The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 1908, Page 17

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s The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, March 6, illion- i By R. W. Taylor === : ae Million-Dollar Kid #& 2% #% %Y ay 30 Tales of | eM OMe) AH! A MONKEYS AHOY, MATES! HE SURE IS CUTEI NOPE! HE'S ME qImmMeE A HAVE A DRINK, \S HE FOR SALE, COMRADE, Dod Mme. Komisarzhevsky ee i EER t = Lik Si ' OLD MAN? ey AAS) MIsTeR? BLAST IT} h tke a Sister Big! SEE? | | bey * of Duse. é ‘'T is w pity that all New York cannot understand Mme. Komisarzhevsky, | By Buffalo Bill I the Russian actress, who is appearing at Daly's before audiences made! } (Wm. F. Cody) up almost entirely of her own countrypeople. fut she is an artist so ery. well worth seeing that hearing isn’t believing in her case, for after all she AER SEES S STEER Serene - alme a speaks the language of Ife. Whether or not she learns English foy the S a No 5. | fed oe el tae ea benefit of Broadway matters very little—even with our tongue iy her ey | nike) © Didern caine the’ baer Bes | hhead she would probably be caviare to the general run of theatregoer’s. She vy; M Adventu TE | tt seing cioser 1 sont in two inore fs not a “showy” actress; she isn’t “sensational”; unlike Mme. Nazimova, | | a Por a still bear isn't always a she isn’t up to all the tricks of the trade. She is like a sister of Duse, oh { with Loan 2 ieee i Tecan igepes and her face seems made to express the same passive suffering > ; ate : Mme, Komisarzhevsky's face haunts you long after you have left the H rse Thieves ig was bad, tre. It seems at least a size too small for a figure by no means large. Her g) by I couldn't hope to t r Our dendewhite ra eth ib ave xet z that night. So [ gerious, sorrowful eyes burn through a a ud waite mes k, and | 3 always un = —— - ! a jo for a good, sheltered smilingly, from bene; ca a broad he ead over which soft brown hair fall, LL GIVE You A NOPE. won't VLL Give You Wann HAVE in been asked for etories| spat to Just then my ‘horss h Yo irs of that she ore intelle eme n AVE often bee ed fc ries t Just th 2 ieee acaviiell ; AIP eRe pOGhER CSTR THEE ILA THOUSAND DOLLARS SELL HIM AT TWO THOUSAND ! HoetoN I about the! eadrmeh of the Weal | wtilnnled, (fly call waa undwaredl Nor HY oan : rotese Nib eet bad i i e ed ay Later on in this/a hollow us peyond the SR a ENC your a, reineinterlig! Mrad Flske's) 8x FOR HIM, Mister! ANY PRICE! How's THAT? GALA {ioc ee Anccinegecantaiveagarhiaa' td 8a" | aloniel® whteH icrisiremet laine: Cacie® posed nerves, and slowly becoming convinced that the Russian’s nerves are serv- : | RoElea gE Bie race yearitaetGNtanlenoeviee | SiauR esa ataatan CORN eT ee ing a life sentence of solitary ¢ nement ; Weare first “run-in” with the worst sort|hand, went on to investi : There is no animation, no magnetism, in this elmple realist. The sensitive of white men that then tn: ed the} There hidden in a litle gulch, werd pooh) has ie downward Aree pia cena ne gchin gi eraloualycy . frontier. These were horse thle about twenty horses. ‘They weren't SAN ag ek ee oh Ea gene Hilal et And horse stealing In those days was! guarded. Looking around, in the dusk, unsympathetic. This at any rate was the impression she gave in last night's miicrinne) Cia teaiiey okmemlomranklna | rene ituigeca Shout a hundred! mak) dd Cle Fhe asd with cold-blooded murder, |yards up the Its windows showed y have been Sudermann, or It may have been th: of the woman Sometimes a horse thiet was a dis-| lights, FRAVUDECOPREUERIE ED , Berself, but the emotion of this strange actress, seemed parched. Her voice ONatESaNt earuntGr nerien erinyan fi TA cents An OS nard in her throat. It was deep but not must ‘om the head, not from e heart, yet irly leap d that it was she George loved and not the daugh- ket er under thelr roof when her beggar mother e forest q Pi ie was hungry | © moment. It snatched {ts moment like a af tfilef, then fell back te George take his girlhride to church, and ended ; fm a hroken heart t of the time, ike her hag of a + mother, was a beggar in the house. Where Miss Nanoe © noe claimed the centre of the stage in the same, role, Mme, Komisarzhevsky kept close to the Sometimes @ professional “bad was dry and so d to come passion when Mantke lea Gas ich people hi 1 put chose this easy way ney. 1 men 0: ngly, but cite ugh to herd