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. oo) ; ' ‘The Evening World Daily. Magazine, —— : Spotlight Steve in Vaudeville 3% By Bowen Conyrights 1911, by The Dress Poblishing Co Thursday. (The New York World), {Vg YOUR CUE TO GO ALL RIGHT ON- THE MANAGER try THERE LIKE \S WATCHING FROM A ouUCK ON ABOK- MAKE GOOD! Get ME? T MIGHT OSE YOU IN A BICYCLE ACT - BUT You'd HAVE TO PULL SOME NEw STUFF THIS IDEA Witt BE A RIOT “The Duchess” as Thin as Fritzi Scheff. Eat BY CHARLES OARNTON. © win admirers a comte opera should, of course, be alim-witsted. Only grand opera can afford to lose {ts figure, Still, there 1s such # thing as being too light. “The Duchess” ts as thin as Fritat Scheff, And ahe is #0 thin that ehe 4s carricd off bodily at the end of the accond act without in @ie least adding to the burden of the tmpetuous hero. At other times Victor Herbert's musie seizes Miss Scheff and puts her in a Yooal flutter, When in doubt, trill—this aeems to be her main idea, She ts up to her old trick again, and after playing tt to her throat’s content she tops it Of with a high note and icts the applause fall where it may. A vocal skyrocket | May always beedepended upon to dazzle an audience. It may not be able to! follow the air that Miss Scheff has taken up, but ft knows when she gets to (he top. That's the best part of her volce-dt makes @ point of getting some- where, | Me. Herbert's acore, on the other hand, has no point. It ts therely an echo! of hia better days, ploasing as ever, but! with nothing now in tt. One moment t's} lively, the next “jumpy,” and so it goes, ‘The orchestration t# whimstcally clever, with @ eenge of hums in {t that tickles the ear, as for example when {t goos to, operatic lengthe as Mise May Boley) 1 CAN MAKE A BICYCLE STAND ON ITs EYELASH NO BODY EVER THOURHT OF IT BEFORE - Tur GET 40° WEEKS AT LEAST ON THE BIG 1 OUGHT TO d1eK To PANCING muses over the fall that goes before an awful bump. Again and again and even| Herbert | has} once again it proves that Mr. has caught the waltz fover that been raging ever since the first (no, not gem!) waa brought he Vienna. But Mr. Herbert’ favor'te| waltz tune ts ail his own. If your mem-| ory happens to be in good working orler | you cen almoat trace it back to “Mile. Modiste."” B, Smith have joined in a desperate at- tempt to give Miss Scheff another “Mile.* Modiste’ by putting her in a flower shop and then leaving the rest to her piquant charms. But the result ts not a happy one. Although Rose has flowers to throw away, the book resem- Octob er BY John L. Hobble. Cooma HHL Sete alginate A rested on the eve of his wedding. That's the trowye MAN in New Jersey woe ar- with havisg a sheriff’ ae a personal friend, An imported lady wants to know why we have lost the art of toriting love letters. The writing of love let- tera used to be popular in this coun- try, but of late years it has become necessary to abandon this pleasure for a more practical art, that of avoiding breach of promise suits, It ts reported that they will prose: cute the dam owners. Why don't they. follow the uaual course im enn mat. ters and put the blame on the dam workmen? A doctor thinks he is doing some- thing original in taking a man’s rid and making it into a jawbone. The same thing was done to Adam sev- eral summers ago. The man who said that the ankles of HRoaton girls are beefy” seems to be in need of a higher education. Wickersham evidently believes that the Steel Trust (@ unlawful according to law but not according to evidence. “An actor drowns in Pennsylva bles pressed leaves, dry of humor and redolent only of the past. It doesn’t strike me as at all strange that one of the com- edians i# bent upon} suiciae, George Gra- ham, John E. Haz- rard and Wilton Tay- lor really have noth- A Great Parisian Mystery Romance, “IT love Mme, Grenet as much &§% walking on the quay you do, more than you do, % L ain{drunken @allora and th Would have the cowardice to desert ing to live for. At) not an adventu oun know, And if\ it was my shadow, the shadow Mme, Grenet, who !s innocent, for you one point Mr. Haz-) Copyright, 1911, by The Prees Publishing Co, to