The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1908, Page 9

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, quence. | Saturday, October 31, 1908-; | -KDBOODOROHD@ HOD HOFODSSDODPDODHTS POPOPHPOWDVWPOVOHIOPV# PODREOVBHSOHSOWOE GOHVHRAs besopenis . Master Gabriel, Three-l'oot Star of Giant Spectacle, immortal Interviews -:- Declares Ie Feels Like a Little Pea in a Great Big Pod DIDDY FODOOV OX The Lorelei Says Man’s Fall Is All Due to the Derby Hat ODDO’ |for her and work for her and think for her and treat her not lke an equal, but Mkema Kitten.” ® ® ® ® ® * By Charles Darnton. ELL, kiddies, to begin with, here area few cold facts about Master Gabriel, | He len Rowland. RACTOUS!" | the Lore- “Perhaps,” I acquiesced, “but the tho condensed hero of Klaw & Er- modern man doesn't treat a gifl Ile langer’s expansive spectacle at the tel, as the elevator an equal; he treats her like—like a New Ainsterdam Theatre: | | ai neenan me) superfiulty. He considers tt a waste of on top of her favor-|time to walt on her Gort Birthplace — Sometimes called “In| ite rock. “How you tt ho nl ner tb di et cna 5 Sahl our midst; known in the post-office | | frightened me! 1 of compassion if he takes the as New York City. | {t was @/itroutle to flirt with her. He doesn't Age—Twenty-five years, not count- I jeven n love with any enthusiasm ing a few straggling days. fie il mi i , rkes a) ae Height—Three and one-half feet in | aidry'sp and takes your hand or a Kiss In a his night drawers. | wy OS) way that makes you feel aa though rd that you Weight—Forty-two pounds at the | a ho had taken your pocketbook, and of- H fers you a chalr or s the door f time of golng to press. { The Lorelet tossed her chin and) you with the alr of ver ‘4 me Now, {f you know your arithmetic, ; twisted her ‘Merry Widow” hat at a) sijuing a rs "i ” | stowing a royal favor you will see that this 8% foot star of more acute angle. | "Oh, well,” 4 the Lorelel, waving Stageland runs a pound to the !nch. te been so ee hehe: MO ee t her jewelled hand nonchalantly. “It's But don't on any recount, even the Seater a pa tn | the worm fault. We have pampered shouldn't know how to act if I met h abAlifla (tered them PARA TIGCE EER dry goods store's, say he 1s all wool Of course," she added, “the funny look= out Just how important they are -and a yard wide. Keep your pencil [ing things in derby hats and baggy to uy until they have gotten half way on your figures and don’t speak fig- Us sers who go on the excurs! back to the savage ate. We'll be uratively. Steamers are scarcely wo 3 bundles on our heads and do- ae a And she tllted her ltte ng all the hard work before long, Why, If you happen to be of the special In disgus even Would {Hine wise sUerereniating matinee s that leaves your feet tn vey seem be all there aro,” I}, man a 5 RHRANCHO suggested sadly. “I know tt temptuously living who wou days. I can suspense when you are in an orches- tra chair you can meet Master Ga- brie] face to face, or on his own ground, with perfect ease. But if you happen to be out of all proportion to your subject it's not so easy. In fact, Jeclared the Lo: sing {t's @ bit awkward for a six-footer to talk with a three-footer when both are stance ‘a ore on an equal footfug, for then the eix-footer has to bend and twist Uke a EFS NUL EREDAR NTO OS ifteen-dotlar-a-w i & S/¥ FOOTER TO TALS WITH contortion! order to catch the words that pop out of the three-footer. A THREE FOOTER > ROSES CORSE ne | public ts unbuttoned down the back. ”, ‘ nit of chiva you Meeting the Little Prince. He aends-her a hoarse whiss| | WHEN ATASTER? ay avaiins (ohitarenwes GU le ten iecorer inte Mlnjemt lave 0 You are led “behind the sce per, and her hand steals furtively to| | 7S ‘AZ7S7TER”? AGRE GMAT TERETE TATE cat eect ce toe ear ey before you have had time to blink the the rear. When she comes off she says cx krown