The evening world. Newspaper, April 13, 1912, Page 5

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; ' i THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1912. Chas. Hawtrey Tells of Problems 'f And Plays of the British Stage + AND HAWTREY TO qi the Censor Is a Good "Dear Old Charlie” Is English, Thing for Manager and ta ji Actor, but Says at Pres- “iy iad ent There's a Dearth of gees for Favor. Good Plays—Managers z Taking No Chance: NEW GIRL IS IN TOWN.| With Unknown Players. > 's Blanche Ring’s “Wall Street Girl” and Is Musical. BY CHARLES DARNTON. BEYOND doubt, that chair was 'B originally designed for the kitchen. Plain-and simple, it Stood upon legs as thin as they were rigid. Its general outlines, in fact, suggested New England. I could see at a glance that it had never, felt the soft influence of the uphol- sterer. There was nothing inviting | about it. But I'm dragging in this upright, and consequently uncomfort- able, chair simply because an English actor-manager set our little scence with it. “The judge's seat,” announced Mr. Charles Hawtrey, as he waved me into tt with an easy smile. Whereupon Mr. Charles Hawtrey threw himself upon @ lounge that suggested all the com- forts of home. If you have seen this loving actor in "A Message from * you can imagine him working away at an “interview.” Off the stage, 1 as on it, he takes things easily. That's the secret of his charm, To bring him up to the present mo- has been sent by Mrs. Peploe, but | Ment I have only to say that Charles & way out of the predicament by | Hawtrey growing gray gracefully, wafessing that the statement is true, |@s befits England's most accomplished had had an entanglement, but tt | comedian hes come over this time > } 4 18 HAWTREY with his Lon- @on company begins a four weeks’ engagement at Maxine Elliott's on Monday night in “Dear O14 & farce adapted from the by Charles H. Brookfleld, who @ince been appointed Play Censor of . “Dear Old Charite” gives a comprehensive epitome of his when, on the morning of his mai 9 Agnes Fishbourne, he looks wh eome letters sent him from the ted wife of Thomas Dumphle and | spouse of Gabriel Peploe. The el- | @erty husbands are introduced and talk Balvely of their close friendship with Ghariie, whose equanimity is somewhat jt when his prospective mother-in- arrives in high dudgeon and reads anonymous letter which charges @i with an entanglement with a mar- woman. Charlie knows that the ut with the death of the lady some | followed by the hue and cry ralsed months before. This explanation | S@lust @ certain, or now por ibly un- @liefies the bride's mother, but Peploe's certain, Mr. Brookfield who, since his @eepictons are aroused, when, picking |@daptation of “Dear Old Charlie,” has UP the letter, he recognizes his wife's Had the misfortune to become the P hendwriting. Charlie scoffs at the idea, | Censor of England. ft the same timo abstracting a note |APPEALED TO HAWTREY’S SENSE | ————_— eres aes me 9 we or wr Closes To-Night After 22 Weeks Sala Leslie, Made! Yonge, Mona Harri-| “G-r-r-r," gurgled Mr. Hawtrey, his _— om, E. Halman Clark, Charles B./sense of humor rising to his throat. Vaughan and others. | He lounged npon his elbow and then Bee \ ae EM brought himself up with @ supreme e! Blanche Ring, One of the Most Success- ful Years Ever Known, With the Artistic Stand- masons, at the George M: tort. akan These on Monday night, will “W's like this,” he explained. “I could Sate eee eey De Maree Mac and |Nfite a scathing denunciation of ‘Dear : cari Old Charlte, or I could compose a Selwyn. The music is by Kari % {charming litte fdyli setting forth the Sven and others. Phe story center: Jemima Greene, daughter of a|rare beauties of the play.” atreet broker. When her father; It occurred to me that the work! lost turns down a Nevada gold mining prop-'a versatile dramatic critic when Mr. ards Set High--‘‘Or- fae aegis, tas I Riri and | awtrey became an actor, but I