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| v “I saw a magician take two kinds of liquid from the same bottle.” “I've scen my grocer sell four kinds of butter from the same tub.” The Evenin Overheard in Silhouetteville | “i'm going for a little spin, my “if you're gong for a little ‘spin,’ why don’t you wear your jar” ‘top’ coat?” | pyriglt 1918 ¢ World Daily Magazine, Thursday, February 6, New Pl, Mrs. Carter an Interesting but Vexing Paula. CHARLES DARNTON, \RDGR brings a great deal of her old power and fascination to the of Paula Tanqueray that, ag much to her surprise as ours, perhaps, is maylng at the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre, Say what you will of her extravagant methods, her stagy tricks and her spectacular clothes, here after all is an actress who can act, Much thinner than when last we saw her, | and with flashes of the fire that used to burn in her Zaza, she ty more like her} oid brillant seit than she has been in years. There !s, unfortunately, another ede to the new | ory this = HOW susserts, After seeing her in the third and fvurth acts of “The Second Mrs. Tanqueray" yesterday afternoon { was so interested that { went back in| the evening to watch her in the eariter acts, Fatal step! Not untit the thira| Mrs. Carter begin to do herself and Paula justice. Pirst of all, her thes not only put the role quite in the shade, but they give the woole show away. No wonder simple Ellean guésses her stepmother's past! What Siri wouldn't after one glance at those telitale clothes? They may have their box-oflico value in creating @ sensation jon “the road,” but Mrs. Carter should have left them in her trunks when she idenly headed for Thirty-ninth street. For two acts she gives herself up to them so recklessly that the character they advertise pays tho pe: the dressmaker. Though Ly no means quietly drei ‘when she settles down to the real w daid out for her by Pinero in a pl that holds its own to-day almost as well as it did twenty yoars ago, Mrs, Carter Gears her ekirts of affectations in facing the situation in the third ac egies GTeeted the actor who made @ booby @f Captain Ardate when he arrived on the scene yesterday afternoon to dis @over that the stepmother of the girl he had planned to marry was the woman Re had once “kept house with" tn Lon- don, For his part, arene a laus with Ardate shows h. y makes this But in dealing ent later Mrs, Carte. h. There's no mi er—it gle face and jost equa! on Tanque ther thm kes her gentler emotion seem real. t youth hos gone and beauty faded Q and movi Paula is ani Ti tempor the Might es fre tr ma in her eye rin h It ho t tal} lee righ the tght easily she m If whe it ts vi Mrs. Ci neven, re nteresting but vexin y because her y ather than bitterness, is tooo d by harshness. ‘The glamour t Nethersole before she forgot how to play the role, and the Wwae eloquent of fatalism in Mrs phell's portt ent performance, For one think 3 ‘should ton cially as sho ens to be playing 1n a small theatre, & very bad habit of repeating f y time she st ‘At one time, for osample, rho « My cloas! my ¢ wore about to add, “My kingdom f ¥ clowk ‘More money has evidentiy been spent upon her clothes than upon her « pany, This fault reste with Manager John Cor io hv unded Oly ence that @s though she m. Brondon Tiurst ts well-bred HEAD Sister Gives me RATS FOR COMIN” Good Stories SUT ATTA (LL BRAIN HIM HUH! RIGHT ON THE Pur BET THAT FETCHED Him ALL RIGHT VLL SHow THESE CROOKS THERES ONE GUY THEY CAN'T MONKEY WITH ) Memo WITH THIS - Wish, ‘HAD A GON “Wrong! The bank he worked for le behind. My brother's ahead!” eT? The Folks That Write Our Books “Pa, ma says if you're too lazy to do anything else, will you please sit In the window an The Romance o/ a Jangle | | (Copyright, 101, by Frank A, Munsey Co.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CNAPTERA, Me wie on the! witiene bart of the alecam the, wikievt rc one han the jungle, “Greyetoke and atid io hut. "There their tithe son ia bam, “Alice dies, A band of apen lad by their King, Kerchak, invade the cabin and kill, Grey stoke, Au ape name Kala, whose own offaitiog thas inst Deen killed, adopts Alice's baby ash own, leaving the ayo in the eradie, Th. baby sim ae gan” Whit) Bhi boyhood, Wandering one day,‘ y the eabai | his father brit om the room ‘aad to prin the hw Unecen, Taran protects. t Later * party in he creeys to. the letter Jane has just been writing. Me rents i CHAPTER XVIII. (Coatinced,) The Jungle-Toll. N his tree he had constructed a rude shelter of leaves and boughs, beneath which, pro- tected from the rain, he had pla the few treasures brought from