OCR Text |
Show THE ACTORS IN PAGE NINE. 1, 1908. CALVES The Era of the One of the moat Interesting facts ia connection with the present political campaign la the determination of tb actors of America to take pan in it. Led by Wilton Iarkaye, who ia regarded by critk-- as one of tbe brighten Grind Honor of Her of th !?.ker founder-5w-nw STATE JOURNAL. THURSDAY, OCTOBER POLITICS. PennJ Wilton Lackaya, Who Laada EigM Return of Thousand Thaipian Vetera. patoddpW 1 DAILY Bhe Will Sing Mors Than Tw Hun-- Political Ghat. j dred Timee This Season. Emuia Calve, tbe worlds a con greatest Cannon, recently cert tour covering the Iuitcd States hah she will ;and Cauada. during ting niore than 200 tiiiu-s- . Mme. Calve Is so flue au artress that, should she ever exchange tlie lyric for the dra- -' inatlc stage (as she once threatenedt. her she would In all protiabiliiy operatic triumph. Site la so feud of ailing that her concert tour was some- - I what of a surprise. It will always please me liettcr to to slug." site said not long , act than Mme ! Problem Novel Jff TOUR. CONCERT New York's Interesting State Campaign and Its Bearing on the National Result Candidates Hughes and Chanler. n ! a ! an at- Prefeaaer Robert Herrick's Era. As- -' Reasanca Baok Nedill PaUeraaaa acpk About Ike Idle Rick. - Afteryearsof owe YYU-- 5 300 : llam Fenn la to re-- ? turn to Philadelphia. and the Quaker City la mfclnr elaborate preparations for his reception. IVnn first the lallic Erminia Swidirsiin" "Msnr IIIS is the era of the problem novel, the rolilein play aud of problem discussions in other literary guises too numerous to mention. Sometimes it Is the condi- Tlsited rennsylTanla metropolis, some 22U years ago, It wasn't a eery lively place. In fact there wasn't any Fblladelpbla at all until be got there. The red Indian was the sole inhabitant 'Swiss Upka Sinclair's Ckwwgcrs" oe Wa.l Street Mew. 0 When Wives as Attach G with Y.iY, with New York and the white of Broadway. If Its pic ture of life is true one must believe tlie average woman in this counter oho telougs to so called socs" drinks to exii-ss- . cares ciety nothing ! mariuge lies and is wholly to the pursuit of such idle given i ' frlvolith-- ns mi'iiey can buy for her. The rtemv in ilu-- story, though he can i.irdly lie culled a fjero. Is Paul w ho is the Little Brother of He It the lii h The story concerns tlie AVEW YORK pre-scuta tbe odd political spectacle of a state campaign iu w bich tbe preseut governor, N Evans Charles llugiu-s- , for ruunliig n agalust Vuit-riia- I tlw lieutenant present governor, Stu vcxnut Lewi In l!Mi t'liiiulcr. .1' tion of the acklug houses aud stock(ioieruor Hughe, w tin w a opposed by yards. sometime the morals of the Four Hundred, again the question of William ICaudoiph elected w:i tlie only cri oration Influence In polities or the much discussed subject of on llie ticket. the marriage tie versus affinities that tlu- - hfiiii-iui-.i- t governor chosen to act III Ills stead as chief executive during attraita the aspirant to literary fame. So long as it is a problem it is considhi from the stale was a there was nothing ered sufficient to form the excuse of a Now a a result of the acof In line the . WLo!snL CM- doing work of Action or tbe drama. tion of the Republican aud tusax. political excitement It Is often In some such way that cercom out I. ms cni'li is an axilraut for tlw aud bee. an occasional scalping tain erratic luniluartcs npicar In the highest "dice ill tlu gift of the state. IwiH'le Ul,t even Ufen lnvted- across the Tin New York campaign Is unusually firmament, literary darting 4 t0 lwrt,c-Htel- n ou tins year owing to II bearVhea he n't'11,0 sky or. if tarrying longer, flaring, glarfound-mee- k the hiftorical pageant of on tin- - picMdcntlal contest. Tbe ing and almost sputtering sintiks iu ing IVnn will find, his tiny their efforts to distraet attention from stale' thirty iiliu electoral vole are the Delaware aud SchuylklU the ni(re modest orbs content to travel hunW toieifd by lu'ili Mr. Bryaii and Mr. , It was, but traua-funne- d their coumw In the usual fashion. ReTaft. II Is generally considered to bo it Duly ciicr than so vast and so into city to change the metaphor, there in tl.e ilouhlfiil cultuuii. u ini there l uil cently, he will be coiuielled to lias licen something of a deluge of the old pi'l'lical adage to the effect lluit itratige that buck to bis , poll. viua ii tbo way as New York goo, so goes the naproblem novels and dramas. A Bridgedescendants of Indians, few A kdteL tion port (t'onu.) minister. Itev. Ernest J. fanioua due