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The Evening World Daily eee es eee November 3, 1908, _ Oe >The Newlyweds:-: MODONOOOONY The Vanity of Man eh wk Bell oon Pe eee ee me eee Faversham Scores in ‘The World and His Wife.’ BY CHARLES DARNTON THE 2055 GAVE ME THIS PicruRE, BUT THE MATTER ‘ « m J LM COINY OUT i PRECIOUS ? b —. Neves to, Widow who ts beginning to take notice Now AND VOTE « } : i ee my mind, te /efes fate by appearing in shabby FOR BRYAN ! f ze Pe: A hair? It is only the more pathet-| clothes or tous! then to heag) Wife who knoevs r hueband can't get , x en omade the! rid of her without a scandal who dares t ; tase "as be dishevelled and unkempt before men. a egaray, fh e nine or ten years avo yOu KNOW as a woman” And even then they are fools, for whe it the ms was = You draw your sword o: M t of knows h heir bh band: iT ‘ : part of Ghelr edi. knows how soon thelr hushands may be 4 souldn't reacl His Wif ts mig than the swor Dean, l BELIEVE kK and uplift. removed by an automobile or special All of w seamed a trifle hard on the Iady, | ‘ the fact th HE'S I tERESTED) sony: fon, | Providence, when thi¢ untidy woman but one of the gossips at Daly's wore trouser# and go forta. ‘There was aiid The patho Will be obliged to advertise for another fe tdle gossip that ice fo acts and then there wae a laa act t IN THE i a comes in because |S8Upporter or mew for her living? In ve Mr. William J acore. And score he aid as the ELECTION ! they really elther case she would be obliged to curl PHelid WhO Curned lover lara atl ee ae hat vanity ie not/ her balr end draw in her corset taces.s ter the acandalmongers had broken up VA only exclusively a Wherefore it is fooltsh to be comfort- the once happy home of Don Julian and : if ua fomining attribute, (@ble, even though married, for there is Donu Teodora, and the street stared tle D Ye but that thelr own 0 tetling when one will have to endure the discomforts of a still hunt for an- in the face. “It you dare sis amuTe ved lover, springing in PHO ILRI RG aL iweleca (Other bread-winner, ants troub e-mal- Siac dedi) 7 But because woman's It 5 troub e-mna Saath ORUREIECHIAY rays e man's vanity is a bus ot thls NOES Necessity and man's an accessory after the tact an exhibition of tt In men always excites th risibilities of the worthy gentleman « Teodora out of kelf-evident a fact, and tn 5 contention they point with pride to the was about to the house ‘I | fact that 11) show himself in all All along Ernesto had heen the atar Re HidesUwraay Shaeta fg mult. bee Uht-hearted and humorous-minded. To boarder, but a gentieman stil. Mr. Fav- tore acores of people ata summer ree M¢@ & man in @ baeber's chair having the ends of his mustache curled with a hot iron 1s enough to make me cheerful yr the day, To see @ man in an elev vator stand before the mirror and use ersham's hea large with innocence. as strafc a string. an, verdad necessity demands wnshaven and In old got a new SNOOHUMS, T THINK HE BARX LIKE YOv'D BETTER VOTE FOR IOUS UIA ES Then 4 aah gle, but you n repulsive trin Tavs: WHEL Rin GERI CRS) GON ANTS ee MUSTN'T CRY) WANTS THAT ' ie unbecoming and often repulsive ttt amb makes ti USED aly ED a a MPICTURE | TAFT? Videily GES Eaten) thines|etoh we women iow that they 45) che well. mente: rticlims| ef) wo fiends on the way I conduct my own affairs, While the jetters I receive trom youthful men willing to assist me in my But I read the signa dtfferentiy. TO yrduous terary labora and inclesing my mind such extremes of effrontery as puotographs and expatiating on these almply indicate a coloseal con- arms make me indifferent te cel. Men who do these things might Just as well wear a placard ng “We know you women are eo erazy about Madri@ and New York carry the tae free from the ney, as @ sex, rid vice of vanity 1 and IIs Wife" kept not) ing hidden. Suspicion was piled on with hoa free hand that Ernesto Teodora were almost buried beneath !t efore the play was an act old. Don Severo ond his wife Mercedes came to ty ls excusable In a weman, Se his brother Julfan’s home not #o muc {3 cause women must marry or work out to dine as