The evening world. Newspaper, November 30, 1908, Page 13

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Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, November 30, 1908. The Jollys’ Bull Pup we ake By T. 0. Mel OOO OOOO OOOUOO0000 | ingagements — Ought to Be Broken By Helen Oldfield. TOO Sayings of Mrs. Solomon | Being the Confessions of the Seven Hundredth Wife. 3 TRANSLATED By Helen Rowland. —— SOO OOOO OOOO G ’ charmeth thee? Then cleave unto him with all thy I O, my daughter, hast thou met a homely man who 7 I S might. For a Greek God conquereth easily, but he foo Doubtless in mony respects we are wiser than were our forefathers, etald old fogles, who for the most part took Ife deliberately, who thought it no shame to be “slow,” and who considered hurry undignified, unbecoming a gentleman, still more a lady. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, the “Iron Duke," and even Horatlo Nelson, who for his time was tmpetuous and inclined to be hasty, belleved in “masterly inactivity” in occasion, ‘When in doubt what to do, do nothin in those days was a maxim much quoted and oft practised. se men held It discreet to keep still b6 DWARF upon a giant's shoulders can see farther than can the giant.” with the face of a mud ple and the legs of a piano ple A only by taking great trouble, and he hath a winning way, Yea, he understandeth women, He doeth the sympathetic and runneth thine errands. He studieth thy taste ! nT alt |] ATE {in flowers ind quoteth thy speeches accurately. He remembereth the necktle thou |aiast admire and weareth it always, | He noteth the fine points of thy dress and speaketh DEFINITELY concerntr them, saying “A pink ruff becometh thee and thine ear is of fasvinating cuteness. 1 cake of uncertainty w Ni \\\ He consulteth thee tenderly concerning the soup whether it pleaseth thee and \J i] II) {H14)) and await developments , ang Ee passeth thee the salt solicitously, He putteth sugar in thy wine and the clams Ni) nil | swaniiys| We) deat site itl, sau ced asa) | which thous despisest will he not offer thee. TM) NK } the fara Iie Sly le ea ALN cl adits b | He playeth the DEVOTED with great skill, yet he forceth not his attentions A rash, generally tk rega as p ROUTH upon thee. Behold how he wrappeth thy boa about thee adoringly wazeth at 7 « elie 8, Ub e still are times when eter re | thee long and hard when thou art SUPPOSED not to he looking . he spread. wa The proverb Is an old one, eal fe my ‘eth down a mental cloak for thee to walk upon, even as did Sir Walter Raleigh in ' j i ma exy : 4 Precipitancy a nat ote th bI Sieaat 5 panker | the time of Queen Bess, and secretly thou knightest him. | Ke: te nie ever it is expedient to make haste slowly is In choosing a pa | For, lo, he hath had much practice. He treateth e woman In this way. or fe. | And tt shail come to pass that in time this shall become a “habit,” and he shall ae up tlatlat an nla us Lindaly Usaall Wat clbiail i Bo ae cs |treat even his wife with some little courtesy, o1 a ne of not to choose e 01 sb Then, consider, my daughter, how other women shall envy you and speak aan Te TGRICAHO PVs to the selection of a coat or a hat, says Helen Old- {among themselves, saying: ‘Behold this woman's husband listeneth when she cago Tribune. SEE There {s no manner of doubt that much matrimonial unhappiness might be alketh h D) SEE her. And is !t no SRT NREL cae OEE : ie | ) a avolded !f only it were customary to regard an engagement as a period of pro- Aiea a bation, so to speak—a sort of trial trip during which the two prospective spouses I i might Investigate h other before signing for the voyage for ife. If all mar- LANOO, DODOODDDOGDOGHGHOOOHGHOIOODHGOHIOOODOHOHISGDOO, | es were for genuine, permanent love, the much vexed question, “Is marriage 16 € * might positively be answered in the negative and life afterwards 18 would continue to be as “merry as a marringe bell.” ny thinge besides love of various kinds—pique, pride, reent- } But people marry for 1m the wish to escape trom uncomfortable surroundings at hom Players of the Period Hy Sa eae | | {{{ ambition, 8 , i) ment toward interfering relatives—any one of th is a fruitful source of the Q) i j | rushed engagement" and the secret misgivings which many feel yet hesitate to |No. 10.