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ORIEN URE 5 nn About Plays and Players By BIDE DUDLEY OR OOD OC¥] UTE C RTON, now co R starring with Henry Miller tp Daddy Long- Legs.” will prob ably be seen next ison in a play by A. E. Thoma auth eoeThe Ratn bow,” in whic « Broadway prominer bangs a Mr. Miller bad the chief role in “The Rainbow" n it played at the L Lire about three sen tumed the sobody seeins tu wha t auseo Mr Thomas ané t forget they ~ ends hee > cDanee they ppene te ge nia fifty fe of @act othe the als tomedia be came frigic uRD Wy freee wo leg Off @ brass monkey Mut it's wll over now Recently Mr Thomas finished “S*MATTER, POP?” \ \ } \ | WELL WELL, EVEN CASTOR on HAS GONE UP, FROM F/O | Te R GALLON | HENRY HAS play dramatization of a popular fovel (name dcieted by censor). He || @bowed the play toa theatrical friewd and (he iutter declared it should have Ruth Chaticitoo us its star Miss Chattericn was playing in Boston with or, but Mr. Ti cou! the temptation to offer » went to Hoston and fend the play tv ber. Sho was ¢ Mented win tt Then, however, 4 up the big obstacle—Mr. Mil , ber manneey Tavmas took his play to his} k xd wondered what he'd better While he was wondering the telopbone ran. | “Holle, Tommy!" said a man's 6. “How have you been?” Mine!” replied Tommy. And after | hat it was easy, To use a pet ex- | ression of ours (we think it funny), | yeones immediately became has: wents. BY WAY OF DIVERSION. | Dear Hilly, the postmun's just left | me your It's weloame, you bet you it is, I've Lngered, old boy, on] @ach sentence your w That let. | ter’s « pippin—gee whiz! It's twenty- Odd years since we me It seems like a bund: We used to swim in th mil! and dive off the stump of th tree. You say that the w warmer out there? It mea that many a kid in less thar will be running ‘round bare ing where you and I did. Ti fe still stands Bay, Bil, ain't t t? The swimming hole'# deep you think? You've started me bank- ering—yearping, old skate, and into my heart put a kink Say, Bill— Meten, feller! Let's sidestep dull care some time when the weather gets hot aad meet once again for a journey out there~I méan to that blessed old e@pot where you and I swam with the @ang, years ago. Let's pull off our Clothes on the fly and swim in the creek twenty minu! stump sor you know—as a sort of goodby.” SHIFTING “PAY DAY.” “Pay Day” will move from the Booth Theatre after the Saturday Bight performance to the Maxine El- Hott. “Seo America First," now at the Maxine Elliott, will close. “The Co-respondent” goes into the Booth sy. MISS BERTSCH'S RISE. Marguerite Bertsch has just been @ade a film director by the Vitagraph, ‘The rise of this young woman has been extraordinary Five years ago she ‘was a Brooklyn school teacher. Sho began writing scenarios for the Vita- @raph., and eventually that concern made her its scenario editor. Now she ‘writes features, selects her own com- } od and directs the making of the 1 _ HE'D SELL THE DOG Now. Three years while Mrs. Mark @aeecher was in Macon, Ga,, she tried buy a beautiful little do, walter at a hotel. fo. wanted and the sale was not made. Yes- Mrs. Luescher received a letter the head waiter concerning the am hard up,” he wrote, “ zoy have the Gos. Ho bes died gua Dut he ts otil! beautiful. You} ¢ t Fiat] FIRST SPRING CRIME. lames P. Martin of Brooklyn never he arrested for writing verne, but he'll take some awful chances if ‘Be continues to provoke the muse. A ———————— / BOSS, WHADDYA | PUTTIN’ THESE \ | BENCHES SO FAR ) \ \ APART FOR? ) HC He is GETTING READY FoR THE SPRING ENCACEMENTS BN THE ALLIES. “poem’ come to us from him. “Midnight F f | FLQOQEY N w i DRE Me EV! Wort on Too MUCH F'CLOTHE