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258 The Evening Ww {EO IOI OE MRS. PATRICK | CAMPBELL Did All She Could to Keep Her . | SOR _ She’s There. By Charles Darnton. JERE bk )'be told that Mrs, Campbell was with her physician and then to have her eweep.in a momont later and implore mis to “set her right" made me doubt the doctor. _ “Please set me right!" she bogged, sinking into a chair with ap appealing look in her large, dark, haunting eyes. If the doctor couldn't do this, how could 1? Or wasn't {t any of the doctor's business? No, It-wasn't. ". “You can set mo right with thé newspapers {f you only will,” ex- plained the distressed English actress, who seemed almost as blue as her Ibeendlue gown. “I'm afraid’ I've been placed in a rather absurd position.” “In what way?" I asked sympathetically. “In various ways,! she anawered, wearily raising a white hand to her! fnky locks. ‘To begin with, I was advertised on the billboards as ‘The Greatest English-Spenking Actress. jow, wasn’t that absurd?’ «Daughter Off the Stage, but = I POPE GOSDOSHOS orld Daily MM CEVBLSES #C ' Barton W, Currie. s | NRICO CARUSO will make the startling departure this winter ot} Tevirg his clothes cut to music. He has brought his own tailor | wita him aud installed him in his thirteenth-story suite in the | - Hote] Plaza. He works while his minster sings, and thereby gets the proper sartorial’ melody Jn ench garment. It 1s doubtful {f there ts any other singer in the world who takes his} personally conducted tailor about with him. But Mr. Conried’s great tenor | {6 original. He dlecovered Dominick Ferrar! In a fashionable Roman tallor | shop. The Beethoven harmony of a walstcoast Farrari turned out for hin { convincéd Caruso that ha wna,a raro genius, He rsked Dominick how ho | came to/make such an uncommonly artistic job of it | The Itttle tallor Inughed and sald that he had gone to the opera-houso whore Caruso sang. The golden notes of his yolce-had filled tim with. tn-1 spiration. If Signor Caruso would only sing a few bars for him in the shop | he would ‘cut @ pair of “pants” of a harmony that would make Orpheus’ turn over-in-his-grave: The tenor hummed a bright melody, and Ferrari caught It down fn his pattern with marvellous skill. Born of this was a pair of trousers diately felt “better, Then he realized that Caruso confessed to a friend sur-| what had happened and flew Into a vio- |passed the» most entrancing sartorial |tent though harmonic rage. masterpiece of his experience, Tho maid] Ferrari heard Hla xwan song cight| trousers wore allegro con fuoco; conse- | there and prayed Jorsiveness, He ‘ad +Not. necessarily,” I replied, ‘calling Gallantry to the rescue of Truth. < Hedda Gabler, but they seemed to like Fancy Thar, Hedda. me and kept me at the Court Theatre 4 with a curl of the lip. “Meaning Engiish as well aa Amet!-| eam managers?" I-queried, though I felt) Gulte sure she didn't mean anything of emotional because I felt woman who would hide her emotions, Wien | acted Hedas ar the Court Thea- re 1 expected to «ive only a few per- Sash Map sort on 8 aS apna tte! janices, Unless you have your ch tis on the jump, and he began adjoining room ,js waiting for his in- MORE BOM etegbasieneditcreayiias [theatre in London you cannot play & liing a clawhammer coat at sca. Hej splration. Will not the Signor warble nell 3 ty chest Tag out for the reason. that z B x Englieh actor-manaxer naturally hes| OUR ohisgeutne feror im inunaer to ;turned it out with great agility, and! bit 90 that the tallor may begin on e taste. for he ts xulded by an artistic. | Bot by & commercial] instinct." +1 pl “Then you regard the American man-| purely commercial in bis att-| that hasn't ono." What ls Unis talk about your having a Broadway theatre for next season?” I inquiry. mentioning the name of @ certain man @ger, “have any taste?" The unbending Mrs. “Pat.” who fhurled this shafe at a shining mi reminded me of Magda when she to her little sister: “Yes, Ito said “The Campbells Are Coming!” But I merely as¥e4 Mra, Campbell whether ft was she who had decided upon « | alage career for her daughter. "| Daughter Was Determined. my dear oe “Btella decided the that's how I get on in the world—I| “No,’'-she sald never bend." | matter for herself, I did all I could to “But you have one actor-manager, | “= Wny? Che TED CGS haven't your’ ehe went on sweerly.