The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1911, Page 27

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aily Magazi fe. “a __The Evening World D 4— Thovonts Emma Carus the Hope of i ‘The Wite Hunters’ BY CHARLES OARNTON. +k wken @ olg woman <o carry 8 Lew Fields production have noticed, there's cothing small about Misa Emma Carus, who took “The! Wife Hunters” on her shoulders at the Heraid Square Theatre last night | When the able-bodied Einma expended her lung power upon “Girls, Keep Your Feure.” something in the singer. rather than in the sung, suggested that abe! should Keep part of this agvice for herself She can't afford to tose hers If she euid even misiay it, fe at the Herald Square would seem empty and sad. For 4tune Carus is the one hope of “The Wife Hunters.” Without her Mr. Field: . ‘atent entertainment, hu it 1s, would dwindle to the size of the ordina: 7 ‘musical show.” i The four young men who gave their budding minds auknown to fame last night. ‘They. will be urknown to fame torte ee ep ere Man Woolf, David Kempner, Anatol Friedland and Malvin Franklin may ete eed without tear of being rudely awakened at an early hour by rival theateice) | managers eagi to fot au strangle hold And, as you may on their combined genius. These you: men have evidently given themselves a thorough — education in, the Broadway echool of voor ‘urn in his seat, and | reproach them with a! vithering "'S-h-he! but thelr enthus: kept up. wonderfully | well, Their love of} music was flerce and compelling. Tf they | wanted & song over | and over again they | got it, that's all there | was about It, an| Odd Facts. There wasn't original note tn any Mies’ Carot nut’ chars) [2 XPERiMENTS in compressing four acter Into every song | show that its keeping qualities are that came from her) prolonged almost indefinitely ds | efeanmnar tare ie a ttalite from (the process, Ite bulk ts decreased by A warship. She wae One-third, heard both tn Enal!sh | \ oe and German, Tt '8! he maximum of British coal produc- not uniliely that @” | cion was in 1907, when the total mined East New York. Bi she was good to start with and she grew Rene Once sia sto-d Tt ts told of @ clock in Brussels that by the cabin door that |it ha never been wound by human came down like agift|/hands It t# kept going by the wind from heaven and 1 picked cotton and ‘and long in any one and brought to the surface was 267%13,- 000 Jong tone, ‘The largest telephone exchange in ex- her voice turn in fancy to those dear old days whei Nokaninnies suudeville market. But ehe didn’ race. Her waik—and It nad the'real swing—kept her going one|istence is that at Hamburg, which {s Inoment, while the nex und ber putting he foot down I anrend rien aking cere of forty thousand tines et jon t nora” along irked ‘as thou: - dlatho {panlen & heat part of her good work wag, that she didn't put on any | Present but accommodations have been webare? wise made for future extensions so that this A large girl in a small part. Miss Ame Vincent added something to &/ exchange will Me enabled to take care whistling number (iat was funny —Tt_was something between @ whistle and a of twice as many lines It Is predicted that within a few years | # without funnels or bojlers, but us- | Ing oll engines a motive power, will be making regular passages across the At- Jantic. For subma es such enginer | gh in tt Nothing else chat really funny happened > herself as grotesque as usval and Loute Simon played ody with a simian touch | Mae Edith Decker sang well aything worthy of her voice, John Park was i a almilar fx, and Mise Dorothy Nrenner and Miss Havel Kirke were others who jolned in Whenever there war a chance, Mins Brenner had her beat opportunity in “Little Pancing Jumping ‘iemer.” and abe solved tt very cleverly The Fnelish pony ballet dunced in its historically original way, giving the performance life and movement at critt-al moments. Miss Gladya Mopre danced on her toes in care- ful treteation af Milo, Gonee have been almost unive-qully adopted by ‘The performance generally seemed like an Imitation of other Lew Fielis| the Admiralties of all countries except productions but there were a few new tricvs hy Ned Wayburn, who staged the | cngland and the United States Piece, that gave “The Wife Hunters” a certain novelty | — | Clam shells tale a fine polish, and the Chinese carve them Into snuff boxes bracelets and many similar articles, In the Chureh of