The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1907, Page 9

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et eras i ° id wDaiiy Pingazine, weanesday, November 27, 1907 ONL ONT LE LL TT TT Te IR I I Te ee e —_: IHE NEW _ Arnola Daly Keeps Mary Garden's Nerves at Concert Pitch, HERE were three little plays on the stage aud another little play in: I the stage box. | ig night for the lttle Berkeley Theatre. for in the stage Bex sat Miss 3 rden, the singiug actress of the latest Henimeratein Mehriller,’ alinost ay white the plume’in her hat at what she saw. Fi qith a ‘ttle cry of hozror, she covered her éyes with her hands to aut out Gie sight of Aspoll Daly leveling a muarderous-looking pistol at ready-and-wait fag Helen Ward in that Mve-wire, telegraphic drama, “The Flag Station." Operatic neryes, which had been kept at 00 wuld ‘stand no.more Only tho whistle of the train that had not paid the peri ee ity of the telegranh operator’a mista Baved those nerves, . perhaps, fr @hrieking aloud. If that platol had gone} oft. the uncommon, ‘or Garden, varinty of nerves would probably have been shot to ploces. It was n close call. | A moment deforp Miss Garden had put her fingorw, in her ears to keep out! (lag Ware’a one best shriek when the | “felegraph operator's’ wife discovered A] that sleop-deadened Dick, who dad b: } ot the kay_for-serentysive hours, ha mixed tis train. orders and ‘that two traing were probably rushing to de-/ eteuotion along the edge-of the canyon} But i took more than that shriek to | bring poor, tired Dick to his sensos. | Walle the shriek was more than enough | for Miss Garden, sleepy Dick didn't wit! up and taks notice until hm wife had thrown 2 disper of water In his taco. | Miss Garden gave a start as though the-waterhad-struck her She waa pot acting, but #he was giving ‘cues’ to! ening Wor 1 The Million-Dollar Kid t pitch from the oxinning, | i GIRLS, TIMES ARE TERRIBLY HARD! THERE BO0-HOO! WHAT HAVE r NE SOT To BE ISN'T pikes the oritics right and left y { pu If Mr. Daly and® Mise Ware could aeLeS pcar eer actress —up—to—nit—the—stage trioks herself, surely they could thrill} a few stupid critics who know nothing | pect: about the tage and Ite tricks, And I'm | G not ashamed to own that I for one was! thrilled to the top of my ‘collar—and! mm te Hanako wo Murasaki In her Wises rdemond tipite evhelules'| mptor emurderoua design. Btation."* fi “it! trough Mr, Daly may dotest me for saying It, the acting in “The Flag Sta-/ which is the most gcipping to be found anywhere in New York. It fairly takes work «7 the Chroat. Mr, Daly no longer plays the telegraph operator Ike Siiaw, ot enrts down to the job and plays him for life or death. Miss Ware helps him ‘Ag :@l her beart.and eoul. She te the woman for the shanty, and when sho they 1 that ecemirgty fatal train sheet from the well and beats its meaning SMadiaDlek’s bowrainded brain, you wee a imple woman holding tragedy in a of they han@ ‘The Road to Yesterday’ led Mian Ware into many nilstakes, if the he bas learned to correct them and \ Me. astow the right path from the wrong, You 6dYs MUST EXCUSE US Now! THT MY BRooeH JUST LovEty? IT DONT KNOW WHAT WE'RE GOING To Do! (00H= Boo- ee THANK You $O MucH, MR. MONK ! HURRY UP GIRLS! WELL GO TOA SHOW: AFTER wanteAte of {l-a4rised praies that might. piles Garden was by. be-meana the tion! one who fat relieved last night to ‘rhs that My, Daly would act be obliged the Bll Mise Ware end himesit.” 