—Louis Mann. a w By Johnson Briscoe. ill conf Which tg a pity, for in most s secret mivgivings should be trusted | OvIS M: whose talents as an actor are fully appreciated by both the ' | and acted upon. T public and himself, was born in New York City, April 20, 1844, his parents | says: ‘Better Je chiding than a great deal of heartbreak." | i Shakespea Por chiding read pain, and act accordingly. (| Netter, far better, to strike a blow at your lover's heart, which time surely will heal, as well as inflict an affront upon his vanity, which some men will mind more, than that you should do him the trreparable wrong of outwardly holding to your engagement while inwardly revolting from it. It 1s a good thing to be able to see things in their true proportions—to choose | the lesser evil while allowing it to be an evil. It 1s a hard thing to act @ Me for a Nfetime. being Daniel and Caroline Mann, nether of. whom were in any way affliated with theatricals. He received nis education in the public schools of his native city and San Francisco, Cei., to which cfty his parents moved when he was a youth In hie ‘teens. It was in the California metropolis, too, that Mr Mann began his stage career, appearing in the early eighties with the stock company at the California Theatre, supporting such stars as Lawrence Barrett and John Me- Cullough. He then appeared in the support of Lewis Mor- risor and Marle Prescott, making his first appearance upon he New York stage in the rupport of these stars at the Union Square Theatre, Aug. 20, 183, as Page in “Vera, the Nihilist,” which, by the way, was the late Oscar Wilde's! first play and was a complete failure. | For a considerable length of time after this Mr. Mann's | career had far more downs than ups, he appearing with sev- | eral barn-storming repertoire companies on tour !n such pieces as Called | {Muck” and “Lost,” with Daniel E. Bandmann as Mr. Utterson in “Dr. Jekyll | land Mr Hyde," and a. the Fifth Avenue Theatre as Charley in “Goggles.” He| | | jmade his first pronounced hit in the stage world, the season of 1891-92, as Dick | ! {Winters In in which company he met and married Clara Lipman, the) [Well known actress and dramatist. After this Mr. Mann was seen on tour in| “Not But Money," and at the head of his own company in “The Laughing Girl’ “Hannah, a one-act play, of which he was the author. He appeared! —— at the no in the summer of 1995 as Svengali in the ‘‘Trilby"’ burlesque in. “The Merry World.” Later in that same year Mr. Mann made quite a hit by! his portrayal of Herr Von Moser in ‘The Strange Adventures of Miss Brown,” at TO.MGin {qiaueeevantia Susinovel the Standard Theatre. The season of 18%-®% he was Hans in “The Girl from tee es iatielar ese Warts,” during the two hundred and ninety performances of this piece at the | ——7-—777— = SSS = = : aa we A Srseormcy sre 1 Square Theatre, and the two seasons following this he and Miss Lipman | B0 ° or) : Soe ee ee ane ae (Were co-stars in “The Telephone Girl." They divided the season of 189-1900 » YOu Have kead of Kin | Stature Here It Is --In All Sizes | Seer cize) seealy 28) ist ween “The Girl in the Barracks" and “Master and Pupil,” and then came a} O o | veoheal to ciche aback season each in “Al! On Account of Eltza” and “The Red Kloof.” | j Sores or tne. cranes y . Mr. Mann then fared forth as a lone star and the season of 1902-03 he was | {ead lenoten lee che lett ‘geen in “The Consul,” with a brief revival of “AN on Account of Eliza.” The| Oe\teicront meotians mn following this he hauled down his stellar flag and joined the forces of i tehed aetinbwitn Reey7, Is, appearing In “Whoop-Dee-Doo” and the burlesques of “Waf-| hepa gre: ne meteriele ‘acherine.” The next season, however, he was again at the head of Husiretenl but ebifton, n company, appearing in “The Second Fiddie,” after w along with| onppe Cen Chine Amat ‘Miss Lipman, he was seen