The evening world. Newspaper, February 19, 1913, Page 19

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= . Febr The Evenin World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, uary 19, 7 | { ar 7 S'MATTER) w|WHeN IT GET : r) PoP? THE ATTIC | : WINDOW OPEN J, | Twitt CALL, AN’ THEN YOu KEEP EVERYONE AWAY Historic Henpecked Husbands ‘oy Madison C. Peters a Brine A Shedd dd SO 6.—JOHN CHURCHILL, Duke of Marlborou) Lf : REGULAR RIDING = You HI CAN Rode. “im? Follows Shaw ENGLISHERS Don'T KNOW tory, was personally beautiful, irresistibly gracious in manners, and aN How To RILE Axess! 1 ™ ‘i (\/ : and Fitch. : even in the conduct of war was signally humane, r : He married Sarah, daughter of Richard Jeanings, a coy and quick BY CHARLES DARNTON. : ; tempered woman, against the wishes of his parents, who had selected 4 Fitch? for him Catherine Sediey, a kinswoman who was rich but squint-eyed. Urged to, there a playwright called Shaw? And wasn't there one name: ch? Ry “The Bridal Path” ay AND ILL SHow You Some, = WU CAN Rode, IM == \ Vopyngnt, AVL, by ‘Nhe Heme Papnening Ce, (ihe New Lork Evening World), OHN CHURCHILL, one of the great military captains of modern als- . Abandon the sult, the courtship was abruptly ended by Sarah taking the matter ‘With the eagerness of youth Thompson Buchanan has evidently been read-| into her own hands, The marriage was promptly made and the secret known fmg one and remembering the other, judging from the turn “The Bridal) | tor some time only to the Duchess of York. \ th” takes toward both. In this play, offered at the Thirty-ninth Street The-| . 7 Sarah's beauty was the ornament of the court and her very errors charmed fast night without apologies to elther, the acquisitive author has plainly Her pugnacity was boundless—her temper was that of a tiger. The stories of he mpted to combine Shavian unconventionality with Fitchian “soclety" comedy. | é violence are numerous, To spite the Duke on one occasion she cut off her tons ( he result 1s neither Shaw nor Fitch—not even good Buchanan, for he did a far) : and beautiful tresses of hair, and knowing his a@miration for them she placed , Better and more original piece of work in A Woman's Way. | > ( them where he could not help eee them, However, ‘The Brida! Path” 1s sure to attract women because of its wed-| a i After the Duke's death this woman, whose temper overpowered her vanity ‘ing scene, If for no other reason, Never has our overdressed stage offered 2 found the tresses locked up in @ cabinet among the Duke's most cherished treas- j euch an amazing show of feminino finery ax that Which caused last night's! Z ures. During the Duke's Illness the Duchess, incensed against the attending phy- { wudlence to stare and wonder, If Barnum had been a dressmaker he couldn't | t ; j gician for some advice she did not approve, swore at hin bitterly, followed hi: i have placed upon exhibition a greater collection of freaks of fashion. This} z downstairs and pulled off his wig, | ecene had no dramatic value; it was merely an excuse for displaying freak: Bhe fell out with her two daughters; one of whom dlackened the face of her i Clyde Fitch made the end justify the similar means he employed in! Portrait and hung it up in her room with the inscription: “Bhe ts much Macker he Moth and the Flame,” and even Theodore Kremer made “The Fatal Wed- within.” The Duchess was perpetually at war, She quarrelied with the Duke vf ' 5" more legitimate than Mr. Buchanan's showy affair, DoubUess peopl Bt, Albans, and her hatred of Sir Robert Walpole was her pet antipathy. 0 fight and scratch to sce a fashionable wedding in Fifth avenue will flock j Though the Duchess iived at court from the age of twelve (at a time when the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre, but the judicious will grieve at this cheap ft has been sald if men had gone into mourning fer the immorality of thei: nsation-mongerin, 5 wives, sisters and daughters, half the court would have been continually |i To begin with, there was a great deal of chatter by feather-brained girls - diack), her virtue was ever above suspicion; mainly because of the flerce, exciui- { talkative frocks, One innocent young thing from the South, however, proved f aive, earnest love she had for the incomparable Marlborough, who was te slay. refreshingly new type, and Miss Nan Campbell, with her lazy drawl, was of hia country, the instrument and controller at once of states and allied armics. cil nuinely amusing in the role, She alone gave a performance with which no