kept feo,’ English inC : interest in her mining partner | ts idea to myself for fear it might eo, inEnglish in Con- ym then on becomes distinctly | disturb his rest, He raised himself upon femitine. Among others with Miss Ring | his elbow to make the interesting state- wn Harry Giifoll, William P. Carle- | ment: oR, Clarence Olivor, Maude Knowlton, | “One thing !s certain—the censorship cert Form; To-Morrow Night. Florence Shirley and Cross and jin Englund wil! not be abolished. The | ns ian aoe Jentire body ‘of actor-managers, not to| By SYLVESTER RAWLING. New features at the Winter Garden Mention other managers, is in favor of | | ¢ RFEO,” Claudio Monte. on Tuesday night will be Grete Wie- it. It {8 a good thing for the actor- verde’s opera, produced in genthal, a famous German dancer; manager. Without It he might produce Beay MEROMGAy che ise Moon and Morris, eccentric dancers, a play he considered harmless and % ® y to deserve the appellation according to modern ideas, 1s to be presented in concert form at the Metropolitan Opera House to-morrow night. It clean, and at thd same time find him- self at the mercy of any one who saw fit to make a complaint before a mag- istrate, This, of ¢ make lot of trouble for him. That's the way | matters stand in Englantl to-day. Tne! will be sung in English to a text opposition to the censorship {s centred reeegroup cf authors who write what |fransiated from the original by @omes to the Manhattan Opera House. we cali ‘advanced’ pla | Charles Henry Meltzer. This is said The Grand Opera House will have| py reminding Mr. Hawtrey of theatre- to he @ first concession by Mr. Gatti “Get Rich Quick Wallingford.” lecera't sn m off the lounge | Mr, “The Bird of Par. will be seen! * NT Gon't think,” he sald, pacing slowly |to the movement for presenting op- hee stone wee the se Academy |UP_fit down the room, “that Engtisi era in the vernacular. The rumor cadem atres e a straw about the of Music will give “Pretty P theatresoers care 4 ST dy entirely |18 that at least two foreign operas eee ane, ‘8 stock beg od de- lin seeing they consider a good are to be sung in English next sea- gins on lay @ season at the People’s play, A man ad a boy may make a! Greetre on the Bowery in “Aline Jimmy | Pee poiseein tect, they may goto the (20% The principal characters in Valentine.” theatre for no other purpose—out their | “Orfeo” will be impersonated by Rita “The Gocial Maids" come to the Co-/ outcry is directed againat the nsor a8! Fornia, Maria Duchene, Anna Case, c c 4 nat the censor 2%/ Henrietta Wakefleld, Hermann Well, an institut: not aga! “The World of Pleasur | Herbert Witherspoon and Basly will be seen | an author. atthe Murrey Hill Theatre. “This attitude was plainly shown in | Ruysdael. Josef Pasternack will con- duct. The chorus has been drilled Marry Hastinge’s Big Show will bo| the reception on the first night of “Dear by that master artist, Glulio Settt. and the “Texas Tommy Dancers, . . Beginning Monday evening the Paul @. Rainey African Jungte Picture Lec- tures will be given at the Lyceum The- etri eo 8 6 John Mason in “As a Man Thinks’ attraction at Hurtig & Seamon’ } Old Charlle.” Nine out of ten people will be “The Troca-| Who go to the the: u England come away without kn Ko who Wrote the roadway wit be | play. Aside from Shaw and Pinero, an P Since EA oy Eee Thenien author's name isn't worth sixepence in| The regular season of opera ends to- ‘Qamer'e Americans” move to the Bronx | London.” | night with a performance of the double bill “‘Haensel und Gretel’ leria.” and and ‘‘Caval- It has lasted twenty-two weeks has proved most successful. SHAW AND PINERO THE TWO BIG DRAWING CARDS. hen Shaw still ‘Theatre. VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. sia cneact sy by Kawa Pepe. | ef more artistic presentations of opera makes her vaudeville debut at the Fifth | leading dray seen in this city. Mr, Gattl, Avenue Theatre, Another new feature | try