The evening world. Newspaper, February 17, 1909, Page 15

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f The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, DODIDOHDODAVOGS! and It Goes in By Robert Rudd Whiting. , 7; ONE of this mental currant N Dusiness for mine,” sald the Boss Plumber decidedly, "Stl, 1 don't know as I] really ought to! haveany kick com ing. It brought | me a nice, fat job last week, “Queer over in Not quite queer enough to be a college — professor or in an asylum, but goes in for suggestion, mental old guy Jers telepathy, psy gry st i and all that sort of stuff, He told me A lot about this suggestion bug while I was on the job over there. “It seems that he'd got worrying over the cost of er d wood, and got the huneh that if he could once get his mind really convinced of the fact that {t was nice and warm when the ther- mometer was down helow freezing It might heip out “He got an artist friend to paint t portrait of I ona back drop the fireplace trate Say, it worked fine rot his mind set on to use any wood 1 and hung It up in just to help im coneen- When he really he didn't bh Ul, and he only 1 as much coal In had to burn one-th the cellar furnace. fine and dandy, But the trouble they « is that well enoug! with those never know when to le alone. Nothing would do but what he had to figure out some sort of a scher whereby he could heat the whole e thoug! ‘d hit upon it “Finally COODEMAANANAGNG Can This Be True? It's Just as the Plumber Told It ee OS ————e The Jollys Bull Pup v w Sy i. Coultaus WHATS THAT Pup AFTER S & a | @ D, pj x Q O D for Mental Stunts a back drop it of a] a sheet in place moving pict hung 1 threw son roaring wood blaze. “Wor the first few days he kept a little fire going in the furnace just to| help out in case something should dis- mind, but when he and got that hot stuff Imagi- hls really working on it, he heat the vle blooming by sug: gained r was house from cellar to gestion “Why, son mes when his brain was] fresh and he hadn't anything else to worry him, he used to have to take up the evening per and read the Presi- dent's message to Congress for that day just to take his mind off the fire and the house a ehance to cool off. : — "t HELP "One evening angold friend he hac . seen for thirteen Years dropped in, or ITS RUNNING UP awh seemed almost frozen and} C ME FOOT, OH!OH ti BEING HELD, nplained that the house was lke an! OX. But Just as soon as the old] ad shot a littl he n into him by mental tel began to thaw out and get “Well, they were sitting of the roaring moving pictu over old college days (don't y CA comfortable, there in front talking 1 remem- ber the time, dim, the chapel belfry? without thinking th e you put the cow In When the visitor | ew a lighted mateh he firep! Ay, a moment later the sheet was| and—made it doubly warm, you should think? Not on your life! When that poor old codger saw his pet mind-contentrator all ablaze his one best thought was that warm | firs was going up in flames, The very! suggestion of {t caused a 60-degree drop} in the temperature and the bursting of frozen water pipes throughout the house sounded as 4. somebody was Setting off firecrackers, King’s size, all in a bunch “That's how I happened to be called nto blaze, ablaze A Remarkable Cas BEGAN after the usu: “T have a little boy at Fat Foods an e bought a moving + in ESA OUE RU BaD es Barreancees —_ home By Dr. L. F. Bryson, lecturer, “is a fine spectmen of ees Rcnaens Meneceeoneneeen. who"— ; the wonderful animal known as the ar-| Drow 00990 oe v doe They interrupted him after much the| @s~ madiilo. T call your attention particu- ® ‘ Cg OEE a CoM | T is impossible to say what will please in the way of fat food, The|!arly to tts hard, horny epldermis, or | 3 P | a @ f S 0 t @ (4 tf 1 0 | _ “Pardon me, old man. T must be going only way Is to experiment, feeling sure that the right thing will |More properly Its shell, which la bnvul- °3 }Jalong. Sorry I can't wait, but I'm due] eventually appear. When commonplace fat offends, something new [nerable, ‘The armadillo, when pursued > $5 the omMse and strange will often Inspire respect and be recelved with delight. /PY an enemy, Immediately doubles Just a minute,” he urged, button ail dvan Wrath racornw xi lau(ieValiel Paetiasldeinererimal an lene Marella Cen UPD NCOMUIOMfarmNOtmagpertoct No. 31.