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G-o-o-d N-i-g-h-t WHAT! Youur NevER CROSSED THE OCEAN! ‘YOU Don't KNOW wéAT YOU'VE MISSEO! Copyright, AVAA, by Zhe Pree Publishing C6. (The New York World) The Bvening World Daily Magazine, By Ferd G. Long SAY- BILL THERES D NOTHING LIKE G0-0-D gem Saad yore Seas . setaonend sare “cournant Wil, oy tue ere Vu0 {F You Don't COOK IT LE GET some ONE To DO / Lin 1F YOU WANT ANY SUPPER YOu CAN COOK 'T YOURSELF! WHO COULD You cet ro SET ONE? LET GEOR ooIT! a Billie Eurke A Spoiled Child n“‘Thek unaWay.”” B Frenca a» vgs ives, “Lhe Runaway” came to the Lyceum Theatre I 4 ight without taroWing anything more than tae gold dust of Miss Billie Burke's crowning giv'y in our eyes. Michael Morton's adagtadon of the Jatest comedy by Pierre Veoer and Henri de Gorse wasn't nearl, =: #0 dasa! es Miss Burke's hair iy aszling It ts barely p ’ Je, of course, that In displaying her enduring young charms We little star—she ‘own quite naka ‘did not bring out the virg Deauty of the It w rather tedious, hough Not so Uresome as “Suzanne,” fm which this playfu' actress qppeared last season, Stace then she has learned no} MPS new about acting, Last nigit 4s Colette, who runs away to Paris to cecape marrying the village | molly- coddle she pouted, she \heedled, she Whinpered, sho hurst into childish tem- bests of jealousy, she kissed every man in sight, She did all the things she bas done before and nothing mor. Instead of acting simply Miss Purke simply acted like @ spoiled child, Un- de» other circumstances Colette might have seemed like @ half-sister + the. other little spit fre, Micheline in “in- constant Geot.»" If you remember that character you will recall it was acted delightfully 1 Miss Mary Boland, who proved t she knew the value of sincerity, wurke Inet night never once stille sincerity of the artist into thls Ilttle art student, Colette shocking her spinster aunts by sketch ng what she pleased might have noth+ ng to fear, but Jolette clone in Parts and loading herself bag ari bags upon the welebrated artist, Maurice Delonay, might be expected to show at fa taint .qggesiton of timidity, Miss Billie Burke was exactly th samo in both places. She behaved like the star of the play, not like a country gir) plunging blindly Into Parts, A wict- ful charfh, an uncertain sense of hor strange position, ight have worked wonders here. Mis psolutely certain of her Ras up to all her old tricks and parently unmindful cf everything Hor affectations at times led to the sus- picion that she {8 Becoming the spoiled Child of the theatfe, While she looked young and charming as ever, she feemed so intent upon being ‘cut and played o franily for “laughs” tha failed to make Colette # sympa: thetic figure. It was a foregone conclusion, of course, that Colette would marry a man 14 enough to de her father. Nobody But Miss Bille Burke She Ot Sa, ever makes cny fuss about {tin pli S though in this case an old friend does ' he to tt remind the artist of fifty that nis age may be against him In the long rup oe ‘e the artist @ very plain man, but he acted re than the romantic side of the character. 1 Miss Isabelle West were appropriately prim as the feaiden aunt dwin Nicander was v good as the mielirsedale 8 Ae y Ife once he gets to Paris, Henry Miller jr, ™ f ° art, Li Morton Belton was amusing as a tender-hearted police oficial. Miss Jane Bivane wae rather loud as an actress who could find her way back to the artat's etudio after the the without any bother, + But “The Runaway” has apparently been toned aown for *:e American stage, We ts quite harmless. beppinesa. Aubrey Smith well, and that counted for 1 Miss Emly Wakeman a ; A Few Odd Statistics. HE population of A:gentina has Peru on the auway from Lima to Or grown from 1s > in bd ng @ deep and precipitous I 6,060,823 in 1910. 1 asm over 609 feet wide and resting on sit?) exporta!tnrvee gigantle piers. Many of the men 534 ' employed on the work were ex-satlor not Bus) whose tr enab, 1 them to work enos Ayres Gluzy heights. Altha n the work was nosessarily of @ most dangerous ehars The city of Vienna perhaps the most rema act there were lents. But an nonic plague broke out comparatively few epidemic of bu or electrically iented So the bridge fatence. It 14 situated in the Schwarté-| wag offlctaily christened Puente de tas | enbergpiaiz. Underneath the fountain, Verrugas, or B of Hotls-@ pame tia huge mented c! v e placed which it still retaina, twenty-seven retlect! 