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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, ——— a se eee ta George Marion Turns “Blue Grass’ Green With Life. | BY CHARLES DARNTON. A T the Majestic Theatre you sit yourself down to “a racing drama by Paul a Married Man By Clarence L. Cullen. OUR friends are a parcel of vulgar|why you're trying to start a row for reprobates whose countenances |some base, mysterious purpose of your unmistakably denote the furtive | own. evilness. of their| Her fdea of the antique saw, lives, Her friends | one cach other's faults,” ts that a dis- are only resting |cT!minating Providence preordained that here for a jittle|YOU should be the cutest little con- while before) ioner that ever was heaven hers| If she asks you before going out of an them in for wera- evening if she has c rou BAI, dodge the question, She'll not cla Armstrong.” So far you know If you don’t know your hors pur grand stand, and you ought to know your hor: you do not } pous drama, To cv ie cordial em id be the very vou did not know ron the coating of rouge anyhow. And if y Mr. Marion takes his drama Marion takes his drar Tr you eat A) you tell her that she has too much on below Fifty-ninth street. This. tin hearty meal shel shel say that you want her to go out however, he takes It at the Circle wit! makes tronical al- | iooxing pale and horrid. If tell her A Jagged cork. But the r is that it fs ture, In thing more Mr.>Mnr ile rounded by burnt et of his smile by human na . “Blue Grass’ is outer fringe of to distinguish n @ common, every-n Le a ough on, she will want to 2 ©) \now where you picked up your fond CLARENCELCULEN pacity for 004.) ress for scandalous creatures that just It you eat Mehtly | daub and smear the rouge all over thei she says that you are sulking over the | ¢..4 catablen she sets before you. Take your choice, You love either way When she becomes querulous because you don't take her to the theatre about she hasn't If you are desirous of ving in The House of Too Much Trouble tell her casually that that woman living in the rear flat on the floor above, whom you rong has very gractously put in the background as that four times . uh oor aaa bs mae met going down in the elevator this W as “nut putation showing that four set of | morning, is a mighty slashing, hand- wer of acting theatre tickets per week cost about 48) come woman, with beautiful hair and |much as the rent of your apartment. | oin |‘Dhis arithmetical stuff makes them en nuyee and ft never stops the queru- |tousness, etther. 0 matter what you do, nor how many sacrifices you make to do it, you | lare going to be considered a tightwad at |home. Get this fact firmly wedged tn | | your mina to the front as if not the god, of both ends of a Look her over keenely and scrutinia- j ingly when you are all ready to go out | for the evening, and then with great de- liberation tell her that If there's a bet- t king woman anywhere in town, wh you'd like to have a flash at her through any kind of a binocular, that’s all. The old paste hath Its medicinal = —— = If her sister zephyrs along with her | properties, too, no less renowned than four young ones for a month's visit and | salve. | , ’ 477 | you look a trifle rueful over it your| Always Iaten attentively and respect- e jollvs bu U alls on INic un 0. ot By Te 0. McGill) siouset ais son" at beatime: that’ ts | rciy when she tells you how many de really wicked the way you positively | tingul looking men did their best hate dear Ittle children. to filrt with her when she was down- If she asks you If you think her new|town shopping. Remember that we all er words Tom of “Blue in the Majestic ne ma er and rath Armstrong ird act take: # familar ra {1 please “pay a little attention * conventional part play. But when the Marion as “Old Folks." you from a more or | the remote stable c d langus rk smi what he think Old Folks and goad fifteen years younger than apy of | place inadvertently let fall the remaric . rienaetGryel Foul br, that you met one of your old sweet- her friends of equal age you'll eat’ your hearts downtown to-day and that. she hat, The old-fashioned salve isn't any |jcoked like Helen of Troy multiplied by nel's da of the went bad thing to keep around the house. It 1s her privilexe to berate you if you happen to overlook getting your daily Ye cia eiYy PLETE = GY), y YY dress is “too young for her,” profess to have our little hallucinations. Yi) <1 yy develop quite a peeve over the question, | 1f you want the dove of peace to look Uy, } Yyy and tell her that if she doesn’t look a] jike a rampageous buzzard around your u yj, Z ‘ —=* < Yy Cleopatra and then a few. oe HELD UP, | that b strong’s old lights. It is the To ret see Mr. M § to tt lovin £ curving its head shave In the stress of work. But if you! pony—The second time I saw him I ever so gently allude to the unpleasant | was engaged to him. house jacket and the floppy slippers} Daisy—What caused the delay?