| “Oh,” mhe answered vagiiel Rene wiated fo save her-from the hard work “and you have found taste a¢ Mrs. | ind late hours—from all of It, you know, Ftake's theatre, I’ ag told. I've never) Bu; I couldn't dissuade her. She had been in Sir, Belasco’a theatre—end | her heart aot upon It, and so as soon ay then you have Mir, Daly, haven't your) $%% WAS free from her earlier mocial And, tell me, duties 1 bt ert y. Bhe te have you grown tired oj | ambitlous torpiey. big roles, and I muat Ghew here?” ’ | eay that I think she ahows great prom- T turned the question on her lise. You saw her in ‘Magda’? On, you Shaw's Sad Fate, should have seen her in “Tenqueray.’ very good in that, but! —— he wayed aside the rest of It, ‘ou don’t think thea,” I ventured, Lene! Sven." ahe said, aw Is quite “that the xtage offers @ woman her it of ft in London, One wcarcels greatest opportunity ak fot him now. Shaw offends cond (eel SeNo."" sak the nother, with a twisted Wi ‘ wroftehda Ropd: trate, amile have never Crought of It In ‘hen ono meets an Irishman ike that light. We have our work to do Yeats—an Irishman of truly cultured and we Ghaue oy neat wo cane ey taste—on x ; Nured Shrugged her shoulders, "An e sees that Shaw has no taste.| tie ond of it, ien't It? Shaw seems to have heen [eft quite by | “Sonietimes there are memoirs to be himeelf. The Irish won't hi @ ‘ked. “They to be ) ave hiny| Whitten.” [ remarked. ney eeemn to. because, an they say. he ie not a true | the fuation now, When are you soln . \ to write yours, A THahman, and the English won't have, “My memoire?: exclaimed Mrs. ‘Pat, him for various reasons, and * | Pose, he'll have to be called an Amert- tan. If he tm to be called anything.” {Three tears for the Land of Las Roprt! Will you be one cf a committee} ; of two to go down to the dock and } meet poor George Bernard’ when hi tims ashore? ! “Shaw's ‘Major Barbars,’"" pursutd I wup-| raising her oyes to the brim of her hat. Po) beat’ me, Ive never even. thought of much a thing.” Pinky-Panky's Understudy. A white ball of a dog that was frisk- jing fp the rug turned a somersault at ie idea. s See the litte darling trying to atanil re lon Its head,” erted Mra, "Pat, comming {rs Campbell. javelin in/hand. “wan af Out of her ‘memoirs,’ She caught ub dacticular offense (0, nogd_tnate: Non ttl te as ehigne cheered my sinking sou! | by, saying: wasn't much of a ‘play=are any. of| “This isn't Pinky-Panky-Foo." Shaw's plays. for that matter? His ike ball seemed glad. The wagging wh! acters are mot charactera—they are| {ink aownt Pitin Panky'e unaerated Merely mouthpieces for Shaw's vicirs. |iing down Pinky-Panky's understudy, “Lm a9 sorry I'm to Play, Mw, Ebb- “And pe grows tired of mouthpleces, | Smith at: the end of the week when my foein't one? Tell me, tm there any in- terest here in serious playa?” {riend® who would really like to see it I mentioned the fact. that Ibeen hid will-all be out of town. hat ts one of the penalties of being been ‘empraced by the short-haired piaywoer, shionable actress.” IT remarked, “She Likes Nazimova, of course, fashi ople co out of town, for thi 8. but my because Iam. fashionable. has beon very badly arranged. % think It ix a mistake to have me "I saw your Russian actress In “The | jny New York for only a woek, Mater Builder,’ nald Mra. Campbell, | Yau? 1 suppose It waa done drightty, “and I jiked.her very much. T do think, however, that she missen the poetic glide of Ibnen. To me Ibsen fs at all'n poet. I feel this perhaps, | beamube J: read ‘Peer Gynt’ before any ot-his-other workn,. J. wae-almoat. over— Baer aloes tér my tour, but I'm it is a-mistake. T hoy to be abl whelmed when they asked me to play The week Ana I arrange matters to ault myself o1 