The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1908, Page 11

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“The Mumic Word’ Is Overcrowdea, But Gay in Spots, HEN nome one with a ble stick has gone throcgn "The Mimi \vorld’’ a W Killed off its undesirable citizens, the Casino may vecome a place of rejoicing. ‘After all, a summer show, lke humanity that stays tn town, usuegy nas to ve boiled down, 99 why complain about E too Much for your money? Vo put the matter in an eggshell, "The Minte World’ Js overcrowded apots. In fact, this none-too-particular "World" fs so “gay” at times that it becomes almost cienii—and it has every to lose and nothing to gain py its uigarity, ‘The by Edgar Smith, needs a shower bat) Nothing really happened tn ‘The Mimic fast night until the no Widow and her dancing got A strangle-hold on each other and “had {t out in waltz time, Reauteous Irena Bentley was wrecked at the Hy ner switch before the trouble was ¢ While the prince chap, Walter i rence, proved that married life wit the permission of Mr, Henry W. Savage was not exactly one glad whirl, At iss Bentley appeared to be but a second glance at the pro- gramme ted to the discovery that there | wasn't any plot, the management golng record with a statement that the y desire was to “amuse with a view of the successes of the current " Question: When {s @ sea: But there was no question about the amusement caused by a burlesque of in ee nh Frank Mayne wore the frost-bitten hair and frozen expression of Kyrie Bellew, while Miss Grace Tyson played the wife with more power than Miss Margaret Iilington can ever nope to possrgs unless she takes Misa Tyson rentanced “Ine Qrace Tyson In song “Making Eyes.” wp the study of dramatic art in @ gymna Thiet’ to thirty minutes of hard laughter. Her grief came in leaps and bounds, When the wife's guilt was discovered she confessed all, Sne had made up ner mind she would have cloties if shy went naked. She told Richard now she nad taken her first etep to the dressmaker’s. “When I saw you,’ she wailed, “I éald te ‘Me for that!’ { ma my mind to steal you. ‘That was my fi emhen, in the full strength of her grief sho threw hemelr {nto his lap, he roiled off ant she went to the floor with the hit of the evening, If Miss Tyson's face fan't damaged peyond repair by her performance she will surely sea tt in the Papers before It's @ woek older Later on she was “Making Eyes,’ a la Dress ler, in a song that was clever until tt went Cack to the Central Park Incident fn Carnso's wareer, and almost spolled the good Impression she had made. if Mies Tyson brought the song from vaudeville, she ehould send part of it back without another night's delay. A burlesque of “Girts" was funny, but mot without belng vulgar at times. Three defenseless men, one of whom went to bed in a tub, while another stretched ‘himeedf upon a lo'ty ahelf, were dread- fully shocked when the ones Morry Widow broke in upon thelr chaste re- twoat and caused them to hide thelr Diushes under rugs and carpet. And when she walked the plank and they told her to be careful or she'd fall, what did ahe my? She sald, forsoot “T'm not the falling kin In the excitement !t was discovered that Sam Sidman sounded enough lke Lew Fields to be his brother, Harry Corson Clark also managed to bring a large part of Willlam H. Crane back to Broadway, but he lost him in a burlesque of “A Grand Army Man” that died on an excursion to Paria, It was kept alive for a few minutes, how- ever, by a laughing ingenue whom Be- Jasco should see some night when dis neuralgia is off on a vacation, “Patd in Full” was badly treated, and other “successes” were handled without ania q@uccess, There was a great deal of Will West and very little of Otls Skinner Jn @ Col. Bridau, who did nothing for the honor of the Casino family, there was altogether too much of @ hideous Ifttle creature whose leering caricature or George M. Cohan was positively unpleasant. George \V, Munroe remained true | to Alint Bridget tn spite of a new name and a new hat, and triumphed over) Grossness by the sheer honesty of his thirty horse-power humor, Speaking of In “Phoebe Snow” song horses, there's @ good Jaugh in the one that the Irisnmen calla a Protestant when | {! tt loess @ race. That horse !s Munroe's one best bet. An Irish song, ‘Mary Carey,” was a green delight, and “Mademoiselle” was @ chio ttle thing, with Mise» Lotta Faust giving {t dash and daintiness 8 Faust never looked more stunning, but her volce soon gave out, and she let a @ollege boy song get away from her completely. She finally fied with the excia- Mattom “It's awful being a boy!’ Amd yet girls will be— It was atter 10 o'clock when the firat act came to an awkward end, with six er @ght young women tumbling about. If the performance were cut as much ag the sheath gowns worn by the tallest ef the falr, “The Mimo World” woula be Detter off. The sheath affairs went pretty far north. OHARLES DARNTUN, SS The Lady Wouldn’t Go Alone. A T recent entertainment in @ colored church at Washington the master, of ceremonies made thie unusual announcement: ‘Mies Bolter will sing ‘Oh, that I had wings Uke a dove, for then rt would fly and be at rest,’ accompanied by the Rev. EB. F. Botts,” VERY variation of | E the guimpe dress {8 greatly In vogue, and each new design ts certain to find its place, Here '@ one which ‘s| made with the sieeves| cut In one with the blouse portions and which (9 adapted to « wide range of materi. als, Ag illustrated, iin- en ts trimmed with | banding and worn over 4 gulmpe of embrold- ered Swiss muslin, but the dress would te charming made from | one of the pretty wash- able materials and also from the colored pon- Bees that are so well liked for girls’ dresses, trom ohalltes or trom other ight welght wool, Banding always can be varted to suit the ma- terial. The quantity of ma-| terial required for the medium size (10 years) {8 5 6-8 yards 24, 4 1-4 yards 82 or 8 1-8 yards 4 Inches wide, with 5 yards of banding; for the guimpe 2 yards 27, 1 8:8 yards 9 Inches wide, with 2 1-8 yardg of Insertion Pattern No. 60323 {5 | cut in sizes for girle of 6, 8 10 and 12 years| of age. Girl's Dress,—Pattern No, 6033. How Call or send by maf! to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN: { | te TON FASHION BUREAU, No. 132 Hast Twenty-third street, New Obtain } York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattarn ordered. ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your name and addrear plaialy, oat i- Patterns ways specity size wanted. ; = __The Evening Worid Daily Magazin e; Friday? Juiy 10, 1908, HAVEN'T BEEN To \ THAT FELLOW LOOKS |THE RACES FOR SOME DE & Boome IL WME! CuFSS Hue try | Z i WST PUACE A \4 Few Bets Pel em S $5000 on SMaRTY | LIN THE THIRD RACE SO LONG , OLD Wm sare et ee -—- SF Po (HERE BOSS, PUT TH ! BET with Him! sani The Million Dollar Kid -- -- | -+ By R.W.Taylor'# / 15\ Ana! rm AN OFFICER Youc Man ! ARREST NOTHIN’ ! You ARE UNDER You'LL HAVE To CATCH ME FIRST ASRREST ! See? MONEY 16 NO G kif Lady” Was Made By John W. Harding. (Copyright, 1903, by G, W. Dillingham Com: pany.) BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, Dan Mallory, a Virginia horse trainer, is Ba i : vew York engaged to chorus Mai ew Yorker named Cra Nora O'Brien, Patricia catches Crawford i To save the girl from hie lures Patricia takes ner to New York and finds her a oosition as chorus girl. ora meeta Crawford secretly In New York, nd confesses to Patricia that ane has formed her fathers name to 4 $9) note (which Hoh Is attracted by ford holds) in order to pay money owes and to buy clothes, — Nore oes to Crawford's apartments to bee him F the note, hey are talking, Mallory {8 announced. } {ps into an Inner room. Crawford gets rid of Mallory. but not before the latter has had a glimose of Nora's.arm through the door, Hearing Patricia ao proach, Nora once more hides {n the Inner foom. Patricia, suspecting that Ny come for the note. has fol: Crawford's apartment, C that Nora ‘a there. | Mra. being heard In the pall, Pat the room whera Nora ts O'Brien, bec cla, darts into hidden, Mrs ed about her daugh York with her hus. Not tt New band an ting them a! and hearing swne ot the xossin concerning Nora and