The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1912, Page 17

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IE TR REE EE EP PII TILT A TTS Fa TI a Fe EE ETP TS World Daily Magazine. Wednesday. March 13, 1912 OM KR Ce) OO By C. M. Payne The ‘Bventn “S’Matter, Pop?” wowewes, =, 86, BAC! OY HAS One Izv Stavieny is chawee ME FoR 4 CONT Smarrar {The Jarr Family: By Roy L. McCardell. Copyright, 1912, by The Prem Puttishing On, (The New You: Word), “The Rainbow’’ a Comedy With BY a a RAW), 4\AR : ; MR. JARR IS MISSING! BY CHARLES DARNTON. RAW “SS i y \ JOIN IN THE SEARCH. "WO @ Sit confusing not to know yourself from your umbrella when you wtack f , ts > u Foursels eway in a theatre on a cainy night. You have « damp feeling that : WA, Bec "4 A ~ i Ae oe Jarr wae returning co his rx \' = . ‘yeu ehould have left yourself in the cont room. ré ft . ving his tumeh= ‘Rain or shine, you're bound to shed i ; YONA S en poetry’ hie colewen a. considerable molature during “The Rain. t A Yj 18 ; a Marra ? o, AW eae bow" at the Liberty Theatre. You may argue that you are old enough to know better, but the experience of years in the theatre only carries you back to “Hast Lynne” and leaves you drowned in the tears that stil! keep Green the memory of Ada Gray. Those were the good old days when the pain of suffering was worth the price of ad- ~mission. And now all this has been brought neatly up to date by A. DB. Thomas, who has the olever knack of keeping his pen close to the bdiotting pad. He evidently realizes that it ts no longer fashionable to weep all over the play. (s content to Jay the dust in @ eympathetic corner. It is a wise author who knows dis own time! I¢ Henry Miller ts willing to go to the trouble of turning day into night he may well thank his sters for "The Rain- bow,” for in this comedy—a: comedy with @ very human touch—he has a play that suits him down to the ground. It is @ pleasure to eee this actor acting : like @ human being Once again, enc at : 9 : q 4 re Menry Miller ag Nell Gumner. 1 same time adding digaity and dl:- 4 mal 3 Paty Pinkainger, the art critic, or the last- tinction to the American stage. BN 4 "ere" ‘ ] man-in-the-world-one-would-suspect?” In the essentially modern role of a father whowe @aughter {s sixteen when 4 3 KS | © ) Mr, Jarr had just edout decided that rat she puts her head upon his shoulder, uJ | . ‘ ”) WY Hy : hy o : it was the last-maa-in-the-worté-ene- ty, Muller fe admirably and tenderly 1odern. The man himself counts for would-euspect, when the boss informed “nothing more than @ father. He 1s eeponsivle for a scandal that brought eidout @ separation herween hie wife and himeeif, but he remains @ father— nothing more. His firet impulse is to save 4d child from his friends. It ap- peare that he travels in a rather fast set. Qfr, Thomas seems to hie his own opinion of Long Island. He has discov- BRAS Ve hig dearest friends in the business, an ok schooifellow, a member of bis : and the father of @ boy Aim. “But Il have to ist my wife Py LORO AND LADY DECLOCH. Z'm going out of tow: “You aay we will be Fed SR Dieta ted qj 186 HAVISHAM and Lady Dedlock were two very unfortunate women who suffered | veil pining and grieving. The wedding cake under a glass «. © grew moubdy and the bridal] pnia p4 nist closing up the deal.” time eultivating Englich manners, In Greatly at the hands of the men whom they loved. But they acted quite diiter-| flowers withered. Miss Havisham adopted a» three-year-old child named Estella for the eole| “On, you can get her on the any event, Mr, Thomes is rather inclined ently under their burdens of pain and grief. purpose of saving her from her own fate. She taught her to break men’s hearts and to fall|tance from Philadelphia,’ to that region through a eingle be due to a too beborse Bit gh by ‘Bosilsh LENS loved @ gay, sporty man named Compeyson, who paid her ardent court and who promised to| was burned to death. However, the leading lady of the fast merry her. He had on several occasions induced her to loan him large sums of money, Honorta (a character in “Bleak House"), proud, haughty and beautiful, married Sir Mies Havisbam, a prominent ch “ E tations,” 1 1 Miss H 's taded bridal fi; phianthropical oid villain. om aracter in “Great Expectations,” passionately] in love with no one. One day Miss Havishani's jnery caught fire and she ak ne Sita. ‘wits soul wasn't bothered ebout Mr. Jarre e- mestic arrangements. i | Walen ibe never repaid. The wedding was to be a great event. The bride sat at her dress-| Leicester Dedlock, # baronet, who was ignorant of her past. She was rather tall, with! “nut Mrs. Jarr will be Ghe's Bake a et rare cn ing table very nearly ready for the ceremony when she received a note from Compeysou| very carefully arranged dark hair, and with a beautiful, stately figure. The title of “Lady” | downtown shopping, and was call me { with, “The congregation will now join saying that he was unable to be present. suited her perfectly, It was two years after her marriage that Sir Leicester learned of her| UP st the office et about 3 Rhea Ne. | in singing ‘Pull for the Shore, Gailor.’* After this dreadful disappointment she had her house closed. Everything in her own| unfortunate early history. She fled on the eve of this discovery and died from hunger and Licthd hg gy A bid vem’ ) Mies Hope Latham sounds a deep, true <“Wote thet ehould not be sent to the . bottom with « silly laugh. Ruth Chatterton as Cynthia Sumner. ‘The talk between husband and wife sg in the second act is also lacking tn el SMES Met Bie Meni. | Piegeet Cowboy Story By Caroline Lockhart ince bP MT BS DR EO “Well, we won't have any time to @e any telephoning {f we are to make the * aaid the boss. “Write e mam ‘0 Jenkins at the office to tell your, Afe, 1f she calls up, that you Gage ~ room remained tn confusion, just as It was when she received his note. All daylight was} exposure at the gates of the graveyard where her girlhood lover was buried. | shut out. She spent most of her time sitting at her dressing table in her bridal dress and 4 ELEANOR SCHORER. sa lhicpianimibeeninidiaes Adatatecaa tate sade ae ‘teed ir pridi 4 otar?. Sl samttety affections, ‘The daughter, of “The Virginian” | course, brings about a reconciliation In (good oMi-fashtoned way. But before the good edt bays (Copyright, 1911, by Outing Publishing Co.) Inatinct of self-preservation was quick ; There had been no love between them, It in his fingers, the sensation of having | bling lelmurely into town. beneath an jue Saree Paap the 4g SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ert itself, Each time, he took a] but che had not expected that. | it in his pocket. Smith was vain, in his! “There's Smithy!" he exclaimed to the! good fella To the ranch of an Indian squaw (widow of a| fresh grip on the slack reins @nd kept! Since then there had been no time or| Way, and money satistied hid vanity. It] ntan who loafed beside iim, “and he's on hie way feeling all would de well, play of tenderness, makes this the most feat Jue?) comes Hints, «bed his horse plodding onward, ever on-|tnciination for tears, for tt was then orl fave him prestige, power, the attention| got a roll!” | Ha {| Whether the taxicab driver test te affecting moment of the play. Rae fn ied White AutMone, ward, through the heavy sand and blis-| hag “quit the fat! eof hiie| he craved, His fellow lounger looked at him curt WwW ungalniiness of @ toad, |Rot® oF whether he had other esoge