The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1906, Page 9

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The Evéntag World's Daily Magazine, Saturday, ‘Elcanor Robson a Home-Made CocKNCY cnaries Darnton Her Mother Taught Her Nearly au She Hnows About the Type of Girl} She Ploye in-A Tenement Trag-| edy''—Miss Robson's Heart Aches for Tina, but It’s Still Tame to Mary Ann, BY Por L. M°CARDELL. ROM Noveaber Hoodoo to November Skidoo, tromf] the 13th to the 24, and a di over for good: measure, it's been pe ate for me #aid the Chorus G'rl, She Worse enor, ofcourse, Who ead tha TI i an cy date? Well, ho was the Seventh-Bon kid. For on =f h we got {t handed cold from Olé Man Moneyton that he wouldn't have no box at the Horse Show this year. ‘Ain't man the wretches? Why couldn't he told us a | long time ago, instead, of brenicing it to us genUy of ‘telting { us suddenly at tho last minute? i “You talc “about your poor friends catarraning you. trams you half as much as your rich friends | | iret place, you don't expect nothing from the LAS for the eternal misftnees of things! "While I hed scarcely hoped to find the Tina of “A Tenement _ Tragedy” Mving her everyday Ife in a tencment on the lower ~ Y more wealthy guys that go through life os Sho hever-offerto-pay for anything, and New mB t 24, 1906. : — of His District.; i \A Love Mystery: Is She Alive or Dead? “By Seward W. Hopkins, Author of ‘The Smoke Eater.’ “¢ is appened that I ant Jarieton is dead." dead? What was oy 1 The Captain = + of getting them pecylsi and crabbing your east olde, I Was a tit disappointed to find her in an uppleh pile of some day graystoneon the upper west ald’, where Riverside Dplye “commands,” as owing of elegant wearing apparel thoy pay in opening chapters, a flne yiew of the real estate “ads" and other Horas Chow tit we got the ultra f-rishing snstitutlons of the Jemey shore, But what was the use of repining? There was Miss Bleanor Robson {n,, All her unaffected charm and a simple blue dress, with a little Chatelaine watch on its northwest corner. { “T've escaped again," she remarked, with a emile of satisfaction, as she came in fresh from a spin in her automobile, “I'm in conetant fear of being carTasted. You know, | wae arrested g short-time ego, of, rather my poor, puzzled chauffeur was walked over to the police etation. for going too fast to sutt the portceman on-thn comer, —f-went with him to explain, because he ‘is French and couldn't explain. It was very interesting and quite impres- sive, I feit greatly honored by the imposing escort of policemen that made my first visit to a police vtation seem Nke a triumphal procession, and the idge was eo very nice {ist I felt everything woul#’ Ue ell right the mo-} t I explained matters to him, This judge was!—— ‘A sergeant?” “Perhaps he was a worzeant. but he looked !!ke n judge. Well, the judge— cuiit on the 13th. ch a flop a \ Charles Di‘ly | oo I lett.the lat play I svrote: w ho leat one I wrote't was suro was tlie guods. Tt the funny papers. Ingham, and he looked {t over and told me tt would be it was'pruned down a Httle. .and when I called for.an explana- t jton's physician, | Vintent met hin at the door. CHAPTER ¥. A Serious Condition. ARIA uttered a-ecream, 1 helplessly looking iat her m Vincent ctiats over fher’up in hir-arm on her bed. . He went to the lkrary and took vp £85 | tho tranemitter. number of Dr, Ho gave the telepho Mr, We: automeblle stopped ‘before the ‘Haye you not heard of tho tragedy?’ aaked Vincent: No. What tragedy? Has {a dead. ing to vote this morning.” “Good heaven! Iiy. whom?" “By Robert Forrest, tile captain of th slestlan district Ho was shot while go-+ ng white on ates mocratic| cap- certainly boa 3 intnted | therbee He fearw me “little Fed acy} ull webct i want to obtain thea ~ agains. for ‘Lacy eit it sould nearest relatlvesthat arth, or in this country, to 22 Sphotnt you {ante in the ‘Amintatrntion: went to the offices of und had the dea 1 forminated his undertaker about and engaged tho or the Sergeant—wis on the other afte of a ratiing, and I was going to-him to explain that my chautfour didn't underatand because he was Frencli, poor fellow, when the poilceman, who seemed tco nice to make a complaint | about anything, told me that I must wait. They were sending out-a patrol | or something, agtt-while 1 was walting I thought I'd go over and see how | he was real mean, becauso he Lad iyo gig je But, ike tho wife in the song, that pollceman wouldn't let |’ me. Instead of giving me a chance to see things, he took me into m cor- poral’s room—I'm quite sure it was n corporal’s reoom—with funny pic- heard that Old Man Moneyton wouldn't have ® (ures and atill funnier flowers In a frame on the wall, When I asked the ECLA HN Aesth beeen ES policemen If he had a pair cf handcuffs. he thought I was gyying him. But lwhen I explained that I wished to know how they were put ®n, he brought MEDELE erbio haa AtweniethearOsAll heripoople hassecne.