The evening world. Newspaper, September 29, 1908, Page 15

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Tuesday, September 29, 1908. Vereverey The New: lyweds Z - Their Nhe ‘George Henenal | Advice to Raw Youths. “The Offenders” a —— : 8 ane Hall, AWSAN4, |, BABY ye is ran y Genuinely Human, but Structuraly Weak, at the aill;| her mother watches them. It's com- - promising. If YOu! Remember that the more radiant the cannot tear YOUr | socks are the cooler should be the head. self away you will - be called @ “stick plaster,” On your ine {a no fit talk for @ gentleman to hear, D not loiter) A girl loves well-creased trousers, and There 1s eafety in numbers, but that applies to your bankbook as well. Be an eocentrio and let her admirc 4 you. Then you're safe elther way. } ae By CHARLES DARNTON. ‘Tou fe @ great deal to be sald for ‘The Offenders,” a protest against Ce <A ebild labor that was heard at the Hudson Theatre last night. In trying make a play of @ principle, Elmer Blaney Harris has done very well S bo e Tell her you're a 4 ter @ beginner—and {f this sounds patronizing may the recording angel of the big boy now. Better homespun sults than breaches f fuventie court forgive a sympathetic spirit! id of promise, } Making funny = ‘J ‘Whether Mr. Robert Edeson, with ali his truthfulness of acting and sincerity faces Is a nice charitable way of giving] 4 preach of extraordinary promise | a girl a giggle, but make sure you can| often results in alimony, afford the sacrifice. = | Be A vainsteking refusal {s sometimes Bome sacrifices can be afforded In af- | worse than a peremptory rejection. Of purpose, will be able to carry the work of the new author to success is More, perhaps, than any poor recording devil would care to write while stil! damp with the rain that brought a heavy run on the visible supply of taxicabs, (f not with the tears of an audience over a really affecting ending, G i . | tatre of the heart. (Id. exception, Page = ‘ ‘The Offenders” proved genuinely human, but structurally weak, For two 1 of the notes.) Never fice « giti by the way she eota the play followed an idea, and then, alas! something besides the rain | - kisses brother or nlaya bean porridge A youthful face {s often an asset, and, | hot with daddy, | after experience, ascetic. - ; - Onty apolled children and affinities Don’t be flattered, little one, the mid-| fal! in love at first sight. Every hapoy dle-aged kind are not half so discrim-| quimination 1s attributed to second inating. aight. began to fall, Melodrama came down hurd and almost drowned the struggling fdea, But an author with an {dea ‘n these days of impoverished drama de- serves a helping hand, It must be ad- mitted that Mr. Harris has given us a BABY GOING play with a big Idea and a big heart. lO} The trouble with his work {s that It HOME To ® shows more sympathy than skill. SEE Mama! | 2 ® : For two acts the play commanded the D y PRETTY i 8 H ¢ rt fo th ome atiention of last night's audience with YW FEATHERS 7 5 1 Ss r e * v mora of lesa interesting talk on the we ocooood coO0uK svbject of child labor, the right of he To Clean Baby’s Bottle. |mpread butter on one-half, turn the i Woman to do her own work in the other half over; let rise again, and bake world, and the usual hit at corporate jue paper In baby's bottle WIth iin quick oven, uT greed and political dishonesty. What P water and shake thoroughly, we OH LOVEY, WHERE DID 1000000000000000000000000000000000K 4604, t with bright Mnes—some, perhaps, too mi remove all particles and can| Skirt from Old Underwear. ken out of bottle with ease, Rinse ] PRETTY and comfortable pettle manifestly ‘“clever'—a few really hu- man characters humanly acted, and a h saleratus and water and bottle | coat can be made out of two pairs Stratghtforward appeal to pity and Jus- | will be perfectly sweet and clean of discarded long wool drawers, j tice, {t almost seemed as though the lin- French Rolls. ladies’ size, by outting them off at the Bigpee ty of Me Hey might