struggle with|Wiillam Kady who thrust himself upon| know that she ta innocent, You know rant driven to! (The New York World), } = uppe such a fie! | have the one the other, upon my soulless body. ‘ it bs Sg 2 gs Mb. choked | BYNé . " eration to warn you that you Will) The husband of Annie Milton vainly | capable of reading tn her @ vi ohh a ee ae STNOrsIs OF PR INSTAIME Nn: (dread, for she had her meal served !") smart for tt. Inquiced, at the steamboat office, the| wells of love, what shines in thelr hin, darito’ Le sh es vote | aeantn or 4 when ineets M. and Mh own room ea And forcibly thrustiag twenty lout} time the next steamer left for Ha-|deptha ike two ailver atars, since her) aaT See One Boer yay oe oh fear, lodaers of ie ony ee arcs our double dread was needlene: the ny my hand he abruptly turned his} wieb, and the hours of the London] pure soul and all its sacrifice belong so : “ world Mr, — Samue rtinents aud tuere finds M. Grenet ig 0 id guest did not appear, eithe back upon me. | a litle railway journey of Jews) you. You have no righ AM Bernard. Madisoa suiiva iy ti only one of the men who can boast @ voice, and ieee, fram Oe cio luncheon or dinner. ‘aie I remained stupefied, dazed, with the/than an hour, In vain he made the Bedy,’ muttered Stephenson, hotly, to fhe gets very Uttle opportun! use it, Ae the confident hero, George Anderson | some discover to the andlads, whom he meets re ees profited by out Pe wie Na p ; in the palm of my rigut hand | gold cqtna of the reckless M. Maret in pod pee os the sabe iain me 's eines. oa his way back to his own room, His h ogether to put on cer od and in the depths of my tated | chink { ‘0 occupy his m " to your lot, t of bt Se etoeng. fo “ales soley, Who has a g nny Yen b2 fig eptilergin ‘Hine | Ue hates Sucate tte ey Pies tat would enlighten me concerning my | heart, really agitated. for. the Crater ink. th kits pockets to oceuDy ee gasi | loved lke @ god! Retrace your atepal ene sor Blan Holey, whe & Sten RANE Bed i P Sab Pen thse natlee ant bacoiiees . own intentions. So, ina great stew, De) 1 swear it, } a Pr ler, |) And at nightfall 1 found myselfiin the vi yt 4 yellow | pame Later itis , + in so distracting a fashion, |{t must be confessed, the Strangler, | Waltz," Miss Scheff is the whole show wet dress of green and yellow [amed chat dreret_ wan stranded before he was Said to me In the afternoon: this insipid, haunting question of the| pulled William Uady, the aviator, by| Place de Meir, befgre the Metropole | _ makes her hair turn red and gives her face a atrange look, but she comes out! hanged: and ty orher hands tan badye, A! “Z., this Is a very strained altation | hatr-brained Magistrate The sleeve, and compelled him to re-| Hotel, I was staggering like a drunken * peautifully in black and white in the next act, and in phe end cuts a very poitte | fhe inventigatio Eady Is deteoted vy | Which gannot last long!” “You worship Mme, Grenet?* trace hin steps, to rottirn to the Metro- | man, “figure In a natty little hunting sult of white. She not only looks her vest here | julnot, Aone. auras. o Se taces 7 pine Mal exactly my own opinion, and oe o wey not love Mme, Grenet.|pole Hotel. The two cr hatte Ali ue few ts 7 at my con- but she does a re: fascinating bit of acting that comes as a delightful surprise. Juinot persuades remain for a few dasa | DOGded ¥ Id not worship the mysterious; were carrying on @ painful conflet, Peet is ? . This isn’t the only ine does, When she comes on for her opening song) $,!* fen m alterward Juinot's, wife, brings a ‘You under meting nae ee creature who had crossed my deatiny | Stephenson was whispering In Witllam den dall eo Re agi gene? fe. you i y J j 0% home a new servant, ° The proses to fhe went on, “and that {ts capital. ean undecipherable enigma. My cow- dy's ear: t rinking whiskey with my he brings along a thas a real interost in the stage but no ear for music, | be Mme, "Grenet. thin ng {erin of the defects in. the machinery of OUT| ardice assured me ot I teamect for my | en Von are not Wehamed of your|Money. And that is all. Very well With this pony and the two dogs that she