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; ( The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, December 23, 1908. ve A Christmas Dinner For Four For $5--- It’s Easy to Coo {| chop them. Mix the butter and the flour Menu for Christmas. fn a saucepan over the fire, add tho Ovatorn Qu NRL stock, and stir till tt bolls for three | Clear Soup a ta Carolina. minutes, add the cream, the sweetbreads aby Olives, and mushroom: son to taste ard: | BWweetbread Patties turn out to get cold. Now fill the pans |} murkey with Chestnut Dressing, with the mixture; wet the edges; put Granberey dally on the lds; brush over with a little 5 beaten egg and bake for twenty minutes Mashed Potatoes. t Phas Th SUNHIN GUNE na quick oven. Serve hot |Opportunity ot cr ithewvar ot By Ceorge fh “Peggy Machree”’ LOOKING FOR WoRK?)| |HELLO BILL,COME OVER | COME LET ME HELD ANDO ROLL THE DF ‘ OM OO DOOD OOK Pats a Jig In Your Stocking. | : BY CHARLES DARNTON | O ordinary Mizzard can drive the shamrock to cover, In the Broadway | N Theatre last night people were as thick as the snowflakes outside. An} audience with a touch of green in its heart took “Pexey Machree' by the and, hailed the old Irish songs and welcomed the new, and laughed at the wit | With the Joy of those who had come into their own again | There ts nothing distinetly new about this “Peggy” play so far as the plot ts| ¢ ' Tomato and Nut Salad 2 concerned, yet it seems ‘ts fresh as the top o’ the morning. Let Lady Margaret | | Plum Pudding. i Roast Turkey. O'Driscoll pretend to be a colleen and call herself Peggy, but let her beware of aj assorted Cakes n 6 mock marriage, when a real priest takes a hand in the sport. All's fair in love Coffee. |g GIVE the recipe for chestnut stuffing, and Downkilty. Trust Barry Trevor to Dee iI but those who prefer may use sau know that! There's more than one way Mem)ET the prevailing tint of the| _ ®¢ meat or veal stuMng. dining-room be red, That Is| One Pound of chestnuts, one pound of the Christmas color and auch |SPanish ontons, quarter of a pound of glorious effects are possible | bread crumbs, two tablespoonfuts but- If the right red is chosen! |tet or dripping, two pork sausages, |r showy poinsettias mingted with [tated rind of one lemon, one eee, walt, d nutmeg to taste fome light white flowers give a good |Pepper an tirect; while holly, If used discreetly | Boll the onfons until tender, and chop With mistletoe, will give quite a Christ- |them very fine. Boll the chestnuts for EE ale |ten minutes, take off the outer husks of getting @ pretty girl into a wedding ring. But bad luck to you, Barry, this Peggy will have none of you, A honey- moon is it? Then take {t by yourself! And so he puts his heart under a red- coat—may heaven forgive him!—and marches off with the army. What's that the orchestra 1s playing to make five years slip by while the cur tain's down? Anway it brings Barry JUST ONE DRINK! SHOOT A GAME COME ON, BILL. OF POOL, BILL ? and then boll them until soft. ! back. And does Peggy recognize him in the fiddling vagabond with @ timp In his leg? Never a bit! Her two eyes are not as bright as they look What would the likes of him be doing as ler husband? He'd be waiting round the castle, so he would, stringing his fiddle and like as not “stringing” my lady at the first chance. What's who the fine lady Is until she puts on the frock that was her wedding dress without her knowing It at all, at all. And all the time he's been wooing her and wishing he may never set e Joseph O'Mara as Barry Trevor. Peggy again ow will you be jeve that love is blind? Never mind! Love in a castle doesn't have to live on cottage on Pegey to him? Little does he guess Olives, salted nuts, glace and crystal- lized frults In small silver or cut glas dishes placed at ‘regular Inte around the centreplece add greatly to | the decorative effect of the table. Pro- | vide a faney spoon for each dish, sug- | gests Marion Harris Nell In the Chicago | Inter-Ocean Roast goose