® pair of clips, I think he called Oe, and slipped them on my wrists, h horcerandtather once and chopped a large hole in his I was rehearsing “A Tenemont craeedy at the time, and I was anxlous to purvived the shock. know how dandcuffs should be worn.” oparations.— Not that We SxpESTES i zs eee sit attan: |" “Js ‘A Tenement Tragedy’ breed on the Terranova case?" I asked, Sie eae aaa losnan occ and Dos Montewrere | ‘It may be," sald Miss Robson. “I heard of the Terranova tragedy for hair the same dull red, and Mamma De Brans- (he first time {n Paris ome day last summer. Two weeks later, curlously eats to reat a lot of genuine eutslass ornaments {9 onough, Mise Graves sont me ‘A Tenement Tragedy’ from London. It ap- re handed the bee! We got an acute kindness for pealed to me tremendoutly, and {t affects me now as no other role has ever | because we knew, If the worst came to Gone, When we were rehearsing the play I was obliged to stop every now fsstons at east, For year professional 114 then and have a Iittio ery, 1 amd. filled with pity tor Tyna that 1 88 n case card so strong on, the Horse forgot everything but her wretched lnt and the hopeless misery that follows we-Kort-o™fatt-ne-tt theyd heen “mustered thar first-mement-of happiness when the coster lad makes her his aeite: I'm ffrafi-t-teel_too much" __ ‘There was a suspicious trembling of the eyelashe | | | | 3 1 ad taken out all the prunes there | box for us at us girls and Dopey MelKnight was there. nas OM hadn't tosscd'a skelly of the olf stuff er to study\the Tina type of ¢ get the rest from\my mother, She didn’t go down to Whitechapel last s' elrl. Iremembored what I had seen {s an Englishwoman, you know.” And you know, do you not, that Mies Robson's mother Carr Cook, who 1s still cultivating “The Cabbage Pat “Mothor has taught me all the Cockney tricke—the queer swing of the ehoulders, the odd way of cocking the head on one side that\reminds one of HHis Master's -Voles's thé short. sharp gestures that exprees & great_deal of Imeaning {na very small ann “Ob, mother aecs_a Cacknay boautitully! \She has Inade tt all very easy for me, But {t wasn’t easy during the perlod tightening of the lips. lof rehearsal, for what with an Irish. dlaloct {n ‘Nurse Marjorld,’ plain Eng- “One should always have one's emotions under contro! on the stage.” Jish fm ‘Susan in Scarch of a Husband.’ and Cockney in ‘A Tenement she went on. "There's such a thing, you kttow, as letting your emotions Tragedy,’ all in the same day, I didn't know what natlonallty I was half the run away with you, and then suddenly realizing that your audience Js sit-|time, Mary Ann's dialect was hardest of all. Mr. Zangwill told yme {t ting cold and indifferent. I know that I’ve gone to a play and seen eo much would be useless for me to go to Somersetehire ind study tt, because no one weeping on the stage that {t has made me feel there was no reason why I would be able to understand it if I did bfing it back with me, So I tfole should help out. It is nearly always best to leave the crying to the {hat Somersetshire character {n ‘Sold{ers Throe'—Learoyd, wasn’t {t?—aa a audience, But I must confess that Tina ts almost too: much for me. My working basis, and went ahead in my own \ Where there were ‘8's,’ ‘I heart aches for heras it has nover ached for another charaoter.” - jputbstituted ‘zed’s’ to give the words that soft, singing sound, and after con- “Not even Mary Ann?” |siderable work Mary Aun's dialect was completed.” “No; I could play Mary Ann with very little wear and tear on my teel- | “Then {t was all your own I love her because ig Mrs. Madge w then a 1 dotermined hat that Ola t onoyton would have given ts the {ekut, Bo far iat {a concerned, when Mamma De son {3 hanging around. regards Donald De Branscombe 3 a rum. Strangers that sea ing at hgme tmagine