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wear and t @t Marie Cahill in and Anna Held in Moulin Rouge,” Me Meanwhile let the lead in the pencil sny d as Wiss Innocence: Lawrance D'Orsay eaking of the plot, to a cabaret that this keeps her The ballet number is the pret- ladies thems The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, “Miss Innocence”’ Shows the Broadway Girl Abroad. BY CHARLES DARNTON. HY not take a week-end trip to Paris and be done with it? Tt would save you a lot of musical comedy French turn that this ec "The Boys und Be Miss ‘Tnnocence arrive next week A word in time saves nine York Theatre WZ For se Broadway to the boulevards. Mise Innocence’? shows the Way gitl abroad. Girls run away host the “show.” ‘They are tt t (ey girls in stage eapt ames in tights. W Have you ben ill sort that sighs “It might Ren” is good enough for her pure English in tights. Miss Held does most of her talking with her eves, Her special stage brand of in-ne ture of convent it cence is quite her aw Fren < ever the same from “Papa's Wife down to this latest girl show same ol voice that won't behave ar better than eves she asks naughty stions with all the in-no-cener st Anna without being Held. yon first see her she has seen on! A professor who fr time te time has heen good enoug girl that when man, a gray-ha © Montioy. of t st Life ta man. becan: so beat ance 10) vast Ireny’s Rritish beauty, this is the Emma Janvier as Miss Sniffins. Charles A. Bigelow as Ezra Pettingill. | ger-skin lady has hér Paul is a back num- vex, ‘This is the only “sensational” se of humor furnishes a es his customary ati rs go to mak. has done his s in making December 3, 1908: BOHODS: ‘The Newlyweds- -Their Baby- Now SNOOKIE, GIVE PAPA HIS OLD SHOES |- T MUST GET ANEW PAIR OF SHOES TODAY, LOVFY WILL BE Haven't you noticed the rt of thing ia taking? No? ‘Then east you Scheff in “The Priga Donna, ‘oof see “The Queen of the { bon't ! what it has to say about “Miss In+ eral seasons Mr, feld jr. haw been true to his idea of Paris, He is French by marriage, ind now, as hitherto, he takes: Held by the hand and lends her from at a star-eved goddess he is not DON'T CRY PRECIOUS } PAPA WONT TAKE OLD SHOES | GOING TO GET NEW PAIR THE LITTLE. DEAR MUST HAVE HEARP LS TALKING 5 AND AGREED WITH WIFIE ! word for It, and don't look nuousness 1 music hall sophistication is Anna in the play, GELQIODIOIOOHSS. SIODEDS Home Hints For Busy Housewives. art Topics By Betty Vincent. Sayings of Mis. Solomon Being the Confessions of the Seven Hundredth Wife. TRANSLATED By telen Rowland. SOTBOOND Anise-Zwiebach. whites of five eggs, ad ee Polite Attention. yolks, | . would it be proper for vs) to a cream. heaping they come in as Oriental rugs. There is the kiss 8 that flattereth best of all Kisses is the pound of tou long, narrow ly proper to send the young lady a ticket as she lives out would be a nice little for partly ‘onled ent in slices of three-quarters of an inch each and ‘Luncheon Dish. OIL. a good sized cl and the kiss that attentiow’ to pay | An Engagement. for it cometh the hardest Yet in all the days of thy life no tteomnen shall kiss thee alike: (eer shall regard thy kisses as a oon, AM ‘engaged and don't want to nave) cken until done, cut up To this put a . cracker crumbs, heaping table- pepper to or pan in and another shall regard . Dut a hushand shall consider . as te shaving of his chin If it Is propey to send cae | am engaged? cards announcing @at Rereaicaniol ffae cup of milk, a scorned any man's kiss: Nhe eralt thee, saving. can think of no other Write informal notes AAPA HPD FI Yet if tou hast consented to kiss inst ONE She doeth this with by the way in which thon treatest HIM. Ifa man kisseth thy hand gracefully, beware of hin, fe School for Innovence, has a s dd excuse rat ises without | ate he programme \to your girl she will say unto him friends know engagement. | self, | Dress for a Dance. 18 | and then stir teaspoonfuls | naw but 9) college man she engage reg 8-18 O403-O00O69O0 960900082 A Romance of Mystery, Love and Adventure. (Copyright, 1908, by Bobbs-Merrill Co.