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The. EERE Daily Magazine, Tuesday, January 29, SATE TE, EW PLAS Evening world’s Miss Ellen Terry Converts Brassbaund and Every- wos such a nie event: ‘ectly would» alwaya and aw eA DSI she had nothi Conversion? the tune se of that. fn wricomp that brow att when: Mise top to toe. tripped upan! ti Roatep that had all the Rrace ar ‘Jay since + +t—ef-wening...ceure 4nd A vehen Ivtina Tory eee a tyomensdanzer mhen ‘ahe found bergelf jn tho tM: Jare, Fas Lot nolatge binek: praadsbraw-t Tppad wit! took off ten appearance, 3 eclebrationta London Ja Ang indeed Migs to have two! Axpivin cmwhen Shiw sat (here In-all vie guping 4 Filled at Sites Torry towering: iget! on Shakesj-care, and KM) only falr tothe play arcieit should pay oritic.Jiu imight_ har Miss Torry, known that the mould throw him into the rshadow. Te weeing ROE) land's most chaaming autres in flow-} ‘\ng robes and egually Mow!lng speeches may_regand ordee of things with wonder and d!*-| senses and caused her to exclaim as he But there 4) no cayse for tears.| dashed out, “How. gloriou How gracious, human eclf With the fem |“ \t,""Jumes Carew, who has returned entirely ¢o her-/to his native land as Captain Brass- seta Prassbound and] bound, ts the only member of the coim- Teelf, ~atis mothers’ Pra pany who appeared In Ube play In Lon: | {pine pide of the pla: rot to mention every other min, with a kindliness, patience | naval officer, Last night he acted and clavorness thet smootne out eyery- ‘thing and everybouy, 4 At-would be, a siily waste of words tO! with Misy Terry at the Court ‘Theatre, | pay that “Captain Brassvound’s Conver-| Mr, Rudge Harding was acceptable as Is oa 20 y{the judge, Sir Howard Haliam, ond gion ta "pauly- eonatructed.”Bome may.) toe Geores ‘itor wes “asthe; re Sb cockney, Belix rink nis brigands, ipay-that, Lot ‘em. fa a relfet to come upon e play that | water, alias tbat Uke “ths ninety and-nine-to} gutterenipe,-desoribed -by_Shawas ian} |*1ove interes olan Ts . It is also full of a cs in kind Hment, {tia Jn a class by itself, Tt will | of justice. Lady Ceclly says, “Let justice |doubtiess puzzle some, but It certainly /44 Gone though the cetling fall" While Teqtertatned last night's audie: jeudience {s seldom entertains When Mise Tecry. threaded a neodle CHARLES DARNTO! seftha, th owing had cromsed her -¥! of tho house, he istered te what Miss Terry had y au st » Oh WIth her plaii Kewing andy (and amused. The play didn't youcunder the arm." It was 5 yofit, ard Miss Terry e wen wf terest med and try the! very catatorrable tn {t ce had only werved . She had nothing to do but, talk and. Brow fone out in| ht the pliy ton} Lady: Cecily white from | She saw ‘good to st ago wetter wad Duoy-/in the face of af. “hog silver inher /@n_ ordinary woman tutn py. a more tian | yi hor, But} Mont from her bel and Jook - pleagart—and she did {t -beasit!- was lost in: admirition ahe Ww: tat i a Woe The Mace Jack’! won this compl: en enforéed ba yikaye lier acclue to his pSoullar kind Tor face, Her tolal tack of any sense of “Brandy [Dower Of Gidis, thetke ard omer pice linresque gentlemen wis _datteops.— ‘Tr says isec\ srother, “the upright judges, “+ fiom the! vergeince “of Brasg>mund, {| whose mother he had ripbed, he was /Qile wiling to De-cacriol off into the ! Where’ another us. Bragebound, rutked and threatened: under her ‘her_way, y ’ Vo Lady Ceciy's, unfailing good hu qieer fish of a play wae pmar, Mins Ty added her’ easy good jura: bature. with the result that the com- Gretna tt A yids, Irresistible.” She twisted isa Terity walled off Uie rath “To Beat Fe, and wren x [she turned prosecutor, in the trial of ho |f2 & ngole tribe that made short work of “undett } was no case. the ous touches by Miss Terry, In the ncene where Mrassbound asks’ her