ts held In high esteem tn | some localities and is often substituted for roast turkey If vegetarians are present additto: dishes of macaroni, eggs in variou: forms and carefully dressed vegetables must elly as well as the plum pudding and mince meat ple. 0 be included. Serve a sweet vals Next rub them through a steve. Mix with them the ontons, crumbs and sau- sage meat, having taken it out of the skins, | Melt and stir in the butter, season carefully with the lemon rind, salt, pep- per and grated nutmeg, and bind all well together with the egg well beaten, adding a little milk or a second egg if necessary. Singe, draw and truss the turkey. In- sert the stuffing through the neck, hold: Ing the flap of skin over and securing It in place with a fine skewer, Tle a |piece of fat bacon over the bird and | bake it in a hot oven; baste it often About twenty minutes before the bird © sug menu is not too diMeult k to prepare with cheese. Miss Adrienne Augard Peggy that would take first prize at any falr. She's pretty enough to be Irish, and if brogue has a touch of French tn it @on't let on to your neighbor. A good flavor speaks for {tself, Miss Augarde sings charmingly, especially when it comes to “Family Pride," a duet that she shares ts cooked remove the bacon for the breast to brown nice}: success, AS s portion of the cook- 4 hird weighing from eight to ten an be done a day or two before. | pounds will take two hours to roast ; BORDON Uilse mealaie ny ial PAtEanEan OMe a hot dish a ish it wit vusages and tiny with Mr. Perey F. Leach. In this de- eee tet cabo with it a ggod lightful number her feet give a dainty Ne a account of themselves. At other times ! ‘ Slear Soup a la Carolina. mH she Istens patiently to the singing of fe IS ms | j Tomato and Nut Salad. H Joseph O'Mara, who revives a number NE iq soup, two heap- | ”» ot old melo ‘The West's Awake O ing tablespoonfuls of rice, two | TOvtheleinteemicsimenettan rouses the audience, and other songs Ly conan, cole cats ae matoes as are required; scoop out strike home. | Wart Nanton aK GIN pHs, TD the Inside; mix the drained pulp Mr. O'Mara hasn't the charm that was Aura t horing salted water, [With an equal amount of chopped wal- Beanlon's, the legs that ae Olcott's, oneLnitatetena "lnuts and one-fourth cup of chopped nor the heart that is Mack's, but he ene pe the carrots; then |Ereen peppers, Add mayonnaise dress- He would be more pleasing, however, | scoop out b f the red part of the] garnish with mayonnaise dr if he learned the art of “make-up.” His You will require a teacupful of | face looks as though it were varnished Mr. John D. O'Hana, as the kilted McDougal, is a Scotchman wort! ing, and his song, “Scotland, Ye Ken,” brings out the best that's in him “There's a very silly rumor,” so sings, “that we never laugh at humor but we never laugh at fools in Bonnie Scotland.” ‘The “maids” who Join with him in bringing out tle tuneful truth of the matter seem absolutely unspoi ed, and add greatly to the fresh charm of the performance. They are never noisy. They do not shriek at you. Their singing Js as good as their dancing, and this is saying a great deal, for “Peggy Machree" puts a jig in your stocking ARGARET ILLINGTON, whose recent that even an Irish Santa Claus might Adrienne Augarde as Peggy. M stage ha evi Gare Comin Ges envy: fn Bloomington, IL, March 22, 1881, balls. Cook them till tender in } The Plum Pudding. § | boiling, saited water, then drain well Put the soup into clean saucepan; bring it gently to bolling point, nit alt plum pudding shouild be boiled carefully, then add the rice and the for about two hours to Insure it little balls of carrot. being quite hot through. urn Put the pan over the fire for a few]it out on a hot dish, stick some shreds + minutes tll soup and garnish are thor-jof almonds in rows down from the top oughly hot; then pour ft into a hot soup|to the base, also a nicely berried sprig tureen. of holly in the top. vs | Just at the last moment pour round [pattie