The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 05, 1908, Page 30, Image 30

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    . THE " OREGON SUNDAY ' JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING," JUL
1003.
FROM
Br. Edward P, Irwtn.
Tina old earth upon which ws llvs
l fairly familiar to moat of ua,
t laaat in It commoner aspects.
W. travel back and forth ovor a
mall portion of It, aa a rula over
about tha aamrf-patha, looking upon tli
aama old things and generally seeing
but few of them and If familiarity
does not breed contempt, It at least
jirevents wonderment and narrow our
capaclf for comprehending the stfango
Tiiaa of thdt upon which we gaze un
seeing. .
It Ta not until, one stands upon the
rim of one of the great alnks of deso
lation which waa once one of the vents
of tha unknown Interior of this strango
globe, and gazes down Into the scarified
depths where" ages agone the subter
ranin forces played at world-making,
. that a faint (learn of comprehension
begtns to llht up complacent Ignorance
and he understands to Home slight ex
tent the fury of the titanic struggle out
of which the earth surface waa evolved.
An extinct volcano' in which the de
parture of tta flrea In sufflccntly re
cent that the gradual process of disin
tegration' haa not tranaformed It Into a
ftrtlle valley la even more impressive
than an active volcano. In the latter
there la life, the evidence of Inconceiv
able power and fury. "One Is thrilled
and awed at what he hnlf eees. half
. suspects in the swirling deptha. But lit
the former he looks upon the resuli
of the struggle of thoae blind forces
and upon their grave.
See America, First
, . Last spring, traveling as the corre
ap'ondent for a Honolulu newspaper
., ' with . the governor of Hawaii and his
party around the Island of Maui, I
stood one morning upon the rim of the
great crater of Haleakala and watched
: the nun rise out of the eastern sen and
"above the banks of cloud far below us.
Every year there is an exodus, of Amer
icans to Europe, and not 4 few of them
; climb the Icy reaches to the summit of
(Mount Blanc or some other of the Al
'plno giants to see the sun rise. Some
day riob. America will travel to the
Island of Maul In Hawaii to watch the
'Incomparably greater spectacle of
'sunrise on Haleakala.
We had rested at Makawao one day
early In March, after having for several
days' ridden the mountain trails that
form the only land connection between '
. the northern and the southern ends of
'. Maui. , The governor and his party were
making a tour of the island for tne
purpose of looking Into its resources
and farming possibilities, and on the
afternoon after reaching Makawao wa
rode out" over the Haiku district to -
. amine some lands supposed to be available-for
pineapple culture. Returning
to the home of Worth Aiken at Mak-
wao. late in the afternoon
TROPICS TO
FRIGID
ZONE
Climatic Transformation Possible in a Few rfolxrs' Experience in Trip
to HaleakalaIslancls sit One b Feet, Wnile Beyond Ifl Unlimitalle Sea
I. " i i mem ii i.i i i a
u
the mountain be made
There was a fair moon, and the nros
pect was 'A pleasing one to several of
us. Only six of the party decided to
go Governor Frear, Land Commis
sioner Pratt: Worth Aiken, private sec
retary to Governor McBrlde; W. J. Cop
per, , correspondent for a Honolulu
paper, and the writer.
Glacier and Cloud Effects.
The ascent of. HAeakala can hardly
called mountain-climbing In the Al
, pins sense. There are no glaciers to
"J3 crossed, no whirling clouds of snow
blind the traveler, no avalanches
' . , , '' " - ', ' ' l ,
' 1 '.'''... "' , " - " . " " - " ' , '
... ym ....... . , . .' . ..,. : . ... . ... ..... . , . .. , .. ... . , .. - .. 1 ; .. .... V .. : . .... , y . .
' ", l ' , 1 I , i - , 1 f - ' A J ' "Itl . '
SH . ' . ' , . 4 1 t - , - - r . . , t
I ' ' ' f S - V . ' I ' 2
r ..,.-5ii - ;- - .- - v - ' , 1 . v sm . w?
..t4,':.- -i;: - -; , , x, .
C...y ' .v ,y - ....-..; ( - . ..:..: fl" .. ' "" , v
ON THE. VAV TO JVM. t J " """ , . ' ;
In the Improbable event of a horse
stumbling over one of the boulders and
throwing his rider over hlsshead onto
the lava. So those who read this need
look for no acrount of hair-breadth es
capes and thrilling adventure.
