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ern te 1908. The Evening World Daily Magazine. Tuesday, January 28, ¢ AERODEO® COOQCOODOQOED™ e CG WADA 9 oy CONE SAT Hee Ve OH none OOO LOIN OOOO COO HCg CO OOOO Cie OOOO CITC SOOO OU DOOD 00D 000000 000000000000: “3 i oe ° ° 0) ave ° e e ® : wes Six 1aiks to Girls on Musical Lopics | © e od Vi wo bi a & & OOCI OOOO SOOO OOOMOOO OOOO OOOO OOOO OOOO OU DEE rn nn O15 DEECDOGONSY 4» © BS1S1 01014) 8/9 1S191+ 010) 0) 6118/0) 9) 0 9.0 H) oceree DODO OOCOCOCOO COOK re ‘ : .[the deep breath regulated by tho, (going down and back Just as far as eo oo Hoy These Talks Are Prepared Exclusively for jslapreagr jit can sith ease, The jaw ts at-| [Firat TalkeLAST SATURDAY-—Art Necessary to Pro- lhe Evening World. | The attack of the sound must ee a to skull pene beneath ts ' duce Easy and Natural Singing. from this ap or . temples in front of the ears y manne, } 5 = i Tut to have the attack pure and in| placing yonr two fingers there and | | Second Talk—y ESTERDAY—The Foundation of Sing- i roppi ' g; Breath Control. T. Ik N |tune you must open wide the throat) \dropping the Jaw, you will find that | ' a O. 3e not only in front, but also at t? a space between the skull and jaw | Fourth Talk—TO-MORROW—The Mastery of the ‘back, for it Is useless to emit a} grows as the jaw drops | Tongue. ‘ sound ff the throat is not sufliciently, In singing this space must be ¢ ! Fitth Talk—THURSDAY—Facial Expression and Mirror H Relaxation of the Jaw. open to let it pi Throaty tones} large ns poi HB for ro ect apis \ or pinched tones are tones which! at the j 1s dropped down, gly = s ree fs 2) eds webinar Gee rotee nin emianl VaR lineal eialdmtomtnemoueninwmatcie H Sixth Tatk—FRIDAY—The Appreciative Attitude and the $ By Mme. Tetrazzini. [through a half-closed throat blociced jack of tho thront, Tt will help} Critical Attitude. | the beginner sometimes to do sim ------- a a \either hy insufficient opening of the ‘larynx or by a stoppage of the throat talk I asked you to study the phys{o- passage due to the root of the tongue being forced down spect of the throat, head and lungs.'and back too hard or to a low, soft palate we said a few words, mt not half In order to have a throat perfectly open {t ts neces the subject of breath control. To- sary to have the jaw solutely relaxed + up the subject of tone emission have found in siviying different feeling the ‘The Jaw must never be put;certain groups of notes more head quality, or mouth open | quality, or deep quality, should be used. The perfect \volce must be so blended as not to show where the regis ple relaxing exercises, jaw drop with the fingers, down; {t must drop down, and It 1s not necessary to the mouth wide becanse the jaw fs relaxed to {ts utmost. 1 shall not dwell on the mouth now, however, as that ters change. will take up enother orticle. | The scale is the great test of voice production. The Do not attack a note at the samo timo that you are Faile should be even. Lvery note of the register should SGN my firs | Ye 1am goiag fonalities that | to i he attack, {t 1s foirly easy for the French and Spanish people to | Usually the test effect of the singer consists of learn this relaxation of the jaw and the epening of the) inhaling. That is too soon. Take the breath (through partake sufMclently of the qualtiy of the next register . jn a throaty manner, or in the throat, throat, but the English-speaking people generally talk the nowe, of course,) and give it an instant to settle, as above or below im order not to make the transition king the t y you aoticeable when the voice ascends or descends the scale, It we vefore attacking the sound. In this w This blending of the registers is attained by the in- WIL avoid the stroke of the glottis, which 1s the sudden and uncontrolled emission of the accumulated breath telligence of the singer in mixing the different tone qual- The voice is divided into registers. But one should itles of the registers, using as aids the various forma- lnot be