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~ {ter them-tath nto her inp |. planned to give another play by Mins The Evening World's Daily. Magazine, sit before puccess OF adr softrpot trtts-heart-after-all. No dodbt,’ she xatd, “All theatres goers are mors or teas aympathette, Wut 1 think the play will exert & tronger. ay In the Anne itedees here? “You going wi of akes to the road? engagement | go on playing | Inm yols ruin: of playing a te in Chisago, 01 the samo part wit opinion a lonz run in evs to en actor, He-sora on and on “until suddenly: tres that he haa} _toat some z. inay not Know} t what it ix, but he does know that It ts something he will never be able to regain, The 0-called eriiation temp: cannot-nt 8 heavy grind. Like everything else, it Hovimng te lett bur thes her hands, then She made a hollow pty gesture andy broke min an ¢ Tt {a Imponsible,"" she went on “to give seven performances a week and Keep them from becoming sdechantcal. T cannot give more than three good “performances fn ‘have emotions by gina notion. must be feft, It ctured, 1-know that yan wou ag. But 1 do not agree with Unieas I feel what 1am doing, T make others feel. ‘This, at anys od get when 1 med nl performance, , To 1 hoart of an audience I mukt t little woman oom expression her hands nervously {oup-in-her-ehalr, It was the flecting sort of thing that had broug)t a lump te my throat more than once at the theatre. “Hut one canpot muffer.to order,” ahe “gold, from a cornes of her chair, "Eve actors are only human, and they grow tired sometimes, strange a thla may seom to some managers, I had to give up for threo years once, but now that tho olson is In the-blood, I Kuppose T wall fo on to the bitter end. ‘The groatoxt auffering I endure comes be- fore ‘he productlor of a play. ""e had Ay ty pole Crothers called “Tho Coming of Mrs. Pat,! when (t was suddenly decided to |put on ‘The Three of Us! 1 worked, very turd on the play with Mian Croth: Vera; tien came A long perlod of? re- hearz}, aid by the time tho piece was ‘yeady fGr pzoduction my nerves -were In alireds, ‘The night-beforo the ‘open: “Sng performance I had nightmare, A thot doa were tearing me to “pleces.:! Ey Charles: Darnton. faxen ha But she didn’t look bappy. uid Miss Car Unusual? Yes.” But then Miss Nill- sin for a ok {n_ luxurious contentment against tified with “ money" and lau- with o Inzy smile tt ren) as bulit for them, Nillgon to Mer cities {ing plays until my eyes ach [have one by a forelen ant, ree |—that—but I yt can only he! of courte; (ie-matter—to—be—ronaideradh——That—t#- of {rst lmportanca to the mana, Whore alm i to have a succerstul pl The waccensful pla: Isjan unknown quan pifuned by on Lawn before it waa tnken iy rence, Wee Tits was the at home, ‘This seas Ch ta uld not feel what | In—the-picture up thers,’ noring In the after- face haif-in-the Eyor 5 and herp. Nillson saddened by esses, when they find They al, - Most actr d that they n spend thelr ing a pose, indigestion, where else. "The: automobiles and other But there was no atitomobtle champing.its Miss Nillson’s d wh her wake as she came de Jark skirt and a close“fitting white-knitted jarket- She slipped into ach hy glance In my direction “What can-I say that w saat! For a moment the two of us t Three of Us. ; no dog barking nstatrs In a plain fend with-n. 1 Iriterest you?" ked of “The Tt occurred to he litle play might have led Miss March 9, Saturd 2. By George McManus a The Newlyweds--Their Babv CARLOTTA «© Oo eee NILLSON;: # # Can't Have Emotions; a 2 iy the Clock. _PAPA'S DOT NICE PLANO. YOURE ALWAYS THINNING OF US AREN'T OING TOBE AMUSICIAN! WONDERFUL HVS TAR FOR MUSIC! HE KNOW THAT THINGS OUT Or TUNE SOMETHING FOR MAMA! MARVELOUS! RTS 1 DO OELIEVE HE'S TRYING TO PLAY