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{ Mr. Sothern Lets | Richelieu Slip Through His Fingers. BY CHARLES DARNTON. R. BE. HL. SOTHERN’S production of “Richelieu? at Daly's Theatre last night M Foused some wonder, but little enthusiasm, As was the cage with Mr. artistle Mantelt success, in “INing John," ambition was scare y crowned with per- laudable Gi@ we may take this good old uly did not add to the glory of Mr, Soth- for while th word out for an airing) the ern's honorable Richelien does not Meant to disparage those 1 phes to France, the r books—the highly-colored areer of big’ speeches, those herole apostro- es that we still tind in the copy- Sothern re and this fs not} But those | and all the vi tmosphere a of the stage and never of things e-don't mateh well with Mr — — Sethern’s carefully elaborated though Neu,” like all tton’s play ejast d $ never pompous, ometimes gey, and he iy always sincere. Per at is why he failed to work out neing form this ghost, he took off s “make-up box "he frail Cardinal y onger t at had se er Lone of the face that a8 Don Quixote, ex- » all-observing, neve with the Spanis , Staring mad | n his da It rem Ir, Sothern we entethatathanay pen as was t young, 2 worst of It all through | Sothern as Richelieu. ono trad 1 Wiggest capital | his Every uttered up it © shouted °B you feit like | vile. And “the B00, he e you a litle bit A little sriver ne failed to send st along seemed to get lost or of the part one mon effect of variety, b y the best t Ri sed to inspire | did not produce an 1 of seeing the Cardi tup the next, f monotony, You grew tr first one thing and they, Of co rse, much of this was the fault of the ai- clent piece of thes tan, but that Mr. Sothern failed to hold the char- | acter, that he an of one i @peech completely own (6 The coolness a In dang he prid and the c » the vanity of the v and auth f the Cardinal ance of the ted with real skill, and Mr, looked more effective In the last two acts in the earlier part of the pia ting under the red robe. In costume he looked neat, but His last act was th umphed over Als en mu an get- black not gaudy. Here he tri- with best b Mr. Cupid--Matchmaker w By Will B. Johns h tone THERE V' NO ELECTRICITY IN THIS = Or MU BE A PIECE OF IN THE HEART. THIS If MY EW. STOMACH ee PUNCH | You Won't HAVE ro HER, COCOANUT: FIRRE= SUTTON SS You Cant SWITCH ! WHEN WE GO THROUGH ARE MARRIED MY Pockets At nichY ! Att MEMBERS or iY THIS CLUB! EG ARTICLE” OF AGREEMENT — O)-T0 TAKE PLACE “TITTLE CHURCH AROUND THE CORNER 24 or, RING | DARE You To FIGHT me !! Laoies AND GENTLEMEN | HAVE RETIRED ERO! THE RING \ CANT GET (NTO CONDITION IF YOU PROPERLY MATCH: A YOUNG MAID AND A MAN, YOU'LL NEED NO REMARKABLE VISION TO PERCEIVE THAT THEIR “BATTLE OF LIFE” ONLY CAN RESULT IN A “HAFPY” DECISION. to some or to knock them down with his voice, 1 “ eae was a good piece of work ata good | a — = ara | a a ar time, for it sent you out of the theatr a ole vf ti el with a good opinion of his talent and 1 ” i Hie intelligence! Hetdetunhreehintess | MY “CYCLE OF READING” 3} To Save His Liquor. $ Mr, Frederick Lewis looked absurd p Hee ree | lene arena as Adrian de Mauprat, but talked | By Count Tolstoy |PORACH BIXEY, the doyen of very well when a gooc hefilting | d ‘ ‘ : y specch ca Miss Gla ae 0 ANinEgo ‘alise (Translated by Herman Bernstein Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein H SATE ahi eae rte Sart : AN=Well, ut| > 3 BEML DS fon, as Ji » was ha Tacit oi | Mark Twaln served his apprenticeship. some » intere | BL WhRE The Power of Kindness. A Vicksburg reporter asked Mr. that v in hi | . rani nay ir r . and musica Ther 4 ine dereewenet aniev sours weapon with which to struggle. MAR replied. “Intemperance ts what kills us too, In he e wt Hh ii © | off. Oh, the victin he sald tn his though she grew a ceoeeecert Helpi Tr Out. T is difficuit to be kind to a vicious, false person, 3 | whimsical way, “the sad victims of In- PL Fv tea elping ‘Them Out ee ee ie Oe | ananires ate her nccoun v down" Gladys Hanson as Julle de Mortemar, a Pi 8 i : a especially to one who offends you, but it is just to e \i mperance T have seen! ; the King ui TUN) " ! such people that we should be kind, both for the | Once, I