neonle qT ere are @ great many ith at nowith eu rain out of your eyes you are presented | that she feels perfectly dreadful, and GR) iG caleba chaste Le eh a pomade and moo to the Ittle Prince that she wouldn't have had it happen cus seuemuae OLE Oe ACT | Be tele Aa ait ea) OG pmhea? o for anything under the—but the stage Vs ali Foun te leneleny cong mas SPE Reomnaeaee cneea dae PUL IVR aecacien | WAnERED! “anerely (eUle her saScrn to be a light eomedian than a grotesque | well,” T hazarded, “how ean you BURAK mare turning to | &Palght Gt om) Gas cee comedian, But I ike to amuse children 1 em when we make things s the Picture I who has drawn a{|®Ay more, and then turns to comfort| (GE a Too ni have se, Sood sume Dayne swine |iGke: : ean encil on 2 you getting a|@Mother girl who has bumped her eye Wher Dey Ut od aby Can) an A ORS Gel ‘ SOUR pera ony ahs soles Moconiaieil’ “Ana When’ we whee @eeinst ao clold “ore sombtilae! © anil aes «bunch of old men and be just as inter ‘ ea led eyebrows about with the u, too, | anether has hurt her foot and fs lmp- ested Laparticuiarls/ceniey (a inolltical | ya SLR Gs Me : ta ng up to the tall, middle-aged, quiet j discussion | er toy their devo ie eloutanavarioa||manitorlayiiva thgiauGarcrdtena east You wonder whether he has eye: | tion ey merely have to ’ confess that you are| 0M the head, and she dances off. gan 1 a, (ER GAT voted and e us to luncheon « us a) eat are the wentianere Ganees off. You /partner, La Marr, I began to branch )never going to pick a part for myself 3 pani’ Neca ome tiereeacty. |dentimentaiatat oavas 1 sindness of |cut a bit. I got my first chance in New | I've always let other people do the pick era OAUELE UN GBEET SITS URI TaE TET EE SAMUI ER eS Maonitnapnthat eat B ee,” f nates Master ‘he quiet man, and you wonder what | York when Oscar Hammerstein put on ing for me, and they have invariably lee or ee ie pee Rigen = rl th Art ey y i} And then,” he recalls, “I yoted for Lorelel, “WE telephon TH Gabriel, An he girls are gotng to buy him tor * Then there was ‘Buster | picked the right thing. My partner and Se ncL ih Ele GeUlea renecleai 1 [setaCULL Ga ieest enroevana taut ita Terselalehinin and letting Prince go hang with | Christmas. remember. I have |I have Jobbed along together for the last | Meni een eee {CHATTER eraliecee eae ear sere SRS the hat. * twenty-five years old,| “A bit crowded, fsn't 1t% You looo|taken parts as they came.” eight years and we've done pretty wall. | Icpantaelvancupgenseponise telat Cine ee ers Revs llaemanaheoktantexcescettielsuonl and I was born right here in New York down and ee little Gabriel. He ts back | He looks as thoughthe might be satis-| Of course I have tdeals’— | papa neentivo to leap into Hons’ degs! and|| husbands are as tare as solid ZThitty-tirst street. ten doors west of for a fifteen-minute stay thie time, | fied to take “boy parts" for the rest of| He stops and you add: “Your {dent | oe gk death. on the high seas and per-|hogany and old masters. And I Sixth avenue yw much do I weigh? Then he'll have to make a “dark | bis Mfe, but you are not satistled to| actor | BI His Heart! orm feats of valor to win a girl when|that the women Forty-two poun My height? Three, change,” and be quick about it leave the matter to conjecture, '$ b-b! Bi Tdeal A | eSS S Hear! Il you have to do 13 to en her aj have actually ri feet and a half. Yes, a pound an inch. A “Well,” he confesses, with a emile| O'S*D!