—Maxine Elliott. | LIIOTT, who recently! name being Jes Dermot, daughter of 1 as Dermott, a cay part of her early girlhood In a voy- age to South Am- and Spain, erica, previous to which, = ywever, she co! MANINE ELLI pleted her school days at the Notre Dame Academy Roxbury, Mass. Upon her resalve to fol low a stage career she came to New York {n 18%, and made her debut at Palmer's Theatre on Nov. 10 in the support of E. 8. Willard, this also being the occasion of this actor's first appearance before an American audience. Miss Elliott's first | part was Fellcla Umfraville in "The Middleman,” and among her other roles {n the Willard repertoire were Virginia | Fleetwood in ‘John Needham's Double,” | Mary In “Ol Soldiers," Beatrice Sel- wyn In "A Fool's Paradise,” Lady Eve | arby In “Judah” and Lady Gilding | {n The Profes After three se support, Miss Elliott spent practically An entire season at the American Thea- or's Love Story." ) tre, where on Sept 1993, Violet Wi phe Prodigal Daughter,’ she was Cora, fn 'The Voyage of May M4, 184, she was Kate Malcolm, in "Sister Mary." In the fall of ISM she Btarted out as leading woman with Rose Suzette,” and on Coghlan, being cast for the following parts; Dora, in “Diplomacy,' Mrs, Al- lenby, In “A Woman of No Import- ance;" Grace Harkaway, in “London Assurance; the Bar do la Bru-| yere, In “To Nemesis," and Alice Var- ney, in “Forget-Me-Not.” After half a Pa tt tain, she passed | Ba p Willard’s | with this organization just exactly a} ned an ein the The Heart | e Orient Ex- | Gentle- | | | holing the two nearest. me a minute,”” They s shed and resig “AIL want to say," he went on, “is that I have a little boy at home who fa bright thing in his life.” ‘asped his hands with a thank- s that could find no expression tn words, anu then he added jae “He's too small, He can't talk yet.” |W cryin Tt won't take! made suet pudding invaluable amount of experle following roles: Omaya, In of Ruby,” Katrina, in * press; Sylvia, in "The Two men of Verona,” Oriana Danger “Nancy and Co.;" Alma Brinton, in "A Bundle of Lies; Volante, tn "The ymoon," Hermia, in ‘A Midsum- ghi’s Dream; Seba Barth, in] ¢ t of Le Olivia, al year, du ed themselves equal parts of sugar and mel a general favorite among child do harm. E whole light! butter, in| seasoned with n The ‘Twelfth ght,” and the Widow Stey- enson, in “The Two Escutcheons,” cer- tainly a year's brilliant record, went to London with this company In 18%, making her debut at Daly's Thea- tre, 2, in “The Two Gentlemen of Verona,” appearing the week follow- ing in “A Midsurnmer Night's Dream.” | [ogeq DERE Miss Elitott, in'the spring of 159, was| | gnootin seen at the Fifth’ Aveque Theatre as} Eleanor Cuthbert in "A House of Cards," and that summer she went to n Francisco and shared with Blanche | s the leading roles with the Fraw- Stock Company. It was during this | engagement that she met Nat C. Good- | win, who was embarking upon an Aus- | tralian tour, and he promptly engaged | her as his principal support In the antip- odes, The Goodwin-Elllott combination lasted until the spring of 1903, during | which time she played the following parts; Margaret Ruthven in “A Gilded | Fool” and Kate Vernon in “In Mis- soura,’ 1896, Beatri: ‘arew in “An f ' OOK wat American Citizen,” 1877; Alice Adams TN ALL MY LIFE Me ehpots in "Nathan 7 INS; Mrs. Weston in USE NEBBER SHOT " y out ‘0B YO “The Cowboy and the Lady," 18%; Phyl- | ? POCKET PARSON lis Erlegon In “When We Were Twenty- | one,” 140; Portia In “The Merchant of Ver 1901, and Sally Sartoris in “The Altar of Friendship,"* 1902. ‘The season of 198-'4 Miss Elliott made her debut as a star in “Her Own Way," which lasted her two seasons, and then came an equal length of time tn "Her Great Match.” She began the season of 197-08 In “Under the Greenwood Tree,” afterward producing ''Myself— Bettina” on tour, She began the pres- | ent season In the latter piece, and Dec 30, 148, she opened Maxine Hillott’s The- atre in "The Chaperon,” being the head and moving spirit of the new play- house which bears her name, Beason in the ¢ an surroundings, Miss Elliott join AL stin Dal; Company on Jan. 15, 189%, remaining @ % Love aad Hypnotisin (Copyright, 1908, by Augustus Thomas.