slightly warmed brandy and re | Play ers of the Period ot at at No. es oreares Uuneyen | } Sweetbread Patties. ALF-POUND of puff pastry, one announced retirement from the | Without a Smile,” and at the Savoy Jan. 11, 1905, she was Mrs. Leffingwell in butter, two sweetbreads, one ta-| “rhe minca ples should be heated in the ise and comment, was born | “Mrs. Leffingwell’s Boots.” She began the following season as Mrs. Leffingwell, | pespoonful of flour, nine mushrooms, oven and arranged nicely on a lace pa- r real name being Maud Light. |in addition playing Edith in the one-act play "Maker of Men," and early 19) halt cup of stock, one teaspoonful lemon | Per With @ sprig of holly In the top one. have a light set to it just as it Is car- ried to the table. rye it with hard sauce, or with some sweet melted butter sauce strong- ored with brandy; or, if preferred, & Mr. Dan Fitzgerald, a plper who doesn't pipe, and Miss Jennie Lamont, as After graduating from the TIilincis Wesleyan Univer- | 1906 she appe Mrley Rossmore in “The Lion and the Mouse" tn the com-| jyjce, one tablespoonful cream, salt and! se aS a widow with a mind of her own, act with a true sense of h character. The sity she studied for the stage und Hart Conway in | pany which played this piece in the leading Western cities, She made her debut | pepper. | i © piper fs In superstitious fear of a black cat that runs off with one scene like Chicago, being the winner of the Joseph Jefferson Dia- before the London public in this same part at the Duke of York's 1 sata ay 2oll and paste out to eighth of an inch | Are You Coming Home true artist, It scoots through its part without stopping In the centre of the stage. mond Medal for Shakespearean work, She came to | 2, 19, but the play only lasted a fortnight In England's capital. During the | in thickness 5 I's a very remarkable stage cat ew York in the summer of 190 and was at once en- | season of 1406 1s leading woman with John Drew, being Nina Jesson in| "yaye twelve small sized gem pans] for Christmas? y Sean = aS a | RBS bye Den el Dro ane as Maememys James K: | VHispHouse in |Order -.._ | buttered a Httle; cut the paste out to ft} | By Cora M, W. Greenleaf. i Didn’t Know His Own Cou’ Hackett’s company, snaking her first appearance be-| ‘The next season Miss Tilngton came into stellar eminence, along with K3tle | «he pang and put a plece In the bottom eee ae eee MINISTER of a fashionable church in Newark had always left tt He sey ey ATSICN Tey ap See ae aA Hee unas aepriry the TysanDy Cusees jE STE SODESEU EYE Ot otienchs A __ Christmas, A of strangers to be attended to by , until he read t Giedias) undovatuay! tollsartia iGanand this play |her lot, At ; GHENT LEASH ERR TGLa LEAT CHE ter ooo atari cue oulntwelyel additional pieces: jane Ye wanderers who roam, pene MARS cation acted as unde:study t rtha Galland Is play |her lot. Afier a t @ month's vaco s 1 lenibletul rivatmaliied tertcuetearound’ (orien tl moltelnimenaieleatennbecers i eh Saran Gitionl fe. “Woul nd upon one or two occasions assume actress's early in the last summer, visiting the far Western cities, and this fall she Ney Aletta CC COHTG GOI loans CNtNIN frome AL Geen mn aee representative should visit our church?” said bis’ wife. ‘Wouldn't part; but she Qas never Mr, Hackett’s leading woman, invading the Bastern territory, She made what has since been announced’as her 17° , | The faithful hearts at home olay sul as several of thy public prints have stated seQ- final appearance on (he stage at a matinee. performnce of “The Thiet,” even be- | OC . zy wq,| |The parent hearts that love you, ‘Tt would,” the minister admitted. 9 son of 1901-2 Miss Ilington appeared at MCHIGAE Une tied eomilnuelevanaldne aecondl act abl thal Howie Bireee Dhaatre ace Da bavepthe Avan SARe soaked.) |" Ne'er asking a return, The following Sunday evening he noticed a plainly dressed woman in one of @QuxoouEEN. Lyceum company, twing Vietorine in “Frocks andlton, on Oct. 14 last. Miss Iilington, who) became the Wife of the «wollsknown4 blanched, trimmed and boiled) in| water |/,. 