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it )- C) { a ’ me (an wef _THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 29, 1913. _ Here’s a De Wolf Hopper Travelogue Ranging From Prairie Chickens to Pie It Touches Saskatoon, Regina and All Points West, Including Neu- Ulm, That Has That Famous Statue. ; SHOOTING PAAIRIE CHICKEAS FROM AUTORODILE Meg Villars Learns How “Get the Hook” Stars Are Trained for Amateurs’ Night “Lemons” Never Heard of That Statue? Neither Did DeWolf, and That’s Why He and the Hote! Man Parted in Silence, ELecrric B'GNS house Fuce Hl! | ere... OT ce BIELEGATION OF aveveav The “Little Father of Amateurs’ Night” Tells How He Breaks In the Inexperienced, and Who Ie He?— Mii“ fe vie 4 Energetic Marvel, courtesies he would have to get them} Thirty-five Years in the or Mr Bullivan, {learned stterwara Profession as Proprie- inte Tome ce Carona cant] tor - Director - Agent cupled by Mr. Gilbert and Mr. Sullivan. Manager - Composer- Pianist - Arranger of “And now let me hasten on to the compelled to state, however, that Regina | ®ubdect of food. If you have ever been has not yet attained complete perfec- | on the road you know what an im- BY CHARLES DARNTON. jooute be trusted to break anything 'from @ bronco to a ten-dollar blIL A Tn Wrolt Hopper travelotue man who eald he was a loyal American | tion. ‘This criticlam 1s directed toward | Dortant thing food i Tt Is important Music - Produc one of his curtain apeeches and|"®4 married the German lady who|the hotel. The gentleman who conducts | Anyhow, but its importance increases as Vaudeville Perfor mer— ran on uninterruptediy, thus: owned the hotel apparently for the joy|this hotel ie the tallest and thinnest | the certainty of supply and quality dim- “peaking for my sight-seeing aseo- of running the bar of that estebdlish-|™an in the world. We etarted to meas-| infshes. Some time ago a certain stom- and Theatrical Promo- ment. It is not too much to eay that|Ure him, but the tape gave out. Inci-| ach specialist had a great run of buel- o_ | ‘30 BEAONFUL TH poseng oe heals te Jaimtut truth) thet | Be hailed me asa brother. He was eo| dentally, he ts @ prohfbitionist. Not| ess from the Lambs’ Club. First one ter’—He It Is Who MANSGARS ALL re serena oe taken any policeman to keep | devoted to me that we bec only does he feny his patrons stimu] whe said he had stomach trouble went! Condescends to Guide * tLeOk ace crazy? during the extremely fleeting Sle. When I asked ‘Whe: ating beverages, turne the water then others fo! , not Loo! a meumering Siriad voavther asthe Of tre? he answered, ‘I'll take you there,’ |0f at 1 A. M. Even now I sometimes|like sheep, but, quite properly, the Faltering Footsteps THe sot et my tusiness, but 1 wish i hee dean. ‘Do | On the way to that two-story temple of |!¢8D from my ded at 1.38 calling wildly Lambe. Although I was in my usual I would have done some advising teo— good health, I finadly sneaked off to the and without the help of any plano! As it was, Mies Lissie escorted me to the door, “Goodby—beat of fuck, girlie,” she Dreathed, and as I stumbled down the steep, dark atairs the mawky etraine of & Franco-Viennese waits came cesing out from behind the glaring plush draped portals of the studio. Why ‘Young Reilly’’ le bert and Sullivan Opera Company. Hadith : t roceed, then, | rt We passed a atatue, When I in-| fr # : ao ecneclae, AL the present time I duired to whom that magnificent monu-| | “We also experienced a town oalled | doctor's and Joined in the general organ Saskatoon. In passing, I may add that|Tecttal. He, assured me there was Pavel been) with) eur atest: and ond [phar poaaee phat ay calla Jad | ¥@ called {t several other things, At| nothing the matter with me, but advised alleled organization (note that I opel | cought ‘against the Indians to wove tra | frat we thought Saskatoon wae th me to avold ple, with becoming modesty toth for my| (oo fe the} name of @ new fur. All the people; “Kindly bear with me a moment gnooctates and myself) for exactly two} “ia there ride in automobiles. They even|!onger. If this etory didn't have a Sigial years. 