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECDDING INSTALMENT. Jack Brookfield, a Loutavilie, Ky. bier, gives a Lox’ party at the’ opera, HI ests, are his sister, Mrs, Campbell, an Viola, his former sweetheart nd her son Clay (who loves jer daughter Viola) and Frank Hardmuth, @ local lawyer, | ardmuth proposes to Viola’ and 1s snubbed, rookfield becomes aware of a subtle power ¢ possesses whereby he can Influence the gaze of rs. He sees and Is strangely in ferested In Justice Prentice, who ts a trans alent vieltor In Loutsville, A supper at Brook- field's house follows the opera, Lew Billing ‘an old man-about-town, {8 one of the guests. He goes to the dining-room ahead of the ren to ask the colored butler Harvey for a drink. CHAPTER II. (Continued,) A Supper Party. | | HETHER It was the recollection | W of this permanent and enforced | separation or his fallure to take! the glass of water Harvey handed him,| there came Into Eliinger's eyes a gentle moisture, He removed it with a need- fessly sheer handkerchief which he} icund fn his left cuff after a fluttering fearch elsewhere. Ellinger heard himself inquired for | in the next room. There was the hum) of women's voices mingling with the | deeper tones of the men, and he had} just time to meet the party at the door- | way. With a facile mendacity that de-| ceived nobody, Lew sald: | 6 inspected everything, Jack, and | {t's perfect. Ladies, we are to be con- gratulated. “What a beautiful room!" Helen ex- elaimed, as they entered the dining- room, Brookfield deferred the «mpiiment to er sen. Yours’ euciaimed, 8 Rule This Romance Wd resssesaes ails sluts Gicksiei CODODODIOGOOODOSHOHOIDSGOOOEHOYS GIOTTO OTCOODOCTOIOODGOOIO to charm when less humble fare is declined, n, Given at the 1al parts of chopped fat meat, lean meat, and bread crumbs, the pepper and salt make an agreeable filling for sandwiches that are often acceptable to those|hynchus, the missing link between the o insist that they do not like fat,—Harper's Bazar. PUPPY UGHT A MOUSE OuT In JHE HALL d Their Uses. Toast and dripping ts a combination that has been known Toffee, which is a combination of a highly nutritious substance that is end of a meal, it can seldom and a dash of powdered sugar, Roe eno eee Pahson Johnson 4°? te Dosw’ Nevan Gamble 8 (ft BS AMOuSE, OH! OH! WHERE = Do 11 BE OH! GOLLY; WONT You GET 17, FOR THIS Wonders of Science. N THIS compartment, ladies and sald the dime museum |sphere, every square inch of which Is protected by ladies and nts, it was used by the prehistoric progenitor of our race, in playing the game of base- ball. Pass on now to the next cage, | which contains the celebrated ornithor- cave man, 6 | bird and the beast.”—Chicago Tribune, re By John Falconer GO WAY PARSON 15 DAT DE e Witching Hour | (3. From a T Great Play “There's one somewhat like {t In a | which his thumb picked out the points. , bachelor's lfe.” chateau in Tours,” the boy confessed;| Assume that I'm standing at twelve ‘He means one of the tragedie ‘it's pretty hard, mother, to be entirely | o'clock, Clay will sit eight minutes to Ellinger stage whispered to Helen, in original.” Then Jack came to his as-|my right, you will be two minutes of mock consolation, sistance. two, dear Alice, and Mr. Ellinger will, “Exactly,” added Hardmuth, from Clay's problem here was to follow | be three-three. Helen, will you take that her left. ‘That tragedy pose of Mr. his Touraine model, without the height |chair near five o'clock? Mr. Hardmuth Brookfleld's 1s what men in my busi- of the original, and not have the room will sit at seven, and that leaves Viola’ ness call an ‘allbi.’” seem squat. I think he answered tt by! between Mr, Hardmuth and Clay, at) “And may I ask, Mr. Hardmuth, what the refinement and number of the cross- | about two minutes of nine.” men in your business do?” beams; but however he did ft he an-| “Well, what do you think of that?’