10, staxer does above You, the free pews. one and iWas clearly nota member ol the flock a Atten| MARGARETELCINGTON IIs" and Fleur-de-Lys Sotre Dame," and the theatrical manager Danie! Frohman, late In November, 1903, 1s now Iving on a | fF three-quarters of an hour, then cut) | noo. the world applaud or spurn, the benediction the minister lastened and Intercepted her at the door. AMET ie A a cod tae ElsRalnen mamanternthe ock Com- ranch in California, and she has announced positively that she will never again | UP !n small pleces : : “How do you do?" he sald, offering his hand. “I am very glad to have you. pany in Richm with which she played, among other parts, Kate|be seen behind the footligits, but we shall see what we shail see, for ‘tix a| Wash the mushrooms and put them in| |One day from out the many (y with us.” Kennion in “The Girl I Left Behind Me,” Agnes Rodman in “Men and| brave woman who at seven and twenty is willing to ubandon a career that hag|® saucepan with the half tablespoonful! | Of the years that go so fast! ‘ “Thank you,” replied the young woman, Women,” Elinor Burnham in “A Social Highwayman,” Glory Quayle in ‘i'he | been crowned with such success as Miss Illington has known, However, to Mar-|f butter, the lemon Julce and a little| | Are you coming home for Christmas? , “I hope we may sce in our ch home," he went on. “We are | Christian’ and Drusilla Ives in “The Dancing Girl reve ARRIETA, A Teavataranel | salt and pepper. | | Perhaps ‘twill be thelr last, | ilways glad to welcon rn Miss Llington then spent a season in the support of FB. H, Sothern, playing ee Cook for twenty minutes slowly; then | @— - @ “Yes, sir.” both Katherine de Vaucelles and Hugette du Hamel in “If I Were King.” In 7 a rage "Do you lve in this parish?” he asked. ‘ovember, 1903, was Yuki in NEATH Nightingale” at Dal Penny A New Twelfth Century MS. The girl looked blank following March she was Henriette In the star cast of ‘The Two Orphans” at IE state archivist at Frauenfeld, in the canton of ‘Thurgovie, has discov- “If you will give me your address my wife and I will call on you some eve-| the New Amsterdam Theatre. A delightful actress in comedy roles, she did I ered a valuable manuscript, which had been used as a cover for other ing. : | most praiseworthy work upon tie New York stage during the season of 1904-6, documents, It 1s a portion of @ “Book of Hours" written in the twelfth “You wouldn't nee. .o go far, sir,” said the young woman, ‘I’m your cook!" | appearing at the Criterion Theatre Dec. 19, 1904, as Mrs, Rippingil! in “The Wife | century, | > ‘ | ing gown than iq f | this one could > A Romance of Mystery, By Louis Joseph Vance, ¢ hy are py ee pn? young woman. It ; Love and Adventure, Author of ‘The Brass Bowl, The includes the high > ’ Private War,’’ Ete. waist line that is in > latest style, tt ts 90009996400 00O9O969GOOS 02299092006 ©900OO6905 690 209-90049H00O909H5G0OH9HI HIS HHHEHHOO DOE GOHIDOD $9000 60GOG-06-694OO DG PL OSDOHT HOHE FS HOOOOHOOOHG OOOO VD dainty charm s and youthful and it can be made from net, chiffon, chiffon volte, messaline or any sim- thin material. In the filustration {t ts (Copyright, 1908, by Bobbs Merrill Co.) to wrestle with an obdurate memory.;patience with himself. Mystifled, he, seemed unquestionable. The brigan- as to the steamship company presenting | but then were was just enough yellow |Ow!" he triumphed. "I know, 'E was |rematned throughout, and the edgé of; tine was hardly large enough for the|him with another berth in Meu of that] in 6 womplexion of Stryker’s soul to YNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENTS | a chap up Manchester wye. Keeper in| his curiosity held as keen as ever, you] presence of three persons aboard her {called for by that water-soaked alip of 4! e him to sidestep trouble when- Shilip Birkewood. ‘ung, Californian, /#/ a loonatic asylum, 'e was, ‘That yer | may