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENTS Pik Kirkwood, a rich young re’ fortune. trough who hints ata mysterious servic Would be rich ‘alendar dining a beautiful wire Calendar begs the | etic said, Vconteanling Himself tobe In He asks Kirkwood to Jol ieirkwood consents, Kirkwood and e | ‘A futile Attempt 1s nade to | brreat eiirkwood, who Ie ibistaken for Calen- He takes’ Dorothy. to the door of a ly scant house, and. ath | e. Worried as to her safety, ‘he °houne after 1 . hammering “at pa and the Dorothy ina cab lo a te awaiting her: ‘en the gill is holding ng Hack Glsdstons. bax ington Kirkwood rings the doorbel CHAPTER V. (Contnued.) Mystery of a Four- Wheeler. Tr was a modest nothing more neighbors, unless it was for a certain The area rail- air of extra 6 ing was sleek with f the doorstep looked the better for the door itself was im- brasses shining red-lacquered soft glow filled the fanlight the drawing-room » Warm radiance. The door opened, of a maid sketched ef sombre black and dead white. me i» My, Calendar! prettily. mene reomeacape ec meme ge “Ob, any tjme orous stoning, windows shone with framing the figure} in masses! came murmurs of two voice: and a woman's. The latter laughed participate in some sport. Rodily si ectly to o of these undisp! Leslie's Weekly, Moreover, spon degenerat The servant's eyes left his looked past him a and returned. ‘ I'm not sure, sir, If you will please step in.” Kirkwood hesitated briefly, then ted. The maid closed the door cer ‘What name shall I say, sir?" “Mr. Kirkwood. “If you will please to walt one mo- ment, si He was left in the entry hall, the ser- vant hurrying to the staircase and npe ‘Three minutes elapsed; he was on the point of returning fo the girl, when the maid reappeared "Mrs. Hallam says, will you step upstairs, sir Disgruntled, he followed her; head of the stairs she bowed him into the drawing-npom and again left him to his own resources Nervous, annoy tience, wondering, might have accord to the charm of the a ment, | betraying the feminine touch in every detail of arrangement aiid furnishing, | was very handsome in an unconyen- | tlonal way, But hewwas quite heedless of externals, f ale, . Wearled, he depostied himself sulkily in an armehatr by the hearth. From a@ boudoir on the AM going to take a young iady lives evening dress small, this dress {i trick of an accomplished which hath upon the forehead and then upon the eyelids and proveedeth slowly, thou mayest pick out thy wedding linger who seeketh » spoonful of mushrooms, Baltimore Whip. RATE the rind of two lemons ant two | teaspoontuls of vanilla, one cup of | two ergy, | and can of) dance which and decide himself stoppeth for pre: upon a flat . nor rélisheth his love in homoeopath kissing isa fine Kind of vest should be worn, control of 2 trurs ment of athletics in our ng section is an unwarrantable sac- from his own exercise, says Pre art, and there are maz | take a kiss from thee in a way to make it seem as though he doeth thee color gloves liverized sugar s though he had taken thy etbook,| aud the volkn of four a kiss as though he had taken thy pocketbook, relIA, OL ERE: Beat (Or teh in» cup of warm water; when cool add ingredients drop by drop, then ten whites of four urn the mix- glass dish, beating constant- orange juice, sweetened, (and maraschino syrup. ning dress Is the strictly prop- | favor, and anothe Yet no wan shall ever understand why thou seemest pleased or thy thow warest wroth when he kisseth thee; for it is all in the way he doth it aneous’| Dut if 3 int and » far fore insportsmanlike, jer twenty-one in the well b ougs, heatlng ‘ And a man who kisseth a woman with his hat on shall bea rniitated, ik considered never Kissed before dress sult a or white walsieou gloves must be worn in some Strides That Progress Has Made in a Century. By John K. Le Baron. OO T in a great privilege to be alive to-day! The twenteth century offers more to the poor man than the elghe teenth offered to the rich. iz From the days of Adam to the days of Washington was a slow | journey. From the days of Washington to the present has been an era of magia. The age of m yt past | It wae a Journey of many centuries from the savage In his dugout to the |taunching of Fulton's first steamboat, the Clermont ‘he Clermont to-day would be a j But tt sot the pace for the marvellous speed progress of the century, Tho laisitania tracer its ancestry to the oft, and even beyond, te the [little Burlington steanvboat of John Fitch The Untted States had had seven Pr iy allway coach } Wowas during the administration of Andrew Jackson that The Best