taught to sing In registers—the voice should be tions of the Ips and mouth and throat, and the ever- to bottom, the idea of the|present “apoggto,” without which no perfect scale can » singer to understand that on be sung. ith the throat half shut and even talk through haif-! shut teeth, times when you are talking rapidly put your hand up to your jaw. Yon will find that the muscles beneath it (tongue mus- ttack will ruin the most beautiful Luisa. Tetrazzini a] The Million-Dollar Kid #& # must attacked from the very seat of suddenly i This is called in Italian “!'appogto.” Your that it is sti glish word diaphragm does not convey the same {m- cles) are tight and hard; that the Jaav seldom goes down ay be called the bellows very far in pronouncing any of the English words; s prop and is whereas in singing the Jaw should be absolutely relaxed, from top } perfectly isters merely pfy By R. W. Taylor’ even OOOO DOC 000000000000. |The New East Lynne hi : SAY, TED, YOU MAKE. THAT SNOW MAN LOOK LIKE THE MILLION DOLLAR KiD! THEN " E, H. Sothern Makes a Laughing Success | CA MAKING & STEAL MY she ts ecemingly unaware his mad but Adoration, ‘Three years pass, during which | peac! And he laughingly kissed her. But Olive flushed to the roots of her | ‘eee! ITs LOTS ~ | SWELL SNow E OF FUN To 7 a ME WILL BE MAD AND | MAKE MaN ‘ our le lene PAA of Dundreary. Slee aaa Al SNOWMAN? AN, MR. TONES: be) Pm\KEEP Away FROM : Deere Mic men te ee | oun SISTER! By Clara Morris ng into his Y as 58 ¥, at the Lyric = an Mr. E. H. Sother shocs nothing to kick about. In- : Author of “Stage Life,” “A Pasteboard Crown,” and others. ed a Jig of pure joy over the laughing suc. Hoda OOO COCO COOOOOCOOCCOCOC000 POCESOESTOOOGOADNG Soe ranievenst ide-whiskered role which still ac oY o gloved b i ole whieb still adv h (Copyrighted, 1907, by Clara Morris.) | quick, elastic movements, full of joy her’s memory | ee and laughter and with the chatter of a dozen parrots, i 3, | Caos Be te. | “Olive, you ere truly wonderful!” sala ives with his brilliant | Daphne, as she kissed the girl on both Vrof. yeauty, | cheeks. And Daphne May, with wide anor aes Nea eyes, announced solemnly, “I didn’t | s’the gift to her int ame. | Know anybody growed but ttle girls See cand cet et iktths “nftiiss ‘of an invaid | and cats. But cousin Otive's growed, once usin, Mra. Ma wl rt) hasn't she, papa?" ¢ te) Socretly lov In the laughter that followed Dr. Jaugning at ee i = nt Philip anil Philip erled out as he held the girl's or ani ein erent TieMareNanA 0 AKEAD, TED! iB REAT! | CUESS and the Profersor, warn | hands: Pea eatiics Loow wust Live) HE'S ALWAYS THAT WILL FIX fr gi ,baphae, Philly laugha| “By Jove, that's so, you have Olivet ven acted the s: Fe ; = Place e-roret Helden, an muli-rlltic You've grown and straightened and AR. MONK, TRYING To Who has wasted his life in extravagunt dis-| rounded, and you are as pretty as @ |stpation, has fallen in love with Daphne, H. Sothern as Lord Dundreary Starting to Step who st and wonder eld Adel Murcott minded “asides,” sentimental 7 essed “'s sages ia Sothern conversation” that turne A monologue and made four-act Joke. 6 last ona y into Our An It was on when the skeleton plot stole out of tts wit Mghted his all seemed ridiculously out-of-date. y bones rattled. hb love-fires, lke melodrama on a 4 mped along through the; Ww The Asa Trench- the rummy kK, long: hile he was at It.) the elder Sothern might have gone further tn making nonsense of old Tom Taylor. | But in view of what the son did last night we can forgive the fath rable silly asses that Steps of Nundreary—we can even forgive him Cecilin Loftus seemed to do with the smiles and laughter she ‘We can forgive him the tnnu an upper box last night. When Dundreary grew young again @f the house, no one seemed more sur- prised than Mr. Sothern himeelf. His | own laugh, that sounded I1ke the chortle of an amfable pump-handle, was a sig- nal for freeh outhursts across the foot- ghts, while ts funny hop always brought a good-rized