1 say Secs] Because the | go out in them to shoot prairie chick-| Point I would not give tt to @ waiting pursuit of art has not been without @/ 2) t inquired. ens, I wént out one morning and shot| World. On the trip to San Francieco 1 Footlighta!* certain financial interest. 1 othe Indlage wiped out the town,:| one chicken and two tires. ‘The naive/fell violently in love with cherry ple. pra a “Ae I have gaid in my justly 2610! ne gnawered. | chickens are so used to steam farm-|MY infatuation grew until it embraced} ua. you o Stage Favorite!! brated curtain speech, which you prob- |. «on why sdidn't you erect the| ims mechinery that they don't even pies of every description. This excited “How to earn $6,000 @ week on the ably couldn't help hearing, 2 maintsin' 1.146 t the Indians? I asked, ‘With-| try to get away. But if a man gets comment on the part of my fellow trav- atagellt® ae, &e. H to that the gentleman who arranged our) out 4 word he left m out of an automobile they grow fright-| *llers, and as we went on my devotion }®D oer ee oo. not the actual lard Beat. route 1s a direct descendant of Colum-/ ro enhance the educational value of| fully nervous, I put my chicken in|(0 Pie became ae it were @ household} | 0 nn sous startling adver- Young Reilly, the q bus Hie genius for discovering towns! my remarks nothing can stop me from| the refrigerator by the simple means| "Fd with the result that ples began} Tou m C ae tema Me ee ae west olde iight- q not on the map should be an inspira- saying that the growth of the Northwest | of letting it hang out the window.|‘® Pour in upon me. At every town we of a Would-Be La Belle Sarah - Otero - Bern- hardt! By Meg Villars. 66 H’* to hecome a Queen of the “What happened when they fought ith the Indians to save the dear little weight, comes by tion to explorers. One of the towne he has ‘been wonderful. Lat ue take, for | When It gets saxty desrees below wero visited I found & delegation of pleajauce elrusk etiane Rll Nay way they Find |te ‘Aghting tnetinct Gigcovered is Neu-Ulm. To pronounce |oxanfple, the town of Regina, Where| in Saskatoon they think spring is com- pies t feel it is only fair to ny enides I don't want to feel that on $ paturally. The pres- | it praperly you should have a glass of ithe population was mainly bovine and| ing. While we were there I couldn't! Gan: nurt my digestion a dacn bic }derk nighte I run the risk of finding . ? Ei[:nt day Aght tans door and a melancholy disposition. | porcine two years ago there le now « thinking of | Disby Beil, who| put they did affect my Mgure, ‘That 1}the so-called theatrical “professors” } ia [cecs romana ole New-Ulm was booked to break the jump | community of such culture es to war-| wears Yaeger underwear in midsum-|inay remain young and beautiful, let waiting for me round cornere with j Father exclaimed that Belasco ia al ether, Billy Me- from Bt. Paul to Lincoln, Neb. Speak-|rant a three days’ visit of the Gilbert} mer. me say in conclusion I HAVE SWORN | knives, sandbags, revolvers and all merety visited Miner's Theatre on an Ntohol, one of the: ing from experience, I am convinced {t and Sullivan Opera Company. I am st “An amusing little thing happened at OFF ON PIE.” a amateur night, and hed happened to be: 1-pound men sorta oF we oe Lplecnencs, t¢: eae mitting quite neur him. He seemed t ena te ty Wrient young tte: (end get 00 much satisfaction from the atate- and others of fifteen years ago. The Why I Have No Use for America---Not by Frank J. Gould\:sc<.ctvtwew rom ov ima ans ue e wen eve, pont er dealing with poultry food to millinery, mn fi $ f 4 tt PA ging yy Ba 4. L the foolish spender gets some tangitie it tie hiediideh bs 4 1 aay, 054 ciate ‘Billy fought he had What Is the Use of Liv- ingina Country Where the days of Young Griffo, Sammy