A MARCH! KNOWS WAHT BABY WANTS! YOUNGSTERS FULL OF. MUSIC CLEAR TOHIS. {ake ine—to- the theatre sometimes, tunes give mo nice presents, But not ea, think he ts stingy? J don't want to-marry-tdm-4¢1 Sp wriths a girl correspondent’ And fier question) ops fn broad field for reply, Of course I have po means of knowing whether this particular ewain te stingy or not, Ju the fact that he “mometimes gives nica presents," | should faney not. Stingy people don't, es e cule, etve “nica a sent P1bink. however, thi girl gives far too much heed to the gifts and. too little ta j It In not always the man who aquanders his whole Ary on presents, theatre sents, &o,, who maken the ‘best or most generous: id. Ie often haa @ way of conti « to aquandor his salary i-doea not always squander tt on his wife. The girl who shows a ; a him to spend much money on her amusements, &c., ts seldom the | tea bes! Men get an fdea sire ts extravagant, and an ¢! y foo pularied men care to Invest tn, By all thiw.t don't y tn Feason.on the gtrl he ts engaged to, nor e. Dut there ts @ fimit of ny Up ney tobe married a wweethenrt expect or permit him to exosed tt An Excitable Young: Man is Paton She connor tees ear Batty: r 8 i $100 e month | AM a young man seventeen years| 1s now tee oe tem Are RONDE! old, of a very excitable nature ami re to ba vary jealous. tota vicious degree. My adored ta aix- oat wretchedn teen-yenra-old,-tut-mest-of-her_tender| sre-twanty-oha thoughts are directed toward a young =. hart whom I hold ax my bitterest tivat| Marriage on $42 Per, 1 call_upon her regularly, but do not} Dear Hetty: ko to complain of'the affection that | AM a ybung gtrt seventee= yoard y is monopolixing: old and am keeping company witt REVE & young man three yetrs. mj 11 —adviae_you_{a—stop rea: jar._He_s only earning : yveln and tet girls alone for nev- ak I have been used. to ioe aS: g “> ' \my Ufo I don’t, know If tt would be a_marry him. They Had a Quarrel, Viniddle-aged gentleman y hin, | i for hifn Be IEAV fa little quarrel with my ) marry elther of these men would” pweotheart, Iam at mult. I hive| Mike you misorable. It) yous love @itenc and. apologiced: toi kine Toat Nrateanuaee:tunravecue bao aE you t that he loves as he ald ¢ can afer ‘to, Dear Betty beforef Jt woul break heart {f we SAG Pz WN, . ~« He Never Speaks of Low a TY, Dear Betty: GE ye It he loves you he will forgive - you HAVE been going with a young yj) You have done everything poantble. /]* man who thinks a lot of me, still he has never given me the impression. wished to be anything: 1 a friend to me, What can T d¢ 2 Her ivi mysell up to him I have. lessened my ~ f attention from other mem pat he thinks » Lam only e 1°, think the young man would He Would Wed at Sixteen. Dear Dy AMC w® Young girl aixteen ye ‘of the #ame age. We not gol to be married until w years old Now he obj wants to got married tn anys |,bo svented from proposing by yout ” he loves me so much he cannot watt | 2Ou% rape i?he! thowght other 9 no-tongountii dam his. dodo nat k Pere Compatition tn thet what todo, as I love this you * Thomas W. Lawson’s Story of a Great and Passionate Love. ElipAY, tite ita treet Romance. &2 By the Author of Frenzied Finance.” that bhe-rulcides and the con daughters drag: mothers dri result ‘of th! A Wall S the oor ns Ridgeway Co.) alr, his hinds clasped and up-| he rolled backward upon an agony of appeal that was | dead. mented by the awful groans, . horror of horrors was sometting misx Bob Brownle: yond his limit. lifted his head, while the ehtld-knett- and covered ktssea,-calling-tn-a-rotce tke thatof « tiny girl speaking to her doll my Bob, wake up, wake. ip; your Beu- As_I placed my hand upon Bob's heart and felt jta beat crow stronger, ax flistened to etish Sands's. I bent over RYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING Browniey and Jini x from her} you tave don Answer no, 0 “ith a bound 1 zed again’ into Could {t possibly be? was at her slde. jon't.