that Shaw lan't s capacity for management be a skit by Edward Shinn callel| the bigger the two, One nthe house, would seem to ‘have “ Weston; or, Moro ned| thing's certain—a pla ther Shaw ged the public taste, for the audl- t Than Usual.” The dil! will| or Pingro can pack t ices have been consistently larger than Anclude “The Ten Courtlers,” a mu-| for twW weeks. In a previous Bea one men: offering, and Edwin Stevena in a] go for 8 fornlen ter wn ihe no. {eral complaint has been made. There er comedy = entitled “Cousin force sod an bad, After that the | has not been enough French opera, The Ham i e a Jay must depend upon mouth-.o-mouth great success which has attende the 4° Fisher, Yvette, violinist; | boardings with ville, but It won do Me t the end of this season, presages a end Lee and other A Woman | @ bit good, Bugle KAewe eS yration to the repertory next season ‘of the Streets,” « one-act play from the| about, play. S MONEY of French operas in a fairer proportion ch, Will be produced. 6 | gto Bee o the lounge |' Italian and German operas. And others at the Colonial will - e* returne@ to eo seue operas in English may be looke: evue and A his head t na his hands e ce My ay IN| every day,” he reflected, “The ¢ 80 of the sensations that acco “Town To-Night,” Marshall Mont- Re repens | ue Arpias | of the: seneallane Gy ‘ventriloquist, and Connelly of conducting @ th is steadily, Ine season the produc In “A Stormy Finish aeing, and at the present thine tere | the Goiden West, The Alhambra will offer “The Open. |!s & Genrih: OF wey ri ‘eee Wo | Natoma,” oof the tng Night," Frank Fogarty, the Rol-|deanth of youn Tha talent fej componers gala oceasions and fonians, Blossom & Bier, Mahe | eany ut there are oe erences | the aired receptions and § linger and King, the Kk Tro, they eo bing. it to tight, A mana in pers after the performances. Hut M Ca de Gascogne, Hassan Ben All'e| {0 ONE if avy expenses, cannot af- Gait! presented several new works that Arabe and Karl Ie. Lac ford to make experiments, If he gives! are to bis credit, If Prof. Parker's 5 eweomer chance and he or #)e $10.90 prize-winning American oper: To-night's the v7 the moment, people in the stalla turn @WAY | yuiiic favor !t wae no fault of the man- Metropolftan Minst rlem’'s MO* from the stage and level thelr glasses At any rate, the dir ctors wave ular social clu "Mets" re: upon the boxes. There {# no mistaking “Hs Ah Taibo Rearaed under the guidance of Coaches this rign, It means the failure of @ ae hgh hee Fe i i NOrKe Walter Brown and Mallon jr. a production, and it makes managers Pu ware. Waller arrears 228s Teas tworact musical comedy called ‘he realize that thelr only safety Mes dn nae ub wal n ¢ Bpendthrift.” ‘They have corralled one actors and actresses whore names are jed opinion, and the same hundred of the prettiest girls in Har- known, That's the theatrical situation | composer's Inquisitive Women,” unt- hundForkville and the Bronx, and to- 1h London to-day, and that's why mans | versaily acclalined, Besides there were show at Palm Garden will com-/agera ere taking Pigarritcaier And’ WGMslanE’! OF tip very favorably with Broadway's) |euccess of which there could be no eduction! | : | ere are The Women's Political Union will! afoat of the old favorite singers have « Mme. Nerdica’s Dow Lost. send ott @ tallyho from the head-} retained thelr popularity and some new No. street, at 3 P.M © ne police of the Mercer street station | quarters, 46 East Twenty-ninth| ones have found natant favor. re asked last nigit to send out a gen- ral alarm for 4 Scotch cule dow ber | the coming suffrage parade on May | n:uer, the German contralto, and our nging to Madame Norciea, Who ts nov A feminine ence | ha. Aas asi tca ath te wo A butler employed | will tool the coach and the bugle eal| OWS native-born baritonesbaseo, Pu concert tour, i George W. Young, her husband, No. 8 West Ninth street, made the re- ex. Mr. Young's name ja on the