to feed thetr host i hostess anywi bar you wik overlook this tm- for a living, But men can be just a SONtthenbl terial teloceeonRipGev ert puden, ugly and untidy and seedy as they Fo {t 1m tmpudence. Women never choose and stil! marry whom they ey are good wage-earneray pitiable, Was a sold rock of suspicton, Mercedes Ww. Faversham as Don Ernesto. H. Cooper Cliffe as Don Jullan. sw! dare take such liber nen. What choose engaged girl would rik letting Mr. ao why vanity in men?" Sweetheart see hér with mumps? What and worse, unnecessary. Sty afmed that ate tr Worldly-wise young son of this precious pate, o: tending to Underst the situation and sympa 1 Ernesto, w bardly restrain } ¢ fre ringing the silly . wy It wae a relief to find Julian s wat the s 1 ore wit © Ernesto when lie declared he would clear out, but he, too ght t 1 iseaze when he called to his friend three times before Ernesto, w ‘> , with Teotora on heard him and came forward teig pon this trivial incident as a means of creating doubt might have gone further and done » nish ¢ { @ handkershief to start him on the : There was no v1 fe weary. @¢ Paolo and Francesca dragged @m opera thet brought out some Wis connection it may be recorded that Misa Mery Garden sat in an upper box and applauded at grea: len There was nothing but gorsip to keep the play going unt!) Ernesto went out to buy tickets for a fairer land, and, ac @erding to report, made arrangements for Cue! with an {mpolite Spanar who had talked too much in a cafe. By Fulten made this little affair o: honor hte business and tn due time staggered - fate Ernesto's studio with a crimson @ain on his white shirt. Meanwhtle Teo. Gore, like a true stage heroine, had HE blouse I that opens at ' the front yet je a little less se- vere than the 1 shirt watst for be welcome many women. one Is finished with scallops ut front edge and je scallops etn be bound, embroti- ered or trimmed |The Widow Finds New Use e for Brothers By Helen Rowland ocdo AOOCTS COORI “O. dear™, “Nor to get used to nor to be disup- exist while he {s driving a nail or read- The Bachelor glanced up at her ert! ODOOO Or TOCOOD000 sighed the | poi Phéy go into matrimony tng the mo: paper; und can think cally. Widow, unt d by ‘lusions or delusions the world of and yet swear at yon} ‘What makes you wear your h glancing at the! or the belief that a man ts going to be under his breath !f you wake him up| over one ear?’ he asked nonchalantly. Bachelor confid- as noble and tender and fascinating !n the middle of a nap or tall to him| ‘Mr. Travers’” The Widow clutched Hked. It includes ingly as he turned before breakfast and without a collar while he is shaving; and that he can be/et her hat desperately. {the regulation his horses {nto or a shave as ‘e {s after dinner in a qulle nice and lovable without being| “And most of your pompadour at the| sleeves, but with Central Park just dress suit when the lights are low and elthes a saint or a hero’ back of your head?” cuffs of a nove a the ¢ o'clock the muste {s playing. 1 ving ney haven't any t's the fashion!’ sort that match 1 parade was begin- | {deals to be shattered.” | ‘And that bunch of fuffidub under| front edge, end it eome there to her friend about the ning. ‘T wish T “Shattered ideals,” declared the Bach- jyour chin, and ao much powder onjean be fintened trouble into which he had got himself had a brother for elor valiantly, “are better than none at |your nose, and those pinchy-looking | either with the @m her account. And of course she for a few min-/ all. A wornan without ideals is like a | gloves, and all those jingly fol-de-rols | turnover collar of Papped out of her hiding place when her fers rose without perfume or a cocktat! on your wrists and”-—— Heiitetereteriaitarer iIs—\s ‘TITAT the way I look to a man? gasped the Widow. | ‘It's the way you look to—a brother, busband made a noise that sounded atmost fate). The Bachelor | without t ¢ hasn't got the nearly dropped the favor — reins No," rejo (With @ contrasting » | one or with o fancy ned the Widow, she Brother Severo did the rest. Teo ‘ h Gera tn Ernesto's rooms! A rendezvous! I'd be one to