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Evening The “Gy psy Love’ Goes Well With Marguerita Sylva EY CHARLES DARNTON. ITH most of her voice back and her figure under such perfect control that she looked very much tn the picture, Miss Marguerita Sylva returned to “Gypsy Love" at the Globe Theatre last night and scored as she might ve done on the opening night if her throat hadn't choked her off. | This time Miss Sylva got through the performance without any 4iMoulty. @ang well and looked even better than she sounded when she got out of! @ opening act and into costumes that were more becoming to her than the first she wore. These later costumes brought her out #0 beautifully and so dif-| tly with every change that sie never looked the same, One moment she mmbled Miss Flora Zabelle, the next ehe Was quite herself, and finally she! d both herself and Miss Zabelle laced into one. If the beauty doctor in the jece had mado her over after cach act she couldn't have changed more fre-| uently. She might be justified in demanding at least three salaries from Man- A. H. Woode were it not for the evident fact that he has already spent a| small fortune in giv-| ing her an tnueually | fine production, | F Lenar has! every reason to be) grateful for the lavish way in whitch his ro- | mantic opera has been produced, The scenery and costumes make it a highly-colored achievement and a large and excellent or- chegtra give it the last touch. ‘The rest remains with Bro: way, With all its; richness of melody Iehar's score has, I fear, too much the quality of a long Hun- gartan rhapsody to make it immensely popular. In the open- Ing act there 1s @ sug- Gestion of the music of several composers | who have long been greater than Lohar, He may, in listening to the volos of ambi-| tion, have heard other | prove the stronger.’ From the « everything—I doubt myself! I don't wounds and got them facts discovered and put know—my head fant right.” @ trifle mixed. | apryars that no intention of suicid “Your daughter's honor, Mr, Milton,’ “Gypsy Love" is| been shown by the victims, And from | the corone 1 good, though not ex- all the facts collected against you It| “Hxactly,”. my f her-in-taw otam- 0 results that you alone i dir the | mered, am wonderin ether y actly exhilarating.| Copyright, 191h by The Prem Publishing Lv xeouRion OF this. myaterioun daughter's honor requires me to accuse For ght opera the ‘Now York World), “ 4 : A Rpt 4 = upon which you can nite Hght| my sonsin-law uselessly. music {s @ bit heavy. <A by making the frank jons which| ‘Then [ heard the detectives and the The composer has ev F we expect from you—confeasions which {doctor exchange a few remarks about dently tried to get as f t grea j |aione ean win for you the indulgence | me. et hatiging lifeless fr atest scandal I have ever seen since| you the indulg far away from “The j\girrulos ‘glare ames tara) cual fs I have held this position in. Malington, | Of the Court.”* Do you think he can be taken to Merry Widow" ber ag tt ‘jet, Junot, ve |Your wife and Mr. John Please, are First, Mr. Dilys, allow me to remark | Prison to-morrow? bs possible. In this he ina they not T have never been In France. ye A Ueland eiped gers Apes " 1 Phyale 3 dia r the urgent, per- has succeeded, but he Mme. ‘Then they are dead—they are really} Physician, lawyer, tives, every. fe hgh Can Mr oy Aare joined | dead?" Oh, indeed it 1s not fault | body looked at each other in amazement | SUAsive voice of the Rev, Mr. Cragg, aa- will probably be re- an my fa' his car has mit I fal ¢ at this unexpected statement. serting Sered for his earlier work long after "Gypsy Love" ts \. re after, him, fainted at the precise moment De state . we “ of t Felt Et (he Gish laa aletat Onto GAiitG eeite ond coce thie wee on.att'ahers | when I was crying out: "Don't -do| Mr. Milton, my father-in-law, ratsed| ‘This man 19 tnnocent. oe tie nothing to take {ts place. ifibaal ba tashaddaceiatad amabbshacl fifi, Fr amit | that! Tt tm uacless and it tm danger-| his faco from his handa and atared at| | 1 usc all my felf-control tn onter not Guard known to the police ‘as angler. © | OUR: me stupidly. aPeetd ls The book by Harry B. and Robert B, Smith has scarcely gleam of humor $id’ siweted vf vin wy nara} “'Yes,"" retorted the coroner, “it really| “Never, I swear to you, Mr. Eliya, and | his arma, Sin Cat eek. im it and the comedians are sadder still. As the gypsy lover, Arthur Albro sings {i Higiot, Meviing his faiier nian, Meal | was dangerous for you, William Eady!"'