dog’ nw ‘by his voice and vill be given by the prettiest girl in| 24m Griswold, wi BS ny ports, ene penta will be i te artiatry, has suceweded ta eclipsing the through Madison and Fifth avenues,| Mema@y of most of i's predecessore. with @ dash into Broadway, A ag eeason Mr, Gatti promises J [of the old artists retained and new) Chiet | toeday to advertise among the latter are Margarete Matze- | eS eg * (Copyright, 1911, by Bobbs-Mertiit Co.) | AR i * SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTH A company tha purpose, of despoiling a ‘rely: ‘ 01 Adventurer: Wallace Cobain ter naglers, a with F, mt Poe ea ta the raga Kl the ‘Wel yas g € ’ the | th rug | ‘ ewer oo it. Band abet ab : of knows wrath hi ithe besaars, , aeving end to tnt ind. Woon Jone. For. Brae makes polves te ‘ouplahs yanne through the a bs fs confronts LE in “that ‘donee has {he roe ‘hsanne urge ry fo. el jones and jromisee Pretending to hold no raphe, but secretly planning | to be revem = CHAPTER XI. | (Coninued.) Mohammed Laughs. | HEN George rolled out of ved | it Wan oleven. He bathel, amd dressed, absolutely, con- | tent, regreticss of the morn- | ing hours he had wamed. work ridding the room of its clutter of | ‘pooks and clothes and what-not. | Might as well get the bulk of his pack. | | tng out of the way while he thought | | of It. | | Why had he been in-such a dreadful hurry to pull out? Calro was jue the most delightful place ho Knew of.) To leave behind the blue skies and warm Sunshine, and to face instead the bit-| ing winds and northern snows, rather! - dispirited him. He paused, a pair Pontes ont trousers dangling from his hand. Pshaw! vente nie Weeaaiee Omens wica recy Why not admit tt frankly and honestly? Vherever Fortune Chedsoye was oF ones to be engai The repertory, ®® might be, there was the d ectable couns | sal defore, is likely to include a much | try, larger share of Frenah opera. | He hadn't thought to eek The company goes to Boston for the| she was to leave, nor whither she was| firet half of next weok. On Thureday |t0 £0. ‘The abruptness with which she and Friday it ts to givo pertormancge | 24 left him the night before punsied | tn Baitimere. Then {t goes to Atianta|fatver than disturbed him. Oh, well; | for a week. After that it will scatter | {us old planet was neither so deep nor Ar gaat inescanan fo round as It had once been. What) Q with st ips and re the called ur ends were draw; jos A NEW DOUBLE BILL PROV er. Ho would aak her casualiy, s A RELIEF FROM THE OLD ONE. |/f It did not particularly me “Verstegelt"’—Instead of “Cavalleria"—|Phange his booking to New York. Irom and “Pagiiacci” in the double bill, at|Napies to Mentone was only u question the Metropolitan Opera House last night, served to draw the fifth capacity of a few hours. audience of the week. Nothing like the “It doesn't seem posible, George, oli boy, does it? But it's true, and thore’s support of opera by the public in the last days of the season {!s on record. no use-trying to fool yourself that it Just ask Mr. Bull at the door, who isn't. Fortune Chedaoye; it will be a shame to add Jones to ft, but I'm going has more facts and figures at his finger |‘ "rie" nds ina minute than most of us have in @ month. Happily Mr. Bull has sur- vived many administrations, been faith- ful to each, and can refresh the memo- rles of all of us. The performance was worthy of the acclaim it got. The deliclous humor of the comedy In “Verstegelt” was main- tained by Johanna Gadsk! in a manner surprising to people who know her only | as the tmpersonator of the herole Brunnhilde and the imperious fold She was ably suported by that incom parable artiat, Otto Goritz; the fascinat- ing Bella Alten and the versatile Albert Rel who took the part previo played by Hermann Jadlowker, gone to Berlin, and added to his laurels. Marle Mattfeld, Marcel Reiner and Basil Ruy: dael completed the cast of principal ingers, under the masterful direction of