that Iater on a limited bout will be pulled off in 2 the other Bina pL will show up, ‘Ay, but he Brans private WISTER DULLINCW AD 19 SORRY Bur — ings. Mary Ann {s a dear, an {deal character to play. “Yes,” she answered, with a touch of Touchstone, “'A poor thing, but she 1s 60 gentlo, eo frail, 2o simple, so unselfish. Others seem to lovo her, mine own,’ Mary Ann mdy haye de—— Well, slr, what are you doing here? g too, for Iam always getting letters asking me to put on tho play again. I may do so, !f only fora few matineos, It’s a pleasure to play 3 ‘ary Ann, She {s not torn by any great emotions. Her most heart-breaking moment comes when she heara that the cat has eaten her canary. Tina has five little bursts of emotion, and the diMculty mbout, them {s that they're all nty alike, ‘The poor thi nothing but suffering.” __Miss Robson _pla: ‘as though she had bee! ‘Thts—to-a-tttie white-tos thet wagging its very best answer, “When I am too old to bo an actress any longer,” sald Mtss ‘Robson, catching up the dog, I'm“ gping to enon home for cats and dogs. I'm not particularly fond of cats, but I Ie dors, And I know I've been a’ horse some time or other—in some orerions incarnation—becnuse I sympathize “with horses-so_yars_keun s Meanwhile Ailes. Rabson S-frisked—tntie—the-reom—and stood “bo! ananas brought | can't see Hin Flarted to m1 fais muc “And the shock waa too Lucy? Th Let me see her at 0 to Lucy’a roos aa Vincent bh y went girl lay oy fear. we are going to have trou 16," said the phys: ad way, Has sho falnted cently, 1 mean?" "Yos. Si ‘ed when heard oft death, was caused by my ment tha {rest was arrested. “y thero any attachment be- Oa _otutectie paint tweén er and Forrest “Nothing so serious knew." He clanced at Marie -as he spok boon falating 4s that—that wo Budject 14 Marto, last the brain. you ater murdorer of her father ray, by nde an error In telling her. ould have told her he had gone out_of town ny and he being that he was Well, why of him at al “She was She wanted him to go.’ "Probably there {* more attachment than you know. It may have been the vas it necessary to. speak horror of knowing tliat Forrest did tt | more than anything done all that can by leave some medicine, and. sho must be kept quiet and watched constantly, Sometimes in recovering from. an Tack ane x -unter -these-try- ing elroumstances, thero ts a sutcidal tendancy. She must not be left alone a minute. “There are enough here to wateh her. ba a wise provision to have & couple drurses? “L wah about to suggest that xond_you_ two, I know them alleht) And Know Uist they aro resume they can be troate take a good deal on fatth, physiotan had Ise, But I have done now, Twill en t paved the floor of the hall silently, {n thought. T! having ‘solved’ # ared and he we problem, his out in lower Broad wRY, Tr wow Just a ba. | looking nucaln SONS the house he Lutter Las the same ft thes algioxk when titan automokile and, ho saw Dr. Wotherbea ly gray bearded man came up the stoop to» Ard tha out tted them. nald Wetherbea, its. atong. He ‘s the paychological York, or, for that matter, If we are to be cons erious and dimoult y armed tnd: you were so thoughtfol.* ucy since ‘I lett?’ but. | returned # potter see the ‘eitiont at Deaking of the funeral. Will utairs and enterod saz darkened. ‘The ntly by the bed, ‘The hush om equalled that of the, where Jay the murdere ne amy day: in exactly the tion she had beon in when W ther wus there before, ctors teaned over her, It. at all lt was In whispers so ent could’ not hear ther etepped to a window. and ed some drops into’ ® spoon, he sald to Marie, poured, down:her throat. AQ An Anxious interval physicians watched her carefully look: at the pupils of her eyes rand felt N ulse and made notes of erin on iat Would assist” thes Ing a conclusion. But-the gli aid "said Willis, “How uu give her?" | many he whould respond to that. At the end of ten minutes they saw j her open her eyes. asked ‘Lacy, do you ‘stared fixedly and vacantly at Her. stare. was-one to ehiit the _ blood.” Sas did not selmk. need T eTiis girl” wald Willis, Andes ta tarrinlenwcalcan shenwasnel ready In a susceptible condition whe i the cause for hor ‘collapse came, an it has done ite work," "Good Heaven. Don't know me?’ nan doctor! tell mp she ta mad!” exclaimed. Vincent. es or—nessly that Tt will quite some time for. her 19 resover, eo tells mo he! has engaged two sald