to {ary “Det 4 “ae cont mander she added a note of seriousn tor Lady | florious! And what an escape nad-put-him-on-the-right-track- by-ex+ plaining to him that she had been able = —In-the} to—manage—peopie—by—never- aliowing pares ‘Terry seems just her good, | herself to feel a selfiah tatereat in any one person. don, There he played the United States the company ga & whole was not up to the standard of the one that appeared sneaking randy-Blace Jack,’ roduced—by nature in—a_city z cwe-gtre-tp-our-evenings and-our} Sooo PP) onarmcter” worth “meetng, \@ollars, To say that this play ts one in| xi "Tom: Paulton, as an Italian of jw hundred would be dealing tn small |organ-Krinder uiicestry who falls under | Tt fs one—on the other play-|the tender care of dy Cecily, was amusing. With only one woman and no ‘aptain Brassbound’s Conversion’ is unul its very last mo-{ full of character, surprise: a Ellen oa on] the ceiling docan't fall. justice _in the conyentional sense is oértainly done for, By Corn.M, pv.-Greenleat. IBN things go wrong Uil you feel plumb ste, “Taen-te-ths props: time to-klek. sare Nover sit down to review your plight, ___But_kfok, friend. Iiek with "Over tha traces, When things go wrong til they “make you stek sure and wulck, are conifng fast and-thick, —— 9. = Then is the time to dreak loose and kick! aicksanda surround your fect, ctok-ke astear, ——_Never-giveup while life remains— A kick oft takes you as far as bralna, It you're fallen flat, with no friend to pick _ You up, then that Js tho timo to kick! Kick tli your nimble expertenced feet Can reach to your own patched, trousers weat!— _Then, keke with your strength and your might ‘easy street!’ youl return agatn, ne pope Hert Jobleeteieibi-e PEER “Waiches of the Night. Two Nocturnal Adventures —twith Yaforeseen Endings. = books that t# Inj did exactly the same thing, each man sVbat is in the Brahmin’ the Brahmin'a, heart, BANAT DHSS ALindu Proxerb. you nor 1 knew the: evitin (he world, HIS began {nh a practical jake, but! Ugtous people are deeply suspicious. Tt hua gone far enough noW and ts {They seem—for purely religious _pur- getting “Berlous, Platte, the Subaltern, being poor, had a Waterbury watch an! a plain leather The Colonel had a Waterbury watch ‘also, and for guard, the ip-strap of a curb-chain, Lip-straps make tho best| 1 4519 may be trusted to surpass all ‘They are—strons ands Siiors.'The Colonel and wife were of short: Between a Up-strap and anordl: |tat type. Init the Colo Snary leather guard there Iw no great i Waterbury watch and another none at all, swatch guards, Kick! L-your might! or.they'l have you beat! E ote fries + taking the other's watch. , You may have noticed that many re- Poses; of course—to khow more about Intquity than the Unregbnerate. Per- haps they wero especially bad before they became converted! At any rate, in the Imputstion of things evil, and in putting the worst construction on things Innocent, © certain type of good _~ wife was | the worst. She manufactured the Sta- tion seandal, and—talked to-her ayah! Every Nothing more need be said, Tho Col- ‘one invthe station knew tho Colonel's | onei'a Wife broke up the Laplaces He was pot & horsey man, “home. The Colonel's Wife stopped the but he liked people: to beleve he bad Ferris-Haughtrey engagement. The Col+ been one onco; and he wove fantastic jonel's Wife tnduced young Buxton to sioriea of the hunting-bridie to which keep his wife down. in the Plains this particular Mp-strap had belonged. through the firat year of the marriage. Otherwise he was patnfully/ religious. (Whereby Nttlo Mrs, Buxton died, and Piatto and tho ithe baby with her” ‘These things will Jolonel were dres#lNg he remembered against the Colonel's atthe clob—both tate for thoir enxage-| Wife vo long as there ix @ regiment {n tents and both in a