you,” he began, doubt- has a working knowledge of men that | retorted the Bachelor, reining in the|*tOck ae ikea. it Julian egreed with him. At last he saw fully, “only I hate to Join the throng’’-—— | {= a great deal more useful to her, Any horses before the Widow's door. “or|‘# &dapted to evecy what his brother wished him to see “There {sn't any ‘throng,’ Mr. Trav- girl! who has a brother ought to be ‘course to ME"— {wensonadie wale The aight nearly killed him, but he kept ers,” interrupted the Widow, in an - grateful all her life for the liberal edu- “Let me out this minute!” demanded |!ng and !t will he alive for the next act, when he was jured tone; “It's @ rare privilege’— cation he affords her and the foollsh | the Widow. | found just as satis- brougiit out to see Ernesto with Teo Oh, well!’ exclaimed the Bachelor, things he keeps her from dotng.’ “Not,” declared the Bachelor leaning | factory for sll or | over in the dusk and kissing her lightly | flannel as for the on the cheek, “until I nay good-bye" wash fabri | “How dare you!” cried the Widow| 7 quantity of [rubbing her cheek with her handker- materia) required chief for the medium 4! Just as a brother: Gora for the second time. "Always to- |more eagerly, “if I’m to have all the! “what gether!” he cried, and after he had ex- g privilegos’~ “Well,” explained the Widow. “a girl hausied the subject and himself he went | ,, =m “I want som continued the} would tle her hands behind her back pack to bed and dled as quietly as you eee a Widow, ignoring the impertinence, “to | before slie'd write a sentimental note ME piease. Julle Opp tell me the bitter, brutal truth ebout | after she's ween ‘that tired expression’ Then {t was that Severo atarted 1 n rls who have brothers have|on her brother's face when he reads told you; many Inexpensive Dona Teodora. HB tum Teodora out of the e. Then {t was that Mr. Pave 1 stepped forward such an advantage over those who don't. | one from another gir!—or his sheepis!i | Anished the/s, ga, yards %, 215 14 and capped a fine, straightforward performanes with the most forceful acting of It's # constant vehearsal for matrimony, grin when some foolisii little thing calls! Bachelor with a low laugh, as she die-| 0045 3° or 2 yards 4 bis career, He t t ale pack of Hes hack into the ture ¢ ‘and without ell the attendant pangs and dis-\ him up on the telephone, or heard him Warne Uirough) tie 1200r! nde ts cnes wide, wit , OM hin that now the story that had been false was true. It seemed a trifle appointments ;Groan xt the sight of his forty-seventh | Seed BRS Rte sce ULTED: 2% yards of br rad t ry A Bae ial esting contentedly in che arms of her lover) “Jf you mean,” remarked the Bach-| sofa pillow at Christmas, or’— | bs Advi Z to trim «before Julian iad had time to grow cold in the next room, but the scene gave Mr. ¢lor, flicking the off-horse spitefully ce sort of man—your {deal vice. aap z a i . cked Blouse, Pattern No. 6087. sham, as well as the audience, eth to be tt: s “t they get used to having pipe-| brother! broke in the Bachelor, scorn- ” ere t ‘ Ps i ¢ i an Mr, Vaversham said diinge: Be i ae < 5 | amoke around the house and lose their | fully. How dare youl P xen npl uid ‘enaie famo's lofty helgit | Pattern No. 6007 tm cut in sizes for a 32, #4, 36, 38, 40 and 42 in bust measure, ome it SPEED NURS SAN eS RET ORC pene Spanien play Into palatable | ajiate for swear words and thelr | “Oh, you can learn lote of nice things) “And chock full of human feelings,’ | ron ay Cerne Z MP apian but tne star himselt and Mr, Morton Selten, who was at } Apart, (oF: Maseullne auLnaEty ane MNO Lewes mien: tens FAsOIRee Dee Nt ive Bi EU ELD Ue sealielony Alsou ene ag: | night ow Call or send by mail to THN EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- nesses De 4 SES Rap et jusiona and their che nee, ¥ y dis- | ectly 9 devil or # criminal. eee ' ee —_ oy ‘4 ea . SE an amiable canglishman ao long ashe Kent: his) velce down ‘iphatie juat what 1 do) meani” erledlicover that he can be gulte)fondiof'youl “Andi that jie doesn't meani halt. the|- tues ee seemen Next SAY, to TON-P On B 0, Die, 1a8 