Friends the first American-bullt locomotive to see actual service, made its memorable |ran fm South Carolina | With that event speed became the watchword of progress. | The year 18th saw the b That invention gave wings to thought. For untold ages the world had known no means of communication fastes yan the horee. The birth of the nineteenth century was cocval with the beginning of the age of invention In the scale of possibilities an hour came to mean more than days had meant Did the magic of Indian ever rival that achievement? Twelve vears after toe rallroud came the telegraph ‘The miracle of Morse made t railway seem slow It brought distant cities in a minute of one another. Was ever such another le performed by man. The raliway and the telegraph wrought commercial revolution. Methods were changed The civilized world experienoed a great awakening, | Thirty-three years after the telegraph came the telephone. Wonders were multiplying. As an Inventive marvel tle phonograph rivals the more practical inventions of that century of surprives Is it possible that the twentieth century can keep pace twtth its predea essor? 3 Can It produce a Stephenson, a Fulton, a Cooper, a Morse, a Gray, a Tall ind an Edison? 1 All Ameri but one. Tt ig A great privilege to live in the Lwentiets century Comld men have foreseen events it would have been a disappointment to hawe }uved in the rlow-going eras, We hardly appreciate how much a day has to offer in this age. The nineteondh century left a marvellous footprint on the sands of time. s before any one ever rode tm @ of the telerraph, HE perfectly Plain outing shirt ts the one that all boys lke. Tt ts essen- Ually masculine in effect and it ts comfortable to wear, while it is so easily made that all mothers will be glad to wel- come it. This one is shown In tan colored silk fine ished chambray, but all shirting materials are sult- able; stripes and figures are grestiy in vogue, as well as plain colora, and flannels must be included in the list as well as cotton and linen fabrics, Fine percales, ma~ yas and nen are, lowever, favorites, The quantity of material required for the medium size (fourteen years) is + yards MM, 35-8 yards % or 21-9 yards % inches wide. Pattern No. 6180 is cut in sizes for hoys of _ twelve, fourteen and atx. teen years of age. A ARS Cali or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- \ ie TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 152 East Twenty-third street, Now obtain $ York. Send 10 cents In coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and ak Patterns, @ ways epecity size wanted THE BLACK BAG PPIODOSLOOLLDODE D4 PODOOOG-LG92DDIGOOPOSCOEDEDOD OOD 99 H.O092LPWGDDOOPIIG OP HOO IO O99 DPD 9O GOGO DO POOP IOS OODOS expert-seemed insistent on detaining him, time you're confounded fiir with yours come the Strand roared, of {ts night Hfe Jn high spate; the Embankment, and deserted, {f brill: high-swung quiet Craven street rrow, and who form of equipage CHAPTER \V “ Below Bridge."’ the waiting Wd have accepted anything The volves rose, approaching. “Gand | preposterous, sald the woman gaily; well and--good luck go with you!” “Thank you ‘ho man more conservatively is refusal with |nothing particularly asto a swish of draperies, r he was acknowledgin, the totally unlooked for entrance tress of the house. to see Calendar, said Kirkwood. carefully con He had thou s » like the sea by Nave of an undercurrent her pose in itself a ques-| “That Calendar whoever that accompany the woman. advanced from the doorway, could hear the man’s footsteps on the| Indeed, as s their owngr with admiring interest changeable, calling to mind the sea on a-windy, cloudy Below sialrs a door the well-trained a very alluring voice and one pi to ligten to, emporarily dunvb with consternation, i'm so anxi be returned id panad ghataccs In & high, sweet voice. from wall to wall, his footfalls silenced by heavy rugs, As the delay was pro- longed he began to fume with Impa- f regretting t he had left the girl outside, definitely sorry that he had fatled to name ‘errand more explicitly to the maid another time, in another mood, d more appreciation made an appointmen “Who in Mr He bowed, discovering himself in the presence of an extraordinari nh natural con- , @ rounded @ years which as yet » ag if to shut him out at any mo- rm of @ersonality was involved; a |Hned