Alfred Hertz, The comedy of Leo Blech we highly appreciated. In “Pagllacct,” of course, Caruso car- ried off the honors, He sang at his best: McCormack, the famous Irish tenor, in and was as effective as ever in his act- | farewell tal at Carnegie Hall, in ing. Bernice de Pasquall was Nedda,| Popular operatic arias and Irish folk ‘Amato was Tonio, Bada was Beppe, and | 208%, assisted by Marlo Narclli; the Reschigian was Silvio, Sturan! conduct-| 14th annual concert of “The Pierian ing. | Sodality Orchortra” of Harvard Univers , at the Hotel Astor, and the third fon concert of the Liederkrang MADAM CHARLES-CAHIER Soc! Florence Hinkle soprano, Carl WINS FAVOR AS AMNERIS. | gcniogel bantonerand Harold Raver What a pity that Mme. Charles-Cahler, | piantat, at the clubhouse. who made her debut at the Metropolitan | MONDAY — Afternoon, Opera House a few evenings ago as] Craft's free organ rer Azucena in “Trovature,” did not frat| Chapel, Columbia University, Evering appear as Amneria in “Alda,” for which Hana rect: Jeena 1 pepilas cons she was cast at a apscial matinee per- | °* ‘cope’ 5 Hanae assay Wake ane aid not | Hille Schoverling, Eitzabeth Moreton ecitpre memories of more than one im Mie eer et personation of the Mgyptlan Prince recital by Mr. and Mri whe commanded respect both by her{at Rumford Hall. singing and acting, despite the tremol»| WBDNESDAY -- Afternoon, that, indisputably, is hers, She was the| spring cones by the MacDow dominating woman character of the| Chorus, Kurt Sohindler conductor, opera. Marte Rappold, with her voles, the ‘benefit of the MacDowell of excellent quality, falled to make it| Student Fund, assisted by the Men- and her impersonation sufMciently im-|delssohn Glee Club, Clarence Dickinson pressive to eclipse her, Riccardo Mar-| conductor, at Carnegie Hall, Prof. tin, In effective costumes, was un ex-| Samuel A. Baldwin recital celient Radames, and Dinh Gilly, bare-| at the College of t legged and picturesque, was a_ fins | Rvening, Amonasro, Didur was Ramfia and Ross! Society at was the King. Audisio was the Mes: solotst. senger and Lenora Sparkes wang the) THURSDAY — Morning, music of the unseen priestess beautifully. the benefit of the Home for Convalex= Sturant conducted. cents at the Hotel Plaza, Gertri Claire Duffey, Cecile Ayres and Frank lin Holding, soloists. FRIDAY - Afternoon | by Mr, and Mrs. ford Hall. when last collar, the last pair of shce: at upon the Ii of the trunk, growled a little. The lock w: bothering him. It waa wonde many things a chap could take out of a trunk and how plagued few he could put back. It did not seem to reliev+ trunk here or a suit case there; there was always Just so much there wasn't any room for, Truly it needed a w man’s hand to pack a trunk. Howev his mot n the old school days wT xot all his belongings into one trunk Was still an unsolved myster: ance overcame {t. George then, as « ailiht diversion, spread the ancient Yhlordes over the trunk 4 wtared at {t in pleasurable contemplation. W" a beauty it was! What exquisite blu te patterns Willian = Jy at St, Paul's cond sonata David Mannes special ell concert for OPERA HOUSE USHERS ARE TO | HAVE ANNUAL SUPPER, ushers of the Metropbiitan Opera sonata David Mannes, recital Rum- capable and obliging a set, pone, ns en ax one could wish or Curtte Burnley's re of songs and > me as all the patrons the | Impressions of the negro, the ehild and opera house know, will hold their an- | the soclety woman was favorably teak dinner in Healy's Dun- | (@¥ed by 4 friendly ayalenee at pm at midnight after the Opera | eee eee nt rei a teneles, season closes to-nle Jt is purely Caryl Bensel and Mra. Louts H, Smith, thelr own { » and they expect to | yire, Burnley showed considerable have lots of fun all to themselves. If | gongs of humor and was able to conve they would consent to let down the |i: without effort across the footlights bars they would be flooded with appll-| she got many laughs