| those eyes. which that morning had been all.that was {ntelllgent, all that owan-Goditie, ait thatwas-human,Their Mou in trost fun Se honor abd rach: Jah_owernta you.’ that the big]: ofa ina to su Beulah Banda believe that “cold, cruel New York" “Haye you made ‘any plans for next season?” I asked ‘Not as yet.’ she rept! “Tam read and I uatn't talk of that nm and py, First of all, ‘0 -is-the materi} side of at the eamo Unyec y before it In tried. he ‘Three of Us,’ for exam was etbetiattopineserotn “Managers are Itkély to follow the beaten track In-itielr xearch for plays. Butroogaatonns: a god “Play: camessout of the weeds and surprises then, And sometimes they: are milsied by what tiey welle tier mistake to be Wie ‘public taste,” and them a fortune, ase some three or four mry~remember; wher: the publ’c became -tired of. the senan- | thohal and the nonsensical and stayed , ua never before In recollection, the public ts showing & 'e for good plays—for a more serious drama. Look at Ibsen. At last he has Deen. Accepted, and-with him has come that: exquisite artiste, Mme, Naztmoya, Lohare been asked to. play Ledda Gab. ler, but I would not think of attempt- ing it without first giving tt years of study. Duse, after studying Wedda for ten years, confessed that she could not understaad her, Nezimova'a Nori de- Mghted me, captivated me, l had nev- er seen ‘A Doll's House’ before, I should like to play Nora. “It has been sald,” I remarked, ‘that su prefer rolee in which you can eat your heart out jindeed -1-do-not;*-she-nrotested. I ike a role which has both tomedy and pathos—lght end shude, Managers were doubtless responsible for the {mprea- sion that I preferred to be unhappy on the atage, for after I had played Mrs. Elvsted in ‘Hedda Gabler’ with Mrs, Fiske they seemed to think I could play only gray and gloomy roles, I have never had any choice in the matter. I haye-simply taken what I could get, Ono of these days I hope—but why talk about It? Theatrical life ts very uncer- tain, ¥t's Uke going up in a balloon— you never know wire you'll land." coil A, Granted in Advance. HI, young! doctor ‘who had lately, op- portunity to learn humility, it settled In Shrubville had amp! nothing else, !n his chosen field. One day he was hafled by an elderly man, who requested him to #tep tn and aco his wife, who was ailing, says the Bhe pulled down the sleeves of her Jacket 41. olinddored, " “Theroare many things that the pub- Hoy Nothing about,” and a witter gmilo cit across’ her face. Ife Ja pers hard for a woman wi alcne:/it { Lad a husband os a brother / who Wis 4 pager, everytning would be er Duy d shouldn't complals, jt ie private word with the man, nantly, "I told her I know she oug! ehfldiun yolce, Joyoualy confident, as it called upon the one thing left of her old-world, evmeof-my-tarvarpasssd_ dn tts yQace cams a great mellowing nonse of God's marvellous wisdom. thought gratofully of ny mother'e ways ready argument that the laws of all Janra..ot.@ot_and nature, ta that of compensation. T had allowed Bob'a head to sink untll It rested in Beulah’ calm ‘and steady breathing 1 could #56) that he had safely passed a crisis, that at least he was not in tho clutches or smiled, the smile of an tnfant in the tacath, as I had at firat feared, Bob slopt, Beulah Sands ceased her calling, and with a smile ratned her ingera to her lips ‘Hush, my Bob's aaleop.