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Show . .j Modern:--.:Stage t. Needs -- '. . More New - jus MULE7 By HENRY nr the Xew York prod Being manager a play from an utterly- - unknown uutfioiT- It was puMy t riUn ami jnttot of t&ItaatiQuS were utterly irnos.iWv. l'rodtiml iii the form in which it came from Hit creator's Den it could have been only a disuifil failure; T le manager wais not for aruomf'nt teniiitnl to pro- - rkAJ"yjarsiago one l recened the rnanusemft Autos to Replace the Last Horse Cars -- The cars that Mr. Whltridge. intends Jo experiment with are aa elee-tristorage battery and gasoline motor car. There is no question about dulo ay he had .received, hot besaw jJossibilities In the their practicability, the receiver says. ot. lie senf for hi m, arm pointedout a few of tht authors, pi matter of deciding It is simply which form can be operated the more Witt glaring defwtb and t5urrepted that the manuscript ht ""." economically- turned over to a professiiwal dramatist. The new. experimental M31. s w as done, and the rewritten play, 1 the only fairrtly-saggestincars will seat about 28 persons. S success. achieved and They will be for purpose of comparirnanustTrptrwas:pro(liieel nnmediatly ongnal son, about the size of the cars which ajenateur hiniHelf to a close study of pra'ctlcaT plarwrit- playwright applied s the Metropolitan street rallwayTopief-atetlie author of numerous uecenul dramas, IIrealizeS and if to-tlon Its- - Eighth street cross-town- , line. - These are 32 feet In length. - now just, how hoKless that first play nurat have appeared original Some form of automobile car is also and appreciatei the patieiie and of form, the judgment manager who looked upon as the possible solution tesert the dramatic of nugget buriexj io,ja: .4tiary (Jialogae. , of the traffic problem on West street, where the"MetropolUan street Tailway Th seareh" for mbryw drainatists, is;. k my ppmion, fhe most intelll- -' has always asserted that owing to tiand! praetieabl? method of unearthing latent tahmt evts suggested. dal effects and the possibility of short gent ten be valuable to In an such new idgaff there are-surfor a"p)eal response circuits therefrom; the underground been has since the a of scenario trolley Impracticable. returns, writing no'great task even to thelitterfy In addition to all this promised reine.)eriem-T- . And the great cry the moiiern stage" j for new idltas. form- the public service commission Whopver romesr forward' vith thy germ' of agoocr plot wilffinoT producing has granted the Interborough company as extension of 30 days In" which to managers ready aM eager provide the moaas of ha?ihg that plot tie " r trains In ' . experiment" with into- a play, the subway, so that the center side veloped " Chicago in partilar atid V e middle west' in general! are mere' uahs-e?te- d' door train, which the Interborough officials consider superior to the in sktious-dramthan any other section of the United' States. CoTa-lint- 4which ha cpsrat4 withtijrwtt!ef;PSaI iattrMtis Hit alerfcittteUigw whiefr lefiponnii'. experimentally for some weeks ' past, i a: most'graitifying. manner to plays that; Appeal may be tried. e thpl -- -- - It really begins to as though New V'ork Intended to follow the lead o every western vH- ' late and discard its horse, cars. Frd " crick w. Whltridge, receiver of the Third avenue-an- d tfnlon railway companies," Intends' to test two automo- - bile cars soon, and If It is found they e&a be operated economically enough K may prove the end of the entire "fcarse car service In the city. Eecrtver Whltridge operates two borne ear lines the Dry Dork, East Broadway and Battery, and the horse car branch of the street, Mautiattanvflle and St. Nicholas av YORK. NEW d " - ;ane Tine.' . " Besides these, the Metropolitan com: pany has the Avenue C line, the line from the Graad street ferry to the JDesbroases street ferry, the Canal and .iran4 street ,llne, the line that runs "fiwuFifty-nlRtstrwi and First ene to the Battery. Cars are also .occasionally run on two other lines. g :m 1 yh.. av yhe g(i dtm-enw- d e .f -- Green-Soutache ... sTde-doo- side-df---tf!