t= 4 ; Ae the Cree iar lg Hayy fy 1 dust, and always to the| boynood came back to He could call any flashy t ‘es bluft | ously. His head was set low detween stooped | Dortant persona! matters to attem® Go” : a pleasing cher, ton, © where somewhere there W&8|thougnt of tt now, He when hig pockets were full of money. ‘Tmhorn, I b'leve you kin emell | should ni e vag She has youth, but not the) ¢, se CT a oS relief which somehow he must reach. |4e nurt him to spe It imparted self-assura: He could] money; and I swear they's kind of @ lore, and his crafty eyes had in| Will never be known, @ufflce @ ear ‘Thie being the easiest way out, Ge note was scribbled, the taxiead @siver given a dollar extra, and Mr. Jerr went” * of generous and bluff ms it ] them @ look of schom!; heming al-|that Mrs. Jarr could get mo Cy} pe eS ae afore Mile after mile crept under his{ yi the better Indulge his propensity for re-| scum comes over your ey: informagjen dalens fers pina bigs) Cs ven oz | Sat er hee horse's lagging fect. ‘Tre midday sung ,,Jtls, (ves mere janting slighta, either real or fancied. |see It. iow do you know he's carryin yes Se Sie one sateen regarding Mr. Jarr when ehe teleghened tractive, 8 er lpr dingrace him. For #| beat down upon him, drying the very Money would buy him out of trout ar Pe. nM ow well a@ ho|the office, nor did she hear from him the girl, for which, of course, the actre , blood in his veins, scorching him, | ey pac lag sy ‘es, Smith liked the feel of money. He| inhorn Frank laughed. ‘ Te eh, & Gancechall hanger-on | that night. a at to biome sate gn the Serres. | sbriveliing him, and yet there seemed se gpewing nis rife | (Ok @ roll of banknotes from the belt] “1"know Smithy ue Woll aw if I had |matior; the keer ee one: biack= |" sie came home with injure® fesiings. ‘The. ~wracter of the wife 1s so vaguely no end to the waterless gulches, to the Sad. walteds” for the | Pocket of his leather chaps and counted! mage him. I kin tell by the Way he hooey pol ® novaniete Feed, Psa ti) ine ene Was GRatE a ara wae to be almoat unworthy, ot qand, the cactuses, the Prune aviing|stranger had geen him and was riding| ‘Mem for the third time | ai tides, 1 always could. When cal office in the Httle cow-town. Bmith | prepared a discourse for Mr. Jarr whlch fe, notice, and M! pT jarker +. "| toward him down the ridge. S my) | Broke. hi louchy-like, He don't take | understood perfectly the source o: r Be 2 oftener, but he felt no pit only irri. them pinheads In town, and then I'll ollin'’ f his| would make him realise that mever, nothing to bring It into prominence r, but he fe P / “It he ain't my kind, I'l} Gave to etop| 22 n Pi . no pride tn collin’ his rope, and he fa yet tt flattered hi 3 Laura Hope Crews takes first place tation that it had not more stamina. PH Me tt Rl soak {t away.” He returned the roll to/ his hat ober hix eyes—tough. Look at Ra ie it ean ee im al-| never #0 long as she>lived would ene Mise Laure B by making the mt ‘A aort of numbness, the lethargy of | hm." Smith muttered, his pocket with an expression of satis- Risa’. cauase te the 4 t aM ty en aincere, | wutter « like indignity at his hands. amohg the women by eeping over him;| The strength of excitement faction upon his face. Aan Rati ee ans “ o had been the n ate tbl i rope coiled like a top Callf By midnight she had stored up tn her @ie-aged hero's sister a very alble ging with a dull de-| him, and once more he sat e He ad done well with the hoi aeth of Tuy, What! ala <6 him te Gl and good-natured creature, CHAPTER XV. : hat he must be lost, | Saddle, fingering tho trigger ax thel pie «hoya had paid him @ third more Ri) “teu ca nae eres mind all she could say to him Mr, Miller's performance ‘has both (Continued.) « or complaining | horseman came steadily on. than he had expected; they had done ; : ; al! wos tons reet gt er on yeen Me ae o tinction, while the play 5 ca a sp or @ “He rides ike @ Texican,” c io! 1 4 delth n in}she had reasol charm an dis re hos Bhs Where a Man Gets A Thirst. 