Ra - 400% . eee Sige es AOR, M8, posetble I am __In that frank enough for you? ‘ “THE NEW MAYOR” 66 & : A Story Based On “If you don't, your political career tw ahe was a/ follow @ play (hut has a star with «| bette asked, tude toward the theatre?” { “said the beautifully frank “How can -he-pe -mnepwine? shaman — ara, o i-wae Gone tor advertising ; wyured, raising her eyebrows in mid | Purp: Dpose, just as est peaking Actress’ was pyt Hboards to attract attention. Tj friende don't come to eee me act dont to “get quently were eprightly and passtonute mada —a—prodigiogs—mistnke—He—had| fn design, The second day Caruso wore} not known the power of his own art them he offered Dominick a handsome|and had been cartied away by It. He jalary to become his personal tailor. trembled to think what might have hap- the Bignor's early appearances at the Metropolitan Opera-House. Dominick a one of the sort who obeys After the singgr has had his corfee In the morning Alphoneo, his premier valet, drops a hint that Dominick in-the now sartorial sonata? Caruso complies, and ae the heavenly sounds of his-volce { rate into the next room Dominick: shears fly over the board and eoch plece of the garment Is. net to divine music. —The-Garuso apartments d when the arrived at the Plaza asked the | tenor to try !t on. Caruso hadn't had | t on ten minutes defore he felt violent- ly seasick. He declares he could hear the roar of the ocean and foe] the floor nue. of traffic In only a faint murmur now and then the shrill scream of an m_may break in on thn ne, recognize Dominick's | range. Saturday, DB DPEDDHDODBPDDIOS sutomoniie | rhythm 93 Domin' him Top a stitoh, and Is respons: ‘The tallor ts 1 «by keeping oFe while “But. who argued. with a smile or, a much longer time than I had r y | was bad taste don't you think to say | anticipated. I'm glad you eaw what yous| This was only « short while before | pened had he cut the coat In a storm, | us discords that. when all your actresses speak) did in my fedda, for 1 tried t muKe | Ceriso—came—to—Amerion As he had }-tit he —did—not-dare-communicete this} obviate any mush. fa) English?" her a woman who could be understuod } Only thirty odd suits and three or four) awful thought to his master. | his eyes fast on “Sfanagers have a way of saying and not u strange creature ‘to baffie un-|#core walstcoats of divers patterns Se! §5 far that haa been his enty “tox | NOTk® things,” I remarked, | derstanding, I did not try to make her | needed some more garmonts in a hurry.| root. ae the French say. Now every-| The tenor hae “And no taste.’ added Mrs. Campbell. | Norwert n, bectuse I know nothing of jzhe tallor was ordered to get to work! thing goes charmingly in the Caruno| tailor by praising th | Norway, and I did not try to make her /on thirteen nvw mults to be worn during | suite on the thirteenth Moor. > | cutaway that he: det! aria from “Rigoletto. coat of a deep ae: ita beauty genius There ne ty tai of has They are au high that the rumbio Gelignted the last one-button It in a walking Krocn pinid and the medoly of Ita pattern {a like the siren wong of A merinaid. The snowbirds in tres trees tringing—Centrat tone and are K twitterléss with awe. no narrow In the trousers he malntal ywer, softer tones. He does not attain he allegro con fuioco until he reaches he waistcoats, he_works But ‘and~-cause Nttle joned to an ark wait the (the room undulate-beneath—his-tect: | When he took the-coat off no Immo- Central Park, but overlook The Chorus Girl | | 1 ' By Roy L. McCardell. 