- h TheCaBtunie--- r the Bight Shows a Gown of Blue Linen Made PVfnceaa with EmpTce Glrdl"" Embroidered" In Triangles with Light Costum on the Left Shows a Straight Princess of the Middle Age Period, and is MadeJef Silk Cashmere l a Deep Hyacinth Shade. AT THE a ioffie Seed Atfwce tv? the fiirt Wha Spiral Ceil, ef Heavy Wire That Can Be Prettily Decorated Is the. Best Has Just Finished School and Is Yet Devised. Society. Entering -- to th ifitelleet ami- not merely to the eenfies.-is of die vTLt Fope every true seriously interested ' in th "American "stage that the vogue of irivclbus-an- d Mr. Adams.then proceeded diplomatindecent entertainmen'ta flourishing in many New ically to Investigate and found that who had him was York thwiters will.be extremely short lived. - nA the grandsonl of inevitalJa'-reactioMickle.l..; from "siYch nariwholesoine They then started out oil a. tour of h fJeman a fare wjll thre clean, great the lower floor of the haH7the walls Ameriean plays, i it not reasonable to 'be- -' of which are covered with the pietures of dead and gone mayors. Finally, In lieve that creators f sucli (Sratna will e .found in Hie the office of the bond and warrant " 1BED and abetted by Chairman clerk, Mr." Mlckle stopped suddenly, section f America which has shown the keenest appreA WMcox of the public service com- and, pointing to a portrait of a dark', ciation for plays that ate really worth while? mission the municipal art commission veteran, he' cried - "That's him!" cf New York city has been able to put This . a stop to one of the most flagrant picture-borthe inscription: "Mayor I Havemexerl J.4 5:6, A, fairday JojjBe publie meana a: day cases ofmasQueradingthftL.tas.conie . to light in this.city for yearB. - on which n Mayor Havemeyer was' the founder rain-- f aUsThe-weatlw- F' bureau i A lev days ago an excited person of the present family ofthat name. verified' a tails prediction, r rushed Into the office of John- Qtript,- -' got into' eon)-- , though it rain all day,, if. .th? rainf afl. does Adams, secretary of the commission, munlcatlon with memberB of the family, and they came down to iook-a- t the ot xceet .0'i of anvincht Ak miny-da- y ,aa houtedr"Comewtth preMr, Adams followed " Mlckle" picture.. They were not sure considerod'i ia diction 1QD per verified: and the perturbed One Into the lower cor- that it was a portrait of their ancestwit, is allowed tho- forecaster.' if tha day ridor, of the city hall, where tie was tor. Mr. Adams scratched his head baited before a painting hanging be- In doubt, and did not know exactly is entirely fair save for a. slight mist or a, tween the two doors of the mayor's what to do next until Mr. WlUcox, sprinkle of a few drops of rain. Can you whose : wife la "a ". granddaughter or ";' reception room. " - - - onbeat that ? the "That's not my grandfather," he was Mayor Havemeyer appeared Informed. The secretary surveyed a scene and identified the likeness,. Furthermore, if"f air"' is- - predicted! for By EHIiSON H0U0H Th$ matter will be straightened! out portrait of a rosy, any territory arid'tfio dhy.js-- rainy ,; but the ttoe-fyegentleman la a high atock, and the dead mayor's portrait will rainfall measures less than .02 of aihch,. be properly identified. seated in . dignity at a table. He henceforth I was apparently, ellgbtly gray,- and was Mrt Adams eaya beiupposes. Jhat zjz: tte "forecast of faiV-'i-s considered verified . Under the picture was in cleaning the pictures years age the andlOU percent..' i allowed the bureau. Stationary temperature gives the inscription:- - "Andrew - Hunter name plates ;were- Inadvertently the forecaster a lauga of six degrees above and six degrees beiaw. 