giggle, There was Mo holding in against his absurdities, even when softening of the brain stared Wou tn the head. When the play attempted to get @own to serious business, however, the creaking of {ts joints was painful to hear. At the same time the costumes with the | have f Lawrance D'Orsay ughter that much. | owed in the hop-| just as Miss | attered about | 11 hook the sides TED, You've GOT TALENT! TAKE THOUSAND AND TO ART SCHOOL THAT'S A WORK OH! JUST WHAT TED HAS ALWAYS WANTED THIS Co 1 MUST THANKE ‘Yrou, MR MONK! YOU ARE | : THE DEAREST BOY, IN | Daphne's’ beauty {ncreases. She and Philip} have a Iitle daughter who {ts the old Pr- fossor'e idol. Ollve. whose mother has died. [comes to live with the She. attil [loves P and ious of hte Philip is tnvitod ort medical convention #. Daphne $# ill going. In Phil y \ beautiful. Da soon r Piiips return. opens bs vistalee a foollsh [letrer written him by anc ser woman, | CHAPTER V. ne (Continued.) - i A Hint of Tragedy. | chamber he stopped. Directly op- posite stood the twin brass beds and stretching across the foot of them a pillow-plled couch, on which Daphne lay, with the pale, clear ight f a reading lamp falling softly over | the or ‘spread, billowy hair and sleep- ing face. Wrapped only !n delicate night garments and stlk kimono, whose beautiful embrofderies shone Kemlike in | ‘the clear light, all her loveliness was jeuping and adrowse. A heelless Turk- [ish slipper dropped from one loverhanging foot, one hand rested on ok, one arm, from which both 1 fallen back, was cast bare above her dark head, t curved black lashes clinging to her pale | ks, while In the wh.teness of her the red mouth glowed ike a scar flow As he looked a at her} | he came nearer to a full appreciation of | ner beauty than he had ever done! He A S the doctor entered the large upper CURSES! jo THE WORLD. ra) loosely an open b sleeves h and whit to her: “1! not be recalled having said ut you are you ofa and now he won- ruse wut ny ‘stepmother t hair, and Daphne saw the blush. ‘That night Dr, Keith sont his wife up- talrs directly after dinner, telling her he would join her in twenty minutes. Rut he had reckoned without his ward Olive. She was describing with grim humor her past six months’ campaign against neuralgia, insomnia and mi- graines of all sorts and presenting auch ludicrous pictures of some of her com- panions in like trouble that the laughter of the two men reacted the lonely wom- an above stairs. It was only after Ulive had jingled off a common miicirel song of tho day, while Philip leaned over the plano,and when she suddenly sprang up, exclaiming “Gracious me! Cousin Daphne loathes such songs! 1 hope she’s asleep and has not heard me!” that Philip realized his twenty minutes had atretched to two hours, His exe ouses were accepted with the careful politeness with which his wife strove to hic) her hurt; and that, had she known it, Irritated him far than any vio- lent expression of feeling had done. For weeks Dapline was fed on Juve’s praises —her courage, her tenacity of purpose, her wonderful improvement in character and physique The New Baby, Phen wt last tue Lope arrived, but hés adver by & serious iliness o caused much anxioty ¢ hours were by | delirious condition, in obsessed with the t had already married made her m passed Ry fet tha Olive stress of the | nto t would weakly took you back to 1858 and put charity Teasiere Lara eee B Reh eaee i z jered {f she had thought him a prig.