The evening world. Newspaper, March 20, 1909, Page 9

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? jus The Racrill! World Daily Magazine, Saturday, ROSE STAHL Back From Her Long Trip And Amused at the Styles RIND? hese PLACE CHANGER. DOO Rn OC IO On OC OCI) ora: GHDOSGISSSwVSisxevsoor> E ST: AHL, Who Returns With ‘The Chorus Lady.’ Coast, and le re in the UST back from a 15,000 mile jaunt to the Pa climate me tell you that there's no scenery or world as beautiful and as grand as that Angeles up to British Columbia Tha there, ‘They don't like you-—-they LOVE love you they tell you so. San Francisco has risen so beautifully out of her ashes that she makes the phoenix look like a hungry sparrow. That city is going to be the most beautiful city in the world. Soon as I save enough inoney I am going o retire and live in a neatly furnished tent In California Seeing the “Sights.” because we were in Denver this electio and I Was taken aroved and saw women My, how New York has changed! |s into tobacco-laden polling places and When I drove through the streets to-/come out looking pretty sick of their day I felt like Alice In Wonderland, new Job. looking at all the strange sights. And| Women will alw tule the world, by SIGHTS I mean the women of our essed coast from Tos Heart Land, and when you, they but never with their heads. I sail for London on April 8, and I fair cit i ¥ HL 19 atl 4 New York six months| open my London season on Apr! pee Heap le hae across the con-|th@ Vaudeville Theatre, on the Strand. tInent I left the New York women, That is the theatre where Charles Haw- looking like a lot of beauttful visions | trey played ‘Jack Straw’ last summer, of loveliness garbed in the Directotre) ftyle, which was very becoming to them, Ker English Craining. But as soon as I got away they con-| When we played British Columbia I meneed to change thelr styles until now| Was most anxious to know if they’ Fifth avenue at the promenade hour| Would understand Patricia's slang up ooks like a comic ca~aival. | there. T felt that if they did it would be a good sign that we'd be @ go in A Question of Sanity. [London this apring, because, you must an wear one of Know, they are very much more “Eng- lish” tn British Columbia than they are in England, How can a sane wom ,those peach basket hats sha a vam- plexion, with her body h Fasseatp in a knee-length ¢ So, as I always like the verdict of swathed {n a gown with a rat-tail skirt|the masses, on the opening night, in fastened fore and aft with #M buttons?) Vancouver, I gave my room waiter, an Good night! | Englishman, a pass for two, telling him Only six months ago a tady attlred/to pay very special attention to the like that would have ) put in alplay, as I wanted to ask him about it where nouldynext day, That night the play went pick the satber! tremendously, and I was quite de- found out what lighted, because {t was a very English aud The next morning when m ‘They pre-'watter brought up my tea and toast I those awful harness asked him how he liked the play Ie ne are ae “The Latest London Slang.” neatiy padded cell she have been allowed off the wall while they Institution she had escaped It's the dressmakers’ fault scribe rom. nee. corsets and a said | had a figure like a pen, He sald that the day) “Oh, it was quite all right, Miss,” he I opened in ‘The Che Lady at said. \ ye Savoy Theatre, and every thie T “But did you understand all of the look at myself in a glass 1 think of slan; T asked. what he said Well, no, Miss; not quite all of it " ” But my sister, who was with n has But what shocks me more than the plained it to me, because, she says, you changes in figure fashion that I, use the latest London slang.” f'n onomy return to New York is this Of cours 1 didn’t tell him that suffragette niess the f our | Patricia's slang was five yeara old. Ho ure getting into. 1 ff they good w VN know more think that voting is a nice, refined this sister when I get to London park me? Well, it isn't, and 1 know, Don't forget to write. «) = } Marvels About a Watch { & ~ * ‘en WATCIL is the smallest, most delicate machine that was