OCR Text |
Show M D THOUGHTS ON LATEST PLAYS IV w M TVfir Tork Trtb- H - I rfc' 11, cene and wo- 1 US" n.unre. here 1 Lir-f thereby Also 1 &.'iy ' in "Kempy I ' .( p '" R51Kf the le mil-1 mil-1 K'V' adventures of mV Vou are P'e f ' I curbing con-. - SI I J! all the others ?to n.ak hr an LJ:0,Jgh matrimony! mtxt 'mischief, she Shears' K id eminent vaudevl.- ' o' the two-a-day EnwnceJ of "1 J 1 Pr5ais ,r N";' " Jl P:l-ffKlous progeny. K -F ""'-ta Ruth. Elliott. last H J?.tf'd-rat.!e repute by itSSStlon of an ear- 5'Snlr. P-I- ' BM vlord night. ws. I "1" ' , . ;.'.'.t-lng II ,,'-7 ..' business eye I '''i.-iinK '!n omPet" I !i.KMnl A I hem- !b- J .jitO! Jri)t,oree of Ptn'; I 'firw! pithily b' several fa- 1 t ' ' ' " ;' ' I R. , (reotyped uproa ", '. Lotus Kobl. d 1 n:S I iL- who ,f,d t" I LSr"'liV writing of fiction. "-:-..-t :'!id pantomime J 1, m iwonj ih- num io-js gi-'c-r' .M. 1 ED pjj a: inu' '.-I who-M.'ii.'. B j jj- ' f I period among tho- who ltv fh1r n I1vt in :h- V. , p., , . ,,r , h niitskirts ..f Wnhlngton Munr- New Tork"? The Vera ui,r, . spaghetti ; rd-ink. aort-ablrt, riWwing-rrava' and ; velvet pms exlaten - or thie metroD-l metroD-l olm' No. on serond though t w hAl! not except to glnnrr. n t'MSRinK at lltt'p Mary a vtsU:nfr school r , un, from Nediord, UUl., an xhf Is r-a.jjrln .n lnrk artj whirlpool nu irair. Icallj lubmerved Paacl'iiated by a , minor rs-mor?or. a gabby heel of satanlc hablta with women, ahe be tows herself upon him. discarding oa I snc nnf-K so ner noble, rural sweet heart The poet lures her with urh pane hypnotic rutt muet h iike Naure and th great outdoors' an.! her tells her that her -soaring splrir mu not be Imprisoned by the dul' shackles of conventional chastity Wonder-eyed she hardens to his cheaii haDjoing. and ImnWralliv ensue During the Indisposition due to h ignnrance .f the schemes of hirili i ontrol Mary hurls herself from a hospital hos-pital balcony In an "org of Velf-dn. etrpctlon: while the poet embVaH In an adjoining ward, a wanton ingenue in-genue from ;hc Middle West Miss Florence nittenhouae lh hapless heroine. M - IVra Ralnev 1S her in", explicable betrayer, and Miss Ruth U Woodward is the author of both o'f Ihem lii.I their dis'reasing tor Years ago wKon we first saw Stan-I Stan-I lev Ifoughton I 'Hindi- Wakes" we J were Inclined to regard ns revolutionary revolution-ary Fanny Hawthorne's sullen deris-J deris-J ion of marriage a-s an antidote for t .exly ill-deportment. Those Were tiv-remote tiv-remote and hippy days when, accord- Ing to the axiom-, the woman paid I and paid, and it was believed to be , more unseemly for a r.-.nale I0 full than for ;i mal.- At t hut time the "double standard" Of morals existed !and the Impression was prevalent ' that it was wickeder for a glrPto suc-Icumbihan suc-Icumbihan for a bo 'Hindi.- Wake was. perhaps, the first dramatic propaganda prop-aganda wherein It v.av suggested that there should be but one law concerning concern-ing th. 'exes, and'lhat law. of course not the ordinance of female . onm,- ence. but, .Hie easier one of mans Inclinations. In-clinations. A fine, play, "Hindlc Wakes " and "dated ' but little from its earlier presentation Miss Eileen Huban now represents the sulky, handsome mi'l girl, who lik- the queen bee, discards her kingly lover after their momentary momen-tary romance, and she is, 1 think perfect in the rote Mr Herbert Iaj-mas Iaj-mas as the elder Jeffcote. and Whjt-ford Whjt-ford Kane as the pathetic Reams hae been written by me !r, , ompli-mcn' ompli-mcn' of both of their (Mp'e'rsonartlons but not enough. "X.-injiv Hawthorne" as il Is now entitled, is a good "show" , . de being a g..o.i play a,Ki H good performance and it Is agln almost is popular In -New York as it was ea,, 'no in Chicago. |