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The Even CHAR I stret Mrs. Leslile Carter as Kassa. But after all t Rlorious Carter hair d “with a world-hun, | wortd. Was getting on, Mrs. Carter Displays Old Emotions and New Scenery, LES DARNTON. long my spiritual expression and the golden crown that added to the Pictorial effect elaborate preparation Kaasa didn't take the black vell, The t go to glory. Y look in her eyes” was waiting to give her a taste of the As a matter of fact Mrs. Carter looked old enough to know better thar to Teave the convent on a little outing of that sort, but It was high time the play and so you felt rather grateful to the Prince, Charles A, Millward’s lame acting, for hurrying things along. Mrs, Carter smil &s she said, ‘I'm not always pleasant, you know,” Then everybody sobered down while she told the Hunnish legend of "The Brok Butterfly" with the old Carter musto ringing true for the first time. ng four: ands ey loves to greet old friends, #0 you across the lights that bound me. and bid you wel Hoping I am not forgotten, t Lh 4 y corn in y hearts as you do all of mine, i ¢ ed yours emotionally at the Liberty Theatre on Saturday L 1 inside a decoratiYe Mucha folder, deserve to be they contain more “heart Interest" than could be srwrought play. ‘To assure Mrs. Carter that she that could | e into the Llberty kept enthus.asin that e reminded her of the Mvs. Carter was back ran absence of ty and a , according to Der own reckoning. She was back where he had loft sin a sea of trouble and sof svenery. She was back tion.” Her stage hands her actors. A ely Mucha cock- 3 to one another » when peo theatre “a big ho fts weight In box- This may be true » are getting into the linds to the the- Carter has done ) in stagir ad the courage t. spent a “a big produc: tion.” she! | her own judgment heavy Mr. Lor t easily have put more heart an words into his five-act Tt dragged on until midnight was 4 matter of a few minutes, with Carter displaying old emotion scenery, She was as pale as the ster Itiies In the first scene when the light Mrs. new spot discovered her as near to heaven as convent could get, and followed her down the winding st doing all in its power to reveal h The wicked Prince who had seen her in splte of M and the audience smiled, t The had become like the taste of death to Kassa. Whither away, Bad Prince? The next three acts led Mrs. Carter along old, well-worn paths, Kassa had deen duped Into one of those marriages that playwrights delight to perpetrate upon trusting heroines. And three years later ehe waited In her lonely mountain home for Prince to call around and se: her and thelr darling boy. While ahe was waiting Mrs. Carter had a motherly acene with tiny Vivian Tobin, Afte the child was sent ¢o bed, Kasea waited alone. Final , out of the storm, came another bad actor, Mr. Robert Cumming: He was the Imperta! Chancellor, and he was out to make things uncomfortable for the Prince at the court. i lured Kas le light-comedy sewing. had been a New York husband with the club-going habit he couldn't have bee @ greater stranger to his wife, For his sake she didn't let on that she had ev @cen him before until ehe got the Chancellor out of the house. Then s } Wanted to hnow where he liad been keeping himself for three years. Oh, y would have come—hut | boy? That was too much! glass. Al through the night and Anished her little sto} But Kas riage and deserted her. that. She wouldn't forget tt. if he would let the Prince go. which she had ted him, penalty fs death'” had been away ‘The play never seemed real upon Mrs. Carter's emotional powers as better p 4 talking with Kassa atout the Prince, It was always but! Perhaps the Prince would like to rea his boy? So she agreed to stay behind with th This done, she let the Chancellor see the trap into Back into his teeth she hurled his own words, Then leaving him to eat his words, she wandered back to the convent, her mind a blank on everything exe It went by fits and sta Tr) She was tho |ife of the party. about the Prince his Iffe wasn't worth talking about it. insisted upon talking about it But he had made her a mother. If he could find out that tt was the Prince who had