hurry, The two watches the country. That was “Rut, to_come’ back tothe Cotonel-and were on 4! Platte, They went their several ways jahele-telow the lookingg-mlass—guarda from tho dreasing-room: he Colonel hanging down, dined with two chaplains, while Piatto That waa carcjessness. | wont to a bachelor party, and whist mnged first, snatched A \watch, | to follow. Jooked in the \glasa, settled his tle und Forty ‘seconds later ‘thé Coloh Mark how thingy happen! If Platto’ gals nade Rub the new. saddle-pad- of bi of the terriy would the mare, nan would have ecreamed fF hep; | ahe soon convinced a | | United Stat aval officer that there AN the Iittle artifces of the woman | Were giVeli ie moat delicate and humor- || agus hs renee that was not broken unt! the booming |. the change fo ie BAW | oe nig “ship's gun brought him to. his Hrassbound with, fair success, While | Mra Hit early tn the mor and ploked crash of Platte’ morning. and his yolce callt She knew Platte ond Uked him, ‘That day she showed him the watch and beard bis story, aide, winked and said ‘Wo -you mean to say his overshoos to fit right “People wo: {is thore anything déno out there for th jearms and lezs, to chop It oft! You_dan't ernest me to do It, “No, + ("There waa a bo: cays ended ‘by 4 you wouldn't let him Enews 6 Very, plas] “and so tt ts“ tectared Mtr, dar wing shat: weendn, wilt:! nickel. let alone a dime. to Clear aff a pavement three timi "Now I know you'll go out there and got all heated up.end perspiring and The Man from Boston- 4 Plain Tales from the Hills + Aeleiieleeietinieteieie tt + NOt. -have- worked ~ througa— Uke _worl;-ing!- Bhooking—old-mant. With his-pelic leather and the old pad-into U ai withers 2 o’cloe! sea. the turf, like as! an in! home, Aurk again how Kismet works! would not happen years. out hi ‘ne bar carpet. accepted. been an ordinary pointed ave kn away on sound and oneinal, | of tho Colonel's explanation proved its truth, Hee once more the workings of K met! The Colonel's wateh, which with Platte hurriedly on to Mra. chose to stop just Larkyn's window. where she saw ing, recognized tt) up. Bhe had heard the ‘cart at 2 o'clock that kyn's Jawn, numes. Seis 1¢ Best Fun of the Day arr Family's Daily Jars By Roy L. McCardell. waat are you. going to do? Jarr as ake «aw Mr himsett andy I'm going to go out and chop the wramacies of me I NGW-YOF And edte Rot pete nts ten un every oft'hia gloves Phevcl ait ah nnd nttncked the And tice she saw him tak uswonted work x onvhin overs off the: aldewalk ng AtonR TO’ "a head. off about ire it will do you good, getting & It's a cinch! ta quacter’s. pionty spranching man, ed appealingly at the ap Mra. Jarr, quietly. . t on Ate” bracing, 1 get plenty of exer r “Tt would-be fine for yow tf you'd tv ule out acd take.a Hitle walk with me once In a while objective point of. my | replied Mra. dart, coldiy, “I must de- stand up on the scats and eat the programmes if she goc ce-to.dress up {nh an ankle bracelet nd an autonio- and do the Silome dance. She never saw tha But sha ties she could do 1E You wee, no- 1a contemptuous glance, adh a bloke to wolk’in this worthor for two Dits, ain't like you that-pute’ an honist wolking man.on de bum, ky person £ay "You're a nt World's Fair, only at thatyume ttt ‘mie are? asked Mr. Jarr, etamping bie. feet to wet)- f you went o church as often 22 ner tt would bo better; for you morally, physically and a think IT was nothing but an dld-adt toh ut net your {cers at rest I'm rot to chon that ive’ off tio’ sidewalk. se AWhelie ellrred peute tite sudden activity, may I ask?! “What stirs mé to everyting about thts house: * round here uliloas T-dg itt) My George! that ten has been ure, Sure eo days, and hore of you think enough of puopl i or something Ike that and then work up to the. really Heavy tole. Or. maybo