for a season and a half, including a brief London cutsettey.everssbing/ot engage . in ‘Julle Bon-Bon," of which Miss Lipman was the author phe) eore ls) appropriate in 1907 Mr, Mann appeared at the Casino in “The White Hen,” and ron the “blouse; Agith @ vaudeville headliner in a condensed version of “All /pecelmoramembrettered He began the present season in a piece called “The New Det Cb neeyiere may opened his New York engagement on Oct. 16 last, at the pale tberembroldered . in the same play, only {ts title has been changed to that of ‘The onatummed. with isons Man Who 1 Still." Upon many occasions Mr. Mann has threatened to show | cache forges aitriny, us his conception of Shylock, but up to date this has merely remgined a threat, | muingirertions) The quantity of ma- terial required for the HIS prettily | draped evening waist {8 an es- pecially attractive and graceful one, yet abso- | lutely simple withal. | There is a fitted lining, | over which the plain \trimming and the raped portions are ar- Min OF [s500 | - e 7 medium size ta 4 yards , cerry: Coca eens carr | were Ferenc Y' pciPe,, Willen Beeeaee th Yrewt Farmeeee| tl Que Nicer 7S get 21 or &, 91-4 yards 82 Hints for the H S cari finbua e ome, abe wide, 11-8 yards of all- fi mi 9 LISTS are fond of describing their heroes as of “kingly stature.” Ac-| of Spain. Hight of the fifteen are over 6 fest tall. But some of the most famous} over tace and 11-8 LOG DADO GOOQDDOQOGOVIFOOGOOTHDDIGOWVDOGOOQOGPOOHAOPDUAS IN conling to a computation made by the London Sphere (from which the ac-| ef the lot—King Edward, the Kaiser and the Crar, for instance—fall far beloW| yaras of applique for ; , companying illustration is reproduced) that same stature may be anything the six-foot mark. Queen Victoria was barely 6 feet in height—fourteen inohes| gaging, Cheese Straws. aD. four Inches long and cut rings | from 6 feet 2 in 4 feet 19. Here is a line of recent, present and future rulers of shorter than United Germany's first Emperor. Pattern 618% fs cut RIOR Eno itathccnaonelotiuutteriinte eutlo seme lorie meaty, put strips in | Burope. They range In height from King Gustavus of Sweden down to Francis fn sizes for a 82, %, 36, mix in one salt- si HORA ATE texcellent YJ snoon of cayenne, one-balt text |{0 Serve with soups or salina, | The 1 rnrora MN Peanes Evening! Wi fing Roll and fold invone cup) RUM Cake, | A FAIB OFFER, The Touchstone of Art, TOLD THE TEACHER. measure. ped Evening Wa (—Pattern No, 6181. Customer From the Country~Here, “4 Mamma (to Bobby, who has spent rated cheese. re ol rj —_ : i & Munic! rend has discovered ilve signs by which to detect the schoo! n grated se. Wet with cold water t HREE eggs well beaten; one-half | mister, I've fetched my new wife up for HE PUN Spy MesDe ne Pyare Ye SIDS Ane elon: fetect the school his first day at school)—What did you Sey actrees to which a painter belongs. (1) If he paints the sky gray and the grass out thin, cut into wide by six Call or gend by mai! to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- TON FASHION BURDAU, No. 182 East Twenty-thied street, New biue and the grass green, he {s a realist; (3) 1f he paints the sky green and the! yyamma—Well, what dla you do? Obtain York, Send 10 cents in coin or stamps for each pattera omered. F ressionist; () {f he paints the sky yellow and the grass! Boppy-—-Dian't do anything. There was| ¢ ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, end al- if he paints the sky black and the grass red, he shows)» woman wanting to know how to spell. $ Patterns, ¢ Ways epecity size wanted. Scraps. possession of great decorat! cup butter, rounding; one and one- | to hav half cups light brown sugar, three | Photographer—Y MK tit brown. cups sifted flour, three level t WWhen cold tie them into bundles with paking powder, one teaspoon lemon ex. | Country—The hull full length, young & narrow ribbon or pile on a platter | ¢ makes a tin pan cake or two|man. If the machine busts I'll pay for PUTP! log cabin style, or roll and cut into loaves, Keeps like fruit cake lit. & stiff paste. Mol learn to-day? How Bobby—Dtdn't learn anything. te istrips on Arter inches long and ical school; (2) !f he paints the sky ngs to the good old ela sir. Full length ‘spoons | or bust? lie, is an im ts ( e is a color talent | cat, and I told her.