5 ove: And anyway there wae quite enough yes trder for one evening in “The Jashi- for #6,” © Japanese elaughter in which "yo ay Mme. Hanake and her kimono eo- forge dertlotpated. Clucking Ike 2 hen, {rBme Haneko behaved herself like the 4 abe wasn't until a rich rounder 3 fato the naughty Jashiware house began making a vulgar display of . }O€ course you saw how it was, (gma perhaps you realised that Mr. Daly ‘Was getting oven by siving you “Mrs, Warren's Profession" in Japansse, but hed ne inclination to call the police, piaply walted to be in at the kill- {24 you hadn't muon sympathy fer Whe Terrible Jap anyhow. With the aid of hec lover, a grinning @evil, cunning Murasaki changed the ettfe from which she and the tall gen- tdeman were drinking and topped oft (ale Jag with two rounds of poison, At- t@er he bad straightened out on the foor phe touk hia money and left bim to dic, Bike wae doing very nicely, n_under- Gaker might say, when Murneaat's silly maid toddled in And brought him around with an antidote. MuraéseXj killed tho maid very prettily. f Taen the Jap whe nud been ‘Mone’ started in to show what he could do. fm a darkened room he fougat the wicked lady's lover, who went down ami eut axter the swords hu fiaaned’ tire a few Lines, RA Alurceak!, hecring U4 Tole, came Ih and tumbled over the dead body. Out S @t the window rtolg Ths Terrible Jap. G-r-r-r! He had her by the neck. ‘Bhe ald a lot ofekicking, but she coulin't get away, He dragsed her to tho = door, ap that ws could we how it was done by moonlight, ‘and strangled her ptt SZ npe, Mure gef.f-ri,and a little g-K-l-u-k! Mme, Hanako waa welrd, fans it waa all yery spooky. “The Van Dyck,” a little ¢ te and scared off a gentleman whose fiat Qc_then Sieg): wenfederates, wad the only smile‘on the interesting bill GHARLES DARNTON, HINTS FOR THE HOME ' The Torn Lace Waist. Useful Old Waterbags. \ Ps TLY the pretty:lace walsta 0): hot water bags should not be Arnold: Daly as Arthur Blalr-Wold- ingham impersonating a tunatic. Just for that edy in which Mr, Daly pretended to be a luna- d with the aid of of varisus kinds begin to break thrown ,away,'as they make excel- around the neckband and over the Jent Hnings f2r sponge! cases or [paftgulders when otherstve tn good con-| for bags in which to catry bath or Pritior. Une a cream cr white “blonde” | tooth brushes, &c.. when travelling. Jet tmgemneath the worn parts, @ara-| Cover the rubber with any bright col- end™ Sxctie the lace down to thin I$ #1 oread material or with a colored Mnen. } {putecticalty inviaible and will stremgtln} ona pieces of the rubber, cut three Inches and a half by one and a half, and, fhub® garment for many wearings. .| sewed with white thread, make good emoft Wasti Cloths. . finger stalln to put on whep part ae ferent: tege-oan bet byl trult asad sppesablen./Tay ere eaalty ats put teaieged pare nto rowt | Moric poed uealinete oul tonne REM crs eine int ieee wee Her TAGE MEE HOURS PART lithe @ arcuni joges to keep = Verena from fraying. To Preserve Catsup. aw Siraw Matting. [fete tance cach. hottie of estan: 2 h empoon= lfnetodke straw matting in tt chambere Fair einai tia am Ge Joompos| become stained or faded It may| sing pour off oll i lauocess restored by washing in a strong lother mn of soda water. Use ordinary | Cocoa in Pies, a \gng Cm *0da. Wash thoroughly, using ; By R.W. Taylor YES, WEVE COME To} CANCEL OUR ENGAGEMENT TO - TAKE You tc THANKS QIVING DINNER! oh ee Too GAD, Too! WE WERE GOING To TAKE YOU, To RECTORS: OK! You DON'T MEAN It! THE MILLION DOLLAR, WERE GOING To THE $% WALDORF FOR ‘| supper train, ie didn't take out with him, and when he fide out that the best customer came {your seat. almost overturning the stout Imdy mcroms the alsle standing on tiptoes, Boarding-House Fable and the Gallant Johns in ~ Who Never See Them, p - By Joseph A. Flynn. 467 READ that newspaper articte you gave me regarde s I ing strupbanging from a femnla point of view,*? I © remarked to Tess this morning at breakfont, “and © I heartily aaree with the writer. The present overcrowded condition of our cars 1a an actual menace ~o puble comfort and meépsures ought to be inimediniciy, adopted for the’ rellef of passengers, especially the fair sex.” “I'm gind to 09 you've come th iifo cgain.’