remember, a passenger of Mr. Sydney } e ed Louls well enough, but his legs left room for a b the Kast CLE OLSEN LOG ieee Fee Pr yhtn My | o31s fell overboard. We fshed him gument. Mr Hilnd, as the bad Baradas, couldn't have been worse. Mi Is ps On a Crullents | save and fOr our ons Jout with a boathook aftc* he had been Howland Bucks art of De Ber Mis usual fash- ey Eaton Nae eneancnrenaren a | soaking on the bottom half an hour or fon, but hi inta Hammor the devote aly actec in conversation, the 1 single unkind or so, We laid him Hmp and sopping on | the deck, and a stew irritated and not to rd ran for the was worth Naess whiskey bottle. ODI ern k r, Sothert t 7 fairacintemece’t} a “Ag I pried the man's mouth open to Mr, Sothern ‘ UY fora th A Plea for Patience, Pe re ioed an error in any one, correct him gently and polat out to him is un ay 1 ; 1 ; if t sometimes with the emphasis on tl word, Bat after all “Rte is ar vat tecesaful, blame only yourseif, qc {Pour some whiskey down his throa , } qe POU Americ do not use Wherein he erred. If your attempt prove‘rnsticcerstul, blame only yourself, or | Mur some wiliskey town lis tleat nT AUST lage correctly,” ‘ 0 one, but remain meek.—Marens Aurellt Me canbon Wodeet, iat : ——-———2 $e Vv ANNE HART ROME LORU CG came from them, I put my ear down Some Tears With Your Tea. close to Hsten, and I heard the half. Well” answered M yenne hum: BF you have parted with somebody, if he is not satisfied with you, if he| Growned sav: vbly, “according to your present. stan- ree reat ou when you were right, it is not he wh “Roll me on a bar'l fust to git some The wages of te coolies who raise tea In Ceylon Vary from $.%3 to 1106 cents a dards 1 1 Chaucer nor Shakes I CAE CRS NAD CAO IE ED OTE OSCE Ee tte» HT ROME day. They are, however, housed free, and get rice at cost price, peare,”—Washington Star | be blamed for it, but the lack of kindness in you, Heker. Washington Star, _ TOOK OK a @ ® ‘ s ManniSter Pushes @ ® y es The Long Arvin of Mannister. By E. Phillips Oppenheim, if « by Little, Brown € Cod “You are go Kill us, to kill us oth!" he cried, in a fre whisper We heard of oath you took, A met you like a we n, both of ve lived and slept with fear have are » long.” " Mannister answered worth a stray y die, TL am Indifferen re not ny away. Oh, hell! It is hell,y was singularly free f made love to my wife, ! olses, not even a breat from i This," Mannister dect with a] stirring in the t Mannister spoke softly, rousand pounds!” Sinclar an asant smile, “is most Interesting, You, again You will prot ome baca to I was to ha ad ve had quite experience, my dear t most ¢ 3 er decl: air, and you speak o rad Now you will kindly nearly that l—listen to me. ey, you ad no cause to to lair an he last three words were spoken with you said that you were not swered, > not enough to live declared, sui+ mand Sincla d sunk between 1 tense 7 oo » went where he wasity That makes five. a present of rom me. If 1| owed you to : be the mar doing you a a anal toad ied, with |!'my dhterttions were perfectly. a Em 1 the woman w a faint smile, “don't you think jand I may add absolute anawere You wit vo ie ave it? You are not the Gast meant to ki ‘ ; ‘ of era ant afraid, You never liked work, at lair that you were, my friend. time just at first, and the chase those others a 1? : lady, your companion, too, has appar-|a long one. Lately T have had adv y—not me,” Ma e ‘| Avent 1 nea ty ently suffered ‘from gin to under- no furthe 1 } Sinclair answe lo ; Sinclair's body was shaken with| stand the ga pe ead 3 ae tl é at al We turned round suddenly, Sinclair | ein ne ext at wa ny and a ips Mann Vou wit find i stick and his hand was lifted ta! moaned, “Oh, It ts terrible to inderstood."” There was a mome i gain is a barg i ¢ | whom to as strike, Mannister laughed as he struck | Fay bealh (oo Aigknd tee a fool!” Sinclair groaned, “| clair wa ‘ ' ume. 0} : : a “Don't be a fool,’ he sald s ful ing behind—and you can't, And ere the t f clever mer the 3 t restaurants b \ 4 f alts "Can't you see that i¢ T meant to Kill your nerves snap one by one, continued. "So was Te itt ha ‘ youll could have twisteg your neck at courage dien: you forget onspiracy, Tean see that! must n way . ; any moment? down