The evening world. Newspaper, January 24, 1911, Page 17

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_— pee RE NLT CT ET I AOE TE OT ELE TTT I NT LTTE * “The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday” January 24. ‘Toure The New*Plays|Oh, You Ophelia! eee Copyright, Avid, by The Frees Mubusuing Oo, (The New Kock Wortley, % Wy le By Clare Victor Dwiggins Another ARSENE LUPIN Story “The Hollow Needle” ; 2 | eke ak ; By Maurice Leblane # ! (Coprright, 1010, by Maurice Letiane.) jsombe, the engineer, and how, after pun- 2 - lishing his mwarderers, I presented the GrNOrGIs OF IRE State with his papers and his plans for pote toe the construction of a new submarine— Beautrelet, one more gift to France? Well, among the plans I kept those of a submersible “Chantecler’’ May Crow Over Frohman Production. FIMNG CTLAPTE ft ur ot F BY CHARLES DARNTON. the myslery Hane. Heautrele OSES Were laid at the Knickerbocker Theatre 4 ; | Rayne. (ihe, beautiful t t, and that Is how you come Kerboc jeatre dast night, nor were any com: ola y with whom he has follen i ve 0 “4 so own, So there was nothing to complain about on either side of the foot- : " Valmeras, . ptt ppdapsiibes ict lights, hanteclor’’ came, crowed and satisfed curiosity. sores) Le called to Charolate: “Take us up, Chafolais—there’s m0 cor now" — ‘They shot up to the surface and the | Klose skylight emerged above the water, aictt| ‘They were a mile from the const, oun Hen of wight, therefore, and Benutrelet was ‘ And curiosity will no doubt continue to 4 satisfac Sopp Aeetne Ever since 1005 we've been hearing of whe barnyard that Mee. A porand discovered one day when he was out gunning for a dran ly Abert or more later the name of the play came out, But the play tse! out in Paris untf February, 1910, By this time Coquelin, who was te have played the C as dead, and Paris was half-dead of curlosity. m, for ft has been S, " ow Neelle” | now able to realize more fully a Settee hight New York—or as much of it as could crowd Into the Knickerbocker * Mintnt | 4 headlong pace they. were traveling splayed keen, though rationai, interest in unna’ history a la Firet Fecamp pas them, then Rostand. Its earlier education had not been neglected in the way of feathered ; ail the es: Baint- stage-birds, but while it knew tn a senso what " would look like, It Donir WORRY Aout ‘wel’ Pierre, the Pettta-Dalles, Veulettes, Bet So ‘tes, what “Chantecle: would be like. Information on this point came wea U have To cela tees, % Me8 bana, Str Seat ae eile See ae arming surprise when Miss Maude Adams, out even £0 much as a sed the why paneled él Seohae’ te y . ‘the en or me oe | wearied of watching and Ustening t feather in her hatr, stepped before the curtalh and advised us concerning tho| ven ah p gt tg tng so oe events about to take place. 4, breal into the. ea him, amazed as he was at the man’ only puzzling thing abow’ It was how Miss to escape with Rarmonde fi Ps ‘ vig oy spirits, jety, his mischievous Adams would manage to » fe out of tho prologue and into her feathers Ye Te | chaff, bis delight in ©” without keeping the barnyard waiting. Pl ail CHAPTER XI. st But sho did not have to be up with the sun in the first scene, for the excetient SOMEBODY FIR » 4 ‘R XI. He also noticed Raymonde, The Feason that the evening shades were failing in the etrangest farmyard ever seen | ™s! (Continued.) young woman sat silent, nestling up by human eyes. FE ‘erything about the place was so huge that the hens and chicks and even the dog seemed no bigger than they should be. Tho Siluston | Was as perfect as good ease management could make {t. In a glance {t could de seen that Manager Charles Vrohman had provided an inwentous and elaborate eetting for the play. Both the scenery and the costumes were remarkable. | The eye was caught and held by the novelty of the production, The four Y @cenes showing the barnyard, night and the breaking dawn on the hills, the it's not your duty to stay with Gant. | rowtul Tely 6 Lapis GO kitchen garden where the Guinea Hen's reception and the fight between Chante- t mard, law and order, soctety and mos | Would ty a eanih ioe oa Gler and the Game Cock take place, and the great forest where Chantecler 18) ‘ : ‘ “ AND LET Me rality, Instead of going off with Luptn, | TANG nor “ie ae 7 |aguinst the man she loved. She Rad Mapa tratdt’ asked) taken his hands between her own and Was ott” | kept on raising hor eyes to