|T defy you to discover anywhere in the| | When 1 did open them again only one and dances well, but this newcomer is so keen on himself that he should be ¢riwts to mary a former almirer, John Pleas, Why for me?" land of friendly understanding @ trace ria te 7 aa thee Lipid gheridan, drawn gently but firmly into the background at times. He isn't afraid of his! gies quasi, UUM Mewes tie] Because if the minute investigation | of the passing through Jt of William | ‘Ny. nal Was tne muller Me ed volce, and for that matter he has no need to be, but he should lose no time in; Suicide of his wife and Plea li ANT Wbaehia tc) ae CB Bady, eviator.” i In a surly tone, taking his accent in hand. It sounds as though it had just landed, Miss Doro- fn adeehans ieoteadin Ueeahe & “Oh,” exclaimed the coroner, “But, Villlam Kady," he repHed. apparent- i , 2 H PART 2. 4 question 1t leads us much more| come, on returning from Antwerp in the ; car have woe thy Webb ts so little that you wonder how she can make so much of herself, quickly and surely to a serious suspl-| Harwich boat with Mr. Milton"—— ly irbed, “Tmo longer have to ‘As @ schoolgir! who has learned among other things how to dance uncommonly CHAPTER III. clon against you. It 9 diMeult to accuse| tt was my turn to play, like my dan- fend intereeta which do not exist you : ou of murde; : y lay, will need an enlightened yer, ‘well she is the livellest and brightest feature of the performance. Miss Frances! J Have Never Leen to France, |}0" of murder tn he strict meaning! gerous companions, amazement and|{ am’ better than any chance one you Demarest rises to greater heights as a widow, but she's not a particularly RED around my ted were: ‘tt is given to the word, but It ts far| stupidity, might happen to get merry one. The chorus knows how to sing, and Louls Gottschalk gets good re- doctor from Mallngtom [rine ‘ee ewan the dette ty| “What ts thls new fable? I replied, | [interrupted his sentence with « @rtm- ‘sults from the orchestra, | lys the coroner, the Rev. 9 PONE with the most arrant falsity, “No doubt | ace have to deflne ‘There's no mistaking the fact that the star is in her right place. “Gypsy Mr. Craggs and my 01d sf | Wat do you mean by another crime| Wo Must forgive the grief of a father) “Yes, as well yo! anybody else. Love" goes well with Marguerita Sylva. | vant Joe Seack. 4 counted |_witch you cannot even define your.| Woe brain has surely been turned by | Besides, my case is so ample. Iam in- nsiderable difficulty, but I T asked with a calmness that at| M8 daughter's death. Never dn his life | nocent! . Theanine? them all without much gtour first amazed Mr, Crages, am an in-| 2s William FE dy, engineer-constructor, Phat ta evident,” he assented, “It rn A B ht 4 ntor, everybody knows—but I could] set foot in Belgium, I put my wife,| would be a craay performance to plead “The Quaker Girl Winsome. It was only at the end of several min= elegy heen Annie Milton Kady, on the wrong track | guilty. . How nit me ‘to. call utes that I discovered near the door, |". is what the inquest clearly| for a month, I apent four weeks in| Your attention to the fact that, in choos- F you long to spend a nice, pleasant evening go up to the Park, formerly | SNK In & tapesiry covered arm ehale | shows us," the coroner continued: “You,| London under cover of another name, |Ing me for your wolicitor, you draw the Majestic Theatre, and see “The Quaker Girl." This musteal play bY! fy head burlad la ve hana was weeps [YU lone di ull the preparations} which I mean to keep con to | au oe nie ele hay Fg eal James T. Tanner and Lionel Monckton {s so thoroughly English that it! ing bitterly. J for this dark drama, directed them with | watch her maneouvres with John Ples penne coves mien, dae, abe aaar seems strange in these Viennese times, but as a change I know of nothing) ‘The meeting of these six persons aay = gra ype | business of the Milton family, I am be better to recommend. |around the couch where T had just y ne et ae: OUI rable than any of my