™ ‘held vigil over our sleeping lover and . strony brite Ik soul, their life w reached that ll ‘The-day—has-been-a-hird-one ice softened tlred child's, money muat bef) ha: Airownley, greatly Ueulah promises ta aid her! in the eche ; not dead In body, the-maric-epark hed fed ‘ay but an empty shell—a woman n and blood; but the cita- the mind was What had been a woman was but a child. I passed my band acroes my now damp forehead. opened them gure, with'clasped, uplifted handa and bursting eyes, became as a and choose (the proper moment for invest: By clever maa’ lation Bob takes ad- the hustle of the was empty, I closed my Then I shail be able to th lap, and from hia the room the Beulah Bands cheek and the hands a awfiil guttural groans, r put upon ea ah, you know I would not dece bady from the my soul from th i dnd" T-promtwa-you-thet-if-F-find , what you call wrong, took one beautiful hand aper and passed It over Bob's and sottly 6 Together we — CHAPTER VI. & T passed through iny office fow minutes later I heard Bob's face with tts In my horror I almost expected to hear the purling of a babe. Sy-fyen in-thetr porplaxtty, just have ; J suddenly became aware | read “Kcroak | have done wror chubby fingers. what your father would wide WRAL-you-Ray to-at child whe had: no fear of tha exakens; if or of what} en One MIN It was ralsed In passionate elog ence. "Yes, Beulnt, Ihave done tt -xingte~ T have oruntiied-Casnineyer, at Diack Teadiine went ithe top of the paper that-she had been should come next. I bad to fle wHknown that day. Wan ave a companion to cheer and ‘edlace it on its far journey to the great | Hs youaT—Itow tong —e—watted —Bo! awakening I could not tell. The clock's hands maid an hour; it seemed to mean age. At last hls niagnificent, phystaue, ‘ly unpolsoned blood and aplendid drain puited-bim through to hia now world of mindand heart torture. IMted. He looked at me, then at Beu= | Jah Bonds, with eyes eo sad, so awfu in-thele perplexed -niourifumgss, that almost wished they had nover opened, or hud opened. to et: meses. the obi) Mike look that now shone from che girl's, | rested on her and hia FpIKED ray tothe: crows ter areotes Ago: Youlaveti.ree_mililons.and_1 have Now there is nothing moro but | for you to go home to your father, and) then come back to mic. Ueulah, back to me to ba, my wife “He stopped. ‘There waa no sot waited; then, frlghtened, T st the @cor of Beulah Bands’ » Just saying The hand of the clock on Trinity's itecple” polled tos is Bod agatr ap proached the office of Randolph & Tan: *RIDAY, THE 13TH." ARC CeHVA Th One OF MH WPERRIBLE TRAGEDY _IN Rack to me, MOST PROMINE! ST CITIZEN OF STATE, EX-UNITED STATES NATOR. AND EX GOVERNOR JUDGE. SANDS_LANTYING, WIHT TEMPORATILY INSANE FRO | HIS FORTUNE AND | Fonps__ror| WAS TRUSTEE, CUT THE} JUS INVALID WIrr, 118 % ‘WEN HIS OWN. | ‘MIUEB DIED INSTANTLY." another coturm VHORERT RNOWNISY CREATES THD MOST DISASTROUS PANIC IN THA WALL STRNET AND He went straight to 1 office, I to mine, I had been there @) When Ttreard “deep, gut Phe wound came + It came from’ Beu- __ With a bound T as’! oe BET LEB BANDS. 4 L-reached the door: in—mercy'a name_tell_ me you. got this money falrly, bonorably,”” Ehe bud ¢rawn his head. down close! and her great plus 6) searched his ng though they would go louder than before. Inh_Sands‘a office that met my gaze! It haunts mo even | jnow when years have ilfed tte -vivid- The beautitul, quiet, gray” Meure Bho wie a chi in| that had grown tobe such m famlitar 7, picture to Bob and me of Iate sat at the | the centre of .the room. Her elbows resied | hand was an afior- e-had-evidentiy-been + reading when Bod entered, God known | how-long-she-had-been- reading 4t before | he came. Bob was knegling at the sida| toher face, Hila gaze, final ips murmured * lo his very soul. her simple appeal for ‘nim to allow her tose hix heart, to soe that there was | flat desk tn nothing black