34UMe, Mayor of New shifted, "Bill'' Kennel, the Cerebua of is the office, about It. of the' previous Iay at eight a. m.4: ini other words, a range-omayor's sorry Tori, - "And. this., name wasn't Hunter, "Now I will have to get acquainted :12 dtegroes.8" Just try far youjcsclf, YotrtaraVniwa. by using this .either,-- continued the excited individ- with- - the, old, fellowa allrover againr "" nTethodr"T" was Hutchlns." he said. I ual "It -- MfiresYeE fareeastsr :Verificatipn-of . vgrege-- of easy guesses said hard guesses up for the Vntiiie' eountrywhich Mexicoi When the writer1 lived, ia New and It Kw includes,, say,. England is considerable In New was a it Mexico, many years ago, the '"regular" contingent. staple amusement to bet. with There Is Fred K. Fish,- for Instance, any tenderfoot during midsummer that it would' rain, before fijve .o?clock who la' willing to pit his skill against in the afternoon.-- The bet was always-madin the morning, when the- sty all comers, and Ernest Adlef, who cloudless.---Th- e tenderfoot wast alwaysinvariably, lost, because never gives up until the last jump la rained! later in In made, - Others who- - are- regular absolutely at the ' boards r are William what the wea titer would lie without a weather bureau. Orr, Jamea Jd, Halt, Theodore -- J " , 4 S a steadier of nerves tn'ade ragged no one can' tell It New England, with a r, N. R, Walter Munn, Husted, of wheat the turmoil the pit fand bya relaxation will two. extremes of easy and these is be. what the weather It between Giovanni tarace and K. S. from the erind of the w Brewster. others out the- value. of the weather bureau's' andgewai mririuiMSrTTnf work m the floor veterans m the in more or less consistently. the bureau gains 3 per cent, over the in form If aneea grain trade on the Produce Exchange drop guessing. Of some of the men It is said that per In New York city take to the good law of of the 50 natural chance, what should be its credit, 85 per cent, game of checkers. In the they do not allow business to Interfere . t,'",". library, otherwise known as the read-t- i with checkers, but a reliable authority or 33 per eent, ? uijJ roortiVjuBt abaft the grain plf, one upon things' doing on 'Change stated eotspy corner is set apart for these dev- recently that this was a canard, and otees of the ancient pastime, and at that, on the contrary, whenever any the- future is the 5Tnrost thing that looked like a .'deal eomes - checker enth usiast.-Tle- T r nf Tnore-the ptr iiightthe "scrtigthtnTi o tee or expert at once goes and does. half dozen 'bdardsr to fight and to hold her owh4 to. rise up and J it, with as much expedition and des Most of the men are staid and battle with the woes and disappointments e and jwme near the patch as possible, : returning to .the Sometimes" contest "the board whiienihe hi it for a if the imark,- but once ;UfV..pot.toinkunder and Set7 and" is chess, but most of the regulars pre yfjunser generation esfiays his hand fume against them And her own sad lot. UsiBjlly to his cost, however, for there fer checkers The type of girl whose pTacFwas1)yttie" flTesjiie7wfi6"mu8t TesaIeT' - GrandsohofFormerMaybrCoiTe - Don't, .when school dayB aTe over, fancy 'that yonr education is finished. School It Is only just beginning. merely teaches us how.: to leam; but the greater part of" our real education, somes after," and whether or .not. we women snd up by. being, iepends almost entirely 011 ourselves. Wise people "never regard their education as "finished." They axe alto learl aome lookoub on the ways thing new. . Don't let a love off sport ami out-ioamusement lead you to despise needlework and indoor occupations.