! whe Te pied, scarefilly adjusting a new swastikn bow tle. “Sts certsinly worth your Mfe te sauirm Into a car these days cand’ make a play for a seat. You know that pretty, Honrl- “etta with the natural curls on the top floor, whe thinks you're just ‘Oh, myl'—the: girl with the brown-etriped: sutt exactly ike the ono I'm having made, only my mult {3 more — expenaive on account of the @well lining? Well, she had a whole sleeve ripped owt of her coat the otter might by a couple of husks on the. Haw would you lke that, el? E Say: you're a little girlle pushing a pen behind the bare all day long trom in the morning till 6 at night. The boas rolls In about 6 with something that The Poor Girlies Who Hang Straps, Seats 19% In and blaw out agaiv wile “he was downstnirs decorating Henry’s maloxany, a. woen iip.in the alr for fair; and everybody. does the shake-aatauntit-the inst All in, and as hungry: as a walter in ‘a swell hotel, you two-step for’ the cars, mix up In « free-for-all and then do the strap: act all the way home. You're Just crazy fo take the heavy load off: your Iittle Trilbya, but the only pitce var: cant 1s the floor, wile ali the gallant Johna in the seats are getting thelr penny’s worth reading ‘How To Be Polite’ in two lessons. Cote ‘You fellows rush Into, the cars, hog All the sents, and then fall asleep of. - @tve Into the middie of the paper. When your ‘umping-oft place comes in sight you. unwind yourself, make a swell bend to some fussy Henrietta nnd offer hee | hanging on to a strap, reading the face ada “This game about you fellows being all crumpled up aftur n hard day in the ~ i Dear Betty: two years my when Dear Betty: loves me, Invite this boy. T¢_yo pend: were | friends. with him, Dear Retty: A convent. my father, who ftehn, 22nd when, Mt. te dry At” will “be ¥ adding a teaspoonful of cocoa. to + <a} one color and the spots will your oI lewith thirely removed, Pe head ee ieee rouge and Lt ste sont. wi marry will aeorifce her own love fi A Fickle Sattor. SAM sixteen and love a young man senior who seemed to return my affections until of late, ceased suddenly without any cause to my knowledge. his attentions Unless you have offended him, he ‘s a fickle.young man and not worthy of worry on your part. You are young and will find some one who will treat} you more conalderately. She Wants to Make Up. AM sixteen and-in love with a young | fellow of eighteen, NED OO 19 CORALINE DH FOU-ATO100 + young to be seriously in love, Just “be 1<4-Gonbent-Bred Girl, AM elghteen and until the last two months shaye spent my: whole life in My mother ts dead and is stern and grave, takes little Intereat in me. Ever since I a child I hayo’ been tolt I was to & cousin of father, who says he About two months ago we had a quarrel and I am very anxious | to be on good terms again, but he} dosen't agem to want to speak first. 1) am going to have ao Says and I would like very mush to Would it be for me to write and ask, him to call| ‘and then ask his pardon? 1th ng Ma PARENTAL OBJECTIONS. through personal selfishness, — , Dwenty-seven, refuses to consent to for her and she My wedding ts net for the third of January. But 7 really do not think I care for him in the right VincENT®S © ADVICE 7° LOVERS Qaughter, as the casa may be. Of course, there are some who regard matr- mony as a sort of financial bargain, but fortunately these are fow and far HE course of true love never runs smooth, DUE) reween I¢ your romance hes been blighted by parental objections, don't con- ee Taina taki LG pe kara ea ue ee sider yourself an ill-treated mortal, but try to convince your family of the consider ‘e young Cs pene s oawantaicefatcalebbayel ev ban llntarestal ocltnolr| Sesereeior tentang bt a) CTY os Cae Caled: tare Sod Ca) Conn he child at heart, and he or she who refuses to ablde by their decision will find cut too late the folly ef. marry- Ing in haste. f It ts not often that a mother an engagement mother Jove always seeks the child's happine: in order to insure the future welfare of her son or If. you'are not old enough to deckte for yournelf—that is, orer twenty-four or five, don't be impetuous and rash and throw reason to the winds by rusting into a secret marriage. Consider the question seriously from one and all sides, land after the firt disappointment has worn away you will in all probability be mighty thankgul that parental objections have still kept you heart whole Jena fancy free. ay at all. Ido’ not know If he cares! friend which causes me to doubt his for me even, He says he loves me, but/love. I might be happy, for he seems I overheard a conversation with his!