—Kan- that she's wearing when you get home, sas City Journal, May Manton’s Daily Fashions, } —tening to every word! This is the scene } this is the story. Forget everything that has gone before and bet your last | hope on the horse in the © and the | Ole erie ae Rae huenr core i N season of the } Mr. Marion and the horse that looks oe AD BED waist is always in de- mand, and no matter Low many one may | have in stock the latest Jatyle always finds its piace. Here ts @ pretty Jone that can be treated | in 90 many ways as to into his eyes as he runs the course of the story exer: the s of the play. God bless rest auty and save the trainer! If a he ) speaks volumes for Mr. Marion does his be and horse.” But even Marion's ¢ y fails be available for a great E here, for r the blac : -l| many different pur Folks he puts a white soul is Olive Wyndham as Virginia Taylor. | | poses. In the flustra- 0 for Itself. It r 1 and white Regan Hughston as Warren, tlon it !s made of a and inspires £ t Grass will prove a worthy son of Milady and wi ltancy striped silk, but the race at Le the sum of Mr. Ma an guess But you ean't gue atched tt with your own eye fs burnt cork with poetry— the striped effect can be obtained by comb!- nations of embroidery and insertion, by tho application of braid and in elmilar ways, or the blouse can be made from plain material and embroidered to give a yoke effect, or with any design that mi sult the fancy. ‘The stripes, however, are almost universally becoming, material as It gly t South: Miss Olive Wyn girl, She be aus jeft “The Man From Home’ to play the “Blue Grass” fits by the char US| Korea’s Captive Emperor ful in history than sitton by the 1a! prisoner, ye ex-Eaiperor of I w a 2 was univer ae the one illustrated or : combinations of — em- | broidery, with lace to ; s ais | give much the same ef- fect, are highly to be commended, while the wed to com. x s ven his son, | blouse will be found * Hes tie visit him ex under Japanese | equally appropriate for exy t p taken Saray Eeceueelll | the gown und the odd ris nets of ins tion recorded fro:n The quantity of ma- spar 7 ° terial required for the - aA ‘ | ‘ | medium size 1s 3% yards i} Se ‘| q f i Z} CHILDREN | 1s, an petal or ah Un y: > ae op 7, | , By = y WY ards 32, 14 yards cal Short and Tall Woman. | Pa | , oF My |r patterm G147 ts cut jaa Ya perfect type of Womun, such as the Greeke etmired, | aT a and. tno bust i ore in the eal womat © ideal tall woman, but they are | measure. Blouse Waist—Pattern No. 6147. very ah Artiits say th the sh woman should mersure as = - | & follows: set foot 4 ‘< seh 1-2 cs; bust, % Inches: watst, 21 f) (pe ae Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- Inches; hips, $i round 4 reest part of the forearm, below the elbow, | \ EY) > | to TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 18) Bast Twenty-third street, New M tneles, whic nitd r ta 4 inches around the wriet. Here aro} : °\ MK : |$ obtain $ York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. the propor 1 wor Height, 5 feet § 1-2 inches; buat, 96! ° ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plalaly, snd al- ineles, wa i ‘ « te arm, MW h@hes; wrist, 6 inche Patterns, ways specify size wanted. thigh, 2 aches; calf, 1 inches; ankle, 9 inches So Qrraaes D462 999994 494996499 O998O 9920999 6006-0000 00064 Pt 04-9600 > 1O-96-26046000060. po 4 $ - rn Bei lation of By Robert W. Chambers, y - = , 3 It ce Vork ALY (et = = -— = Author of ‘‘The Firing Liue’”’ and “A é ociely . . Fighting Chance.” feeeress LVEDEODDO DY DOEL ODD LOODDVDOT DEOL DOOCDLOO DODDS DOOS: for any humor or jesting hitherto she had not miscontrued,| give him one day while the blessed | gr I have been truthful—| passing. Fear clutched at her; for the ping the great arms of her chair,| way!’ he repeateg in a yotce so low{frank with you a n who had asked her ‘though often she confused herself In ex: | eane was young, slender, straight, white-faced tn the|she could scarcely hear him—and be-|and