-Thwoman whose Interests .are all outdoor cannever be ai "home maker" En the test iense of the' word."" Don't fancy that because you don't looking you cannot happen to be good Ire attractive. " Some of the most attractive ' womenmentloned. in hiatory have been absolutely plain; they merely learned how to make thw Best of themselves and so can yont Donti If you find it difficult ta get on with people, excuse yourself by saying that you are "so reserved." It Is the surface impression that strangers Judge by, and not one- in a thousand will take the trouble ta try and find our If you are Interesting and pleasant below If you. are cold and reserved on the BuTfaceTfiBrelntEtBe thing- to do Is to- determine ; to be. even If it doest mean at Mg pleasant, effort.r-Bost- on Herald. - -- n ln-t-ow ;- in--tl- w- n .well-educate- d vtril'-jn-telligei- rf d' - e Wide Range for Weather Man t?wuM&na-inunedlate-ly - 1 1" fair-weath- er - - 'tr'',rriirr.lirri .smooth-shaven- - 1S05-186- 1846-184- 7 .rr " -- .r Y frettyt-anSid.aint- J Ing is done by fastening the end of of the wire, then winding the; ribbon closely around the wire all the way to Jire top. Each end should be finished with a how. The closets: should be furnished with as many of these holders as its owner has hats Ih "use; USEFUL TWEED DRESS. I : - 1 vytfffifcv r t The Marrying Age. There seems no harm in a young girl marrying a man whose means are to maintain a wife, says a - ibs-.-."!!- !. amply-s- ufficient e Checkers Quiet: Nerves of Pit Brokers Mi lurrent-WTtteFj-a- nd, moral and physical dualities which ga to make a ;ood husband, there can be no possible objection to the knot being tied as soon as it suits their convenience. If there is considerable disparity in age, then ft might be advisable- to waft for . rime to see if their ltove for each - . ' other remains firm. Early youth fades quickly away beJorethe stern "realities of life and" the responsibilities to be faced by two talent-represente- - e - the-day- . - t1nose;partff-anybody-cauld-'t- - eli - weather-bureau- young Inexperienced people. """TheTaMTagTToT't is about 25, and the man should trifle older. - " I . borax-an- GirlMust -- oFFprtuneFonStates treasury authorities had United - . 1 him arrested. .. No less than 200 soldiers of fortune JJapt JBmOTt;TrtnC5Fe3"- ent.war trusty It is to bejljcorporate under the name of the "Imperial Sol-- , REVOLUTIONS TJRUST ;Heg Daring arOnrd diers of Fortune Dragoons,-wi- th ; of- . - ance of the wayaof the faintest breatV or- knowledge xf evil is nrigidiy- kepMrom- - Im, does' not yrdy - II "and'-daTiBs- e o dtir7 H 1 I . but somewhat " table-spoonf- " " " Pretty Summer Ruga. Effective rugs for the summer cot tage or bungalow, or for porch use, come in" blue and white." bid rose .and wfilte, green and w"Btwn"l&ndsoapeborder in Japanese style. The border' consists of - several gnarled old trees or of wave effects In cclr"aBTing"c6Tor"oenrTfifo a rugs --are very background. The "' ' " ; wBUe """ J& -J- sewn in The acjilop; ea,cji cut in the same way, otherwise the bodice is quite plain and baa a yoke and deep cuffs of finely tucked ellk. , Hat. of soft isilkJdraped.over.atraw and trimmed with a wreath of roses. Materials required: Six yards tweed . 48 inches wide, two dozen buttons, six yrda-bffttd.-- -- r . ' ce fv'J-- ! r - - t -- the-man- V the hands with It several times a dryingpowderT - ference twtvern "making "aT "giri too manly, movtflJhLfa r 1 - 0(J--wajr o .' - rf 7 ' fices In New York. . , , Wwise m her knowledge of things; and keeping her in continual- ignor"I have just returned from Canada) ance, making her ""prude, too straight-lace- d, andjrightened of hpr own MELVILLB' BOYNTON, the where I have organized. & Canadian CAPT. has' soldier of fortune, - vet. brigade"; consisting of announced the formation ot a "revolu-aJ- erans," said the captain, t ..r. A girl, of ihe present muiit be strong-wille- d; a)le to judge and act for fiew of In the United States we wftr York.. Ha.eayinlt ""Out trusC herself in of time her . ILjjjr paes so. get S.2QQ more-rt-he .eyes. ar,e. notsuflleientlyjopen tn, ntvessityrfoif .: jr JCi. iEuicorpntate,dw-standing army ot know tho world with its intrigues, ite temptations, how' is she to avoid the and presi- - the 'revolution" trust." Then when jrovM flghtere,-dictator- s J.dpTit8.Jn any jeoutbern Araerban re-- 1 leadr of the opposition tnv VeneiueU ..pitfalls? A.j;ixJiM4iQLJaleiit im jpubilc that needs a rebellion to raise or Paraguay or"Tihni67"C6iombla its taxes, or for any North "American wants to put through a revolution and otherwise how is sheio knowwhat to expect; and not knowing; what but . .1 corporation that needs' a rebellion to be sure to win, he'll come to me and experience will open her eyes? rure concessions. gay how much he'lt.gjve to be made orld--anA gklIto4iM.to-faehf- r make herrown liTtngr-uithoug- h " Cdpt7Boynton7It was who a year what he wants to. be. ' s 's 'eelf-relianneeds-hinot Cas-irhe" eqiial,' physically offers enough well put our "If ngo organized rebellion against ot Vnezt:ela, and bad a tot of fighting men on board a boat and go must conquer her own weakness, even in a way 6ink her individuality 03 oiiZ.tcrfi.lt Venezuelan niom?y coined down there and overthrow' the govern'ad' overcome herself her woman, etifie that portion "of a, inclinations, I'-rment. He can take the job and pay to fioire his project. ll? w rv t dy to eriirt for South ua oft, and we'll come back and look herself which entitles a woman to have ncrves,"ind brace heraelf-tthe " iviUi I) Bold!r-whaa the out faf another contract" . unequal conflict of paving a way for. herself shaping her own V n f. ; .; A fine, soft tweed checked with a complicated lotion is. to mix 12 table- - darker shade of color effoses, is used spoonfuls of rose water, one for this decidedly- useful style. of Jtincture ofbenzolne and .The corselet skirt-is- - wrapped over ell Rub-irten grains of .tannic acid. . to the left side, and has the edge seal-- ' UlthJliauidT-aiid.-latr,jdust-Wlth.-- kept. "linjgnor- world, so that the -- . off day. andherished,. .PiAftiowc- ;- l alcohol in a convenient place, and wipe ed -- 4 d "Another help is t keep a rf -- WAIT . dusted over the' palm's of the 'hands when they feel atfckyJwill . quickly check the moisture. Modern1: r- . ne-wit- h- ' - baa For Perspiring Hands. A good cure for that trying ailment, hands that are clammy or perspire, is to keep on your dressing table a small . olng-rpnsro- three-scor- ." . Schoon-make- -- man pwHtfded-hat possesses the necessary - i'-M-r- - f . 3oHier Taking care of a hat when ene- Is not wearing It is ajwaya some trouble, and putting It awayjn a box, from which it must be taken out everylime one. wants to use itjeems. a great bother," esiiecially when one ; . is in a hurry. Various' hat holders have been eon trived, some useful and some not much of a success, but the best one yet seen and the most steady 1b 8 strong spiral coil of heavy wire; the bottom being larger round than tha crown of the hat and the top much ' smaller. A girl can buy these- - spiral! wire hoIdersTand make" them look very The--wi- r herself " hto be ribbons" witmust "covered" - d - OF LIFE. REALLY USEFUL HAT HOLDER. BEGINNING - . gaily-colore- h butterflies. -- l . - Rainy Day Decorations. ' Idea. Place an old umbrella frame vertically in & fernery and twist smilax or In- around"the frame and down At the base of the fernery hav visible hairpin attached -- so that - It may be pinned to the "hair or dress. a bed of violets aa large around In cirFor the centerpiece have a " small cumference as the umbrella. .At the branch with budding leaves on which luncheon hour hide a small lump " Ice are placed about a dozen gallycolored in the smilax at the end of the b. ces. butterflies. Serve: Ices in the form of allowing It to melt and .drip ontha " ' Butterfly Hint. At each, plate "place a a small "paper butterfly-wit; k1 j". d r ' violets. " . eaca-spo- ' .' . ke. . |