The Duke was proverbially mean. He alwi . ult could be found. Miss Ann Murdock, as the girl who had no intention of firm, to save the aix-pence for a chair. A (iting at the church very long for marriage and children, did her best to act e Billie Burke. Her red hair seemed to have gone to her head. She arrived Uy the ‘scene in a costume that was not designed to hide her girlish charms. troubled, having $700,000 on his hands and not knowing ir one idea was to make Natalie impulsive. She iacked balance. When Natalie . Intest of his line has had no trouble tn this particular, r a 1d her father that she would like to have alx or seven children she sounded y Truly, If not tenderly, the Duchess loved Mariborough for , ike @ babbling babe. If Shaw had been there he would probably have laughed p and lived with him as happily as her domineering epirit would have allowed he }imself to death, controlling his mirth only long enough to hold Mr, Buchanan to Ilve with any one, Marlborough’s love for the Duchess was deep, pure an! esponsible for the funeral expenses. ~ unselfish. In her anxiety to hand him down ae the greatest man of his 8 There was the usual Long Island “younger set,” distinguished for its gla- was ever on the watch to guard his reputation. She loved and honored the mi ling girls and its deah-boy excuses for men. But there was one fine “clean” she often grieved in the waywardness of her high spirit, xception in the immaculate person of Robert Cameron. e knew he was) When left @ widow and the Grand Duke of Somerset asked her to marr, | “clean” because Natalle told him no repeatedly. He was selected as a sacrifice, him she said: , ‘on the matrimonial altar in the most ingenuous manner. Natalie wi eager ‘ere I only thirty I would not permit even the Emperor of the world to su: to bring him to the point of proposing that she herself wrote a scandalous little ceed tn that heart which has been devoted to John, Duke of Mariborough.” paragraph and sent It to the Town Tattler so that she might seem “compro- mised" and make Robert feel it his duty, as well as his privilege, to marry her ¥ Without delay, But the editor added a paragraph that brought in the namo of | ‘Vera Malczeska, with whom Robert the Clean had dallled along the primrose ‘ + | path, When Robert felt it was up to him to marry the Russian lady, Natalle! Fealised she had been a trifle previous in announcing her engagement to the! i401 of her heart. But as Vera thought children inconsistent with high art— whe had her pet dog and that was enough!—Robert, loudly proclaiming the “right | Betty Vincent's \ Advice to Lovers to fatherhood,” cast her off and then feli head over heels into Natalic's net. ) SPPIOSIIIL POCO S OP EIOOIDARIDLS OD CO @baw’e idea that it s the woman who pursues the man evidently appealed : “Ash Her.” Of the modera young man, Here it is: — Mr, Buchanan. There's no denying that “Man and Superman" is a good | -——— mene meececemmte a -—— oo aoa Bei “He either feare his fate too auch, d Friends’ Bad Traits } by TH Pree Babhabing co, f By Sophie Irene Loeb our 00 nends Router deans None, out if agtrl| And win or lose it all” nn RRA RAR OOOO DDR s ‘ ‘That would seem ef the name. So what did Natalle do but order him from her room! He again two genaible places in a man—above | #ald? Mertbety walling tor ma’to take charge | Who Knows. Gut that he may be ats Gat relations 2 y = AUN a Raaie ee | t get on my nerves and Wor-] “And I have mg@own Mttle bank ac-| thousand dad traits’ and looking at t evident truth. Yet|Now that has been cleared up, bet I husband e hint of an old colored mammy that ‘dem red-headed ones HEE onty oure| Or hie desert ie smail, i loves you te ty “In this; The other day @ Mttle woman was) “Oh, yes," whe answered, “ho ls & town, he Is matching his STH ¥ In two words; Ask her! talked of his “right of fatherhood” unti} the curtain choked him off, Th ‘all, 1¢ you should| “It'e no use. Try aa I will, Y can't | perfectly willing for me to take charge| Who knows but that he inay be at & sufficiently ob- e @ curtain cho Im off. They met 5 Everywhere aro the butt count and all that. But then that ja a| the ONE good one A ing y} 1 frequently re-\fnd myself in love with enother girl. has to be managed.” So Robert no sooner pretended to bs on the point of pack- : such pleasant play. What more simple than to add a wedding in full view of the audience? People go to the theatre to things. And that wedding certainly was a rare jet There was also that beautiful moment when the bridegroom took {atatie in his arms