—Boston Globe, 2 64OOHDDIODEOOOOHOEO$ O04 4 Pasa ee -." TH aa BEB LA LJ Private War,” Ete. ‘Come and yond measure; it was, in a word, un-}in the power and at the mercy of himyhis mouth was hot and dry, he felt as;tore tneffectually at wrists of hands|thin and petulant. Beneath his topcoat;covered this on vhe floor beyond the : oe nat me home, Nolne, canny: who had followed her, providing he were |If stifled, that el. DING INSTALMEN’ . Birnie tiliatace (andi Before hi CEDING INBTAT MENTS | Frognall Stryte,’' 'e nex, and’ re him, sing art in’ Paris, lowes | “That'll do for now. You borrow a door, vaguely ‘trough the San Fran: By Louis Joseph Vance, La Author of “The Brass Bowl,” “ The (Copyright, 1908, by Bobbs-Merriil Co.) yan’ carn't find it!’ S see me this hever ched hfs throat. So, for ajand evening dress was a short and slen-| man's body, Carefully stepping across latter he recovered his head gear, appearance suggested the burly rufflan, | and then, fag, Ustened with an ear ¢ midnight marauder; he seemed lIit- | close to the fellow's face. A softly reg- st the wall, Kirkwood | tle more than a boy old enough to dress | ular beat of breathing reassured him. | grip on the hand-rail andjfor dinner. In his attitude there was | Half rising, he caught the body beneath Mg his | someth! pitifully suggestive of a#|the armpits, lifting and dragging it off ukonist out balance, ‘The lat-|beaten child, thrown into a corner. the staircase, and knelt again to fee] of r fanning his face, | ter plunged downward, dragging Kirk-| Consclence-smitten and amazed Kirk-|each pocket In the man’s clothing, pert- , wood with him. Clawing, kicking, | wood stared on until, without warning, |ly as an obvious precaution, to relieve the bottom,|the match flickered and went out, Then, |him of his advertised revolver against 1 see the |was masculine, if he analyzed it cor ep; but long | straightening up with an exclamation |an untimely wakentng, partly to see & effort | rectly. Dumb and sti ed Kirkwood's}at once of annoyance and concern, he|he had the lamp about him. 4 upon the point of par throat was free rattled the box; it made no sound—was| The search proved fruitless, Kirke 4 suspected that the weapon, Uke own, had existed only in hia vie~ for the bynorsis oF Pre he Mngered at the/not friendly. And in that case, What) Again the raised foot found no level space, the two hung, panting and strug-|der figure. Nothing whatever of his | the bsed by @ wan at peril might not be |higher than its fellows. He stopped sling a dusty and be-| hers? and held his breath, oppressed by a Then endeavoring to awing bis should-| a broad hall stretched Spurred by solicitu ) ra the rear of the b ing, losing itself in blackness 1 Philip Iirkwoc who has } Dis entire “fortune re arthauake ngAges yp : HAN, ho'hint at an e says eleven 1) ave no dealli ner on th -|torment and w ination penetrat pencil and paper and write it down I'll read tt when I've got more time by a stout | yay, i and | never heard the like of {t, This ort for which "t ber y ne 0 ye Ty alse Brhip |Basn't been lived in these two years, in in ‘oundrel_ and will | Move on, and don't let me find you the fe swith him, That night at e of his departure for Amer- , the young 1 ld- | put personal apprehensions in his nd {and forgot them, cautiously pick stairs, Save for) way through the gloom to the fc of furniture—a hall table,|the stairs, ‘Th nN }conyietion that some one was near | ders over pocket |him. Confirmation of this came start- released } Himself Mterlous servic his |lingly—an eerte whisper in the night, | stumbled on the stairs, thrx t of wo close to him that he fancted he could re, by the newel-post, |feel the disturbed tall dumb clock |he paused. Darkness walled him about Is it you, Eeele backed chairs—it was Overhead the steps vanished in a well] Ie had no empty. than Kirkwood's strained