believe. |to be long kept a secret from an in-|paper then !n his pocket—courtesy of|ever feasible, And besides, he enter- a od, almost. pennitees, in London. He 9 ils in with an adventurer named Calendar, | party Consistently the affair presented it-| quisitive fourth—unless, indeed, they |Stryker. He had sold for a pittance, | tained dark eusplctons of his guest is he scarce dared voice even hope ' 2 ‘ng the Amer: | : hose daughter, Doroiny. Mutwoolts ascori | ‘No,"” said Kirkwood wearily. self to his fancy in the guise of a puz-|iny in hiding In the hold; for which, {a tithe of Its value, his personal Jewelry, trimmed with hand: orothy goes to a deserted house by night to| «T didn’t know but mebbe ‘twas. Bx-|2le-pleture, which, though you study it ary rt nd thad apent ever ny he could eall ninost heart nds i ected house by night £0) e | D 5 once the ship got under way, there {and had every pe c d s : of ribpon and iwels. Ml escyped from ‘is tender care, but,|hensible, until by chance you view It) iq not believe himself a person of |to glve him he would be gat | 9% Jn conatralned allence, The captain Lier oa ce 2 gtole thorn. ahle. the (At Tes, /findin’ the world cold, chynged yer | ffm an unexpected angle, when It re | sumcient importance in Calendar's eyes |back to London and nis third-rate hos- @te voractously and yoclferously, push poh eed an ate ered Mom England om a ‘ise |mind and wanted to gow back." Veals itself intelligibly, It had not yetito meus that worthy en the dia: |telry, but not with enous r to pay ack his chal and went op geek to Seo In Risse: af Sled the “Alethea, Sire. Hailnm. follows! Without waiting for a reply he| been bis good fortune to see it f ER STARS MARE MATELY OASIS MD rae Pea erin Ea nen ve the mate. ‘The latter, @ stunted the tucks tiny sou- om, to wet the Jewels, Kirkwood, too |) oo Oe ed the | Pisbt viewpoint, To hold the me mforss. off SUTTER TEE kney with a wizened counte ache could be used Neato Join them invonier ty protect ‘Duro: lurched into his room and banged thi ment throughout the yoyage, even to t If a daytime dress 4 Y, He sealsa catboat ant sails out 18! door to, Kirkwood, divided between | b® Walked endless circles round it, pa roumlioN | f and a mind as foul as his tongue, eas ts storm to the Alethea, He Ix diikged to the was \ | tiently seeking, but ever failing to fiat e8cape recognition ee, me ot smal nee of his attempts to wanted yoke and jeck of the brixantine, ‘half drowned: but usement and irritation, heard him With every second, then, he was Aw in un . earns fromm Sirvker, the captain that the iii anit for nome thnce ona | the proper perspective, * * * Kaci 5 p - rin hy no engage the passenger in conversation an be added, ‘offers to gall Stryker his jewelry, (Men & ush fe enough WHE | tion with it, he handled over and ¢ id he had-rushed, impelled by motive AE DORR yo tine cussion, After the sixth or eighth ot dancing length or offers him ‘four pounds ($20) for the |{t lasted; which was not long. For no! axamining its every facet, bright or {0 hotsheaded, so innately chivalric, wo [en ush to lone @ comforta PUK) cuts inet halmaadialauaneantdiaclarend Pty ite Regis ry | did the captain sleep than | qui, ay an expert might Insjiect a clever |unthinkingly gallant, so exceptionally [{MTOUEN &, Bixar We ie sonous bit of Insolence and retired dainty as well can be Penetrating snore added itself unto the| imitation of a diamond; and like a per- | idiot ane pies he A ABRE cA s berth, leaving Kirkwood to finish and makes a charms CHARTER S17, | fansicatiny snyre ndaed size nia) ibe ; , |erdiott Kirkwood groaned wiih deapair [else through his own ogresious folly, to eS a (Continued) any imitation it defled analyst | Idiot! Kirkwood groaned with despa p uh ; ‘ ikfast in peace, which the lutter 5 exA anh tortured ship Of one or two things he con-|of nis Inability 10 fathom the abyas find aelf reduced a: ks * t to the last visthl a Alling styles. one or two things was ec his inability n the # pee