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- Stiri @ Kors ‘ TIS SKINNDR, who is to appear O in a dramatization of Blasco Ibanez's novel, “Blood and Band," sends from Madrid this story Tems a comedy by Harry W Which the Shu of a bull fight: in the new vas wigned cone | (OHNE. (T Yours | “The story of the Spanish Inquisi- tracts with Katherine Kuelred and Jour WAT “THEN ~ tion is A thoroughly comprehensiole Ruth Donnelly for important roles in naan i thing to me now, for I've seen one of {he rural comedy drama, “Wait Tul! We're Married she most important buli fights of tue Year in Madrid. it was in the pres pn Monday éfive of 18,000 corrida ‘fans,’ the Queen Springer nt Mother and the Queea herself. Gall = comedy wick’ “Ten bulls were driven into the player, bapitad iit ae “arena, Two who wouldn't fight With — Frank Bacon w safficient gery were hooted out “Lightnin'™ at. th ‘of the rin protesting spectators, on Saturday night, Aug. 27, and Wien like an unpopular umpire at an Amer : Mid ball game. bight met thes © the star of a th. Nearly a dozen horses were penefit pe en in aid of o death by the horns of the the Baysid th American s many more were disem- Lagion at 1, on Satur- WOwelled and driven away to be sewe up again. And the great national eport was a grand success “Blasco Ibancz been tremend- ously kind to me, and has delayed his departure to the north for two days wi in order to give me all assistance in in. place of Phyl the mattcr of costumes, customs, leaving the company Habits and tradition face of u popular Presence in various & Where fetes and receptions ¢ ing him, for he has returned to spai after an absence of “On the morning téok me all over the bull ring an buildings. I saw the beasts separ in the corral, driven through @ ser Of enclosures within the building an¢ finally into the dark cellg, where they were confined for four or five hours before being Iet into the ring to mect their doom; the stables, where about vhirty-five ‘old hacks were stalled before their sacrifice; the harness and costume rooms; the surgery, the only Teatly antiseptic thing I have seen in Hpain, with its douches, instruments and five white cots; the little bull- fighters’ chapel, in which one of the Scenes of our play takes place many picadors, bull drivers, stab amen and assistants, all busy with Preparations for the day “After thas in the Ibanez car we flew to another part of the city, where in the ‘Strect of Good Su we Mounted the stairway of a building to. the apartments of a torero who might well stand for the hero of} “Blood and Sand." He is a sweet) youngster, only nineteen years old,| modest and unassuming. Yet ne_has fought 100 corridas this year at 7,000 | pesetas « figh’. At this boy's a ment, in the presence of several ‘fans,’ Ibancz and myself, his valet dressed him from his underclothes up to the last detail of his c strapped him into his g ment, an en‘irely new suit that h day Gina Gri join_on Monday “Mr. Pim Passes re Guild Hlow IN A KATINKA Adrienne Morrison been en Harry Cahane will present in Stam | YER MoM ss COT HER ARM ( Vers cet IT SETTLED PEQuoniatey, I'D MUCK \ RATHER PITCH Ty TENT d TONIGHT UP, | Mom and I ) WE Hurr | : QURSELVE § Has WE STERDAY COME SLING § cost him more than $1,000. This la name is Manuel Granero, and he is the coming torero of Spain since the death of Josclito in the ring a year a “At 4 o'clock in the afternoon came \ A BENCH AN’ LU HIM PASS the rea’ event, and my boy pre- i ited the only casualty. He was . red as he made the thrust