she favors. Jullet as a boginning. h tha.case Ifshe has a figure ike a, weok's washin: by the pound she would be quallied to vaake a. 1 Sho In pained to observe that hor arrival eroatos no pronounced furere in the =Sho Judsoa that we “nm ropolitan papers fiav Mr. Jarr, weakly, for he was played out and sick of the Sonald the husky person, "I. worked for a wartian once who of: Jin.and promiged, to gimme six. And she reniged.” aald Mr Jerr, noting that hia wife wan't looking, and pass. golng to Guis’s,. I'm golag out said Mts Yatr: quted Mr. Jerr. from him lolter at the kitchen stove, he was aware of g excitedir in fram: the front. + ecoiston whi has run! offiwith the hatdhetinnd’ the akavel! ern Hur’ at Pythian Hall for the cestume: of Greelan that old | e¥ York editors m the eried, "and he at have mislaid the marked e s she sent them, Gut sha can alt for ter tiuinnh., And sheidsoa: She Onda she ts up ngatnat + uinch of:the mtupldist managers-—ewot-he 1 real talent when It onmex from a tis two athdying the wall-paper designs In the Ume belng orudy commerdialism haa got true renl an and sitting on Rer trunk of an evening. Sy, t} When'her namo Ie hung put/in rn door, she has onty sorrow yand pity) for y who aro willing to break Into the bi snid Mry Jarr, with the alr of a moral hero, no good and TT WEEN A Kom eharct any ey “Resttes—t treater o_you? asked Mrs, Jarr, but you might have, hero who offered to do !f for 9 cent ‘ou sald w quarter waa enough’ “NvhenFwns- a kid was miedo gota) 1 sald Mrw, Sarr, ' He sald tt was Ume toed downtown, at day lis remarks anont the working Classes were more than canstle, a hita-nhe waits for the’ Ume those poor weaklingn of the way of the'cliorus. - By G coming —ip-throash—a-trep. eorge McManus nday ad, of a race-Upater. GAKED Berns? I T. THIS WAS A: k Thro’ Funny-Glasses ~ By Irvin.S..Cabb,.- : Mttle while at this season of the year there Merkos from the red Umothy a young Mary Ander- son with the hool_of Expression and Elogution ts coming in_ 0 Blve New York the firat deep tirill it hak had alnce Clara aoquit leaning ove r-the footlinhteoand crying genuine lap of the leader of the orchestra, dust now. when John the Baptlst'« head ‘Is belng served Jerotte all along Broadway, the new-comer js mpt shucks stilt on. The prize pupil of the a effect that she could mabe tem f that Is practically the same thing rhymes with ttso}t, would be better tor her % Especially ts this apt to he Any Umo'they played Jultet. L-reprossed peapld,' or else the met: notes That (he Desig Beam i sho -Feolted the Charigt: Race ret ot Ue now pubis re 1 ttna cn herdrms. The/tarsess” Jed ruffians who cannot weain ‘to ahi noe, 'She spends the next. year or ter offices of booking agents, For crowded into /a hall bed= fol what a sorry ft is Ahwad of | There can/. terature forthe ° THI: FUNNY PART: It nearly always tuina oC Mat atdut thir thine the-mtssuided sister-gets_to-be- 1 Broadway star tho lofly-ilndet lady becomes a candidate for the-Lin-spear.jdb, TY©VINCENTS 9_ DVICELOVERS QEAN -B-E-A-N! FROM THE LATIN ‘ B zg NO EXPLANATION! at bls paying her the sli that attention. attitude toward men._T! Shall She Show Her Love? AM «young xirl_of seventeen and | desperately In love with a young This young man calls at my house and even takes me out occasionally, but an yet never showed me directly that he cared very CAN YOU DIRECT Ax a matter of fact I HE TOR RESTAURANT WHERE | CAN OBTARY IS THAT 124 BEACON HILL? THIS 151, MATILDAL BEANS FOR OREAK = FAST PLEASE PAMISHED! LEAVE ON NEXT TRAIN! Indifterent to | Do you think that if T acted-as If) cared for him a great deat Ne have acted as it 1 Show that you tke an interest nim, -but-do-not-deriare your love, His Love Has Cooled. AM-a-younk girl nineteen years old, i min dove with young i We Givesworked? woven During that timo we were very good fflends, and he alwaya called at my house to.nee.me, but I haven't acen or yeavdsor ben nince—t tetthtr, pines Sorensen ad ye prrrmt reer Hoe henge sak tree dove ” #tiendliness-+s.