way from the convent, all would be over but the gloating. Kassa knew there were wolves in the mountains. i anything from her. P During these trying momenta Mrs, Carter threaded o needle and aid n Then who should walk !n but the Prince B The Chancellor couldn't learn If he Mrs, Ca er was long-suffering—but Ha! ha! She drank a She arrived at th When she He had tri ed her She coul t forget Chancellor ‘The pt the one day she imagined she and depended entire! nese powers have seen better days as well +o This Item Will Interest Brooklyn. onvent | How did he know tt was his] Mrs, Carter's blood was up | toast to her wild-eyed reflection and then smashed the mirror with her wine- the storm signals were up when the curtain went down on that act. It so happened that the Chancellor had mentioned J.ady Madoes! when he was That's what started her on her long walk wrought her to the Chancellor's house reception In a torn negligee and furs, ‘0a false mar- | Monda { Watch Him Roll! tHe’s a Wonder! ing World Daily \e | Looie, the Bowler Magazine, | WE CAN ALWAYS } COUNT ON LOOIE: You KNOW WHAT 310 DO-LOOIE | Now, WATCH LOE / BYE-BYE! Ld SPLITZ Y~ WHEN ie \ LOOIE ROLLS 44 THE PILL? ‘ WELL WIN THIS, ALL } RIGHT -LOOIE'S THE KID 1 Ele aI No. Players of the Period. #& of 2, one of the best of | Sardou's “Thermtdor,” in the rupport) following being a list of parts: 1902, tion of leading of Elsie De Wolfe and Forbes Robert-/Mr. Letpsic in “Carrots” and Archt- nin London, ton, The season of 18%-03 he played the, bald Vyse in “A Country Mouse;” 1903, and, Jan. 1 E of Crayston-Leigh in “Aristoce Heath Desmond in ‘Cousin Kate;" us fa racy," continuing a second season in| 104, Col. Brinthorpe in "Sunday" and was a surgeon in this plece, being advanced to the role Torvald Helmer in “A Doll's House; ot the Marquis of Normandale. He|1908, Col. Grey In “Allce Sit-by-the- the English army, being a Scotch-| then appeared on ¢ one season as Fire,” and, 1906, the title role in "Cap- man, while Captain Heartease {n “Shenandoah,” tath Jinks, of the Horse Marines, ther was and the year played Harry Jones in ‘The Silver Box” and Sir Burgess Card," passed the season of 189-97 in the He Montague Martin tn D- the Governor.” During this same early port of Olga Nethersole, being cast for period, however, Mr. McRae also took passed amille,”’ Paul de Valreas part in a number of special produc- where u Fr ' Fei nd Thauz Uons—for Instance, he was Count de Was stationed, in “Denise,” Ranettl in ne Wife of Varville in “Camille,” with Henry later 1n Engl Scarl!" and Jaffray Ellicott in “A Miller and Margaret Anglin, at the he was sent, when a lad ten years old,| Daughter of France," after whieh he Hudson Theatre, April 18, 1904, and on |to @ military school at Roulogne: spent two seasona in the support of May 18 of the same year he was Jean |Mer, France, where he remained until] Horbert Kelcey and Effle Shannon, in the matinee of “Yvette,” at the |he Was sixteen. He then went to New! playing Hamilton Walboys in “A Coat Knickerbocker. That same summer he | Zealand and engaged {n cattle ranching, | 0f Many Colors’ and Douglas Rhodes appeared with the stock at Elitch’s jefter w having become a skilled In ‘The Moth and the Flame.” Mr. Gardens, Denver, where, supporting | surveyor, he spent fi MoRae created the role of Dr. Watson Amelia Bingham, he played Johnny | tratia, up G in "Sherlock Holmes," with Willam|‘protter in “The Climbers,” Col. de tons for pioneer settlers Gillette, the season of 1989-1000, and the yfailly in “Olympe," Jim Morely in Mr, McRae c to this country In !Wo following seasons he was leading “phe Frisky Mrs, Johnson,” and Hiram 189, and for a year was in charge of a| Man with Julia Marlowe, being Capt. |cattle ranoh at Fort Laramte, Wyo, He| Trumbull in "Barbara Frietchte” and |then came EF: ded to follow | Charles Brandon in “When Knighthood |an actor's career, he being a nephew of Was in Flower.” Jenkins {n “A Modern Magdalen.” He returned to Denver the next summer and appeared in the following roles Ralph Kirtley tn “My Wife's Husband,” : By Ferd G. Long "His Excellency | y, January } iy (ALOolE 1) A lr 20 SY George Langton in “The Manoeuvres of Jane,” Louls Armand in “Hearts Cour- ageous,” Orlando In “As You Like It,” Mark Embury in “Mice and Men,” Sir John Manners in “Dorothy Vernon, of Haddon Hall," Angel Clare in “Tess of the D'Urbervilles,” Lucentio in “The Taming of the Shrew,” Alastor In “In- gomar,” Marshal Lefebvre in “Madame |Sans Gene” and Charles Brandon In “When Kntghthood Was in Flower.” ‘In May, 1906, Mr. McRae appeared at | Wallack’s as John Russell in ‘The |Embarrassment of Riches,” and the | month following he was seen in Chi- cago as Lieut, Rafferty in “As Told In the Hills.” The season of 1907-08 Mr, McRae was first J. Madison Tate in “The Step- sister,” at the Garrick, and also played Dr. Forester Wake In the aspectal (matinee of “Dr. Wake's Patlent,” at the same theatre. In December, 1907, he Joined Mrs, Fiske's company, being John Rosmer in “Rosmersholm," and the past summer he succeeded Kyrle Bellew as Richard Voysin in “The |'Thief," with Margaret Illington. This | season finds his return to Ethel Barry- more's support, and he ts now playing |Paradine Fouldes in "Lady Frederick.’ 28.—Bruce McRae. By Johnson Briscoe of} (Copyright, 1908, by Harper & Broa) post, falls irl frontier trading beautiful Alluna, Gal Burrell Necia become engaged, dread of marrying a half-breed. by ‘two ‘ark and Runnion. a man kon professional Gale for the «i (th ‘accompanied mn” named i to the scane and hie friends, are wn claims on onp sain eo has eme by staking Gale t but falls: CHAPTER IX. The Awakening. was out. Ever since the day she questioned him about Burrell this with the girl, and when he asked this morning about the reports c cerning Lee's strike she told him of trip and ull that had occurred. “You see, I'm a mine owner no’ concluded. “If it hadn't been a cret I would have told you befor ‘Went so you could have been one of first.” "I'm goin’ anyhow," he said, “if ‘Aeatenens Will int me ond uf ive « The GYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Liout. Burrell, stationed at Flambeau, « fo love with! he observed, gazing at her shrewdly. (who passes as| supposed you went with your father.” the post trader, and | nd serie ra: Spoteon | those hours passed alone with Meade, Doret, Gale's young French partner, secretly | While her eyes shone and her cheeks loves Necta. Leo, a miner, discovers a rich | glowed. and Burrell go there | jt bore out a theory he had formed dur | {ng the past month, so, as he lingered, | fold district. i head 4 stake out three tiene for the Rit,” Gale, Volcon and. Lew aw decision robs Necia just staked out ries Hearing that roof, the trader arms him- Thomas came Into the store and Es. the next morning Corporal found Necta tending it while Gale had old man had taken every occasion to talk her ‘on- her 7," fe- er the the net Barri | Then she told him of the trail by Black Bear Creek which would save him several hours. “So that's how you and he made it?" I “Oh, no! We beat him tn," ehe said, | and fell to musing at the memory of The Corporal saw the look, and [he set about a task that had lain in his | mind for some time, Asa rule he was not A careful man In his speech, and the delicacy of this manoeuvre taxed his in- genulty to the utmost, for he loved the girl and feared to say too much. “The Lieutenant {a a smart young fel- low," ho began; “and it was slick work Jumpin’ all those claims, It’s just like him to befriend a girl like you- I've seen him do It before''- “What!” exclaimed Necla, other girls?" “Or things Just like ft. “befriend He's always “This couldn't cause him trouble, could {t, outside of Stark's and Run- nion’s grudge?” “No, I reckon not,” assented the Cor- poral, groping blindly for some way of expressing what he wished to say. “Except, of course, {t might cause a lot of talk at headquarters when it's known what he's done for you and how he done {t. I heard something about It down the street this morning, so I'm afraid {t will get to St. Michael's, and then to his folks." He realized that he was not getting on well, for the task was harder than-he had imagined. “2 don't er & doing favors that get him Intu trouble.” | Sir Wyndham, by the bye,| He then became principal support/David Garrick in “Pretty Pex: Barly in the summer of 1894 Mr. Mc- Over 