him, and “Of being: Beautrelet constantly observed that her torent © 8°) hands were twitching and that the wiste : fut sadness of her eves increased. And, You're considering whether |@ach time, {t was like @ dumb and ser Given his fret real music lesson by the Nightingale, were all wonderful to be- CONGRATULATE p shame, infamy and dlegrace’ CAppoatte Dicope they had to dive Sent i Weld. There was a great deal to seo, but the ring formed around the Game Coc Nou! fortunately, my boy, you have no| they should be seen by the fishing erase, cholce, For the tnoment they must be-| And twenty minutes later they shot at Heve the two of us dead—and leave mo| &M angle toward the coast and the boat the peace to which a prompective hon. | entered @ little @ubmarine harbor est man ts entit ‘Later on, whon| formed by @ regular gap between the IT have given you your lberty, you can | rocks, drew up deside @ jetty end rose talk as much as you plense-—I shail| ently to the surface, | have nothing more to fear.” Lupin announce: By the way fn which Lupin elutched prt- Lapin!” felt that all re-| The _@pot, situated at e@txteen mflee Tesides, why re: 1 Dieppe and twelve from the Tree . sist?) Had he ise red and . and protected moreover by the handed over the Hollow Needl What|tWo landsiips of cliff, was absolutely did ‘are about the rest? Had the not| deserted. A fine sand carpeted the j th to humor the trresiatibie nyme | Pounded slope of the tiny beach. path Ith which, in ‘every-|_ "Jump on shore, Beautrelet—Raye | thing, this man tnspir ? monde, give me your hand. You, Charoe | ‘The fecting was so clear in him that| 1%. go back to the Needle, see what he was half inclined to say to Lupin: | h@Ppens between Ganimard and Due end Chantecler mado it impossible to seo the great fight. ‘Tus @isappointment was enough to make sporting blood run cold—but course we couldn't expect everything of iuiss Adams, Her Chantecler seemed Ike a some- what sobdered Peter Pan in feathers, In the first act we had, tastead of a cock | pws Migs es ie ; Kuay-Trouin and come back and tell me with a tendency to XA 38 lGheare ia Gn vous Gaal | terests me tremendoual! grow pathetig, and : ia 98 - NGSING RISEATT Bald bass “Isidore,” said Lupin, “if you knew og e e ame HandtoHandl By Will B. Johnstone | iiss api sitistenc™ | rou ccotray act yor tory. 2 ie H } prersbreyily a atric say would know that we are at the bottol ater isch oti phya tho boat, the ahape of when atruex him | 0 the cores of Partonval, 1p the parte ag pe rp dea ra Consrtght, 1911, by ‘The Drees Publishing Co, (The New York World), collar and its appearance quite une | fea cated ot eure of lines that should fap 1803, Georges Cadoudal and six accot- ‘have been resonant ere OouN ; ; men on eck, they weet down « ttre | pices, who had Innded in France witit love scenes between GENTLEMEN. Cor TAS WEATHER ve thelr heads, At the foot of the| ty the ned» i hulr shoe aa the Cock and the by the road which I fince then this road has b by landsilps, Hut Louis Valmeras, bet- ter known by the name of Arsene Lupin, hed it restored at his own expense and bouxtt the farm of the Neuvillette, where the conspirators spent the first night and where, retired from busines and withdrawing from the affairS of this world, he means to lead the life of @ re- which one feels when going down in @| gppctable country squire with hla wife lift—the sensation of the ground van-| and his mother by his side The gen- jIshing beneath you, the impression of | (ieman burglar * dead! Long live the omptiness, space, This time it was the | gentleman farmer!" water retreating; and apace opened out,|~ Arter tho ladder came a sort of mowly gully, an abrupt ravine hollowed out, “We're sinking, eh?" grinned Lupin. | apparently, by the rains, at the end of we've only to paas| whi y laid hold of a makeshift preanee 270 Se ve where we were to| staircase furnished with a handrail ee ewes ot bent anothor Mttie cave, situated right at the | A Lupin explained, this hand-rail had made even the most } * ¢ i bottom and half open to the sea, which | been placed where it was in the stead imaginative specta- can he entered at low tide, All the! of the estamperche, @ long rope fas- d : : ’ itchera know It, Ah, ten #ec- | tened to atakes, by which the people of Me one to wait! We're going through tha | the country, in the old days, used to he eee 6 and it's very marrow, just the |help themselves down when going to