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Show ",BBBIsBBBFJJ"laWJBBBBBBBJ A1 Among her Dramatic Mirror is!"-Iscences, is!"-Iscences, that brilliant womnru JK complUhed n-trens. Hose Kytlaj e'res us thla glimpse Into the life or Ss. 2 Hullflnch 1'I.ire, lloston, wfct, . bv celebrated comedian, Wllllaa fir-rcn, fir-rcn, lived for half a centuryf It was with Davenport and.UVick, that I flnt went to stop nt 2 Du loch Place. This house was tho actofx frc-ra. frc-ra. Only the elect were admlttj ore and It would have been a aerlou 1 11-take 11-take to luvo referred to It as t ard-Ing ard-Ing house J ' Ono was the "guott" of AincUi Ith-er, Ith-er, the quaint little hosteiil u at the end of each week n mrn ious little bit nf paper found Its i pto one's irornl.nR paper, abowlngj ibt-edness ibt-edness to Ai sella In a sum abott till to the chargc-s of a llrit-rlatsQ t(. Hut no amount of money woil vo been too much to pay for tho pfl kge ot meeting the company whlti Ou tlrac to time came there. I First, there waa that uld fr on favorite, William Warren. II, iud lived at lliillflncb Place, nsQ to J acted at tbe lloston Museum, (ty I I years. He was tho only man tt tr I milted to carry a. latch-key. fl ms I a quaint old house In a qutlo lid street, n no-thoronchfarn street, vth ' a great beam padlocked ncrcsr no end, by means of which the d lira In the street lived secure, from be fear of Intrusion of tho rulcu by or Ibo Iconoclastic express wage's tan their exclusive, cobblestones. It waa a broad-frontcd,thsllo) ote nnd no doubt, when orlxlnalljf tslt. It stood In n pretty Rardcn, but I Us had long alnco disappeared. 'All to time of which I speak. It was cnlad on all sides by more modern and mm pretentious houses, while thefiilda had shrunk to a damp, narrow, tatrd space In which were a forr dtieitd, postponcd-dylng, lingering, bspejlea prisoners In n melancholy wlrMUnt The house teemed to haviJtaVit warning from Ixt'ai wife, nnd rtfrali. ed from looking back. Hvery rlndcf In the rear bad been blinded tva:V out Ingenious contrivances. I ftai'fa. ber one room In particular. It cci-tatned cci-tatned two windows, each iWbwt thirty small panrx of glasi. Thl original panea had been renovc look? Ing glass being substitute!, anl nhta one moved about this room li a dlo Unfit tbe light was alvriys dim If Hullflnch Place It produ'ij a curloaT effect It waa as though nto vera IryJ Ing to escape from a comptny it one's own ghosts. It waa an old-fjihlonej place, and In many dctaCs It lacked tho numerous appllancca tor warruuT and comfort to be found la moil era huuses, but the clcanllneu, coilneS good cheer, nnd, above all, the peopS to be met, and the talk to U heard J two rooms In that house nido U most desirable place. Ono of these rooms was the lot? front room on tho ground leor, w45' two windows which lookril out M Hullflnch place. It had a t'lh-shotp dered, narrow, colonial chlmoey-pS at ono end, and a "rlt-rnt" portraltlf ,nnnnr,nnnnr sal ASPiREsTon HONona. -, i: miss f v"5 S EJJELLE f I) VJ5- Mlss Hstelle Bchubert la oc. ..W. beautiful omen of Cl'g has a good soprano voice sm ?h ralmello ability, which Vhe "? ivlng Impersonation, of $$. j' William Warren In a tky-olue cravat at the other Tho Intervening apace on the walla et cither slda wero filled I with representatives and autographed pictures ot actors and artrpssea of the past and tho (then) prescn. Thla room served the double purpose pur-pose of sitting nnd dining room. Dj; the real point of delight, ot rest, of cheer, and mirth, was tho kitchen This wis directly In the rear of the sitting room, nnd In tho daytlue, with It one window looking cut on the melancholy little paved courtyard, wo not a cheerful room. IIU1n, l-ollrr anil llnrrn. Kdwln Hoath gave the Player- Club a largo collection cf Interesting memorabilia, me-morabilia, say (ho New York Bun nnd alnco lit death addition tmo been niado to It from time to tlmo. but tho roil actors In the club any that Illthop Potter ha dono more for It than anyone clae except It founder When tho Kplicop.il house of bishop met here several week ago Hlshop Potter entertained them nt a lunebvin t tho Players' Club. Undoubtedly the bishops ndmlred the appointments and did full justice to the luncheon without with-out suspecting that there was anything any-thing Incongruous In their surrounding. surround-ing. Tho Plnycr' Club, however, haa some actor on It membership llt, though thu more frisky Lambs' Club find greater favor with them. Hlneo tho bishops honored the Plnycr1 Ita actor-member bavo made the room nhcre they lunched historical. One or two of them have arranged specially conducted pnrtle to visit the Player' and have rarebit and beer on tho very tabic around which the bishops once sat It ha become n how room to theio nctor. nnd a tho Lambs' Club ha never entertained one bishop, to say nothing of a whole houeo of bishops, the Player' feel that It may pluiie Itself an tho event. MADE BONO FAMOUS nthel Oraro Levey wn born In San Francisco In ISS0 and made bor pro- KTIIKL GltACn I,F,VnY. fcsslonal debut at the Columb'a theater the-ater In that city, Jan. 1, 1S03, In Hoyf "A Milk Whlto Flag." She vubiequently bcoamo a member ot Joe Hart' Specialty Company, nnd met with success alnglng Ocorgo M. Cohan' Co-han' aong, "Telegraph My Haby." She Is now the wlto of George M, Cohan and a member of tho Uebman Company. atrlcal folk. It Is Miss Bchubert's ambition am-bition to be an operatic star, and the young lady' ambition will undoubtedly undoubted-ly soon be realised. She la ouly II years old. |