400,000 rubber trees have been planted on the Hawallan Islands, the experi- | maki: debut Oct. 21, at Proc-| with Ethel Barrymore, a position he Bertte in “The Henrietta,” Jack Bige- Rae marrled Miss Nellle Wilson, proving so successful as to make a thriving Industry certain, [tor's Twenty-third Street Theatre tn/held for five consecutive geasons, the low in “A Japanese NightIngale,” | Staten Island, a non-professtonal. N9O040 449984 2OH9SDDDOPIDODOIDD DES BHD PEDODLGODOOOH 19009040.64-4-4.0-0O00-06-4069914990004000 OOOOH D1HOOGO0 © In the Frozen Klondike @ Author of o@ “The 1 "He hasn't done anything that any,men like father and Poleon and the/too, good family and all that, and, man wouldn't do under the eame cir! priests at the Mission, who treat me what's more, a captain at twenty-five. cumstances." ‘Just like one of themselves “No man's got a right to make folks body will want to marry me some day,| to a squaw, or leastways he had been, talk about a nice gril," sald the Cor- I suppose, so I ougnt to know what {s/ but In them days nobody thought much poral; “and the feller that told me) wrong with me.” She flushed up dark- of It, any more than they do up here about It dhe reckoned you two was|ly under her brown cheeks, ‘now, and particularly because he'd had In love.” He hurried along now with+|} he feeling cime over Corporg! ® Government contract for a long while, Aa chance to speak.|Thomas that he had hurt a helpless/ fan & big gang of men and critters, and had made a lot of money. Likewise he had a girl, who lived at the fort and was mighty nice to look at and restful to the “after a year or 80 of cactus had to be caught Up! antmal of some gentle kind; that he quick; you're too fine a girl for that.” | woe bungling his and tuat he “Too fine?” Necta laughed. | was not of the calibre to go into the “L mean you're too fine and good to! amenities. He began to perspire worn social let him put you in wrong, just as he's! uncomfortably, but went on, doggedly; (ees and mesquite and buftato grass. too fine a fellow and got too much| «pm goin’ to tell you a story, not be-| “She was twice as nice and twice as ahead of him to make what his people! cause it applies to Lieut, Burrell, or be-| Pretty as the women at the post, and would call a messy alliance." cause he's in love with you, which of|#8 for money—well, her dad could have | i ( bought and sold all the officers in a | “Would his people object to—to such! course he ain't any more than you 1 their wives looked down on her, and she didn't mix with them none whatever. To make It short, the captain married her, Seemed like he got disregardful of everything, She'd been courted by every single man for |four hundred miles around, She was pretty and full of fire, and t was both of an age to love hard, so Jef ferson swore he'd make the other women lump; but they a thing?” questioned the girl, ‘They | with him'— p; but were alone In the store and so they| “Of course,” sald the girl could talk freely. “I'm Just supposing,| aut just to show you what Imean | you know." Tt was a good long spell ago, wh | “Oh, Lord! Would they object?! was at Fort Supply, which was | Corporal Thomas laughed !n a highly) frontier in them days lke this ts now | artificial manner that made Necia bridle| We freighted in trom Dodge City with and draw herself up indignantly. | bull teams, and it was sure the fringe | “Why should they, I'd lke to know?) of the fron no women, no foclety I'm Just as pretty as other girls, an I i nothin’ much except a fort, a lot of| take her; but soldierin’ is a heap dif ‘I'm Just as good. I w just as much! qnjune, and a few officials with thelr! ferent from any other profession, and as they do, too, except—about certain) wives and families ow, them kind the army has got {ts own traditions. T! | things.” | of places {s all right for married men, | pinn wouldn't work. By and by the “You are sure all of that and more,/but they're tough sleddin’ for single | captain got tired of trying and gave up | too," the Corporal declared heartily,/ ones, and after a while a feller gets! the attempt—just devoted himself to her “but If you knowe about things|awful careless about himself; he seems| and then we