pate, | NE quart of Mght dough, three- | kn! open the seams and use the Hs woman imbued with the spirit | fourths cup sugar, one-fourth cup| ankle for the top, Featherstitch the 0 rufsm, sneered {In settlement and of lard, one egg; work in flour to | ous, poame. end) Agen Ehechem eel fae siormi vole anaunomnnsal che stiffen, but not as stiff as bread, When | foom like a gore] skiry At nicely, and be Madonna of the pen’ by the prisoners, |Mght roll out. Cut with round cutter, warm and strong, could be the wife of a political grafter| ees —_ ee and not discover In a year and a half that her husband {s no better than dfs rade seems lke stretching probabllity too far, Yet {t {# true no doubt that Robert Edeson as KIif King—Kath. even in the best of families a wife may erine Grey as Helen. not know how her other half lives, | ‘ IMPLE dresses are you waited to see what the author was going tt A ae x z @arkened when a prison-marked figure skuiked through the window of "Boss" DOGOD0G000000 OOK OE! for the little Btreet's home and put a Japanese servant to sleep'with a blow on the head, At) @ Ra CHATS ON . girls, and this ong, the sound of other footsteps the intruder pushed his way through hangings into (0) B H rT n R wl nd ae ots with ite straight gath. Snether room, ‘The “Madonna of the pen” returned to get her pocketbook. ‘The! ® — | OW By Helen Rowla The Gentle yi ve yi 2 f if ides ia aeoH plight of the servant puzzled until she made her way through the curtains. 6 ALLL y charming anavcnitdian "Then her cry brought the shock of discovery to your ears. She stumbled out @ @@@ DOOD 000000000000 100 00000000000 DOQOODOIDDDD000000C yoeyey MWOQOIOOO DOOOODOU nOODO Lt 4 struggling with the housebreaker, The author gave her the pistol and she held iG SUSE Tiger arcaneume wiracee In effect while It takes Kilt King “at bay,” as they say in t llers. She knew him as a convict J « ee @ Widow pursed up her lips Rraceful and becoming ¥ sane onathat h red h y Nevertheless,” sie retoried — ob- i who had been released n that day, and she offered him money and you," an- atinately, “two people who are begin- lines, In the filustrae handed him back his pistol. Then the Judge who had sentenced him walked nounced the Wid- ning lite’ together ought to know just tlon it 1s made of a fn, and between tham they gave the fellow some good advice and his freedom ow, altting down Wns ehey ween gy mR tt tabi fter that t for the child labor bill went { hey wouldn't stand at. al they pretty wash fabrio, ter that the fight for the child labor bill went on with the reformed burglar beside the Bache- did," rejoined the Bachelor with a haves ah ay on Helen's #ide and against her husband, who was In the pay of the mill owner, lor on the couch short laligh.” Phey'd run away’ nine rimmed with em- ct rprised boss" In et ¢ ssing the mill r ae times out of ten. A man may. k , When Kilt i surprised v In the a { kissin e mill own in the dimmest THREE sth Sot cree Cota MTMAHeN RE Bue but it is just he had a to fig! If the fight had been carried on In the § corner of the Wal- mon and the Apollo Kelvedere that his as well adapted to court !t might have won the night, But the scene shifted to a questionable dort Turkish wife professes to think he is, and a& Wave : restaurant, with the mill owner and his silly wife, together with the “boss,” room, “about Woman may know that she is not the ear e MN oat rN events | mUeadolll waletied {hah hin ery de luxe edition of Venus that her hus- truss, to challles anc drinking champagne while the ri ed burglar In a ux: che en. something Vv y band fancied he was marrying, but If ia te (atta ak from an adjoining room throug? Je In the door. He had brought with him important.” BRE ROVER FormindacHihh ot ihecractlaod INC Gat @ factory gi ) was only fourteen, so that he might "get the goods” on the “Anything ts $m- tga beep) Up athe. wentle. er} of Baihae bane ibe proprietor of the place. portant,” returned innate dustahat 1 (nought!) erled : ea : All went merrily until