which were de- cath for tickets, but wisely they ¢-| served, frain from inviting outelders. Here's mace aceeng 40 them Mr. and Mra. David Mannes gave the CONCERTS AND RECITALS } first of thelr matinee sonata recitals at Rumford Hall yesterday to the delight OF THE COMING WEEK.’ of an appreciative audience, pro- If the opera season has died hard, the| gramme comprised componitions by concert seison {# dying harder, Fol-| Beethoven, Mozart, Brahma, Grieg a lowing ure the concerts and recitals q@n- | Debussy and three numbers were de nounced for the coming week | manded over again. noon, the Barrere Ene - vind Instruments, at the! Flenrietta Wakefleld, of the Metropo! ¢, aswiating artiv: Andre | tan Opera Company, been engaged pianist, his frat appearance in by Walter Damroach to ang Jua: Veuple’'s Symphony Concert, | the principal character in his opera the last of the season, at Carnegie Hall, | ‘The Dove of Peace,” to be produced an ail-Wagner programme, with Hein- | next November. rich Meyer, baritone, soloist; musicale — for the Arthur Home for blind babies Walter Damroreh and the Symphony a: Delmon Edwin Gra, the blind | Orchestra wi!l on the Vania violinist, among the many sololats, and | spring to)" ve wh ox Prof, Samuel Baldwin's free organ re-| tend through the South and the Middle cital at the City College. Evening, John | West, . Pressed, potent deapair. consequently did not \ greeted the Major as one & by gradations George} nett | Considered clever Indeed, brought the) |the principal atreets and tricts, and use jit * ttaelt He pressed down the last book, tha! Stubborn as the lock was, persever-/ xt *: RY ‘ BY HAROLD M'‘GR Fortune hever knew, She sat in chair, het fingers locked tensety, he eyes large and set in gaze, her lips com whole attitude one of Im George dit not see her at lun enjoy the a hour she ill? 4 she return bet lost friend; and conversation down to Major aid gone ear she was lunching alone somewhere. ‘ortune, No, th: |She had the trick of losing herself a visiting | Of it grew from pain to fury. Mra, Chedsoye wa fri at Shepheard's, When did Mr. Jones jeave for America? What! the morrow? The Major hoad regretfunty. Mke Calro for Christmas Geo: was love's labor lomt he returned at tea-time did he see her. Why hadn't he known and got up? could have shown her the bazaars: ani there Wasn't a dragoman in Cairo more familiar with them than he. A wasted day, totally wasted, lounging-room til it wale th and dress for dinner, the gods had turned Geor: affalrs 0} to go up future 7 dressed as !f he were going to the | Truth to tell he hadn't enjoyed sleep! opora: awallow-tall, white vest, high col ed thoroughly in weeks. He set toliar and white Inwn cravat, opera| Fedora and thin-soled pumps; all th habiliments and demi-habiliments sup: Posed to make the man. be the glass of fi form, ho turn his trunk. hion thy Me did not rub and the firat valid 0! towar 1 h’ saw, or rather did not ace, was entab- Mashed beyond a doubt, as plainly defi nite as two and two are four, The ancient Yhiordes had taken po: one of the potentialities af tt fabulous prototype, that of Invisibility it was gone. CHAPTER XI. Episodic. ORTE } turned from the bazaars, a kind of torpor blanke' usually so fert An 6 an cess of evolution of thougut was denie she tried to think, but there was a: appalling lack of continuity, of broker threads, It was like one of the cumferentia! rallways: she travel! did not get anywhere. | Ryanne had told her too much for hy own sake, but too little for hers, 8! of beach wa Ihe color and ed |tlon of the streets were no. jon | sorbed; it was as if wae were ! through emptiness, th ity of a dream, stifled, too; hi. of at Mechanically she dism riage at the hotel, ent to Fer room, and in this sem rH ridin the pressure if he added a steamer | conscious mood sat down In a chair, land there George's wish fou | tlely. Oh, clear as the sky outside there was one thing AM w leai ne lright; something