| hand and convince himsed tia in your heart, even when Mr. Adolph EO SE EF OF OE OE SE OF OF OF OE OF OF OE OF OE OF SF OE OF OF OE BE OF OF OE OE OE OEE OF SE Gt OF OF OE OF OE OE OE OE OF OF OF OF OE OE OF BE OE OE OE OE OF OF OF OE OF OF OF OF IE OE EEE | Dnero was something so pathetic In the | Ws not yer dead; und sie Woy os Lestina made you doubt that America % ’ Gives ’ d ’ a suggested helplessness of this utter|heart by her pleadings tat le woud had ever produced s0 crude a specimen ® V ‘mn Q h an bandon, and he turned restively away | not neglect the children for Olives _@s his Asa Trenchani. But {it was im- *® Betty ineent Faviee n ourts ip arria & « een one or two recently Seqiilred | sale. possible to aympathize with brandy. & vy tt 4 sinking down on a tam-| The old professor, who ha BFS Ob OF ot OOF OE Ot OF Ot Ot OE OH OE OE OF Ot OE OF OE OE OE BE OE OE OE OE OE OE OE OE BE EOE OE OE UE OE OF OEE OH TH SE SEE OE IE SE SESE I ME ESE OF SE OE OH ot ot oh oh SF” | MEMONIMM WE RUE UNE On arly | soine of these wanderings, cast pierc.is soaked Abe! Murcott, who had failed to teach Florence to love him in his school- while Phitt his He end kmow I do not care for| drew down the perfectly moulded arm, | glances at > one thing I do not like about him. first make her believe master daya, and, worse still, had lost Marry the Man You Love, ; too, Pay her attentions; | never makes an appointment, I have mecT) AC. | and, stroking it from shoulder to finger |raced up and down. fila] fon. Tn. Mrs Malcolm Breaiay, yon | Dear Betty: eto call, and you will #0 discover! 1, go this, and when I do he elways ke any more appotntn | tip, murmured: “Dearest Iittle womant!""| “Have you any suspicion of the eny ria oe, a oT - as see [WeOUt. sixementhe: agp) ereaniles er, Jour’ aiisctlony ia fash: es tr | has eonielexouse tor keeping it. He man. Ho will soon Then, half laughingly, “Ts this mere/of this mental dist ” * fs usually: shown in tnremper an fo: n do neo re pros 4 A - ‘ ney, an r7 4 en? ‘0 jcast, sf wered th Map a ate man for whom I do not care ep She Loves Anotiier. 1s very close with his money. He never r tke him, and as he| doctor's wite a flawless beauty, then?’ | “None in the icast, str,” answered the ital ‘ 7 § Dishes | Hs (Eo iy Coed 2 NTS! Nan A ies eee takes me anywiere and never treats | be particularly inte ‘Phe heavy lashes were lifted just | doctor. Daphne has aisays made Bas capital ax Dundreary's loquacious I could not answer him, as 1 did not) @ Ant ivtsen and have been sweet-| me to even a soda, He has a frien will probavly not make an| enough to show @ line of sapphire blue, | Uilve welcome here. rervitor, and Miss Virginia Hammond ay love him, My parents iiko this g2n-|| joarta vines ahildiood with @ rourg| «whom I love, and he mows dy his we- yntintle whe friendsiii Daphne was in no wise fluttered nor, ‘Um!’ mumbled the older man. “Um Mary Meredith, Mise Helena Head a8 Adolph Lestina as Asa Trenchard|tleman and would be very happy it 1|{ man of elghteon, However, tere 6! Uond that he loves me, How can I J; 1s perfectly to accept attentions) | Ut ai. She hed an artist's calm ap- Yet her constant presence las evidently Florence Trenchard, n as Georgina, and Miss Gladys wero all ‘in the ‘ation of her good gifts that was a Had an irritating or a distressing effect married him, but I love another man, upon your wife's mind. Perhups Olive who I am sure returns the affection, eee eeeeeaalies prec! Practising Shooting. thousand miles from vanity, but when } pic Miss Hanson bore up beautifully In the scene where Dundreary bur-| but ts not in a position just now to ? e Httte (ld eather aggressively at home here. Qened her with his rambling noneei It was only in the last act, which grew| marry, What shall I do? Der nur ee Gea Be ee ree hee | We icok upon ter aa a child, Init to ve, that his endless talk became mere drivel. Before that he found fun PERPLEXED. [woman ane was he lecned against | Daphne's eyes ahe ty a young woman even in “want ads.,"" and his story of the fleet of children whose sou’-by-sou’-| Walt for the man you love. Don't Hes eon biee 1 pillows and whispered | whose tam{liarities may be annoying wes’ noses made them look tke a regatta was capitally told marry the man you dislike even to ene Seles more | Good) heaven( sir, you don't imasine to be capa- 1 Dr. The play may have limped at times, but Mr, Sothern never went lame in his father's shoes, CHARLDS DAIRNTON, Daphne, with all her prid ble of small jealousies?”’ please your parents, as you would be doing him, as well as yourself, a grave | “T cannot merge my life in his, but world at will, Oh, : he can enter my = pasrat ee: help me keep him there! 1 don't want Philip. Ask Him to Go with You, to be a thing apart, dependent upon Delirium! NTS FOR THE HOME [nia nountyt I want hie Tove, hie cont “5. out wnat vers pride mas mony ch beastie yy Terenas dence, hla companionship! Dear Lora, 9! 78° greater Jealousy. At ak proper for a young lady to as! i ioaaee Oh Pad 8 At a "ater or Loaf Cake. (Poll Onisteacnill sere Jont otibrosn| bread ] a gentleman whom she has known LOR eos pe aan aee events, my boy, when Daphne recovers NE cup sugar, butter size a? an exe. ema pours serve with lemon or hard for some time to accompany her ero the labyrinth 1# no intricate and |We should try to relieve her from tho Beat well one egg, one cup sweet Bake fonenipiace} ot/vemusement Snel aeyi| thard to traca without the clue, and tf continual presence of Olive.” milk with half teaspoon soda ais- | Baked Cabbage. having the ttekets? bap Gh ‘pure love be not it, then I am lost and|_“Y agreed the doctor; “perhaps eolved, one good teaspoon cream tartar|(QOAK cabbage one hour in cold| It 1 perfectly proper for the young | |pannot. foliow where my husband %he might join some party of our ac- in two cups flour; vanilla flavor, water, then boil 10 minutes after | !#dy to ask the man to Sate nShr Nreeante clualg ianoelenekinece pia Lr Ce ian cutting In goo!-sized pieces. Place cbe Him te . . . . . e| “Tt would be better, ati! If she should Peaches Melba. in a baking dish and cover with 1 table Does She Lov | | F join some decent man in a matrimonial WT large halved canned peaches: spoon of butter, 1 of flour and 1 cup| Dear Betty: | Transformation! life tour.” drain and wipe dry; make plain °° wb, sth and pepp: iP taste. Cov- AM the assistant manager tn @ | And then there came to them the vanilla tee cream; fill each half in Swiss Cake Mipbasand: Bakerone Hout downtown omee neste ee hala = { None ees ae een | weary, tncegsant entreaty: wramid form and top with andiea 9 \s rapher yugh her obeerfulness, | tsEor Te LO Chinese Ke nths, spite ' “Don't, ip! jon't hold her Lea SAL eR ets geen see aos Beier a eupa| eatness and good common sense Nest Containing Swiftskggs ests For sare lochir Maret rs, ‘Then Philip thought tt dest to| your urine willo 1 ani alive!” But 5 if\* idea vale Supe: , 3h . > ke city home to awatt hfa|hand upon my check an . 5 . ' su 3 flour, 1 cup sweet | Won my admiration. She seams to ik 2 si ze ; return to the y ‘do not ery, de: King’s Pudding. | milk i Wanenetnteesnink neal avervine nd, under the circum- Edible b nests are collected In the Malay Archi-lthey are mado into soup, thoy are esteemed a nourishing] wife's hour of trial, And lo! all unan- | Dead, women to not srs, 0 t RG GL Galen jtar, 1- vot; cream, butter( stances, should not tke to commit my: pelago, more especially in Sumatra and Borneo, They/dainty, and command a price equal to 50s. a pound, It|nouncet, Olive Tied returned and etood jjeave behind. On, how well it would ve t i { he } Ww t 4 he s ad ja now it Biacdorahuttarshalevein .| mr mole and eos [self Are there any tactics which Taro usually found in caves near the sea and are made ofjis said that $100,000 worth are sent to Singaporo and |!" the hallway to, sive Peeiteaecteen de Lica yi dle Oka Uprentheali acien de onatamen anal annonce wae then’ add the mike and: fh might purse th order to find out if ne oe ee inn en eines tha seh ye-|China each year, Illustrations from London Sketch, | Breen and welvo! aN because they had no thought that aie ny erie amore. otdmmetas ald hig ocrenene te aie “at Al | eaprocates my feling? a a substance resembling tsinglass that is secreted In wpe-(Chinn enc year. “Mlustrations from London Sketch, | fO™, new Olive of milky akin pink ASStS withthe pw’ ge props @ne temoon cinnamen, pinch of walt; frosting. The girl won't ehow you she loves cial glands in the mouth of the bird. In China, where Ups, pink cheeked, of dancing eyes and ‘To Be Continue