The evening world. Newspaper, January 4, 1908, Page 9

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Saturday, Jan uary 4, iota Ps Hemp ouaenewener r=) OH SBE PPBPEBBSPOHSHPSBBBOOSB PBBLOCHVBOHOSHHEPOSCHSOHLROGPHOBDPPD BO®HHOOPGPOSPOOPBLOOOGHHOOHHWS ©88090008080NG8 BSPBB : MABEL TALIAFERRO, the Young Actress, ie : The Evening World Daily Magazine, |g @ Miss Taliaferro, “Oh, what wrinkles! Ty is five when this pleture was taken, | nd Twas of the kiddies with | hauncey Olcott I thou; him tho | ‘grandest’ actor in the world, and 1 his feet with my head while he was singing. ning about actin And I loved M was awfully nice to kid Seventeen and a Half Years on the Stage, and Now Only : 20, She Tells the Picture Story. of Her Life. xe —o¢ girl with t > a fair-ha lia- ‘and — left Mr for Andrew Mack. T appeared int s and did a lot of travelling. T also did a i ying. owner of Lvo cents’ orth The great line In one of the plays was =_ J of conversation and four dolla worth of feet, and how she ‘Consider yoursel? under arrest!’ I was wning ornament, of the centre table ‘TY fond of that speech, and when I considered myself perfect in {t I tried| With OU it on the company. ‘Consider yourself | ed" on girlish, winsome | & to be “interviewed,” and made me | upid until she came over to the Darnton. re in your teens and your first ay Cretics wher you went to cali on His) you felt like the unuepp: with the cr | finally came to your re-cue and t—shared the family albu . it was something like that when I “c aliaferro, who seemed tco youn ard and hoy tory of her lit That 1 aving Cevice she was just twenty years ed on the stage, Ard shed before me had would show me the rhood. She settled ourselves, should teil ne the 7 oid, ot ey n row the ¢ » Clreus” flashed photograph of Loved to oBe an Fine | she it u Andrew Mack. heaven eautiful pir dT was awfully pose 1) just as I would have it played.’ And so I played it for him at his little the- | 1/1 played the fair part's Desire. y rec the fd hi “ayy Gli G © peeped ont at | atre in Ireland,” “recalled 5 Se ee a ay TACT ESS Away Flies the Fairy! | pe rod vate had pen that I shal! neve t rn of the page and the fairy was in ‘or Fair Vire} Doar me deserve noc or it,"? said Miss] gone! Behold the child actress in the | Lovey Mary! Miss Taliaferro, “there and with my hate y head, but would uyel t But T was pleasel| “Yes,” mused er Yeats said to me,] 1 was in long skin ead the part, ‘That's] done on the top of m was there a sig: fe played afi 1d | calico dress « of | short time T had a sw beautiful o4N 38 36 3 Who Flashed Into a Star Over Night | she was aa T J ably ris! <4 =P €S 4 ning of Browning. a4 ! engagement. We closed on and I was married you believe it, couldn't appear inj mus' ‘Mrs. Wiggs ig the Cabbage Patch’ |w Without a special permit? 1 got jon Friday permit as quletly as the law would al- low in order to spare myself as much ympson smiléd up at shame and humiliation as possible. There 1 was in tong skirts and my hair ‘done as { sald, and yet I was su to the indignity of a permit just because I wasn’t sixteen Poor Lo Mary! We laughed he r eyes at v a Do} Yo had Ming Was anxious to She n petted as ab she was Bick had hated to ar a “o s*—-she had s-orned fa books and the stupt who know no better t to send t Ny, looking: * she told me. em, And here “Seventeen, “But Tage! At Eighteen, in “In the Bishop's Carriage.” the wall, then of the album. om Browning to jed the new star. be from the circus e how shall good-by to the stage at the em! of this season. Ered wanted to ‘star’ me in of the Cir- ‘ wspapers sald Well, they sald very “red did the rest. I have done anything. kind thing don't fee! At Seventeen, in “You Never Can Tell.” | | under rt six y after the first rehearsa’ Daly. IT gave in my before the als W nh uime . would get a lo from Mr. Daly asking me to come back He was awful at rehearsa he was charming after the first night, and 1 f ve him everything. He was prob- | ybably wrong, | ly p words, and Tw for I never hefore, and I felt sop yed ag > silly fi had anot 1 thne w vas laighteen tn ‘In hop's Ci age | | 1 couldn't do the part in the first I can be Polly ‘toug but I n't be Nance Ollen ‘tou en the Life of me! Kindly note the ple- nd see me trying to be ‘tough.’ We smiled at the perfect lady wi seemed about to step Into her carriage a year later by the pletures Wel At Nineteen, in “Pippa Passes.” were face to face with Bro Pippa. This sobered us. Said Miss Talia troubled her dainty white shirtwalst nglin st summer, but I came i Bard Job. ‘ck full of sawdust. I still feel stuffed Browning a Bar . with It. T don't fest a bit Hike a 9 “1 don’t deserve much cre@it for the | 1 can’t under y—do you reatly other things I have dome, but Gl) fee ie one Ges me that I deserve some credit for the wa me do Well, then, I worked over ‘Pippa Passes.” It wa n the string. awfully hand for me to give both the] There!" f had never sev. a circus performance 1 Fred and I travelled with the my OOOO OOOO0 in One Brief Hour thie Amecteam Soldier of rancane Even the Wounded Men on the Landship Cc with blood and dirt, surged a German selenth ites CHAPTER XX. Vout. him with mad enthusiasm. It] ‘The Adventurer a Meee eae CRRA Ceci en use Danae New Honor as all he could do to foree his way a mighty” ships. the ¢ wae|| ge-| amidships, struggling In the most un- wheels, is capable of 241 A Ms) ne Nae tiled manner with those who would | BR ARENGR HALL ee af Hone | \ave raised him on thelf shoulders and in love yrne him aloft in triumph 1 t of Lloyd ensueke. | i sie ng for the first time in his life se. and) {(Copyright, 1907, by D Appleton & Coo 3 tev. TT tod most Intoxienting pleasure the 1 can glve, « bewilderment w only equalled by his surprise. It 1 not dawned on him before that he had traordinary and he his assumption of | 4 on his part, was sYNopsis OF 1 Lewis Kirky Vill into my hand." | 1 with Oi aute: y Next. LE some to | who | G ns a enue ur scolded had swept to lange uppearance. T. t done anything so had even feared command might later on be resented. But here he was the her essing whelm | with us enterpris Tha expedit of four people -W: the waist, with « a quaint little BOOODODUOO Dog oo pagination and d's eye for drawing “nd composition than almost any of the other designs yet To the Puptls of The Evening World's Arty che. | i } : ess. my ks to you ‘ Cory RIGHT BY ANDERSON} BEG to express my thanks to you \ ail for the commendable work sen given. We only et to say that lack | , # in made upon The Evening World of space prev ting At Five, with Chauncey Olcott. | anks of Dee, 28 and 31 and Jan. ving works mn the letters rece in which merely a black backgroy Was given, leaving a white space which| was to be filled in according to the, Ingenuity of the pur The Evening Wo | tree examples the hundreds of bea which were sent in if World's you sts which ure most interesting. When time and space permit I shall s these letters for public st delighted to say that the S cli are equa! with the f work m these stage ever since. I have gone to bed in ‘The Little Princess,’ in ‘U) Tom's Cabin’ as Little Eva, in ‘Ply Passes,’ and now I'm back in bed ‘Polly of the cus,’ so you see my ‘oareer’ has been rather restful. It began at the Fourteenth Street Thea- . \tre, where I toddled on the stage as Baby Bascome. I must tell you of an awful thing that happened there: On i night I exasperated Laura Burt, who | was appearing as the wife, by playing with her ‘make-up’ things, and finally | she gave me a rap on the knuckles. It| hurt, but I kept still and walted for an| At Thirteen, In “The Land of Heart's opportunity to ‘get even.’ Now, Miss Desire.” { Burt bad a which she kept tled to @ lag of a table in ner dressing room| looked aa though she had been caught } while rahe was on tho stage, The dog!|in the act of climbing through a win- | Revenge! I untied the dog and waited | dow, } unt Migs Burt was in her most d publishes to-day, from among ul compositions ese may appear s80ns, The Jokesmiths at Work. ) $6 TD) UIEDINGS are getting higher and higher,” sad one New Yorkur | B “Yes, answered the other; “they are ovidently trying to keop | up with ihe rents.”\—Washington Star. “Do you ever think of your youth?” asked the first oft man. By Julletta Fuhrs, No, 142 Driges ave- | y , (You bet I do.” sald No. 2. “I'm atiti paying interest on some debts I f// nue, Brooklyn.You show considerable | : , é contracted before I was old enough to know better."