was wrong, and this side and Mr. Jones, \wrong upon mother, her nel ‘upon the other sid Think and t endeavors gave her no sing! tion, Four blind walls sur (The Un tomance and Company —ther one punded h Adve euch a thing In existe WAS a propose t DISINFECTANT Seat of Ryanne'’s to cover up some-|a thing to b WEST DISINFECTING CO.. 2 East 42nd Ot thing far more seriou upon sufferance. I have been talki NEW YORK. ——— - —— Had she gone away?! he started? He * a lone shook hia! Of what ure was loyalty since none of ‘There was ne place | 6 called a carriage, drove about) When he hopping dis-| ger, the danger unforesee hls eyes Ailigentiy; but | against Not even ‘when | 5 He He hung about the Tonight (ae Jf er to the care of Momus) he/Tt e When he reached what he thought to | eye; It} a NOW| wasn't at all necessary; the thing he had immediately re- ed her For a time tho pro- sh the unreal- was oppressed and d the care mechanically @#he (her, fus nk as she might, her{admit that [am of your flesh and blool, iMumina-| am going to force you to recognize | WHEN THE STOMACH YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND IT HEALTHFUL AND INVIGORATING She pressed her eyes with @ hand.| with Horace. I met him in the They ached dully, the dull pain of be-|thia morning. He said some Wilderment, which these days recurred | which you must answer.” with frequency. A sense of time “Horace? And what has) he |mcking; for luncheon hour came and! pray teli?’ Her expression waar jPassed without her being definitely |pant, but « certain inquietude aware of it. ‘This tn Itself was a pur-|trated her heart and ace jae. A Saunt, # as she had taken) beating, What had the I that mor always keened the edge|said to the child? aes jot her appetite, and yet there was nol “He said that he was hot « g00@ craving whatever and that you tolerated him Where was her mother? If she would] pan errands for you. What kind only come now, the cumulative doubts | panda? of ail these months should be ,ut Intol Mrs, Chedsoye did not know speech. They had treated her as one|to iaugh or take the child by the would treat a child; {t was neither Just| ders and shake her soundly ‘Me nor reasonable, Uf not as a child, but} jaughing when he gald that, as one dared not trust, then they] One would reely call it that”? | were afraid of her, But why? She| "why did you renew the @ 1] Pressed her hands together Impotently. | with Mr. Jones, when you knew thal | Ryanne, clever ax he was, had made | never intended pavog back that | ailp or two which he had sought tocover! there waa a ation, Mri [up with @ feat. Why should he confes® | realized from the look of ut himself to be a rogue unless his congue ni] would not bear evasion Wad got the vetter of his discretion? If What makes you think I never In- was a rogue, Why should her mother | tended to repay him?" her uni use of him, fn Fortune laughed. It did not sound ‘Mother, this ts a cris! for roguery's sake? rater > hs They were fools, foots! if they had| "erode tty Tears but seen and understood her ae he| met by countec-questions Ror, By w Pancy. You know that you @id not! tend to pay him. What I demand, she would have gone to the bit ter end with them loyally, with sealed lips, But no; they had chosen not to | ee, and in this had morally betrayed her, Ah. It rankled, and the injuatice At that |; moment, had she known anything, she ‘ertainly would have denounced them, ftably, why you seemed ao eager te enter into his good graces once mare Answer tha Mer mother pondered. For onee ghe was really at a loss, The unex ness of this phase caught her of balance. She saw one thing vividly, gretfully: she had missed a val point in the game by not adjusting Ber play to the growth of tue child, @pe had, with that phenomenal suddenness which atill baffles the peychologiats, them sought tt tn her’ ‘The Major was wiser than he knew redth dan- which they could make no paration, And he would have been . [first