St. Sulphice, at Paris, the 4] valves of a giant clam were used as re Is There Coal Enough to Last Only 175 Years? T* avaliatic quantity of coal in the] ion of solar heat in this temperature proved eo1 fields ts nearly 19,00] nd uncertain climate, and tt ™ miliion tons. It ts easy to cal-|5e folly to consider serlove! & possl-|ceptacies for holy water. The largest culate that if the rate of working §-}ite guply of energy in a concelvable| clam of record weighed O27 pounds, the speases as St te doing our coal wit %@)q.celeration of the Ifberation of eneray| moat welghing twenty Pounds and the ompletely exhausted In 175 years, by We have in this world of ours only & imited supply of stored up energy; In tae British Toles a very Imited one~ namely, the coa 4, The rate at ts being exhauste’ atomic chango. It lovks utterly Improbable, too, that we sball ever be able to utilize the energy due to the revolution of the earth on !ts own ixia or to !ts proper motion ground the shelle 607 pounds The weapons used by Menelik, the| Abyssinian Lion, to defeat Italy severa years ago were none other than the old 4 which this 0 un, muskets of the paypal zouaves, laid down as veen tner steadily for the last} tr te open to argument whether it! by commind of the Pope when the forty yeare. \ might not be wise to Dasten the time|breach in Porta Pla was made, since | MY sey 110,000,000 tons were mined in{ when amoke t# no more by 1 DOSING! Converted Into nreech lo t ati! far and ever stee the amoun | \ fing for each offense; an Instantane- | Vere 2) Lok eee e earl yy three and e@ 4 mill-| us photograph could eastly prove the et ~ Phare the Chicago Tri [offense to have been conmitted, a — ve the tmposition of the fine might i layed until three warnings bad re ween 1906 and 1907 the amount of }wayes until Fires gat rataed in the United Kingdom tne ill dal F 1,009 to 268.0 0,00 ; “ reavod from 24000 Jor herd ot} Vanishing Elephants, ‘at ‘painat three and a Leif] PN view of the rapid disappearance of Copertaht, aia Belgian, (wo and @ half tone | the herds of elephants which for-| FETTER an Inver e twn @ . Me stmany and one ton in Franoa,| © merly roamed in Afrion and the! rtebrate Ingra ngland's commercial supremacy and Mmited number of those anima | PS : ‘dy power of competing with other, maining in Asia, attention h Trouble likes to Use as a Pacemaker of called to the enormous supply of ivory the Man who Take watch exists In the frozen tundras of Siberia, and which, it te thought, wil! probably suMfice for the worlt'a ccn- sumption for many years to come, This — Mooi wmuen Whines {vory conslata of the tuske of the ex-| Whimpering ts No Kind 0! dort tinct species of elephants called mam- | Mgato for the Win-Out Song ft on the Nun juropean nations are obviously ‘go | rrned, #0 far ae ran he geen by the | -glative price of coal, and when prices | {ge owing to the approaching exhaus- fen of supplies we may look forward 1@ the near approach of famine and ‘misery. It's the Little Slips that \vc into the Blg Slump! mulate ome have deduced that from the|motha, Tho tisk of these animals were | ame We'he all Provided | tides, the wind \4 water power small! of groat size, and wonderfully | Some of us are #0 Indurate our ¢ ‘i suppiles of energy ere no doud! ob-|alundant at some places in Miberia, Ioan that wa Koefurs to (aiearn th tainable, but that in comparison with where the frost has perfectly preserved Unne ry Btu? without the Ald of a are f ved from the combustion of them, and In many cases has preserved Centrifugal Separator! not Seelt } coal they are nogiisible, Nothing {s to the flesh of the animal also.—Montreal -_-- be Beped for from the direct utiliza. Mtandard. | rhe instariment Man aocan't Care Sore ot } ‘ . y \ \ . - — a Seatless Sam, the Subway Gink #% & ( by Th Copyright. (he New York Worid) Copramnt te The rene rota, a tihing Co. \ Fs (toe New York Wort, / e beer) 3 1911, Vress Publishiog Co, By C. M. Payne IOTHING DOING? THEY COULDNT SHOW: ANYTHING JHat Wout D Gar ME INTERESTED. MY MIND HAS MATURED, SON Pres 1 Plotless \ Lite » Little ‘Thought, reing Jing for Pretty Fur Suits for the 1912 Cir] T the recent races in Paris the new fur suite attracted oonsiderable attention, The tlustration shows one of these suits in moleskin in @ striped pattern, made up with @ short jacket. ‘The skirt ts long, which ts a new style note, and one that will be gonerally adopted this season in all costumes, With these fur suits