the keeper of the restaurant slipped $2,000 to the “boss’* the Bachelor gal-, the Widow dramatically All men t er lined ot “oh i ye maleate neetee ' 4 his gloves and think that women have got to be lied | si, and with low i mith his “change.” As soon as San Francisco hjstory had thus repeated Itself, | lanty, as he remove’ to" | Cron hes and the reformed convict broke down the door and accused the ‘boss’ of taking a lighted a cigarette, “which can make} “We don't think {t,"" retorted the | ath or or long bribe, The grafter's wife ar at this Interesting point, took in the situation, you want to see me.” Hechslany AY Oren it Fenians ree sleeves, su that It bee and announced that she would leave her husband, The grafter thereupon threat-| ‘How nicely you say that!" remarked above all, kes the man who feeds her aGiiae adaptedhteng ll ened to send King back to prison for oreaking Into his house unless his wife the Widow, glancing up under her hat) mendacious lollipops.”” : ; Vedisna RAW) GRAS agreed to remain with him. She woul sacrifice King, so announced that she brim admiringly. “I wonder where men ets eur pala Ee Weta, me RISIRERTIA would do what her husband asked and up her work, But King urged her to learn how. a yi Ing’ ao perfectly frank and Mice about ‘The quantity of mae keep up the fight, and, taking matters Into his own hands, surrendered himself, “How-to what?" inquired the Bache- | selina The truth” — ane terlal sequtredistabithe The lurid Mght of melodrama cheapenad this scene, but In the daylight of lor, leaning back to get a better view | aoa Auch a thing in my fe : the last act you saw the yard of the good Judge filled with his juventle charges °f sMe AY ee ee ert | About my, hnupe 2 and witnessed one of the tragedies of childhood In the fate of a little chap who) “Tolle 80 pleasantly and—an | 7 i the Widow iene Mae 8, , ‘was sent marching bravely off to a reformatory where he would be Sent) the lessly, That's what I wanted to see you | You look just like Lillian Russel. hale and Any weaithioss f prt tty and eae aan ae temptation of the whiskey he had be ng for his mother, This little hero) ®b0vt: You see, there's a ae no" | you've got too much powder on your The moment a man and woman have “to on!" exclat Bachelor e: LAER ae was herolcally acted by Master Robert Tans ell ene ee ne ro Ot 2h | nosey and reached that stage of intimacy where Head tattth rat silat alike Lt lab HSS a ae “That's the stuff—that stunt of the Judge’s—get ‘em while thore time,” Kug Mee serlous—and’— | “Mr. ‘Travers!’ broke in the Widow they feel it necessary to comment on nat 4 uae King had sald, and he was out of prison again to see the boys get the right sort) “It’s the same thing,” put in the/iraignantly, rubbing her nose. ‘We each other's collars and correct one an- |The Widow's frown relaxed and « ; of start, But this time the prison had been too much for him. He smoked a Bachelor soothingly: [don't tell the truth to—to mere casua! other's grammar and turn a microscope i Perrin "And," continued the Widow, “I acquaintances, do we?” on one another's failings, the gama ar oe NW Tae ote natal ae one ie pene hie “will,” leaving all the | a ited to know whether to tell him the| ‘The Bachelor winced \\s miringly. “With that figure and “those " bob baselh lS Pee Ree es sey aan truth—or how to avold telling it, or'"— "he sighed, ‘we wait until they | “B 4 the Widow reproacn- | °%¢8— if i Girl's Dress), Pattern) No: 6087, The curtain went down on the most appealing acting Mr. Edeson has ever!