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/ Ibsen! Faskizg out loud, sk And dango? IE CHORUS GIRL ~ ROY L. M°€CARDELL. 467 HEAR that Mansfold'n got a three-time winner in ot Most Wonderful Man the World I FET oe Cee ee ea paply ales Has Ever Hnown,Admiresthe Char- TS owvngy le a Neuse ta erité a munich show there| acter He Plays for Its Haman Quali- “Why, It-ain't) no use to write a mu hes 2 days full of jibing and expect to get mway valle Ags ee ties—As for Cleopatra, Well, She, you can tnke {t from mo. it's these Shaw and Ibsen fellers | ne that have got the public winging. Wrps Probably Much the Same as “Not for mane, thom Ibsen thingy! Will I ever. forget Other Girls. o4 when I waa home once in Aliccna “wien tT got stehs— 98> 2 if i orning ccat ‘of En long come Mra. Fiske playing in ‘A Doll's House,’ and me, altays the goat, adit T tell ‘em at home it was some. thing Itke ‘Babes in Toyland,’ and just the thing the chil- Gren’ should’ see? "If Ta a thought a mono: Fit wan high-brow drama if Mri. Fiske was f0 1) ~ ‘A Doll's House?’ So I blows in with the kfdd! 1 my Munt Emily's children ne 6 the funny man coming out end of the ocond act and prettnd to ‘em it waaail/q philosopher than'an sctor, and. W {room ub-to-date and has a penny arcade, that I led them kids st : y =| a stack of bras on “f Can't Btop Dancing When the Musto | ‘The smile that wreaths his Caesar pinyed over his long, thoughtful’ on the phonographs and held them up to see the pictures In | the mutoncopes—dless your heart; them {ds seen no harm in them—I'd never “Why shouldn't Caesar smile?” he asked, Ho surely had a sense ot| ‘Loon aces ns Lady Bountiful with them no'mor Write one of thom 3, } the publt ee an, write one of thowe Shaw or Toson plays, tf that's what the pubite| OOS O° 19 attuationa in which. he found himself.” Ww play you simply have, a lot of) freaks Aoting yaturat apd talking: n & crazy and talling natural, and eny such things as ‘It wasn't senha orbes Robertson English Actor, Wh Caes Mish cut and y pi tson at his hotel A great | “many of those y ainted things called uctors “act” so much | nown that | all day that they can't act at night. But it's the other way with Mr. | | Robertson, | traces of the nctpr in-his dressing-room., Eiko | Ti LO a {Shaw y human—and If you happen to-kmow actors you} ininie hoy eotnente lee Tbe worth knowtog—He-has-non0} lof the airs and nonsense of the about him, He looks more like | he Speaks there {4 no. suggestion Ty profe: } fat he is talking for publication, taco as-I-temarked that he played Caesar as though he were smiling at him, humor. He’ may not have smiled at himself, but he must have emiled at “Do you agree with ‘Shaw's lew ot “Cleopatra was probably just such Caesar?” 1 esked, “tn girl as Shaw makes her,” ho said, | ‘I see no reason for disagreeing after a moment's reflection, “It ts jwith It,” he answered.“ have-néver|not at all-unilkely that she did all been able to share the somewhat the things we see her doing in the common view that Chesar was a very | play.” serlous old gentleman in d toga, who|’ ‘Even to, sticking pins inta} was forever pow-wowlng all over the | Ca»sar?” . place. Shaw's Cucear appeals to me| “Perhay said Mr. Robertson, first of all because he 1s a very|with a quiet laugh. “I have read| human Cassar, Shaw could not have that sha played a great many pranks made him anything else, because he | when a girl, one of which was to run “is so very human himself. Shaw | about the nelghborhood in disguise. recognized in Caesar the qualities of| As for the pins, well, perbaps—— 4 grest-and-genorous