Crawford, she bas come to the latter's apartment, CHAPTER XVI. Ina Tight Place. DRLING perfectly safe hehind the F door which already had sheltered her 60 effectively, and familiar now with the room, Nora was seated on the bed. She was tired of trying to Msten to the conversation she could not hear, excent as a confused murmur, and having regained her composure wag waiting for Patsy to go and intending to follow her at once, he realized that Crawford had gone too far, was dangerous, as Patsy had warned her he was, and that it be- hooved her to be extremely careful, She surmined that her sister had come to get the note and, not hearing her yolce raised in anger, assumed that Crawford had succeeded In mollitying her and that everything was going along all right, She wondered at the length of her . however, and was getting impatient When the door opened brusquely and Patsy, seeking refuge herself, appeareq! DEODADOOANONIAGY: ad | This Novelization of “Tho Chorus|to her startled gaze, she was too sur-|Price, you fool! Didn't I tell you not!Chestra, thinking they might return prised to move. Patsy as she closed the to come?" | door and found herself contronting-Nora) “I had to, I was afrald of pop and | Was not less startled and agtonished.|mom, Oh, Patsy, don't be hard on me. ‘The supper tabla standing between them I know things look queer, but I'm @ told eloquently enough the tale of what good girl.’ had teken piace. Doubt that her slater) “Let go my legs an’ get up. How had fallen victim to Crawford's snares many times have you been here be- was Impossible. fore? Own up—tell the truth. If you Me, I'l kill you." Horror! Never; It's the very first time.” “My God!" she groane? “Swear {t, by the Holy Mother!" Nora had risen to her feet and stood By the Holy Mother, ite true. 1 lps cen Sag! | wish I may die if it ain't, I've been Patay went to her, her eyes blazing foolish, perhaps, but I didn’t mean to and her teeth set. ag ae “iat je this?” ohe demanded “That's just it, You don't mean to The girl did not, could not answer, | 4o wrong, but you will-you will, God “Bpeak,” she ordered, “Dut whisper. |help us," | ora ella ihe) next seats “What did you come here forthe | “Mom!” gasped Nora, & posstble atill | notg7y more terrified, Yes, and to see !f you was here,” Bhe raised her hand to her head in &) utraye you got it?” dazed way. Patsy grasped her wrist fu-! yop yet." Hously, and, squeezing It as In @ vise.) wtow dd you leave the theatre? I twisted the arm until she forced the thought you couldn't do It, leading the girl to her knees. lenses ‘Speak, speak, I say," she ordered.) + gian't ask, When T couldn't find “What {s the meaning of this?” | | you I hiked to the flat, an’ when I saw ‘Let go, you are hurting me,” whts-| yoy wasn't thore I got a hunch you'd pered Nora in agony, T have one 44 fool enough to come to Crawford's, nothing wrong.” ‘An’ thens] heard mom's voice an’ rushed “Nothing wrong!” hissed Patwy, trem-|in here, ‘cause I couldn't tell her why ‘bling with grief and passton. ‘You i /1 way there without tellin’ all. I won- jan’ you know you lie. You've been lyin der what she sayin’? They know to me all along, T'll let mom tm.” | etry not at the show shop an’ are Nora threw her arms around her) vuntin’ tor ua, aure pop. Hark! What's knees and clutched her frantically. vi h no, ngt that me supplicated. sie gripped her alster's shoulder, and m not what), cold sweat broke out upon her brow "On, my Godt" she whispered | "There's Dan!’ 0, “yjsten to mé, Patey. you think. Indeed, I'm not. I haven't done anything wrong. Don't let mom seo; oh, don’t!" “What Are You Doing?” “T wouldn't belleve you under oath,” } | CHAPTER XVII. | The Insult, “Yes, you had to stay to supper,” “He'd have given it to me if you hadn't come.” “He'd a given tt to the Long Acta Theatre. When he reached the theatre he could not find the old couple. After hunting at what, about awhile he took his seat in the on you GO ON AND BURN! YOU CAN'T SPEND ' gaid Patsy. “What are you doin’ tn this man’s room? What's this here blow- AULORY, after his first interview out? What are you doin’ In