and they sat down to their first meal together, But the fo; f that wedding night ended when the Russtan lady it a very late present— @ bracelet that led Robert tle Clean to betray the fact that he was unworthy wey to find| Who dares not put it to the toush A oe ask her. du can find one or |coniplaining about her husband, She|GOOD PROVIDER. He always puts against the other fellow In the proc change him. He hae so many bad|of the household expenditur the same time overlooking your “ten : vious and self. Qt breakfast, but relations were painfully strained until the remarkably patient find a whole fami ry ends of clgars—in the parlor, upstairs, | sATTER OF COURSE. Who knows but that your harrowing i . be Ae hai ab Hes What ehall I dor” ing himaetf off than Nataile told him to stay right where he was, rms, you may | downstairs—wherever he happens to by My Gear little woman, how many men | ttle volce has commanded him to Ly ri to-take-a-} Stick to the second girl, tf yeu eeslly To treat of intimate things without sincerity or uncommon wit {s a dangerous Peaae Essie 0 matter how I provide recepta- pees ‘are in the world who spend their ever this nd that end pet yoRowr ebance young] jove here better than the ether, 7 Practice, Mr. Buchanan has mioveeded only in convincing ue that he ts a shock. | cles for ashes and laundry bays for the! 5,5 envelopes sometimes BEFORE | te other, to the point o ng men, who peseec: — for granted; oF, | ingly bold boy-dramatist, ready to tear the veil of discretion into tatters and! what is a great throw it to the winds. But in trying to be frank about sex relations he ts in 7 deal better, bold- rude, Happily, a great deal that was said by Miss Murdock and Robert Wa’ ly clothes, It Just seems IMPOSSIBLE for him to pay attention to these things. Very often it T ask him to bring| oO r of course? ‘ . that ut my 7, ” Hi they get {t and let the wife wonder how |4/#0 48 4 matter o' ‘ out of . M." writes: the butcher, the baker, the candlestick | And ao it 19 the caso not only with wubtle wisdom 1 Sera ts na aaa husbands and w: ut with friends. . shall tell them| the other evening we met a friend of nake UP YOUr | something home from downtown, even ,,| It is #0 easy to look for and find the | « . ea Fick could not be understood, Both lost thelr hegds in the noisier scenes. In 4 mind that you ean |fr'it ye the last thing I ask him to do|, Many a man ts not at home to smoke| jatiiTe, but much wiser and happier | "ow %? find out if dhe cares mine and the girl immediately took « 7 Gulet moments Mr. Warwick behaved very well. The only really consistent dy perfectly with: | before he Kets on the car, he comes {H's cigars; and you might be worrying |4) overlook them and bank faith in| Of course, you can count apple seeds | fancy to him, treating me most rude 7 favacger: thet of the Russian aay we had ne ze for ch{ldren, counted tor} out the rest; and | home without it with the usual excuse, | Yur little heart out wondering where | even ONE good attribute. or pick off dalsy petala. Those methods | Wouldn't it be best to give her up?” ] 5, otterly miscast. Ag the old mammy Mrs, ‘chari oe ae ae that ten SROURRAA | forgot. |he ts. Perfection is not found in this world, | Deve at least the sanction of tradition.| I think you deserve an apology, ith all tts drawbacks, "The Bridal Path” has bright spots, and unless I'm bad traits cannot ‘ery much mistaken it is in for a long run, I asked the woman one or two sites | And, perchance, while he ta forget- | tons ting to match that allk for you down- and he who would be happy will ac-| But there ts an old couplet which I' one act of rudeness is hardly an excus. cordingly bear and forbear. riously fecommend to the attention for giving up e friendship. Es ingle good one less good. 4 Tarzan of the Apes gar Rice Burroughs TRON OR AMI MORO AOA RIC Be Not Like Any Story COATS That You Have Read rnot, should he atill lifted the biuck head in his arms—call- had been watching Tarzan sat with gaze upon the floor ehe hoped, for her ing Tarzan's name aloud. him and knew that Tarzan was puzzled for nearly an hour. It was evident to ough his feet should There was no response, and then over the envelope. How atrange it pannnns saan annn Rann by Frank A, Munsey Co.) “And then our spades siiowed us that “Speculation {3 futile," sald Prof. Por- apes, and for D'A something had been buried beneath the ter sadly. “The chest is gone. We shall be living, but real! " ior @ hole had been there and never see it more, nor the treasure that forest god—even U explain it to me, please.’ him from the notes that they did not When D’Arnot had done eo, show Cat lone. in" the. Jungle, been filled with loose earth.” was In it.” prove of cla: D'Arnot placed his ear above the man's peemned that to @ full-grown white man know that he and Tarzan of the apes ing him that the blue represented a!! rade lut. "There thelr . t who could have taken !t? re- Only Jane Porter knew what the loss And at the last minute she left a mes- heart. To lis Joy le heard tts at an envelope was @ mystery, D'Arnot were one and tho same. t ter on the earth, and the bits « ‘Alice. dies peated Prof, Porter, cant to her father, and nono thee sage for him, to be transmitted by Tar- beating beneath. opened it and handed the letter back to "I have given my heart to another,” a, Kembak, invade ‘An aps named’ other colors the continents and Islands, spicion might naturally fall on the he repeated over and over again to him- Tarzan asked him to point out , spot where they now were, ‘nen she did not love him! How could —D’Arnot did eo. y What it meant to hey, nun of the al Six days later Captain Duftann aus” Jane t e would sail early on cabin, returning ons woke, Kala, whose own off fas just heen killed, adouts ‘Alico’ nee on” leaviug the dead little ‘aye 1's pentier, wade, Houten Carefully he litted Tarzan to the cot, ‘Tarzan. t to leave the and then, after closing and bolting the — Sitting on ne trivial pre- d00r, he lighted one of the lamps and men of the cruiser, sald Lieut, Ch: but for the fact tr t Su orter was the | camp-#tool, the ape-man spread the written sheet before him and ( t Janviers here assures ine text after the others had started for Qie examined the wound pead She have pretended love and raised him “Now point out America,” said Ta » ; that no men hav le th Jane Porter would have begs bullet had struck @ glancing DIOW Wo ‘Tarzan of th em: to such @ pinnacle of hope only to cast « > ore days have had shore | boat. t n of the Apes aan. ] $ built, none las been on shore since we @ further reprieve, had {t not Men that gig uneeled down beside the bed in the skull, there was on \ Before T leave lot me add my thanks him down to such utter depths of de And as D’Arnot placed his finger 3" fi . several anchored here except under command she, tov, had begun to believe that her qijch qe had spent so many nights fe n wound, bet be signa of @ fracture ty tone of Mr, Clayton for the kind- spair! upon North America, Tarzan smiled ‘ ‘ au officer, forest lover would return no more. 2n4Grered up a prayer for the safety Of the akull beneath, 4 ese you have shown in permitting ue Maybe her kisses were onty signe of and placed hie palm’ upon the page , “{ do not know that you would In spite of herself she began to en- Of ner primeval man, and crushing his D’Arnot Preained oom of yetet one the use of your cabin, friendship. How did he know, who spanning the great ocean that ay be : fect our mens bub tem glad thet thers tertain oubis and fears. an Teason- jocket to her lips she murmured rant ghout bathing the blood from Tar “Phat you never caine to make frieada knew nothing of the customs of human two continents ts ‘nsero ‘thaig 1s now no chance for suspicion to fall ableness of the arguments of those . cousin, Unseen, ‘Tarzan pro: on them," he concluded, interested Fre “I love you, and because I love you, “goon the cool water revived him, and With us haa becn @ great regret to us, beings’? it te ch officers commence ot _go very far,” he cy Bi not be- We should have Uked 60 much to have Buddenly he rose, nd, didding ree the width of my han : Martel spay tyne pont ane, , “Zt Would never have occurred to me to convince her against her will. lens i tocia dinves. May. Heaven, Bustin arene hig eyes to 100K 1m geen and thanked our host, D'Arnot good-night as he had learned D/Arnot laughed. How could ie { J | iigecurs'her Fury fAi'la thse to suspect the men to whom we owe #0 That he was a cannibal she would pave’ ity on my soul that 1 should “rps wits, Kad fourth the we There ia another I whquid Mke to to do, threw himself upon the couch of make the man understand? Meares dep hack he "replied Prof. Porter, "I would not believe, but that he was an adopted vcyrowledge tt. Had you come back pieces of cloth, and aa ne raw. that tank also, but he @id not come back, ferns that had been Jano Porter's Then he took pencil and maite a arty from a French warsi> as soon suspect my dear Clayton here, meinber of @ savage tribe at length for "me, and there had been no other Tersen ‘had regained consclousnans though I cannot belleve that he ts dea root extingulshed the lamp and tiny point upon the shoro of Africa t Pale whe ves Raed DoF Beh ay, T would have gone into the Junk!