‘ ney | b "On, come on!” broke Hatweath viet from his first slouch to his last gasp. Miss Kather! The Bachelor shuddered, | have become dear friends or flances or | ect! shrugging shoulders, ry done. Halas Spa in Windatdce WIEN Ane BR en ye eee a ne nink of the horrible things we) our husbands or wives and we have £6 cup y ae Call or send by mail to THE BVENING WORLD MAY MAN- Grey splay careng: friend Ob eae aoe Tw eat usiasm and earnest feeling. | woulg have to say to one another,” he! got them at our merey—and then we | “A aie Cn (55 TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 18 Kast Twenty-third street, N John Flood, dn teplte of ob ners valet) se . ne 038) ee Well, and Miss oyoiaimed, “if we always Insisted on| rub {t in. The saddest thing about} lor dry Lee rreliing, but T lke quar Obtain York Send 10 cents tn coin or stamps for each pattern ordeied Beatrice Prentiss again proved her cleverness in the part of a wayward, slangy | being truthful! I would have to tell} married life Is the opportunity It gives| hilarating f In mes.” - These IMPORTANT—Write your name and addrvee plaialy, sad «!- i factory girl, who, Ike others in the p talked too mush: The play W2S you, for instance, that I know your | two otherwise agreeable people for tell- we frat poy Fortal the WHI PPatterns $ ways syecity size wanted almost talked to pleces and had very little to hold tt together, \hatr doesn’t ourl naturally, and that | ing each other the disagreeable truth.! comes'in at the door love and all Its. sometimes.” PED POLDEHODTELONEDODPODODIDILOND PEIAPPEIOAIDIDEDIIIISDLINGDDED OGIO DIODDINIAADD l A Revelation ye = By Robert W. Chamle: 3 + New York Society i wstes duthor of “the Hiring bine’ anu a & . . Fi jl ” ; ighting Chance. 4 s Ps (Copyright, 1907, by Robert W. Chambers.) ) or what to do. good woman; the kind people's sisters is worth his salt. ) #0 dear to any young man who has she was beginning to be a uttie afraid) ul, ue “Hi | She sitting back in thé limousine, can still talk to, you know. * * | And he sald so in his own naive fash-| had none of him, which was an economical way tha hard. ot pla. QYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALMENTS. | Very Ilmp and flushed, and the quiver of For I'm nothing more Interesting than | {on; and the more eloquent he grew the AS for Allxe, she also was mildly of making him very proud and happy. re is a0 tled up that he Capt. Phillp Selwyn, of an old New York | her under lip and the slightest @imness a divorcee, Gerald; nothing more dan-|more excited he grew and the deeper flattered—a trifle disdainfully perhaps, ‘Being his first case of beauty in dis he had never been assailed some peop Phe varauant family, has resigned from the army because of her averted brown eyes distressed gerous than an unhappy little fool. |and blacker appeared her wrongs to| but still genuinely pleased at the hon- tress, and his first harmiess love-at- His face was pufty and pallid and faint port in playing with a boy esty of this crude devotion. She was fair with a married woman, he looked she trusted about him as he entered the club a Jows hinted of close hie wie, Alize, divorced him to marry Jack | him dreadfully. °° ¢ J wish I were. * © * But I'm | him. aNlite Rowven, a cotillon leeder. Returning °°] wear ates, Ruthven,” ne blurted out| still at the wheel! * * ¢ A man 1! At frat she humorad him, and rather! omched. too; and, besld nim aa he entered the club and and the line from the wing of the nos- area ree New York, Gelwyn frequently meets the | with clumsy sympathy, “you mustn’ know calls it hard steering but assures | enjoyed his fresh, eager sympathy; af- | him; for he was clearly as transparent felt truly thee he My =e ready o Who tis to the nerveless qualifie in you Ruthvens, Allxe till secretly loves him | such things, b-because they're all{me that there's anchorage ahead. ter a little his increasing ardor Inclin- | 8 {he spring air, Also most women 1° young and callow uth had been gol n up?” luring young Gerald Erroll to | Fe ee nene yovgeiwyn bers Allxe to| rot, you see; and if any fellow ever | * © He's a splendid fellow, Gerald; | eq her to laugh; but it was very splen-|!usged a boy about with them; she had | haunted it, t 1 of unrest amble at his house, | Pi aed Realy him—well-eome ulead had several, but none as nice ag ( ‘On her way home Alixe smilingly re ae ee f i Saiiet thie, for the eake of Geraid’s alster,| sald those things to me I'd jolly : ont to know him—well—s MO \did and chivalrous and genuine ardor, | hall several, but none as nice as ‘er sawed the eptsode until doubt of Se Inder he wore pale t He turned paler. “Get up and go to Hijeon, Eileen is the ward of Selwyn's | goon" ay; he’s just @ clean-cut, human, and the Inclination to laugh died out, im up an SC ara Si mre EAE PEE | f ler a silk-and-silver kimono, wor: ‘olundering, erring, unreasonable, loy t 0 arn-| 0 was therefore natural for her; and, WYn's app p agaln abl he “y i En eet arr Aue protherinaw, Austin Gerard. Selwyn, a fens to aay youve. Naver for emotion Is contagious, and his earn-| EAT al ame ta oe 1 Uttle whippet,” she suid slowly, led over @ doubitul land deal (propoted by | i pa rp able man whom any woman, who Is not | estnesss not only flattered her legiti-| !f she hesitated to conclude his sub- nea gall and he was smoking “I was once a sold the only 08 he riticised ; | * ctlon In short order it was that, far reached her hom ‘ eVAR WAU bs i, hie busines, PATI) rose ca well—e & fool herself, could manage. * * * ely but stirred the alackened ten-| °° . 4 ; mal! 3. straw t thing T ever have Reergerd. HU AProMuutelll cap maiieateeubody. lacoriticleed) | Of mately bu : E : ot Ruthven was a sm av This : by uspaltk ater, Bie Goren, aooie'ss, | “iwell—everybody | $e ert Some day I should tke to have ¥ou | sion of her heart-strin:s until, tighten-|!" ® Corer of her restless soul, there ee ee ie re iherca tt “Woll!” sald his bullying ends now—here, at this instant! ' F Bitgen end, the Gerard gaia | ones oy ; athe [RROW him—intimately, He's good for| ing again, they responded very faintly.| Md an ever-latent fear of Selwyn; of | pl Uk Tmorn sien Olt Ge lished displeasur k iat | Later thet FeO rec tonaues, Gerald | “But not as we are! Do you rea the people of your sort. Peace to him!—it | nT had no idea that you. were lone-| M8 opinons concerning her fitness to Magiacn Eu p Day aa ei ievehige eed Te | ize, who, at Selwyn's request, tries | papers? Well, then, do you understand | there's any In the world. * * * Turn} jact as memor to the boy of whom he | edition of the larger mansions of the! sh i | con fhe iad p gambling. he speaks eel to have her t i "he declared | we friends, but with less excuse for thi oved th Be eee a? ard bitin Inethots: how a woman must feel to have Met | your back! I'm antvelling.” ‘sometimes Tam, a Uttle, Geraid.| ®&# fond, and whose davotion to him) friends, but een Bt aes AT ea sroniaNes | ‘husband continually made the butt o} 8 p , Gera Waa dnaieation overelabooration, since the jons ob astonished, set Mg viautd. untrue stories-as| 4 Moment afterward she had calmed! she ouht to have known batter. Per-| ™& qu ed: GaRRvGnly i Handed Aa inee out tor wmome dheeh BULWas tie V. " ne were a performing poodle! 1| completely; and now she stole a curl-) haps she did Sy or ua en seien Coie tebe DADS Ihe marta {tg narrow ornate | with a nod of his head whe tu CHAPTER V. lthough he were a performing po 4 Mera i even partly because of it, she decided y ‘ |--I'm alok of that, too, for another | OWS side glance at the boy and blushal) "well," he began, “couldn't I come) (oe en ce Gerald; wo| facade presented not a alngle iy volce was agreeable an him mt (Continued.) thing. Week after week, month by |@ little when he looked back at her and"— the let her hand fall. be accident. close | space the eyes might rest on after a | precise and overcultivated, perhaps. stretc see for a chair. Afterglow. month, unpleasant things have been ac- | earnestly. Then she smiled and quietly | “'No, Gerald tor ble on thai cushioned deat, (tovena| Urine atte and codity the s maid retired Allxe eat upon Rage, even real anger, were emotions hat a|cumulating; and they're getting too| withdrew the hand he had been hold-/ ‘I mean just to see you sometimes | what he'd do about it and | the awing her skirts down he seldom had to reckon for he © nim she had always tai is to| heavy, Gerald—too crushing for my | ing so tightly In both of his, and have another of those foliy | It took him séme time to make up some il ay 1 stockinged feat was @ very tired and bored and burned- y ay ey Laie eye outh | Shoulders. * * * Men call me restle "So there we are, my poor friend,” | talks"— + 3 his mind: but when he did he held it near-alssance.” What on earth @ matter?” she out gentleman, and vivid emotion was @ well-bred but hare: Hah y hag) What wonder! Women tink my name] she concluded with a shrug; ‘the old| “D9 you call this a folly talk?’