nature, the gen-| J was left to believe that thia tlenesa, the big, broad sympathy, the | might he a Shaw “touch.” nt—tl "take off ue ‘At Hysen play is Piays-end, with n new. ere: Now, all-tha § hava bnd saw plenty—ha daplt, drinking avaod alc and Is dramatized by I eWhy, in ar Yon Yonson chara “An Cosen p ‘a dollar a week’ written all over “The Ingenue is & dame with a splitting headache and the fret bit ahe has ts —t9 lay ona sofa and groan. Then the leading man comes in wearing mackinaw ors and looking ns sad as sent for lx cue, but gives a hollow groan end eays, ‘Tes, Olga, My famfly has an inherited tendency to warts, ned for the first time that your grandfather wore a walstcont the horror of it!" "And the dame doing the Spanish Delsarte on the Gavenport ways: “The misery —|-/ ‘of It; the mooking misery. of it? ig “This is the way all through the act. They have a bitter quarrel as to cy should take headache powders dry on the tongue or In wafer shape low of water. \Gloomy Gua gives st out during the course of the piny that he has a job in the public Mbrary, but Is great: ambition 4s to be a notary ~~ was a sad mistak: _made of moleskin! Ah whether th swith aw public and do great deeds. rum blossom, “But in taking a headache powder he tries: to-wipe it off the wife see: “has Mecelved her, hunted Adam—ie sort of people that-think #0 hard you can bear their brains snort, asex and titter a A He married couple. And right there you can pipe that (t lis ever known, and it seems to me|sympathies of the audience, she Ke ool mostly and voting the Republican ticket because y Ket thelr money first, but them that staya behind in Norway and Sweden n is bilious and bughouso for fate! Nay they don't oven talk broken English! And a good | t je always sure for the laughs, | ayn starts with an Interfor get that has ‘A dollar down and | it. o fred In the third act he discovers a wart on his nose, but hides {t from his wife by painting it red and pretending he ie drinking hard, and I! a pink ¢ maw, and I've played pratrie towns in the Was a jemoni And then ail the people frankness and the magnanimity ot| “The character is very cleverly t the man, In my opinion Caespr was! drawn.” continued Mr. . Robertson, Hi truly 8hi 1 PAY mOM et ga cae wcntug lis most wonderful man the world|‘for while Cleopatra 13 against the erally’atarts a play where other sensible that Shaw ‘has estimated the man at} never losea them. It {8 what we | his real_worth.” i {actors call ‘color work.’ The nice “And Cleopatra?” thing about {It fs that an audience Mr. Robertson teaned back in-histforsives her much—as a_parent for~- wid solld people, that take thelr pleasures floor-walker. only an innocent pila sone on the wart and when ho on his handkerchief, and knows be Chéalrical ‘world 5 ota’ jena ito swallow the loaded water. hiskers instead, J — bane brine in nome dinar easietin-and-dares him to burn the wart! Sbaw Was CRE error Sf Lhe +wart nus sapped his physical and moral courage, and he renigy, but tells her to Like tho ¢clasors and cut {t off—that he'll be brave. : eitl of seventeen, tag how gots off-a lina that her ayoa are opsned to what e weakling-he te, |Qialice ane oot await ber remy, Another |chooso gut my ‘cousin ax my compan- |JecKes ie See es alte to-he paces up-and-down-the room begging her to forgive him ahe elita | casi, Sen taut | lwopen a headache wafer with the sclasora and puts the lunar caustie in tt Picasa atie {Sol -agamed mildly urprisea “at —my | 2er-where thoy_nre_by_ this time? about him and up thts te-cloude Wh Ce hg milk, add remainder of mili and ~ “Then she tella