—‘Hucouragement.”?__ champagne cost 10 cents a quart probably no one wodid buy or drink it. would be worn anly in the kitchen, In other words, as soon us anything becomes ridiculously cheap and-easy-to-ac~— no ono yalues it any mare. s rue Wal The ell whony any ———— man can kiss ta tho girl that—sooner or later—no man will The_sirl_wha le: ghtest attontion ts the igir! who will find herself minus. Mer want the love of a girl whoso love they must work to win, By this Ldo-rot mean that a gitl shoul be coldly atost or contemptnens hy Her- ein vast difference hetween frank friendliness and “en- couragement.,” Jat a man—ree-you Hhe bin, but iiot Mint you ke “hint tater than you like other men, Thix rouses the spirit of cempetition—so potent a factor ii_courtehin — sents ar Z = pie pirtwho-ynlnes-heraelédighly alll cazte-othera tovalue, girl who holds her own self-respect cheaply If chiffon velvet cout 6 conts a yard It ow, In no other clroum- A man see she Is overjoyed: nust not wor me. Do you think gh he does It lowks aa it hia love has grown cold % him a note oaking him pecome of hint, Let st be r wentimantat——tt—he— dew: nol answer you can do nolilng mo 'He Threatens Suicide. Dear Ietty: | AM head over heels In love with & { $ Young tady-seventeon years old. She is at present keeping company with ‘a fellow that she does not seen To care for. She said he wowld commit sutclde if she ever went back of him, and at's the only thing keeping her back, HRS ie Very Hide. Slate QD E jas every riche to discard the other, CS oS ee eS et woeeweewew fii isiele t Kipling © May Manton’s Daily Fashions. =i atts Nked trad coverinzs for the emaller onl. dren and 1s always oe By ae ‘ tho Duteh sort UvuseRcepiag, hearts ares us bad ransorous hatred 1 the tenet er the Wite's uporing- he mare's gious training, watch to the Colone! explanations,"* I should send | Wite-und-ask Larkyn thought for a minute of places—whom when -Laplace-and—his-wite-belleved. in gach other—and answered L T think tt will do her good remember, we must never tell her ho | even little jor ae they make of Mrs. Larkyn, and ereed of the Co when she was coml: the morning, not have reared, bolted, fallen Into a ditch, upset the’ cart, (ising over_an—aloe-hei Larkyn's woll-kept, law: Witt belief only _m; the Colonel's. ‘on the villainy of men. & hat she had done, tt was atch her unhappiness, and “farthing attempts she mada 1k -from_ the sation. »But nie. pew and laughed heart thes’ had heard thi had known | iny. gorge § can be-made froma of _matectiin Here are two that al- tow of alive : “1 will nend | tiings, and while 1 an. Taobl, the watch and guard few from his Walstcoat—aa sword hops out ot that his own watch the resiless suspicion she wis in the Colonel's possession, ere wate Into old Laplace's mind, a ltt! the scabbard wh feu de Jole—and rolled” and rolle the moonlight, tll tt stop) window, Viatte stuffed his handkerchlet uni the pad, put the cart atralght, and went; knew thet an | find good holding-sround in | Of the Colonel's Wite,” The packet and a pote containing a few remarks on the Colonel's calling hours were sdnt over to the Colonel's’ Wife, who webtin—her-own room and | took ‘counsel with -he: 1. there Wag ono Woman ynder hoa’ Platte said Re 2-plece can can seoing that ‘< strapped Watorbury. with be made of taffeta. Under a| note from Mra. Lariyn + ¢reate a mmall trouble for at Mrs Larkyn. knew polnon dropped would would merely Lo aye and tr ow It happen: disappoared; story Krew Krenter. Wie talked and prayet b: she was tired ed that the Colonel's Wife t bear ner punishment aa pest she Now Mrs. Larklyn was -a