that Ned his bull and the ficld. was carried off His hurt did not prove too ferlous--a ‘hrust in the chest below the heart that was broken by the aimost armor-like ornamentation of} is jacket. I called on him yesterday | Wd found him dressed and out of but terribly sore.” | SAVAGE PLANS. | Henry W. Savage, who has returned | from a two-months’ trip to Euro bréught with him rearrangements fo} the score of “The Merry Widow, made by Composer Franz Lehar for the new production of that operetta THAT TouGH LOOKIN’ FELLC HAS BEEN FOLLOWING ME AN HOUR — T'LU SIT ON = For | | eT ' this fall; also the score of Lehar's newest opera comique, “The Blue Mazurka.” Mr, Savage attended the 800th performance of “The Blue Mazurka” in Vienna and saw it also | in’ several of the twenty odd I pean capitals. According to Mr tt int, inst, | Award Winners, Strip No. 8, Evening World’s Summer School of Drawing | w York to conduct the] — PPP PLP PPL PP LLLP PPP PLLA PAPPPAPA, SPPPPPLP PPA, g opening performance. 7 NOISE. Im. the gloomy, dusky _@ather ‘round me lovely fancies things past and gone, forgotten, Are embodied in these trances. ‘Whey float and fly and flit and flop In fine array. [ yell and frown | At these weird things so very strange | aa What can't keep still and won't sit aera * down. 1 drive with Phoebus and | hear $5 Awards The clash of arms, chant of Sagas, Holand at the Dark Tower hurls H Margaret Tillistrand Lovely wreaths of ratabagas. (Age Fourteen) Inomidst of my delightful ride No. 500 We:t 49th Street, New York | | $10 Award Jack Persons (Age Fourteen) No. 70 North Fulton Avenue, Mount | Vernon, N. Y. A swine Philistine shouts, “Less City. noise!" Yéirather own an equipage Charles Kuhn Phan be equipped with equipoise. | GEORGIE D. MENDUD JOHN DREW, GOLFER. John Drew, one of the oldest in- habitants of Southampton, won the golf tournament recently held there. making 18 in 84. Mr. Drew will soon desert the golf course to commenc réhéarsals in “The Circle,” Somer Maugham's comedy, wh the Sel- ‘wyns will present in New York early $1 Awards | am Beptember. HUMBERT, SILVI, age fourteen, No. (Age Fourteen) | No. 343 West 24th Street, New York City, Richard Tut (Age Thirteen) Farmers Avenue, Springfield, L. |. ¢ PUT AND TAKE. 1828 Washington Avenue, New| 9 ° Life is a game of put and take, York City. | ] h D G od St ‘And all we ask is aneven break; ABRAHAM JACOBS, age fourteen, e ays oO ories ‘We'll use this earth as a spinning top, No. 1001 East 163d Street, Bronx,| ¢ Give it a twirl, and we're off witha Wy, | sae \VIENO SHULTZ, age thirteen, No. 271 | VERY CAPABLE. | fore teem GUE Shere wage cwlawaln | ¢6 rispet nthe mood olf top. bay ‘e West 118th Street, New York City. SEA CAPTAIN, holding @ 1@89 | gin't erposed to matrimony ane rake; HENRIETTA FRIEDENBERG, age | of lime julce approvingly up voll, why is it you have never We're there on deck to grab some joy| thirteen, No, 210 Jane Street, Wee: | to the light, said: his inquisitor continued And call the top a good old boy. But when the top turns out a put, | DOLLY FIFDLER, age fourteen, No. Ite then we have a bill to foot; 42 West 73d Street, New York City. A hurts to pay, just like the devil, — | ‘And we say the top’s not on the level. | ALFRED KLEIN, age fourteen, No. | 51 Heberton Avenue, Port Richmond, And ‘ each Gey we keep on spinning Staten Island, N. Y. Aad trust to luck that we'll be wit-| 41 geRT KRULIS, age fourteen, No. Mt puts to-day and takes to-morrow | 436 East 59th Street, New York (ur portions of joy and trouble and) City, Barrow. JACK HONEST. | Jesse JACOBS, age fourteen, No. rs Gossip. ' | At the Stamford Theatre t nt, MARY SULLIVAN, age fourteen, No, (Lee Ditrichstein will make his ap-{ 9150 8th Street, Richmond Hill, hawken, N. J. Pearance in “Face “Value,” a new! 1. 