the cabin. Among these Were nome pancils. He took one, and beneath Jane Por- ter's signature he wrote: 1 am Tarzan of the apes. He thought that would be suMctent, Later he would return the letter to the cabin, In the matter of food, thought Ta aan, t had no need to worry—he would provide, and he did. ‘The next morning Jane Bort her mt letter tn the exact from It had disappeared two nights before, She was Myatified, but when she saw the printed words be- the felt a chill ran he showed tha letter, last sheet with the slg found pot neath her signatu spine up her sald, “that uncanny thing was probably wateling me all the time that T was writing—oo! Tt makes jer just to think of it must he friendly he has rr he offer to harm vou, and m mistaken he left a very wubstantial memento of hie friendship outside the cabin door last nicht, fort 7 4 aiurat ie well Of Other Days. Hjust found the carcass of « wild boar enough as Tanqjueray, tut tt we easy tou an aula’s falling tu e there as [ came out. Jove with an umbr RAUCH A Desh H AOE a8 Ore JOSEPH K. Ceeeceneennes From then on acareely a day passed fa enough to drive any one to drink, and except for Miss Maude Hannat ae y ‘The Publishing Ce donot b offerin) a gerd Naas cite is. tno maining members of the cast are little bet neve te Process. . ke EMMET. By Robert Grau. | Counelans, 1913, Yd, tea, Publishing Co, that did not i tne its ff in of 9 Ya. Carter succeeds in leaving a last mpressioi "AL was being held at a small nth as ——- : snares A cored Baptist churels in Southern Georgia ley nis eyes had been good, A, 8, M.| Young d eer, again a quantity of strange, t one of the meetings the evangelist, 1913, by The Mrem Publishing Co, (The New York Byening World) ! Hutohlason would have followed his oked fool, cassava cal oilfere + afer an est but frat xhortation, re from the village of Mbonga, er a boar, The May Manton Fashions ay a8 earuat but fratns exbortion, re don't you want toy company during his excapades and made, ® family line Into the British army | Om the villuxe uf Mtbonga, | Nae Geek Viet te te dual en Ces buy a dog? ood the losses tu the local managers, |and wo should have had no “Once! 'parean. derived the xreatest. pleasure pees ‘Sha diikes vies fe yeodd yeary ago In Welcomed on hiv return with | Aboard the Lugger” and no ’'The Tap. fot btw Ife in hunting meat for these VEE: Soren ofthe | Oa pei tment ee a ie saa adevilie theatres of | ver ny Warrior.” | trang Tt roomed to iin that na (raped skirt t@ to} Brataer Jones! uuntry a till, hand. | n his diva; rances y Carson, author of The Motto oy by Hs Hl '@ snArt through-| “Mah soul done Leen wasliel w'lte as snow. fwome ¢ 18 fanoug singing | b shorter eae Yet when |of Mrs, McLane,” Ie Mra, Car | beautieul whites Ht the spring, Vhig ; Pawon. : ‘ Pe tle above not in hls ™ Emmet lived an almost | ue She has lived the tife of At) gome day he would v into t one is dletinaly novell ge uimtueytt oe KUM Re ITT osepht XC t had been a minstrel lexcmnplary life, The spectacie of the West in which her story {* placed, and] camp in dayligi! and tale with the and the almplest pon. | “Over ander to de Methodis' chu'ch ecrost de | before scored a hit with "K handsome comedian arrayed in shia aeal- has camped and hunted with her hus- pple throwght the medi HH St tha lite sible garment to make, | rilroad."* [tut so great was his vost wkin overcoat, tuking his datly constl-| band on tne old Indian trails hug whieh were familia There aro two plecen in} “Lat Gxt Brakder Jones, yo’ ou wa'at|Voricty thestres that an exninent play-| tutional tn Central Park will be recalled | K lan Wigwin has an apology [8nd to Tarzan, nite to overcome the skirt pro a in dry-cleaned !""——Lite, wright of that day, Charles Gayler,|by many players of this time. (from the young Bohemtan woman whol tye tinldity the wild thing of the $30 drasars per and ——————-— ought to ft Emmet with a play that mmet was his own man, though | has just translated “Timothy's Quest’ | forost, and so day followed day wlih- meee ry ts the third The Name of It. would give scope to the pecullar gifts of | his son (who afterward succeeded him |into her own language, Saya the gontle| out seeing @ fulfiiment of his good in- Bitte dCs Included in| va was » party of vistors seeing the sights in| tlle Mew public favorite as “Prey looked after the business Indy, after begaing forgivences for omits | tations. |. amp, emboldened by \ eht seam and Pittsburg that finally entered the oonserr And thus was born the famous tails. De AIS costly pronks “Frit /¢ing a few passages too distinctively ‘ rae bar oot eee tae ana fit Im) Ms apved over the front| torr presented to the elty by Mr. Phi |sertes of plaintive and who Emmet averaged a profit of $100,000 for! American to be perfectly umlerstood by ther into the jungle in #earch of nuts he bi - Of the ekirt to be hetg | Me Swater, wlle showing them around, we! arainas, which served merely as a frame {each seaxon of forty weeks, Zohemians, “{ did it with such a careland fruit. Wy alii In position by buttons | aed, Suny oe bee 6 loft hag ve B {for the never to be forgotten Hones 3 Hetween Albany and ‘Troy stands the and plety that the structure of the] Scarcely a day passed that aia not I — a ‘Ons | cherge a son ee oe lullable r doe Emmet en-| majestic En exiden ie ie uffer b: 1 © least.’ }find Professor Porter straying In his pre W. « “3 r other ornaments, | beautiful hich was admired immensely, | Wables with which J of t en | mes m0 resilience which the book aid not suffer by at in the least.” | fin on Hn Reda abe El ob ‘ 4 The model te ay It was He 4 out | thraled gaudiences for nearly a quarter nerected at a cost of more than ‘V4 are authors who wilt be «ind of | Acs 4 Mr nue! T. Philander, never ‘ tromely ¢ NOX* | the excellen told the name of of # cent! so left a large fortune, thin evi @ that 4 translator can have|\ nut one inight. call robust, was worn Honable | thy ile Ye bop ty of Joe ® death nis spired @ son! to the whadow of a shadow through the Als h for | Op | truly extraordinary, 1 But though he Hooth ton, lover of old fure|ccasclesa worry and mental distraction 10g treet suit and for Aen pporting company w ' toand ree nitur Lnws, haw In his Ine [resultant from his Herculean efforts to ° . Date ; yalea n he ° tof r co jsafemuard the pre be finisher OA It oan = .-.aeepcaal i vue EE MAE He h the a diane ie of tapestry ples | er onth parsed. Tarzan had nally ne Mishel at the nigh! hy ve [money than almost a € m a substi: ed up in Rome, He relates that he re- ermined to Visit the camp by day- walt line or at the| the Jolly Kids. lente ariagt aa jtute for thelr idol, And “write met! uted the temptation to buy thie tease [cet Natural ine, it can bel Te ee ent Bide wha ha > “rita” would play t with the wame fate that “Rip Venture until one the King of Italy pur-| It was ¢ afternoon. Clayton had an be to ive in Lakewood and whose tart rst gy ee hiceae yin] Winkle did when the sons of Jefferson | ¢ h 1 t. “D thought tt} wandered to the point at the harbor's nade beoamink to ail Hn 38, ba ralx weeks each year, a * too tn} ’ n 1 the mat thought te] wa , at the a figures. When t I | ana Ploegh wed them t f the fact th Lighest: price | ¢ndeavored to prolong its vogue. be fine to my, ‘Oh, yes, the King | 2 git be ian for paaing ¥ w ~| Men ral waist Hne 4, drier gs seats In those daye was $1.0”. | ssceineaaiien at = has the mate to this," he now declares, [Mi fehl fh we ett ted as @ signal t abide a In New York Emmet played engage! @ ir Stringer, who ownw @ fruit) suould a steamer or @ sail top the far kirt ¢ . in be dart | “Naw, yeu dub! nu ments of al mon Juvation year! $ 7 % in Ontarto and a ranch in Alberta, | hori itt both front an : atte thout ¢ empty sent 1 Odd Facts 4 that we are all wrong when we ter was wandering along the ck or ered at the Mevie itd ut 1 hwand it re {eet the pone | 8 (rom The Wort Almans: ett tale Ud a camp with Me, Phit- Wk, ae Vike, Adi oo wr] tae comed nk tea with i @ adtan border to the Arct Phe ee Hor the medium #12 ton't soy know H the pu . when! TW. Hacithoune shea ‘wave down grade. The savage benat the skirt will require; deat? 4 fo he sang lor Del estatugue of ‘ The great rivers all flow 1 ana I ' ard terial | > You La r i | talowue tn bu mtart from the sul-arction » the Ju) . 4 ive | Hmmet’s es ape sdled to hin] the from pole to pole na totder you're really In thelr @eareh 1 5 Ready to Oblige A r nen ‘ . Wihie | ip So 1 further from the a aay Ra | A TEXAN then, ating & vred (Midat of @ pent i an Tra « “ rae KK. Stl or ¢ before the walle . an ee ne « theat Buaqon dialects @ sraotere and a graduate of Johny Hop ut Mgt ; i Pattern Ne. 7746 ' . A 5 ; Mawie ice ic gual au anak Ae present in the | ae op i OE ful af “ 1 4 ake the hero new book t r alwaya of her Pattern No, 7746—Two-Plece Skirt : sas Ths . t ar 19) jens the Ne wh They wars of her 22 to 30 Waist. - » . , . a many Uno and th ta aused bin it . « anined , * at aL Call et THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON PASH ! a} ; J Se a ti Mew BUNRMAU, Donadd Building, 100 Weet Thirty-second «treet (opp - | y ry site Gimbet Bros), comer Mxth evenue and Thirty-recond street, ‘ @rtate few Tork, oF ent by mall on seceipl vf tem conte in coin oF A The ape-man knew n stamps for