to sense the trony of It could he have seen where this danger lay. 1} Why should they wish the papas e!young man out of the way? y 1 should Ryanne wish to tnvetgie him into the hands of thix man Mohammed? Was Dit merely aelf-preservation, of some deeper, more sinister? Think e| Why puldn't she think of something’ was only a little pleasure trip to Cairo, they had tokl her, and when ahe | had avked to go along they seomed will- ing enough. Rut they had come to this hotel, when formerly they had always -| put up at Shepheard’s, And here again the question, why: Was tt Because Mr. Jonen was staying { ? re She ked him, what little sl i}had seen of him, Is was out of an together different world than that to she was accustomed. He was r insanely mad over @rde nor a | social tdler. He was a young man with @ real interest in life, a worker, not- nding that he was reputed to be ntly rie And her mother rrowed mon of him, nevor to pay wack, The shame; hood, all in a day.. What-e fool she J been not’ to have lett the child at tone! am waiting,” said Fortune. “There more questions; but I want this ene ered firmt.’ “This is pure Insolence! “Ingolence of a kind, y “And I refuse to answer authority still.” “Not so much, mother, terday. You refuse to om “Absolutely !* “Then I shall judge you wi mercy.” Fortune rose, her eyed passionately. She caught het mother by | the wrist, and she was the stronger ef the two, “Can't you understand? Lem no longer @ child; & woman. Edo not ask ; I demand drew the woman toward her, eye 10 eye, palter, you always palter; palter evade, You do not know what fe ag and truth are. In this continuat 4 calculated to stil my distrust? ¥, distrust you--you, my mother, You And why should jahe Approach | Made the mistade were olan tae him the 'y firat day and recall the In-! os .. w why, cif not with the ulterior puepose | PMt T ee Feel of using him further? @ ball strikes Contin a wall only to repound to t thrower, OPENING SUMMER HOMES. so it was with all these questions. ‘There was never any answer, q When the summer home opened it should be thing 1 have come 8 you had yeu int, ed out, mentally and physically, she lald her head upon the cool top of th and: her a fl And tn, thie position “her her, eturned to drens fo - twa, found her, Belleving Fortune to be front ceunsied lew} 4 be ml asicey, Mra, Chedsoye didpped a hand and woodwork t! upon her shoulder, ‘a (A d her head. wash-. ‘ortune raised her y ; f TWhye child, what in the matter?” the| ed With water into wi alittle, | mother asked, The face ane sae was| CN has been put. ’ not tear-stained; It was as cold and pas- i 18] rloniess as that by ich sculptors rep- CN i at cleanser, disin- - resent thelr interpretations of Juatice, fectant and deodorizer. It re” gat back In the ¢ nd ist. Matter?” Fortune spoke, In ry less, and indeterm 4 her con-} that did not reassure the other, moves deposits of grease and Aition to driftwood In the ebd und flow] firat place T have only one real aut dirt, kills the germs that breed to ask. It depends upon how you answer a . Chedsoye genuinely asconished, daughter? The child is ddresving an imaginary in them and makes the whole atmosphere fresh and sweet. It should be used in bathe” ‘our daingh! ehter?” M Am T really “Really my dat it ne third person, “What makes you ask) that there is plumbing from which ch ily question?" She was in ) 8 1] furry to change her dress, but the new| Odors are liable to arise, A yag attitude of this child of hers warranted “ tome patienes: {Get “The Yellow Package with the "| “That is no answer." sald Fortune,| Gable Top. , with unmoved provectiting attorney, rtainty you are my daughter. “Good. 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Don't experiment== insist on having Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters know is, why you spoke to him again ae stepped out of @irthood inte weman- © 4 us x

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