1 le ef produ several diffeyent luminous| A sign with letters one hundred fee: and colored r is trans] high is to be seen on the shore of the mitted thr 7 ans mbia Kt ear Beverly, in the fegual to £100,000,00 cant ‘two mail curved ribs within. the Mmond t vor tee ed out spout of a ashing faucet fe late Si) Soli) Aird ta the most oddly prevent’ the water spattering as it pamed bridge ln the World, ‘This ly in bsues, no matter WHat the pressure, ita way across the Atlantic, Already it 1s beg! into vogue in London and Paris. goon New York women may appear on the Gireets with handbags that will look like €lorifed reproductions of the sack in A MONSTROSITY in handbags ts on ng to come Grandpa's carpetbag, stil! #0 fashion- hich some newsboys carry their papers, | ness, t ‘The new b able tn the tall timber belt, has nothing] panying picture on this creation either in size or gaudi-|of varying shapes, sizes, materials and/and suitcase combined. mm the Sketch, are|would be large enough for laundry bag well contain And woman atill grumbles that she is Pocket! Pocke' woman has progressed from Purse t> handbag, from handbag to satchel. Now, we are told, the satchel fs to give way to the “sack"—In the form here ilustrated. Meantine the @.signs. Some would hold scarce a sine Sketch suggests that the new receptacle en in the accom-|gie bushel of potatoes, while others be called "the Woek-End,” for it might goods and chattels sud- [etent for a visit of that period. (Coprnght, 10911, by The Press Publisbing Ox, (The ‘New dork Workay SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INST. NTS, Walam: Bed, priory ‘ap aviaior, id impulse some discovery to ‘om iis Way back to bis o ising law reuet causes Fads rvlease ug dea I's body \ convincing logic into it, his voice had | 1 am not fooled with ey f js no pasy shterwant Sunot's wile t —with my he arya proves ty with all my hea fuinot elle Mogiatrate, hay du Would lov was in the Ceptns {ged heart. Yow," he harangue nd why I %, the Strangler—and \ tive duty, Maitre J what it may, the charming and too une | M. ys happy Mu enlarge uy div Grenet! ingot et us unders: bracn, A Great Faris.:an Mys:ery Romance, | On ones aead. Now, du you understand , why I am going to place ail the Fr sources of my ingenulty at the servi of so noble @ cause? Do you compr hend that it 1» not M. Grenet’s imu derer who interests me, but—the rival He paused and stammered: “Pardon CHAPTER V. j The Anonymous Letter. ET there bo no mistake con- cerning my intentions IT have a great deal of aim. , ne me--the word outstrips m: Won lodgery of his at's eial hota va | CMANged strangely. The tone was AFM! thought. % Js not a rival, I hold 0 culty tn giving @ truthful pore achowite huime. “Grenet ‘abieure at kel er, calmer ned to be lamenting what I told you: 1 love Mme. Grenet trait of the extraordinary A'wishes to epeak with him” a lsh disenchaniment—one kne¥ with an ethereal passion! And, to suve| Mme. Grenet, who ts always varying, mouratul resignatica, what her from the clu:ches of % Whose execution an artist's whom, if 1! and for Were a married man, I should not want |to see beneath my roof, 1 am ulready Making the sacrifice of my social posl- | ve the head of |tlon and am ready to offer a still greacer ay my tmperas | one—that of my I I have said itt? to save, com |W. har ould be necessary. Pernaps tt te true that I much Interested in with an impartial ey should be affair to see If 1 ideailze |. “do you under: to heard Maitre Jujnot accompenying| 1 shall falsify it like M. Marathon! It bier ta his auto, ae | Tallow the frst irritation caused by tan Koln ft andirg vetore the door Ter equiva col 2 tow. age f00 | house, ihe ol \® oh ve ana ‘ ard me to ve alma | We heard the Magistrate's last words, | *P2** aithiess brash will batray nd each other! | gposen on the threshold of the o [the feelings of to-morrow, which wil who may be| “Ah! Juinot, you are the lu | be my real ones. » jaugh at me| ¥ I should be t U don't KnOW What Jealousy e Mm et} At that word jeuiousy, ers if the image 1 Ace, | goIe inexplicable asso a Lam uying nve her we 1) ) murmur as accurate ag possible, should ughier, 2 & vo! agreeable to the reader ng in Your duty, M. 8 enson, 1s not to Tussdsy, October 10. Frnted for the First Time in English moat | Let George Do It! 5 By George Lcosacenengaesn.zxcepenlagdabapaleniiandae. 