and listen t0 human being. You rus! A while T have been away our r t " " vst a Ite me” ways terrified. Every time you look, friends over there have proceehed ‘0 ais) I ‘ Pitlelr, gaaced vehind your heart sinks; in every crowd | atrip me bare and divide the plunder, |gjtt, It was ro time to bargain, enws in « tT “Give me another drink,” he begged you tleally for one face; What was your 8 4, m: OD friend “lt was Colln Btevens w . M Mannister measured him out a small quer ig place you enter with a sob| “I cannot ¢ Mt anything about It." | ne gald, slowly. “There we ’ eae quantity, of tear, ed doore are useless, There | Sinclair groane’. “You know very Welllthe others who were In a a em “No more,” he said Armly. "Bit down tp Knock! You must open! A waiter| that I cannot, You know the penalty @ names of the other ine fe sou al tha now J want to tall to you.” perhaps, but tho sweat {9 on your fore-| Mannister smiled. Mannister demanded, t ever I do ‘ edge The m&n grovelled before him, H ‘thead, you are shaking like a leaf The| ‘You will never,” he remarked suave Colin Stevens was the lea Sins nees and pray Y ; AY brain, giddy with the fumes of the! man thinke you are mad, Sverywhere|ly, “Do nearer death than you @re just] ciatr repeated, unwillingly wil 1 have to s . Come Spirit, held but one thought. He was | you are suspected—shunned. Every pair | now.” r r ; f i fd pam AK theo : seater ate ve I ees ‘ a is ot e@ wool there, a Mannie! t youre ° silence for several moments | niater » cal t ha et me o 4 b y al iia wes enteric hres BY i (Slie sis seetee roted beams to coete between the two mon, The little wood! your neck. It te not a pleasant death.” |tand. It was for that purpose that you (ko Be Co ed.) a ig World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, March 30, ¢ |possessions, and not for love, 1s far 1909 ATRIMONY tavtcad in M Love {8 a gam which a@ man play: | times gets, ts not a pay-as-you-enter cay, but a toMch you pay-as-you-go—and the longer you keep it going, the heavier you pay! ein which the girl ts the prize for s—a wife the SURPRISE he some What are the very sweetest things in life? The first love affair, the | frst kiss, the first cigar, the first baby—and the first day after youn divorce, The air of lofty virtue twtth whi | “doubtful past’ is almost humorous, | doubt at all about hls own past, The swiftest thing about a tazica | ride in it, Nowadays, a man feels hurt if a | kiss her, because he only does it just ich G@ man comments on a woman's considering that there {3 never any b is usually the kind of people who girl seems insulted when he trie)-to as a special favor, A good wife can sometimes lead a@ husband in the way he should go but not after he has started going same other woman's way. A man's idea of displaying firmness of character {3 to find out fret what his wife wants him to do and th If the suffragists do succeed in es! —Heaven help the other women! en proceed firmly not to do 4t tablishing juries composed of women Don't try to flatter a man by telling him that you “understand” dm because down in his heart every man secretly cherishes the dlustow tat he is a deep, dark, fascincting mystery, After the first year, married wome and stop wearing fancy silk hose—bect n put on plain dlack cotton stockings use it seems such a waste of mdney | lo pay a high price for something that nobody ever looks at. Spring is the time of the year 4 their tenderest. when hearts, like vegetables, are-of O} id OOO OG By Dr. M CODDOOQHSE UPID having ( grown old, has changed his name to cupldl- ty. Matrimony has be- come a matter of money, and 8 common {8 the mercan- tile estimate of marriage becoming that I should not be surprised to see the hymeneal market lists chronicled with the prices current in the Stock Ex- | change. When you hear that a young woman is engaged to be married, the first ques- tlon asked 1s, “Is she golng to do well?” Which 1s to ask, “Has he money?" Thus 1s happiness bartered away tor | worldly display, the very citadel of | clvilization and virtue surrendered to its | foes and all its treasures lald waste, | To make a mere business of marriage, | to call {t @ living, to make It @ career, |1s to degrade a contract of all most sacred and dear, A marriage without love fs a humil!