him he may kias her, He does ao, and this gives her eoursgc sted hi ; ; "Sho then des in horrible agony, while Gloomy Gus setzes the solssora and SPiaaloo TT vastly reilevetl. ‘and then, as we made our pish 6 by 7 treated Into THAKey a Pass AC the wart, bot misses {t and cuts two Inchew of his medkinaw A Hero Flies! — CMaLT RAyanE lok ‘FOU yet Nee be ection: ‘ SEPT SaCM ITS TMC oo - chile Jack was walking up the long ———tePhen_he-goee raving mad, Dut te Interrapted py hts wwtfs's metien:- aunt, who. H trap, _He-sat_thero beside me while omes in und anys that while looking through an old trunk she has founda the dtather used to wear, and {t is made of cowhido, and no! ;chatr-and raised-his-big grey tyes ty elves 4 —naughty—chiid, Caesar ae —18 Caesar, just-as-a-great many untme) “And therefore the-cstiing-In thi ettltude-he-Jooked !more fortunate {n having I things were sald of another of the| ‘Yes, quilte easy. Fhesitate to call him “stringf,” *as| from first to. Inst, | Cleopatra does in the play. Juntrue things baye beon” eald of | stand?" \ \ Sat urday, Novemb er: —_ easy to play” a_8Y Ttis-not-n-cher- ‘ns lean os Shaw himself, but I ghould jpathles of the audience with him.| world's greatest’ men— Gladstone. |actér to try an actor. Hamlet—ot A great many | But Shaw's Caesar 1s easy to wher-|course, was a much greater strain, and it took me some months to rey’ ick ini-l-ivielele Plefbeleetepeeteflefeleebeedetnioefelteleldebe-teltetofebebb y Chas. Darntont cibelofabelnfalefatolafatnfutatatutafetotafatafatatats without feeling {t and In that way escape the strain of two perform= ances on the same day, but—well, 1 ing ft couldn't play Hamlet without feel-” } that's all. _ Curiously enough, - : as Shaw who told me how to A human Gesar’ Warne [cover trom my engagement at the alekerbooker “Theat Tormances—on—Saturday—were-e trifle ty too much for me. I-used_to-say. myself that I would play the part} ‘Two per= play Hamlet, ‘That was tei ago, when his. brilliant oritieterns made him tho terror of the theatr{- eal world. All of us stood in fear of him. I had never met Mm, and l youn . | fone I reretved a Te from him. ‘f understand,’ he hot ‘that }¥ou intend to play Hamlett stpe pose you think you will bo h grea success, but let me tell you that you won't.’ After dropping! that bomb, x nticcers tmtcas L got away trom the old-fashioned —way—ot— Pee part. It was a letter filled with en- couragement and good advice. Shaw ended by saying that he had no’ wish to meet me, ag he considered {t auother, It was ‘not unt: {Years —later—tha: a ehttad ot knowing him. By that time he had given up writing oriticlsms and 8. writing plays,” : : 1s this the first ‘time: you havo appeared {none of his plays?" % “Oh. no, I appeared in . "The Devil's Disciple’ when it was first! kien in London, and f-am_happy-to suy It was a success.” 9 “Did- you'" feel’ sanguine of the success of ‘Caosar and Cleopatra?’ * “I neven feel sanguine of the suo cess of any play before it is prov duced. It's ‘all a) Monte Carlo, We may. feel that we know something about the play, but we don’t know anything about the box-office, Thi box-oflice 1s the Tast word, end we must walt for It to tell us whether the play is good or bad. Shaw was yery sanguine. He always is, for falling encouragement to the actora— in-his pinys,and-as actors are Hke (silly, sensitive children, they are al- | wa: in need of encouragement. |Shaw knows just how to treat them, jaud furthermore ie knows just what }he wants, I have been: associated with a great many authors, but I have never mot one to equal Shaw In knowing what he