For two or three miles we rode along
a country road unusually good for Ha
waii, where good roads are the excep
tion rather than the rule. Then leav
ing this, we commenced the ascent of
the mountain. The first part of the
climb was like riding along through
the rolling ground of one of the mid
dle western states. A trail, accessible
even for vehicles, wound up the side
of the mountain, and on each slJo
stretched away rich pasture land,
whereon grazed thousands of cat
tle. At lntetH-als out Oi the darknes
ahead would loom ghostlike a white
signpost Informing us that the lummlt
was so many miles ahead.
faintly visible, and .flouting far below
ua nvir tha aea and tha lowlands wa
- could see what appeared to be ghostly
islands, white, unsubatantlal. foamllke.
A few degrees above the eastern nor.
lion hung a narrow atrip of cloud, black
a coal but with tha lower edge faintly
tinged with delicate rose from the aa
yet Invisible sun. The light Increase!
,wlth wonderful rapidity and the higher
clouds burst Into, flam or beoattia In'
credible masses of pearl and amethyst
and gold, with daahe of purple and
cerlso and deeper painting of violet and
orange.
The colors changed every minute un
til one could hardly follow tha bewilder
ing transformation. Out of a sea of
pearl dust the-summits of Mauna Kea
and Mauna I-oa on tha adjacent Island
of Hawaii rose swimming In tha glory
of the morning. Molokal floated on a
mysterious sea of vapor. I,anal lay
like a long sand dune bathed In the dif
fused glow. The mountains of Weat
Maul rosa boldly above ft, plain yet
hidden In the vapors of the night.
And the colors In the eaat Increase 1,
vibrated, changed with kaleldoscopio
swlttness.
And then suddenly there appeared
above tha rim of, the world a dniillng
segment of a circle of molten gold. An
Instant wa stared at It,, and then there
ahot above the horlson aa if hurled up
by giant hand tha great ball of tha
sun.; ."
Gardens of Color. ,
The clouds swimming far below wera
instantly metamorphosed . Into gardens,
of color Their upper surfaces, which
were turned to us, glowed with every
color of 'the rainbow, every minutest
drop of moisture acting as a prism
through which the rays of tha sun
passed and were broken up Into their
component elemental colors and re
flected up to us. Ana orr in tne west
they were unable to advance more than
100 feet or so without stopping, for the the great blue shadow of the mountain
atmosphere at ,M)0 feet Is very rare. Itself was cast on the darker sky.
And it wns getting colder. Some of " The crater that lay below us was in
the party who were entirely unprepared rtrlklng Contrast to the glory of tha
for tho trip felt the chill keenly, for east Arid, stark, desolate, It was the
there Was a wind blowing that aeemed very place of death. Where once a f u-
to find every opening in one'a clothing rtous sea of fire boiled and tossed ltn
na to scarcn its way to tne marrow, troumei cone ana snot great coiumna
One of the party was seised with the
nausea of mountain sickness and before
the summit was reached waa almost
unable to sit his horse.
A Climb to the Top.
We rode Bteadlly
until
the rovurnnr
euddenly proposed that an ascent of reached Idlewlld. Alken'a summer home Ajr Grows Cold
mm nignu na hair-way nouse. at an elevation or
4,000 feet. Although we were In the
the moon went down, leaving us In
darkness so dense that none could see
the rider In front of him.
Overhead the . stars glimmered but
faintly on account of the haze which
had spread over the sky. But far be
low us glittered the twinkling lights
of the great sugar mills of I'ala and
Puunene, and the harbor beacons of
Kailua. The stillness was absolute, ex
cept fon. the clatter of stones and the
heavy breathing of the horses.