- |bhuen stoop to the dust, a mockery that WEVM-C. PETERS blushes to the skies, and she who through the solemn rite of matrimony |puts her hand tn the hand of a man |for dinners and dresses, for palace and other than a wife, The legal forms |complied with may seal the Ips of Jeritlcism, but wife she {3 not, “Fine family and wealth" are the Irresistible potentialitles In the quall- fications of the modern ultor, What Javatls 1t how high a man's family {f {he Is low himself? What respect can | a woman have for a man who Is rich | in money but poor in ali those elements | jthat make up a man? | Can ancestry or wealth cover mental imbecility and moral ness? What is the Interest on $100,000, | or $1,000,000, In comparison with | dividends drawn from a loyal heart and | an educated brain? Marry a man for his mon nd he} will find {t out shortly, What. sub-| lime contempt a man must have for one| who simply loves his pocketbook up | base- evel ¢ Child's Nightgown—Pattern No DODDODODOGODDOHDDHDOHGODEDDOQOIDGOTODOHGOOQOOOHOQOOOO OSA Talks on Matrimony | bY adison C. Peters °% COHOTOODOOODONODODOCOOoOOaD’? No, IV.—Matrimony as a Matter of Money, Many a woman felgns to love a man who has money whom she would posl- tively hate If he were poor, The love of money {s a miserly pre- | tense of affection that leads to dis¢on- tent, disgust and divorce as soon as men find it out, If money {s the thing you are after, the older and uglier the man 4s the bet- ter, for nothing should come between you and your golden calf, I do not wish to say that a young woman cannot fall in love with an old man; but the strange thing is that young women never murry old men who are poor, and because they marry only old men who are rich the world justly concludes {t was a marriage for gold, where the bride !s bought and the bride- groom sold, My advioe to the young matrimonial bargain shopper {s—better two at 25 than one at 60, The hand that holds money and the wedding ring both ts not always stained with sin; neither does money itself fur- nish happiness or provide any certainty in ths home foundations, There are many palaces whero wealth anticipates every want, and yet where a skeleton more grim than death haunts the cupboard, and an ache sharper than imption’s tooth gnaws at the heart. Moreover, there 1s no certainty in the Possession of money, The rich of to-day are often to-morrow's poor, Character {s the determining force be- hind money, Intellect and love, and so It 1s the greatest force In human life, Commercial matrimony {s the evil peculiar to our time, The gold fever is epidemic and the death and ‘divorce rates are appalling, We put the mark of Cain upon the man who takes a bribe, What shall we say of the woman who has her price, often turning what Jg fine and noble away for the man who Is willing to pay for his victim, What shall we say of the mother Who places her daughter on the soctal auc- tion block and knocks her down to the h st bidder? Promising as the prize may seem, it is rare that she who marries for money es well, She finds that a serpent s coiled among the orgnge ——+— May Manton’s Daily Fashions. UCH @ simple slit. S tle nightgown/ as this one {9 in de- mand at all seasons of the year. It can be made from lawn, ba- tiste and cross-barred musiins, that are so desirable for warm Weather wear, and It car be made from tho heavier mustin or even flannelette and become Adapted to cold nignts, Tt can be made with high neck and rofed- over collar and long Sleeves, or It can, be cut out to iorm a Square neck and made with elbow sleeves, so that it {s really an ex- ceptionally asailable Nainsook .fin- ished with narrow lace edut model, s the material rated The quantity af ma- terlal required Zor, tha medium size (6 years) ards 2¥) or + vards 9 inehes urd of Pattern No, G203 tin for wits f 24,6 ar ears 293, of age, A Rn | ¥ MANTON FASHION +) LD MAY How allat THE EV 1 eg BUREAU, No. 112 East Twenty-third street, or send by mail ; to ‘o 132 West Twenty-seventh street Send 10 senta in coin { Obtain 5 or stamps for ea rdered + Th IMPORTANT—\Write your address plainly end alwaye } specify size wanted Atd two cents for letter postage if in @ jPatterma | ity, pe FU eee eee , eg