ever con- } structed of the same number of parts. About 175 different pieces of i A) material enter into its constructips, and upward of 2,400 ate operations are comprised Some of t fn its manufacture. € facts connected with Its performance are sim A blacksmith strikes several hundr and is right 1 glad when Sunday comes around: make credible, when considered in total on his anvil in a day, roller jewel of a wat againat the fc pws fn 600,000 In the short space of twenty News These figures are beyond the grasp of our feelle intellects, but the marvel | does not stop here. It has heen estimated that the power that m: watch 1s equivalent to only four times the force used In a feats furp quently it might be Med a four-flea power. One horse-power would suffice eI run 270,000,000 watches Now the balance wheel of a watch !s moved by this four-flea power one and forty-three-one-hundredths inches with each vibration—3,669& milea continu- ously in one year. If you would preserve the timekeeping ‘ualities of your watch you sh take it to a Competent watchmaker once every elghteen montis the nd day after day, 432,000 impacts year without stop or reat, or J.152,- yeurs, suys a watchmaker tn the Chicago | every es the conse= ould ——¢ ¢e———__—__——- THE PRESIDENT'S DESK. ; HF the thousands who sit In the President's reception-room tn the W | House, waiting for an audience, only knew it, they might make | time seem lek» monotonous by contemplating the principal article o furniture, the Executive's desk, It is handsome and maasive, with a Wealth of carving, but its chief interest consists in Its historic orig! You all know that Sir John Frantlin went to als came back, His good ship iesoliie spared from destruction in s off the shores of Alaska, where s her, When she reached §. over the th Pole ant ¢ drifted in of the Aretle Ove rious until she reacied the me American whalers b ne watr arded her and clatmed Francisco the United States bought her, repaired and refitted her, manned her with an American crew, and sent her to Engian! With toternational compliments, The old ship was broken up about thirty years 4g0, and from the soundest of her timbers a handsome desk was made, by direc: ‘ton of the Queen, to be presented to the then President of the United states hat fe the desk that stands in the President's reception-room, and on {t the pers of at least ¢ght administrations have been written, The Man From Home / | Will the Ladies Lobby? THE NEW TARIFF BILL ay J PAYNE LIGH TaRipn On \ PERFUME W FEAT —— NG FALSE HAIR MR.CANNON IS A FLIRT | | The mean old thing who proposed the bill—he's a married man, too. |e == ove Letters of a Cyni By Helen In Which She Agrees to Marry~And Take “The Dip of Death’? in Life's Circus. JACK DEAR: ES—I will marry you. It seems to be “the VY easiest way''—and besides I intended to all along, You have “won me by siege and taken me by storm,” but it's been awfully hard work making you do it. The most difficult problem @ girl has to face in these days in how to MAKE a man FORCE her to marry him. Yet every woman yearna to be taken tn a rush of conquest—instead of just taken for granted or as a matter of course. She wants something to remind her of the fact that her husband proposed to her besides the ring and the certificate, which 4e all most toomen have. And yet, when I think of how beautifully you have made love to me, it does seem almost a pity to marry a fascinating man like you, and transform him from an artistic lover into an ordinary, prosaic husband, Your life has been such a “labor of love’ from early youth that I can't help pitying all the nice girls whom 1 am depriving of the delicious experience of being flirted with by you, I wonder if every girl who merries a popular and attractive man realizes what a cruel thing she te doing to her sex by monopo- lizing him. It seema almost as wicked as cornering wheat or form- ing a love trust, A really ideal lover Uke you is 80 rare in these days that he ought to be divided up and passed around Just as far as he will go. Considering the scarcity of husbands, it looks almost “piggish” for one woman to have