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4 ; for Shal Da riton. ady to see that he has a we St ands Cir artes 1 by sudden valiant Mantel! a maneger that still stands for Shot “T've always been a Shakespearian crank ed when asked what he had to say for himself, “When | was a boy my father bought me for all the Booth performance I got theatre-mad and toon found ‘elf running wild on the Bowery t rakespeare murdered. Nothing 1 be bad so long as it was S I] swallowed tragedy whole in fe days. It was by that juvenile experience that I got my taste for His {nterest still seemed to be as you red {teelf at a rakish angle to his smoul teparing my entire managerial career, Veen to produce Shakespeare. But American theatrical the only he cor the boyish brown hat that g cigar he declared, “my greatest desire vears I found it impossible. Tackaye wouldn't play {t and In't get Skinner. T 1 did, Now, a great Os @ great polltic Like the unwil L @lusive Skinner, [could \ "Stan Brady did until he ex; 1 . ‘t tmean that trae ¢ statesman or an athiets erent the Idol of the public and have a & are What following. For example, a awheneacantall Shakespeare can play ‘ t » Now the eritles where an actor tn a fr r ¢ t ne 1 of the draw an audience for more t attention ulght. In New Y frou thy actors, ledged, "the Vd p ily written t get one. Of writers of hay run for mon ence between a sande of transi k and @ amalier city wil ie speartan readiig pull metroy y ANY, U..ce have thme to rea it wor ese Imitators Here we're too fast re for specimens. I've the go, and we want & ! any number of a girls, The man who xets off the Vw eth Century Limited —tmmediat i wants to know where \nca } Fileie Janis ts playing: or, if thought of any one in par! woes to the hotel « asks, ‘Where's there a & ts He will go to see Shakespe cre but when he gets to New t a fee him with a telesco : : While I agreed with ‘hotel trade,” it so Reading Men, actor doesn't want to answered Mr much you are how ra Shakespearian red an actor argue that ho would not £ yearlan Actor to Giddy Manta ple onlus: What do 1d not believe in the existe " that d— rot for? he ubllc that took time to ree ] 8K at if aut of It? The @ Shakespeare without vid a other cay asked Kee Rankin te leecope, y Pol ud he nearly ped “There In no questi ferted. “New York has yt theatre-going publi than rs y In the count-y t e eke nisl 1ké up this special puble ore Es Sosr at nsidered an honor it now it is coh: modern actor loves the Idea’ of playing eeks. He lacks ar Jay he can sau his cufts with a good unded by so much wash that t re lary. As 5 3 high-priced raid to go to the theat hey take es is a hothouse long timé to think it oy Lr flow gentle iing to be care- thetr minds before 7 ed. Our present day lead- fe, this public is very hard to jen are Carusos. Mantell hag lost fr. Brady pulled tn his ; Shake- et for a Then he pus flit ata th his hat and said : ‘ her exercise. Here's ‘People went to seo An actor ean't play ey loved to 1 ud drinks whiske rie ee M ill at his tbr Mr, Brady exorted, bers t ! ; ‘ own personality T ' Tevitg because he pro! € ae eee i (it Gv: Us Rt Bet drew ther t r | sald a short time ago,” Hamlet had insp!) ght urhed, “L don't see how they're and beauty behind t to cast a cl. le play American comadian «ho w Theatre. To make the New had played Shakeons ire s4 all the theatrical at the Lambs’ Clot sof New York will have to he Was going to ret f et 1 hope it will be a suc. because Bhekespecve — spellul «+ and an honor to the country, and Shakespeare witout spira : say now that If {t ever wants thought—when an + i \ irace George, they an Imitation of a ni ' ’ thing as a tribute making the charactor live i the \ Theatre stands for, ae But the actor who is we to 1 piny that appear at the espeare ts hound ¢ \ erdam eatre with Mr, In time. People who d acoumulation of five fifty years ago say are calls for consider: between the foil snd fam doing It as ex- @edians, All ts presen. rot pocketbook will allow about unclean * me akespeare on old thing—that cle ays live. | at the that Manteli cones at a moment,” Fae Pray ever crue 6 « ay! Warned Lezec- t that has a way of | n H ae r ne 6 that Mr iin en is violent fits of earnest: \ h In it bla 1 of the man—in his Way the last man you t pect to do some of the things he ts doing | Once again he is te cu y into town and burl the NO, 3. n Which She Disousses the Latest Fashions iu Love- Making. My Dear Jack: S this a proposal which I see before let me clutch it!’ For proposal, written on a man’s monogrammed met “Come, a real live paper and signed with his full name, is as rare in these days as Sheraton furniture and Stradivarius violins, It deserves a place in the Metropolitan Museum of Fine Arts along with the other cw rios and relics of a dead past. Men haven't proposed for so long that they have almost for- yotten how to do it, When they do, they simply rush into it, or sinmble into it, or slide into it—as if it were a lunchroom or a duty or an afternvon tea, But yours is a perfect epecimen of the high art of love-mak- ing, My dear Jack, WHY couldn't you have eaid all these things last night BEFORE leaving me, instead of going off in a state of wrath because I would not let you kites me? Am I really ‘‘cold” and “cynical” and “unnatural?” Of course! When a woman re- fuses to let a man make love to her he always concludes that she MUST be abnormal, because in hie simple, childlike vanity it never occurs to him that there could possibly be any other reason. And yet my reason for refusing to be kissed last night was simply that you had neglected a little formality whicn I consider a necessary introduction to a kiss—in short, the formality of first telling me that you loved me. This may seem horribly old-fash- toned and conventional, because a man used to propose first and kiss afterward, but nowadays he kisses first and proposes—when he pleases. This gives him plenty of time to think it over, I sup: But if I were a man should at least pay her the compli- pose—and “it is never too late to propo and wanted to kiss a woman, I The evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday, March 6, —==Love Letters of a Cynic=-— By Helen Rowland, 1909. Eee The Lit Cigar ment of telling her that I loved her whether [ did or not—juat in Tatt Ie | ; that Smelis Up ‘ order to get the reat flavor of the kiss aft ts In, What the Subway, Woman's Luck-» It's funny how a@ man who will “le like a gentleman” on any Does It Mean in America and other subject under the sun will suddenly develop a George Wash- ; to You? and the caution of a lawyer when it comes to saying “I love you.” Those three poor little words seem to choke up tn his throat and form an awful “Don't” lump. But, as for me, give me the angelic fool who rushes into @ love affair in preference to the fool angel who fears to tread, The reckless lover, like the reckless diver, may run all the risks, but he gets all the excite ment out of a flirtation, while the morbidly self-restrained man tokes about as much satisfaction in love-making as a dietetic in his dinner England. ington conscience BY "MARTIN GREEN back in human shape—one of whom I was--strangled Uncomplainingly, be- agreed | cause long experience has taught the New Yorker that the hog is the only man who gets his rights. “When the train reached the bridge this raw material for sausage stopped on the platform right in the path of the rush for the stairs, drew a mateh and began to cremate the cold, slimy in places. where remaing upon which his fellow passen- conservatives and | gers had been holding an involuntary reactionaries get | wake for twenty-five minutes. together, The| “He wan a well-dressed, prosperous conservatives and looking man who looked like he ought reactionaries feel to be able to light a fresh cigar every that they have few minutes without straining his aa- won a personal |sets, but he certainly did love that viotory. They |Peca of tobacco garbage Le hed cartied |1ook upon the installation of Taft as|downtown with him. The man who an indorsement of the policy of ‘Let carries & going cigar Into a subway Us Alone.’ train is temperamentally in the same “Maybe they're right. To the great | class with the snipe shooter who prowls mass of millions of citizens who are | along the edge of the gutter and di jnelther reactionaries, conservatives | (ously snares the unresisting but |nor radicals, but just platn, ordinary WL," wald the laundryman, “Taft's in.” “He's wedged | the man who was vetting hls pack: | ge. “And there vay many a quiet {ttle satisfaction souse hidden away last night Marry you? My dear Jack, I'm too fond af you for that! 1 pd your society too charming to risk losing it by marrying you. T prefer to seeing you in the evenings to aeeing you merely in the mornings. I reatly like having you in love with me, and it seems rather foolish to take the surest method of curing you—for mar- riage is the Keeley cure for love's intoxication. You describe it in glowing terma—just ag the man who wants to harness a coy colt comes to the gata holding a lump of sugar in front of him and a@ bridle behind Ms back. When the colt reaches for the sugar he slips the bridle over ite neck—and thereafter the poor thing is made to drag @ load (of troubles) for the rest of its life. That's marriage! Jack, dear, wait! Wait! Jf it's @ woman's privilege to decide first whether or not she till acknowledge a man's acquaintance and to invite hine to call or to dine, isn't tt perfectly logical that it should be her privelege to decide first whether or not she wants to marry hin and invite him to the altar? Wait until I invite you to marry me—for I never shall until f fall 80 helplessly in love with you that I can't slip out of it. Don't say that's impossible to a cynic; because when a toman falls in love she ceases to be a cynic or a flirt—or anything else but a complete fool! And this may happen—even to ME. Dn Banzal-ing Big Jim. i) “What do you think of the way the people are handling the ‘welcome to the city’ sign to Jim Jeffries?" asked the laundry man, “By common consent,” replied the My Panhandle Pete BY GOLLY, DAT une an HARD To CHOP | LET ne THINK! copyright, 1909, by American Press Ase0:)| ‘Three English," he sald, "Good s0 ciation, | far Those English are safe. | Marlano went on ! gi SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS There is an American Signorina | Tike, a shrewd Kokomo (Ind.) | Mees Granger - Seempsone, Mila uardian, to two leh orphans reeshe travel with her to be chaperon Here he became enthusiastic as nat she Js about ic St. Aubyn, ‘son | memory of sundry pieces of gold a N | silver wakened his keen thougiits {sis young, generosa, Y are) every one, she is y ot} weeth cha © Shinpaon, ‘who are trad \} waya dumbly loved ite Hotel, inengnito, eaile | “You mean this Lady Creeshe? ‘Herr von Grotierhagen, terrupted the Frenctanan with a put- Seas [xed frown, CHAPTER III. “No! No! No!" erled Mari (Continued.) rifled amazement. "Mila! : Pre {ole Indy and does not hear so ef In Disguise. Quite deaf, No pourbolres. Nothing I GAIN the maitre d’hotel remained | speak of the young Fi , A lost in onishment. For some] Mees Granger-Seempsone, who ¢ t moments he stood with the nap- gil#h Honor je son of Milor’ Haweas- kin in his hands gazing out over the} tle wishes to espouse, I think.” nilerful bay that lay before the hotel.! Riblere wrote rapidly in his note- e those cousin of his in| book, and without looking up sald Moscowa,”” he said at| ‘Who else !s there?” h of awe In his tones. | “There is the brother of Mees Gran ‘And yet, though Monsetgneur {8 89) ger-Seempaone, a young g: good and generogy, vill not the Anat- from also North America, He mate the wainst the name of even eyes all the day at another lady ) 1 have not that Js of the party, a Frenc royalty h lady fear? |teasse de Champigny. Ha! { The secretary snivered in the soft’ me! and he burst into a warm ali seized his companion by | titer, Ridlere looked at him w “He has I have not. 1 take what precautions I can se- he sald’ quickly astonishment, and dent more to his note book over which the pen flew cretly from him, but of what use? You! with a practised hand have few patrons?” “why?! Ade smile crossed Marlano's face and he HES Chas Mariano smothered shrugged his shoulders expressively " ‘ uh alg yet so early in the season, |th@ Napkin he carried and wit musician—he pointed off | fet