The evening world. Newspaper, April 25, 1908, Page 11

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4 é The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, April 25, 1908. POOODHSDGOCHRHSPDSOOPRPHBPBHOE RE OHOOGPOHOLPPHOSDO® BE LPDBOHBDBHPDBBOPO PHD PLBPODDPDE DPODPD PHOHLKOE ROPE OESGSHEELEVE PELCLOHEDD © DAVID WARFIELD Believes Actor-Emotion e ut ° s « Must B By Charles Darnton. ] AVEN’T you seen David Warfield’s ‘ears through your tears as you sympathized with ‘The Music Master?” Haven't your eycs reddened like his noca wien Hel-ane \with the choke on “the last syllable) told poor old Von Barwig that ne mustn't come to her beautiful, unhappy bome again? And wouldn't you be willing to bet « bunch of spring onfons that Mr. Warfield was ver the heart-breaking business a8 you were? And wouldn't ae watery 0 i“ jeve him if you heard him say: zo ene back the tear When I act the gentle old music master, with his great empty heart crying out for the child who has been | siole ttre a him, I became the music master. His heartache is my heart- ache; his sufferings my sufferines; hi; emotions are my emotious; his tears are my tea , This is just what Mr. Warfield did—not say, (You lose the onlonsy) | 1 gave him every chance to talk tears, only to have him talk technic, He was outrageously honest. Jn spite of my sympathetic advances he stead y refused to shed a tear for publication. I could have wept There was nothing for me to do but close the reservoir and open the bre’. pan. Bis Outrageous Konesty. ? “I don’t cry a drop” he as: the actor must frst get at the centre of Ja part, at the heart of a character, and y be moved at first. But you may } one thing—he isn't moved by a metropolitan perform in purely coming off ed from into hin, ht fs to drill it into the a e first few readings of a y be touched by It, Just as} ve touched b > Incléent of ev ‘ou read in a newspaper. one best t seem to lay lfe that But sup- “How do I repeated. “I dor like the ma teal? Well, that's the way part, You get to know ft soewell that yt | you don't think about it.” ‘And don’t feel it?” Woman's Softening Trfluence. The actor may fee! {t occa at in me ctors/no idea how great a part a " |plays in a performance. T am affected and | most by @ matinee audience—I don't throug! simp! by the sympathy of the audtence, rather han by my sympathy with the part it]An audience may affect the mechanism jof a play tn the same way. For in- ce, there are certain places where! Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. By Helen Rowland, looks upon matrimony as @ Sacrament, @ man regards It as Both are right. six men, all of them very much in love, to write as many s one girl who is Just a little bit In love, for the difference in perspective, after all, husbands are wake up from love's young dream the woman's first thought fe “He i it up?" the man’s, “How can I break {t off? A man’s anxiety to talk about his latest love affair is only equalled by his Teticence in regasd to all those that have gone before. Matrir ) a bachelor {s like a Salad, a bandbox or a newspaper; it looks {nteresting, tit he feels suspicious of what's in tt. Infatuation is a rose, saccharine ami ephemeral; love is Mke an immor- ing. . in the divorce courts could be traced to a man's deception ® woman's attempt at this reformation after marriage. but the fear of consequences that keeps a man from nan, in a man’s life when he thinks seriously of bolting to en he first discovers that he {s in love; when he has Canada or t ntipodes: V made up his mind to propose, and when he wakes up on the morning of his any: Wedding Poverty {s a love charm; you never know how great @ thing love ta until you; world, if he can only keep his wife in the straight and| t and zigzag all over the downward one without fall- A husband be “ narrow path he can go ing from grace. Fashions. VERY design bordered ma- terial or flouncing 1s in demand just now, when there are ao many beautiful fabric¢ of the sort offera. Here Je a skirt thet 1s made with a Spanish flounce and which is eminently graceful and becoming, while {t {8 almple in the extreme, In the il- lustration it is made of bordered batiste, but there are aimost innumerable suitable materials, not alone bordered ones, but also ail pretty plain ma- terials that are @dapied to the style of the skirt, for such always