a thole live man all to herself, Do you really want me to marry you “at once?” That IS rushing into it, dear Jack—but I suppose that most people never would marry at all if they didn't grit their teeth and shut thei eyes and RUSH into it. Getting married is something like walking a tight-rope or turning a handspring in the air; if you stop to con- sider it, you simply can't go on! It's the “Dip of Death” in Life's circus! And the only tray to take it is to seat yourself in Fate's automobile and keep your eyes on the stars, while you go plunging down. You knote you are going to get an awful jolt, but if you just hold on tight and don't think about it you may land safely on the sawdust in the end and go rolling along comfortably forever after- ward, What ARE we marrying for, Jack? Do you know? Of course not; nobody ever does until it is all over—and then nobody remem- oem | The Rising Generation By Will B. Johns tone. | Rowland. bers. They are just fascinated by the glitter on love's gold brick and the shimmer on the honeymoon and they refuse to scrape off the gilt and see what's underneath, But nobody can call ours a marriage of convenience, at any because there isn't going to be any convenience in that little 2rj Harlem apartment where the clothes closets are just dents in the wall and the chiffonier is fighting with the steamer trunk for breathing room, and the rugs are treading on one another's skirts and the pictures elbowing one another off the walls Yet just for THIS (and the privilege of paying my bills) you are giving up a comfy bachelor flat and your independence and your latch-Key and your clubs. and Tam giving up the family home and my own name and all my flirtations and most of my opinions, Its a pity—but then, if IJ didn't marry you, somebody else would—-and if you didn't marry me some other man might. That's why we're marrying one another Jack; that's why EVERYBODY marries not in order to get a particular person, but in order to keep anybody else from getting him or her; not because they can get along better WITH somebody, but because they CAN'T get along WITHOUT him or her, It's the dog-in-the-manger spirit in is Ah well! This is probably the last love-letter I ever shall write yvou—since we are to be married, Hereafter, ] suppose, my communi+ cations will read, “Do-come-home-Mother-sends-love-Harold-needs shoes-the-cook-is-sick,” and yours will be confined to the simple but striking expression, “Inclosed-find-cheek.” Goor Sweetheart.,.I hate! exchange you for a husband,.... but the deal is on and the bargain struck and we'll meet at the altar and dyaw up the papers—and sign away our birthrights for a mess of matrimonial pottage, The scene will be set like the third act ofa Clyde Fiteh drama, and the orchestra will play between the acts and the bridesmaids and the best man will go through their little parts, and everybody will send us something we don't want and they'll stuff rice in our hats and throw old shoes after us and tie white ribbons on our trunks—and after all is said and well just be helpmates instead of soulmates. It is very sweet of you to offer to tell me ail about yourself, dear—but don't, I don't want anything to think about when 1 wake up nights. I don't believe in confessions hetween man and wife, » They may ° exhilarating for the moment, but they are apt to leave you with a bad taste in the memory. If you've got a “past” keep it; and just leave your future to ME. rate done By J. K. Bryans March 20, 1909. i rug dealer was a dark, dis- Ungulshed looking Oriental whose manner implied that he might have been the Ih: gullan of ty he hadn't pre- the rug “The he ex med trlum- spread out a th’ fuzzy one, th predominating color of was oa sir, ta a genuine {mp erial ntly, as he) which | rd Can This Be True? The Rug Dealer Explains the Origin of the Mineeta Aura he “Many of these roe lodge in the rugs, where most of them die, But once In @ great while, only In the very most ex- | pensive and luxurious rugs, the warmth {9 suMcient to hatch out @ mineeta | bug: “The first thing the young mineeta notices, of course, Is the vegetable dye