66 iLL, we know what simp has fell for Puss Mont- Wee sald the Chorus Girl “It's nobody what ever sets in with us before, It's an added starter Goldie Magee introduces to her when thoy !s sitting rn Murray's shades of death playing table chess the other, afternoon, é "Yea, I know Puss Montgomery was married to a cer- tain party named Maginnis. a merchant nrince of Marietta, who, {n money matters, could make the bark of a trev look Ike honeycomb tripe. "Tight? Say, he's been with his money all hia Ife like all the rest of the world hax boen the last couple of weeks, “No, I don't know whetner they are divorced. I néver LJ inquire into other people's personal affairs. But if parties is iat be as it muy, can get used Goes to the “H hearted 1f you show him how, and I see iio reason why Puss should uot Took Tue high notes and delirious burst song. For the mort {nto| gn ‘aliegro ma _non_ ‘3 Of claw-hammers and frock: N ENKICO CARUSO Jackets, part he matntaina) be quick and sprightly, but’ net toe much so, ovember 16, 1907. ‘ DDDDDHPDDPHDDPD PPPBPBHPDBHPBPDPPPBSP® ARUSO’S CLOTHES Are Cut to Golden Music | By His Own Special Sartorial Maestro From Rome GH? FHOTO BY AIM DUPONT —~ with any passion: tones tn his coats, and whenever he seems to his master carried away by a swiftly gilding mel- ody the tenor cries out: “Non troppo! Non troppo!" or in other words, “You ing the speed mite.” But in the waistcoat DoniItiok sayw he has a free hand, He can make thém rich Inyish in tone as ts his mas- ter's voice in all ita brighter shades and transpose It in his vests. He has made several fortissima vests that Caruso wears only In the Subway. There they! soothe him, whereas in the quiet of his rose-tinted chamber they thunder en his eardruma. Lea However, the tailors duties 60 not ‘op altogether at the creation of ear torial sonatas, symphonic “pants and waistcoat cantatas, He must also re- pair Caruso's stage coatumes, stitching gussess art Vs in them wherever they pinch or bulge. Aa every breath the reat tenor takes Is muslo Dominick does this during odd hours, when bis takes a nap, setting the gussies They must Caruso has forbidden him to monkey "a 2o® snore: 30S, INODGNGQ0UG: HOD NADPORIOVOLr9 @ ‘And as the Cry ‘They're Off!’ Died Down, Dopey Slammed the Door and Shouted ‘Churchill's, Quick!’ We Win on the Bet.” OOO OD OOdO00. Cee! IT's A WINE. a professional atrikobreaker and his ways !¥ rough, but he'd good- ba happy, because he's worth half a million and in his husineas, ts Hable to be killed any “Ho took us all out and he certainly noted like a gentleman, J-will anked him for giving! us-auch-a-pleasant- even- ing we found Mamma De Branscombe altting up crying ‘Honk! Honkl’ and bes- ie the bel to pioase go round the corners careful, $ ou know you sure have had a good time when yon Hayo them fevered that, “day. An hour or two after we say dreams, when !t setma three years ago since you got In bel at daybreak, “It weemed like old times, kid, to be out with a cheerful giver. It seomed Uke them happy daya when conditions was normal and money was in silk stock- ings and not in woollen ‘socks. : our of the one and intq the other, and!ednn “Maybe time was when we waa opulent ourselves Lat ‘em ft up, kid, that {t can de got back ce will be restored. and wo wouldn't have stood for Puss's burly breadwinner, and when no money would have looked good to us unless it bore the union latel; but, as Mamma Ds Branscombe sald, who was wo that we ahould say that the open shop was not, after ‘and economis Mherty> ithe pureat—senmat—— arid there was dents on his map where it had you to remember “henceforth that I| But all these provisions are as nothfng| “Tam Wall, you Horrigan aren’ made you. (Copyrighted, 1907, by George H. Broad- é ‘Burst, ernopsre or preceprva cnarrens. | 7k? It You're what And your future will he what Dick Horrigan choosea’to I lifted you up and I can tear Diok | (t right’) "Oh!" laughed Horrigan, who thought he began to soe the drift of the other's mind, ‘I don't hold out for that. “I {to the company | but for always, | deecendants to ‘tx terms, chief outrage of the whole thing. think that the not only: for our time, and binds us and our) That (4 the} To ‘Alwyn Bennett ls made Mayor by Hor vigaa, te politica) Hoss, ‘and by) Wain: right, a financier. ‘They look to him) t thelr crooked deals, He accepts islet ssh bacrn was "a Hlece, jas, who. re hin with being an idler, Dallas's 3 joves Benn, Z hla Uarrivot: ie ose wilt wradting & perpet Qn ne the | Bor Street Railway, ft wecretly OW; A; {5 hfe be Hort . itical enemy, calls