Rast Twentyr otrest, Now Julie Opp acted Teodora in a heavy, uninteresting ner th, the Widow, clapping her hands delight-| and at the same time not admire the| unpleasant thinge he saya.” \TLearn to extend a gladsome hand Obtain York, Send # cents coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, wath her quite out of th e quest on. As diet band, Bie Cooper Cliffe waa more | gay, “They have nothing to learn shape of.your nore and the way you do Nor half the pleasant ones.” Pcie ile berets. OH Ca HET Psd PATORTAN D-H tte your name and addreas plaisiy, smd ab staney”” then pariah and as Severo, Mr, Charles Ha acied Uke a mts | styeaven forbid!” efaculated the Bach-|your hair; and that he can adore you “What!” The Widow dropped her) 7 A” (eotine’ amile. iene § aster, 2) WAY MpPfy size wentee ie merican who ha lost an election bet. i yer 9 * - eure lor plously and at the same time forget that you. handbag Washington Star. 1 » By R (9 A Revelation of 'y Robert W. Chambers, . - “ “ K e -— -_ -_= = Author of ‘‘The Firing Line’’ and “A New York Society “= . Fighting Chance.” Bdbyrient, 1007, by overt Ww. Chan je wearily, "I am not compeliiuy yshrug—''you won't understand; ail yous Siath avenue and Washington Sire, riind, he evolved the theory of personal yerect and shaken himself free of the past) It was not easy to do; he had not/vilia at Kagewater, with two tratned J ——— _ {¥ou to decency for the purpose of pun-|can understand is the gratification of st the Leavy and increasing drain on! responsibilty, las—ho supposed; as though the prec jended i yet. He did not know how, |nurses to care for her, and « phases eptopats neti retry ishing you; men never trouble them- your senses and the fear of something !)!8 resources permitted Obs With narrowing eyes, from wht which becomes part of us, can be shaken | There were ties to be severed, triend- | for her to drive, nee iain selves to punish vermin—they simply | interfering with that gratification—like|now; and what with settling Gerald's y doubt faded, he gazed at duty |from tired shoulders with the first shud-| ships to be gently broken, old scenes| Pain, sadness, the desolate awakening big. wite. Aisa nis ‘tier Heuthyan, a jotilon eager. exterminate them, or they retreat and|death, for instance. Therefore I am providing two 1 all the calm courage of his race, |Ger of revolt! to be forgotten, memor! to Kill. |to dishonor had heen forgotten; to hen 1, ward of his avoid them. I merety mean that you |@atisfed that you ur land enous! sulbe at Clifton for not at first recognizing tt as duty In tts) No; le understood now that the’ past Tiere was also love=to be disposed of. the dead now lived; to her, the Uving 4. ileen loves shall never again bring publicity and {of what I said to discontinue any lege he had been obliged to! new and dreadful guise. | was pact of him~as ola iimbs and And he did not know how. who had been ecilidren with her wer ame upon your wife~even though |proceodings which would tend to dis- sell a number of securities, w ter! But night jead und body and mind were part| First of ail, paramount in his hopes | children again, and she a child amony ight x} i 9 {Bom mereifully enough, she has not tho credit, expose or cast odium on a y ome to a figure too ab plexed, he ret ls errant > n. It had to be reckoned with—| trouble, the desire to save others | them. Outside of that dead garden o/ ale ath, ollze necomnes inane. | Paul | Shere iaen Shas You are what a com-|wite very sorely stricken i over nnough life, ‘ack to | what he had done to himself, to the| from pain persisted. | the paat, peopled by laughing phantem: a ae expenditures use up el) his, ready | Pa Rese riTarey nUBHA sven, and | oemn nem Ged in bie meroy, haw blind: e Government had at 198t | doubt and pain; and, on ly sir] united to itm in bonds tn-| wor that reason he had been careful |Of her youth, but one single extraneour Aah. “He ie experimenting with ex: | 8 DP 5 ed to the infamy where you have ntention of tasting his tn- |, Basing with impartial eyes | dissoluble except in death that Gerald should net know where and Memory persisted—the memory