There the Top,"
broke out a large" part of the eastern
wall and allowed the molten rock to
pour in devastating flood down the
mountain side. The gap still remains,
mute testimonial of the powers of the
Madame Pele. the fire goddess whose
habitation the crater once was.
tropics, the air was already decidedly
chilly. It was the original intention to
spend the night at this place and finish
the ascent early in the morning; but the
moon was still two hours , above the
western horizon, and the desire to see
the sun rise tempted iw to continue the
ascent. So leaving the cheerful fire
th
Shortly after the moon sank, we came
to a long barbed wire fencefor the
slopes of Haleakala are leased by a
grazing, company for the pasturage of
their thousands of cattle and In order
to keep our direction, we followed the
narrow trail that ran alongside of
mm rence. ay this time the air had
""""' i" i" "b i ii r-ViaK k cv iiurti nu, uecome aeciaecuv com, and each of us
we rode out and up the mountain. had put on a long rubber slicker Sud-
From here on the ascent was much denly out of the stillness came a long
harder. A trail was built to the sum- r-r-r-rlp that startled each man to an
mit about three years ago at a heavy upright position In his saddle. A muf-
expense. but the engineer apparently fled exclamation that sounded much like
knew nothing of the effects of moun- muffled profanity followed Pratt's
tain storms,
now- It
absolutely
slicker had been caught on one of the
iwrns oi me ience and torn half across.
Naturally this was funny to the rest of
us until our laughter was stopped by
two mora tearing sounds. Cooner had
vvMuii uuwn steep ptopes, tnreatening to unusable on account or the rushing tor-
Jjury beneath them any unfortunate rents of water which at certain seasons
luat, may be In their way. For a day- of the year pour down the face of the
Jlcriu ascanL not even a srulde is neo- old volcano. fnnaMiientlv. under th
CSijary. All the traveler needs Is to leadership of Mr. Alken. who. had made mvself l,d ventured t .r..h, k.k.
7 , :.YA nl l-ol" a .i' i-l .- A l .1 01 , 1 e a- 1 , . '. . . ' 1 " uniua
... . . u " 1 1 ' hub 01 nsL-rius ueiurc, w rime suuiKni ud ana hrpn Kroner j . . . . ......
ail -the way to the summit. The road, the mountain In pursuit of the ever- With the ironic- down nf the mnnr. ,." ..' ?? A B15nl Ma D??1 tne Bam wltb never a slip. But breathing waa
IS IWia. IS Inconceivably rouisrh. hut vnnlshine- skvllne Shortly after l,,ni.u l,lin ,u -.1,1.1. ' t-j 't'
it is in no pa'culc.r dangerous, eacept had reached an elevation of $.000 'feet trying to catch up suddenly leaped for-
SOM
E FIRST I
the layered a-a. hn 1 1 1 rl er heenme hniwmlni, harA fi, k aA .. .-...-
v nut m ponies oDiigeu n stop constantly anff let them
scrambled over the rocks like goats, blow. Towards the end of the Climb
of molten rock toward the sky is now
an Immense yawning hole, burned and
corched by the ancient fires, barren
except for straggling clumps of a hardy
plant that appears abla to live without
soli or moisture.
Haleakala la the greatest volcanic
The last part of the ride was by far crater in the world, either active or e-
Ihe worst, the way being through a-a ."J" '5J Pll8, i"1"'
, , . ... , . miles across. Bometlmo during Its long
bouldera with occasionally masses of peri0(j of activity the great weight of
slippery ponoenoe. Ana tne ascent was tne monen iava in mis cistern or nr
almost as steep as the side of a house.
But unexpectedly Aiken anounced,
"There's tho- top, and looking up we
taw the ragged line of the crater faintly
against tho sky. One last scramble, and
the horses landed us on tOD. "where we
could get the full benefit of the gentle r xrt,,i. -T7.V..
zephyr that seemed to have come on a rcnt volcanic fires,
special mission direct from the north
role. "Me for the dear old Alaska
where it's warmed," moaned one mem
ber of .the party as lie dismounted
and stood shivering in the wind.
"I'ghr-r-r-r," groaned another, -''I was
never so cold In my life." But he was a
good deal colder before ' the sun came
up.
There Is a house on tope of Haleakala
but a windstorm ome time ago blew
the roof off and when we made the as
cent the place waa useless. So we
crawled into a sort of cave, under the
edge of the eraser - atfd tried to keep
warm by, .the ifperceptible head of a
kerosene lantern. It was S o'clock when
we reached the summit a long time in
that wind to wait for the sun to come
up.