Kelly A man cannot indulge in a little affalr/fact that more of my early years were by that except to spread broadcast un-| return for her money! Of course the Sia) Akasa, Nadi! & young army of rootere at the ring- with a chorus git or have any fun| spent among Americans. Pieasant details about the private} Poultry food may Kill the fowls and the ne Tdssie's “act” is an Orlenta:y vias For some reason or other young (Bale » im @ restaurant or theatre but that the! here is not language in which I can| amusements of @ fellow who wants tof hat May ruin your eyesight, but even it Gistome) danet ont, ae eae me Sam, his son, took the name of Rellly, newspapers feel licensed to tell about! +e now ridiculous I feel when I realize Uttle fun? such calamities happen you have had 01 he mai , When he started dozing One Cannot Raise Per-\\."inroding ruthiessly into. matters| rie 'T h mites oes, ia aeeeAiae France, where they #ome excitement about It if tts only tn Py Ane <2 watched sey, aoegy, 1 (810-4 ins the. preliminary bouts at the Bate which should be sacred. her whole life trying to do good with tting an American's §enine the parcels. mr SENSITIVE GIRLE ‘ ‘ mont A. C. : fect Artichokes? If Vou) * te Cavetes her share of the fortune my father left|money to bother him by asking hin | Whe® you put down goed money In] ALLE INELUENCED BY |Past ccsmume nnd the “praverty't At the beginning gf hie carver Retlly Don’t Have to Earn) my whote ute ing ‘and establishes allly hospitals and fresh-| what he has done for his country anaf°*uange for learning how to fro my 8c waxen heed waa missing. T conerera.porten made himeelf npopular with 1 yp] this country to try |Z alr funda to save the lives of more|make asinine suggestions as to how he} “efore the footlights you don't see any es tar cae bene nd tne} “UD matchmakers ty falling to dow Hear Money, Dee's tae oe Karan ‘gn vhs ren "mardnts| ies sind ire cnereny "afte arty san, Ym Teh an, ata rata of estuary iin Petre evan neh ges ne bran Sag own life and that [>35 ’ have the blood of ; kt Live Here. terring my | 177 friends hap- py] Tatras hang. ing what one of my|Uilt in my vena. ‘The pobtie te Kencesi fat it! You haven't me to realise! told me ome things about hie preto-| acted in @ ehuroh! cecame known when his mother wrote RIMARILY I am transferring m: you're there hecausé, ten to one, you! sees that filled me with wonder: I looked at him closely and there & rather pathetic letter to Billy Gibeon, are making your bow at in amateur] All about the little girl who raneway|wasn't a ghost of a smile flickering > ‘A eo France permanently be- veothers is doing—spending day after| By Jove! don't you know, there was one ; laining her son's failure te appear relaag ort: day In a fupey office, working to protect| Of nature's noblemen! It tu this coun- 4 ohow and the gods in the gallery don't| from her convent echool to go on thel round his olen eyes. 1 began to fealf on ; peosticed dale tomtanted country has decd or eres the stockholders in railroad companies He eeme see e raging of young ment aijow am: ur talent time for more| stage and who 1s @0 talented that Kiva) nervous, but as it was raining cate and bree Meet thacuetnt Gan ane ve eoll obliging and educated enough | automobiles, and and in “epreading prosperity” by devel- ry! @ learned how mich be:- Finan one blink betore they turn per-| Tanguay could take lessons from her!