ene a erally to ast visible scrap of Despair. | Kirkwood, comforted at first by the|vinced; for one, that Stryker was a/his self-contempt. There seemed to bx ‘an ' again {nh ade hetuldaisnarantaeanice Mialauasiiataniaas HE captain swept the articles into | blessed tohacco, lapsed insensibly into Har worthy of classification with Cal-” positvely no excuse for him. Stryke wea Sire ee Dy s both were in qualit orla r the one capacious fist, pivoted on one |dreary meditations, Coming after the endar and Mra, Hallam. Kirkwood had had befriended him indeed, had he pe Lae cee tune of a moderating wind, the : 12 tee! at the peril of his neck, and |SWift movement and sustained excite- not only the testimony of his sense to mitted him wo drown, Yet he | ening yA f i « wearied away. Kirkwood went ands 21 i, 9 yards ‘Qumbered unsteadily off to his room, ment of the eighteen houre preceding |assure bin that the ship's name, Ale- for the be us he saw 1 t ba) bala en for distraction from the ae is 44 ed back in|his long sleep, the monofony of ship-|thea (not a common one, by the by),| lay in himself: an able fault, that 5 ret notony of it all, got a \Pauaing at the door he turned back p en Bet Herrin sir with \tequiry. board confinement seemed irksome to a had been mentioned by both Calen f rboring and nurturing generous Aero eens hing of epra with a@ y of ap: “I eye, ‘ow did you come to get the |maddening degree. There wag abso- and Mulready during their altercation and compassionate instinets tie pa AR I Hiatl! @ sort Mpa a dark line on the eastern 4 yards of n there was a party named |lutely nothing he could discover to oc-|on Bermondsey Old Stairs, but he had|course, Kirkwood couldn't see It that) ©) eee n from the orléon, which he und 1 to be the sash, 1-8 yard \Almaneck aboard this wessel?” cupy his mind, If there were books |the confirmatory testimony of the sleepy way rear H RY pa Moring for the .0W littoral of Holler 1 was glad 44 Inches wide, Calender" aboard none was in evidence; beyond waterman, William, who had directed) "What else could I this life § " ¥ Doral ) dodge below once more and dry him- e tucker, If Pave \t yer own wye," Stryker con-|the report of Mr. Stranger’s Manhattan Qld Bob and young William to the an-| himself against od visibhen wand 1 the Lone and smoked) His» 1 r ‘ Hea t | ; 1N t Daat Twenty 4 street, New jeu seemed pretty keen ab at ° $ saoall he remarked conclusively and reviewed his adventures in detail and Was (hat t t 5 t i Obtem 4 ; amps for each patt ' ANT name and address p : nly, and ale + “L wes.’ riatim, and was by indign vided Methea t had left her | a ' " wa “@eems to me I did ‘ear the nyme sore, anxious on his account ‘as| before she tripped her anchor. That! ‘ques afore. The captain appeared well ee vn Dorothy's, and out of wll they Were Het wtowed away Aboard ber y, his homeward passage fore Be was autovra wn 204 anepped Kirkwood. arn A ee aeeeneeeeeeeeneneenn Ie Ke Ay lOheer Lerbored ines BU AWoOd es eleuding aboard wae adh) alo Be Comuaued, 4 be ' , b I a eo) rw Cree} r 1 van " 5 : Seml-Princesse Gown in Emplre Style— a eeded gracefully night's entertainment the walls wer ohare oft How Creek, That there mon senac ca t leave her t van Ot af ae i 4 the pleasure the mate's CAPA ERETTT a nan <a inanan “There isn't, is there?” devoid of reading matier, and a round should have be Wo Vessels of the the mercies ry rogues : d - ‘| Calas ee i i Sia \ “You ‘cand me.” of the pleture gallery proved a diver- same unuaual name at one and the * * * Ana f ar i . , H ue a car the vale ANd AE A H when ah pS Men,” said Kirkwood sweetly n sion weariful enough when not purely same tine in the port of London was a ey " ny : el eure you y yoltin olneldens ) preposterous altogether a t t On wenn = IN I invent beurre nwnere! rey ieeieyp rin Noe f > yend by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN ‘The captain pondered this at leisure Wherefore Mr Kirkwood stretched |to find place ig his calcutaciol me . . How 3 i