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G “The R.turn of Eve” Not Yet Bat Scon, iss ey os DARNTON. of Miss Bertha Ga last night might hay BY CHARLES ©” and the heatre and to the stage | led to Paradise | aT ai had k way aa Sut, dike an ht ¢ Dodd 1s a recent lege at 0 their wild oats by writ so far, for the real ation Ne o the last, whil n of Eve" and pathos ed a human @ the fantasy of vanishes after the toner Dodd starts with an {dea that} kes even the weary and we ts Barrie's “Admirable essen the Interest of . In tact, the process ts re Where Barrle's people tion to nature, here Adam | are driven from thelr Vir- n Eden to steam-heated New Y ‘These two foundlings, helrs of an ex- perimental militonaire, have — been plot recalls ichton" doesn't Huns D, Rev ived, and brought up by an old servant as | Metreand Merriment. brother and sister and without any HYDLIS stood like # sweet knowledge of the outside world. ‘The P ereat {dea seems too true to be good, and the Daviguiihoratreamuon vers play starts out to confirm this suspicion ceteris Miss Galland, as the untutored child [jrotding a slender bamboo rod. of nature In the first act, goes baret without entering the Salome class. her vo It strikes ear rather Hor shriek then rent the ambient shoes, a y. So far \ cattish big u feel that “The Ret yet but soon. ty itself ty litte better. It Bertha Galland as Eve, s with a good {dea that ts y worked out in New ety and ends with a victory for Adam. Rut if we are to Eden m dull after New Y« Dressed in 1 tiger skins, Eve seems to be mixing the Btyles, But as a dressmaker, | had left {ts lair rat tucke Lard may be weak and Ahd eggs go for a son tut the man who deals In must ge ays st —Bosto The rain drove folks Descended In a st And the end-seat Into the mld —Washingte ‘0 cover, bane 4 Wonders of Geology By Dry rea W. Clark, f th loal Survey, i (D.C) Herald pe “Beat it, eh ci and don't The s handbox, a sultease, A furlong of Se, nd as wer blade the geole yoleante outflow h's crust to a dep} ‘k, of the United f Geochemistry,” "'t A rake Ala Is thickness 0: Hik ing fc serve aff ny Panhandle Pete nts elevated above the 0,000 tons, Atlas was Pore beyond que The volume of The atmosp rater, oaly one this world be ehores dhd to s One per cent Bloba toad The salt in ¢ al 1 the volume of the ocean f the ocean forty-five feet 00 cubteo miles of yet on all land areas of the 1 gust FILL OS RUBBER BALLOON AND <ive It TO CECIL. tes, would form a layer 1.6 miles high » section of the earth's crust, the thin ace—the pra ley soils, the es—become a mere alluvia hose products of which only 65,109,0°0 are 411 feet; hence, pread uniformly area of the earth The averag ff all the land $e 190,712.900 square miles, above the 10,00) cuble miles—was over the globe, !t would form a shell 600 feet thick.—Sunday Magazine, The Story of Three St. HERE letter from Ta Bernards Hl runo Krontch, says a tourlst in a when It Was sorrow in th ON [ 11S A Shame! the fee-covered f overhung a deep helpless animals ‘ aA rock which and the chasm. From this ey coule howled pitifully. vninils were fh id for that reason the rejoicing was when at dawn the next diy t Ared at the Baum- gartnerhaus and barked for admission, investigation he dogs had worked thelr way up against the almos snow and ce wal a YS Light on Moonless Nights, i ight Intensity of the moonless night ky !s estimated by L. | 0.001 candle ot; of moonlight, 0.014 candle-foot nd of da 8 A. M. and 4 P, M., from 200) to $,00) candle-fe Some c others greatly decrease t of flumination, J, lewlngor at ight, between xuds Increase, ntensit COOOL DAOSCIOSOOORS | Booth ie and flay il, ‘Wilson’ 5 Great Love