Sinette Aaa watna. him, the bil ta dntule lous. While they are talking Walnwricht the signing of the Dill on Re Tmoved hy apy orinelples of human: 4 tells how Wainwright once. ruined Garren and. oxuect Jater calle on Alwyn signing the tor. enauer 4 tien to ough bat. A CHAPTER VI. (Continued.) The Mayor and the Boss, rapa After his Genarture | enters At the Idea that the financier you'down pust as easy, And, what's more, by —~, I'll do it if yow don't sign the Borourh bill. I'm a man of my. word, and before ever you were nomi- nated 1 pledged my word to have that dill put through. The bill paid yout jection expenses. It! “I paid my own election expaines, You know that." di «Your personal expenses, perhaps. But who paid for parades, halls, banners. flroworks, speakers, advértisomenta, workers and watchers and all tho other, milllon things that elected you? The jmen bohind that Borough bill paid them. And they did tt on the under- nding you'd sign the bill."* "In other. words," remarked Bennett, on made A” ‘Oh I'll keen {t all right. You'll alan {that dill, or you'll’ — “Mr, Horrigan.” exclaimed Bennett- the bons paused, choked by OMT Ties queried Bennett, as hl uty, “It I den't controlling his tempor with more and more difficulty, “You sald something dust now. about our 4 adow- Geen Fils ta the. Neen dan Ke wad can't keep It H | don't pare WHY you sign it as long as you DO sign It." rs es “What do you think about the bin] “Oh, we've got a howling reformer in| yourself?! inquired Alwyn. "Do you con-|'h® Mayor's sent, havo we bider It honest?” Horrigan. “If I'd known that “What do I care? I {tobe aimed | “Tho people have got a man and’ — {| trying to protect thelr rights and. prop- “y eare, And i think ‘the bit} is 0ty: Hero's a letter I revetwid to- frauditent. |day. You'll recognize the name of the “Getting tender in the conactence, |CRPltallst who wrote it, You know he j1s honest ha well as wise, Thin tn hia aren't you? Well"— “Tf you put It that way, yes this Borough Dill is crooked from first 900 for city 10 T think | Proposition: He Ay’ Ithat xame franchise, a! per cont. of tho gross recelptn and turn way Company the right to use whatover motive power they choose to, It gives} “It !) aibona Ade offer. He votuntee: 8) them the tight to charge fye-cent faren | to deposit $1,000,000 to bind the bargain, without any transfers, In, one para what I want to ask you, Mr, in this: If the franchise ts grnph there's a clause permitting them) Ho to bufld a subway ff they. want ono, By| worth $2,00,0%, why are you and your} can build a conduit And-jease jit out for anxious to give It away for nothing?’ telonhone or telegraph wires.’ By an- ‘‘Logh herai’! blustered the Moss, Ctheq they ean de an musings. {| ; f B ended from this time on, Seo? It's| wear no man's collar—yours or any| aimpardd to the fact that the bill xives| y ended. Smashed fat. .You think offone else's—and that you can't deliver! the greets above and below ground tO! you raalize. Alb t P T b e yourself ana fine, ‘promising | young |,any xoods you've bargained for in my | the Borough Company forever and ever] just now. 1° er AYSON LELDUME.| man who's on the road tw tho gover-| nome. If 1 alan that bill it won't be| —not for a term of years, but until the| yards drat’ : ; norship and maybe to the White House, ! under your orders, Dut because I fhink” ond of the world. It dativers that routcl Bate looking,” “Ho was no classto beauty SS CERO KKK KEKE ER ER REE EKER CEE EERE KEE EK EEE EE EEE EEE RE FALAFLHHAASLAAAAAPAAHAAAHAAAAAAAAAL AAA AA ASA APPA SAA LAA ALAAMAA AL AAS SAS AS E MAN OF THE HOUR.” — FA LBALL AAA BAHAMAS AS AS AB IEE I 9 IEE IE IE IE aC WO 9090 9 I 99TH CEC ORE KE ERE EE EEE EEE EEE EEC EEE EINE AAASSSSSSSISLA SAARI AABAAAIIA ABS meana fourteen votes, You beve oolyy hie Track with Puss «WMontgomery’s Strike-Breaker,.. and the Crowd Cashes in the Nassau Handicap on a Tip from DOWOVOOOD: interpused work his diamond rings back and forth, as if he eles; and he would Insist on walking close to the houses, ensive that some friends ef labor