7 an 00 asions mm OF Ba caeste @haaat man eqmaihing cemiils 5 ee r] “Hullo!” Bmith angwered deliberately, | trond ¢ nts and follow htm Ike | calm end had summoned up an trouclad ie pot only witty but hu ow th akinae tron taciine: riiculate 60 baggie De od repay on trans etlons And Smite ha a ougined « How he comin it paid retinue from loon to saloon. | resolve never to speak to lim again, 7 nes, vic ‘ fe swung bis leg over the|This was enjoying fe! And ni . ahead. He dreaded to lift © thought he saw a barbed wire| threw his wel@ht in one stirrup, but upon this a ‘and ¢ she had Squred Steak. is eyes to the Interminabie| rence. A barbed wire fence meant cly-| Smith was taking no chances. He put It but {f you can do it" Tinhorn slapped erry t Mat ay 01 an a Beaman ph how much board for ' CCORDING to the new edition of desolation stretching before ion! He swung his horse and rode} out a hand in warning, and the other 4. Smith's back w dust rose. Jeouta play if he Understood Saath the two children she would pay her the Encyclopedia,Britanniea, the him, The minutes seemed rd it. The dark spots he had| man stopped. “Bure, I can do tt, and I'll start as} “Ge somothin' stimulatin’, | ‘The had gone down the i her while she tolled, a proud Sut ‘ord ‘ateak" is apparently de-!houre long; time was protracted as era posts were only sage-| The swarthy face of tha stranger wore| goon ay it's sate after I get back to the | ' fometnin’ that | th was in town with money, bt af here bed Ay though he had be ting hasheesh. brush. The smarting of his eyeballs|a comprehending grin. No honest man rl % eee ow fi Mt cold saleslady, “ved from Icelandic “stelk,” used in the ad been eating has} . He ranch. I gotta get to work and make nt & m with loud he had decided ehe had ved from Teelan hr word. “which (£6 as If he had ridden for a week, be- | and eyelids aroused him to ax -| drove horses across the Bad Lands. He| rene. | Motta wet to work Grink that feels. hike Oy at eight cf Gim.| By" & 30: te. Dad Senses eee ie as the English word, “whlch ‘fore tis horse's shadow told him ‘that f throw the Indian sign of friendship tol" ney nad looked at him quisaically, | Wire soln’ down.” Sinith was tying his|Sinith held the centre of the stage, ne} Personal belongings aumMcient to Anamee meant properly roasted meat, f¥0™M | noon had come. crying of disappointment like a) Smith, and they each advanc “The tact is, I'm tired of livin’ under | Horse. | Was the consplcuous figure, the magner | her to & divorce ateikja, to rcast;. that Is, placed on &| ‘Tie jar of his horse hurt him, and it But he was astenished most that] “How far to water, Clayt” raainat TT Ata qaaare daa “Here's somethin’ spectal,’ said | whte’ them all, He gloried tn it,| rom 7 until 9 her emotions veered atick or peg of wood before the fire 1 at times, like @ tor- nef #e-at they had not) ‘Well, doggohe me! _pmith | “And reform?” ‘They had laughed up-|20Fn, when Smith went “ pularity; and the! from rage, injured pride and grim deter- (compare Swedish, stek; Danish, stek, turing nightmare from which he, must Ris aes aa ba er OR glad yelled | soariously. | Keeps tt for my | friend Kaceoeak, fi * wes beginning to atazte| mination to fpar, Suppose Mr. Jerr bad roast meat.") je long distances i Pte Ai i “Not to notice." ow fate? Danie con eras been run over in the streets, killeg in ‘The came authority says: “A ‘porter-| With closed eyes as the day wore on.