pause je een” he submarine.” the ber oe asked Reautrolet, “how t it] After a painful climb of half an hour rose of its own ace @ fishermen who enter the lower | they emerged on the tableland, not far cord in the last act 1 show you en demolished Jadder, brightly Mt by a lamp, was @ very small saloon, where Raymonde was waiting for the and where the ; three b just room to sit down, | Lupin took the mouthplece of a ing tube from a hook and gav | order “Let hor go, Charolais!" Isidore had the unpleasawt sensation €46 Guy ovr = 3 CT WOT? Hen Pheasant be- came a femipine RIGHT Now, chorus gasps in which Miss May i < Tm yey joined Miss } we Adaths sin drawing HER HAND PAT Hearr etc, th long breaths only mildly warm with; emotion, K ‘And if nvust be con- fessed that crowins [ @eemed rather hard | work for Miss Ad- | ams. Her physical cave don't know it's open at the top and | from one of those little cabins, @ug = a “ators that It communicates with another from | ont of the soll Itself, which serve as Miss Adams SQUEEZING BREAKING MY which @ atatrease starts and runs! whelters for the excisemen, And, as 18 oe mort i FINGERS 5 through the Neodle? ‘The facts aro at | happened, two minute ef the moment, but | later, at @ tarm the disposal of the first comer ath, one of these custom hous@ “Wrong, Beautrelet! The top of the| omcials appeared. elf up and saluted, in the great outburst, before tho sun had taken the Cock's Mfework out of its hands, she betrayed the effort of her fantastic task, She could not, of course, little public cave ts closed, at low tide,| He drew him: SOLID t Beyer achieve the Impossible, though she recited with her usual intelligence and detl- by @ movable platform, painted the “"~ y and acted with the charm that !s pecullarly her own. , BRAZIL color of the rock, which the sea, when ‘Any news, Gomel?* In spite of {ts cocky hero, “Chantecler,” as a play, hasn't much to crow about ‘he first act alone ts dramatically effective, chiefly because of the rescue of the Hen Pheasant from the poacher and the falling in love at first eight of the hero of the barnyard and the pretty creature of the forest. There 1s something rather fine and simple in the {dea of the Cock’s believing his work to be the greatest in the world, and, with the soul of the artist, persevering an it for his own sake when he finds that he has been mistaken, There ts some wit, too, though sur- prisingly little humor, In the way this barnyard satire hits off gome of the foibles and follies of society, But the sex struggle developed In the love of Chantecle for the Hen Pheasant cannot mean very much under the present circumstances, It Louis arker's translation of the play is thin and not particularly tm- pressive in either its poetry or {ts ‘“messaxe,” tt has many quaint turns which pieke it surprising, Interesting and, above nll, unique. The play Is not a master- It rises, shifts and carries up with ft and, when {t goes down, fastens firmly over the little cave. ‘That ts why [ am able to pass at high tide, A clever no- tlon, what? It's an idea of my own, What True, netther Caesar nor Louis XIV.,| ‘My wife-who does Gressmekingya® nor, In short, any of my distinguished | the Neauvillette”’—- arine—my mothee pre sors could have had tt, be- o,| “It seems a eatlor was prowling abeu§ met no one at all-suspiclouss rnor—only"——- suse they did not possess submarines. | spoke of her, Well They were satisfied with the statrea which then ran all the way down to| the village this morning,” the little bottom cave. I did away| “What sort of @ face had her with the list treads of the staircase ot a natural face~a sort of Enge invented the trick of the movable! Hshman's face.” i's a present I'm making to} "Ahi" gaid Lupin, in @ tone preoce Neco, but viewed simply as a “production” it ts admirable. The scenic artists s taymonde, my love, put out Re eee ae ° Fave done wonders. Honors here are almost equally divided between Ernest the Jago be ide fake @ shan’t want it/ ore — how ved: oda: ac Gros, J. M. and A, T, Howlett and Charles Basing. And Mr. Frohinan {8 really OO lane S keep Ber " “{ndebted" to John W. Alexander for the costume dealins ‘ ndrutle Hatt, which seomed to be of nor” a out tor Chi ‘The little chicks were instantly taken under ¢he wing of the audience. They | he seine colar on the Mer, Mk them), Ved War Teena ee , and the shabby old had a funny way of unconsciously leading the process {nto the cabin through the two ‘as never far behind tn popularity, And with toads, guinea ples, r ort-| from now. If there's anything, I shall Ats, } rough @ thick glass | be at the farm.” ; gander w ke aistainly something ected above the p | ked on and said to Beautrelet: pag u ntion, there was certainly something a the planking wal n wis and other things too numerous to mentl y olected ‘abate the DIARGINE | rallteg 00 086. 