—HlS 10Q ctor. | | ¥ neighbor's child Just will destroy; | siunch of violets and she topples right|to whether or n x I haven't grown an inch in ten years, | LO$t j curling his lps, “I have an ambition| A smile hides the secret for a moment. | ! He takes delight in breaking; | sver ; fable : le | over into yOur arms. to do the p: but I've gained five pounds during that] | above boy parts. People who are sup-|'Then: | | Plain mischief 1s his greatest Joy No," I giggled. “AN the feats of | “tell, hav time. ‘or a few nights,” he tells you, “I | posed to know have told me that I have| “I admire Mr. Sothern very much. He | He ought to have a shaking. valor nowadays are performed In try-| “of course they have,” 5 ae Pan wouldn't grow and hag an awful time firfaing my way dramatic ability, and I claim that I/{s so intense for one thing, When he My Mttle man pulls things apatt arg if) CURES auidbdniiiwaikine tontltrsesielmmesiirivainy tes d You wonder j#bout in the dark among all this sc g 1 hat I'm enous pane p y bs | ‘a nd a norelel th a bitter Baste You wonder about in fing ark among all this acen- | have a voice and that I'm enough of a| starts out to ‘nail’ an audience he us-!one can be a great actor in a musical | To see what's in them, bless his heart; |the precipice of matrimony without |have the right to wear t ¢ oH ine ooh tone, ump! Into something, and | performer to take care of myself on the ually does it. I Iike serious acting and | comedy—it doesn't bring out such. fel- Much fault with him one cannot find, .|tumbling Into tt, and in marrying rich | lige taremant aad tact Mate abit Bote put tt" he tells] then bymp! into something else, At the| stage. I'd ike a character with a ittle| sciloun plays, Tragedy ts tho thing that |Jows az 1. 11. Sothern and Joh Drew, just his bright, inquiring mind |widows for their money and"— eA iru pana ea Mara rout Lbs an old story, you see. When | first TBHERIESL I felt as though I had, pathos in it—a serlo-comic part—but I'm | grips you, that holds your interest. No|A spectacular production calls for «| —Chicago News, | “Yes,” broke in the Lorelel, “Any | nuen a dels a i a Be Pipent 9 ee Abie notice) itimugh | Joined eiclreus; ¢t olmoatjsotl lost) yen ——— man who marries anybody thinks he|<D ‘et Ane wear sheath skint | fast used to the klds and they got|now feel ke very little pea in a e i io ° aie Sea ABTRtEaGUIRRIGR an: thing sei#0 they Io to, make shone ins te el Ris aad ay an coe Sais oy eel aaa a es [EDO YANN PRCT Tayler CARS eles eit raeererernng yy, «cause fo grieve over it, When I was|rattle around. It's awful to hear your | n Ollar I 2 = y, Z fi vi r ‘And an act of charity," finshed the |{shten the men away like hunted rab- i} four Went to France and stayed there {cue and seo ffty chorus girls between | Lorelel. “But 1f they only knew how | bits. They have the right to pay for ‘ namen tierce: on ao chime: Deck |yauyana the: stage | TAKE GACK DE CENT, fascinating they look when they do|the theatre tickets and the cal when ent to the public schools in Provi-] You guess from this that aw PLEASE MisTeRD anything brave or chivalrous or noble, | they g9 out with a man, and to take denc the ttle ’ OH PSHAW! HERE'S Boss! L wo 1 | 5 if yf actor was not “brought up” on the 1AM LOOKING Ff, : S: ULDNIT |they would never have allowed them- |{n washing to support their ands Hou hear him running into French, tage. : oR A PENNY - Co BUY KNOW HOW To RUN A |ipelyesintoy become) iso} scommon-nlace | mney Mavesielusnt tpimakesherse) X you ask e op e by It hone 0,” he explains, ‘my parents were DONY BoTHER\\* JOB' PLEASE x‘ LF NewS- NEWS PAPER IF 1 | They would have gone right on dying | #0 chea ideas! ble that no Set Oe Nant Bian performers, But I've been enter-| | | Tval HELP me ! CURSE: () f for us, and sighing for us, and fight-|real gentleman would have one of them Fee nne ne RAGW UnSt Swpes & yeople as long as I can remem: eh : PAPER ! OWNED one ! ing for tis, and waiting on us, and pro-| round tho house!” Bee, r. When I was a kid of four they Busy. cegtlng ue Hto sit’ buck and see @ thing all Bune Cells Bis Real i aine. sed (o perch me on a table and tell “But,” I objected, with a sigh, “there | jad up" a f. e to sing. But I never had any in- n't anything to be protected from | broke in the Lorelet, “Wiesel, looking you |Struction. My first professional appear- eyes " | awhile. the “modern straix © was with the Wilbur Opera Com- [coe nney urine) ne. SItferen ca ine) julek to come for- “But rman,” you ar-|Pany. I was fifteen then and had fin- torted the Lorele!, waving her hand | a sip! And gue. |'shed at the Providence high school. I SOM EU le eR neT UREN OS tO b0)| EG: Hehenote ee “Of course he agrees j bad been appearing at local entertatn- jpEatected -wogtien there ial ecnipg stoi 1 oquettish y over . father was German. But he c nents, but I wanted to get out and pe protected from or not. Shb Just | her pompadour, while she began sing- | Alsac That ex see tf I couldn't do something more, and [loves to be waited on, even when there on. Won't You Come Bay ith , Wiegel | ent it? 3 |when the Wilbur company came to town [adewnele soem tull. Bea UtERE Were ‘ a ane \ was Fre: Now] we're st I went down and struck the manager {about a SER oa Ra td the exxeursion steamer gitdea way, aren't we? for fob. I' ver fo1 i ‘ er Ike a queen or @ crue] enchantress |past without a ripple and the men on ere Tamaant 208 @itobs aU betes Congas. ayatagheria Jor a delicate, helpless ttle thing who | hoard merely took out thelr field glasses ut J ‘ momen! surprise when I went home that night rae vutters alone or carry {and stared &t her with a bored expres scamper to new adventures on the,and told him I was going out with a fant es ee S She may talk about | Son in stage may be six fect and ali|show troupe. Father was a tatlor, and eae pit A eqiial pay and | as he Ralslen hee anes oT Ee See 1 t { A oman uffrage and equ id | as she finished he ONE. that, but you feel that you have lost|when I broke the news to him he aotucation, and all that, but when w {as much attention asa wour ouly protector, ‘The stage man-|dropped the clothes he was working |comes down to real fe what she Ilkes |HoWadays. I do. beltev ager lis you under suspicton, and the comes d Hues business and find a posit or q pest In the world is a n with a big | y : MOT ecg a crowding chorus girls have you under briel emits a few chuckles and Air of broad shoulders, who will yote | yanity case with a snap. | Inspection. Gut pretty soon the stage|swings around on one foot, s hu SOE NUNC eet Beat Madey toe Manager notices that plump little crea-} "I stayed with the Wilbur Company! a i ture out there in the big eye of the @ year and a half, and then with my anton'’s Daily Fashions. } eee ‘A ; | May Manton’s Daily Fashions, ’ 5 é ONOFOO PPDPODPHIGORIOSIDISO POTS IGI HG ® | : THE | y OU NGER oi) r "By Roben W. Oh eho ; | ene 3 ambers, 3: lustra Author of ‘The Firing Line” ¢ fon is made of and ‘A Fighting Chance.’* uw ; PEELED DG PLLPOOGHE DOG IHOHOGIOOG HD OHO DODDIDP-D? 99409-9990 9O9-9-09909$98-00999459026.9969000 O92 003-0-6-0099$099H9F-5-000F499Hd05-00004 RAL ooeoo.? |eiterdown flannel and fobert W. 5 oh Nee! ] ne trimming 1s rib (Copyright. 1907, by Mobert W. c [mole tunnels which Neergard had dug gances for them interested these people, | meant nothing moro than the threat and | 80 fashionable among the friends you | other now," she anid languldly, “It yor lee ee | undermine and capture the strong-| whose only interest had ulways been |tho insult, the situation permitting him |have surrounded me with. I. merely | mean & ¥°}lbon banding, but the / SYNOPSIS OF PREV war . 0 Ket rid of me, there is no use . t ee ERI Se OU INATALMENTS.