respiration 1 reughout the tation; not pressure ustled round ‘ere again, March, | say!’ a few arti Kirkwood nda dining. with & Gn} beautiful wir Catendarebegs the | There was more jean's ald, confessing minselt tobe'in |explanations art e 0 0! jor Of arrest. He aaks Kirkwood to Jol | abuse, more terse comn an 1 flanked by or more whining tured with nds to depa Rerrescanes: Kitkword and ihe pink tare | ove Whole concluding with scraping ts fhe 10 | Steps, diminuendo. mr Calen- ttunctory rattle o: apa Me her Request | bobby, having shoo'd the puta: fe. Worried ag to her watety, ra. the house, after, Dorathy, thrashiig hal off, assured himéelt fan Who blocks his Way. The man seeks |had actually been do “Pollow ikirkwood. into the oune, but is |H20, Actually been done at the door by @ pollceman. > pling they went jolently by each ore the last was reac nawer ready. The vol of blackness; he « sound ceiling; his eyes ac to fathom the unkno: |with unrewarded strain of The silence hung inviolate, pre Slowly he began to ascend, i hae ng the balusters, id not e 1 with fut n; his ¢ ihe Kiri (Calendar’s daughter, Id he stood poi ther pers the evils A futlle attempt ism: ho dw inistaken for othy to the Throwl Jes, is It you un he got to his|empty. In diszust he swore it was t {ng for sup-| devil's own luck, that he should run ¢ e | we at | nd | feet, and rt; then waited, pant | whi ' ky. As it ceased Kirkwood was t ther with bis |plinded by a flash of tight strii sighing in the cane explo ascurity before nim. | squarely in the eyes. Involuntari And yet, a racket had }On the s , thick and heavy, |shrank back a pace, to the first step | been raised at the front door, within the | muffled his footfalls. He moved noise- | from the top. Instantaneously the light | !! sixty seconds past! And yet, within |lessly, Tow rowas be asp 1 hand fol- shi tim'a ready imagination, tryjng to/or vestas at a time so critical. H tno da: get his bearings. he tloors, nself painfully | could not even say whether the fellow | lamp, in the act of rising he struck St he shrewdly sur-| was dead, unconscious or simiply sham- | with his foot, and picked it up. i that his assailant had fared #5) ming, He had little idea of his looks;/ It felt Mke a metal tube a couple of ¢ And, in point of fact,| ana to be able to identify him might |inches in diameter, a foot or eo i man lay with neither move nor] save a deal of trouble at some future| length, passably heavy. He fumblea ng th a carps shaken and brul departed, satisfied and leaving @ badly ateful amateur erin’ self ned a 1 to pursue nte CHAPTER IV. se | rd the top the staire eclipsed |t self-appointed .car r of crime, use of that thunderous far awing-room ngnstrations sequel, Still, Kirkwood hesitated with|gummons? Or were they, perhap: e (Continued) atiaa lac tanalnalainantennalenie prenty mayen te Barony, a Jeaat, jeurveds and presen dy A aah that sened Halt or if } 1, ati! ae death at the Ameri-| time—since he, Kirkwood, seemed so lit- | wit it lopatientiy, “Howeret the ‘ jad preceded Kirkwood Into the build- | fo igher level failed to find ft : ‘ fect A ATA CR IPERS? toe J atc i aateranae sur ; 9 Frognall Street. Linus im point of fact, it had been in- ing? Had they not heard? The specula. |Axain he hated, acutely distrustful, | gtyinateglygeayaed, that, he had been nso had folded tte| ucehen nf thie insane adventure’ And |4he-iufernat machines WorKP” Aa t rey rere 7 hand lamp. ‘The tremulous ) er 9 Prognall street, | the girl—what had f hor? How |catfoiing abruptneie as his Wateaieed | told him something vat terrifying, mo-| could he continue ort fin hapehance on the spring. A achat arta Naned (tba bh him than able | without " a ie @ again smote him in the ch in the | new) might be lurking not a dozen designs to dare reveal themselves, to in-|which the undefined onions Of Blatmune as his own. to distinguish it ver of yision, he | those » 1 fa ' at ine rire 1amtaut etae nd boudoir were save hin inspiration endured interminable minutes of trem- | inclose ulate cry rang out upon the still | , Kk out and ru a HE response came