on the roof might casually welght brass knuc! as if he was appreh push a chimney over on him, “His yolce was hoarse ant more endears! “That aint all; he took us to the track get-away Gay, walsh wee yeeterday, » DOOCDODHODOHOGGHOHODDOS: etween bricks, His hands was large and ample, and hi McKnight. "4 nervously was ‘adjusting his ‘summer- 7 4 low, as if It ndé cinders tm ft, dat expense wae nothing to him, and it ain't HOW you say dwt WHAT you say that all the exd I will say that {f old friends 4d regard = tn emmse, the Pinkertons was ks rapeotful aa could be, “As we was coming through the Aqueduct amacked right up against a four-wheeler and sha! ‘Mr. Strikebreaker fiashed his roll and paid the price of the emashed ecs- ‘going hack, which muat have been firs | Pusn Montgomery some good advice. }¢— all @ recognition china, “He pala full #, souvenir, i home at once, We had the gypay's warning on the winner of the Nassau Handicag,) aad Puss's Gtrikebreaker came across with al price, When the wreck was cleared away Depey Me Ticnight, who sure is the daff, picked up the door and frame and sald he'd take It Little did-we deem that act wae to mean so much for us{ | We got In Dutch on every race, and it looked blue for the eventng’a enter tainment unless xt least two strikes and a loclnnt shew! be Geciared aemewhare our atx-cytinder scooter off the side se t launched during the era of moss-rose he had beft. ‘We was ao nervous that we got over by the rail, for the start was to be im front of the grand atand, when Trim-the-Lush Larry, our favorite night hawk “He don't, hey?’ says Dopey. “Say, kid, he win on the bit. ‘That night, while we're getting at ¢ It perronal property was in her name, for, had experience. “One husband had left her without without a word. “Oh, very well!” HOROSCOPE e Baturday, Nov. 18 1907, | © . 9 UY, sit and promote “new bus!- B ness, Particularly lucky are these twenty-four hours for opening ew shops, factories, salesroomm or of- Mee *soubttul day, however, for dealings tween the sexes. Quarrel impend. wotok— pao ound. menac Danger tens an important person ti MOke whose birmidate. this ts will be | family coachman, who was down that day, tips Dopey that our skate had been @ | hong Acre cab horse, and he knew it, becaui ah "He cin't got a chanct!’ said Trim-he- ‘Watch me! _| dies down, Dopey sinma the cab door shut and hollers ‘Cawrebill's, quick!” he had been introduced to him. t the don't take no intrust!’ And when the cry “They're off _ he grape, Mamma De Branscombe gtves ‘was {f she married again to eee that all as Mamma De Bransceabe said, she'd a cent, and the other ones had lett her FOR TO-DAY. : PDR oer ieee dow aot te letid! see ews el- feot their adn ampla) nent must be pekticularty; Saree! ha this twelyemonth. ‘Women will elther marry or play « part In others’ matrl- onl irs. 2 "he ate born to-day wilt be inetined to ros! mess and will have an settled disposition. If not ‘| ca: youth this will lead her to be -fortvenate, unwisely, ‘boy born to-day —witt in Dusiness and will save money. retorted, Bennett: "Tye been looking déeper into it than T asked you I'll answer it myself. ‘That {x why you want & question In one to give away a franchise that Is worth “Graft! snorted Horrigan, contempt- ously. What's: y ‘The name old reformer how!! " of graft, anyway?" “Graft Is unearned {ncrement. ur idea Money to which phe reciptont has no legal or ioral right. ‘So! Aln't a erafter! to evade the law, but graft printing’ ap advertis know {s a ‘fake. When a Conk propriation man has agreed to yote for one of hii When a five- sand-n-yaar Senator retires at the | fon, what'a| 11 TH | th Gratt! } insurance or takes of tem! That tor doin A manga: res! befause how man or and he about. but here as well. choose Folk for Go’ aplte of his faults, wan from. Then show me the man whol al! he was honest. Wh A lawyer shows his|of this country make, President? show you a fool. Present company not excepted. f “That's. where you're wrong," Te: turned Alwyn, Sxnoring the slur and speaking with a judicial