! ‘Men in his business are the awful swered {t satisfactorily, and that's suf-|Ellinger beamed, {n mediocre admira- prosecuting attorneys of this country,” clent success for a brotler,” iti, CORO Ga 1 ; ‘ h und his chalr between the | Ellinge: ts iz Hardmuth's) laugh, which he offeredltwo older women, ‘fan't that Just like| wee ee ee $ A recognition of Jack's pleasantry, | nim?" | “You sea the beauty of my method, was a too rasping enforcement of it, | Mrs. Whipple," Jack remarked, sagely. | Helen remembered that {t was. “As like him as two peas,” Ellinger rambled on, {nconsequently. “Jack turns overything {nto a diagram. I saw him draw an after-dinner speech once on a table-cloth. Yes, sir—draw| |it, and {t was a blamed good speech— but to look at !t—reminded me of a| dog's pedigros exactly.” Helen would haye understood the dia- | eram quite as clearly as she understood | w's almiles, but she recalled without | sistance that sculptor-like quality tn Jack of mentally seeing all things,| ltanglble or Intangible, in geometrio | at | plan, “I think {t's gumbo," Eliinger whia- “This affectation of density concern: | pered to Helen—"chicken gumbo strained ing the place of honor doesn’t decetve | —this old darky beats the worl ‘Seating you between Mr, Hardmuth and a questionable person lke Mr. Bl- Inger 13 what I call ‘tempering justice with mercy.’ “Do you understand what they're talk- {ng about?" Viola's mother asked, elplessiy. “I try not to," Helen answered, smil- | ing at Jack's metaphor, “Here's something, my dear a! really addressed to compr sion." And Brooktiold Indicated the cup Harvey had Just put on Mrs, Campbell's and turned an Intended compliment Into seeming critleism. Clay frowned petu- lantly, but Brookfleld, with a counter- polnting tact which was a marked pos- session of his, continued: “And I'm goink to put the distin- guished architect on my right.” “Not Helen?” his aister inquired, "I want Helen where I can look at her,” And Brookfield cast an explana- tory glance toward the voy thet would have revealed the situation to a mother much less fintultive than Helen Whip- ple, who already divincd the rivalry between Hardmuth and her son, and was grateful for Jack's sympathy. “We're seven, aren't we?" Jack hur- ried on. ter, “Wo-are—aeven,”” Lew recited, {nj you and me, Miss Viola, does ft?) Just enough of everything—taste labored repetition, with mildly literary | Hardmuth asked, as they sat down. | Notice how you get the chicken and t enjoyment of posatble quotation, Wo know It's to the right of the) celery and the pepper the gumbo “And seven Into sixty goes elght times lady.” and the aait and the consomme, each and a half,” Brookfield sald, indicating | ‘Uncle Jack selected Mra. Whipple| one answerin’ like a ull in a Bible the lady to ait opposite him, and/|class—ain’t {: pe 2" Mr, Ellinger's at her right,” she re- Elling volce seemed to ft In with Into sixty?’ Mra, Campbell asked, | piled. the half-light of the room, the old finish Bhe always needed a guidebook when| ‘There's no lady opposite me, Viola,"| of the furniture and the ivory tint of conversing with her brother, who was|her uncle corrected; “our disposition of| the dollies, It was the voice of @ vin- wont te teane her, Ignoring her quee | seven leaves that @ vacant epot, as you|tage—a voice that could have Issued Mon, be Gxed ble look om the Gal ever eee, i: symbolises ihe Of a only from that genial, ruddy face whose J the outline of the round table as he| drew out his watch, 1010000000100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000) By Augustus Thomas COTDOOSO: '00.000.00.