coptrolied hie mf beyond the gates—‘they walt always at “Be he answered, have thought that Madame the te to play when they shall seo tesse 18 80 good a friend of t Any one coming, but of Inte they are Aisappotnt, Within, with us in the ho. lish Milo Hawcastie, A im but seex people. All of one ahotel see many things, eh, an’ I tel, are think Milor' Hawcastle and Madame P " 1 ‘An expression of + crossed the ae known each other from long nehman’s face, and he opened his DeMhaps. This wejeuner is for them: fe : e Also, I think from what I hear that book quic! ! he murmured. “Who are doth have been in Russia one time the, They eplk togeazer tn Russ. Mariano scratched his head with one! “Pouf, they will not recognize my tuminative Anger, and bent his brows employer,” sald Riblere. “No more upon the table In thought. than thia North American who travels s Milor’, an sh Excels| with him and who is as Ha Haweastle; there 1s a babe, Bet dejeuner xcellency Honorabile instantly when he shail arrive A there te Miladi | @ perch, petit pols, ved figs, tou Engiah M ) is ais. fend his own caviar and vodka s what I carr lo e ames Va bene, « . W ‘ Ano, aud var ‘The Man From Home | at the end of his financial rope, Michele, snd bowed himself up man who was getting his package, “It {s agreed that Jeffries Is the only white professional fighter !n this country big slobs, 1t makes little difference whether | enough and strong enough to hand the Roosevelt is President or Taft. They| hot wallops to Jack Johnson, When know Just what they can expect—so | our civilization gets a little riper—when ;much coming In and so much going! we get along to the stage where our jout—always about three Jumps ahead | | prize-fighters are the same to us as the of a DIN collector—always trying to |gindiators were to the Romans, we may Dut something by for the undertaker— | jalways hoping for the best and getting |the same old worst “As for those who don't cara they lamp this change of administration in @ spirit of cynicism. [t seems to them as confirmatory of the reports that the moving picture craze Is dying out and the populace s going back to the legit.” eo wt By George McManus | AML I'VE AN IDEA) Beet { The Subway Clgar. { view with equanimity the spec a black man occupying the position of champlon heavy-welght pugilist, “But, at the present time, the heavy- weight champion of the United State: should be more than a hired fighter. “That Idea of the Board of Health in golng after the human swine who carry ignited cigars into Subway trains looks good to me,” remarked the laun- dry man. ting kage, “I | for th roan Tht NEVER thers tla orae vee aattiha laine natipn, And this being a nation of woRt | lot pork that rode down on the train ee LR DELLE ae Lae Na jwith aie thls morning. LY REM SCO CCE) bl performances may be, ts not looked upon as & fitting standard bearer, That s why Jim Jeffries looms larger in the public eye than even Taft. We know what Taft Is going to do, because he has told us, but we don’t know what Jeffries is golng to do about Johnson,” ay 1} ( Where They Suffer. { iene enna ened DD | | "He made the Ninety-sixth | street with a half consumed torch Inj an Ame ‘his map that must have cost all of ten| meeting says that the En, “T see,” aald the laundryman, “thet n woman at a sunray train at jcents, Upon reaching a position tn the! are better off than our lear where he could grab a strap he re-| "Maybe #0,” sald the man who wae moved the flor de efluvta from his face! getting his package, and held it tenderly in his hand, | teemed female orator has Inside infore | The olgar expired in terrible agony mation about the condition of women By Booth Tarkington {| Jand deci si the et in immediately. in a country where wife-beating ranks and H. Leon Wilson. eRe Ceti malcabarn mike razor- | a# the national Indoor sport.” | ts & Fron 3 the ia) Play CHAPTER IV. Strange News, Earl of Ha ie | Earl unfolded “I Mattino” he glanced : ’ w King Edward’s Many Suits. No English papers? he said, Alor the malt ts late.” answered |@_ OME one has said that King Edward never wears the same eult twice, the S This 1s an exaggeration