1, om y by: Babette epee, ere may Ry! LESTER BRILL, age fourteen, No. 29 east Includes Frances’ Underwood,! Alvin Place, Edgemere, L. |. hine Hamner, Orlando Daly, M.| ran 0 lamner, Orlando Daly. M-| Names of award winners and $10 Kpill and Lee Millar. “Phe fifth annual cruise of “The Lights” will start with a vaudeville Performance Sunday evening, July 24 award winning drawing for Strip No. 9 will be published on this page next MONDAY. &trip No. 12 for you to 271 Newark Street, Hoboken, N. J. | T sor over | Bur Mom DrD NY (hy 'T He ave R GOLLY 1H NERVOUS — A WOMAN ISN'T CVEN SAT InN DAYLIGHT ANY MoRE “ HERE'S A Good SPOT = ( THIS OPEN SPACE! L Love To Have ROOM AROUND je IN Ta! we) (mids ty » ¥' she SPRAIN E SPANKIN’ ME HEI WRIST MOM . soe HURT s D Her West ¢ AND =) ”. eS ar ase Rae Vir. ~ HuRT Fa LZ wv} — Pe Pe eee SS Fa — SAY, YOUNG SCAHP — iF YA + peels DON'T Go AWAY FROM ME TLE CALL A: POLICEMAN! 5 ; . AM, HAVE UNDER HERE - (LU SAY 11 FOR Mi, ii HOTELS we READY FOR Us INTO A Ant A LOT VISES Bur WHeRe I cor SPAN WED — IT DOES NT ANY More HE OOF F OU'RE THE ONLY | SHADY SPoT | IN THE PARK! FF | ' ZOE , 1 You'D LISTENED TME we'D BE NIGE an’ DRY IN A Ij, OF HOME INSTE SOAKIN' WET! ‘D HAVE A HOT MEAL US ANS ALL “THE COMFORTS AD OF BEING OUT HERE You'Re ALWAYS GETTIN' MESS +HAVIN' YOUR OWN WAY, are STUFF LIke THAT — Tig ' TRACY GILLIS, OF OMAHA, AGED 33, SEES A. WoMAN FoR FIRST TIME HIS LIFE . FIRST /MPRESSIONS ARE NOT * ALWAYS LASTING BRocKTON SHOEMAKER. ARRESTED FoR BiGamY ce ee me TEN-DOLLAR AWARD WINNING STRIP, NO. 8, COMPLETED BY JACK PERSONS. LITTLE BOY BLUE AE BLEW HIS HORN | LOTS OF + AND IT GAVE HIM TT ROUBLE HE DIPPED _!T 5 THE WASA TUB - AND: IN. BLEW A GREAT Bic BUBB “Navies are different to-day from what they used to be. A man was) talking to an old sailor, The sailor | said “Yes, sir, my boss was in the navy too." “In the } man, ‘Wha | may | ask?" “Pour to five quarts, sir,’ | old sailor. —Washington | TOO UNLUCKY. | VISITOR in Kentucky came across that rare specimen, an unmarried colored man The negro was a quiet elderly per- json, not shiftless but quite Industri- ‘ous, so the Northern man felt curi- ous and determined to find out why |he had remained single , was he?” said the as his official capacity. said the m: w complete will be printed TO.MOR- are Columbia Theatre, Bar Rocka- ROW. r FOIE NE me mee ne om “Uncle Jim, how does it happen | that you are so opposed to matri- eo mony?” M to the Senate. you scen any “Lawdy! | thisaway; m yessah—but 1 couldn't resk ent."—Los Ang! ‘Times. one my BETTER THAN AVERAGE N. Y., said at a lune cheon you you see It's judg- AYOR LUNN of Schenectady, ‘The machine candidate, the achine politician support him? “A machine candidate enator Swank,’ d elect him, but what kK You--what's he dup ‘What's he done yunsel for the railroad sneered Citizen, ‘promised us great things if! why do we always got elected Six months went by. | Then John Citizen met one morning] place in the next row the boss who had put the candidate in, machine John he done? trust, light trust and the food trust; The old fellow looked up with @\ bought himself a town bouse and a| The questioning teacker smiled.! ceed, but I can't afford to give yelled ti.9 boss.