08 Se Stree to look at. The Place for cal Bi t is ture. wtord, as the cynical Blackbird, got delightfully close to nature, oe os, he hopped about in the true spirit of t, but in spite of her ho upper layers of the sea,| Ah, if it's he, in his present state of uly, @ shadow glided over| exasperation, 1 nave everything to | fe “Petticoat Government” y conclenc ib, clever, smart and gally conc ; a Miss Blayney was a@ pretty Hen Phoa’ tasy. : 1s about to take place| tite tated a mome ee ote revalped childishly ineffective. For the #ako of contrast sho should copyright, 111, ty Te Pre Fuftistlng Co, | fraette, who epeaks before the annual |through the NEGLIGENCH of @ tasy |tenance to get thls NECESSARY know!-| The teet ts inves But,| rit we ha t tora eaele ven ike Mies Adama, Oniy in ber bad voloe wes Mise Raney a oan | are one Loeb, | omrantion of the Altied Forces of Civic | wife may even patch hia own clothes. | edge, , yap ie ow) bask, Fe have vent Mets Guinea Hem Her five o'clock toa manners were hopelemiy muburiasy | By Sophie Irene Loeb. [ana Morat netterment, having « mem-|It is not UNUSUAL, Axes of REFORM may come and go.| He {90 the Py st 1 Arthur Byron was an indifferent sort of Dos, whe iy che Wor bes Oca | CHESTERFIELD writes to The bership of 190,000, her subject being the! Regarting the statement, “It tt were |BUt MATING goes on forever, And the Don't . Bred Dyiserdia a. goes Blt Of BOK Se Se Van oe el Evening World in “Lettera from |#>!ty of women to run the Govern-) women who were running the Govern-|™ates must have a SHELTER PLACK a . i peed Guetay von Seyftertits was full of dark eounds as the Great Horned Swi Ont © the People: thent, sayat ment as it 4s run at present itis certain | And Whatever ATMOSPILORE ta put ripe r t \ Witlam Lewera was the proudest Peacock Ge eee “If most parents| “It we had universat suffrage unl-|that men would rise up and put us out| {nto that abode reflects to the OCCU. |» Wea be avis Miss Adams “ruled roost” by her charm F man ; y ee RARER. am would give careful Vareal peace would follow, No woman| of ofce,"' tt 1s equally true that if men PANTS pnd the world Pg . no dowst her popularity, together with the talk «tat Rosand’s play ‘aused, Camideration to the Would vote to send her husband, on only COULD many of. them, nee | Certainly the girl may not CHOKE to Poot “i are *, will make “Chantecter” a success of curiosity is me Oe engi Oe: bringing up of their and brothers to be killed in warfare. | ing us run our homes as wome are being | MARKY or work within the confines of hea k ve . for the sa 1. > seccbicencetiioacstacaats —— - oaean daneiiters to. denen | Tale 18 RAE eae A See to Our! run AT PRESENT, would rise up and | the pusehold fhe may, with grace, ents made ave ef Fenounce happiness at the er all the duties of| country 4 milite PUT US OUT of them: and, No welf-supporting bachelor Kirl, ne and > » floating | when it seemed w on Roman Stenographers Were Slaves, te home tie, cooking,| "What we need to-day in running Our] to gay, RUE OF a OS TORRY ee ALL BER LIPE This ia 2 4 ie Isto t x i uusto’ o think JYolumes; and lke dense hail the words needlework, clean-| Federal and munictpal governments on | DEPLORABL But the M not | Another shastaw, a t , " who Day of is are cote earns are hurled from my nolsy Mps, but liness, housework,|@M economical plan 49 the epectalized| Joi very. often this ts the cause! ruth ts the tact ek Near eaten That's tho t n wa i M of the stenosraptonditions, Aa a|thine ears are not troubled, nor ts thy regularity, order, | taining of employees. [ot ARAL WARFARE in the home| cme acIND and WANT the home. It |. e sats Sd eas ; Of very mowrwver, the profession | page filled, Thy hand, scarcely moving, economy —-to keep| “A ‘washerwoman does not trim ahat) Which tn the long run does More! wig nay had the early tr : What w tdi ae eiyp : matter of fact, however tae ven vays of {files over the surface of the wax. the home ettrac-|and @ baker does not make clothes, We|1#mage than the war of nations, whteh| rrr ie and yet have on mtn eB | But eversthingt @ gives me te was foilowed as long 980 as the da) T wish my mind had as swift a Might ||P acy tive, read inatmass| should have educated end trained ape-|1# being gradually disposed of, the battle! onient attributes saint ; i Me re love, Hine Gua she Roman Empire TTaeenae as thy right hand when {t anticipates Soom || tive books and|ciallets for every department of publig|in the home being @ continuous Anst!