|nold which had now. surrendered to| centred in themselves, |@ heavier hold upon his wife and a new | mention this for your information, not in attempting to couple my name wie, | Various Mshter welll family, nas rests from the army because him, | Meanwhile, Neergard had almost fin-|grip on Gerald in case he ever needed ause I am particularly proud of it. | that of any man—first, because {t 1s un- els, cashmere In wife. Allae, iy Ho MME Tok Ttage made him 1 for a week; but, Ished with Gerald—he had only one fur- | him; but threat and insult were very hot anything to be proud of, in| true, and you not only know it but you| and henrletta clot Grete ives luting Young there was nothing to do about it. He ther use for him; and as his soctal suc-|real to the boy, and he knocked Mr. | 4t merely happened so; a mat- know you can't prove tt. ‘There remattis | ¢avet ' , Belwyn bees Ai this for had been treacherous to his club and cess became more pronounced with tho|Ruthye” flat on his back—the one thing ter, perhaps of personal taste, perhaps! the cowardly method you have ry babes peanp wake ot Gori. Mind Avan 1 Ms own caste, and Neergard know ir people he had crowded in among, he | required .> change that gentleman's pre-| because of lack of opportunity; and |nerving yourself to attempt, never | MBNt Are Prete Geran. One even Xeleails at elwvn'a and knew perfectly well that Ruthven | became bolder and more insolent, no | tense to deadly earnest. |there 1s a remote possibility that be- | dreaying that I was aware of Sete Jby many, Again, ¢ ead eee Of Tie aed ace nhs ithaiedas dared not protest—dared not even| longer at pains to mole-tunnel toward) Ruthven scrambled to his feet: Ger- lated loyalty to @ friend 1 once be- pose.” pretty flannelettes and fePeoree” Alixe tot» whi the object desired, no longer ( 4 did it again; and, after that, Mr |trayed may have kept me personally A soft, trumphant little laugh escaped ston eve poa if 1 So quewtionabie " Then Neergard began to use Ruthven ®?0ut his mask. And one da tly remained prone dur- | chaste in this rotting circus circle you) her. There was something alm a | eos f ea ERA fee ean aan Aid NAS when he needed himr and he Reena cy jthe boy very plainly why hel... ' never | y of m terse but concise! have driven mo around in, harnessed | sit {n her delight at outwitting Tie pecially well adap' Steal tion “heconiva™norcr Rely Visits permit himself to win at cards in Ruth- '¥ited him to meet his sister, . 1d he | opinion of him expressed by Gerald, |to your viclous caprice, dragging the| very slowly, in his worn and faded encg ( the purpose. If the pronoese' to Hien, Mh. “namie “iat sis ven's house—a thing he hed not dared | St 80 answer that ho never for, ot After Gerald had gone, Rughve | weight of your corruption’ — & hew expression began to dawneihe closing of buttons eat Mantes forthe t0 do before, He also permitted him- And all the while Ruthven squirmed |opened Arst one eye, then the other,| She laughed, “I had no tdea that I) flickering stare of suspicion, And In it. with loops ts Wked Sionet ot futhven’ haw dite elf more ease and freedom in that wader the Hght but steadiiy inflexible ‘hen his mouth, and finally sat up, and | could be so eloquent, Jack. But my the purely persona! impression of rage iy, fronts can be fi Pendituse injovtri Les Mat and helltieip: NOUKe—a sort of Intimacy sans facon— | PFessure of the curb which Neergard !MS wife, who had been curtously «b-| mind has become curiously clear during | and necessity of vengeance subsided ap papperrcege soa ee ms and hi clubs, ‘The even a certain Jocularity, He also gave | DA slipped on hin #0 deftly; he had serving him, smiled, |the last ygar—strangely and unusually eyed her intently, eurlousiy, and wii, ished with hema and family ae eyiareiie wonder vainly what Mee sie scie the privilege of inviting the | Viewed with indifference Gerald's boyish | “It is strange,” she said serenely, |limpft and precise, Why, my poor & cool persistence whieh fgatty bes be made s \Ruthvens on board the Niobrares ang “evotion to his wife, whicn was even ‘that I never thought of that method, | friend, every plot of yours and of your to trritate her with buttons and but CHAPTER X. |Ruiliven went, furious at being forced {190 Pen and naive to be of interest to|1 wonder why I never thought of 1t,""|frlends—every underhand attempt