| her teacher asked after they were in ‘Why, he’s got hinfScif made special | their room the he's | country seat, and he's started in col- | lecting old masters, ‘That's what he's | done, darn it~and all in six months, | | too!’ "—Los An; STILL IN EGG FORM. D’ you know,” remarked a Boston business man, “tha! actor? I once had a craze to be an In fact, 1 was on the stage for awhile, until I discovered 1 was not, suited to it" | "A \ittle bird told you, I suppose,” | said his friend, “Well, no, not exactly,” replied the business man, “but [ have an idea it might have been a bird if it had been allowed to hatch."-—-Boston Transcript. pes Lili ‘ FAMILY PRIDE. IX-YEAR-OLD Pau! was misbe- having in the school ranks when | his nine-year-old sister from her | happened to! notice him. Immediately she walked from her place to him and adminis- | tered a good shaking and a command for him to stand still. “Why did you shake him, Virginia?” “Because if I hadn't shook him his | teacher would,” she retorted. f “But [ can't see, if he had to be shaken, what difference it made whether you or teacaer did it.” “TL can," Virginia was positive. wanted to keep it all in the family. Los Angeles Times OMS ool ane. TOO CONJUGAL. IT'TLE Kthel, who was shopping with her aunt, listened while the gruff but intelligent clerk reinonstrated: ‘ “Madam, I am sure you will not need so much material. You will find five yands quite ample.” As soon as they had left the shop Bphel exclaimed, indignantly: “Auntie, I didn’t lke that man, not one bit! Why, he talked to vou just like he was your husband!"-~Harper's | Magazine, A HANDLING A “TIGHT ONE.” A SOLICITOR was making tho rounds of a certain New Eng- land town on behalf of a use- tul community work, when he encoun- tered an overthrifty merchant, upon whom all the solicitor’s eloquence was wasted at first, “I believe this is a good thing,” the merchant, “It deserves to id \ | thing. However, you hava my good } will.” “Very well, Mr. Skinks,”” 4 ine solicitor, “if that's all you feel able te | give, just sign your name here and write ‘good will’ after it, and then | townspeople will know what "our gift | ‘The paper was signed, but the mer- | chant put something more than good | will against his name.—Philadelphia | Ledger. SR AL | & FORGIVABLE FAULT. A N Admiral said at a recent din ner: “There are too many people in our country who can’t bear the truth, We must pretend to these ; People that everything American is | perfect. If we oriticise, 1t must be criticism as mild as the chicken | deader‘e “Do you guarantee this hen? | once asked a Providence chicken dealer. | “*'You bet 1 do, Admiral.’ said the | man ' | * "Has she got no faults—no faults | at all? T asked cautiously “'Well, Admiral,’ the chicken dealer | confessed, ‘one fault she has, and there ain't no use denyin’ it—she will lay eggs om the Sabbath.’ "—Wash- lington Star, DINING CAR LAS’ CALL PRICES Fon oninG | CuT 25 can nie PER CENT. % EVEN AT ‘ THAT You's t HAVE To r § TRAVEL MG ' SOME To (wat t PAY E01 (on 20% Fair. ATLANTIC city BaTHers = # SMOKE , BRIAR i PIPES — ANTTHING To STRIKE 4 MATCH REPORTS WAR RAGING [,\oRE /f BETWEEN ¥ ROBINS AND SQUIRRELS FoR FooD= Many A NUT HERE WAS FED 4 PRETTY B/RO CAPTIVE AMERICAN EAGLE To BE FREED | IN TRENTOoN, VERSEY FREED BOXING FOLK OF MANY EAGLES RECENTLY FORDNEY TARIFF DISCARD. YO FAIR SALFFLING TH. E PISCARD CHICAGO SAYS LOWER _ PRICES COMING FoR. BaBy CARRIAGES. MOsT “BABIES” PREFER. UTOS 70 Caas Tis SAID THAT DEMPSEY AND KEARNS HAVE NEVER CAST A VOTE = Wo MONEY f WIT Fo, THEM To S&E A ’ SALLOY fox