Romance of an | American Knight | B enasnsasasnscasessessesacesoaonesasecassacasesaes0 00000 Tam know: nd on the Ges as {I trusted him, an house | for years in Sibe Nine years of h thing. T had fifty thousand rubles In my | "he sald, gently. ~_——_—<=_=—_—_~ Tt fs ten 0 since I was cc desk—the funds I had transferred—to on him now?" demned in St and you,!be delivered to my society, One day He wai inst 1 then chuckled know By Booth Tarkington | wa and H, Leon Wilson, |" nothing e horrors o erstand the police came to search ani In a thin, yreus way Be- ne of his found only me—not \ er Mighty Hunter Getting Ready. { State Owns Old i paper: } N the Belgian state railways all the newspapers left in the trains belong toy} wo aie O the Government, They are sent aper mills, made Into pulp « al prove @ practical garment, ward as railway tickets, The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, March 18, eenaannanaanaanaannanannanaanntll \Fashion Turns Back in Its Flight. By Will 8. Johnstone. ~~ 1770 Improved Upon. ————, Fads for Women. N exceedingly smart loose wrap that would not be very dim cult to construct Is of broads A la Jeanne D'Arc, cloth, It hangs from the shoulders, where {t fits smoothly, and closes down ft Russtan blouse tash row of handsome buttons the » length. $s cut out, suggesting a Duteh round, and the v ample armboles take plain sleeves that can be buttoned In at the wrist or lett loose | The only trimming !s a blas band of the cloth piped with black satin, that trims the neck and covers the |f armhole seams. This ts an excellent |] model for an evening cloak, An excellent model in a separate skirt ts of fine serge, cut gored ing. A trimmed panel ta tuserted at the left side above the knee, from which point the skirt buttons to the lower edge ts decorated with rows of str pointed on the ends where It meets the ctisin’ for me trip to Africa each one Tits style of skirt 8 exceedingly well cut and finished and should suitable during any hour of the day. ol er mills, made 1 tons of newspapers arc col- to the p. Over for wear ry SEE IF U0 CoN BLOW pis UP gies DID J ALL RK HT! IOC OO O00. °8 short of a definite proy xely before witnesses if p ) “Huh! Don't waste time talking aboutyanyt it’ sald T “Ish agua n't be surprised | and if you w . ale his Initial move w e returned his ba He took the retuses by the arm steered him tn the direction of th: las the three entered the the curtal yove the entr W I was h friend; not the fifty Were agitated violently and the (Copyright, 190, by American Press Ass'n | a ages, a translator in Stheria p Bureau of the Minister of Q I} BYNOPSIS OF P. CHARV ENS | Merete aioe ames goe nae pear entey Daniel Pike, a shrewd pkomiu (indianad : = th ’ lool 1 ‘ lawyer, ts tian to two rich or a nent he paused and pressed fu 5 have, gined that | ( ‘ bees otis QAO js scarred hands to his lined forehead , : nd!" ‘Then he laughed outright. been for her deafness she ) Ethel. ieee | then sighed and went on e Fir m t six ‘ou the he 1 e€ ‘ord of the the Bad) of 1 I was also a member of the Blo |; oll I saw that you were'a that had gone on below her. A : Boedy, fortunes 1fty ait ile ; Foe atte sneer et 5; y,, fortune; hu Fifty: a Constitutionalist, and as such| utp was they who sent the polices {Breet man Sitter easier enous ie sweet als Eihars paid chaperon, was able to doa Httle for the Caus ‘if aeetat Dantel looked at hun and grinned In of the road, she wi aa ; , ‘at Sorrento, ey ‘i anc iteh replied vigoroust t a eis tt prace took her ha re the Cause, the same, my friend is face. sharply, andiwlehin’: out to pA, yA ich your © heyon he tronile oy What you doing. Doc? ing for of the doo el ae