in the asniffling ‘ 1 tion seemed ridiculous. Or had they] Nothing happ I snarl of the London ne'er-do-well, | Tak of apprehension at the hands of heard and, alarmed, been too effectually | He went on, guided by the balustrade the idle rogue whose ehiefest oc- [that ublaultous bobby, who (for all ne popied by ihe coils of thelr nefarious |passing three doors, all open, through feupation seems to be to m Fanks of The Unemployed on the occa- | ¥ards distant, watchful for just such a) vestigate the Bion of its annual d suggested in a ghostly ¢ BRA RAL SoA SPA TTA ng horror in a witless daze before | that house of mystery? " Ze’ me alone, carnteher? Ah'm doin’ |the best of excuses. Reassuring as he aware of Kirkwood's entrance, and ly-|he paused, listening, he Up!'—and struck out smartly with his|!e thought of his match box. Im-| But he debated only brieny. iis|,,/igart in his mouth, he stepped bea! eo ‘arm, officer’ had found the sentinel's extemporized|ing perdu in some dark corner, to am | His foot struck with a deadencd thud| gtick. Itw ferrule impinged upon some-|mediately he found it and struck &| blood was young and it was hot: ft was|went ont) and Utting «protecting fore “Didn't you hear me? Step out here, |¥@"n—Prook positive that the fellow had push him as he passed? against the bottom step of the second| thing soft but heavy. multaneously | light. As the wood caught and the | quite pla: tha not/arm. 5 h, that's better + No harm, eh?|2ad no more right to prohibit a tres-| that were hardly like the girl, | flight, and his pulses fluttered wilgly aatd allow, ffiahtened an cane bright sir flame leaped in the pent | withdra nd retain his s¢ spect Who's th tf he gemanded besablg, erhaps you'll explain how there's no |pass than Kirkwood to commit one~at wthe other hand, it were possible | for a momest. Two minutes—three—he | was swept aside, a blow landed glane- air he feancd forward over boay, | 1 girl wa t found, most | nin, ‘named by & awit tush of obits harm breakin’ into unoccupied ‘o. 7 |the same time he found himself pardon- had stolen away while Kirk- | waited in su Krom © came | ingly on his shoulder, and he was car eathlessly dread! what he must dis- | assured er ° breath his shattered nérves Gorblimy, ‘ow was 1 to know? ‘Ere'a |MDIY & Prey fo emotions of the utmost 4 was hanging tn irresolution by the no sound. He we: before, Save | ried fairly off his feet by the weight | cover amp that f Jagzled i and a slimmer of conned senee e toff ‘ands me sixpence fer hopenin' ‘is | consternation and alarm, if he feared to | passage to Quadrant Mews. Again, the that twiee a step ining, | of an hurled heavily up m ¥ he man 1 juliet, head upon the | of tne 5 should be his ald pane Hae mae A or ane fear house he had no warrant! space of time between Kirkwood's dis- to his weight the top the | staggering force and passion. Reeling, { ps on t irs. One| he thous f and providing he was|and ard, ¢ ening blindly: #, seem he Was borne back and down a@ step or if n OV his face, hiding | abie to 4 at t F pands. ‘ ' upon his conscious: | two, and then-—choking under an oath— the upper half Th nd gleamed | In the ac on the wtatra he had|,,.:Mis# Calendart he orled, quarcety ‘Ere 'm | hout of @ job these six |barmed within its watls of mystery could hardly have fulfilled it and |ness; little drops of perspiration started | dropped his cane and with one h while and delicate as a woman's, His |jost his hat, he remembered that | yvoq'' ed light bad dis! lookin’ ter work every dye’! The silence of it discomfted him be- evcaped At Juat moment she might be'out on his forehead, his scalp tngled,| caught the balusters, while the other chin was smooth end round, his lips! te vesta’s short (Te Be Contineed) F \ ‘ door to-dye, an’, sexee, ‘My man,'|leave th wea, ‘yer've got a est fyce, Wr'y| Whatever to assume that he would be|miasal and his return had been J-|close air, like the her work?’ sezee, ‘Ow cam 1% sez |permitted to remain many minutes un-lingly brief; whatever her erra d, she | weigh more heavily

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