quiet oddly at contrast “The man who sald the Hoss'a. yehemencs *Honesty is the with best policy’ knaw what he was talking It pays best not only Why heroalt: did Missouri Because, In Wh: the Sena: faulla he is honest. to La Follette sent Wisconsin? Becat y Were ‘they blind to i it What's that | faults and foibles? No. But they knew ne takes pay for) be was HONEST! [am honest. Thix ment ita editora| pili ian't. That ts why T won't sign It" What's that? man votes for an ap- another Gongtess- banker captain on a yeor buys yachts and country estates. | thing out of your about the railroad pres! font who gets Ktock free in a corpora. | n (hat-antps over his road? to lust. But''— is) | savy aitharmatien witTiCHZAIN' over the whole plant to {t at the end! what's that? Graft! ‘tat cme explain.’ pursued Alwyn. | Of Mfty years, What do you think of) t “phix bill_gives the Borough Street Rall. | tat? (end of ten years worth a mi “Ita a fake. | that? Graft! A polic fut ioans ga fanc! Graftera! another paragraph'a concessions. tliey{ faction? In the Board of Aldermen 80/214 clours 1,00 por cent. Every c securities afters, all one «rafts ‘who oan or who lan’t too stupid, Bhow Gratt! } Or the », who Rives | } mao man whe doesn't graft and ru ‘° & "You won't, eh?” 1 Horrigan, “Phen voto it! Veto tt, tf you da not only smashSyour political careor, Dut I'll pass the bill over your veto, That'll xhow, you yirdtty well how! you nd me atand as qo power in this city, make you thp langhing stock of administration’by taking the whole ands and passing it In spite of you.’ ‘I doubt tt," answered’ Bennett. ‘paling, wrath fn T4 me coolly t Horrigan'’s little red ey fight your Boroligh Alder- manic Council and ousitde counell, To passa bill over my veto you'll ha Bet & two-thirds majority. That nd to | | four hours in dold water and intense darkn 1s to grope around, move the dig boulders w: wtuft from tho bed ofthe river, emptying vour ‘solid thirteen,’ And I'll make |i my —buminess to see you don’t get a} fourteenth vote.” “TN look owt for that, al right, el) rihttt “One thing more, Mr. Horrigan. 1 ave reason to believe there 1s bribery’ a this matter, I'll ferret out the name st every man who gives or takes a < t (ith the Borough Franchise bill, and I'll send every erithem to jail Not only the Aiter- men, but the capitalists who are behind the measure. Receiver and thief shall ko to jall together, a “Is thet sot! chuckled Horrigan. ‘“phen, Mr, Retormer, let me tell you who {3 really behind, this whole aftate, the man you'll haye'to jail frat of all— Mr, Charlés Wainwright! ‘Uncle of the girl you're trying to marry.” He leaned back to note the effect of GEORGE H. B Successful Play. : BROADHURST’S ® e * revéletion. But Bennett's face moved ne-mnuscle| wave no hit of what ay beneath. y : “Besides,” wnt on Horrigan, cager to pread tis advantage, “every cent of Mise Walowright’s fortune and of her brpthers has vat by Welnwright inte Borough stock I¢ the franchise {s beaten that stock will collapse, and Mi ehow: _ be a, pauper, Youu Ps pore fr'fove with pad hee brother if you yeto that pill po ahead and do aelvou) ct $ ica," Ho. LJ card and £ ik to his desk. The peemed ‘atl nocked out of him. ica vily: Pest Uke a man over- exhausted. Picking’ up & pen, he wrote repidty, oaat aalde the :pen, crossed to the jow and jovked out ‘into the snowy, crowded pai "Yo1 signed the billT’ cried Hor HEED Mood Ik" replied Bonnett, ( (To Be Gontinved.) Diving for rk ti and. bin IVERS. wat K darkness, D Tianavaal place nm fifty-two fo cen the ‘divera ¢ the Ora Antrenin, of ar which tales about half an hear te fill, diamond ¢fegers in South Afrioa, They work In Icy cold "About tares and a half miles down tho river feom Klerksdorp a wire fope is stretc Colony alde, by means of w At present they have no Mii Diamonds. ed ceroas the Vaal Rive. from the hich a larke scow ts Jescend and work in from forty-eight to , and Work for three or ens. All they are able to do at present 4th crowbara and scrape up the smaller 4t Into a large fron-bound wire drum, x