there. “Bob, speak to me, speak to ma." sin “tell me there was ng dishonor (n tho getting of those milfions, Toll me no one Was MAGS to suffer ny my father apd I have suGered, Tell mo I thought you woul know tt was time to wake u pent over and kissed lili on the eyes again and again with the loving ardor She faced the door. on the desk; in h noon-paper that TUROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY.” ‘The awful groaning stopped and an} aq child bestows upon its pets, ashen pallor spread over Bob Brown- | Before I could catch him | He slowly rom to his feet. T could om his eyes and the shudder thar A Few More Lemons at a Cent Apiece. &2 aby, bs G. Cong | meri: oe EROPIE: ery CLOCK GETS ANGRY AN OVE. NEXT, QLOCK~ OF> ny DE NECESSARY. SUICIDE: $ 23,000,000 000} THis. DOESN'T Me TOY te rank WwoonY ANDLE Youth's Companton, At the close of Cane New his visit the young doctor asked for a RrER STHLE i$ up pnd SAY “Your wife's cand is somewhat com- “theatrical | plicated,” he sald, “and with your per- ho ix | mission ¥ should like ¢o call the Brook- field etolan in oneal tation. “Permission! echoed the man Indig; if nt} © 7 ye Lut we will make wp for went over him ns he cat he desk that he wa. mory of the He rose J wont up but-onty from & a instant.” ‘Then ‘he folded Beulah § s to his breast and dr hia head upon her shoulder, He sobbed | t ikea father —with—the—eorpee— Hie of Joy she followed hist” jung tho ttle grag: ity gray jacket” thelr pee and and ¢ 0 1 and all our ériendshin, 1 ae Bt Bike Wi ve my gy as I can find a ministel | It fa best, beat, Ito uscd - Th Tt hs ae Gal_wourr ¥ not capable of knowing right fro Why Tob, my is this the way you treat your h? Ia this t y to net before this kind man w as haw come to. tak ughty, nag At the sound 0 Bob's head slowly rose from her should: T saw fg decision’ the Inatant I caugit his Porentinntt ttn tien heamreny ref carmeaa-tniemt enrylachaea tealsina By OF fl posing It, and, mick at rt and hor: | even of herself, of everything, Jim, bul = tied, THatoned xa he snd in a voles | me 1 must tey to win her back for hers 3 new father to his Hing, d-have & May Manton’s. Daily Fashions. HE shirt waist 52 that ty tucked f Ps ~ encheco ming always Sat DNs tr myst-dermint wad he tea model t rives the taper- the, Brant while tt can be mado to provide mote or leas fulness at the front, an may be de- ined, As tIlustrated, Te Te ade OT TIT Tren =#ith—somd— neok and attached tar, and the tucks fat the front are ched for thetr en- hy butthers ate several “varias tons of.-the. model that can be made with ease and suc: cess; ‘The tucks at the front can be etitched to any dex sired depth, while the nook canbe mado high and worn with @ separate col- lar, either of tho tern or with any pretty stock that may be liked. Again, sleeves can be bn el- bow or in full length, so that a great many possibilities are cov- ered by tho. single dealgn. All wasting matorials are appro- priate; and this vea- son they are excop- ;-Blouse or Shirt Wa tlonally lovely and exceptionally varied. A novelty, anda pretty ono, ta the We of unbleached Iinea in a canyas weave, with white collar and cuffs, and some times the waist alao ts worn with the additional box plalt and ‘frills, that can De bought separate and attached to any watst z ai The quantity eral required for the medium aixo ts 8 6-5 yarts #1, Bit yards 3% or 2 yards di Inches wide a Paticrn No, 5U13 ts cut |i sizes for 2°83, M, 8, 8%, 40, (2 and 4 Inch buat aor measure, Gall or vend by tall © 11 HVENING WORLD MAY Hew to } ron FASHION BUR! Jo. 2 Weat Twenty-third street, Now ontatn York, Send ten cents | 9 or stampa for each pattern date “IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and Pattern" } ways mpecity size wantod. 5 : ‘