shouted in} Wesalee's ea: : ‘Hore,” anid Wealee, shoving him. Designed with Bear Brand Ya: Opera Cloak, Laura, La Rue, Knitting Editor, X will mail full directions for making this pal | who are interested. Thero will be no charge for sending them. Kindly addroas Rrening World, PLO, Box 1134, N. X, City, gracefully to the can: tre, practically form: tng eV this part of garHieAt ia made- of Shetlkind Ioss—a iining--color- beneath, and cream white on tho outside, It - fis “done-on—a--comparte tively small Maltese pin. or “haifrpin,’* When finished the patrpin work | has ° much the appearahce of a lovely: drald ty fanciful design. It te prettily joined rd gether with nothing of tha effect ut-ordia crochet work, The ining for the lower portions and tho cage’ la also of Shetland Floss and) ir the Uning color, It is mado on a bdiggem Malteso pin, one fully, twice as large as thag Used) for the yokey And the, work In dong closely, to give @ substantial bo dpe Upon the foundation nro | fastened tha flouncta. ‘They ara made of zephyr Shot¢ land on the largex Maltese pin. nary ttern to any of my readers } eh Stralght across thesback>~but- witha sight curve ii: the” outline and. the—tnes—of —the- pattern, -to———

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