wants, Although degree. He is sensitive to the slight- lest errot, I have seen him wince when an actor has glyen the wrong inflection to a word. But he never loses his patience, he never excités the actors and everything {s made right {n dne time without anyono's feclings haying been hurt. One day }iast-sammer, when we were hard at it with ‘Cacsar and Cleopatra,’ he popped his head in the door and \called ont: “Those sre very good, |very brilliant Mnes you aro speak- ing. Who wrote them Mr. Robertson passed a hand across his face and rubbed off a wide snile “I tried very hard to get Shaw to come with me to America,” he con- tinued, “but I couldn't persuade him to take the trip. He sald that he had only enough strength for ordl~ came over here-he would wear him- sea and ail that-sort of thing, don very R00! i . of it, aa doubtless you tb agreet Speen Le to St a (Our Derby Sweeps Jeiebiniireicirininichiehitietibisi eich fa [ne doubt, that my solitary ride with | Gon, Se RS kes we we By Sir: Arthur Conan Doyle. frinieiei-eieleblel ieee eesti bit eeleleiel-iis [inlet (By Permiasion of George Munro's Sona) |~ Cousin Sol was particularly disheart- | f00d prospects. T think T{shoura, be \ahull fois you at the other, elie Ot A 77 Sal by George Stumres—Bers.) ent and out of spirits ght | Very gratef: you for your hesita- * With which speech Jac! sCoprsehey 1 a ne dout yirvinoy Nell, and Took upon, t-my-aeter toed ap qits—cse metered sale i + side of the | HINTS FOR THE HOME. Lemon Cake. WO cups sugar, 21-2 cups flour, cup milk, 1 Jack had Deen a prearranged thing be- | Of, Your good-heartednoss nef, waved his cane : ‘Ene! fey [anger in his. eyes, however, while Jack, |4@id I. thinking. In my enrt what & Riper feaaae ( by er sound | 1 regret to eay, wus decidedly ill-tem: {Very much finer fellow he was than tho. re ae Starker, who, after confessing hia |pered. It was {hin fact that made me /imn he was praising, | | ; thorns, -ralirns from "jon in ramble th . and things, We'd better «> nla state of the-w See ae eth RE oad Sa aaa lG through the woods | Fent_of he party, hadnt we Libla mate. of thew proposes, i shaving selected him COMBUNTOH,|—Hr-dhin'e-take—very tone toad mp didn't even. jump out of th the “great tree-triinks and heard the | volees of the tnt . d jooxing af mo with eager ETRY} tio distazce, Darty_srowiie a moles ny atrotied—stees )—+novgdy can tose mo," ania 1, “for murmured, as we branched off among e y” pt the shadow of | axis of tho field. fimkin, as everybody supposed. — . ig tofanswer_one or two -auestions; and{ Bubot_ whe planted them could Dace Ae RY manoeuvre was tO Tu © the -comtuiens come tn? What chance has broller ballete or bites whosa : ay lage fo REE pete ovisona © beneath weleome. pire Renee fehend, Slevated | apes ts thelr fortunes? 4 shi Dench yet ehaeaed” to Lieut. Haws shade! Jack retuse Ps Tees reader AR nade for Jacket the very “Why, Shaw and Ibsen ts even putting the greasapaint people out of Dusl-| Ol cops ene, thent- Ti gald-= energeticall eee tader Avarea in _high didgeon, |.top of tts speed, — fending to. te: ness. Thoro ain't’no call for ‘Very Pale Juvenile,’ ‘Hero-Fiush,' ‘Juveniles Ro- | turning a ittie white aaa you fonder of him than of me?'