¢o like me very much. My father cel in a tow | proper LT. i who ls (AQULIZLES UMS would be terribly angry if I did not want to marry him. What shall I do? ANXTOUS, Under no ctrcumstances marry the ‘man at present. Talk the matter over ‘with him, tell him you do not love him ‘and also that you overheard the con- versation with his friend which leada you to detwht his love for you. Ask him to walt umtil you can decide and tell marry any one you\don’t love. ‘Don't be scared into marrying your cousin. When Engaged. Deer Betty: S it customary for people tn mod- + B — ONR® cAmau ents or {invitations are “sent, who pays for printing, &c., parenta of brite or beidegroom? 6 H. £, P. It is not necessary nor customary for people in moderate circumstances to mend out announcesnents of an engage faed@ing amnouncementT: |---| Dancing. Etiquette: Dear Betty: * Fa young man asks a tri to dance bbb him;-te tt-proper-tor-her.-te-say- for him, when escorting her home, to Jenve her at the levator cr take her up? NOY vi | It 4s not customary to thank a man after dancing with him. He may elther leave the girl at the elevmtor or take her uo as he wishes. | their vest pockets bending their backs to give her 4 seat, all the ttme forgets; jland In at the next curve. lola lady handed cut ta @ fresh Alec who stood up In’ an overflowing car one? | night and sek: “Madam, will you have my seal your father firmly that. you wit! not | erate circumstances to send out announcements of engagement of| thereof, and: the daughter? When marriage announce-| Plait» at the een ttre pride DTN pay tor }-ts—-8- 8-4 —yerds tl = “Thank you" afterward? Is it proper | Vonage may be all right, but tt» Rirke, looting ike the last paige of ‘From Rage. fto it od hea, trips Into the car oh a Frenotr-brerze- att thn-Johns_forget-the ¢e— between Kid Sorappo and iforrible Pete, and almost lose the good clears In Re poor woman with the-bts—bumditetn her aeiit a inging to her skirts, braced wp against the door, wondering whose \lep she'l*! — . like the one the | | Al you felloaw need is a «ood swift call ones in a abilc Bur the old lady only straight- ‘No. thanks, I'm getting out at ened her neck a little” further and anawered | the next corner too,” ‘There's nothing wrong with your eyes, not at all. You're eel Jant week Lizzie went downtown to match a piece of gcods for sho'a thinking of getting. She ran into a friend of the famly with a long of how Brother John had run off with the daughter of tho painter neat door, and before Liasie knew It they were closing the doors, She caught a trolley, fisuring on a seat, but not on your Itfe. All the Johns were rotting their money‘a worth, and all the way uptown who do you suppose she stood right in front of and never let on, but eyed him all the way? Why, that fellow with the Sasty. fingers on the accond floor front who ix mupposed to have nothing but: rooke. ‘Whan the car rollad'up to the corner _ha-had_the-oast-tron_nerve te get pend ypeak—to thee.as=if-he_never_asw—her_U0-then™ = -———Perhmpa te thin tk Inter pored. emer IE AMT Wy Serer aftort to part one of the rolls. ‘What object could he have in pretending not to notice her tint!l he had reached hts destination?” ‘r¥ou aught to go to night echool,"’ she replied, paying no attention wemt- ever to the thumping nolaa from the kitchen aa the steak was being made tender. “If