| and Wey Kept on alfing down his choek| The stranger glaneed at tho bere | gmith sincerely belteved that nothing |. Win t diinks. I a . 108) altel” hee ted ant tert, Memeline sub kidnapped by the Black , k is a choice cut of steak | The world, red and wavering, ewung : J ] backed si at the stood between him and Dore but his | in 2 can potioe.” se wiped the no sried axultantly, °C Mae @ dered by thuge—eloped with house’ steal around him, and he gripped hig saddle. | ther had given him @ colt back ther? | mering heat waves of the desert. teara out of his eyes with the back of|Motorious tdea that I can buck the|Hand, murdered by thui from the loin, 80 named, aparently, frst | horn herd” ‘The only pees iting. “a wi they slept between sheets, He| “Just around the ridge,” ho answered, |! im of money, ae ee me i se his hand. ™ ” | wheel and wi. *) Clara Mudridge-Simith? in New York from @ well-known ‘porter | agony of which was too great to be) rad, Proken it himself, and taught it) wpidn't you pack water?” jana throw It'ln her lap a hatful, andi .“E varanteo you Kin notice that in| He had not meant to gamble—he haa} She explained to the children end house,’ and eating house where cho ‘was hia| tricks. It witanied to dim whe (he| ‘But Smith was already out of hearing, ‘Come on, Kitl’=well, women wore | @b0ut five minutes, It’s a never failing| told himaelf that he would not; but his|Gertrude, the maid, that Mr, Jerr had steaks, &c., and porter or stout were righ Ws meee pa ane that, he told himself. | remedy for man and beast—not meaning admiring friends urged him on, his|been called out of town on ferved, at whlch Ahese steaks were a was superiatively intense. | jt <t'ine sad yp 4 Feet one Gay CHAPTER XVI | Ahead of Smith, on the dusty flat, | t claim that it’s horse liniment at all, | Dlood was running fast and hot, his|uuttle dreaming this was the whole truth, ' -ppeciaity. were moments when he had &/ and the colt was gone. His father hand- ° | the little cow town, looxing, in the| Put tt back, Smithy; your money aln't| heart beat high with confidence and| ‘phen, for she feared to call him om she . MA ateak grilled between two other| desire to slide easily from tis hor horn Frank Smells M lke & acattered berd of Gingy | 604 her hope, Big prospects loomed ahead 2¢ : ed him @ sfver Wollar. He had thrown nhorn Frank Smetis Money. hi I lephone at his office, she ; ne kak Aeon acy ¢| into the sand and Ife still—just to be Ps was glad hie ride wawended| Tinhorn Frank's dark eyes 1m; success looked easy. He flung jeaks, which are not served after t! yes te time MITH 4id not his money reckleasly upon the 62 downtown and send in « 4 cooking 1s finished, 1s also sometimes | Tid for 4 Of that Jar that burt him not care for money | 1, e day, He was thirety, hot and/ with an avaricious light at sight of the y red and “ : ‘a “*perterhouse’ teak 50. He viewed the dletance 10 the | streamed eves Y in iteelf; that igehe aid pot Win | black, and with throbbing puies |t0 Mr. Jerr by a : ; : Mot Gi thes days of high cost meat green gontemplatively, 3 net r with the oathg with which his care for it enough to work aly TASRRD ee wheel Ge pemee |, ser, soare were 69 ° Meo as the a ree, 2 UD | ft ‘had so frequently cursed him; i 99 bo teonad it when he t back © monument of elk | earned dis tiving by hie wits too long to), Sim | Oi Mm Oe seemed |the boy ap veed wery bawever, aa teen Pease the ie faa neo LN LRU ae wee than most ALN Beaten ‘he feel Of saloon, Was Lie fies’ wie smith ont a A oad an AL ore Ho {Fo Be Continued.) r i y sere a % g soapy eiacrt oe Sha idallnclicainntibamlbicthantgaten iL ella Raheny siniaabichehnibaltter evi «ge nails asinine a nl RL ka el le tn ne a asia PEE

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