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000070 permeating good-nature was the com- pensation and perhaps the product of ita dulness, Helen remembered Lew Ellinger {n his early forties, more than twenty years before, when the hair, now white, car- ried only a tinge of gray at the tem- jPles and the short mustache was black. |She remembered his clothes. t had been an epoch of wide brald and silk facings In men's wardrobes. She re- membered being told that it was a point of pride with Lew never to be | Seen without a fresh pink tn his button- hole, He was wearing a pink to-night. The voice had been mellow fn those days. It was now almost demoralizing |in {ts suggestion of creature comforts, Jin its mutfed, o!ly and smoky famil- larity. | Helen recalled Ellinger's reputation jof that olden time—‘a perfect gentle- man, rellably punctillous in all ctrcum- stances as long as a lady did not | forget herself"—despite which reassure- |ment from the passing blographer |grandma had not permitted mother to go driving with Mr. Ellinger, And here |he was to-night, smiling to Helen her- self in quite disappointing harmiess- ness, his glowing face with keen lit- tle eyes of blue presenting all the colors of an American fag Through the mist attention Helen laid hold again o: —And then he varnishes the Inside of the tomato with hot paraffin, lets it jcool, and puts the am and the | muskmelon Inside of Ellinger was | saying | Was he still talking of Harvey? | “And how long have you known him, Mr. Ellinger?’ Helen reconnoitred ' ewhy, be cooked for Jack's father,” of her wandering s voice and t, Mind vs. Crime One Man’s Power Harvey, of course, “Doesn't it seem good to you, Whipple, to get back to Kentucky some real cooking?’ “It's wonderfully restful to be in the old home again.” “But the cooking “Philadelphia h field.” “I Know tt," Ellinger admitted, ‘1 remember eating my first oyster crabs |Newbuig In a little red brick hotel—the old Belleville.” “Bellevue,” Helen corrected. “I meant Bellevue." Lew's memory led him to revel in the | description of a menu, this tlme the one |that had framed the hallowed baby crabs. A term of jcaught the ea " Ellinger pleaded. some pride in that clal succulent stress of Mrs, Campbell, Lew's other neighbor, and drew from her an ‘inquiry. Mrs. Campbell's sympathy with gastronomle tastes of the old sport Was less feigned than Helen's, and Lew ved ag y of @ connoisseur ey the et he spread vanished room Ir of terrapin and the lusetous though n that was an nt little shivers a's 9 Bllinger, tem ped of speech, pointed to ace, tensely awry in mimetic plation of his own, and the gen gh released her from her auto- | hypnosis. 3 (To Bo Continued) ~~ x February 17, its armor, in which shape, | And once more) 1909. oe. § of a Married Man By Clarence L. Cullen. OOOO the O matter how} No man ever kic gnin about y N thomug h ly [high-heeled shoes his wife wears atter 4 awomanthoe bas seen her try on a pair of #o- may have reduced | termed 'common- 1 shoes, her husband to} What's th act percentage of ubjection, she iid start for the theatre hates to have It belts or with thelr plack- i ets unhooked If their husbands weren't sald of her that, ‘ahe wears’ the’—er-wellh that sho|o” the Job to remind them of) these weara ‘em. If the suffragists ever should win can't you see those “Votes for Wom badges changed to read, “Gloats for | Women.” Yes, Vasht!, women are great d ers of and boosters for thelr sex, That's the reason why so many of them are eA, ie Mowiiendliginnaesloticnalaatcut walls” to kidnap Helen of Troy if he toa Jatled wife-beater In St. Louts had ever seen her take a cold pork One reason why some women are so chop out of the ice box and cat it fond of the moving picture shows is }while holding it in her hands? that amid the encircling gloaming | Would Romeo have risked banishment, a ‘the booby hatch and the demnition bows they have a chance to get at and use Vo. in’ general for Juliet had he ever the powder rag, which is kept nert\canght her vaselining her nose for & the bank roll. (You have two guessas jcoldsin the head? as to where that is.) A woman whose husband {s niggardly | with his compliments would rather have nim say, “You are looking mighty at- tractive to-night, my dear,” than to have lim give her a $j note—nearly. ld Mare Antony, for love of have bid ome in Tiber melt ide arch of the rang’d Em- Cleopatra had been fn the fall” | pire habit of harping upon the minute de- tails of her indigestion? Would Paris have “scaled Hium's lowers A sculptor of our acquaintar is engaged upon a statuette (a nude) to be called “Hate,” frequently plays poker e, who. in a woman's game. He 8 sgydying the | \When, upon coming home pretty late, facial expressions of the women who | you stake your wife