that promise to become very Cashionable the French woman carries & handbag made up of fur to match the eutt. In this case it is Of moleskin trimmed with fringe, and the noticable feature is it's huge size. The fur bags have found a place tn our shops and will probably be in de- mand with the coming of cold weather Another striking costume that was sreatly admired at the races was of broadtall, with trimmings of white er- mine, The skirt was made with a pan’ at the aide, which was strapped with narrow bands of the e: carried with The beautiful handbag this costume created considerable com- ment. It was of ermine and, of course, of huge dimensions. Deop white wilh fringe adorned the bottom, and over this fell a row of ermine talls. Tho other Wlustration mhowe one of the new fur sete that ts nent fo its novel shape, At the first glance one receives the pression that the wearer had donned her furs in an absent-minded manner, but not 90, They are really m to be worn thus, and, ax will be noticed, this style affords consiieravie protec tion. The muff ts very large and also od) shape he set 1s of Australian opossum, and vy gray silk fringe edges both the searf and muff, an Mishing Co, (The New York Work) of the Wind unt we've Only cag re !Mateh Lett! you Look If you've only Got one Gait, don't We used to Foil to let it he Running Away! Thing, until ¢ t Costa Rican Satdie ty Misunderstood” Man and the to Br Abused" Man both Graz 4 Posture had hin of Thiatles the Dube Wali! We ant Dilute our Troubles by loo oD Telling ‘Em! ta If the W had Stayed Abed he Might have Ducked the Barly Bird! Sand tunis Deater for rds riday, November 3. 1911. By Clare Victor Dwiggins \ whee — By Albert Boissiere. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENTS. friend We shall be wble to see through n Ealy meets Mf. nd Mme. Crenet a @ the opening." ’ Martooul, Eady ‘Oh! no, jfinde a. strom te coats | Hl nots” ther endatae Fagg tig ge Bayh “On! she said, with disconcerting Julnot # young’ Parisian lawyer, Ju wolnews, “you are showing a new sen 4 jealame of Hedy, draws a revolver in a sudden | @tiveneas that makes me wonder ft of mates, and fives at him. The shot kills] What? You, who looked on calmly Mine Juinot. Rely and Mone. Grevet eseane to sutcide-that is reaiy It—at the # Aayeesy ae athon, he, oa era ae _ {cide of your wife and Joun Pleage, ae Niaccetad kee tg te Tole ao '&,| WOU like to make me velleve that the Strangler,” and suspected of Geonet's monter | Ceath struggle of w mere lawyer, to Eady. aarts 1 Mestiog bia catherte you owe nothing, upsets you to law, We ens that his wife is seeking @ di this degree, Come, Go up, I tell yout" Meo tat le exiecte to marry 6 Tova And she pusned me up the stairoase na Witens, Cady goes to his home, wi by the shoud Desiny thrust fod “hrough © hole {a the floor of a us bilndly, irrestatibly, into the path we do not choors, but which % te Impowsible for us to avold, ‘witnesses eile of his wife ‘Statathon and Mime, Grenet hare fc ‘England and become bis CHAPTER VII, The Living Targets. ING! Take that, Stophen- 1 protested. “I will it wh: ‘quegedts that he marry ‘Ningland and dines a Nea a tith of ontsonous mm [neal © He end Juinat alone eat the mu dhroome. | Both are instantly ef ted Uy the poison, | ° ee eateer een r son, my old Charlemagne PART II. chum! Pang! Hit! Mme | CLAUTER VIL Jucnot! (Continued) The frat shot from the Tevoiver struck @ Dresden statuette on the manteiplece; the second shattere! ‘c a ‘ into fragments the portrait of Annie the Coroner, my wife, an exquisite pastel framed fa) = “And the abominable | under which war the only artis ' widow of the murtered| tic ornament of my dining-room. man! Ah, ah! youother®) “And the doctor dues not come,” 4 don’t know.’ murmured, frozen with terror. we don't know anything) “That is all that would be lacking, Jat all’ aswented the clergyman, WhO said Mma, Grenot simply. he one attached no Importance to what he /thing lacking would be that M. Mara. considered mere diva ns, | thon should have sacrificed his life for \ “Lut fam going to avenge myself) nothing. “What are you thinking of, on %, the Strangler—and since 1 am| Wiliam? Is i, not our sreatest interes: compelled to be a criminal the second that this man should disappear?’ time—you will laugh, gentlemen, | A third ‘ang from the revolver, No, these gentlemen did not laugh.’ interrupting the Impenetrable and cyn- They did not laugh when they *®W tcal Mme. Grenet’s words—and Maitre Maitre Juinot draw from his pocket Juinot's voice mingled with an eptlectic a revolver of mona aera be ote A) laugh. n the direction of the shelve “Bullseye and doubt ! ihine and with a skilful ehot DFIN® te no longer 3, Maratea down Half @ dozen flowered plates, G,, Mf, Marathon’s Mushrooms. ~ ALM yourself,” entreated “Certaint There Marathon nor Mme. » st, the sorceress, This will teach which scattered noisily ever the GM) them to mock at justice. Ing-room floor, T had knelt down near the open’ They escaped as autckly as Pos) Mme, Grenet bowed her pile tase 4, sible through the two doors o! near mine, which wi with cold apartment, double locking th POT Heraniration, and we saw that the niac within. kiiful marksman had decapitated with 7 ing both pitated wit! f ; a decanter of ale, cldedly, William Eady, he ought t© YP) prey are living targets to him" shut up. whispered Mme. Grenet in my ear, Let us run to Malingion ees pie| OUP eyes In the hundredth part @ urged the clergyman. @ second saw the flash of the firea: bd il be the most useful of the frearm, doctor who will aie person muat be “fected toward the opening in the ceiling, and our ears in the same in- determinate lapse of time vibrated from @ sharp hiss that made us sud- deniy throw ourselves backward into each othe: arms, The bullet had passed between our | taces—had brushed us, it might al- most be said, on the cheek. And it was a miracle that neither had beén. struck, yond the possibility of doing “Yes, let us run,” replied the Coroner, whose limbs were trembling, ‘You are not afraid, William, nor you, madame? | Besides, he ts locked tn.” And the other?’ asked the pastor, The death rattl> of M, Marathon, two paces from us in the drawing-room, tes | lcalled me to reality, and while une lGrenet was Mghting the two guests to | fhe gate {went Into find lying on the| said Mme, Grenet Ki sofa, with glazing eyes and fallen fac The unfortunate maniac began to yell had said to me|as if again echoing this woman's the poor man who 4 | eThis will end by a marriage and by @| thoughtless words. With my wild eyes T saw Mme. Grenet sacrifice tainly this new hero walk with @ firm step to the stand near ero who had go delib-| my bed. Jorateiy sacrificel hig life to ave mom | T heard her open the drawer, without | me and Mm ne at firs: comprehending her deelgn—-and dy vote once for all.” moment fess admiration, 1 had knelt on the carpet near him and | clasped the feeble bana that hung down aT orem 1 felt for | T heard her say ina i in must be ended, What are you doing’ T cried, utterly dased at seeing her take possession of my revolver. “Since you have no energy, my @ear ened his eyes with dimeulty and \ at me Wil) a giseay stare, Hie William," she answered, “I must have swollen lps eno gh for two!” a faint voloe, soarcely breathed. You * * * would do this, you?™ 1 a wlgh ald “Why! sho eXclaimed In asteniah- ” nea William = Fady. Let ment, wi the utmost sincerity * © ¢ minutes sti" might make me doubt your clear: kee what I have ness of sight. [ am compelled com will swear that to repeat the same qu on, ou Ww make!* © * Do you wish that M. Marathon'’s 1 sat vould be vain? nyself| “Iam not a murderer! ¥ protested uj with the aame fury Julnot, Neither am I! she answered catmty 1 |“bur nothing can prevent our being \* Always, to profit by the sometimes, cor eves we have been, oa dep) a little, ¢ © © L 1a strange | ¢ this very place a ot know, and tt ts ! But tn the Metropole . ’ 1 p verp, vou re: er, afte al, my dear William * © ® You @ia ® with Lord Abdeburry tha sam: ; S. thes WN Strangler, t rd f her husband tiveness! I rly, ir troubled face, J oo M. Mar. Ibs the Fame vrcertainty wh a 7 fu at lows tT had not dtytnet ow, Boh nd that, if I had like you, | would have pre- execupion at any cost." That is, you would have destroyed us th artef. irrev The ohildishness of you d his eyes ven t Irama character really provokes me, my dear Mara f the ters M. Mavathon himself has marked out Fi f ni ’ tua our dut May "You shail not do this! You shat nut and again tt was the living do this!” I repeated frantically, grasp- .orM iT er around the walat, forbid I left t 5 tterly be: 1 to be & murderess, Mme, Granet ¥ + * * innocent Mme, Grenet! You shall . t. who was returning pot kil! Maitre Juinot, as Maitre Juinor killed his wife, “Tiere t@ certainly @ Providence,” oj we

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