o} mosite.” but and there was th he got up from his, chatr, dragged her~under the law of the saosit "You decadent 1 .le beast!” he said| land, nee for bi ings !n prospect slowly, "do you + ppose that the dirty| He turned on tis heel, paced the little | Also {me, Geraid would proba accident of your atrusion into an hon-|room once or twice, then swung round able to return something of t | @at man's life ec ald dissolve the divine jagain ade, Hut these things did compact of wedlock? Soll {t—yes; be-} “Keep your filthy mon } jest |Selwyn—curtously twisted and reat |Justed to the comprehension of # ehtlé’s plogive kno Rovernment. shall aniiess. Philip hears Be Aivorce Alize. eard room al iil take suoh a ati this dictation. ruin two young souls had| ‘That she had <trayed—under man|how he was now obliged to Ii wrought of thelr twin lives: and always,| made laws held gulltiess—could not/the Loy suspect and understand how always somehow, him | shatter the tle. That he, blinded by | much of Selwyn’s little fortune tt had Mmind—vasue at times, at thmes wisthslly among the debris, pose the spectre of | hope, had hoped to remake a life taken to settle his debte of “honor and | elusive and incoherent—but it remained their deathiess responsibility to one an- dy made, and had dared to masque: | free him from the rinister pressure of | #!"ay8 & memory, and always happy ther, and the !nexorable lMfe-sentence | rade before his own soul as a man free | ‘gard’s tmportunttt on wrong | Viate present stringent conditions, 4 ) ‘¢ |@mirch it, render it superficially un-|from women and boys over card-tables, , were they ely to for a long : - : _ a to over: 5 CHAPTER x | clean, unfit, nauseous~yes, But neither! Even if » biind, wormlike process | and Salwym, tired and perplexed, moun. *8R4e4 ceaselessly in hig For | to come, to go, and free to love opuld| ior that reason, too, he dreaded Win ms | Obed ten te Ber: oH (Continued, |¥ou nor your vile code nor the gnbecile |of instinct ed the shame in you, | ed stairs of his lodging-! etter or for worse-for better or for) not alter what had bi wm Gene: Back, ft have Austin know, beoause, if the truth | (ize ed quite AP PerV rey Poor (t ' The Unwritten Law. | }aw you invoked to legailze the situa-land you ventured to offer belated ald; laid his overecat on the tron bed worse-til! death do us part~ttl! death | back of It all lay the deathiess Pact were expoved, nothing tn the world| sy ine simole and pretty things ehe a) 3 tion really ever deprived ine of my {-|to the woman who bears your name, 1 | divesting himself of tie garments of ‘!! death! for better or for worse, And nothing could prevent @ violent @nd final sepa-| row cared for; but toward the third aay 7 0," said Selwyn, “I'll manage! yevocable mtatus and responsibility, 1| forbid \i-1 do not permit you the privi- | ceremony as a mat of economy, Dreadful his d@uty—for man already ewe mem wie) at Aa Fe Mega ration between iim and the foolis f his abaenes ahe uausily Dacame fest’ sale aftatr And " tel YOu) —even Iwas once~for awhile—pes- liege, Except that she retains your name | Pulled on an old tweed shooting Jacket bad dared to sunder them, and he had | ° erg bord) Dy that, ne matter, what [W729 NOW, at last, was beginning C0 6h0W'| legs, asking for him and why he dé no ow @ it. nave I MY) suaded that it did; vhat the laws of/—and the moment you attempt te rob! and tro acquiesced to save her in the eyes of | ™ 1. | the first glimmering traces of character, And then they telegraphed him eon nd common sense and he left everything and went, white Bo he let {t be understood thut his! faced, stern of lp, to endure the mos | address was his club f present, for| dreadful ordeal a man may facet others did er thought; always, always he was under obligations to the end. And now, alone, ebandoned, helpless \ lodginge—or rather in the emall hall| the jana could do thisec sree Ley ; saps a lo this—could free me|her of that I shal! destroy you!