Wetheroee—'Miss Smith % Harpet, They will be here f. all Insumetent, do—the bat all ns lett: Where ho nena Wu rit tr developments than warn tet ae and Tolihy all have a perso! ave # Iie reception room ‘in which to see my friends, and J fecl that the theatre fs mine body and soul—{f a theatre could haye a hody Most of them haye plenty of bo T has lost {ts soul. Be ee Gag = = etiwith Mra Zanewill) abe sald; “but talked t nim ie pi [sian atonerton to bo | only with two or three children In @ school. Everyone in the Jewish quar- Old Man Moneyton camo ter seemed to know Mr. Zangwill,und ho was halled right and left with an ‘unmistakable show of affection. That was before 1 played*’Mary Ann, Prajudicod For. In, 28 nati Thea a wercont Ww Even Daly's De Branscombe act tein fpr Boner MeKnisht-emoking ctrarettes, 1 habtt smoking them all the time,and asked Dopey noo smoke-oating act with cigarettes. gazing: ‘Oh, anything to kaep y HES Rint she we "Sho said {t waa a $f Ne wouldn’ \ WANT A). ToOT- HORN T00;-PA PA! on Eke the hot pot if we'd fust lett our hox to atretch a bit. Vi be tf you didn't have about ten thou- stogttho:sane—tine. way with tt. sinh DID WE TELL HIM. ALL NOU WANTED? SOLDIER, a CAP, A DRUM AND A. Be rst HORN? ALL : 1G Yee some poopie from the suburba said, “ft: _ By RW. Taylor, wr haa Content wea running. fresreistithiasaits13 rev: (To Ba .Continued.) "May Manton’ S im slinple, proakfast jack Mlustrated, very. satisfacto; of the of the sHaBt nts mand. the-materiatte elderdown Daily Fashions - the old dame Jocks vulgar cnough tote of thet + sratt too much’ style about tiem to be in the Smart | HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. ~ ~ T0o Young to Shave. {series of deop-breathing * - j i TD VAalaheutd Givise vou ie ao [YET Gay Wetove: an open wsae ane. [ERED UA let Tor oop SCHEME ! [Vit WIDE, THESE nothing I regard to your son'g|l0& t9 lungs full of air and exhaling TOYS ¥ WANT. 1M BUYING NOW BEFORE TOYS IN THE | sain slowly and carefully. There ts not space hero to iyo you a Ist of thees exerclses, but Jf you will song moan addrossed and stamped envel- ope I shall be glad to send one to you, Bad Blood and Boils. J. M—Your blood is evidently in & serious condition. You should * CO a doctor at once. A_ bol! which has lasted for five months ts not to be regarded Ughtly, and I should advise you to lose no time in haying % attended to, __ HINTS FOR THE, HOME, A Breakfast Dish. AKR some siloes of broad, cutting off crust. QMfake a batter of three “ese and—ono-pint>of mitt, Sonk{ the bread in It; put dome putter In tho | * frying pan. try the alicos of bread until brown, Browing a\ beard at eo carly a n age ts thirteen, ome hoys':beards ma-! ture sooner than| otters, and it would | be the greatest mistake porhaps ine e duro hy akin to use any proventive. Nas tuo should always bo allowed her course in such matezs, mage Too Thin, L. K.—Your lack of chest doyelop- ment {9 probably caused by too + Uttle exercisy. Fortunately this :4g a trouble which can bo easily rem- edied “at home by going through a BUYING MY XMAS STUFF NOW AND HIDING IT UNTIL LATER, SEE? THE RUSH, EH? CLOSET HERE tern a JUST BOUGHT BABYS XMAS TOYS —HID "EM AWAY Of beef may also he used !f properly TILL XMAS , cooked, Chop them fine, season with | butter, pepper and salt and nerve hot. {The ‘eXoplonce of thia dish depends yooh the way in\which It Js cooked. - Anything which fa warmed oyer must be nioely prepared. Fried Rice. NY old rice left from dinner may | be made with the hands or with a, lett from a previous meal, cutting spoen into cakes, iteoctra ai X them in small ploces and hoating them thick, dipped tn an omg and ae Ne (Pith S970 oF three ewes ntirred DN cgntete rate moot feraane Ham Relish, 'N economical relish ts made ffom pieces of cold ham that have been in colored «ilk, will 3 is —avorn akirt of are ple dtannelotte: vn 3 for, thw he skirt 1 onailo dealrned absolut turn-ovpe ¢ and wit that art Soth and conventon rt ia mad six-gored m. Tho hunntity of mate 1 Inet i for Lae mr \dium inclet ‘ inclies wido if it DD fw out in crn No. bit Call or rend by mail to Moye) to. TON FASHION BUF obtain House Cost OOOO THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN U, No, 21 Weat Twenty-third street, New} York. Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and alk ways specify slae wanted.

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