But while it was -still black dark, our
guuie nustioa us out to watch the sun
rise. There was the faintest crimson
(
v Within the greater crater are about
a dozen minor craters, thrown up during
the dying out of the fires, probably y
their Inst spasmodic sputtering.
Viewed from the summit these curious
ly resemble hills. Yet from the floor
of the crater they are seen to be moun
tains in themselves, some of them being
nearly 1,000 feet In holght.. It is al
most possible to climb them, for their
surfaces are formed of constantly slid
ing particles of red lava sand and one
slips back almost aa far each step as
he gains.
Nothing can give any better Idea of
the terrible earth forces than the
scarred and riven, sides of the rim of
the crater. And if one can picture to
himself this huge vent In the earth
filled with flame and boiling rock, he
may get some raint loea or tne manic
glow In the east, which steadily and rowers that created out In the midst of
rapidly became brighter. Soon the des- the Pacific this now fertile and pleas-
olate valley of the huge crater became ant group of Islands.
ONS OF IMPRESSIVE GIBRALTAR
t '-V " m Inn iii.i.mijja'.l.
j
mill' -V-aHjrff Ji
. . . 'r-TWM 1 m vT .Saasaiss- 4V r- ' rt" .. XT ' l 1 Hill. . , , t Oi.v VI :-- . ,f .v... . ,.L. r-"
'- , , .- . . - r3P XT- - A it."-' ' i- .' wrt l-
.-'! " "" ' : " ' -r -. sKatyM,
- CSIDKA.LTER. CTH.E ROCK)
rKOrl TrVE BAY.
By J.- Mabel Miller.
THE deep azure of a clear SeptenT
ber day reflected in the tideless
waters of the Mediterranean. Be
tween the blue above and that
. below, the majestic figure of a
lion couchant carved bv nature out of
stone a gigantic rock rising 1,400 feet
out of the sea and bristling with the
fortifications of Britain, (.ibrallarr
Such was my first Impression, while
waiting to be rowed ashore from the
Sclndia, of one of the most historical
as j. well as one of the greatest geo
graphical features In the world.
From an !mprcss:on to a thought Is
S. swift transition, and perhaps the
first idea that occurs to one in enter
ing the Straits of 5UirBltar Is toe near
ness of Africa to Kur..e the dMtnice
being but nine mlle from the -most -northern
point of Africa o Tarfa
t-paln. the moat southern point of Eu
rope. On the headland at Tarifa Jutting
Into the aea, still Hands the old Moor
!h catle, one the monghold of the
Karbary piratea who in mediaeval times
enacted tribute from all h!ps wising
tha straits. In fact, the word 'rifr
I 1 . F"
TTTTfta
ll i.'Vr. .41
"niWtiliiJ t ii f-r in' I
mm '
i . '
. .T-awyyiii WS 1 a ., j
' --frJtj aw-Vt2g-waqrj, jt., C
are the casemates and barracks of tha
artillery regiments that serve the guns.
The line wall Is armed with guns of
the biggest caliber, some of them
mounted on the parapet above, but most
of them being In the casemate below.
These are but the beginning of the de
fenses. In the rear of the town again
are batteries that can be fired over the
tops of the houses, and the rock Itself
bristles with guns.
The rock galleries, however, are the
"greatest feature of Gibraltar. These
were begun over a century ago and
were blasted out of the bowels of the
earth by ganga of convicts.
The tour of the galleries Is precisely
like walking through a railway tunnel,
with the exception that there are no
arches, the solid rock through which
the excavation Is hewn being self-supporting.
From the entrance at the
Moorish castle, which was built In TOO
or thereabouts, to . the Hall of St.
George at the end. In which Nelson waa
once entertained by the officers of the
garrison, I a distance of two miles.
At intervals of SS feet there are port
holes through whlcTt light is admitted,
and at which heavy guns are stationed,
mounted on carriages by which they
can be swu-ng around as desired. Thesn
enormous guns In the galleries have
been likened to the teeth of a Hon, the
shape of the rock so closely resembling
that of a lion couchant, and the gal
leries' being located in what woula bo
very.Ua head..
paid Tne galleries are In two tiers, one
above the other, each a mile In length.
l nn . , . . . . - nnu Brs i-Mi viij) nji wiei ti Blue in tim
I-,12"!,.h.a" .L"t5 "h"r,5,'tlm o Pnd rock, the side which' faces Spain, and
are intended as a protection against
advances from the land.