oa) DNE THINK IM A - MILLIONAIRE U4 ANOTHER AND Home and Comic Page of THE EVENING WORLD, Thu rsday, \ with ort Hi DIAMOND ats eu SWELL AXEL. THIS (9 EBBETS FEL AND YWANTA FAMILIARIZE YERSELE HERE'S WHERE YER GONNA SYART YER CAREER AS AN umpitee ! NOTE ALL THE DETAILS OF THE AN REMEMBER TEM! 7 we MY GooDNeETH' ITH THey A WHoLe GALLON oF cats Ton OIL IN THE WORLD, we od od “ se ws \ ») HERE ENPFEF FER —Trus' a Womar. tc Find a Way Out! CLOTHES RENT | 5 ud FoR INSTANCE , OVER THERE AFIELDER GETS THE SUN IN WIS EYES SOMETIMES ¢ Y'GETTR WATCH AN SEE. IE HE FUMBLES A FLY.) “THAN A DUDGE HAS & RULED -THAT A WOMAN ¢ — SHOULD NT Neary iD MORE For | “yi d . } (THAT OLE lerae YES, BUT To KNOW BANE ALL NOT AY VISH 1S — HERE DAS EXITS? en MANS RIGHT! SPEND MORE ON CLOTHES THAN (Y'roor \o! WET DOES AN UMPIRE WANTA KNOW ABOUT We EXITS FoR ?? we ‘SHOULD' NT ' 1 Noxapo Tikes. April 6, 1 ‘PAY ‘2@@2 WE'LL HAVE To RENT ‘ATS ALLE 916 By C. M. Payne A BIGGER ] PULL VUN VERY RAW 22? DECISION 2??? n—_ entitle ie suffering with spring fever. would you diagnose his ailment, Mr. and Mra Reader? nnowe fences all All thee signa, ‘That aentle siiriog again has came GOSSIP. “harles D. ¢ open air Shakes 23. Niel A new lain . PREPAR conan Res TTS ~ FRONT OF THIS (AERH- URN canter) |S FRONT OF Tat \ PUT EM ALL IN A ROW TOGETHER + €AND LET IT Go j \ 4 TAT THAT? 5 er “he a, have signe. sun stays in the aky ti d “Spring” has just Apparently he | ettes How! John Wilstach Bri nis ailment, MF.) Broadway again Jacket.” and Warmer, under his arm ‘twitabulate, Sou know. proclaim, Toueph P yeat had just drawn h n will begin his rian season April are Lillian son is to be leading bin Players atthe} € ont of the Man, he chorus girls TREE, KELW, AN’ DONT ASK NO QUESTIONS~ SAVVY! _QUES abs Cop PAN NIK Pre Pobening have been forbidden to feed it cigar | to be seen on Hoe has returned from a trip ahead of John W. Zwicki, manager of “Fair Was seen leaving the theatre yesterday with two new shirts Broadway bears that the Pincus in- terests will. stage Smiles” again with a new prima don- na doing thé smiling. hing, Victor was @ bank on Sixth Avenue fond 4g Fad heavy grip. She eala “The Girl ‘Among those mentio members of the next "F Lorraine, Darling and Hussey and Boyle *harle nn Kennedy is working Matthison will star next fall veming World) “The Yellow Who ween ap- possible sing Show" Timberg and GEE BoB, Some POOR BOOB WITH A BRIGHT FUTURE WILL KICK HIMSELF AROUND & LOT FOR EVER HAVING SAT. Tom Healy is to Hawalian- his cafe clude a “big surprise the surprise will b by Ben, ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES. -Your "Foolishment” is being Jolson at the Winter Garden eight times a week L. H. Ham by Ruth Fielding “Fear Market" Floe recited Ussian entertal a song r of cert te mas by Al The part will She wi FOOLISHMENT. While calling on Luella Drew. mie glue, he frowned, act of Dis play, “The Rib| “The doctor told me to In which idith Wynne] medicine three hours run then skip an hour. ViknNow-4t LOOKED THE MOON IN THE FACE oN THAT SPOT ONE NIGHT NOW Look AT MeE~ IVE Gor & DOMESTIO 2. te NHE Chock! UKIE~ ave a Hindoo-) nment at inday night which will in- A report says | and dance | emonies. be played 1 join the cast Monday. FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE. “Why are you skipping around |i that?" take my and nning I'm skipping.” SPRING TAue we THE PARK WHE he) Fe DED Pustisaing Co, World.) by The Proms F New York Evening IGZAGGING out of the way of all the big clouds that br en- countered, Bobby took a longer while to reach Alphabet Land than ever before. “I guess the clouds are so thick be- cuuse I feel so sad," he said, remem- | bering that he was on