loyal. I gave you, from the moment first time in her life she desired to 7 eon. ed-the man she had |plaining it. Impatience of his absenc At the thought she moved uneasily, | gloom. Meved she had misunderstood him I knew you, all of me there was to give. | go to him, hold fast to him; seeking in 1 \ J evoush to weep for when she had too, lad stimulated her to understand | shifting her position in the chair. Sun-| But he did not stir. Then unreason-| “I did not heur you," she said faintly. | And—and if there 1s more to give—now | contact the reassurance of his strength; awed him oi d straighter, a little she lacked the temporary state of things—to know | set, and the swift winter twilight, had/ ing, instinctive fear confused her, and| “What did you say to —{t was yours when it came to me. | but she only sto w ae he aske owing at that time away from litm meant for her tinted, then dimmed, the Nght in the; she heard her own voice, sounding| “I cannot say it agali 0 you think I am too young to know, paler, already half divining in the clair- Taw. Avalin Geld i sue Philp, | She layed him in her t fash only existence in suspense jroom, On the oa@k-beamed celling, strangely in the twilight | She slowly shook her head, not com-|what I am saying? Solitude fs a teach-|voyance of her young soul what lay Trvort' a ters edetititacts [1% meareely « mus that he ever) Very, very slowly, by degrees tmper-| across the ivory rosettes, a single bar! “What has come between us, Capt. | Prehending, and for a while sat silent, jer. I~I am still @ scholar, perhaps, but | still hidden if : could be dearer to her, yet shyly wishful ceptible, alone with memories of him of red sunlignt lay, broken by rafter! gelwyn? What has happened to us? 8t'uggling with her own thoughts. Then, {I think that you could teach me what) “Do you ask a part in this?” he said clin tor Whatever more the years might add) and of their summer's happiness al-| and plaster foliation, She watched it! something is all wrong, and I-I ask Suddenly instinct with the subtle fear my drill master, Solitude, could not! at last - Babe gor her ae Renita. her knowledge of a love so far tm- [ready behind her, she had learned that | turn to rose, to ashes. And, closing her! you what st 1s, because I don't know, | Which had driven her Into speech ee © if it—it te true you love me.” | “I ask tt.” que ‘ m from or doubt or the | time added things to w she had once | eyes, she lay very still and motionless ‘p,, me."" “When I sald—sald that to you—last | The mounting sea of passion swept) “Why? i mounting thrill of a deeper emotion, s1 ered her full ca for affec- | in the gray shadows closing over all. | sie had lifted his head at her fret |*¥mmer; when I cried in the swinging |him; he turned on her, unsteadily, his) Her eyes wavered, then returned his heare had remained confidently passive, warme | Von He had not yet spoken when again! word, hesitatingly, as though daze seat there—because I could not answer |hands clinched, not daring to touch her. | gaze: Philly th attens 10 ly loval, reverencing the mystery of the | Alone with her memories of him, at| she lifted her eyes and saw him sitting, «coula you tel) met!! she aske faints you-as I wished to—did that change |Shame, contrition, horror that the dam-/| “For love of you,” she sald, as white Alfxe’ ta’ intyne "Pn! love he off she ¢ not!odd moments during the day—often in| in the dusk, one arm resting across his) ,, - you, Capt. Selwyn?" age was already done, all were forgot-| as death, mnprrainn, Fale understand it or |the gay clamor and crush of the social) Knee, his body bent slightiy forward, | pj) you what, child?” No," jten; only the deadly grim duty of the| 4), remit ON Sy valle Filoen in-away from home, Aw he| And A OW A chance turn of a | sautinemer driving with Ning, or lying,| his gage vacant "Why you are so silent with me;| “Then y-you are unchanged?" |moment held him back straightened out, passing 0 mg Elven returte and hy Ser word—a Gent to an idle train of] slde-eyed, on her pillow at nigh, she| Into himself again'—silently com: | wnat has crept in hetween us? | "Yes, Eileen.” | "Dear," he said, “because T am UN-| across his eyes. When she saw his face i peace ibe theusht aly follawad—and, with |became sansplous that time little by|panioned by the shadows of aid} courage sustatn The first thrill of deep emotion struck |changed—because I~I love you 8o—helP/ again in the dim Nght it was ghustl out warnt they had stumbled on a | little, y gradually but very surely, thoughts; far from her-further than | (00) changed—except a little in— through and through her me!