that, with Crawford, walked around to| | gress?” the Eighty-sixth street station "I came to get the note. I didn’t) o¢ the subway, as his partner had at- |mean to stay, but I had to.’ rected, and soon was speeding toward ood Based on the Play By James Forbes, 3 there and that, anyhow, he would be [able to assure himeelf that the girle were on the stage. It did not take him long to ascertain that neither of them was !n the chorus, and he hastened around to the stage door. There he wae told, as the O'Briens had been, that the girls had left before the performan! began, He was about to return to the front when there happened along the passage the boy to whom he had given the verbal meseage to Patay, with a tip calculated to insure Its safe delivery, “Lookin’ for Mise O'Brien?” queried the youth, "Yes." replied Mallory, “Had a Row?” “Bhe's gone; so's her sister,” he told him, ‘Dey had a row.” "Had @ row?" "Yop. ‘Pears they had a hair pullin’ match, an’ both vamoosed widout tellin’ de stage manager, I guess it's de hinky dink for dem. He's been fightin’ mad ever since. Dey delayed de coltain ten minutes. De call boy seen de youngest go away in a cad,” "That 0?" said Mallory, greatly troubled. “Where did they go, d'you know?" pe, but think.” v Miss Simpson does, 1 Miss Simpson?" {de show golls ka dollar from his pocket I Miss Simpson Mr. Mal- > see her?” he asked replied the boy, pocketing and darting off he returned the In a few minutes "Miss Simpson said for you to walt here for her,” he announced. bill In a little while the woman whose mode of life had often aroused Patsy's sharp tongue came down majestically ‘Are you Mr. Mallory?” she inquired, looking the trainer over with a critic love. “T suppose you're after Mf: | O'Brlen. The whole town seems to be after her to-nfght, and everbody {3 coming to me to tell them where she's gone, as !f IT was her keeper and knew | or cared.” | "rm sorry to have disturbed you, miss," said Mallory In his Slunt way. though he felt awkward and a Mitte timid {n the presence of this tall, a. some woman with the alr of an aristo. crat. "The boy I sent up told me that he thought you knew where they were.” (To Be Continued.) When Slumber Comes High wot PHEW ¢ [CAN'T SLEEP HERE | Ques I'LL Go ON THE ROOF } s -By MMV NT Albert Carmichael HEAVENS: (rm ALL COVERED with SOOT! ODOOSLIHO Writes of The Backdoor Manners Of Neighbors. ' 1 many parsons ! . seem to think SUD COOOOUOUOOOGG Then they lean out, with the sun pour- ing down or the rain, and talk, tefk, that the only talk, talk, until I see heads appearing (hings about a at other windows, as If the occupants house which count of the other apartments slmply could ‘re those which not stand the gabble any longer. show and sound Ze from the front But to my mind just as I think that! tha front parlor gives no sure sign of the Kind of a housekeeper a woman is, ao I be BH ieve that the way & woman has her ‘ack yard or her | Are-escape furnished are surer signs of | her housekeeping than you could gather in a month of rubbing your fingers over the plano Ild looking for dust | In Mke manner a woman's manners | at her back door are the test af her | Dreeding. She who would be politeness | !tself to a stranger on her front poreh | can be a brute to a beggar or a ped- dier at her back door, And to see her | hair marcelled for the afternoon at the front window one would never suppose she could look such a fright as she does hanging out of her back window talk- Ing to her neighbors across the court to save telephone charges. | | The amount of time some women | waste hanging out of their back dows or leaning over the back fe | And the width of the woman's mint Just Like an Ostrich, Iam never Irntated by !t, I am too much amazed. Even the funny papers, who can spend hours discussing how to, the cartoonists and the professional have a dress made! Jokers never could make up the sights th@se women present, nor could the the an'ty of thelr patter be reproduced, ex- cept by a phonograph, ‘To-day they | talked for thirty-seven minutes about the remnants at a certain department ‘This afternoon they went at {t