was transferred, all but euiaidenyouldiund why It aln't) to go backward and run down mighty | nim possible. I can't tell you without| quick when he gets away from civiliza-| “Woe shifted to @ better post, but hurtin’ your feelings and I Ile you too| tion and his people and restaura and | Capt. Jefferson was changed to another much for that, Miss Necia. Seems as| such things; he gets plumb reckless and company and had to stay at Supply {f I'm almost a daddy to you and I've| forgetful of what's what, Gee! {t was a rotten hole! Influence only knowed you for a few weeks"— | “Well, there was a captain with us, a had been used, and there he stuck, while the new officers cut him out com- pi "Go ahead and tel offended," insisted muet, I don’t know much about such! gorthigh-tempered and ehivalrous and I wae told, and it dritted on that way me; I won't be| young fell the girl. that looked Iike the Ileu- “You tenant here, and a good deal the s " gal Meola, chings, for I've lived all my lige with! all that sort of thing; @ Weat Pointer, Yor a long time, im forever maxin'’ By Rex Beach, But some-| Now, our head freighter was married, ately, just like the others had done, so | Spoilers.’’ ane an uphill fight to get his wife reco'nized and always quittin' loser. His folk | back Hast was scandalized and froze | him cold, callin’ him a squaw-man; and the story went all through the army, tl his brother officers had to treat him cold {n order to keep enough warmth | at home to live by, ona thing leading to! another till he finally resented it openly. After that he didn’t last long, They | made {t so unpleasant that he quit the service—crowded him out, that's all He was a born soldier, too, and didn't know nothings else nor care for nothing | else, as fine a man as I aver served under, but it soured him so that a rat-| tlesnake couldn't have lived with him. “He tried to go into some kind of} business after he quit the army, but he wasn't cut out for It, and never made good as long as I knew of him. The last time [ seen him was down on the border, and he hed sure grown cultus He had quit the squaw, who was livin’ with a greaser in Tucson"— “And do you think ['m Ike woman?” sald Necla, in a queer, Strained voice. 6 had listened in- ently to the ral's story, but he had purposely avoided her eyes and could not tell how she was taking It that ! You're different, but the a y {s just the same. I told you this to show you how It !a out in the States It don't a y to you, of course’ —— “ot course!” agreed Necia again, “BR what would happen to L Burrell (/ rtf—well, should do something like that? There are many half-breed girls I dare say, ike this other girl, or—like f | She did not flush now as before; in- ad, her cheeks were pale (To Be Centinued) ' | naturally warlike. I 25, 1909. (OOOO 00000000000 000000000009 0000000GQ00 000000000000) : Work Tog By John K SMALL discord will some- times ruln @ large symphony, Even Nature's harmonies are often Interrupted by dis cords, Engulfing tidal waves, volcanoes which in a night convert busy towns into allent sepulchres, earthquakes which swallow whole islands and destroy cities and tor- nadoes which leave death and desola- tion In thetr wake are the dlscords that disrupt the harmony of nature. A discord is anything that disturds the tranquil trend of things, No matter how crude or how savage & people may be if left to themselves they exist with a eertain degree of harmony, This {8 one of the selfish re- quirements of self-preservation, It Is not necessarily a matter of ethios, At war with other tribes, even at war with nature, the savage, nevertheless, lives tn rude harmony with hie own people. War is the great dlecordant note of etvillzation, The savage and the barbarian are Susplcous of his nelghbors and jealous of his rights, the savage naturally re- sorts to hls tomahawk or his Javelin, Among enlightened nations two thou- sand years of Christan clvillzation should have made war {mpossible. As long as wars exist the symphony of civilization 1s incomplete. Christianity Itself was a discord, Attuned to a divine key, {t cam protest against prevailing condition: All great souls have been discords, out of harmony tolth existing ideas, Nothing !s wholly negative. “The carrion in the sun will convert Itself to grass,’ says Emerson, Life’s Discords Often : D00000000000000000000000000000000000000 @ @ ether for Good’ . Le Baron SOOO Os OO COOOOOms Bearing out the not altogether philo- sophical theory that there is good in everything, even discords have their Bradlaugh was the most he- rolc discord that ever shook up the dry bones of the British Parliament. Bradlaugh was execrated—then ad-_ mitted—then admired. 