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Searle tt app wn ae The Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, December 19, eGreat ad ° PELE EELGHHOE# OPS Peay er naeretan id (1 WONDER (FU } sHours Buy © | HUBBY A PRESEN or" pes Fie: ‘ = Gre ARE You). OAD? WHAT'S THE : MATTER, ARE ae YOu ALL No Fc ow | Wit |HAVE ro &¢ (BACK AND GET 6d 1908. | ROVOBDPEOHD DOP HEDLOHWDOT PORES TO LOOROOBDOEVOHNHD EHBGOSP HHGCEH LECOPHH PBHHHMEGBEOESEH DDPHBE BRHBPBB BS PHP SOR HSS® iristmas Marathon Race. BH DVHR BE Where a Woman Can Win Against Longboat or Dorando. 4 BRL GRRLF D PPRBEDLRBRF ORB RRRP RB PRB PQDRNPDLDRVVRVBMKD on TREES Ae OES 'S ANOTHER } — i e, Speaking of training. women begin to ¢rain for the annual Christmas Marathon jand stand up ait tne way downtown or uptown, as the opens Lt ropurse, reads Lae list, opens her By Martin Green. Jalong in the early fall. | TI ular start, over the prescribed cours 1 street and) purse, puts the and buys a ginss (of scdavoriay AST seen the great Christmas Marathon ra ngle reader of the, — The training conkists of saving money and thinking of a way to make every | Sixth avenue. Any mau w ry ake up his/cup of tea male sex? No! Then you had better hadst, and that right speedily, Present worth §1 cnst only S9 cents ee ; | position on the platform of the “1. st im at) Twenty-third strest the course turns to the east ne fer a8 Broadway, ae begear z Any woman with money to spend and a fixed determination to purchase some- | that point ~ witches to the south a few blocks and doubles back into Sixth avenue, because it will be over next Thursday y cong | thing for that money ts eligible to the tmas Marathon. From Fourtcenth atrect the course runs north After which it starts up Sixth nueuapnin crossing atest horcubhtarsugone But keep away from it unless you are a strong| ay tne racers are in costume, of c Rakai eiee TREAEREN aa V ECHR CORGRS TAS Lea CGELUTLLG cUTOT aCGRe TTR ifiniaayinfesblockvonianiae Hfukbeliaihas clas man with nerves of steel and a heart of oak and an/ amateur male Marathon runners are— me kind ume, natur-|lays her own course, Conse they are alwa ihe into e There {8 a lot of running arownd to be done at Thirty-fourth street and iron will and other hardware. From the first Mara-j ally. The woman entering the Marathon entry is guaranteed a prize—| sayin 1 BEG your par Jond, and “I hop vu choke,” or w ave and Broadway, that being a junetion in the department thon run, when the Grecian messenger fell dead at! Wears a simple common s outfit of the ordinary clothing, which 1s not visible; | effect, so that nobody can 1 t Mae y of th stants stop here for refreshments before starting 0 i fs Cn tea si oat Raa of corsets—not visible, but apparent—her best gown—the longer the sk: Ono of the t t store must be entered jon the final lap, whic across to Fifth avenue and up and down that the finish Ine, to the last, at Madison Square Garden, | 1, ),, a pair of high-heeled shoes and a Merry Widow hat, A break and raced throu ‘ ants 1 thoroug when Dorando sprinted himself out of first money,’ puckwheat cakes, soft boiled eggs, sausage, x fruit, to coffee b ing and every counter, w yy not. It is par © te i ) the case that covered the course from Four there has been nothing in history like the present starting in the race ts not essential, but 1s commonly consu {teenth street up to ‘Thirty-four t around a do tt over again, Christmas Marathon. No! And yet, how long would Tom Longboat, the muscular Indian, In his funny rts out to b hiefs for her hust ve Ww on thelr own tracks all unusual for them to do this ‘All AUroiennintosons 114 not running pants and light jersey and spe prepared Ing, last in tne st to the fur silk and satin de everal days in succe compare eurtbreaking iousness Christmas Marathon, going the full route of the department stores that every then to s goods ailor-made s Ps carrying a muff and a . a powder put, ar a iscrine iat contest to de Woman goes? Take ft from us, he wouldn't get bis stride before he would be, ment, then to the mii nto the pari 1 runners carry the bundles they buy. ‘This adds seen now in the retail dr ods ‘The racers are Sending in an ambulance call the grocery depart’ 1 to ‘ and makes \duranes feature more promine — ed women > Talk about the difficulties of the original Marathon course outside Athens! It | partment, then epartment, then | t finish during the evening rush hour when MLC VELA There are thousands and tens of thousands of them, 48 @ ride in a lmou! mpared to the Christmas Marathon course to the book ueps ndy department and then out of the store. | wo . wor dow , day are on their way li hundreds of thousands and mililons The race starts every morning n thousands of New York and Brooklyn and | She don’t the last place fore the finish. enables them uncomfortable on the cars, ‘They have been in training for weeks. Every one {s In the pink of condit Bronx homes, Thi tants, after ring themselves that their hats are on| Nearly ev When sl me she puts the Hist Io the ' 4s Christmas approaches the struggle waxes fiercer and more flerce and fierc | Straight, take a y canter to the surface car or the “L,"" or the Subway, In her purse, After the first round of the Marat remembers t They say they don't, but they enter every y “ —— a — - ~ “= = ees WODCDIOGPODGHDOIADAADISD DODHVOHODSODOHPITOGIONS “a 4 99 B ‘*Scar’”’ CSOQDOGOHOGOS azardous business | -t- te te tet * + . ° P.0000000000000000000005 Copyright, 1908, by Bobbs-Merrill Co.) SYNOPSIS OF PT Priltp, Kirkwood, can's affections. oes to wet for her father stone ‘bax bidden th . From) Mrs. as y. @ catboat and sails out in ® storm to intercept the Alethen CHAPTER XI. Off the Nore. IRKWOOD'S anger c dom more. His bra perature of hi gained its me: without distortion, weighed them with- out exagger: It w clearing, th sment quickly 1 saw h Leaning against the combing, feet braced upon the slippery and treach- erous deck, he clung to tiller and main sheet and peered alead with anxious 'yes, a pucker of daring graven deep between his brows A mile to westward, three or more ‘head, he could see the ntine anding close In under the F hore, times she was Invisible he ald catch merely the glint of her can- 8s, white against the dark loom of the toral, ton a mist of flying spind- 't, He strained his eyes, watching ir the chance which would take place 1 the rake of her masts and sails when she should come about. For the longer that manoeuver was deferred, the better was his chance of attaining his object. It was a forlorn hope. But in time the brigantine, to escape Maplin Sands, would be for to tack and stand out past the ship, the wind off her port bows. their courses would intersect. It re- mained to be demonstrated whether the eatboat was speedy enough to arrive at this point of contact in advance of, or simultaneously with, the larger vesse Every minute that the putative Alet put off coming about brought the cat- boat nearer that goal, but Kirkwood could do no more than hope and try to trust in the fisherman's implied admis- ion that {t could be done. It was all in the boat and the way she handled. He watched her anxiously, quick to approve her merits as she displayed them. He had sailed small craft before frail centreboard catboats, handy and swift, built to serve in summer winds and protected waters; never such a one as this, Yet he liked her, Deep bosomed she was, with no centre- again Then board, dependent on her draught and heavy keel to hold her on the wind; stanch and seaworthy, sheathed with stout plank and ribbed with seasone timber, designed to keep afloat in the wickedest weather brewed by the foul- tempered German Ocean. Wishal her ines were fine and clean; for uli her eam she was calculated 10 nose nar- rowly into the wind and make a pret Pace as well. A good boat he nail tho Grace to give the credit to his luck. ‘Her disposition was more fully di @losed as they drew away from ¢ beach. Inshore with shoaling water, the waves had been choppy and spiteful fout leoking force of weight. Farther Out, as the bottom fell away, the roll- ere became more untform and powerful heavy sweeping seas met the cat-boat, @om their hollows looming mountainous wo the tiny cockpit, who Siena tag wrsid be wasn” * i The Black Bag By Louis Joseph Vance. ing wales bit Offshore, too, |added strength, For nWales would ened i ‘combing, would han, minutes on end the leeward e screaming, pelting ured the estuary would hi } until the water cascaded tn over the lee nd the wow - OUCH! Gee 1 THOUGHT IT WAS GOOD FoR A PAIN IN THE STOMACHE asted them dling wake t onward, the wind etormed with possibly, had fresh- run green, and now and qualls that ol her over rudder, Ifted clear