colle on te vake: 1 ar in bed, protesting vehemently: | divor: I have played a dangerous ¢ jagues It’s all very restful and soothing. Ewen the ushers are Quakeresses for the | waked, as if from a nititmare, cot, ERLE SuG nea nitahan ats Mir, Eliya, an you wali. ut fe i¢| duce your father-in-law to save you! time being, And they don't chew gum—make a note of that! But the ushers! Dolled me to mike a ties ver ne I have had nothing to do with] my fault if Mr. Milton, with his tnven Phin ts beyond my comprehenston, can take care of themselves and you as well, Don't lose any time in discov-| tite ie ¥ MMT this drama, into which you do not see! tions, {# the cause of all the trouble? Tx | Slt, puawed, “You think that Mr, Mll- vering the prettiest Quakeress of them all. ier name is Ina Claire, As the Judging by the ens and pa fn which no one can see any-|y¢ my fault If he came make Annte | nwt ineidka toma aniue evan ae irl” in the vase she is charming. ‘Tall, slender and graceful, she sings as! yeid me in bed th iiss dere i , [lose her wits by warning her of a retur raw you out of this uncomfort urally as she dances. There's not the least sign of effort in anything she certainly the most u satan t waate your breath In talking.” | which rought contusion to my It rn does, and this, more than anything else, perhaps, explains her peculiar charm. | tremely searching ey coroner, | 1 pieaae ae bared lth Per Is It my fault {f, having surprised the) fy a I satd, “1 shall enoose Clifton Crawford 1s equally easy, though he makes a point of it, while |the solicitor and the clergyman bent upon | ps ee Ao the “Clerkenwell quarter to] O-FOld plan of those who preferred | you wt the least hesitation.” Miss Claire doean't. He seems perfectly willing to have you think him @ bit) in disturbed mo without my clearly un-/aig''th. ‘solicitor, Mr. Sheridan, who | Wath to separation, T witnessed helps |” waty fees,” he tried te Ught-headed, But he is so Mght-footed with it all and so good-natured that + aa he be Pag oned without dan-| "ad charge of wife's Interests !n “ vs sh denativa thba. vou mupneser | W hataver ou want, And he strikes you as a cheerful idiot, He probably knows he's clever, #0 I'll not | g asked the Cor the divorce sult Introduced by her. It/am more senall’ thip la thabltociietaihgs aude wtb we sagaGatad Dother to mention {t. But in letting himself run loose he sometimes caus The physician nod He you) Whe S0is 10 sie. Reem Pile | on: § n the floor t i bial the performance to drag. There are moments when he shouldn't take so much! Two men Whom I aid not know en- MoM AanE te HUROPET I hoe | Ol tad In| “itefore being put In close confinement time to say the tnconsequential things he has on his mind. tered the room to enlarge the circie,} Ly wont. to| horror on the stick elt whould ike to read a F 1 paper, What the whole performance needs, in fact, Is a Hite more “ginger.” It and T saw m talk in low tones Wve A MY TOT rope to which the 8, Periaps you have not the latest Parts Jacks “snap.” When the scene whanges from a country village to Paris you with the Coroner, I heard only the)! an Maa nin hae ale ther, ny | newspapers at hand hardly notice it. Excent for th irl herself the Quaker spiri rt excitement which dis.urbed b oe ” " " s er spirit should be left. ¢ ers rein which was th h Naarae that Ta fabitalad, 16.3 ‘Annie, may God rest her soul. Ww sow replied Shert- Vehind. Most of tie principale and the chorus ought to Wake ap und stack mutt tiled? heretics mon: mwomree tne Tact 1 | nded b , " Off ata new pace as soon an they're out of England. ‘Meres nothing slow on prosecution js settled erelict yon have a gig. It t# you who| Closing my eyes, I added in an ex-|dan, astounded by so singular 4 request, however, about Miss Maisie Gay ve Is alWays on the Jump, and as a French! ar In high places that the basis | stopped on the way at a ropemaker to , Staring Intently at me he sald emplat- dressmaker she given a capital performance clval Knignt ts a french | ofthe accusation may be a Iittle weak?" |tny the fatal cord necessary for your 19 the favor to let me rest. | fon ough he doesnt get a chance to be hal and bri h sin the answer of the two! gesiens! Eve e! g ou f everythin ” Dome rae The Arcadians” he has a funny so i Tae loaaiinen oF