- | phe cares of vie house ra a er silence and Poets, who are laughed at my words. Who, pray, has betrayed antreweael inagazines, devote | service. tution, io Okt ecaeneatcne ce Tie oft ul her I tell you, the for having private stenographe’ ima? Woo has told you What Twas Just | ete spare time to healthful pleasure,| ‘There {s enough money wasted) On the other hand the man whose fot- | absurd to evar think that man ma i, Cha a x ut walking in the them in the fourth century of ou meditating ab ing? How does|teacn them to be mofest, affable, un.|throvgh the @ross {gnorance of male|ter is quoted at the opening of this ar-| ner piace there. ‘The fox. may. for makes me faa and Prof, Cole of Columbian Univ’ your winged rig nd steal the welfich,, thoughtful, good tnannered-—|Moeholdera and by @raftera In public|ticlo t¥ not far wrong, On with wuf-| WAN'T to reach the fruit on the tall ro moving very fast, for a jeventh heaven. An) Weta in @ paper on “Later Roman flor | crets of iny inmost thoughts.” thero vould be less unhappiness in mar-|office to nearly run our country, trage, yes, Women may vote and work | tre vis HASY for the giraffe. ke bad , 1 Lupin? @hall Y ever Oo elke 40 Wim Remit now tenmates Inte ee etary | Tf We ren that in the fourth| pied life. It is a fact that hundreds of] ‘If {t were women who were cunning | SIDE BY SIDE with men, yes, But by |! ot. Mor NATURE has not “bul W are ae aa tnaa ut er memory the past which the first time the v K reves ar to his century people wrote with sharp points | young men are anxtous to have thetr| the Government as ft is run at present | ati the laws of the Darwinian the or the ‘ i o! . th ’ he loathes and detests?” address of the poet Avsoniis tO orn on Wax instead of with pens on Paper, | own ‘homes, but cannot find @ helpmeet | tt {9 certain that men would rise up and{any other Mfe-advancing progress, we| Woran is tho I dives ho mont. Fish f ar (To He Continued.) stenographic aealstaat. iy etning, |the picture sugwested by Ausonius and | trat would make @ good, domesticated, | put us out of oMlce.” MUST HAVD HOMES, “There t9 no | what othe D acd ipaginese man might Oy Aion | hig stenographer Is.eurprisingly Mike that | contented, modest, loving wife, ‘The| 80 there @re the two FIGHTING | place like home," and in some instances | nents are sn store for he Rene He ye Aceon! Gs "akiiful mas | of the business man In his office le-| nappiest homes sro among the hard | FORGES. One raves the peiticoat gov- |it 19 @ GOOD thing there isn’ | Every elster of ur needa to know Pi pl fee awite vows come nittar.».Qnen MEGS PIII aie o.cs is she dusened MUIR ClAmen and Sher Gecaaiere| enetieee 1a he DMMEDIATE HOME,| Every woman, sulfrage or no should /ZATIY. too the things pertaining t0| cred Lupin. “We're || story of « Quel of wits between the the double py of my tablets, where ‘8 stenographer was a slave, and the | make the best wives, and also the girle| the other tn the home of the nation. be TAUGHT some fundamental prin- MES conditions, jot only to iu - i 4 f “ uk te OTE eaten tol going now. What do you think of my peeereat number of words, each €X-| modern stenographer an independent who ‘work in connate rvice,"* Contgary to Mrs. woe See, sapien thes govern hone FaRGT. There prepare but p FOBT rr our ives fi hell, Beautrelet? Not so bad, frested by different points, 1s written young woman who earns her own living, At the same time Mrs, Harriet OL many & washerwoman trims her hat—if is PLE) of opportunity between tl b ipy the | she? Do you remember the story of th Ne a single word, I go tigugh &Teat —Youth’s Companions Jobngton Wood, lawyar and ardens eufs phe HAR any ef gt nd @ baker time of birth unthi the age of ssif-sus- contre of ify stage there oF Hot, | Geren Eearjs the wiklehed: sages ar / nine es deeper tere tree centetasemereanncre antiemetic ntti tien renee AER I? IE AE = rot CAIRNE IN Oe ete MT ee A r ~ yr. —., = Pa

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