| glaring in a baleful and gloomy TORRID Thero asher re Jonger. Jacky bust,’ ‘Dark Sun-Burnt’ or anything tn grease paint et all, except ‘Sillow Young “why don't you Cane es ae, ., em nots z geMr Solomon Barker, while the latter | pore ex reed nt it for & Mo~ ori » in des SEs si fen’ and ‘Sallow Old Men,’ “Then the stage darkens and the curtain falls, i ‘Not atone the show business, but afi the atage supply people feel It, tos. Do —fryou-tilnk Archie -Ginn-1s guing to get rich deatgning costumes for Shaw and " \ d, It's #11 sallow, these Shaw and Tbeen dramas.” ee elcome toa cried Jack, gty- —— -flowenms—on—clttio - the road. Py iS bout it any more. | sanionw big hand close aroun joynning bralet aide of YY Can't YOu lalk dike—your old self x 3 it ial "Thats a merry way to spend an evening, ain't {tt == "YT Ok yery much, if two yeara tick; but on meeting te Tumttive Hy Cronin hm 5 it a @ you much, | ¥ 40, and pot be so dreads | a tmagio than . ae t tell you, ths. people ts pretending they ike that sort of thing, but that's! y ooking wp at him nervdisly; "DWTS |Siy sentimental | 1 oe hldsrandseeee wD the $8 “Whe nae face changed at that MON | nanoouyring ime fate a Little penk of Gehutigable Mr. Cronin had organized, I ike You) wild strawberries and mosses, and} What fun wo had crouching and run-| was tn ; young. | perching himpelt upon ; 07 se muehe to bal beside. 106, "Nowe all take yan ta ae OuKs! and how horritjed te otal _commpanton, Are you fonder of me than of him,| gentleman encore enthilsiastically, i | (aoe ly in & very tender yolce. fhe gare and distingutshed himactt by “T don't want Blste, Aimuya Retting caught, and sever Dy | his hand Morning Exercises, - -Liportant a matter, and it tm of HEALTH AND BEAUTY. foing qunaruped: “Wnat do 720 08 | AES aT STEER you’ devoted tan! minutes to deep) jbreathing before ah open window, filling the lungs aa full a Possible with freati| \"; ‘every morning, jfo a yory short time to @lvo to Bo Im- course, ing ths ‘pony a cut with hie whip, you mean to say that we are ex-| any possibility catching anybod . [rate beet Ww which rather astonished that oasy= jy equal in your eyes? Poor Jack! He was certaln} him. tunate that day. Even an accepted | =z | lover would haye becn rather put out. io answer. _ | come time, you know,” . | PiNink, by an incident which occurred ti, con: By \Margaret Hubbard Ayer, WP sca how it tn/* sald Jack bitterly; with mild’ reproach in, RistySieee 22] quring our return Home. It wan agreed E went SD FOMIsS t 1 i spye noticed how that cousin of yours) "yao wish you avauldn't bother ma[that-all-of-us should walk, ag the (rap Between lis dignity and his te ew Dotter to spend a half hour or three-| as been banging roaiid you ever since |sol'! Lierled, getting ausry, as women | Dad, been already aemt Of with, So | ie ludicrous thet: irightens have been here, You are engaged to) weuatiy do when the empty baskets, Bo we started dow him? Thorny Lane and through tho tleldy. 7 Quarters, but ten minutes will suffice to Were, Wo DU change the umual early morning gloomy. x y are You don't care for in the wrong: ‘another fonm of indigeotion, and | dent?” I, WuRhing throunh my MegS ott 9814 | pave a quarter of a mile by the field.” z¢ all Ayow hort : 4 pose yout . Goa! the distance In a al alr, ‘and exhaling| water, taken as hot as possible, will Were brought up with two girls and better go, round. ye pen heavemt, the bull went : shall ever He of you." rot to Mke. the Sisal ETAL ‘9 the da auld our milly je. Quickly as hi io aeomed alowty and ateadily,|| often cure this without the tee of medi: | “You might mot cave for him muoh |fing ‘never proterred ane a, chy but Cer ene eee idualy, teristing dia'| quicker. ati} candine, two. soomed 00 You would be succlolies, But there are other peascas of [and suill bo that’ said Jack, sulkly; land never droamed of marrying aren |sustache, gain the hedee Wunost At he Oly. into veined to Mid. your| courses You way your tose is only red (and holier of us spoke again until a}and then all of a sudden you ure told | “Ob, nothing, ‘That |ment: We } . v" ° folnt bellow fram Bob and Mr, Cronin | you must ctinose one, ; uA ve t and the }) eesond disap: | St the tip. ‘This sounds very much like ne, and %o make the | quadruped”. {n the pt, espondency dlsap'| Hig ''iroulation, of Hot enovgeh warm {announced the presence of the: rot of jother very uni you wouldn't and | field tea bull, and not a very good. [ot at Pouring and your) clothing, Keep your ankles and wriets |the company. ‘ Mtan easy thing | would you tecnnered one, elther; any ti} (sehar éerisw of triump! Appetite for break-| Warm and try and take regular exer- is pienld was] a’ auccess it waa ens x auppe ce not” sald’ the wtudent, font think, that: the ladl auld he Hy snctulied baie esa WAL ied (ust would acon re-| cixo_every di rely due to the exertions of the latter jen yc F ame mo Seer atta by hough r Snes |siniivain Totes lovera out of four I don’t blame yo! Bion ey es 1 ¥: * ane, {to see Jack turn, By taking tn’ deep draughts of | Blackhead: 5 fan an uidue proportion, and dt took all | swered—#ttac Wigraatonubpha: toads fueron eee sams the la dise in ut Nad’ mtart oft. Cor crisp, fresh alr, you aerate your oKneads, of hia oonvlylal powers to! make up for | stool with Nin atiol, think: vou sre | CHORE: albeit cul ‘a her tad. & glance in our direction thoughts as well ap your breathing or- NIXON—You should wash your|the shortoomtign of tho rest. Hob |auity rieht to be sure of your own} “Then coma rountt by the hetke an Kad patired to his room: Sy the ‘ | S ui remed a a Ded fi cI! Ti Reema to iy OO) ued a e road,” Sol. hada) : Appea. the dgrk places of your mind, All thes water and a good hygienic soap-fin ihe cold, ie emy {vo admirers |MUna Hike sthe: tric Tengheh gentikman'| rather tostily, “but [an ¢ neroes vi yadowa are noon dispersed and saaeaing the obstinate portions twice jspent choir tme in glaring, attornstely that be was, “it xonms ta me that | the. fleld! SEE eee aeanise bie ea a day ith i gamale-bale brush: apply=|}at me and at each otter. Ar. Cronin, | Baw thoms lean-excelont follow. Hel Don't be! a fool, Jack,'! sald ‘my. ti a r hue, js formula: Jorasic acid, 2drams; |} owever, fovsht gallantly mmainst the seen more, of tho world than Ta 2 ouncess rope water, 4 ouncem |doprowsion. making himect! agreeable | YG (ie In The Tent tac enttn brother. \judiolous tre alain “You fellows may think tt right toj*ore Iunch time to ail right” anid TL ‘It's got out role itis fending bun 0 For goodnees | Sim t Y yan Niches Cronin, “It's fs ake mo notice of ning and dodsing among tho Hitneriey | time and affeced to take 90 netkened though W Tio did tie only chin: tnto @ crorus of 1a ie ° 1 pald I. t AGRE me much or you st gating Or a atilo to ‘ hoo! 4 point of view, Renae God for that! responded | oF you wth delve ee rig eye ete wa Crone” old {rownte tenacre lot. when | Hekenied. Rig pasty Nth : i Tack dovoutly. "Tere f@ ome hope) Tore there were aymnptoms of sods gn | MT, Cronin pulled up, ard, remarked | italy ho, waa full OF qnis coat tats Cure for Red Nose.-~ [yet Perhaps you Wi come) to PINK | my part, and utter consternation, and) At he thought. we had better wet into |top. with his HAL FIR AMS Tle hts pure ¥ or in, ume, 2 a dofeat amo: Toa guttering in “ Ah ‘A; RA red nose a ‘usually just-| you fond of flint fool of a madical atu-| icnt tmone the Barker éaction, tied! eald Jack, "Nonsense! wWaelsuer was not ten yards behind Ney : > Khan's cayairy had been : an si $ : : i yur Afehan hero could no ver Flames a day of pore|.,, 2° nhs fool” eakd 1 tndienantly: |woe-begona appenmnce.” “Suposs: ya | <iXee but Wea father dangerous. We'd }ia his feos, ur Ate hrs hing jn the right place. which intmity, Una with fiction twice m day on tio'\y all, and exploring rulus ar drawing |csrtainty tant. one of my chicas turn tail at an old cow, but I don't ft foaudnlmity Ba! ad : ; ml nit One of, my oharacteria. 