® rose and again going to the tavle wrote 1 do not know nis He ts the lay down upon the vot “This little mark,” he sald, “is man 4 t healt” Men The Frenchmen smiled, both oMcers She would not atmit that he could with you—foreve: a mmensages which he handed to the ape. &reat White giant who wore the dia — For a week they did ttle but rest, tmes larger upon this map than yo 4 joes to Mind’ a tieastire Cas and sailors. It was plain to see that @ be dead. It was impossible to believe dubs sng man, explaining the terrivie mistake he tmond locket upon his breast. while D'Arnot coached Tarzan in cabin {8 upon the earth. Do you eee r “ ca burden beg besa lisad from thelr Mndh thes that pertedt body, am, Slled ith CHAPTER XXV had’ aede and how thankful he was If you know him and can speak his ‘At the end of that time the Row how very far tt ta? = \ “The treasure has been wore some triumphant life, could ever cease to ’ th, the wound was not more serious, language, carry my thanks to him, and could converse quite eaally, in thought for a long tim: 7 time," qontinued Clayton, ‘In fact the harbor the vital spark—as soon believe ‘he Outpost of the World. ‘Tarean, a@ter reading the n tell him that I watted seven days for ‘an they were sitting within _ “Do any white mea live in Africa’ ° hoy gh 'apare as we litted tt which hat immortality were dunt The Outpost of the World, =O atMu.se at the couch hin to. return, fore retiring, Taraan turned he asked. (Continue) indlcaieg thes warever removed he Ag ane Forier pevmitiod heresit te Se/IT38 the report of Rie gun EyAmet “it ie Aothing.” h Teil him, alao, that tn my heme ta f "You." . Lost Treasure. iresgire, dls ep Wille: AOA Serpse Wes perpen thepe) Chaumiia senerg. saHelly saw the door fly open and the and then, his vocabular America, of Baltimore, there “Where {# America?” he sald. ‘Where are the nearest? + 8 e it resh, for it was Intact When We unwelcome forced themselves upon her. gure of a man pitch headlong within wrote: will always be a welcome for him tf } D'Arnot pointed toward the northwest. D'Arnot pointed out @ spot on the $ ONM! 3¢ cannot be! Whe uncovered |" If he belonged to some savage tr1d® ontg the cabin door. You should have seen caren to come, “Many thousanda of miles across the #hore just north of them, . . 6 could have taken it?" "There must have been several in tho ho had a savage wife—n dogen of them NN) {iN CAM S0Gk | | me and Kerchal as ie NORD OU esaia ie WIRE ORT ee een Ee Ree RR Or RRO aca cis | r GGA Erok. Porter, Party,” sald Jaen Porter, who had Joined perhaps-and wild, half-caste children, 10100 are wgain into the prostrate form, “D'Arnot handed ainong the leaves beneath a tree ne "Lam going there, “Yes,” said DiArmot “But it le not 4 a3 J HHeAten only knows, them, "ou remember Oret tt took four fhe girl shuddernd, and when they told & ol the half dusk of the eager that had been le the cabin. I do not know how you D'Arnot shook his head lose. professor,” replied Clay- men to carry !t." hee that the ccuiser would all on the but suddenly in the half dusk o t hrough lear to love me, who have never “It is his face, The spoken to m ypossble, my friend,” he sai@, “Have they big boats to aross the , 4 eal th 4 ‘ton, “We might have ‘By jove!” cried Clayton. ‘That's morrow she was almost glad. open door he saw that the man was ‘Tarzan reat ee WhO Deve AeUAE Al id HRDRAMBIE, FY TENG BP ANS oasate ught the fellow who guided us was right. It must have been done by @ It was phe, t 1, Who suggested white, and in apecher instant realized With a look of surr t ri » true, fe da, t f vith a well “You” B about the location, but ‘1s sur- party of blacks. Probably one of them that arms, anny piles and that he had sha his friend and protec- second one he tu ‘ over, 1k B true, for t have already siven my cupboard mrad pe CR eS and consternation on finding no saw the men bury the chest a comforts \ in the cabin, tor, Tarsen of she Creal pig geasohing for ano 10 pr heart 0. AOR ca, Mnnue ueTerh renee nana Taran : i eneat Snipes were returned immediately after with ostensibly for that ita personality th a ery of angu! e . t ‘ " i tle meat mye ad . of lis friends, and carried !t off. who had s!gned himself Vargan of the to the ape-man'e side, and, kneeling, qlaagta be handed i: to D'a*not friend, JANE PORTER salt . ‘onunued.| ‘ ha ’

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