the tathen| ae was soon to disc Fae Hs me Seen ey _— gen] Pinetree wea eel plact@ly, “for and mother lead him Into aiffcrent paths, “There's aw much truth ag fun ia this | were mmis ant of the afternoon which preceded | am worn o i Aaily toflowing the| >. Miss May Vokes i# droll in her old inimnttable to Inve is su una did the two vietims a it] I heard the coroner ask Mr AVIOLOFS there=Tle caper when the spirit of Paris moves her to dance, At J ton Hady seen that they cherished any such Phen what * na id lke to can't dance! Pope Stamper gives distinction to the . Miss Dt w! | steamboat, told a }itries to act like a princess, Miss Olga Petrova makes a French metre er Coroner, trying to soften his 1 Please a dinner at ahe! tion ut Iw really tie cause af your curt- Ous, and deur old Nellie MeHenry comes out of the paat to Ngure ae the Tand: | v said i n with some Mrs. Kady had And 1 heard fat awe ontt of an inn, t fal wn 7 1 ly one, T assure you," The cast Is filled with clever peonle and beautifully adorned by the © | _..\¥u0' do. nat: feel too waarieds. Wil told eh riba poten dbl apa pee enue 1 wsly godess divs ing Miss Claire, The music runs along very prettily and never gon charm: Rady, to answer t ate quest be Of your reclering, so fantas t puld he eA! Its strange—tte v Jeane bit tired ee inant founds the | which T have to ask you turn ar ‘nothing! tue to write ft, if fb: had the: ec \ t's atrange—tt very strange “The Quaker Girl,” with a ttle more “snap,” ought to put new | 1? No!” I faltered {Whe dread from planation later, at the of my tr he wiative the Park, Mie tntol eT ine trans telus whet you lias tady, I shall) ‘Excuse me, Mr. I ow. I \ (To He Continued.) Copyright, 1911 Seatless Sam, ‘the World Daily Magazine, Copyright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co. AW= Now, MASTER INFORMATION PRURBAU, MAY WE in@uiRe AS To WHAT WAS On YouR MIND THAT SAEMED $0 IMPORTANT? FIsHuN WUR eatin it git axl Subway Gink % HELLO. JOHN: HELLO Joe! MRIERE 9 10° wiht UST aoT QUT OF XQ [THE HOSPITAL ~) On You hATTUCE An You Wut AN=| S'MATTER (The New York Worlt) ™ ( by The Press Publishing On (The New York World Cort yes- THE MEASLES= NEARLY GoT me | Your FACE TaTHa WALL The, eu CAN 1 vil i iM: By Albert Boissiere ) Om Covrtaht, 1911. by The Pree Pubiiahing Co, INCE women have the vote in California will they please take of their hats in the house? Another Maine guide has sacrificed) himself to eave a deer. He must bea member of the 8. P C. A. A woman died reading her hua band’s verses and drinking carbolic acid. After long deliberation the cor- oner's Jury decided that death came from the acid. Last week a lady writer on divorce waa married, Probably taking advan- tage of some innocent young man to get material for a new book. During the world series a player was fined $100 for lurid language on the ball ground. He should be sen tenced fo one month on Broadway. The ball ground is no place for such language. A woman brought suit againat an- other for atealing her husband. The defendant produced the husband in court to prove that she had stolen nothing. perfectly frank with our readers. germs will be found on everything you handle except newspapers. How some New York Assemblymen vote depends upon the thumb pree sure of the hidden hand. A man whose life was saved bp a horse tried to feed the animal @ 860 bill, If he had wanted to show gewe- tne appreciation he would have geen the horac a reat hen's egg or 6 hemp of imported augar. A lawyer complaine of being ow tenced to one year in prison After all the things he has done to the tow he should not object to the lew @stag @ few things to him, If we reduce the cost of Netng Op doing away with the middlemen Re will become one of the end men Gnd increase our competition, A woman states that she éocen’t know as much ae when she wae mar ried. That's the firet time we ever There are germa on bank notes, car atraps and doorknobs. In fact, to de | Old Loves in Covyrtaht, Katherine and Petrachio. GATHERING BROWN was the only ehild of “Beat ‘Em’ Brown who, back in 'M, swept the whole wheat crop of the country before him in one huge tandsiide and then built @ couple of banks in which to store his loose han, From the day of her birth Katherine had shown a decided preference for