1 History wi record his name with, those of Oromacell, Bright and Oobd- den—all dtacords. But In chorus they composi harmony. Pope touches the vital chord; “All Giscord, harmony not understood; all partial evil, universal good.” i] John Brown was a discord, He struck @ false note in 186—« note, however, that swelled {nto the war cry | of the Rebellion. The echo of the gun that fired on Sumter waa a discord—a discord that awoke the loyalty of every North erner. The destruction of the Maine sounded a note that meant the humiliation of Spain, In the archives of Madrid that te re corded as one of the countless discords in the story of that nation’s suicide. Discords are often boomerang Yet it must be remembered that noth- Ing 1s wholly negative, and that dis- cord {8 often ‘harmony not under- stood." ae eet Ralls and Speed. O @ iwo-rall Ino {t Is Impossible & great to prevent derailment of traing occasionally, On the mono-rail derailment !s impossible, even at hun- dred-mile speeds. = (Copyri@hted by (Copyri My “Cycle of Readings.” By Count Tolstoy. ~~ Translated by Herman Bernstein.~~ The Stallcized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's original comments on the subject. the Press Publishing Company, the New ‘ork World, 1908.) Ighted by Herman Bernsteln.) 9 Seeking the Truth. it, for this road fs within man himself, and but few ARROW Is the road leading to life, Malory. T {8 not given to people to know whtther mankind ts going. The highest tolsdom consists in your know- | ing whither you are to go. And ths you should know—go toward God, to. the height of perfectton. The majority are seeking ways for others, and therefore they do not find for them: JAN. 25. ea the ways of life,—Lucy and only a few find served Him; these people are senal Ts: are but three categories of people: One category discovered God and ble afid happy. The second category did not find God and are not looking for Him; these people are foolish and un- happy. The third category has not found Him, but is seeking Him; these people are sensible, but as yet unhappy.—Blaise Pascal. W T HERE the quest after truth begins there life always begin the quest after truth ends life also ends—John Ruskin. Re aaannanenenameel @ all things {n God, to make of our life a movement toward the deal, to live with gratitude, concentration, humility and courage—the: the wonderful viewpoint of Marcus Aurelius, as soon as © constitute What bad Christianity 1s that which detracts wisdom and gets along without ét! In all events, I prefer the wisdom that contents itself with the Ki wisdom which recognizes it only beyond The symptom of a false religious life to discriminate between a holy man and Ingdom of Heaven on earth only to the the grave. 4s to put off life to some other time and @ virtuous man.—Amiel. eee has found the truth he ts a fool.—Pe an Proverb. T™ man who {s aceking the truth may be called wise, but {f he thinks he See ee aaeatennel [ 1s not the place we occupy that !s important, but the direction in which we move.—Holmes, eee O general aims should determine your activity; the designation of your life, which is the same mankind, should determine tt, as the designation of the life of all * Infant's Long or Short One-Plece Kimo! 6228, How CaM or send by mail to to TON FASHION BURBAU, N Obtatn $ York, Sand 10 cents in coin or stanyps for ¢ ‘These { IMPORTANT-—Write Patterns. ways epecity size wanted May Manton’s Daily Fashions, IMONOS hi Just as much in demand for the tiny infants as they are for the’ mammas, They are 80 easy to slip on and off and they mean such perfect comfort that baby is made happy while his mother is saved much difil- culty. 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