real iif of (iuvernor Hughes' adttise with whom he made bla Crafts, has written a play founded on on hand to greet him will the life aud adventures of Ferdinand ministration that ha at tract's! widenraty. aitb friendly whoops. but every one Pinney Earle, the artist, and the womspread a Men I imi has Ims-- hi will be strange war against nice truck gambling. an whom he supposed, quite erroneousriw and everything else aud sew. Tills fact inspired Senator tinre's witty ly, it proved, to lie Ids soul mate." The nset Mipular event of founders' Then there is Professor lioliert Her-- ' prcd'cliou to tlu delegates Iu the 1hiii-wratWILTON LACK ATE. pa rick of the University of Chicago, who stale convention that, iu Ills wk will le tbe great hiatorieal will among American players, 8.000 mem-oim- has a ritteu wbut la called an on Krid iy. The procession e (nut have of actors' orgaulxatlous of eight general divisions. novel" dealing with sex a to in haud tbe take politmounted of deio.il promised luwbif a called "Together. It la a problems, Already the New York book that has stirred up some discusill come the chief herald, who will , leal game. folk have formed the be followed hy twenty other beraldp theatrical men sion. but not near as much as young I Copyright by Med 111 Patterson, the millionb eliliorale eiwtumea Incident to the White ltau Iolltlcal league, an orgau-nlA. Du Pont. Joseph of heraldry. First in line will be lzatioh designed to Impress tbe Klitr aire Socialist" of Chicago, baa oeoa , A ME. EtIMA CALVE consisting of a trllie leal arties with Its campaign Impor- stoned with ills story, A Little Broththe India n ri Lean I letuipe Indians. By permls-ik- n tance. It la not claimed by those who er of the iik-h-. sen. life" in The '!Urty la much greater on If high of tbe secretary of tbs Interior are active in this matter that the America ia anything like Mr. Pntteraon the dramatic stage. The act re has movement la the outcome of pure pa- has Cfty real Indiana will form this part more sway. In epera, no mutter how It. happy indeed fire those painted For some time tbe impres- whose lot ia cast in cf the procession. They will wear the triotism. obbig the Individuality, (lie artist miit commonplace nstnme in use by tbe red men at tlia sion has lieeu current la theatrical cir scurity. Then there Is Upton Sinclair, She cannot get meamire her ways. cles that the rank and file of the pro- whose from the one two-thr- ee exiHMtes of the evils of away fession va not getting all to which it HALLIB KEMINIB RITES AXU HEX IX KM in The Jungle" ranted of the baton. She cannot be all of her ' It ia believes itself to be entitled. ate The iiihhIc with lis in balls of legislation. He has by which lie passes from olmcu-rit- y personality. tempest thought that tha condition of the pro- broken out again with a work wli-xml poverty, through the thrnll of rhythm hold her luck. She I the fession may be Improved greatly If It early love, through satchel carrying" slave of the composer. But wln-- she can make Itself felt at the polls. Mr. for wealthy college unites who took act without music she cau he what Lackeys la a close student of iolltlcs him up liecnnse of bla athletic achieve- she acta. and economics, and it la to his InitiaMine. Calve a few year ago had ments, through renunclntlon of Ills tive that tbe movement la due. Ilia liecauae of her father's fluan her tomb designed, explaining (hilt la uot result matter the action in the cla! failure, through a marriage to an- ahe shuddered to think of the Mtl-billtof a sudden whim, but has been other. man's faithless wife, through Inof being hurled amid lumtlMlc brought about by long and careful more money get siirromnlliigN; also that rbe did tin! fidelities, dissipation, thinking and wide consultation with ting, tlie tragic death of his wife In an wish to give her moilier the trouble of other leading memtiera of the profesother man's automobile, through anoth- baring a headstone made for her. Two MU. HUT AH AS A rAHPAIUNEl sion. Now that the beginning has er loveless marriage with the daughter tatnea of the prliua donna herself been made It la not nt all likely that of an Imuienaely wealthy 8t. Louie flank tlie tonilx one aa Ophelia and ths opinion, Governor iluglu would uev the actor will ever relapse Into tbe er get away frotu the pout" brewer, and. finally, to his soggy seinl other aa Carmen. nonvoting condition. Governor llugltea and IJeufenant sat If fact Ion at forty years of age In the Governor (.'hauler are lilb young men, one of la he the money knowledge that A VENERATED FIGURE. and