leads into the last act she may yet) Grane, &reror French Goternment well enough to in-|wife, Annie Milton, anxiety for iny rept. | cowardicn, yout You, alone, are} TRNk of this, my Ane fellow. pape. sh enoal bral 1 Nan attatrer ‘of ‘Mane le/form you that we have a hundred] tation and honor all cried out to me in| armed against the others. AiG) STBRRSEINE each s6yU ABO 49 The'length of Miss Scheft's stay at the Lyric Theatre will depend entirely By Marathon.” who tells the jchanoes te one of not bein: F dlatar Red rife g he of my soul, And yet trom| who tremble more than Me an mien pe chee deeply penetrate my n her own drawing powers, ‘The Duchess" doesn’t count for much. nd “That's fine! A hund 0 one, he depths Of my soul another vague| who does not know that you are . he Gy ah Fs ed bas NN AP dy ee protested, with an air of confidence. feeling spoke more loudly sull, counter- | 1am ty! Reflect an tnetant. M.) UN give until to-morrow, ‘That's nt ulltccint, and “And the ‘one’ in question,” he ob-| balanced my desire to fly, fastened, | Marathon calla yo , the Comte de ee de 5 : inte" ummernain, m #\rerved in a peremptory tone, ‘is that 1) fixed me there as if the tn ‘able | Pulliceint knows only Stephenson of the! While Writing these lines 1 belteve ° § 1." and suspects should denounce you, or you should de-| stake to which my fate had chained me. Hotel Stllery at Rheims! There was|'hat there was something prophetic in Just a Glimpse into | =~ ounce me—in a wort, that we should} pw it was no longer T who was only Maltre Jutnot who could ruin you, /hs words ah Me CHAPTER IX. betray each other. Now I am sure o| crossed the courtyard of the mysel hotel h the alevator, intending Halves You can ie equail eT re] 9 unfortunate Mme, T was clear that Comte de Pul- lofty outburst of sincerity. | K the auto garage nOps| | [> lage seek eae tire licelnt had reasons of his own T should be enti : i ; | 0. a an f you would have the good- . pak Comte Pulllceint { | | Arch ttiatnel Pantie miotar| Renesas being, with regard to me, | Business Suggestion. tame Seetng me alone, he spoke to me. RINGER is the leading trimming shades and as the plush ts in shaded | | 13 *lan absurd rival who has no trance, of | BS IBY had wor iene to] “Whats i I straightened up, with a wor of tn- Just now. The S-inch width in|effect and ratsed fully a half Inch the TiC ates ena We ccc tare: (Mrnmpelitnc, TAL UE ADORRE FFABKLY. V6 fii nest wo dit omen ft tn sole, Erving to appear as cool as he, " TGENne: I ; vi It is decidedly pleasing. It sells at tures, the boldest and the most idle.) worship Mme, Grenot? Well, you mus ie Bat pide don't know what I expected—a nun- Rs une a Bh ne a st sire re | which I could form, would lead me far! vive her up. My aetermination ts pos!-| +1 4, Lip dred q Jeationg on his part, the same on ‘our-inch jet fringo is $1.05 a y ae tncoate. awa, far, alas! My mind wrestled ut one finger into the) ‘Phen say “why can't I ———— *, Wideh of course would burst forth, the metal fringes in Drilllant colorings| plaid eile tinea to a aro Rik aventiona so disturbing that I was eet peers rest must enter! Tam | teep me for, the An Unfortunate Ablution d into a enmewhat Cmioult cons are 8 cents a yard for the 21-inch | ¢ 79, relias to match are (not absolutely sure of my own intelli-|resolved to sacrifice mivselts te the #1 a 4D a Any 2 te th te el Weeuly,| JT is au authentic antedoto of Hogarth that be yrenate sate oe Pek hacen yentes ‘width. Jersey sailor suits for the little bec kence. I mean to marry Mme. et, ADK a iconcaaiiies I to make certain ministure exetche | (, ahi The side frills that now so fash-[are being shown with bratd-trimmed | 1 took good care not to add to Mme.