his way to visit “Mr. Z” and that he was the last gentleman of Alphabet Land. Oh, I wish I could begin all over igain to visit and meet their second favorite he grieved and looked | really downcast too, But he bright- ened up presently, not wishing “Mr. * to Imagine that he made a sorry sons," |far fron “Mr, Z cordial person true, ’ proved a very pleasant and He welcomed Bobby | into his home and immediately set | about entertaining him, rather them, for a lad of Bob's age arrived jat the same moment and was sharer jin all the hospitality of “Mr. Z,." “The reason I was anxious for you two lads to come together is that both | your Mumastes’ birthdays are coming | or ver yn and you have been puzaling your heads about presents, I am going to help you out,” he satd, giving each chap a hammer, nails, wood, uw, paint, brushes—everything nec- essary to make @ pretty little foot. | stool for Mumvie's cozy chair. | The day was a lovely one, and |} Robby could not help looking at it once. Then he set to spurred on by the f how pleased Mumsie would jongingly ju work with a vim thought ¢ | be. | But the other lad, though he was just as fond of his Mumstie, would drive one nall—and then gaze out on tye sunshine and wish for ebout ten a at coming to see him, which was |®teadily on) had finished a pretty stool ET LA WWOOOOGINA Minutes, then paint @ little and wish | again, By the time Bob (who had worked Tom's was not one-third completed So Bob went out among the many other children and played with as much zeal as he had worked, Now it happened that these were the children of Zeal, who is Mr, Z's" favorite son, and when they heard about Tom's lack of zeal they stood under the window out of which he looked and wished and sang: "Work while you work; play while you play. That is the way to be happy and gay. All that you do, do with your might. Things done by halves are never done right! Ha hat” vy laughed | and ran away, thinking “Mr, %." had come to chase them away. But he. to bid him goodby, inds of the clock were ily creeping toward 7 _— a A Stranger. ANAGER HUGHEY JENNINGS of the Detroit Tigers makes it a rule to give a try-out to every comes seeking a place with him. One day at morning practice, as Jennings tells the story, @ chap wandered in ‘one claiming to be a ball player who! COO® By Elea replied the candidate. “Oh, yes,” rf hit and field pretty ‘ you ‘Oh, yes, indeed!” "What do you usually play?” a right fielder.” "Well, go out in right,” instructed Jennings, “and we'll see what you can do.” Jennings instructed one of the pitchers to hit a few files to the new man in right and turned to other af- fairs. He was back In a few min- utes, and, greatly to his surprise, found the candidate still beside the plate. “What are you doing here?” he him toward the how he had been doing. “Ww close of the season the Yankee replied, “I've just been gol..e over the books and We've netted aout $17,000 this season, I reckon if we do as well year I'l! paper the parlo: cord which Is right fleld in this park The American Boy (on | Not Really Extravagant. HERE'S a Yankee landlord on the Maine coast who keeps his old hulk of a summer hotel filled every year with well-to-do guests from the cities, who pay high prices for the wonderful scenery and the good meals, plillosophically ac- and asked for a ohance. “You're an experienced player?’ questioned Jennings. cepting the bleak rooms, the shabby wallpaper and the threadbare up- Bolstery, A New York man asked asked, ‘I thought I sent you out in right fleld!” Jennings,” was the re-; ply, “you'll have to excuse me, but, you see, I'm a stranger here, and RROW COLLAR Intwo Ashby 9im Lesicon 24m CQUUETT, PEABODY & CO. hic Troy NY