the latthe former Ulug forty-fivJAMES KEIR H4RDIE. kings of the republic. Mr. CliHiilcr waa born One paragraph will illustrate Fatter-son'- General Booth of the Salvation Army ter thirty-ninIu lKtiil at Newport, IL I. Ilia father British Politician Who Idea of tbe life of the Idle rich,' Picturesque and Hio Farewell to Hia Uog. wits John Wlullirop ('hauler, a aaelieiu Wee a Miner at Beven Yeare. as Fresldent Roosevelt la fond of termvenerable head of the Salvation In The counTammany Hall and for several In Jamee Kelr Iltrdle, now this ing them: Army, tleueral William Booth, who term a congreNSiiian, .nireeutlug a or alienee. broke the figIt'a moat Carl one the ia picturesque 'Finally try, has started ou another long eveiigcl-bttl- c New York dMrlcL Ou hla mother' ures in the British political world. It getting pretty tiresome. Kaine old peofrli-a- . tour, tbls time in Houtli to tbe Astur la not bla first visit to America, and ha ple, same old food and same old Ikkim, has a tender heart and likes aulimiN aide Mr, (hauler belong la a great grandNon of He family. same old bridge, same old racket, same as ie1s. Oil Is well known and admired greatly In . starting from lludh-yWUUuiu IL Aslor. old staying up all night umeold horSocialist circles In tbe United States Ills Journey to Africa lie for England, Hla boyhood was spent In Dutchess I'vo boredom. tour Mr. Canada. changeless Ilardlea rible, and present deadly, aald gnodliy to his favorite dog. and couuty, N. Y. When nluetien years over with me, lost Interest It's all la for the purpose of amalgamating tha the beautiful and Intelligent aiilmnl old be entered Columbia as a Jaw stuof me.' " American and Canadian trades union' aeeined to realise that the purling dent After hla admittance to the bar lata and Socialists In a great homogene- Upton BlnclalFa book, Tbe Money was to lie a long one. he went to England ami continued bla Changers," uses fictitious names In General Booth will snn In- - four- atiiilles at Cambridge uulveriity. the exposure of alleged Wall street score. and hla lotig white lieurd mnkt-I'ltou hla return to America lie took Crimea, but the disguises are comparseem him very patriarchal. Imt lit np tlie practice of rrliiiliuil law. JOSEPH lfXOILL rATTEESOM. Mr. .la thin. too, Sinclair, atively Though a inn n of great wealth, he exand sees tbe alna of society splits tbe United States nary wide erted himself In his profession and beopen and leaves It a worse wreck than through the spectacles of tbls phllos- came known for. tlie nnuilicr of cases Reuterdnhl left It after his articles In lie carried through without compensaMcClure's last winter. Sinclair's new tion. In I Mini he retired temiNirnrlly bonk la called Tbe Money Changers,' 1908. william rare from practice and went to EnglymL and Its publication baa already elk-ltetins William Penn landed. There will an Interview from the chief of the buiso be a number reau of ordnance, Rear Admiral W. P. of handsome floats htynwenting the life of the American Mason. Indian. - Nor In y the Hat of flashing and The wit section will be devoted to glittering Inmlnaries should nallie Ermlnle Rlvea be forgotten. f Swedish settlers, who were tha wiglnal white She Is out with a story called Satan Pennsylvanians, ante-win- g iv.iu himself by some forty-Sanderson." so named, no doubt, beyears. One of the floats will rep-cause the author divined that the devil tlw first church built in tbe was going to be a very popnlar fellow Me. In the Dutch section, will be aliont tbls time. . of the windmills Iprhnps the story by Mr. Fatterson , nierlya reproduction , la the record breaker of the season aa and other generaHy used, '111 a sensation. The way the author, who represent scenes of the . not long alnce surprised his wealthy coming of Ienn will next Lm As this will form the princl-P"-rt friends by liecoming an out and out of tlie pageant, there will be Socialist, has pictured the smart set are.1 floats and a in his hook has brought down a horcompany of 3:!l nets nest around hla cars, bnt be does mounted marchers, tlK flBta wUI show JAMXS XXIS HABD1S. not seem to mind it renn's ea-h- e Tower of London as a ons body, alike In principle and workYonng Mr. Medlll, a grandson of the nT,,,fl,Pr the throne of Charles ing together. Ilardle la tbe parliamen- late Joseph Medlll, who owned the Chik,n to'lSn '"ting a charter tary labor leader and aa such exerts cago Tribune, waa graduated from LXWIB aTCTTESAXT CHARLES th,rd wU1 "taw Penn a remarkable influence on British poli- Yale and was a member of tbe fashindM , T band iU ak,n their way tics. lie la tbe owner and editor of tbe ionable secret societies there. In his He then became Interested la politics JPnI.