a who plenty of fle worked up I knocked at the rickety plank door. « voives I had heard as I climbed the bands large @n p were hushed at one Then [ a lurge bunch heard a half do: sharp clicks, That is the story: jm nt the ng of rifles or revolvers, I wanted a big, grizzly bear TT began te wonder what company I had . rather, one of my sisieie Ww Mag mbled into, Before I could move & rug. I had promised, as svon as 1 ated’ Th er of the people wie had z in ould have let her d sed for For ack some on . Stealing in and osry. whould have time, to Ket her one. Por, | who's that? The Russian actress pract! b st unknown art of self-offacement ' vy even in those times @ big. grizzly could! «4 white man!” 1 answered. “Let me Instead of holding the centre « r e she held you in a spell of genuine { von oon t GEE! THAT MONKEY not be aot in a da, it] a Am hitarman snehadlt es and simple art it any of the tricks of fascination. The TS = NIGHT} You OWE ME Got MY WATCH, PIN mieaat) slong tip throush ills | eet ace cawungi opens where aroueed ert of a Duse, of a Lena Ashwell, is of a different sort from thnt of a Bern- of ‘(ou WON™ D Oo t and more than a little danger. |around a fire, were ten of the ugilest hardt or a Naztmova, Mme. Korn! gs in the class of the tormer.| SELL Him, MISTER! Ce) CEE); AND 3,000 DOLLARS EAGuahefencnadh ferignyandit/ararced| | ePUNse acto Note en naes Soe a ins Her company follows her good exa' A. M. Feona, who played George, ’ MR MONK | GLAD \ DIDN'T BUT HIM I on ‘horseback for the hills byt I yea gasburne At a glimpse I recog- BARLEY enloo red i kay ei baruer, GRO) Gare Gre TS) ait Hoiseahoe Valley. I ran across plen'y | nized one of them as a noted horse thiat of antelope tracks, but not a trace ad} t had broken jail a year before. n I knew what I was up against. 1 wlone?" asked one of the men. ' ‘IT sald, “I've left my horse be- low. “I'll go back and get him now that I know you're not Indians. Two of the men jumped up and vole nteered to go with me. This the very last @ 1 wanted. But it Wouldn't do to refuse or to seem to sus nything, Another took my rifle 4 fvand Sts itmit in the horrfble pic- ture which Mme. 0. P. Althy, drunken gypsy mother. She was such a fearful spor ne gasped when the daughter em- braced her. Rut pathsome creature, with her begging smile and her greedy, thieving hands, a character study that compelled admiration even from those who shuddered at the sight. 2 No lover of acting should miss seeing Mme Komisarzhevsicy. Those who May go to see ’A Corintoss will find an actress. Rut in spite of her title she will ever be “fashtona’ Reoadway wil probably turn {ts overdressed back on her and try to use her name asa joke. Walt and gee! CHARLES DARNTON. | Realism ran streight through I get of bear until after 1 o'clock t afternoon. Then T came upon the tratt one. It looked as if a giant ind been walking through the snow on all fours. My horse snorted and fidgeted. From that I knew Bruin was not far off. I was about to dismount when my | horse plunged violently, Th not | eighty feet away, ! As I looked he reared himself on | oma = a mpd eke eines Heyl ed all on the plea that it would be eS Rycke da Giga ia hi pirebisy Ae atjin my way during the climb. Luckily What Busy Pens Have Earned. | [rar to Cura on UFR ee a notice my revolver: 16 | RENDEREAN TS make him angry. For | W4s hidden by the blanket that I had OLA'S yearly income was $60,000 : Rooms z wn over my shoulder. Daudetis ROR DEOUs! | : ONO, ACS Cot Ju 1 down the slope I plodded, one Lamartine's ‘History’ br: aE = oa = — Gis OM: LO VUE of the men on gach side of me. ‘There Varadise Lost’ was pold by Milt was no help for it, It was a case Hugh Conway sold “Called: Bac © CDISDEDODQOGOBDODIDQHGOGGODIOGODI GOGO DHOAGHOOL GHD © O Where a man m rely on his wits. Chateaubriand’s literary earnings were $110,000. |The force was all on their side. All I Mark Twain in his Mfetime has earned $700,000. |could do was to wait my chance. Browning's earnings were about $10,000 annually. fo} J y They led me past Cheir bunch of stolen Hugo is said to have made 1.9) out of six books. BO) O} New York. @ | hors: and on to where my own pony st I ymnne. « By Clara Morris. ue een Peuae as a ei netted ea $20,000. Fo@QODOQIOSs DO’ y OC = 5) ne lomon’s Mines"’ tte 5.000 on its first sale. POOOIDDOOOOSAVGr. | was hobbled. ‘Then one of the two aa ces the bridie and we started back, I Boog! Olive. Goldsmith got £00 guineas for his ‘Animated Nature.” (Copyrighted, 1907, by Clara Morris.) who has often Both men laughed, but (live peevishly warned Olive, andy im How quic stened the dearskin, with the ex- Dickens left an estate of $400,000, the results of his writing. RYNOEEISECTIREE dre Sneaneeliocent y ted: 1 uncomfortably | of that its smell might stampede “Unele Remus" Harris has recelved $100,000 for “Brier Rabbtt."