The evening world. Newspaper, October 15, 1913, Page 21

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The Evening World Daily Magazine. “Wedthtsdiiy,“Oct ower Ts, 19tgf- T WAS JUST, GOING TO TELu YOU- it At- Now wher Hat Flour: 4 y I Just NoTIcEeD AY UM- Now . Lew ME SEE: Weres nov a err OF RUTTER Ine 6.—“AGEB OF INNOCENCE,” by Reynolds. (At the National Gattery, London.) Barrie Skit at The Globe Causes BY CHARLES DARNTON. T WAS orobadly in a moment more !dle than thoughtful that J. M. Barrie Gashed off the little skit that left us quite dashed, ae they say in hie country, at the Globe Theatre last night. Evidently hoping that t few lines would find us well prepared for “The Censor and the Dramatis @eneliderate management tucked them in the programme: ‘The stage is in a fearful state, Of thrillers there's a crop, ‘And audiences see of late ‘The underworld on top. iy by day and play by play ' moral sense grows denser, ‘We'll have to try Old England's way And leave it to a censor, Ae a T As the drama now is ¢o unrate, Vaudeville managers to-day Wouldn't think of showing in their halls & modern high-brow play. They would firat submit all the plot and wit Of a play uron their pitt To the eagle ey@ of a wise old guy, The censor of vaud-e-ville, While thin iiterary gem did not sug. west Barrie, nothing seemed impossible of bellet after the astonishment caused by ‘The Censor and the Dramati ts,” which served at a: plaything for Doll Girl: Charles Frohman proved hie devot'on te. Barrie by aitting through the strange Galt 484 erating Hattie Williams Part the audience stared most of the time. It looked up in surprise as Richard | Carle came out with the announcement that ‘the stage is in a fearful state” and then helped to prove his assertion by) Joining in the afterpiece. He and | Hattie Williams struggied desperately with cockney accents as acrobats whose | mofal sensibilities were shocked by the “society play” in which they performed before the censor. ‘ Pats J When the censor stood up in the first row of the orchestra an tator in Row H was heard to remark, ‘It's Diamond Jim Brady!" But it was| WI West, who informed the author on the sti that he was an architect and gave the skit ite one really funny turn when he ebjocted to the play in rehearsal not n moral grounds, but berause the heroine's bedroom was on the Brotind floor of the house. As an architect he insisted that it should be up- Richard Carte ae Joe. judgment in kissing auntie’s hand instead of hers. Now, in the gay pres-| ent, Bob courts Bess IN SPITE OF her chaperon; and they revel in the Jolly lark of playing hide-and-seek with her between the palms of the con- demurely resigned to his bettet | servatory. through her cha Back in the old days Jonathan courted Lucinda, eron, being always very thoughtful of that stately lady and very, very at- tentive; while Luey sat, eye downc: Htated epec- | The Confessions of Arsene Lupin Copyright, 1915 by The Pree Publiablug Co, kin, Just six wh The New York Eventug World), 4 1788, Sir Joshoms 6 Dainting of child Wfede “The Str Girl,” ‘Theophila's ¢mother, patnt when she was only bit, a New Adventures of The Thief Genius. fl By Maurice Leblanc 'URE that one seldom falls to stairs, Therd Wes another amusing moment when the acrobat's good and true — (Copyright, 1913, by Doub'eday, hat is the most extraordinary, see In the windows of print ahopa| the grnndmether bf the “Age of tune Wife turned on théVillain who asked! her to meet him on the ely and told him . astounding part of the story: WAC itenurente ee ule Cares Cie yee, seid Sons and picture stores la the sweet) cence” gicl, yan @jr Joshua's sister, Arsene Livin, dismuaed os a nt treasures. The notary gave him the look which e L HF i what she thoughs of him. Lr piso eo aa ik c we sive to a persen who ip net auite tender "Age of Innocenc Mary Pall But neither” fin nor the acting was good enough to make the burlesque nies, i sort of sub. after ull, are right in hi head. ‘Then, pocepting the| Proof of its wide appeal, It In the best] ‘The pacullar mottled appearance tn: the worth while, If you can Imagine chorus youths in black beards posing as geveralctuet people, “4 peers cae anynatales the exact situation, he took hin pen and drew up' known of all Sir Jo works, It} reproductions of the “Age.of Isnocence”* Ginmatiois you hbedn't be told anything more, ciel Fans. al00 167 hd oar eae ee the aden quad taken. “Lupin vent over the copy which the «contract on atamped paper, acknowl-lenbodies the vory easence of Innocent] ix due to the thourands of tiny cracks I a tet cf aks sake) wither on the neeeeragh and satdown solicitor hud taken from the cupuoard, eduing the payment of the deposit by |eniidhond, Sir Joshua was a bachelor| that have developed in the eriginal, ‘iz acces ma laep of peuule § ithe Ps he rotunda, and, after examining it at length, aald: Jean@iot and promising Mim 8) and» rather cold man, except in Joshua ways experimenting with won 7 which you see here in the picture, or ‘You spoke of three pictures.”’ third of such moneys ue he should dis- bef . on the ourb of the well. At twenty- “Yes, the one which you aee Was to children, on whom he lavished ail hia| his paints, mixing them with etrenge B e tt Vin cen t’ seven minutes past five he rose and handed to my predecessor by the heirs affection and sentiment. Me always hed| substances, like wax or asphaitum, tn as y e s before he lost his Lif went indoors again; and until bis death, of Charles. Louise d'Ernemont poa- ehildren wvout him in his big, fashion-| endeavor to discover the secrete of the which occurred in 180, he never once sesses another. for the third, no able home in Londen, and in between! old Italian masters, To the students of failed to perform this incomprehensible one knows what lecame of It. a’Vrnemont fa: ers Now the iat- | Advice to Lov She Is “‘Too Young.” y until the last m: hin pitting# with lords and ladies he did| the Royal Academy, of which he waa CHAPTER Ill. yap learns was | a Ememor nae yeasty meet in the rast or family’s ‘old. home, ‘where | Lonte a'Ernemont 14 suppdeed to bare tds lu st tbe | of Terror. pilgrimage. ment, #0 an not to give those poor peo- President, he imateted the “Well, the day nish thi cs "i p ie pac the work of love on the littia ones who|the frat P t, he on (Continued,) pened was inva riably the ath of Ais wees Ione 8 euelt St: Nope won bis heart splendid and mary usual methods, but in his own work he ; Quarrel with her mother, The Sign of the Shadow. tne anniv dibttinent ome Ic Mate hoe + nil fis portraits are, he was aupy trled many experiments, which unfore appreciate it. she becomes en- td “Mw. tipn, er objects to my seeing her Her Friends Object. @xcelieat character ts " writes: A laboring man of ying me atten: | Rut my friends think I shouid | look for some oni Shalt 1 try to please them in ¢ with & profession. | BY J at Geneva, wel servant-woman took care of him, and they lived tog: in the Paasy Y wed without any not- uddenty, In 181 Maitre Lupin after a moment's reflection. “The “Bince that time,” replied the lawyer, with a certain solemnity of manner, “for nearly a hundred years the heirs ot Charles and Pauline dErnemont havo kept up the pilgrimage of the lth of April. During the first few years they “Oh, yea, of course.” auld Lupin figure means" ° ¢ ¢ He thought for a few moments and resumed: ‘One more question, if 1 may. Did no one ever come forward to solve the problem ”’ It will And that's Just what amuses me. “But they have been searching for a hundred years “It le mot eo much @ matter of search. ” SH Ne ing aa of thiak: T have three hundred and five daye to Uiink In, ty, It ima great deal more than T want; and ) those of hildhood, “The Age of In- The little girl In the picture is Reyn- olds's great-niece, Miss Theophila Gwat- The ditt tunately have preved fatal to seme of daugnter. | y Jove!” satd Lupin, “And not long before his death, a i OUBME, What shail I do? 166] ei hi ing and himeelf seemed impr SEE ee ice us say the 18th of Outside, in the} nocence’ hax taken ite place beside his paintings, But George Beaus abein love) why don't you try to make up the amazing story which he was telling April, Yenr II, according to the Tevoly- Raby Stuart’ by Van Dyk and “Don| mont said before 8h ¢) quareei with the mother? sister Pauline, who had tionary calendar, as the arrest took “so you have hit upon something?” | Carlos Balthasar” by Velanques, “Never mind; a, faded portrait by 19 @1@ enough to ended by marrying a nd since Charles's de asked place in April, 1704. v” replied Lupin. ‘Not a bit of ft! Raynolds ts better than @ fresh one by any one else.” well-founded and @ annoyed me & won't come now, ‘that Lapin’ 1 whispered to of beating re ter?” made the most thorough exca Maitre Valandier threw up his 1 am; afraid that ! shal! forget ell about