—Detroit Free Press. | powers of composition and artistic ge- block 5 By Franklin Phillips, No, 9% Spencer Kit —<— nius, and vou deserve credit for com- Ny Four OC AND Au's WeUL ow a hel t oklyn drawing 1s very Mrs. Muggins Would you call Mrs. Henpecke a lberal-minded woman? ff, Posing it, although you “have been so) « ———_ = | Bnd vounsUte) ton ities Welln, | ates Buxging: Only where her huishand Is concerned. She is generally J | Day with vour caraunnel eye lee YOU tT or cetyiniurodskeiNovgealioas One iin vared @nabTianey: Wicd etree wew | 0" Bia) Uri 218 yee Ou a eae ne giving him a ptee. her mi aT) , say. tO Nis bagiecauts rt ¢ ‘ tes} Led ad By Vy i } pi of her mind.—Philadolphia Record, to the casual observer to be meaning. | York City.—Your picture is most chermiigly done. The utle is very, appropriate, | church,"” Judging from the steeple in | = —_— = ices. but thev.@o further to develop the ' ‘Four o’Cleck and All's Weil."* _, she bagksround. \ kl Nh Mae i a ee lb Tn | he tooked for Vera, He w | Was supreme, OOOO OOOO; Becomes a Hero; heer Him After the Fight YOO0 St. with great bearded fellows exalting | least, inpossthl. him to the skies and huzzaing lke so Wea PAIL ENE many Jur Amidships he was ac time was p mer FD) claimed with similar outbursts, rot be ted up indsfnitely, : end Zeddy were for going tiero-Worship. azard. Thoy were es of the Injured who, with magnificent nimous in thelr de- hamper the axpedition, Was in no state to take and had locked 1 her cabin, sobbing and moan- Wounded men raised themselves call out faintly, ‘Well done, Kirkpa rick! Gi for you, old man!” ( eddy had one arm around him lik vering b ear. Mrs. Hitchcock was hand with kisses and erving hysterical~ ly. He was pushed and fostied and almost torn to es, As in a dream oo human she was thero to see n the discusalor izing, and with nity he had Uttle hls ‘po! ‘They nd neither settle such He wrung a von Zedtwitz any decision for twent hot to lone the him at this wonderful moment | Ah! there she was, knecling bestd | St. Aubdsh, and gagins up at} with eves ike stars, Huddled abo on blankets and = matt «were the wounded men she had been tending hemming her in so ¢ at she could not rls But there was something in ‘ie Kirk thought le hadgnever sean | som ne tat ed hime ties sibly and filled him with a sudden and), wild det without ¢ 3. In re- » consented ittle repose, Two Cowards. gut ¢ ving dutles crowded on him made the fast bbed him of those e in trim to mo: It was extraomdinar vw ind stationed ery deferred te him, and m on guard. him at once the arbiter of all tt at the most ur- nes, It was as though he had wo friends that to ve crdered dee that he should sign of danger, e satisfied, said West- shown us that ooard, ated It's 1 00d care of No it up, and go below!" n's paternal nly been elected king, His will and authority was posi-|j!ow, B 2 pon him, The poor, di 1 ain had hidden bimeelf out and wit ight, and Haines had similarly dis- seemed that the Intter had it the battle on the tie the top In a state of ab, news had run around the ship, and he had been booted and hissed as be made his appearance on deck, Fortune as tively fo: ed cay ‘Ts ra’s father was praise usual had favored the brave, and {.. the TO mE estat ence time of stress the true jer had W almaelt on his bunk, ice to the watt, felt The craven of Jackson and 3 had been the means of exalting sud been up the bigger efore, and this had | ‘Thetr loss had t ” his fatig Body and brain [Killed and woun le. th wary, and he nestled his ont of fifty-stx. and the pillow like a child to ite d@ no idea how long he had he felt his shoulder roughly feCann killed; St. Aubyn dl Weaver. the little Jockey, hanging en life and death, his only tw nen a difficult operation that would have to shaken, and looked up to see his cabin be carried out under the most trying crowded with men, He sprang up ine and unfavorable circumstances, y in a eweat of spprehepston, | thinking that the Fortuna was agalp \In Doubt. intacheer, | It was hard to decide as to what was| ‘Good heavens! What's the matter?! best to do. To expose these unforru-| “It's all right. Don't worry. We've nate men‘to the cruel buffeting of the ,come to have @ iam with you,” - st waa manifestly, for a whilo at! (To Be Continued)

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