* | ‘ near the mae the! “There's no luck about It. It ts aelf-| knowing perfectiy that they were re-] won the lcrcteunotaesmanaiiuseeanithalore with Tennyson received for his poetry between $25,000 and $35,000 a year I raya pacleritea ts Co ar’ | love brought to a high art.” d_ to. ‘ (ity Cle Msn me, The man with my pony went first, An an author Anthony Trollope received: $00,000 duting his Mfet!me Alt comyide Gail pmo. did a constrained and far from] moment, for the first the. he sW/Tysugged after him with the bearskin, Thomas Moore never made more than $%5,0% a year from his work. 0 hav: me here in GO itis) GU CON ECUBG SD tea ea OY ia) el A-lpho second man, rifle in hand, brought Ha to have had me h . T art,| guish Daphne had endured For ‘Middlemare CHAPTER XVII. Dr. Keith felt a pang at his h train 1s wrecked $35,000. George Eliot got $40.00), and for “Romola’” @jad’s cold with him Macaulay's history brought the author $10),0 during its first ten weeks’ sale, | inh i" seuitede aa vs ot very amtable, to say the| When peeping in appa toot noice molicaven a eRams © bearskin spread out Er dlunier sie is thought (Continued.) which Is not y we ire ; 1s while| comforts, all flowed d Emile Richebourg used to get $20,000 each*for his novels before they appeared | ‘0 be deat marries his ward, Olive least, 1 must remind you, however,| SW May holding PIATRA BGs et eee ih t to recover my- r, and closed] first sin a inst the a his short pray le hoy ani et ‘ fh book form. ¥ fers name. Five A Leap to Death. that for vour sake and for the sa PARES ie aT EATER Ge cog Unie damp folds flapped Scott earned from $9.00 to $75.00 a year by his pen for several years. For mined ack) Wanan.ani| Prof. Kelth—when his cough per-| of the—expected, that the sooner you| With “Gud bless papa anc ee eel SRateaen withi(thenritiencovers @even novels and nine volumes of tales he received $550,000 | cursa“a"pomition aa governess th her own | mitted him—sa resume your former disposititn of jot ORE Ch ent Bob ile Hodiuadeie Matinee uote than Tarewame, Georges Ohnet rece!ved $19,000 for “The Horge Master," as a novel, and $15,000 | Guldren. | Olive ia furious atthe children from {t asa play in the first three months. Out of the play he made more than| old family, cook, recognizes Daphne, $35,000. remains silent. ne's Mttle dauel ‘It ts odd, Philip, what luck y ve] cheerfulness, of frolicsome high spiri in avoiding any inconvenience, any ex-| and fut better {t will be for vou| The piood rushed to his fac pe Cit aval ttlebdauah treme of heat or cold, any lack of! both. You can’t sing ‘misereras’ all the| knew whe hey praved for, How they { it! | Dnmasks Daphne, orders his former} comfort or cheer, and always come| time without harm following to the’——| had {!mproved under her guidance! And had not Olve flattered unccas-} ved ome the neues ay CeapaiTa Deonne floating !n on the full tide of solace, of | The professor cleared his thrat| Olive would never be more to them|{ngly my cursed vanity, kept me zy | in ; ra loudly. 4 w! than a somewhat short-tempered play-| With clouds of incense, I would have! Chamois Maker Is a Magician [In this she is aided by Dr. McNab, an! gratification and o€ enjoyment.” 5 | 7 ~— | humbled myself and prayed forgiven OST everybody uses chamols, and everybody imagines {t comes from th | SA i nae graceful goats of the Swiss Alps. But ft doesn't. It really hafls 1 wW B T. S. | ae ; Me the cavernous depths of tanneries of Peabody, in New England. aes Just Kids. we Y Uo eb A len. ee fed body tanners make beautiful leathers of sheep pelts. ‘The chamois maker is = magician of the leather trade. To his doors he draws sheepskins trom the great ranches of Montana, or thetr possthle future rivals on the plains of S!beria, the pampas of Argentine, or the fields of Australia. Mary's little lamb, masquerad- tng as brave Swiss chamois, has a wonderful career. May Manton’s Daily Fashions, HIS