friv- none would adapted to the thine once jn a hundred ner matertaln anil la Toward tha end at his dinner | with tie two Chaplains, the Colonel it | Is) walstcoat. und table to look at some Mission Reports, of the watch-guard worked through the buttonhole; and the waten =Plttto'n watch heart of her : for lawn and other You seo, being de Gamo to pellevo! wins hable fabrics nal Sin, she could ul the Colonel must have * somewhere that night, and | fore, preferred to stand senton: leseer count of rambling Into other ps compounds out of Platte forcot about the watah b fter a white, and moved down with hin regiment. home when ber husband nuch, and jump ft can be Hned ulotly oa to the | ‘ throm hout_ond con- carer found” It next morning and kept it! : holy fervor It was Mra, Larkyn Larkyn Was tt rey olaus, lady, and cal i Then the Colonel went home tothe (, Guat Pantysaliod wifo of his bosom; but the driver or colonels Mite: aald-—thad naieteo the carrlago was way. 80 the Colon seemly. hour and hin exc the | Coloeel xKo] of wrath wpe destruction,” Pait1t..was gvod for her. the -Golonit, ‘anthers tie crecd-nusp i warm and nie n—te mihi, have erred many Umes bofore a mer ful Prowidep | worthy an instrament aq Mra. 1 . Abe Mentioned o people as Well. (But the Colonel's rd | never forgot. ite way the Platte was quite right when he The mintrust and the tragedy of it—| ch we outsklers cannot seo and du! In—are killing are making If elther of her i Ultie body.) | Wher shedding watches uty coupled with the fact rival on thy previour night, was At this coint. she rose up and sought | her liusband. ept the ownership oc the pesought him speak the trat may sound too. sudden a revul fe DUH say if a man or woman) na ker a practice of, and takes a d Maht In, believing and | of people Ingifterent:§ purpore hin excise for a lohg-W The very baldness fe Colonel wretched. Tread this story. they ving evil “of | its being a fairly true a cage and can spreading evil very. near and X- | think. alpo. that the ie ‘atoh was too Ti neer bolrz shelled by for bis soul's sake, jn showa that) ¥ fe denied acres, two bad words. Then a stony silence, -held the Colonel's Wife, while a man is breath five tmon: that followed {= no affair It was-imade up ot gunk chéeke: ding. It 1s | tis, Na well | pocta ahould not write abou do not understand told him that Bappom and different branches of the Ser- i ir ar Spee Eph sentence ink heraele, 15 and substitute Gunner. for Sapper the ho. moan worry of moral’comes just the same Call dr send by mall t THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN TON FASHION BUREAU, Nov. 2 West Tweaty-tairs street, Now York. Bend ten cents in cotm or stamps for each pattern ordered, » IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and af ways mpecity sisd wanted, another rated fact the ag racing, wil tie worst nocklon could have | equld draw of mine or yours, fy y and ‘0; | Sage’or old age In. the’ same times see a wompn who! would: have Joan of Are | Another cen. iy i, climat Bees | ye eee alte h ‘How. disguat- Child's One and Two Plece Caps—Pattern No, 5574, : uwe-ploce cap is mady of white silk, with revers, In true Dutch style, ntily embroidered by hand, while its polnts are held by rosettes of ribbon, ° aid that tho Joke had gone too far,| and there is a litte friil of ribbon finishing the edge of the cap: the ane-plece model 1s made of lawn, with the revers of ombroklery and trimming of Tawn ttea and strings, Tho quantity of material required for the medium sizo (1 year) is, for either < i of them cap, 1-2 yard of material 21 or 2-8 yard 84 inches wide, with 11-2 yards of raf} depend. upon : Kikstandinnicel telscie Pattern No, 5574 ts cut tn slzes for children of lx months, one and twa years of age. Tat nar pow te worry, He wil it commit sales. Tf mia. NCEP ate