to “Whar » credulous fool you are." s ¥ (Continued,) to stamp with his open approval an | nose who witnessed it But he hada lastly siratobing her oak 7OURK arma | discredit and ey mo hae been mr said, “to bulld your hopes of a ser Phe quantity of ma Mha Three ppisode which made Neergard a nocit|2t counted on Neorgard's sudden | ond glancing casually at thelr sym-|fectly apparent to me, u supposed | tion on any possible mental disap : The Unwritten Law. Seeley Ls “"| hatred of Gerald, and the first token of metry and smooth skinned strength. that my headaches, my outhursts of of minet) Oe ; } Alsat Al required f HE RUUivent Ah ‘laeraidla ; that hatred fell upon the boy lke a into your own quarters,” she added, ns SS@F, Wy wretched nighis passed In 16 gtood t ’ { W cynical suggestion, had con-| yl Jt hanpened that Rosamund di-| thunderbolt when Neergas: whispered |ho rose, shaking with fury; “I've en- teafe—and the long, long days spent ae sien is Ithout nsw , net Py 1 to exploit his own club nes <p a ane i ta situation {8 not! to Ruthven, one night at the Stuy sesant dured the last brutality I shall ever | Kneelins in the ashes of dead memories surpicto: the Slowitha~and had consented to re-| este ry enip ae ihersyierey rr dail: Club, and Ruthven, exasperated, had suffer from you.’ |~@il these you supposed had weakened jag necome the ‘ nied : ; ‘ ate nose y 01 led fo nerhaps unsettled—my mind, You lie "24 bee neeitration of a « . th 4 aign froin it to do s0, he bad every rea-| her, and the thing omedea Hat fe ncneg, | Eone straight home, to find his wife in| sne dropped her folded hands into her | 7;e7P* y mind, YOu i0! asity almost. apprehensive. #on to believe Neenjard meant to elther! ty, ‘particularly beet ih in fears and the boy clumsily attempting | jap, gazing coolly at him; but there was | (1770, ceny tt for you have had doctors | qq on f ' 4 4 ¥, particularly because what viclous-| to comfort her, both her hands in hi i ; ® WAS! watching mo for months, You didn't on e@ said; “what elser” Vattern No. O142 mulct them heavily or buy them out|ness had been eo long suppressed. 1 a giitter in her eyes which arrested hi Wh ; } presses in} | his) know I was aware of it, did youy But mat 00 YOU ln t Ine case, having been useful 0) Neergard was now tentatively making | ein ng 14 Ruthven coldly, first step toward her. 1 eee PATER | Regie ciaN Neergard, his profits from the transac-| {tself apparent in his leering ease among | ame pipusible explanation for tis) wy think.) she said, ‘thet you. menn| they fa tior aed eae told them | Fou have been saving several thing | 2 : a L Fitting F Pp No. 6142 aenten ia hese Gams lenenii rect pray yyw rng Vy pe t of thing. If you haven't you'd bet-| my rune walls oe tent ene eu meap | that my father died of—of brain trouble, | abo oLors mt ha nel t 5 ose Fitt use Go: mone. aa usu eerga. cool - 7 ; i a ad , et ave ai Buaeny, 08 uausl—Neargard coolly In the very small set be kepnelied with; |eventy’ Be sided: [you'd beter Weave | schooling a# your wife © © © Bus|sunlled and settled 7 roan fiery La He Epo Odiein § York Send 30 canis 10 coin or siemps (or each pattern ordered him of his election to the club, | and the women of that set were perverse knowledge {s not necessarily practice,| framing the gilded foliati But—who are o ; Tuese IMPORTANT—Write your name and addsras plaialy, smd ale a . i i s «i ons of the are these doctors-whom you end Ruthven, thunder-struck, began to| enough to find Neergard amusing, and| eomvenient house than mine. and it happens that I have not cared) back with her beworny) axes dave noticed?’ wWaye epecity wise wanted. semnive the deuth of the ‘thie fertility to contriving Rew extreve-] As © matiqr of fact, he had really |to commit the partioular indisenetion We anighs ae well understand one an- (fe Be Continuedy

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