shirtwalst fw entirely dis- tincttve and} fresh and ts well| adapted to waisting | flannels as well as to taffeta and wash- able material. Also | the fashionable stripes have a good effect when eo made. As iilustrated, the materfal ts one of the new Scotch flan- nels, but cashmere, heneietta and taf- feta are to be oom- mended. The Little revera at the front are exceedingly smart in effect, yet Involve no diMeulty either in the mak- ing or the launder- ing, and the yoke at the back can be ice, One shot dropped an who was leading my pony, The other pierced the bearskin, and the maa - under {t suddenly stopped trying to tear i tt off his ead and collapsed tn a heap, But before he touched ground, I was in the sadd and sending my tired pony ne as hard as quirt and ike him go. pring volley of rifieshots He| the proudest women who ever I bitter insult offered her. n the ra ned me, | dow it + Nat) WOMRTTNG) rs could 1 urted her again and won her back—| And a seat proud, sweet Daphne! Well, God knows! from the cabin on the hill kept me m | -# through my wrongdoing | have placed | mind that I hadn't started a half seo the rod in strong and willing hands,|ond too soon. and I feel it often.” — He smiled grimly, and as May after her prayer 4 mt mito bes ' a] o} pe erect inte ve) eee Beauty ints. “God bless them both!—and her! land went to a separate apartment, as| By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, }he had done since the discovery of} Daphne's continued existence, and soon} all wero sleeping. Cheeks Are Thin. The Watcher. k EB. After bathing your face at warm Water, massaga Across the orchard, in a rear rocin of m into the cheeks, the bare little cottage, Mme. n upward and outward had rolled high the blue paper side! movement: Spermacet! (pure), 1-4 tled with cord—so that when lying on white wax (pure), 1-4 ounce; the bed she could see the chimneys of| almond oll, 1-4 pound; butter of cocoa, the old summer home outlined against! 14 pound; lanoline, 2 ounces, the sky. | Melt and stir in one dram of balsam The rain had ceased, to-morrow prom-| o¢ Peru, After settling pour off the feed to be fair, and she rejoiced at the| clear portion and edd two auld aeame thought of watching unseen while they of orange flower water and stir (briskly selected the puppies she had already! until it ooncretes, nia the ‘decent woman’ for, Even .. Pow whe could hear small whimperings (Pimples, from the basket on tho porch at her B S8.—Apply this salve to the pim- 0 | night this ride ging always oun, | | dow, sounds that told of the mo- ples, and when the frritation mentary absence of their white mother, has entirely disappeared use whose two tan oars gave her a placid. the complexion brush so frequently mild appearance, utterly contradicted recommended by mo, Pure rice pow- \by her ceaseless activity and wild hi-/der is best to use on face. Drinte larity of spirits. plenty of water between meals and be- ‘And #0 watching the dim outline of! fore breakfast, about eight glasses a the roof that sheltered her darlings, she day, and take as much outdoor exercise fell asleep and dreamed distressfully,/@8 possible. Salve for pimples: Beta lined it onilorttiea as The village was crowded: a great body apthal, 5 grains; of! of chamomile, § is found most be- “Do you s’pose you kin lick Jeffries, Chimmie?” “Wot's de matter, Mame?” |of horsemen were coming down the ‘ i Raat penning oxide of » . , , fy e- Zinc, o1 a J eurts 5 coming. The sleeves “Wat's de use o' discussin’ dat, kid? Jeffries is retired fer good from “Liz is puttin’ on airs ‘cause her brudder was run over by a $30,000) 708d and directly in their way Daphne Oe wees thereat a May and little Philip strove to save Face Too Stout. tucked to form deep | de ring.” pute, the two small white puppies from be- E W.—You must get a specialist ta . cuffs are both novel and pretty, but’are log Hempled fon mW ea UG crys spe massage your face either by hand Rot obligatory, and} FH HHH HE LAL ALLEL LL LASALLE S LEAH AI AT SMAAK ALKALI AAI S ASS ALS G I AAAS sok se oe | CMUENE AE temennd awekeneds To ig. Plain ones, gath- . | wiedge of the post= ? s ’ ’ brow and noted with amazeement that: ered, can be subst!