|don't need you as @ witness. Have you V 4 e ni throne ta be eaborauet ct an afer | Cat ally, verelessly én passing, ke 0 fonanie can be purchased by the yard. |brondeloth collars, They can be had | Grener'a terror the alarm she could not | UAderstood ty a ne mom | ery Convenicnt. time” AT cetaln drainatie nap oF § a fund ostwetn a0 ety men, ti tiste emoroldery a do colo: n¢ c ; en, unceremontously 4 cider @ je would write a plot i . M. 5 ai oa A fine hemstitehed ba emorotd |e NSB COHAES AL a Prices nave failed to show If I had told her Bis maar in bandeul of louis, meedead: | 2 ™ somadiing initio vs in shorthend. He wae ace conndted os e sew| bad piece of business with the automo fs 91.25 @ yard. A plain batiste can | ess nid pen veto 301 that Fi ai had Just received hia} MA POCKET hundred francs be enough | Waa ukaibed Of ution 4 drama by @ manager bile O—ga1—¥!"" be had at 43 cents a yard. Sepanese crepe curtains have a white mul under the name of Zimmermann. | 4. Malice you to get out of the affalr? | the coustruction eT nate tt weiter exclaimed: ant Me fm) And he went awe The new flowers of Wool Are ADP ERT.) Cet ne eee eter Dey are | egy er he Were In the street she eat} you gon't seem to me to have very | cevtly Uuilt, aaye | memsely wrbed the blot Geen Me. ties smile, of which T was to have, that 1 ing on many of the practical rea@y-to-| thirty inches wide, three yards long | een ey woes fost: much money, my lad.” ce ee ee ee ee eae evening, the most curtous explination wear hats. A nice cluster 1s # and only $1 nr j “I think that we are lost This mode of arranging a separation Jhc) « Now, about the piece! It's done of course;| 1 #tood @ moment open-mouthed, more Amini " y $6 pal | _1 did not even try to cheer her aa T ; dently desired since the you took it on jour thumbnedl and more perplexed, then I went up to Other wool hat trimmings are the} Children's blanket bathrobes tn neat! walked which T had ary ferred to i sels . hes 1 | walked | her side with bowed head, floral designs have the edges bound tn| my mind adrift. satin and look decldedly comfortable. | At last 1 suggested timidly: To be mare," 1 "lit was for wom lit, 11 Aled tha author, but as fl luck would hav evening before, and at that tle would have gratefully accepted, I could not crocheted wings, efther in plain v Weel or edged with bfick velvet, th; Mal The prohibited aigrettes are being re- the shoulders and a siail rest saleeman if he had Ophelia’s Explanations Ss] The Press P Copyright, 1911, by ashing Co, (The New York W { WonnoER IF THEs& MISERABLE WORMS ARE BEGINNING T TURN ON Us i VLL NEVER EAT ANOTHER POISON IVY LEAF Ad LONG As | LINES OHSOHS suck A ‘Tummy AcHE ! WELL! ANY TIME THE sicm& , WORM 4, BUT THe WoRM HAO A PAIN “HaT MORNING AND DECIDED Not Te GET VP —— ate EARN BIRD STARTED So me. BUT PREsenTLy OVT To GET The WoRM— COME A BaD BUG HAD STAYED UP ALL Printed for the First Time in English nd there morning’ uofortunately—washed my “ * vo ¢ 4 2, 8} ‘ ow use. $1.55. Crocheted wool quills in two color]They are $2.95, Slippers to match the! “Must we info M. Marathon of | OX Use G of your} Yeulent hands! combinations are \ bow or ehou|robe'can algo be obtained, what ace knowt! leaene. 228 told Mine Gronet of y “Oh, till T explain, When| —eeceneinirstee ¢rocheted in a combination of black and} Girts' coats in pretty gray mixtures! She answered tn an anxious votce,| what intention? The wedding? I ny fie 1 cau a Me Jems home Vn It Was Lovely. white wool are $1.45. pave a deep collar of the goods that) witch gave me more pain than all the! not such a fool as all that! Iam walt but the hace YOUNG woman tn Cherryvale, Kan., ested ‘alls over H . gy Sie ‘cheese. ALON6— Aathor seo Mme. Grenet, e threshold of her room were: ino ou have seen hin ag Bhe we hear the open window Her white hand 0 of her voles, which nn wens WHAT NIGHT, By Albert Boissiere, “The Man Without a Face."’ 19: 19113% He wasn't @ good actor or he would have been able to keep his head above water without the sligat- nia.” support. In Allentown, Pa., a fourteenyear- old girl fed candy to a bulldog 80 she could rob the owner's house. And some people believe that women would not make a success of political “An old-fashioned woman of nine ty-siz climbed a flight of twenty eight stairs." That's nothing. We saw a modern woman dressed in latest style climd a flight of twelve stairs. “Newark woman files a Reno evit.” Now what kind of a awit ia thate A rich man's son has deen arrested for speeding. He was going at euch @ fast pace that he ran over Ais ab lowance, and Maitre Juinot ts crazed, “And YOU had exactly the same tone in asking, “You have seen him again?’ in epealt- ing of the Comte de Pulliccint. “Yon,” I replied. “He ts there, He te atl t “On e cried, trembling from head ‘do not desert me, M. Stéphen- to f aon. 1 supposed that, tn this moment of tn- sttnetive terror, she was speaking as I was thinking, like an egotist, from the Sole motive of personal safety. But I was quickly compelled to pers celve that thie weak woman was far Perlor to the strong man whom I be- ved myself to be. And I felt aetual shamo on perceiving that my fate was the source of her anxiety, before ber own, when hurriedly added: “Lf you desert me, my friend, you will wurely destroy yourself!" aes Cid weed ley No, I did not love Mme, Grenet. But tt ts certain that [ had reached the extreme and dangerous point of asking myself, for the first me, woy T did not lov Mme. Grenet, and why, not loving her, I was still defenseless Against her passion which, in spite of myself, hypnotized me. Really, tt my duty to act with more frankness. In considering solely our common interest.I reached the oo! clusion that 1t was playing with dai r; that actually there might be dai ser in allowing Mf, Marathon to rematn n ty his ignorance. I struggled until midnight with this painful idea. And T ended by feeling such terror ef tt that I decided finally, since 1% was 4m: poraible for me to sleep, to get up, dress myaelf and go to wake M. thon to tell him the truth, Yea, yes, from all the evidence * Was necessary that I should inform M. Marathon of a pri ince dangerous to number on the same hall as exactly opposite to Mme, Gren- with a knowing |an unpleasant Her first words when I crossed the| door and Mme. Grenet's chamber also, la ray of Ueht, & By Clare Victor Dwiggins AAA ADRP RPP PPPLP At thia late hour of the night I had poly mt hearing my shoes creak on the floor, Every one in the hotel was asleep. A eool alr was coming from the elevator shaft. Thad @ surprise in the very ye? 'e It was to see, from under the Ji hdle all the other sum- dere in the row were totally dark, I sitting in @ leather armohate | concluded simply: ‘They are like me-toe anxious te was laid flat upon a half-open book and! sleep.” ~ your disappearanés from the are’ the rita the hard light of the little electric la 1 was etrangely deceived. aced by the beautiful Paradise and} collar and cuffs of red and green velvat "Take care not to do that! Besides, | ME 20" your disupnearany I jot @ botter.” ai, some lovely chicas,” was toe | with a green siiade threw ft into a Having tapped timidiy at 3. Qfare- ra. A pretty piece !n goura can be/in equal widths. They are $18.75. do you know anything, M. Stephenson? am speaking of the Intention of —_— . loraly cheeee,”” she con | Strange relicf. door and received no anewer, I fad at $2.0. A practical gift for the. October linen! ‘The meaning of jestion Was SO) separating us—forever!” Pi t £ baila a ae T in saw clearly Mine, Grenet's|tirned the handle—and the ec watch ‘A new trimming used by both dress- r? 18 a set of hot plate mate. mysterious that Ic nA \bo shower. | lt echute vee area wtiie rear, my| 009 € 800 OF G It 4s," be declared, hand on the knoh of my door In the! presented Liself to my eyes was eo un- makers and milline ngaline rib isting of three different sized cases, addenin ar that T should! Jad,” he answered. “I ain sorry to Bee 66TN, the absence of @ a boarding apartment in the Rue Marboeut, when expected, so startling, eo extraordl . Bon about three Inches wide, having th nbroldered, eac taining « Hte to Comte Pulltccing | that you do not understand me." if the imag A be used to quality won ahe came to te me, “My husband {@ that I rematned standing on the thresh- me cilge tn a raised plush effect. It asbestos mat, The complete; at the ple * luncheon hour,! Catching me by the’ehoulders and gy, stant aid, “LU atic to dorely,—oe, | OxPecting you." And what struck sje, old, unable to go forward or back, Beings shown in all the new prevailing}: | Mme. Grenet must have had the same! Jooking angrily Into my eves, he aald; | whe defined J f most wan the I (To Be Continued.) a ene ———— or