can bea trimmed to give a bordered effect. The quantity of ma- ‘ terial required for the medium size is 7 - yards of bordered material 4 inches wide, or 7 1-2 yards of plain material 24, 61-4 yards % or 41-4 yards #4 inches wide. = Pattern No. 5957 is Skirt with Spanish Flounce—Pattern No. 5967. cut in sizes for a 22, 24, 26, 28 and 30 Inch watst measure, Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- TON FASHION BURBAG No. 183 Hast Twenty-third street, New York, Send 10 cents in cain or stamps for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your mame ané address plainly, and al- ways specify sise wanted. e ot ng too | e trou- | turn a smile, for it and hits yo! smile." nd made !t mechani = ISTAGE-— Born nov.30 JOKES WERE SPRUNG ON His PET CATS THE PRIN suB AIN D FOR THREE SAVED HIS mon SAGE 47 1x. THE SPIRIT OF ADVENTURE Took HIM TO THE ExPosition AT NEW YORK CITY WHERE ON HIS ARRIVAL HE HAD 2, IN HIS POCKET AND AB/0.BILL SEWED IN HIS CORT SLEEVE,HE {| SAW ALL THE SIGHTS A WITH THE $2.AND THEN ENGAGED As A PRINTER FOR A MONTH , AFTER WHICH HE WENT ro PHILA DEL PHI AND SET TYPE ON THE LEDGER” BuT HE WAS SEIZED WITH HOMESICKNESS AND RETURNED TOHIS HIS HOME HAVING BEEN AWAY cane VEARS,. ~~ YEARS H EY. igh isn't) feeling it?” 1 ask oe Anger Must Be Felt. felnlelebate ini feirin-teinintetetatetafete he Seven Ages of Gre == : = yf eee ee oN oe : : eee ENTERPRISE’ FLORIDA-A SMALL HAMLET OF MONROE | COUNTY , MISSOURI. MOST OF HIS EARLIEST || AS Q°AGE-S) D WIS FATHER HAVING DIED WHEN MARK was’ yy LESSTHAN 12 YEARS OLD,; / PRESSMAN, FOREMAN \\\ ea 3° OF THE COMPOSING Room LN AND RSSISTANT EpiTOROF > Vp THE HANNIBAL courier: f/ ~/) A LOCAL PAPER HAVIN MI $00 PRODUCE PAYING | ( ON A HAND PRESS, HIS S SALARY WAS SOf PER WEEK BSSSSSSS that I couldn't reea Real in the Moments of Hysteria to lea than posing 1s n, “Plays that re brought 1 1 his Unconscious Ceennic. If t nie, 1 1 have ar I don't know it, and it's rome that 1 don't, If sa hired man A quickened Interest came into his | be ver find him at Men (‘%.) Se" Mark Twain T - SUAGE- BouGHT SOME MINING PROPERTY IN 1863, BUT BY DEFAUL? OF LABOR NECESSARY TO HOLD HIS CLAIM, THEZ MILLIONS ITCONTAINED ENRICHED THER. Nk AICCOUNT OF ANC fHER MINING COmiANy, THUS NECESSITY DROVE HIM AGAIN TO WRITING FOR THE’ VIRGIN: Uy ABout THIS TIME HE AICQUIRED THE LITERARY NAIAE— i MARK TWAIN" IT BEING A RIVER | PHRASE~ INDICATING THAT THE WATER . NYAS ONLY TWO FATHOMS DEE 1835, IN™ UNSUSPECTING )} J DURING THE YEAR 1366 \ fe “HE WENT TOTHE SANDWICH ISLANDS To WRITE UP THE x SUGAR INDUSTRY, RETURNING pA TO SAN FRANCISCO HE MADE on ) HIS FIRST PUBLIC SPEECH LAD BECAME. (// TERS DEVIL, CHIEF i) WHICH NETTED HIM S600, THAT SO ENCOURAGED HIM THAT HE _¥ 4/ AGAIN WENT TO NEWYORK CITY WHERE AFTER ONE YEAR HE. yy TOOk UP THE WORK OF 3 E kG (CONDUCTING EXCURSIONS INTO BF ae ORE 7 FOREIGN LANDS, MAKING ENOUGH se) AAONEY FOR A TRIP TO FRANCE, ITALY \) AND PALESTINE WHICH FURNISHED HIM 2 = . ADVENTURES FOR “THE |NNOCENTS ABROAD’ y i E BROAD, aioe) Lie STtSO MET HIS WIFE ON THE SHiP-QUAKER Copy! Va HIVEDIN BUFFALO FOR A WHILE Buy MOVED TO ‘ ae ee WHERE FOR EIGHT YEARS HE DEVoTES HIS TIME. TO WRITING “THE » “ GILDED “TON vv ” LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI THE STOWE eT OnN SAWYE ju F | ‘ € ELEPHANTS By THENKHUCKLEBERRY FINN’, ETC, s ONG mARK- TWAIN 7 HAGE (oy) E HIS BOOKS WERE Dd PUBLISHED BY CHAS.L.WEBSTER- SSL & Co. OF WHICH MARK TWAIN WAS Sea grr | A PARTNER. BECOMING AMBITIOUS ONG HE Took UP THE MANUFACTURE. OF AN IMPROVED TYPE sini / \ SCRIBERS,AND Run oF, E HELD HIS JOB AND / LY" AGE- IN 13S2— AT THE AGE OF !7 HE BECAME A PILOT ON, THE MississiPp) RIVER AT $250. PER MONTH. HIS RDVENTURES AS A PiLor HE IN LATER YEARS Compitep y INTO BOOK FORM ~"LIFE ON if THE MISSISSIPPIT LIKEWISE MOST OF HIS LITERARY PRobucts # ARE TAKEN FROM ‘EVENTS BEFORE HIS TWENTYSEVENTH & AS AG es aioe 2 , MACHINE. BUT THROUGH HARD TIMES THE COMPANY BECAME. BANKRUPT,LEANING MANY CREDITORS, NOT DISCOURAGED HOWEVER, EVEN AT HIS DVANCED AGE HE AFTER AFEW YEARS OF HARD ZS US8 work HAD PAID OFF EVERY (i | DEBT. HE IS NOW PAST THREE —— lf SCORE AND TEN, RECOGNIZED IN : ) HIS OWN COUNTRY AND ABROAD AS THE GREATEST LIVENG HUMORIST... BUT DESPITE ALL DEMONSTRATIONS 2, INMIS NONE PREFERS AQUIET CORNER AT H@Me WH HIS PIP

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