to an unusually af- lose when they are looking at the {¢ she 1s lable to sus » doing it to atone to ind to her for the guilt of a nd soul women who win. ' You don't need to keep a parrot In the | ) ourself | flat when your wife, who ts studying | Sin-subiner French, learns how to say “tres bien” | Familiar quotation (usually accom~ Jand “towoura’ and ‘volla” and a few | panied by obligato of sobs); “Well, when Jilttie things Ike those. |P'm dead and gone you'll"~&e., &e. One of the adduced why a Some women are so sensitive about Minneapolis woman 1s suing her hus-| their age that they won't even ac+ band for a separation {s that, instead Of | gnowdedge that they remember the See Hie ae Br ae antique period (fully ten years ago) “pecline and Fall of the Roman Em-| then the ser abandoned round gar- pire.” Aonther re- | ters for hose supporters. vealed In his sin! When a man hears a woman say (as a If consistency's a jewel and all like | good many of them do say), “Sakes that, why {8 it that a0 many women |allve, but If T were only a man wouldn't Leas By : _,.|L know how to go about ft to have fun, anti-vivisectionists wear dead birds | though, he just wonders and wonders on their hats? |and wonders what she can mean, reasons abysmal brute My “Cycle of Readings,” By Count Tolstoy. —— Translated by Herman Bernstein, —= (Copyrighted by the Press Publishing Company, the New York World, 1908.) (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) The italicized paragraphs are (Count Tolstoy's original comments on the subject. Effort. OOD life may be attained only through close ap- plication and constant effort. FEB. 1 Th lent take it by force,—St, Matthew, xi, 12, weer J* as much power is necessary for a consequential ful- e T* kingdom of Heaven euffereth violence, and the vio- filment of small duties as for an heroic act.—Rousseau, ~—eeeeeeee HE man who, while walking along @ difficult road, !s doubting whether he ale will be able to continue to go to his destination {s like the man who knows whore virtue {s and yet doubts its truthfulness, He cannot follow along the road of virtue because he doubts. Doubts will exist as long as we Live in this world, but we should strive along the road of virtue like # man who sees on his way @ path along an abyss and he follows {t.—-Chinese Buddhism. ee A BK and {t shall be given you, seek and ye shall find, knock and ¢ shall be opened unto you For every one that asketh recelveth, and he that seeketh findeth, and te him that knocketh {t shall be opened.—St, Matthew, vil., 7-8 ee RY to lead the Hfe most conformable to virtue, sald Pythagoras. It maybe the most difficult, but as you grow accustomed to it it dew comes the most joyous. CCC N order not to spill « full vessel it {a necessary to hold #t straight. In order thag ‘fa blade shall be sharp it is necessary to sharpen 1t,—Lao-Tse, mee F you would have diss perform the will of God. You can fulfil the wit® of God only by making an effort. Effort is rewarded not only by joyous; Ufe, but the very effort makes you realize that you are participating im the work of God. aa ale i | May Manton’s Daily Fashions. | Mier ennai liked by the young girls. They ar@ sultable, and the sug gestion of the military t preclated. This pattern, can be made with the high neck and collar illustrated or can he o form a V-shaped In the case it 1s designed to be closed with buttons loops, but when made In the more oe- always sure to be ap~ | latter and vere manner the edges are brought and held tn hooks and eyes. of braid ts appro- | together bly by Trim- min pri but not obliga- tory. The coat ts well adapted to the sult aad to the general wrap, The quantity of ma- terial required for tha | lé-year size {3 41-3 yards 7, 28-3 yards /4 82 mehes yards «ft Pattern No. 6254 ty Misses’ Military Coat—Pattern No 6254 Wa | Z ma enn THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- Call or send by mail | ar TON FASHION B ‘o, 182 East Twenty-third stre New |} optata $ York, Send 10 n or stamps for each pattern ordered. These IMPORTANT— sur name and address plainly, and ale Patterns, ¢ Ways specify size wanted ?

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