for fifty-one minutes about whether to dye that old blue dress black or make ver just as {t was with a plaid. As them Is very fat I was not sur- they had decided store now that dress when T meat {t, and T shall know {ts cost to a penny, Tam also an authority on thelr opinion as to the relative wei fg qualities of heatherbloom and near-silk And these women are both marrle@— married to defenseless. men, who are 1 the protection of the law, and have to listen to these women talk! Think of it! their back-do ers are like. keeps only the front te aie nobody dirt of the back ree They Talk, Talk, Talk! | minds me of the ostrich who burles his head {n the sand and thinks his whole There are two women near me whoss conduct t@ a study In human nature; body which I have seldom seen equalled,| True They seem to be sisters, and their, anguage w and by your bac refinement {is shown by your 1k nobody hears, nen yo! kitchen windows back wp to each other k-door habits when you n {wo apartment-houses. One signals | fondly imagine that your world {s passe by whistling, the other by yodelli ing PUZZLING PEWS | | i | HE Soclaty Reporter with a matical bump tells he made @ Ap lightning calculation of the of guests at a recent church weds ding. His bird's-eye sketol low the Ss were arranged The pews were numbered consecutively, commoncing with the first pew 1@ A-B and ending with the last pew in O-1' Tho bride's mother was seated In pew No. , ten from the front, directly, opposite the groom's mother in No, 82 The pews were all filled, so who cin tell how many guests were present? 000000000000 0000: Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship ane Marriage 2000000000 80000008 GO0d0000000: Return His Letters. lie Dear Betty: | HAVE been keeping compar rlority would be apt to make ed life unhappy? P. dD, ove each other so silly a caus4 e should 1 arate you. Ig ng about her al ith alo nonths| B j the young man for about six girl insists on ta and have received quite a number of! ramtiy let her do so; but do not quarrel letters from him telling me how much| qi. vold the subject as much he cares for me. I answered tn th@) ag po, she asserts that her game style, Now I would Ke tO! famiy ts the tocratic let have my letters back, but he will not}, her ; k 80, but your opinions to | give me ming unless I give him hls in| yourself and avoid a quarrel. When return, I do not want to give hin his! she finds she cannot argue with you om as I want to keep them. 1 trust hi M,} the subject she will let it dro uit he ts apt to be careless with my) A D | piers and t do net want anybody elre| Mould Know His Mind, to see them, Please tell me what I shall | Dear netty do, LMF. | A girl (s always extremely foolish to} write anything to a man which she} would not care to have any one else see, ‘As he already has your letters, the only thing you can do {s to return his and ask him to return yours, You cannot ex- pect him to give back your letters i you retain his. Too ‘‘Aristocratic.’’ | Dear Betty | AM a German-American. I dearly one years old and am gos, @ young man of twenty. s young man has been 1ouse two and three even- non las mg me good night, Is this found out he s off and on, ale nd of me. Da ie to kiss me past few erty of kt prop I have Just going with ather gi though he seems very you think he should ¢ it he does not give up their friendship? he not been coming long enough to ask for my st company or to come ‘0 some understanding in regards to our riendsilp? DOROTHBA B, Do not allow the young man to kiss you at any time, Thet is @ privilege which belongs only to a flance. He most certainly ought to know his own mind by this time. Why do you got go out with apme ther men. at times? Perhaps it@iy thinks he ia about te Jone, you ho ine to Lhe poli, love @ young German girl, She (s very proud of her family, and js always boastine about how aristo- cratic they are in the old country, She family cannot compare with them socially, and we have had many quarrels on account of this. I love her, and want to know whether this question says my

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