In the rug, and he starts right in to eat. | “But livin a steep mountain side for 80 many generations has mado their lef ss very much longer than i their right legs, so that when one finds himself on a level rug he can only walk around in a fixed cirele, When he has eaten the dye out of a circle he starves to dea The dealer got down on his hands and kh again es, that 4a mineeta aura, all right, Tararah, Just feel tt. Youd have to|That rug ts worth a very small fortune, travel a long way bdefore you'd find T would not part with it for—ah, but I ‘another rug Ike that, you vould have it for thirty-two “Then I won't go," murmured the}dollars, didn't 12 Well, J never go back j customer timldly, jen my word, Take it, It Is yours “Loan let you have this for’ —examin- | gift thirty-two dollars.” ing the tag—"twenty-three dollars. The, The customer regarded (he faded cire Invole: — jele wistfully “What's that clreular spot there! “1 wish I could,” he sald with a trace | where it's faded?” demanded the cus-/of sadness in his volce, “but I'm afraid tomer suspiclously, “No, the other end, aie rug dealer glanced carelessly at | the f clrele, en, with a sudden Young-Turk movement, he dropped to his hands and knees, and peered at it Heavens © oxclal 1 feverishly, sa genuine mineeta aura!” “It looks as if somebody had set a ‘wer Hower pot on it You won't find that on one rug ina lion!” “1 should hope customer, untmpre You explained the dealer more calmly, peculiar pink dye not,” muttered the the these rugs is derived from a vegetable used in that Is found in only one place in the world~Mount Tararah, This ve; able is very rave, Every year the ¢ Is almost entirely devastated by swarms of mineeta buys that J upon it “The only thing that saves the plant at all is the hot wind that comes up jfrom the desert at breeding tme each | apring, Uislodges the roe, or eggs, of all >) the feed the mineeta bugs from thelr nests, and wafts them down to the foot of the mountain, where the peasants weave their rugs May Manton’s , ae a f apron that simple and p tective is the one fills the that ime ql portant practical 1 ‘rhis one 1s full er igh din place as well as over one, while it ¢ man mate- ius, ty (ue Mustya- tion one of jae pensive printea was fabrics is tnished only with stitched hems, b ginghams, 1 tie 1s appropr kometh. dainty is wanted, y dirtity could be ut tae, ‘he quantity of ma- terlal requived fer medium. size (10 years) Is 318 yards 4, 41-2 or 234 ya es wide, Pattern No, 6283 |s cut in Sizes for girls of and Va better “Once wh hot omy wife was a little girl she was a mineeta buy. Around, ar vund—there's na tells might have happened a she ad. pre of mind enough to the awful thing a at r¢ her foot, Ever sin that In any way reminds her of mineeta bugs makes her dizzy, How much iy chat Pennsylvania Persian over In che ¢ > - A Chafing Dish Recipe. OMATO RABBIT.—Take some I ices of Whole-wheat bread, cut rather thick) and with and cut inte sandwieh of a can of to- crust removed, shape, Drain part mat spread one slice of bread with eithor the thick pulp or a slice, aid sprinkie with salt, papri dvy mustard, and a little Worcester- last, cover thickly with J cheese; put on the second slice of dread and together firmly; saute in butter as before, till the bread ts broken on both sides and the cheese melted.-Harper's Bazar, shire sauce grat press Daily Fashions. ~s Girl's Yoke Apron—Pattern No, 6283, i How Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION (F) BUREAU, No. 182 East Twenty-third street, or send by mall to No, 132 West Twenty-seventh street Send 10 cents in coln Obtain or stamps for each pattern ordered These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always ipa, Mamma says that If you're too lazy to do anything else, will you piease sit | vee here, i! prvatenes you t 5 000), 9 Patterms, Hed tine Center, 20. tme sente for leiter/ posted IeiLaie near the clothes Sloset and blow the smoke in, go as to kill the moths [ov Til disown you and ut you off without a penny, See & : s SEGaTHOTETEaRODDITEEDODOIOSEERAGRGE @ p sennovecamonanaeacmasoeasansoeeesse PEDHOTGOG