he recognized her before that maybe he'd have.to cough up aa- _ other nickel” One ~ Arsenic Fortunes. . : HTERE ts a gant demand for arsenic for the destruction of jocusts m the ae Transvaal. Ita manufacture has even been proposed as a colonial indus try, with profitable prospects. : HE ‘plain tail- I ored waist never £008 lout of style, This eno sincludes the | very latest features | Tt te made of white madras, but flannel, | sttx, oofton or linen materiale mey be wed. It can be made with the los, regulation sleever {Mustrated or with the three-quarter [ones finished with | banda. The liner | xiven by the ptaite | at: the back are | pecullarly desirable, | while there ts just enough fulness at the front to be be: ceming and to con- form with the latest demands of fahton Tho waist ts made with fronts and back, It Js. finished with the regulation box platt and with tucks et each side shoulders are ald | after the seams are | ctonea. ‘The quantity of material — required for the medium size $5-8—yerda— 37 oF; $16 yards U-tnetae wide. Pattern No; 5849 fa cut in sizee tor {Rh AB BAD oon TAT ‘Call or send by mall t THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- ‘TON FASHION BUREAU. Nv. 21 West Twenty-third street, Mow York. Gerd ten cents in cola or stamps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plaimty, and a> waye apecity sise wanted. ‘Theee ne | Jen EE Ke ECR fe THE NEW: MAYOR,” o AStory Based On ~ IO EEE ERE EEE EEK EEE ECKL E ALAS ALASSAASSAAAAHASAAA AAA AHA ALANS PAAAAAMAAAPAAAAALFALIF AFA IAAL SIA 3 Pa zn % - “THE MAN OF THE HOUR.” GEORGE H. BROADHURST’S % Successful Play. be BAA SAASASAARAA LIAS UI EEE EEE EE EEE EEE EERE CECE EEE EER EEK ECC EEE LECCE EE EEE KE LASAAAAAASSAAAAHAH MANNA AA AAAS ALIS Y noting her @on's misery, begs What is the matter, plan te ast per, CHAPTER XII. (Continued.) A Midnight Visitor. WAS trying to “make up my mind,” vaguely replied: ‘Bennett, By Payson Terbune. Mopyrighted, 1907, by George H. Broad: hurat.) , 3 yo $6 @YNOPRIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERA. | Avra Bennett, «rich spunk tan whom | | 7 sorely distresséd by her plead- Fen, “the political Hows has made | ing. {whether @ man ought to follow vet ne s had ou Ope wien torrigan Rallway | hia conscience, even if it leada to beart- : or_namied. Wel own | brea! ; manctoy namie Ves rmriant are Interested: | break for those he loves, or whether he ‘ e pbrother, Percy; is the fi ward | OURHt to let conactence go by the Al nee fortune Tein Bora yn. | ‘board for “once and” protect the happl- tis" soto, | Noss of his loved ones,” Incurred on “le them ob: t ditmatean acco ice oe Vainsrright's: ) iso autor for Datlaas hand. Aierman | Awan! dice, A pollen enc oe Mirra ANS [aocond over qatich a. question, ete figan plana Ie ‘bass i ov ware | MUat: door ole do this fourteen Aldermanic votes | consequence,’’ aediod. iH hy ontrols . bi y ASinininttadion Gal Weinvecient and | cT don't know about that." he said, i moodily. a ( a ce neste, inlet, | mc Naa alaee 1 ‘ou know tt perfectly: well, It in fr he a what your father would have advised you. aurely are doh Supposo, for revered as I do my own father'a t Yen?" he paused. "© mupposititious caso?" he continu that Ine { iduty, be the resulta what. they may’! “Idt/us take | a ‘mere supposititious case’ if you like. | Instance, holding a position of trust, had had e "Tt | father whose memory he honored and | Alwyn. "You really think so?” “There can be no doubt. A man, | right, te sit be as you say!" “What?"