1911. McManus You wouron't KNOW WH Te <6 tC A coon ERE oer WELCOME TO OUR here ts ne dishonor tm Y dear girls, remember, M breaking your promise to atarry a man If you Ang you do not love him as you first thought you aia, Indeed, it would be far more dishonorable for you te fulfil your promise If you knew in your own heast that your feelinge toward your ance -vere net all that they should be 1 know perfectly courage enough to tell a 1, and ahe feels that the man cares ¥ Nberately to make him unhappy. that {t Is sometimes man she no longer loves him. If she fs = tender-hearted arg for a girl to eve ery much for ber, it le no easy task don But, my dears, you must take my word for ft thet it ts better to cause man one sharp pang before marriage than to have you both endure the Psst I misery of finding yourselves unhappily tled to each other for lite, She Loves Another. Y who signs hie letter “FE. A. writes: T have been in love with @ girl for some time. Before I paid attention to this girl another man used to call on her and she loved him, She telle me now that she still loves him, dut that she will marry me, inasmuch as her love for him {# hopeless. Would it bo wise to contract suoh a marriage?” I certainly do not think you should permit the young lady to do elther you or herself the tnjustice of marrying you while she caren for another ms: Perhaps you can win her affection though, !f you are patient and kind. At she has been perfectly frank with you. pret Friendship. GIRL who aigne her letter “BY.” A writes: “I em an orphan and « youns man calls frequently upon me, and has given me many presen' He has tolé me that he loves me, and although I Uke him a friend I do not thine £ could ever love him, Now, my married sister says I have no right to accept his attentions if I do not intend te Ta ohe right? marry him. certainly should make your % toward the young man very plain to him, Then if he wishes to continue bis attentions he cannot subsequently re proach you. by Albert Author of ** The M. four nours after M. Marathon's visit, ty commit ap unusually gi ror, WROee horrible result was the tragical deata of the bewitching Mme, Jutnot! T had obtained the evening befor from my annoyed counsel a di two days before leaving the house whose hospitality weighed heavily upon him for many reasona. I hoped to profit by them to draw from Octavie the ex- planations I needed, In truth, 1 w: completely maddened by the {dea of an- other arrest, which was only a question of rs. IT rpent the second night tn the ots’ guest chamber—alns! what cruel frony!-in debating @ delicate prot my solence a# an Instinct of self- preservation And I really belteve-tt {4 as well to confess the cowardice at vnee—that the magistrates attitude, 90 arual, over partial, to Mme. Grenet | alone prevented my denouncing Octavle the am Yes, I real In t midiowa , Hid not dena er eoaure T 1 it as for my ‘interest to vursue that am as AM or | 1 foresee the objection! Curtains jatroner than’ ris he Ar en » image of| The ambiguous remark of Mme hat matters would have 0 you underst under>|my veloved wife, Anne Mutou, passed | Gre Everythi ds me to thin CHAPTER IV, Stand! Best Bd ta ati | betore my troubled ayes. | pot in the, etory of the dummy and (Continued,) 1 Jove her td ay | On!" J stammered, in an agitated! hat of the contessions, of which L now ;; a Ned w 49 | tone nL to des. t Mme Juinot s Maid. er bnew ene on | ees ale et eee OR hear saps tia, AEae Oe Var Mead Ww BELIEVE, my friend, that] are married to a de young wite!| "1 yp because I do not wish to ruin) Most Plauaivie expression of & ruts M. Marathon is right.) Yu are Ignorant of pumsa of |youy gald Grenet coldly, g| of Which we are botn ‘snorent | Everything leads me to| feelings—Jeaiousy ort Tepeat my order’—yes, yes, the perpiex.| 1 foresee the objection and | answer {| think, both in the story of Are you » M Marathon?’ Jing creature sald, “my order You| it at once. ' B tne dummy and that ot| the lawyer ed, WU leave Mme. Juingt# nouse at onoe,| Lnere was no Uupiicliy on the part of the confessions, of which I now hear] (Yes sit, 9 aimalehearied | ad, Bt Re tthe story of" the : . orant of the story of the for the first time, that this ts the most | ‘4 Bat an Agel} uh $0 galt teats that of the confessions, The | | plaustole expression of + truta ot wis.ca | 2t'* well that there is] At that moment, Maitre Juinot eame|SUY Me icgr wus the Work Of © Thad felt ax mth | as dark ss nigat tam] Sime, Grene: swiftly vanished throu org j Minaal The wae Anu, waite speaking the truth, Emuat| oat Nive Tgome aitent im, (anger on her ips, an eathing tb0 | x4 Grenet'’s widow, doubtless, to adinit that the tone of ner words was! prudence with this Don Juan Stephen {terrible warning, the incomprehensible (i act whose cyntoal jest #0 strongly imbued with tt, that 1 Preeencs fe ans estimable client! | ‘reat had led 0 blind alley, wituous thought I should be til, like @ woman| ; would risk putting my hand in the; “Beware” egress, Where I was punt to vay Who has hysterics, in the presence of 4 ee tnnt Miner Grene: Is the purest or | 1 ad Just sven, for the second time, | through an inconceivable fatalttyt so incomprenensible a Justifeation. women * ¢ ¢ she ts a woman, |the cruel, evil light I had | f will be I felt my hand burning with fever in| after all! I fear that she may be com. evening before in her pure eyes, while Conte Pullles her icy one. I should have liked to| Sietely deceived, as we have been our- mistress of the house ws \tleman who pur withdraw it from her clasp but I no|geives by this dangerous rufflan who | Pano. and I was terrified by the charming Mme. Grenet with longer had the courage! And she was| yas gained her bi fidence! I Tt was t 6 to wlsiprear, attentions at iHneims! 1 Intend holding my fingers with @ mechantcal| that she 1 gone away with Z| ‘Che lawyer soon raised the heavy pore ner to ex vr ty accuse Mme. BraEA Una as. BEBO: aA DOSARAT the eS tinare whic, tere which separated me from his office n to exculpate diary power of @ woman's hand, t kept me awake until o'clock this : matances bluns I had the terrible feeling that mine | morning you do are watt and accuse her would always be *he prigorer oO th.8! pot see the side by side, hand nly mor nor pity, whea woman, hand~shi Weak and tgnorant you, William Eady h npel_me to do #0. Aad M_ Marathon had resumed his dem- | victim, he the bold and dangerous rug- om from here a8 soon as it is really blundering, to Use no onstration, If he wes putting the same| fen! It's enough to make the hair rise | barener word, that forced me, twenty- ble dra J not have in the Uttle house en ‘the Ma t Neuilly if M into room, almost frantic, t and #hake in my at, the anory. hat just received Kady,” he cried, ving serap of paper he was cr ng in The ma nent alarmed me. I felt how it would be for me to try to his a 1 the aper from his trembl ngers and ad the scrawl, in w Maitre Jui- urged, unle e@ wished to mise irretrievably both hin por sition amon: ots reput # and Mme ive from his renet’s mi igh an inconcely- misplaced pity, he had ospitall Where docs this come from? Whe Boissiere, jan Without a hace. knows you and your hiding place? he demanded in @ hissing tone, with furt- ous gestures, I had @ feeling of terrible anxiety ond answered like a coward. | "This anonymous letter is from Mme, Grenet!" | “From Mme. Grenet or from anybody cise, what do I care?’ yelled Mattre Juinot, in @ paroxysm of wrath. ‘Ba. plain how the writer of this note cam jkaow # © # | My cowardice was to be complete? Was I to confess; “Ask your maid, Octavie—ask Mme. erenet herself.” — controlled myself and verge of my beseness. stopoed on. the | "Maitre Jutnot.” 1 sald nadly, “Twill not remain in yeur house a moment longer!" "IT expect that, and nothing be [replies edasperdtea | “You have undeniably the power to estroy or to save an innocent maa, I, William Eady, am a man of honor and onest man! I ask only one thing, jot refuse ime, for you Swear, that wi you will reveal my real tity to no one! In an hour | shall bably M. Marathon's prisoner aga ear that you wil know only® Stephenson, the tenant in the Rue Ma 1 and ever * © noted? * * Willam Easy, the aviator @f Malington | 1 sweay it! he satd. . rasied, “by what you | ear by the heads ou make me shudder with your head Mine, Juin he cried, “Mme, ) s away and will not return Be fi anche {have sent her off trom here, [ don't wiah ker t veot what has oceur etween vs! | nave a Dumb ness eng ro im an hour ¢ vou here when I come back! Vast # all I aa jof you 8 @ | He made a vistble effort to hold out his gloved hand. vimion me” LE sald, One more re The anonymous letter? Why, if yow please?" “That is my affatr! It ts of no sere vice to you, and it may be of grant utility to me! He hesitated ® moment, then decided, and hending it to me, added with @ bite ter laugh: (To Be Continued) *