until, smitten by some racing billow, the tiller would be all t OH DEARIE n from Kirkwood’s hands. Again anc kK and those wer Don Ley But always the cat shaking the clinging PicTruRE wate! Into 1 her wind during whieh K to dash tl search the w netimes not Long after went upon even sta, impa KK abou each with and other 8 of the yw an abbrey salt s1 I-ha and swinging her ste: ain; and there would ed breathing spell irkwood was at Mberty from his eves and ad was r the etimes he found her had expected her to, she they began to close ir r. He could ned canvas she wa under the flerce For himself, it ee t wind was nip and tuck now, and no man in HARLIES SENS THE END OF THE CHRISTMAS MATINER mY CHARLES DARNTON Py You Not To Go NEAR THAT, believe in theatrical signs, you have rat tot robably given more conside e announcement of Mr. C com ic York to In this stat has put food for t plate. Keep your eye on the pis uuce, but You think, @ relatives eff your hands wonder why in, the name of allied Collierism put siman is natinee to its fate w as taken your inev ligestion hout a word? and you ourself on the wire, in Ch all done up ia and his office door; i would give you ickles nothing for their pa ‘0 you interview him by t aph, hoping to cateh him in an idle moment ently the key speaks, Listen, Fi Gain tn Happivess. lof my companies now playing in dif. Iie peeerert oe eeraean ; ferent cities will give Christmas matt Replying to you “j 2 However, this is the last year oe sua Pee are a f the Christmas niatince so far as U " my am concerned. After next Friday tres have always been very profit there will be none for actors in my employ—I shall make this a part of my contracts with outside managera, Whether other managers will adopt this plan I cannot say, but I should. |not be surprised to sind Christmas matinees very generally abolished in ble, but Lam cutting the year to give the i off this stars under my man lagement or those playing in my the- jabres onportunity of spending Christmas with their families or their | friends ire Mr, Collier plays as he wishes to an his normal sense would have risked 0 : |@ short time, 4 sixpence on the boat's chance to live un- (play. | CHARLES FR 4 til she crossed the drigan What is lost in dollars is gained in | Minis: ROHMAN, Time out of reckoning he was | i the long run by the happiness ‘ * to knee! in the swimming cockpit, | Rest a Danetnena ie “TICEY” BROUGHT OUT. ho a Bee aaa |brings to the artists and their ee dish wit ther and keeping his e |dnionds, so 1 propose each year to *Slavey" Play by Wiltinm Gillette roles ney tur ned fo ithe ying pa give them their Christmas | Giv for Charity. of sail was heartbreaking totl; Regarding whether L prefer the | Fis aac began reluctantly to concede that ‘ } UTSBAL CR ily prea Thee STARE De LATTE home on Christmas, 1, Ginette, was acted at t missed t rigantine he would be, lo i} sually i at 4, G8 f have no} tre yesterday afternoon for the benefit h was not enough to stand rehearsais of my own, to see some | of thy s 1, which was ough foda time second place I have ao home | prod n, and to Klaw & Erlanger for It might « nd solve the p Licidentally, the appeal of the Nahas eur | ange audie lems prosente h new, mal h is the hardest thing the the jow and each furious howling s trical » ger has to comba | the end inevitably must be failure airioaL anager nee he convat: Laee:) ” > utle ein “he on Would be but to postpone the | At Mea! as ik 5 it bonis ai pant J tee ulags |certain end * * © save and excer ments in New York City with ah | possiblity of his gainine the ; ; a that sho | ten to twenty families for every \ may he 1 |witin the veriod of time strictly and Lacnsainaa (ean onihulaiin fRaniree lene with hla [briefly limited by his powers of endur- | wenty dive jeer of bullding frontage, | play. ie man who anes See them at night with windows | has ears Long since he had become numb with aglow, That means that everybody is | Peat @ ke | gala Te aceenect Grenehiings af ley | 76 LEAVE THE PRICE TICKET ON YoUR XMAS PRESENTS 76 Go HUNTING THE BURGLAR UNARMED! at home end disgosed to stay there, | lh ovand, Unianaee counte: keeping the bottom ankle- | The great problem that confronts the | +. Tere ntovely |deep regardless of his laborious” but sacral la eked cscs f und § onsible intermittent efforte with “the ” balling atrical manager i¢ how to get the | suguestions he f ay unl it dish. And the two, brigantine. and | DO@o® 900OOTEOODIOH’ 2 FOOTE XG SOOOOOOS © OOONY. | people out uf their comfortable | tN meets pproval af cockle-shell, were” drawing together | Ree EROS ao onuiaiy ‘ oe ons naan fb nartanl a inte with appalling de.iberation 4 s Gives e “ ° 4 pigeon-holes and into the theatre, |* 4 in the Te Se ee MOR ne point |S And a been | mea when it is over slips out of of surrender, as often plucked up lope Advi I This is what keeps the manager busy | the mana to return as ap the minutes wore on and he kept | & vice ~~ id planning, thinking and guessing | pice presented to the happy if he could ‘stick it out his judgment | S®@C@CC@ewes we DCCSIONE WODIDOE tH: OOOY : WOONMODDIOOOOODODOO0E y " AUMIOF Aas: HB Che ee Oe and Seamanship would be” justified h, at 5 woe ‘Ir Rai Har dlfeaRanuranaliaent , : t ppeal of ibe Beme, ngain and back as “herself.” Sie eos © though human “ingenuinty arriving home I wrote to his mother, keeping company owing to the differ-approval of the suit, Do not elope even seeps ecret, but as the avtha |Dacked by | gen resity could “by no \A Cc aperon Unnecessary. but the young man answered, To whom ence in our religions, We love each ieh they refuse to sanction the The appeal of the home at Christ: | taxes ! rn © prom He rs means contrive adequate excuse for lily | Dear Betty should [ write my answer; also, to | other rly and are at a loss to know !friendship, for if you marry in haste 8 is, of course, much stronger than 1 t “'Ticey” some " | n @ | Js it proper for a number of young 9 me day But that was weide, something tr-| | sauies to go to on evening affair une | NBM shall I send my Christmas card? |Just what to do. 10 you advise us to |you pretty sure to repent at le TERESI ICTS ry 1] Smith played the author, and jfeparable. Wan and grim, he foughi . mf | A. | elope? W. H : : io f - {t_out. escorted. ye ~ cd itself into a home celebra Welford caused considerah maith thas fla seciae ca If the young ladies are over twenty |, 4# the young man answered the let-| Hoth you and the young tady are too] 38 Lopes 25, @ tieel/ 9. ON lebre er entious “bounder, arched throat, he could and there bre three or four of them in {tf ou should write tg him if you wish | young to think seriously of matrimony. | , and I think the actor who hag | Overs in the cast of twenty-four were \ oF his ation, when event Rte at ataraaan et unnas ry, | continue the correspondence. Send | As you say you love each other dearly, ty me or friends to welcome him to | mr Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh, Ming | gaine point of inters the party, ay ¥-!the Christmas card to the mother, * ° A MAN of thirty-elg » old t By hth of ry nile head Of the brigam [If the gir younger they should be cannot you and she have a frank talk irty-elght ¢ Id tO | their home is entitled to share the | Vera Stowe and Mrs. Agnes Findlay, ne and got sight of her wind ‘@ccompan an older woman oF 4) They Wi, with your parents, telling them that you| | marry a girl of twenty-tive oe means ' jon restauennl freaboard as, most slowly, the ocat-|masculine ; ey Want to Elope. Mtn tn eens Cop han inant a reside joys of the festival as much Ke em pane, .o weaet slowly, | are willing to walt for each other four Pea 7 svury, the author@ | "For all that, the moment of his actua: fi Dear Betty or five years, but if at the end of that! If ¢ eight is in love with twent One eles v 2 1 trical manager's |trlumph, wae’ net vet: “he had + nerd Answer His Letter. AM @ Jewish young man nineteen une you still love each other, you intend | five vive verua the sid be hag But the road managers cling to the | onic sheer audacity (2g A ge eo yo ge Fe years old and have been going with to marry, and in the mean time you if they marry. A girl of Owenty-tive| Christmas matinee They want it— Thompeon is planning to put em tent ane * ry 74 ; ay ry she summer # girl (Christian) of the same age. | wish their consent to keep company? If is suiliciently matured for a man of | ingigt upon it—and it ig decause of | tHe Play With & carefully selected comme gone made A or 2 [kam saralen 50 * week Her parenie |yen aap sonrines theme of the mnnerise | Alms -algt ond he le nos too old tor pany. Accordingly, critic ie fee } ‘ their insistence that twenty or mone | DOr. a r] iD Wig <a ee