-.i:warn the Welcome. The Labor Leader and was first elected to book be has held np to scorn tbe Uvea and waa prominent among tbe memto to who of I!,,trit Penn . 1892. In college. imiicawoa.M go errox efusMswuuo axxcLAix. glided the youth Wmut bers of tbe rarnelllte party iu Ireland. making parliament trestr h e Mr. Hardle Is a native of Scotland, hare a gay time and blow" the while the last of tbe Irish Indei tbe to ha Crimea The OOODBT TO BOOTH flATIXO np ophy. OEXMAT, Ul He waa a founderLater puts the Proprietor In his eft- -. the money earned by their fathers and characters on, again reHAULXT. AT SOO league. rATOUTB barge born In 18M, and was a toller Intwenty-fopendent who figure In hla pages propelled by many oarsmen. mines from hla seventh until bis grandfathers. Mr. Fatterson married would land them In Jail In short older energy and ambition are almost equal turned to New York, he entered polroen-t- s will illustrate tbe cventa urth law practiee. In year. He was a atndent and a daughter of Harlow M. HigginbothU true and exposed. to those of a youth. Not long since tt itics and resumed hla to write articles on economic am. one of Chicago's wealthiest cttl-en- s One of the sensational features of waa f J900 Mr. Chanler was elected lieutenbegan rehe that contemplated reported and president of the Colombian the book is Its attack on questions which attracted attention magnates of tirement as commander In chief of tbe ant governor on tbe tickets of the Dem",ie,pma. Mounted and while he was still a delver In tbe bow- exposition, ne resigned as commis- the steel trust. fnotWn league. Salvation Army, bnt his present plans ocratic party and Independence waa nominated Mr. els of the earth. He was soon accept- sioner of pnbllc works under Mayor Chanler' The In day to the African tonr Hla look Investigation like Referring do not it -1- 11 b, follo.Ml bj ed by tbe miners as their exponent and Bnsse when be became a convert te 1893-- 4 which resulted In tbe cele- will last several months C wntiu'-r.ia- i """fand will take for governor Mr. Bryan aald: Mr. attended be time one At socialism. - headed Gen-Jt- e. fans held a firm sway over them. by scandaL brated armor author tbe continent Chanler la a man of means whose monof mi, dark pinto tbe to him h nB,on- regions has not weaned him from sympathy yne and Lata-- The following story Is told of Kelr an agricultural school because he ays: "Nothing mnch waa ever dona where travel la by very primitive meth- ey tbongbt It would be a good thing for about IL The government could not Hardie's early parliamentary days: the common people. Relieved of with where and bullock as such wagons, lh 0ty treop of rh"-In-e Are yon working here, mate?" que- a man of bis views as to the leveling afford to let the real facts get out ods, roads are of active toll, he prefers the necenlty disPhta w!if the very rough. Such n,w,r ,n the P"rsde ried a friendly policeman at the house of tbe classes to know how to milk Bnt of conroe, tbe Insiders In the navy comforts never deter the founder and a life of usefulness to a life of Idleness. tha cows and till tbe soil, altbongh. en- knew about It and the memory will bead of the Salvation I believe we are entering upon a new firo,,nct,on of the carriage of commons. Army from titled as be was to an Income of about last aa long aa the ahlpe last" hto Tte,t In American politics, and In tbe Yea." era XhiJ n doing what he considers hla duty. Ha re-ohe was under no comThe author claims that tbe steel suffers much Inconvenience Just now years to come 1 believe that more men A , 1S24. nd another will- On the roof 7" which was under- (50.000 atoyear, bother himself about nch men were responsible for the bunting In the peat of Mr. Chanter's type tb ropro- going repalre at tbe time. pulsion from cataracts of the eyes, and under than TWt t0 Phn- floor. on tbe 'PM in things. "No; of Helicon HalL the socialistic colony these circumstances hla courage In un- will consecrate their lives and their A Little Brother of the Rich", la a with which he was identified. a th. means to tbe good of their fellow men." om o ab-- Tbe pnxxied policeman sought n Mni-rdertaking so exhausting a tonr la great fair. book which concerns Itself a good deal and got 1L t Fli-ars- r tt luti-resilii- su's-ess-ft- h- erotlco-philoMipbl- Fpl-jbe- polk-eine- re n ! Iack-lngtow- h n y e e. s iu-si- s d sensa-tlonnll- nt pe-Tl- ie "r, n! e fSTf.,"" .1 r m-Bw- it rt ,wf y ' planatlon |