SOE 0 8 ‘ Booth Tarkington and Harty is ‘Wilson’ s Great Love Romance of an American Kni DOCOIS OOS 1ODOGTOOTGHEDDIGTDIOOILOGOOOOGHOWOOSIOS to use resolves the knowledee to mail Pike into y iding black: setiiement t CHAPTER XV. ; By Booth Tarkington ieee ; IKE was still at with the end H. Leon Wilson P letter in his hand, looking after Ethel, when he an othe Copyright, 1000, by American Press AS#®.) | tration of what her words meant ably O000000000000 xo offended the girl, and hate him all her life for Jis entrance Into her new pli nad gument the B tally ateeled }y looked glare of the Ear! wud men steads up he er been unfortunate Was Ilttle else thay an insult, acs "My dear Pine gar to her we And ‘There ia a cert qiestion Cooley, wh chad t 1 to "E sald 1 wo liscus the flaw In the Hawcastle escutch: you, 1 meant what 1 sald hat he kr existed, had Danlel qulet! SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, 5N@ had given her promise a Bs him: mise , pasa) aa Hae patter i at Pantie! Mike, a ehrewd Kokomo (indiana) | MOt mear? that anything !n world he lawyer at he was a long che other, her { if aw guariian of two rich orphans, Should make her revoke tt. That prom. Wey from ho sighed and turned least unaffecte’ by Eine! Horace Simpson, who are living {ee was sacred to her, just as tf it had {© Where the sin was sinking Ina haze “Pare tls afterno Jey in Furope, Pike has always dumbly lovel been spoken before a clergyman of red across the bay, T reat anxet cerning the Brhel. She writes him th ¢ 19 about t In hig heart Plke knew he would have the vole of !lorace prencribed allan law for those fo inarey he Non Aimeric St. Aubya, son cf to give in tt he was to make her happy, !t the cultured accents tunate a LELARTITE At) heady. torwunernanter Cowee ‘ethers and yet he knew that in making her castle, Apparen e connive at tie escane n waartl temporarily happy he would be making to seek She had re of ce fortunates w Ruawares > An ARO. V2) ner eternally miserable. If he could | fueal by the pol melts ‘ ion ge tne eet | he » tie sirength to ! out agatnat, Wear ed again to the auto: Da ked ath a smite mito, ca himactt | her and refuse to sanction the m arrlage | mobile and against it, As he "So you're all 1 t Fane beeing FAR LO | he knew the craw of aristocrats would | did ao he heard Horace say: are you?’ Haw dat him The mArringe settlement a |Mever accept lier without the cash, and) “But the! says Mr. Pike positively but went on BTS Oop oa atement Be es by the terms of John Simpson's | refuses ply that I ascertained the AD egoaped will could never be theirs without hie} In return he heard Haweastle reply: alty for It, Fo: person w nd Mim the te Octo consent. “Leave him to me In ten minutes heart has eo betrayed him t vy 2 Geinten glimmering He bad isretrien Of his own hopes he could see but the | he will be as meek as @ lamb, | te two yeare tn prison, and Italtan pris- Dumbly pleasan Pike ruminated and ¢ Being in Jatt ain't m ‘arnival,” he observed id h like an “Rven a country citizen of your escape admirable it his pl were proved—if he were caught In the act 1 will be plain you These last words had ay ominous note. “Let s imagine that a ba wanted man appeared upon ' " here and made an appeal to ountrymen, who-—-for t! argument—la at work up Say that the too amiable Ame’ seals the fugitive under the « and afterw with the « friend, deceives the officers of and shelters the criminal, of that lower suite there He looked about In the « Nght and p 1 drama: to indow. Pike, now thor vue nter ted, and with hig pulse beating a apld tattoo, followed hls finger, ‘The Earl went on, Imaging, for instance, tat the shad- wondered what ¢reah are | ona, 2 am credibly Informed, are—un-|ow which eppeare pon that curtain! ght. OO) Were thar of wan apa eeull youn 1 to a Peagonable re ques Dar painfully, f saw em that that swaying window taln w ad caught £ a 50 toa dist remec that this au e y the d we sed, what . e would not Twe s ea prison for A ks bad for—that American, ent’ {he ae whimateally, (Te Be Continudd. ) 13 iy ; |

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