- tt V t Gives ¢ ) { % j tion of the muscles, &c., should try to vt * and the sky wus flery red. Aloud she said, | ‘ (: Suen a rme nraiat 181% Be y ineen Faviee n our 3S ip arril 2 | “How does the sun come to rise inj reduce a face that ts foo fat. ‘The flesh made with the plain) % 6 llarnrener arin quien tesent ater aa ae Pearce io not really reduced but shifted, as {t back and tucked) mK ENTE NHN NET ENT RK ON CN OK EEN ENE EEN OS EW YS | or sparks—and she knew, Jwere, and an amateur might’ bring fronts and the yoke ‘2 about the most unsatisfactory results, icity. Only an expert whe as a thorouh et 2 | : spondence. However, you should not)any one until you are sure you love no, mcr Ps With one ringing ery of “Fire! Fire ae bile eheas A Telephone Romance. |inave aun feensiyois love foniencnirottiar | ain ermeoiueltn orraen veuleace:ton moa | 2 SeSpictods) Sutton. |she was thrusting naked feet into Eyelash Darkener. I Dear Betty; before meeting, as you both may bejcannot afford to marry at present, wait | Dear Betty | shoes, throwing a heavy dressing gown ‘ eniyan f je ord 8 . —If you have brown The quantity of| 7 AM nineteen, and recently held a D9-| disappointed in each other when you|untii he is doing better, but don't ma AM twenty-four, and keep company | about her, a shgwl over her head—and WDAy eee HAE ea RARE material raqutraa | | sition with the telephone company. | meet Mined he Goin Del BEL DMCA DN E IUBELD: Hr ie eaaarl MuUEl Cot eaier cectie Cine ane Stee ce ot eoneaecea to use an eyebrow vencil of & hare for the medium eize|* I took a grent Iking to an operator | sg i u IOveiner much, but T don’t think | crossing the orchard, while 4 « monizing shade, or darken your Shirtwaist—Pattern No. 5838. artes asllsiecall to) whorl daikedl aver thsmwireainrl Shel Lowes lao Men eas 7 cory oe Duy creas | croseine, the: orshard, u brows and lashes with ps very strone Jaitrit veroalat 83:8 0 ae [she loves me as much ax she save she | sclously her ips mechanically repe yards %1 or 2 yarda 44 inches wide. have never met this voung lady. but T! Doar tiecey Don’t Kiss Her Good-By. [does ye she doomn't mo out with | serem battle, murder and sudden death |t% made of dried nee Below ts the ve recelyed le ostals fro és A . iden death | °° thinese ey stain: Gum Pattern No, S828 In cul in sizes for a 32, 44, 36, 38, 0 and 42 tnch bust/linve, recelved lettera and nomads frory| AM twenty-one and am in love with | Dear Betty: Jother bovs, but T don't know whethor| ‘trom battle, murder and sudden tone es caer al Puy pee her In whieh ells me she cares . s 3 ; elles atte, |nrable, 1 dram; rag. ‘measure. two young men. TI Ike one of these LOVE my sweetheart very much, and | to believe hor not. How can I find | ro e ¥ | great deal for me, and I have answered | (i 3 foul 7 feel ss Pact tae enatl rea tie ~ death! lrose water, 4 ounces. wder the inid > Onn re en told Nee T loved her, yam] 2 better than the other, but he would she loves me, When T sty good-by Jout whethoy cally toves me and | Occ pping and gasping for breath, ehe| if gies and tritured “all quantities Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN-¢ | Der sind (mld fer 0 Med nie eat be able to support mo as weil ae} ] ix it right to shake hands with her, [also If she anes out with ether gentie: | OVINE TOU Me re nesene | ad, eteowder with tr je water Unt ° e 2 Sou sh se in vour| dors were calling out and pounding at! you get a uniform bla. quid and add cabal 1 take PUZZLED. 44, Wok. neathoarte word and not be so sus-!doors atd windows-—but the Inmates|the remainde of the rose water to it ‘ Pi cannotlove two amen. Abitneueame hoe net kias your, sneetheart uniess [7 If vou expect to be happy and slept like the dead. Were they dead? |e should de Rpplied with a very ting, Your introduction by telephone was aj time, for if you truly loved your affec- pyou are engaged to her. When saying |hoid her love you must not question (To Be Continued) camel's hatr brush, quMfcient excuse for starting @ come: Uon would not be divided, Don't marry tgood-by shake bande with her, and investigate her statements, r. Both men love me. Which jor is it better to give her a kiss? How to [TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 2 West Twenty-third street, New} 2° 0 vou think that there we York, Send ten cents tn coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. $ (an. iarm in our corresponding wit! IMPORTANT—Write your nume and addrese plainly, and al-$ | aon other? B.T. ways specify size wanted.

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