18 St ala caren aunt ane a (To Be Continued.) Jauntily and ewas- grxorem or rrmospra cmaprans, |tveen us ‘There was more sorrow than | V/V wont talk abont Tepany aor | cerepe ae ate tha pencaare iOS Wo clustered) about the stile my | watched the proceedings with anxt orrid ¢ungt | Jack tried to look as if he were enurely ‘after —the d-in-the view and in the prove His gato gener a [Dut accepted the offer with a grateful|out, At first. we heard shout 5 pails ___ CHAPTER Ul. jarilie- Hy mind weemed to have been | inughier coming echoing iro ‘Birection of the, vor radar— wl my and “tosatt eT) wr Jace ‘o fold by this! Siitde, cane: 4] se tne matt ton of f changing towara j that waa Ke for te no foscended to 4, cons yas he heard his usual gtate- of 0 How to TON Obtain |German Puffs. NB pint miJk, yolk 6 exgs, whitey ‘of 3, 4 tablospouns flour, 4 table- mpoona melted butter, pinch salt, ther, for he xaze1 74-7 putmog, Mix flour smooth tn a litte actosthe mitkewddche: ywellteaten eggs and other Ingre May Manton’s hth Fancy Blouse Waist—Pattern No. 5,515. yards 41 Inches wide, with 1-3 yard of all-over lace, & yards yard of. lace, Pattern i wes Sale ‘ig 2 Gall or wend by mall to THis EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- 16 fa cut in alzes for a FASHION DURE. Cup butter, teaspoon poda;-£- teaspoons cream of tar- tar, essence sf lemon. Add 4 exis. quick oven, Serve with this saucet Heat whites of 3 eggs to na stiff froth, 1] mix with them 3 tablespoons fine sugar, p> soup hot—waterand.julea..of 1 lemon. Cocoanut Pudding * imasiie ny surprise when — he went on to say that I wouldn't bo . best. for both ectors and critics to ° have no personal relations with one - yaTy use, and—that_he knew it ne slong without he has nde thatthe pleasure es} {that matter.—He tt soutes-of neven——_— he-ia not-an-—actor_thimealf, he has ——____ Hit actor instinct toanextradrdinary solf out meeting people, making ad- 2 shredded cospanut, sir in 3 table spoons cornstarch molatened in Mttle cold milk, Beat the yolks of 3 with 84 cup of sugar until Hent agen whites ‘over the top. thickly. ind —brewn_tit_the oven Daily Fashions . ae seems lit erally to bo no MIE the pos- si es of the: ptomnas— it is conatancty = tractive Torna, and it {, {¢ possible, ‘always a bit more vharming vfit the last and seems Snniah Ta vortie.— pty OD 6 includes “an une —___nhty—stiaped — yoke, it ho ing Its lower” and ts adapted ko to the gown and to the odd waist, In; ithe Mlustration tt 1a made of crepe de Chine in the now shade known ay sherry wine and 1s trimmed with velvet and combined with chomlnotte of Iacu. It could, however, with propriety, be made‘from aay material that 9z thin enough and sot enoagh to be tucked with success, and ae that {9 true of almost everything fashionable, It means a long: list of materials. “the Wuantity of may terial required for the um size is 4 yards $ yards 27 or 3 of banding and 34 $ and'40 {hah bust measure, AU. No. 2 West Twenty-third'atreet, Now York. Send ten cents in coln or stamps for each pattern ordered, Wheses IMPORTANT—Wnite Fatters? 3 ways specify alze want your name and ¢ddrese plainly, and al- ed. u CALD } pint of milk and add 1 cop milla Pour into _likely to become a pars