sid ive " sticad that all na eldest of the brats a I don't sce what difference a man’ velations Every inch of the garden was “Goodness gracious met!’ h the Intereating though It may ee sh MUR T recognioed ad peaged at Was door, yelling = toccupation makes if he is conge of two wit ery clod of ground dug up. “why, it was the plague of the office! be. Obiige me by reminding me, Wil thrown off tie gioomy and dexpondent th, aoWs onacoming! © © @& you love him, Geclared. tnbk eet aver: They take! he One of my predecessors, Maitre Turion, you? AUR i aide tlay IN Ts rig ie tarmer-wen had carried 2 on Pal he , was summoned to Passy no fewer than . oe i “They are full of hope, Md Maitre A motor wae tugging on the other ; 7 POM! HG, St writes *T have bee a house at number of Dags a AML ‘om thine to time, for eighteen times, between 1k and 1M%, 1 reminded him of it meveral times Valgndier, ‘and it is my fault But What yidy of tae wall, A man on # motors ( ashy 1 in love | with gold and silver and that those no part tu turn over a by the @roppe of heirs, whom fortune- during the following months, though he ejuid | do? Your friend 1 cyelv came tearlng’down the lane at the yéung man, anes probably only copy-| with a gir! for six months and I would | bags had disappeared a few days before stone or explore the well. For the most tajjers, vclairvoyants, vislonurior, im- never scemed to attach much Lmport- \nprwaqion upon ie t visk of wreeting Hie neck. ing the minutely | described emotior Nike to get married, I am very bash-!/ the arrest. part they are content to wit down on pogtara of ail sorte had promised that ance to the matter, Then came a long joa people with a conf Mnaer thoter OF @iex wth eer favorite heroine in rpmanc. ‘ful and di not know how to express my |. According to earlier confidences made the stops of the rotunda, like the poor they would discover the farmer-gen- period during which I had no oppor- Wryoy T cannot mity that T feel Hows mh heat to-fdet. we coull: bse 909 1s glder ahe will smile and gh over|tove, What shall T dot” by Charles d'rncmont, who had them madman, and, like him, they wait, And Gralg trensures. At last we Inid down tunity of seeing him. It. was the period, Sa Hilear GOH OF: tONOe, Mane clas oaatehanlt, uikenrs pisode, But from hin father, the treasures were hid- that, you see, ia the sad part of their ‘Any outalder applying to insti- an | aterward learned, of his vieit to Jeannioe of yours? © ¢ * Aer earliest spitimental mer boarder on New 1 think it's @ pity for her to spoil the last years of wr: childhood by antici- peting the Mrst years af her woman- England if You must determine to conquer your! gee in the garden, between the rotunda, self-consc’ won falr lady, usness. “Faint heart never the sundba] and the well. In proof of jher statement, she produced three pi or rather, for they were not y e tute a eeiren waa to bewin {ng a certwin sum,” destiny, rat In those hundred yeare all depot these people who have succeeded one another from father to aon have lost~ what shall I say?—tho energy of life, Wat sume me at Pasy on the Armenia and of the terrible etrugsie on which he emburked against Abdu! the Damned, a atruggie which ended in the tyrant’s do’ self had fixed rave hima eltul deta: the heirs li questions aud T f more or less fan- ptain, to which ir heads sitet i in. rather die than nell it. On this they Vhat do you 8 ; Lupin replied to none of my letters. 08: Nanne country life has been’ commented | Foundings which result too o‘ten in th And they will be there x: ure all agreed: Loulxe d'Ernemont, who repeated Lap. 1 did not know whether they reached ethene upon by eastern’ papers and doudtidnp | COs 0 the’ cities to enjoy what they claimed’ Maitre Valandier. “Unies * in tie direct lairess of Pauline, ax well calely yim: and, meantine, the date was fF Shan are led to. imagine {9 a luxurious * © uniess Citizen Broqual, who nO av the beggars, the workinan, the fot. Tray thet Bim ANG. mR es ne Ne ame ok sulien and fhe same influences prevail jn the lake existence, with much money and Iittle doubt welt @ rat, succeeded in ferret- the clreus rider and 80 on who e thousand dering whetber his numerous under- ORD BABES Oy 2. TAS and mountatn'resorts in other’parta| work. The Boston Transcript notes the ig them out, Hut thie is an unlikely “harlen Fe ae He ee rerio meet takings Would Bot prevent him from at ane the two lean misters Marseilles: dadeseadent nich @f the country. The otty folks who visit | deteriorating effect of the summer visitor Supposition, for Citigen Braquet died in Invite alt the df helt to mest Kerping the appointment wiicn he hime | At half-pass ane the two lean sisters Me \ \ fully creased Wusers, bis black f@!t hat 1 patent \gpslyy boots were nut tis cycling. “ » . ‘ vanes, ca “A thousand france.” Ho caught One of the workman's eh ie ae ad pis iat a a, elbea WIN, you Ningly. tell) Bee aun had painted during his tise Re yomrane'ieth wa. Init “And did this have the effect of fright oe ee Reritee Newerer, ®t on apprectation dren by thevarm and eaid? aa esi 11e Me what a stamp means when placet|cantits, and which he had succeeded * the Yith of April, and ening them off" us able to wend him vertain par> ne tecoeeret BEN the ig te RRR ane fetch Bini “ upside down on postal cards and let-|in conveying to her, with instructions the 16th of April comen th “No, Four years ago an Hungarian to send him certaln Pare ne discovered 110 wald the to the cornes of the Rue Raynouard. at, 7." wrlteau 'T have paid atten] to anv es i . Dr Cones at tried the experiment and made aucceeded In guth- fat gentleman. of conviction. Look sharp! I have an urgent appoint \ i Dp ters hte hand thom ty hie wife, hie on and for a miracle to take hypnotiat p e ubout my nebkhbar, h the to @ younwfady fo) Naht months, | It iy generaily undertood to mean “I his daughter, Tempted by th has ended by taking eve tne waste a wuole day rae nee ee nemont, suah ax the love |The infantry al, Gansied be ibe mett to Weep, at two occlies ars usr nd we were vbty hi in love you." Chari the old et fave sold Axed the deposi 5 ; oe an ee ¢ a ran € : t - : ‘ ' very ‘1 o tne fi ‘ > ae 4 Rad ye lady with the litte 4 ‘ ernniot t ¢ The ‘‘Pernicious” Summer Boarder, i. and tne treasures we cy ; EERE hava bean lett in peace.” re) ung widow's daapair. ‘and. the Pevont na two! T hawerg kood yiiaster of at hou, 1ZE perpicidng éaftuence of the sums ing way that gives to these country amd there” ; + chuckled poplits, 8% that corner over there." + We Bye Shel rane plucky life which ahe led With ber little Ane hic thousaaa tom And Her RUKETE Wate Che eke village folk.a discontent as to their sur- And they are there now,” chuckled polnting to the .ploture, ey would k Jaughter. a f ere 5 ° these places seeking rest and change, | on Cape Code towns, and that this effect */3N0 POV: year , ee a the morning of dentleman in tie aylied suit auddenly twelve wooit ita and aay namber in @ive to these, at other times, quiet | !# also of common remark on the Maine «Bo then everybody began to hunt, The notary bould not belleve M8 arti 19 pin maw not mity Tinded on (Ly uotary ired. whom J hed to help en t Aeighborndods three months in which | SO@s and in Nova Scotia where there Is ‘Thy onlidren of Pauline, the sinter, hai though Lupin had ine. uy \ had finished lune, ‘It's you, Maltre Valandier, who are f« motoreycle in vagese h @ striking Contrast between two seaport tened from Gen ‘was discovered e suprise®, WAR Tt wan ang past | left to diame = ¢ 9 9 You ought to Maltre Valandier, you they present to the natives and 4o:them: | Oe ee eae vatering piace the that Ch 4 Me whined hak ana toa os ae ve brought the saninin vere by main my ad enough t0 Featare. it to Aelvee a standard of living aulte|inngbitante of which are notoriously and that he had eons, All these he's ssined Mulire Va- 1 jad nom entered the lane than Lo A aut * bumbas, the owner Wee fhe Label Gate vi y \- a fn ! naw tie wa we fo brate atand ‘ uite clea fed i » ¥ Gifferent fromthe orderly everyday eX- | ghittieas, and the other a Gshing port ane ae himseif? taaainent Besldes, it the farmerceens ; ng outaide tre door in the wall, Maitre He wave me a anvagy look, and the my boy! Ie the taxi th At ltence, @henned vy summer folk, which breeds harle ‘ ay Mad tualigad bie fortuna, Gente you i Veiahiler, interme’ uy enam of a9 foot n bis ture, Hung fiattered rner of the Rue Raypouard? Cape “They fing thelr money about, molthe hardiest and most industrious r¢ think that that fortune would huve jon Pio bladiv ator ' din my direction ne. ; @atter whether they have aruch or little, families’ on that coast, ‘Never?" been found? One could manage to hide upoa no evidence of any Kind. cried. "Where's Liat their sep caches seemed (To Be Continued) = .

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