~except | ‘Then. lighting } bedroom which I now occupy—an army | prom g faithless wife, and regularize|for the:, you have no further rel service revolver in falrly good condi! her position in your household ipe-cigars being | the Wo Dreadful, indeed—because he tons |now on the expensive and forbidden knew that he had never loved her, nev with her—nothing to do or undo; no |tist—he drew a j/er could love her! Dreadful ~ doubly orginal ae atuay laws of the land volves aa to the dispowal of whet re- /gat down, resting hls worn face be-|dreadtul~for he now knew what love|1¥ etek utterly Supeatem pon the Ge \ ne also desired no scene with Boots, ! force the smile to bis lips and gayety ss Re u wo at mains of her; no power, no will, no in- |:ween both hands. ‘Truly the world was| Might be; and {t was not what he haa{cency, the charity, the mercy of her! 0.0 14 view would attempt to force, into the sl fg soul of him, ané al olled it with No, siman excellent 4st to be persuaded. fluence In her fate. 1 supplant yous |not going very well hin in these | oelleved It when he executed the con-j!s8! paramour, the young girl who ha@) nic eo tive with him in hia cherished | with her in the pretty, sunny Freon salven: ped lunricagh Mr atu BVODWRA | is weep lie, My wile, ohe: or|f take my own again; I reassume a re- | days tract which must bind hum while life|once been his wife had not turned tol 2 @ prana-new house, And even if he|iistening to her prattle, answertng thi Bowithe cylinder sping around in ® MAD- | usiiamed, lumbied oF unhumbled, true |#Ponability temporarily taken from me |For some time now it had been hie | endured. him tn vain [eared to accept and permit Boots to childish questions, watching her, seated pranperectiy trustworthy, So, as } wea marriage vows or false to them, | And now, T think, you understand Jeuston to face his difficulties here in| Gnce, and not long since, he thought] Before the light of her shaken inind| pigeg tim under such obligations it|in her tockingechatr, singing sortaniets cellent and in-} would only hamper him in his duties ty to herself, and playing with and ribbone—dressing (hem, undressing OM), seated |that, freed from the ead dlegrace of the| D8¢ gone out she had written | sipped Letween shadowy past, he had begun life enew.| coherently, practically in extremis, and) Because now, what rer pt have this very now legally te wife of another, has| He gaye him one level and deadis |the silence of his littie eeviceable weapon, nnd shail Give My | jever ceased to be my wife. And ‘t is|stare; then his pallid features relaxed; | alone at his table, p ned of his galt the pleasure of using It on you tf] 4° niger law that corroborates me-|he slowly wolked past (uthven, grave, bly frm teeth, his stroag hands fram- | They told hinr~and he told himself=that| if he had hitherto doubted where bie|come must be devoted to Alixe «. erranging~untt! the Rees you ever com ne any such secon fF | higher than you can understand—a law | preoccupied viocked the and/ing his face. Here he would ait for/as had that right duty lay, from that moment he had no| Even before her va taken the m quivered under the misery divorce or separation againat your wife, | unwritten because sxiomatic; a lew| passed out hours, the long day ended, staring an who stood atunned and hop: onger any doubt. And very quiatiy,/more hopeless turn he had understood and he turned to the ourtatae! ‘Fale te Anat |governing the very foundation of the] ® * * © © *% & [ats the wall, the gas yafronting the future in fetters of com-| hopelessly and trrevocably he hal|that she could not remaln at Ciffton dow, lands clinching conwulsiven Buthy fared at him as tho: yp |eoctal fabrie, and on which that fabric| His led were nat stig ickering a e. Blo that token he had crushed out «. his soul the hone snd|Buch cases were neither desired nor | and teeth set to force beck the steam netized is abso'utely dependent for its existence | ¢ fury ‘ it with and he . ent es t ° proulse of the new life dawning ¢ =m |treat erstood that. And | gling agony in hig threst Men's mlsppke ms," added Selwyn, | inte But'-with @® contemptuous | email a ef the moral confusion in his weary Nine a desired to believe it—and he had rise: | above the dead ashes of the past jso he had take y Uitte (Te Be Comtiowsda x,