brows arc who’ bore close inapec despite an elusive effect jout its attraction for Kirkwood was impréssed that it | would be very easy to learn to like comfortable w 6 wrong thing, blurted words woman, in brief, I'm awaiting your explanation,” she| lightened, was weighed upon again DY ating Calendar hi said coldly. He grinned with nervousnes: ¢ the mental proces: Hallam. She seemed to regard him with a suspicion which he inexcusable. he had spirited Dorothy Ci then called ing somehow done figuze-full fair shoulders and arms ing ont of the glittering dinner Rorgeous sihouette against with a sudden, impera “But T am expect: | he was to have laughed delicl ing him any moi maturity, not striving |'wheeler but @ hansom, and the handsome Mrs. Won't you wait?’ She indicated @ chair, and took for with a gracious gesture. herself one end of tive gesture, Although he had not anticipated it, he was not at all surprised to recognize in her the woman who, she exclaimed ng to right a | Kirkwood? me floor there @ man's Thank you, I wil Kirkwood moved toward the door “Bust chere'e no return, if I may adventurer, in the dining-room of lesa. Kirkwood's state of mind had the stoop a second lat snorted the American. necessity’ —— By Louis Joseph Vance, bd Author of “The Brass Bowl,” “ The = Private War,” Ete. theory—that he was an emissary fromycabby his fare, and turned toward the Scotland Yard? * * * Probably she pair upon the doorstep, evidently su com-|distrusted him on the latter hypothesis. mising that something was amiss. Foe The reflection left him more at ease, | he was Calendar in proper person, and a» “I am guite as mystified as you, Mrs. | sight to upset in a twinkling Kirkwood's Hallam,’ he began “Miss endar ingentousiy builded castle of suspicion was here, at this door, in a four-wheeler | “Mrs, Hallam!” he cried, out of breath, not ten minutes ago, fnd— slglican UlerasieeeAnalithent Then where ix she now?" Catching! aight oof iKkirkwoodla (oninlas “Tell me where Calendar ts," he re- nance: “Why, hello, Kirkwood!” he |torted, inspired, “and I'll try to answer | saluted him with a dubfous air. you woman interrupted hastily, But her (eyes w blank, "You! "Please come in, Mr. Calendar. ‘This to | mean"-— gentleman has heen inquiring for you, as in this houre wit tale about your Her| when [ came; tha ft, found his) daug |daughier in the cab and drove off with |» Dorothy Calendar’s moonslike Jher. It's clear enoug! | visage was momentarily divested of any You are quite mistal sie sald trace of color, ‘What of her?” ougltfull George Calendar a8 “you had better come in,” advised [not been iiere this night Mrs. Hallam brusquely He wondered that she did not seem, ‘The fat adventurer hopped hurriedly to resent his * imputation 1 think |aevoas the threshold, Kirkwood follows not" ing. The woman shut the door an@ Listen¥’ she cried, raving @ Warn |curned with back to it, nodding signifie {ng hand, and relaxing her vusliant a ntly at Kirkwood as her eyes me od | titude moved forward once more to peer , Hopped own award the Hmbankmen Well,” snapped the latter inte A cab had cut in from that direction ly, turning to the young man. and was bearing down upon them witt Kirkwood was thinking quickly, a bras rumble of hoofs. As it ap: yr proached, Kirkwood s bh the present he contented himself Ft, that lad with @ deliberate statement of fect disappeared.” It | disappointment It was » four gave him an instant’s time, ° © pe) There's something damned fishy!" h wings of the apron, disclosing 4 #hIte told himself, “These two are playing 4¢ triangle of linen surmounted by & Slow: \crosp-purpones. Colendar's ne fool: Re’ ing spot of fire, betra. the sex of the | evidently a crook, to boot, As for the fare too pleiniy to allow of further woman, shes had her eyes epen for ® number of vegies The main. thing's ho she didn't vanish of her Own hope that it might | the | turning ative \nd Mre. He'lam knows, oF he was sone sort of an had manufactured a| and a man tumbled hastily our upon toe | | plausible yarn to gain him access to her | sidewalk. | Standing beside her, be stared blankly. |home? Or—harking back to her original e than she's going to tell, Med up sharply suspects, in At the door the cab p p r iP n she's gaing te belle think she eniar does, so do I 50: Vm toe da Here!’ he cried throatily, torwing the! (To Be Continued.) — ais