\ queried = Mrs. | “De you mean "Buppose some’ ona tempts him to|Some friend of yours, perhapst’ betray’ his posltion of trust—even os 1 tempted—and | threatens, in case of his refusal, to | sympathized, lmake publlt certain facts which would {sition for him! It waa he, perhaps, have lately |prove his ‘dead father to have been aj that I. heam talking to you in here How can you hesitate a|so/undrol. Now, what. ahould the man just now? No wonder he seemed ox- One }ao? Should he let hia father's sacred cited! “The sing of the fathers shall it, no matter what thoi memory be trampled in the mud, let his duty go by default and save'—— | the’ ‘It would bean awful responsibility to decide such @ question,” ‘sald Mrs. jchildren than on [the wives,” } Bennett with. a Mttle shudder, » there could -be only ono. reply,’ nd that tet been Bennett nodded. “Oh, the poor, poor “What a follow!’ “but | Bennett, half’ ta pimnelt, The wivea?> Your “) mother Dving?) That: makes it) groaned Bennett, prompted Mra. Bennett, as|stertied at the despair in his voice. {t Is an actual case? terrible po: | |be viaited upon the children, even unto or “It is sometimes less hard on ‘mused friend bas a dai }Oh, my son, every Gay I thank God in| Fiveted on a bit of pasteboard lying on Tan humility that my husband Ifved so | te corner of his desk directly beAeath Right 15 piameleas a Ifo and jeft #0 honored aj the reading lamp. It waa Horrigan’s card. | Slowly- the mother'a gaze shifted trom thé oamt to ther son. name! How «rateful you and I both | ought to be for’— Tt la easy enough to decide for some Jon you have never aren," retorted color had been crushed by some swift | Bennett, almost rudely, put suppose emotion that left it very okt, pale and | the dishong: in--my story had | sunken, s been father, “Mr. Horrigan!" she murmured. ‘Te “I, refiume to muppono ‘anything of the Waa he who was your Gnitor to-night? sort!” interrupted hia mother, Indtg- Surely he tan't the sort of man to care nantly, rising to her feet. ‘1 wonder ,sbout hia father's reputation for hon- |that you, can speak ao! How can you) sty, He |svgmost eo horriole a thin: oe Youwre Ured, mother," interrupted “Just a thopghtless, tao! ‘speech | Bennett In baste. Won't you'— of mine. That's all,e lied Alwyn, “Us| * * she panted. His visit here very late. You'll have a headache, I'm ALWYN!" her volco rising to a wall of afraid. Won't you go to bed?" | pante-stricken appeal, ‘“‘did-did (hat “Yes. It is late. And I'm ‘keeping /man dare to hint anything against you up. Good-night, dear, I wish your| YOUR father? Tell mo the truth! J / friend ; A haye a right to know, Did he? '-—— She oheoked hersell suddenly with a Alwyn bowed his head tn allence. Hite giap, Bennett, giancing up to ‘Toll me whet be emi” From her face the| “And you thmshed him and threw | Bennett [raged love of a wife that demanded | allence brocded orer the study, oromen | satisfaction. [only by the occaxtonul turning of a | ‘He maid,’ muttored Bennett, almost | paxe of the report, Then, after what |tmocherently, “he said my father made | seemet to. Alwyn An eternity of -wait- his fortune—oy—gratt!"” |ing, the document valid to the floor. Klanced at hkt mother. @h¢ him out of the house?’ she cried, her, Was, standing rigid, her face cold ead Jold eyes ablaze. | hard as granite. | ‘SNo."* “Horrigan has ferreted this out," he ) te Aawyntt | said, not daring to draw nearer or “Hehe proved what he said!’ peoffer comfort | to the woman “whom “Tt Js a let A wicked, abominable | the Boss's disclosure bad turned to Hier i store. | “He has secured the proots, aad Ee ie By Sava he wil them broadomat j ‘Tt Ia the truth, mother, Would T Unies withdfaw my opposition in the have told YOU auoli a» thing—would | Horoush raz matter, If 1 let that Dill. pase he Will burn the re- |Horelgan have loft this room alive {tt were not true? In only One thing to do," in- 1) In Its {ntenaltye= | A allonce—dreadful apeak in | rath ‘tell over the room. Alwyn dared pot COP arkrtewin fook at his mother, At Inst aho spoke: | iNet be | “I must know more, I refuse to be-| cet wy 0, trembling, #0) | Meye one word, You spoke of proots,| | ting. Ni Riemay OW” NOVICE What are they? da npt advikescf command | De Withput e word, Bennett handed her right!” |) mM a]

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