wasn The King exchanges his attire about three times a day, and consequently would need more than a thousand new sults a year : at him, a Also Madame de Ghampigny,"" | costing something Ike $0,000, {f such @ story were true. As a matter of fact, entered uy c e from t Wied heck fas he glanced down | he orders about thirty new sults every year, and at Buckingham Palace, Wind- vas ie the unfamillar pages sor Castle and Sandringham he keeps a stock of about two hundred. : cre eee an lereanor|_A% Re spoke the Countess, clad In the | SLUTREUBATILGN ERE ante Men ai ery latest’ Parisian oreation, swept raat rar at fuation was Al down the stepx and approached the pba bs eT table, She looked well and she knew It. : nk of events, and Wapresaatly about thirty-two, she ning nore i Mota have contessed to five more tinder pressure, but her dark heavi im th nls desire, yet he | pene aah hel yeauty was well set off by the light in ceren wore ‘s ouwward hint of any troubles | colors she affected, and the tilt of her skirt sults @ parasol revealed more to the capable ereat many He was a well ved man of fit. | eye of an observer than a ream of self+ materials and @ great tyssix with yn gray h Jeseription or admission. rposea, This and Aa i ary musta | ne was of that type that causes the ree yin eertan crcl lines In hig mouth elderly dowager of any race to regard one has the merit af nd softened the sev Nneaments. He her with suspicion and to gather her allowing a cholce of led himself with an erectr that male entourage beneath the protecting | wetst k 1 {f not } per the hi , ke pride 'f not in deeds wings. Madame de Champigny, ralsing Can ET tural Maroy iH ° tinguished with her hand with a little gesture of greet: | line or the nat jttat curlous indiv that causes , paused an Instant as she stood at) one. It will be found Anes Ma) Reet \ S ere one ie the top of steps and cried softly: | adapted to all sulting ihe were ae Pees 1) skirt 1 he was unmistakably The Earl jumped to hie feet and ane GEde te 1S 4 vowed, Inquiring at the same time: washable ones thet his sense of honr, that woul ‘My er Pceeuty| My esteemed relative is still asleep!’ are already veme The Countess swept forward to ier chair, which Haweastle pulled out for or, and murmured: “T trust your beautiful son has found much better ermployment—as our hearts would wish him, eh? Haweastle laughed shortly and mirth- made up, as well aa yoo! and silk. It can be made in citiver round or walking length, and it is es well adapted to the nag, WAS not suf- nmniving at n reknowledge y for her as the con- was clad house as it Is to the whtly striped loss street 5 He has. He's off on @ canter with The quantity of mee the ttle Amertean! Whateat the demure Countess olappod er daintily gloved hands together and cried softly terial required for the medium size is 10 yards 7, 5% yards 4 or 1% yards 53 inches wide If material hae act that n knows no exac t was f were old friends, these lwo, figure or nap; 7 yards epetil sia alaet en at a glance. There was m7, 3% yards 44 or 3% : to end, and /n0 inquiring as to each other's tastes yards 62 Inches wide reat the ho one about, and disiikes. It wae evident that long it material das at the table that Association had ingrained an intimate neither figure nor ine ay m, and at the Knowledge of the other Into the mind nag ‘ ‘ town /of each, and they met as good con Pattera No, Hens ori the Hotel nwithwar todad | Fadea st more than perfunctory Se THOHaS Rand W he courtesy. The Earl went on as he re. y \ low bow. Mart-| seated himself. ' fi "[ didn't mean Almerte, however K ! " Helene, but my august alater-in-law Re ! M acknow!- | W tur nment he turned te How Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- making | aper again and read. The amiable to TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 132 East Twenty-third street, New ed with | Countess smilet at him enigmatically, Obtain York Send 10 cante tn coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, ! brok with the gesture of an These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and ab Patterns, Ways spectty size wanted ye continued.)