things without frills. in her infancy she used to chew all her baby ribbon rosettes Into damp, de- Jected masses; and at the of four they say ahe systematically went through her wardrobe, when the nurse wasn't looking, and calmly tore every ruffle from her petticoats and dresses! From the time she was fifteen her attire consisted of ecant tailored sults, manaish ehirtwaiste, linen collars and heavy shoes, At that age she was & crackerjack in the saddle, bully awim- mer, @ tennis champion and an almost professional whip. Her father, lacking @ son, rether ad- mired this boyish aptrit, Dut her moth was {n despair! Denied the joys of a “coming out” reception and the launoh- ing of her daughter on the high seas of a “first won,” she wes incon- solable. People all eaid: “Wait till she gets married—some man will tame her’ Hut Katherine showed no signs of wanting to get married, although there were several men brave enough to un- dertake the Job. Bo, fancy free, she frequented horse tows, motor races, aviation mesta, &e., and her corduroy eulte and soft hats, pulled well over her eyes, were always in the thick of ft. ‘Then one day, when Katherine was two-and-twenty, @ young man of means who had figured at recent flying meets in an amateurish way proposed and was accepted, The knockers got busy! “It'll lat about two years!" aaid ope. “V'll give ‘em six months!” gaid an- other, But, strange to any, 1 ted forever. Hecause the wise young man of means tamed the wild bird he had mace his own as thoroughly a# Petruchio tamed Katherine the Bhrew. The day they returned from their honeymoon his protective, manly attl- tude vanished. He began to @lsplay a | fondness for tea and fancy cakes | they walked on the Avenue he'd spend before the shop windows com- inanely upon the articles of | bours menting | wearing apparel. once «0 rich and forceful, | was reduced to a plaintive, soft to that came oddly from his athletic frame rat of all. he never went out on “Fi His voice, and, w damp days without his rub! At first Katherine treated these va- varies with a fine ecorn—and atienc \Then, ax they pera! , #he took him When | heard of a man allowing hie wife bo forget anything. New Settings By Alma Wood:ard 1011, ty The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York World), * to'task. His retort was meek and miM “And oh, e courteou But the crushing blow fell when, one afternoon, returning from her dally canter, she found him tn her boudoir embroidering a cushion top! Under her stinging epithets he winced allghtly; and when she had finished hi waid simply: ' “You have taken my place, You live with horses and dogs; you wear clother my tatlor might have turned out; your bills at my haberdasher's are as large @* mine. There has to be scme gentle feminine thing about the house. You deny your rightful position, so I have taken it—and I shall continue to cocupy” 1t until I am dispossessed by the real xt morning Ketherine came down to breakfast in a ravishing negii- gee and a baby Iriah boudoir cap! And that night, at the opera, all @e Siasecs of the upper set were levelled at Box No, 4114, where sat @ white chiffon and pearte, fluffed softly over her ears, huge white ostrich feather faa, It was Katherine shorn of hep @uroy! Society gasped—but her band smiled. } AND BY THIS 6IMPLE TALS HOPE TO PROVE THAT IGN'T A SUFFRAGETTS MATTER HOW MILITANT, WOULDN'T DESERT HER GRANT BANNERS, HER BUTTONS AND HER BADGES FOR A MAN WIHO WAY WITH HMA” oF TOU BPLIBVE IT, BOTS, THY HM) «+ After one’s had hte ttle Ging At the world and found the agpten @t old 4 Oh, ife te fair at the bree As the eun cttmbe wp the And the flowers ate ‘We gather with lavish ‘We find the hills grow rugged end @tesp, And shadows across the pathway eregp. | And Ife at noontide te not halt tady Bure we have jearned @ lesson or two, Have bought our experience gay er ené, And paid our toll in passing through The little gate beside which stands Old Father Time, with outstretched hands, But when the light begins to wat | And shadows deepen around our way, What does tt matter, the loss or gain? What does ft count, our work or play? After the curtain begins to fall, Tell me, what is back of all? —Arthur D. F. Randolph. —+—— By Clare Victor Dwiggins HEAVENS ' {| MEAsLEes- (Te BABYS | lest pecnereee |