ent ihe aa lt fancy'ta | bears suffered and fought—the Cause of 0, jg ail ate if ie Congress?” he asked, an G encounter Horace and \ TPR AL maya ebea K CO) YOu Alnierie and Ethel. become. formal i ‘ , 4 lave against th asicod, 3 ; Rie La ee ae e i mie “the Neat agrees | Liberty. I could do but ttle, though I For a moment’ thalhuntad | ft hie Joined him in the hum © altuae Pigny coming in from t e, She Y pau 1 r > m 1 triqd. At last I transferred the funds of | os, an. into them came the ravenous tion, and then: turned gravely to the @PProached them at one you please,” and at tue words he kissed ny jthe Government to the Soclety of the | (iam of the hun fils x “Have you “i she de- | her hand rapturousis Meares hen ie | Blue Fifty, It was a small thing, It eee and theme UT fear the carabinier did not depart manded, excite s Lord) In the mean time the suddenly resu ture of his erinie. was for the Catise—not one ruble for] ives spaamodically, and there was a Without suspicion, venated Lady Cree ad found her self. I swear it!” I , \ Aparato j myself. K about Jawa that : ‘guaptcion! @ Ivanovitch, bite se aw and parted ¢ PT TS ‘ | Von Grol gen started back with fe poke Susp nit vanovitch, i | CHAPTER XIII. | Ms n Gr pereeeen Uae He sl Hy pair \ té 1 ry exit from ‘ ITH a hasty glancé about the | is, 4 ' Pike Interrupted him th W garden to make sure he was! |) ce B ie fi he re er shud as ict 1 motioned to the hotel ft not observed, th Ago tere NB tO sla's sake—ni t , Dow got the whole lower c a i proached Von Daniel | ™ a ¥ floor of this wing—you're his chaut toa’ She and spread oft h ada \s he) He paused and went on weaily, tha each che = reel . ed forward the a moveme But LT committed the great Russian ; ; : set him- uous t she ta mov a mov ARS Lo RRETELGRRL ia Rett y Against the I was about to suggest It," Inter : Sa the einsow., curte Oe ee ea be Ther ean Englls nan {te ah) lerhagen stood comb- i Grollerhagen, in turn, Rh) DOSE ee. Ae ey WES. r ment above the doorway to the hotel, t er: lere was an Englishman Strong fingers . ; neas of manner. “I have Union betwe t and the n@ble As t i * and he turned with « move- who lived in Petersburg. He had cons |'"") t tun the case, \t M ‘ we © spared for Countess, ment, but whatever had ea it the .tracts with the Government—1 thouent |" ‘S| a room staid ‘ 1 : the first word I ard tly, for t ‘i h h 1 y frien ” i ast Prof. Iva tow movement had ceagel and there wis he was a ' est friend. 1 ’ ; ieee a ene , : f ie t ‘ nothing apparent ad married in my student da 1 nfession, you rw can T ink you? God iat fedt ¢ n tt wit , “The Italian journals eal! me a brig- | Paris—ah, it Is the old story ena! ul & revolutionise, said the Russian, go- that 3 , alt deh end," sald the Russian, “and tm this| bitterly, “f knew the Englishman ad-|he «p's ind at Ivanoviteh’s start of ab. toward then WH outstretched every cleneeaa us aie ins - a5 ey a inspired by the Russian Le- | mired my wife, but I trusted her—and | ject misery and contrition Pike stepped | hands. power, she would not be satis with To E ued. 1909, By Martin Gree~, i The Day Afte MIND the time whin T could st The lin'th of all the whole ny And at the ind could run and lep And shak fut whin pipers § Y But yesterday the Ine of marci soomed laid along the roughest stones And now I'm Jackin’ steam and starch, With pains and aches 11 all me bones, ty ea tee es I left the Vanderbilt Hotel At noon and feelin’ purty well, Aud tuk me stand whore, in the ling) Division No, 2 Was gatherin' at a place we knew, Right restin' on Fifth avenue, 4 We stud and stud and stud and stud, Unul the frost was tn our blood Or so It seemed to me, for I Am older than In days gone by And thin they told us to be goin’, ‘Tho flfes and drums played ‘Garry Owen,” And out we stepped as fine and gay As ever on St. Patrick's Day. About half-way past Cintral Part. Mo frind, James Aloyslus Clark, Who came out whin a lad with me, | Way back in 1863 | Says Clark to me, says he, “McHugh, | Yer age ts pressin' down on you.’ | "Twas true for him, but Clark, the knave, Was laggin’ back hisseif, though brave, And thinking that he didn't show tt He cinsured me for fear I'd know tt; i} But I could see his feet wero lead, vugh proudly he held up his head, And that kept me in better trim, i I felt just as bad as him, And so the t@® of us marched on Until near all our strin'th was gone, But whin we reached the final stop, And each was fearin’ he would drop, We both DECLARED we felt tmminge, Rut KNEW we felt Uke thirty cinta, I mind the time whin I could step The lin'th of all the whole parade, And at the Ind could run and lep And shako me fut whin pipers played, ‘ow, though me poor old bones are sore And I'm lackin' steam and starch, Me heart Is Nght as ‘twas of yore Whin Patrick's Day ca |g me to march, | MY “CYCLE OF READING. mt By Count Tolstoy. Transiaiea by Herman Bernstein | (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) | ry How to Judge People. -yv HE condemnation of another person is always T wrony, because nobody can ever know what was going on and what is going on in the soui of MAR. that person, 18. NE of the most ordinary errors consists in the fact that people are classisied as good, bad, foolish or fi mel wise. Man flows like a river, constantly changing and yet always re maining the same, He was foolish, he became sensible; ‘ked and became kind, and the reverse. Herein lies the greatness of man, Thus you cannot judge a man, What is he? You have condemned him, and he is already different. EN H' who looks upon hls own defects has no time to see the defects of others— All possibilities are in him, he was wie) Oriental Wisdom. eee D° NOT censure your nelghbor until you are tn hie place.—The ‘Talmud. PRC Ro E much to others, nothing to yourself,—Cyrus, ‘lof man turns ¢ m truth, Moderatene ot luntarily fone. The more dier will be your attitude toward KNOW that my fundamental nature is good, not evil, All other people l are the same as I ain, and, therefore, not knowing all that is going on within another's soul, you will be nearer the truth when you believe er good than evil, , Mighteousness and arly you will under> popple.—Mareus Aurelius, every person to be ra { May Manton’s Daily Fashions. RACEFUL Empire ts are favorites of the Incoming They aré appro- priate In Shantung, Direc- tolre cloth, sili and wool marquisettes and allks and satins. For tho gulmpe elther lace or net 48 @ppropriate, and the bolero can match the skirt season material, trimmed to give the tunlo Suggestion and the little bolero !s adjusted over it» upper edge, The guimpe is plain, with long, one ple eves edium size will for the bodice 88 yard of or 2, 1-4 yard 4, with 2 lk, 4 yards of for the blouse 18, for the 61-4 yards % or 7, 4 yards 4 or 62 tnohes wide, Pattern of the bodice No, 6280, a cut or M, 34 es bust use pattern cut In sizes 36, 38, 40 hes buat. Skirt Pattern is cut {n sizes Sand 30 h waist measure Fashionable Gown—Pattern Nos. 6260, 6160, 6215, 2 How Call at Ti BVENING WORDD MAT MANTON FASHTO 3 BUREAU, No 132 East Twenty-third street, or send by mall Ld to No. 132 West Twenty-seventh street Send 10 cente tn coin Obta! } or stamps for each pattern ordered IMPORTANT-—Write your address plainly and always specify size wanted Add two cents for letter postage If in @ Patterns} hupry, These AAA AARP LOOP