ete) gattern ordered. ° ‘ “lb wa » yw po * bend IMPORTANT—Write your ed4rem plainty and aware epecity}| |, ; : ¢| divinity “aa mortal man ever coment Wattorns. } size wanted. Adé two eante for letter postage if in @ burry. os % . eh ee J a ppl here it ta —icage Page, he sawrice of Wis, HW wad capiaine BLUM, Vase, While be waited he passcd in0 time moke the plants?” Not Like Any Story Y TARZAN OF THE APES By Edgar Rice Burroughs. Man and a Yankee Girl. printing a message t her; whether he intended giving it to her he himself could not have told, but he took in- finite pleasure in seeing his thoughte expressed in print—in whichehe was net #0 uncivilized after all. I am Tarzan of the apes (he wrote). Tam yours, You are mine. We will live here together alwaye in my house. 1 will bring you the best fruits, the tenderest deer, the finest meats that roam the jungle 1 will hunt for you. T am the Rreatest of the Jungle hunters. 1 will fight for you. T am the mightiest of the jungle fighters. ‘ You are Jane Porter, U saw it im your letter, When you se this you will know that it is for you and that ‘Tarzan of the apes loves you. An he stood, straight as a young In- dian by the door, waiting after he had finished the message, there came to his keen oars a familiar sound. It wae the ing of a great ape through the lower branches of the forest. an instant he Hatened intently, and then from the jungle came the agoniszed eoream of @ Soren and Kage of the per, dropping his firet love letter upon the ground, ahot like @ panther into the torent Clayton also heard th ream, an@ Prof. Porter and Mr. Philander, and in a few minutes they came panting te the cabin, calling out to each other as they approached a volley of excited questions. A Klance within confirmed thelr worst fea Jane Porter and Esmeralda were net the Instantly Clayton, followed by the two ol’ men, plunged into the jungle, calling tho girl's name aloud. For half an hour they stumbled on until Clayton, by mer- same upon the prostrate form ralda ped bealde her, feeling for her ulse and then Hetening for her heart He shook her. ts, She lived caneratda “ExmeraRla What has happened? Esmerald: Slowly the black opened her eyes, She saw Clayton, She saw the jungle about her, “Oh, Gaberelle!* she screamed, and fainted again By this time Prof. Porter and Mr. Philynder had come up, What shall we do, Mr, Clayton? '* asked the old professor, “Where shall we look? Heaven could not have been so cruel as to take my little girl away from me now, "We must rot Esmeralda first,” replied Clayton. “She can tell ue what han happened. Esmeralda.” he erted again, shaking the black woman rough- ly by the shoulder, “Oh, Gaberelle, Ah wants to dle!” cried the poor woman, but with eyes fast cle Lemme die, but doan lemme see dat awful face again, Whater dovil round after po’ ole She ain't done nuffin’ to cried Clayton. da did jaberel 3 he was bade, Tank de Lawé." res Miss Porter? What hap- ened?" questioned Clayton. Ain’ Miss Clayton here?” cried Be- meralda, sitting up with wonderful elerity for one of her bulk. “Oh, Lawd, now Ah ‘members! It done must have tooked her awa “What took her away?” cried Prof. Porter, ‘ “A great big gi'nt all covered with ” “A gorilla, Mr, Philander, the men rcely breathed as he voiced the rible thought Ah done thought it was de devil. guess it mus’ ‘a’ been one of dem rilephants, Ob, my po’ baby, my po? 1 honey Clay to t for immediately began to look tracks, but he could fusion of tramp! vicinity, and his atoraft was too meager for the trans- on of what he did # All the balance of the day they sought through the jungle; but as night drew on they were forced to giv in despair and hopelessness, for they did not even know tn direction the i thing had borne Ja It was long after dark ere they reached the cabin, and a griefstricken party it was that sat silently within the litte structure, Prof. Porter finally broke the silence. Ilis tones were no longer those of the rudite pedant theorlaing upon the abe stract and the unknowable, but those of the man of action—determined, but tinged by @ note of indescribable hope- lonsness and grief which wrung an anawering pang from Clayton's heart. nothing save @ co grasses In the clos w “T shall ie down now," said the ola man, “and try to sleep, Barly morrow, 80 s00n it i» Meht, © oh tuke what food [can carry and oo tinue the search until T have found Jane. I will not return without hep. His companions did rowful did w jot reply at once no his own gor thoughts, and each knew, as the old professor, what the tase ds meant—Prof, Porter would never from the jungle, soph, by Be Contaued) was immersed