—-with! 4, gingeriy, so respectfully, that she| However limestone bonb not good for his arteries, the doctors Ee begin ea i ne mat Ad) with any man who Is k-kind tome! T8| oenny shocker, you know, ‘Alone in a| 4°eP Teproach was obliged to look out of the window, | Ox tripped Mrs A th a, told him, Heo. far, Pim & combine yen © y, | there no excuse then for what they call | vest ottyi—t've dropped my handker-| “Why not—exactly; but I'm awfully! Clearly he was quite the safest end ire stair t hes Ha thunda Hie chble alana a aie experiences diluted with Bratitude| - vestiessnens? * * * What woman | S00, | intereate, Mrs, Ruthven, and we un-) nicest of all the unfledged she had ever scented skit * draw ai HI DARE” COWPAEA RLS Wl Pai atta ber interest end @ harmless stieatar| Would not be restless whose private af- derstand each other so well'- — possessed ng-room, but > ant! SaEy Hlowiy et Hltauslel down /intg) Cha of pentimentality. In her particular) 1. or. the gossip of everybody? Was| ‘“T want you to believe me your! «1 don't underatand you,” she was| “Please, don't,” she said sadly Artments ; ten't aell. This fa some of| chair and sat facing her There was case, Sowever, there was a eH peal {t not enough that 1 endured terrifte | friend,” sald Gerald, in the low, reso-| jmprudent enough to say And by that token she took him fo: Mt hor tort ani NEE a mn Taslakueh ght BIR BAEG SCRA aRE ER more—a hint of the forbidden—| i iiaey when—when trouble overtook | lute volce of unintentional melodrama.| ‘yyis was delighful! Certalnly he muet her own 1 door ating ted: but her| nervous twitching of the under lip; he 4 trypsbled enjoyment, becatse he knew]. iyo years ago? * * * 1 suppose| “Why, thank you; are you so sure be a particularly tle dog if} She was very light-hearted at Re i passed one heavily ringed hand across ot ourse, that Mrs, Ruthven was on} ro. a fool to talk like this; but a gitl| you want that, Gerald?” this stood young ning when she d it pr was ef and cing is clesely #haven Jaw, still staring at xe footing at all with the Gerards. 80] et do it some time or burst!—and | sas long aa I live! he declared | matron found him what in romance Is) Stuyvesant Club anc to her tr e sur and a I ot him to- | her. be Leora eal tee Dlavan-}to whom am Tto go? ¢ * © There was) reroine emotion In the ascendant. | Known as an “entema jer own house, for he ha ay : want to tell you something,” he ey mot at all distasteful to a very}oniy one peraon: and [can't talk to-~ 7 be protested with am sinilily Linak 6 Pera ovaatcian thiiean ‘a See ce alee fake ee ; | pretty woman upset him very ensll h ‘ P on } F SRE “ young man's palate that person knows too | DYe Nae ae vratamcen rue | that he Was quite transpa she ins | @ a mise re “¢ with my affairs, and stop But now—he hod never. never seen fer[ much about me, anyway; which Is not h sisted sting him and contrived and take him about when she was sh rst glan \ the whl ae pe ike this—nor any woman, for that mat- good for a woman, Gerald, not good for | Duty. in distrem nockes, him fa | te look disturhed in her mind concern-| of an escort. She also repeated that) ish @ What do you ay hae a fapwaad 20 4id not know where to look & goog woman * * * 2 mean & preity * \t dose every whelesame Boy who! ing the probable darknene of (hat past ne was truly an enigma’ and wat! hair or of any hope of It wart bre fort Hs aut play with ‘tHe | ‘0 Be Continued) WOM never ii ee ae “ee ‘ } \ } tive . mene A somes a a dori

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