| dogs outalde, and ‘Twenty-third street} went to bed feeling as fit as could be, to grow them in the perfection which| what thanks have I oping the roade—-I sometimes wonder formers themsetves and «ive imitations| “She would be starring ol Broadway looked untnviting, I decited to risk Stony to wake up so stiff In the limbs ttain in France. Of course the] nad for it? Nothing, {fhe is all right. That isn't what stock- eer of a menagerie broken ‘oose, he complained bitterly, “but she} few more minutes in the studio. that he couldn't walk. Under the etr- wey © rupees unpleasant holders are for or ratiroads either, But| fering on this side of tle Atlantic. | o¢ course if you are thinking of taking|4@ @o Deautiful that she drives ell the) It was rather a wonderful place, that} oumstances she begged Gibson to @x- broad minded and intelligent i steers of my perfecting railroads is less futile than Z you lon't have to earn your money |. tne amateur business professionally,| managers and agents crazy. Every|riudio, for the production of amateurt cuse him those who will read this interview will | ext tnate family the development of @ great telemrapa| to earn ft—well: there coset CaN fino to epeak, there {8 some hope of get-| time that girl sela foot in an office abe] talent—"But you ought to see my quar-} "To those who used to eee Billy Me- understand how important this ts. What | Moreh on altogether due to the ard telephone sytem. What is served talk about In # aligned interview. t gets insulted. And of course WITH Fifth avenue, my dear madame; {Nichol fight in the olf daye Young ts the use of Hving In a country wh one cannot raise perfect arttchokes? HER BRINGING UP (!) the poor girl can't stand that!” uch wonderful thing Reilly ts a pleasant reminder of his she witl lat} I asked the Little Father of the Ame- stage, car-|teurs if many of the girls he hae aided dragged off | with his competent by three stagehands and a negro cail| years in the prot boy. Then she will come back emiling|—had succeeded, and ask for more! As 1t happened, Miss IAsale wes ta the You ean guess how popular she {a| Little Father's studio, and she ts a suc- with the Gallery Goda! cessful product, Five yeare ago she The Lit her of the started us an amateur, then became « There te that} seems to have made quite a c and fin@ly has graduated into i there ts the eye} the pusiness! But then he tn the Profession, (A big "P’ please, Mr. energetic marvel, thirty-tive years in] Printer’) the profession as proprietor-director- | Mien Iigzie was a blond little lady with agent - manager - composer - pianist -[@ goodly number of rings on her fing- arranger of muslc-producer-vaudeville fer and a gold-flled smile. performer—and theatrical promoter leaned I'm whaw, dearie,” whe sald Fancy being all that and yet conde- | ae we pump handled areas ending to guide the faltering foot-| ‘The Little Father of the Amateurs rt) b steps of a would-be La Belle Sarah-| continued hix recital. “I've produced v a ae raias st Saatie Axe’ 12} upspringing motion that seeks relief Otero-Bernhardt! t Win, Alys Lorraine, Hope Boothe \vorlte amusements is to hear himeei¢) That which has encaped the eve in} I've mixed the names because that's| Sybil Johnson, and I also started Louise worth fifty dollars, oushions! father in his every move. And, as was But there are other reasons, There h T. bl Post-lmpressionisms At least, that le what I gathereg from (1 saw her photo and quite believed! that cost ten dollars and what not.Sthe case with bie father, it ‘takes 9 ty no longer an opportunity of oppor- Caruso urns the Lables. Si the Little Father of the Amateurs, | the epesker’) ett te in gute nto] OM, untortunately”—hte voice rang re-f real good man to beat young Sacamy tunities other than those of artichoke REPORTER who had orders to|that it ie impossible to give messages of Sitting on Tack} wnom 1 me foter! Mame, Farrand, i Fee pap ee aa what 2 sretfully—just at present the place !e} MaNiahol—beg pardon, Young Reilly. ralsing—which never existed. pas A interview Enrico Caruso, of the| through you with any satisfaction. Get ond lemon” is also @ pe ie being spring-cleaned.” In my father's olden voice, went to the Knick- |off that line and ask Mr. Caruso to come By E. R. Schayer. time it was differ-? wooker Hotel yesterday noon. He was|to the phone or I'll come up there and HERE is desire, ‘There is ren ent. He found ‘ab toi py the ol fake you into a salad dressing.” ‘There 1s desire to rast; there chance tomake the} wag taking a nap but would probably| ‘But, air, you must not talk to me piace to rest and desire; there is greatest amount Of] see him at 5 o'clock if he would give |like that. I am Mr. Caruso himself, no [place to destre and resi. . money with tht notice by telephone. and you are insulting me when} Standing, we ese one sitting; in- least amount off at 56 o'clock the reporter went to 9 ‘ing to do you @ favor."’ scrutably the desire comes, The rest work, He even} tciephone, The man who answered satd: roared the reporter in exasper-Jis rest. made money out of} “anout what do you wish to talk with ‘are you so stupid that you can't) The rest is not re the Erie Railroad; fr. Caruso? understand that I can hear Mr. Caruso fwhich escapes the who can mak ‘The reporter could hear the strains uf beeen jd ? the oom with You-vOUT watch escapes that, money out of the jeate Alda” pealing through the room | "Aigner Aled, wean voice, Come} There ls that which doss not escepe. Erle nowaday: back of the man at the telephone. Hel right up.” ‘That which escapes the eye ts there, Ridiculous Inter- had the assurance therefore that the] ‘The reporter went up with a vast}Ppotnted prodigally with pain. ‘That merce Commissions and State} tenor was at home. feeling of triumph. Signor Caruso apened | which does not escape encounters that “1 will tell Mr, Caruso himself when | the door himself, smiling whckedly. And} which escapes the eye, he ts at iberty te come to the tele) on & stand in the contre of the room} Anguish, unutterable, produces action, from which was sti} violent, involuntary. There !s motion, nd for anything “I suppose you have some castles tn Spain,” I rejoined jocularly; but Miss Liasie would have none of it. “He's from California, not Spain,” she remarked. ‘The Little Father of the Amateurs was kind enough to give me some ‘dea of the way he breaks in—I mean advises— Miss Inexpertence, oricanteadian’ Gaviaaian ‘I play to them,” he murmured, and her to go to Jericho!” said his hande danced lightly over the yellow} Olcott to “Jake.” keys of @ vensrable piano, ‘I play and} Jake hustled from the room unnoticed look at them—8O!" He glared, and 1) Just as he finished he heard his master tried to look Impreaned. ‘The nenaltivefexcitedly shout; “Jake! Jake! Come here! ones are influsnced at once, and thus I] Come here!’ Jake hustled back, and can discern talent!" when Mr, Olcott heard what had hap- Talent! I should worry! pened he flew into a rage. 1 let him play on a little while, for, as} “Go and apologise!" he shouted. "Take I maid before, it was raining hard out-}it back! Take it back!” Jake was at , side. However, a knock came at the} the door in @ jiffy, and here ls what be Olcott’s Handyman. IEAUNCEY OLCOTT has 8 butlar, oom, gardener end all ‘round handy man who is a very good worker, But sometimes he shows « marked lack of brains. Mr. Olcott was the target for a char- ion aaxi”—see above aiate Ci boards are scattered over the country, living on the money of taxpayers, and they have nothing better to do than to} phone,” he said. stick their noses into stock and bond la-} “But I am Mr, Caruso," gaid the man sues which are the personal business off at the other end of the telephone. the buyers and sellers of them, “I know better than that.” said the | ging, fastened to that which hae not eacupe).fhow such a@ lot of stawe aspirants! Dresser in Boste ‘The other night} door and @ prospective pupil arrived.} told the e¢ollector: “The master has Agein the 1 tone of pudlich reporter, ‘Tt ie just ‘because mutton-| ‘The reporter went away wondering if} The eye Alls, The placo ts vacant think of it, not being sure which they 1d Belasco" She looked lke « %-a-weeker looking? changed his mind, madam. You sceaa= morale SnmuMtias. | Dans corvange jhe Loupe Us ihee Steg Me bad peally apglogised enous, ‘Tre rest ts not apparent, Wiad 10 Boquize firet~iaiem, or pearls. "Good heavens, you don't tell me you for a chanee.ghmake more 1s was none pe Y= aaa eee ttn tee eee em ’ '