~and d help us both. ‘here was a woman," he » for CHAPTER X1 iy. rey Bean femll” aos aalis | wae rey? ward for him frail, | he had ever been. For # while she lay |i tne way you wished srgrn Then-—then that is not it," she fal-! ‘Tell me,” she said steadily, but It! nom 1 was once re He cately fr to endure the k ew, elusive @emonts that in to|there, watching him, scarcely breath- |‘, RIA RNS HIATT Here tered. “I was afraid—I have sometimes | was fear that stilled her voice. She lad) .ioiy wearily, head bent, + th (Continued » And now fear crept in—feay that he awake an unguiet pulxe or stir her) ing: then a faint shiver of utte ianhecwahar ie ita) Titata’ tment ecu | ee ed if it was. © * © I am yery one slim hand on the table, bearing! w.icnt of one arm on the table His Own Way. 4d forgotten, bad changed. Lieo Low |heart Into @ I, ioaving it} lineas came over lierof desire for bia! nave teft me so much alone thie wr glad, Capt. Selwyn. * * * Will you down on the points of her Angers until) nici she leaned Do y inders ‘ould © spoiren re Ane ing, and slow gradually attention, his voleo, his friendsiip, and | 3.4 1 supposed I understood’ sre wait aa Uttle longer—for me to—to|the nails whitened, but her head was! oaid7 he asked athena i{eisaali kan’ an aaetidantecs (te ae 1 restraint @ julvered | spreading th every vet |the expression of it. But he ney Me work” he aid; bul ahe aearcely |CHanme?! kh and her eyes met his, straight, un oA ORT | ee ee a ind eaterail tia’ aarcait ; weeks m no! moved; hts eyes seemed dull and un-| knew the voice for hie 'Y He stood up suddenly tn the darknes « | se gay Cin 7 | did not credlt--wiloh he could not contae n tifo and in bin rin hero on, but in] seeing; his face strangely gaunt to her 1 know y have had no time, 3/84 sho sprang to her feet, breathloas knew it" she aalds "Funder ea iteredeT cam Delieve—made it no easier, Bor 4 . And her firet doubt crept ti | his; and she was vague unfamiliar, hard. In dim light he|xnow that; 1 ought to v it by this for she had caught the low exclamation | stood there was something, If it is| tee bi rpg ee time in his life he had said somes n her et curfouely passive ar jseemed but the ghost of what she hau | ¢4, for I have te myself en and the strange sound that stifled it in| trouble and I see it ts—bring ft to) ra A 9 i . es which left her usrespou ith a) She turned her expressionless put no question to herself | Known, of what she had thought him ough. And ye n we are together Dé throat if 3 am the woman you took me eet ted \ Saaaitiad Marainad dallonee and af arivacs |éroca win ned, ceniee tee ane wan irue oF fa'se. Ani &@ phantom-—growing vaguer, more ur i has besnadifiarent, Gan Tell me. she stammered, ‘twemhat give me my part In this, It ts the nme Dales”: hie is ne neat fnvaded. A tinge of fear of him creyi (he velvet back of the clair, lool 1 with him she evade al, slipping away from her through why? Po you think me changed as happened. D-don't turn away to the | quickest way to my heart, Captain Bel-/* man the slaios ol & jan. wil no fm, too. Bhe did not misconstrue what into tie late afternoon sunshine. oo; only the quickening the fac light. And the impulse to st not change,” he said window; don't leave me all alone to en-| wyn.” yy 4 4 . - the bie, bis he had said under privilege of a jest All the long uutumn without him, ali | ond pulae questioned the pure thoughts| arouse herself and him trom the dim breathed, wos tldure this—this something I have known| But he bad grown afratd, horribly SEM Mer tray Reader Pati but after what had once passed between | her long, lonely, jeieure hours tn iLe| ynvouwed, only the tneveasing impa-|danger—to arrest the apell, to break it, could mot—except—e little, as I told) was drawing you away--I don't know| afraid. All the cowardice in him was | are the she had not considered that love, | golden weather, his silence, his with-|tlence Of her suspense sonfirmed the) and seise w thelr own tn life where! What ie it? Could you not tell|in the ascendant, But that passed: | be spoke CRee 1h Whe aveiinel, might serve aso lute humeels end Bie Work, anawer Wied Bow, Perhaps, she might ewbelmed Leh Gad abe eah wp! "Kou Muat BO) ChARSen~Bet even Khat'me Caps Selwye! Int have been wetching bis worn face, she sew it erik, (To Be Continued.) aM r } even thet 'me Ce jo! ied Rave ber oo mn ‘ ‘