The sanguine kodak fiend who Im
agines that he Is going to have an In
teresting souvenir of the fortifications,
or of anything else I at Gibraltar, is
doomed to disappointment. No sooner
does he unstrap his kodak from his
shoulder than a polite British official
informs him of the frultlessness of his
desire.
The human aspect of Gibraltar Is
particularly Interesting. When the
tourist steps upon the quay he Is con
fronted by a motley array of humanity,
mostly with something to sell. Here
are Moors and Spaniards; Jews, long
bearded, clad In gabardines: Turks In
3
ti
Is said to be derived from
stronghold, where duty was
to the pirates of the sea.
this
first
THE GOVERNMENT HOUcSE.
HER CRY
... Br Charles Foley. -
THE lat rehearsal of the drama
-Her Death Cry,- waa over and
the playwright, Johnow. left the
little thaatra pale with fury. He
had evary reason to fel netted.
Atl the actors had doc veil and every
thing bad gone fine, but the actress -)f
rlsyed-tbsKAIn part the beautiful
ISonda Mlzal Werner. Bad been simply
r I tlcuhma. laatwvd of doing her vary bt
ed patting her whole soul late her
tart ah bad doa nothing but r,ir
OF DEATH
silly. The stage manager Is stuck on
h-r. too, putting It mildly, so he will
do m.ihlng. sind If anything is to be
do'ie j must do It myself."
-At this moment the object of his
thoughts left the theatra. together wlih
the stags manager. Mizzl Werner was
Indeed thankiesa creature. Without
Johnow ahe would never have had this
chance He bad ordered her engaged,
and now shs was deceiving Mm with
tne stage manager.
Indignant at her ungratefulness and
a I moot insane with jealousy, Johnow
Went over to the couple and said curtly:
I did not want to humiliate vou in
rrom or tne otner actors, Madame.
at Gibraltar, the first thing to do Is to
climb the rock, which Is not difficult,
and on reaching the- summit the view
from this Pillar of Hercules of two
seas and two continents Is well worth
the exertion, particularly at , sunset,
when the sky is literally aflame.
Women who are not good walkers usu
ally aval themselves of the patient,
sure-footed dorikeys, and are thus car
ried safely to the top.
Although a rock." Gibraltar Is fer
tile to the point of luxuriance, produc
ing no less than 500 snecies of ferns
and flowering plants, 80 per cent of
which are native. On the side of the
rock the Barbery apes are frequently
visible.
Wonderful as It Is bv nature. Clh- hass-v frnimern t n t in. . nA ,.i,
raltar has at the same time, the dls- and blackest Africans, besides a native
tlnctlon of being the strongest fortlfl- variety known as "rock scorpions"
cation in the world. The rook is three from this babble of tongues and tan
nines long and from a half, to three gle of color I was glad to escape to the
quarters of a mile wide, the whole clr-e cool seclusion of a friend's house and
cult being approximately seven mlls. be refreshed bv a dainty luncheon of
The town Is protected by artificial Scotch scones and honey and oatcakes
defenses consisting principally of a and tea. within sound of 'a simple song
line wall, which Is a tremendous mass service at a mission conducted hv tha.
Of masonry, two mllef In length, with Established church of Scotland, and
projecting bastions having guns turned within sight of a field where a Scotch
iight and left, sweeping the face of the regiment, gaily kilted, was marching to
wall. the muRlc of the pipes
Inside the line wall, fronting the bay. Truly cosmopolitan Is Gibraltar!
anv of the three arts, and my talent la
atn-jte:v in a comical line. I love to
laugh, and know how to make othera
lavish.
In that rase you ought to have given
un jour part instead of pestering me
until I ,jv, it to you. I tell you onc
you
play
!h tH ,- i iiini ci i ne otner sciors, Maoame, nut
. , , .' " . -" - ' ' " rfnnnaon If
- ... i u rr, aei only aa
I r-M. but a. lover.
r. but it muf he played right The
. .:tB.M Wrese from art t art.
" ir.tead ef Il ls I ir.ay Bar tonight
!--. -the audience, tns'ead of altting
'h.rt nd di.rtrg the lirg ar-e m I
-r nj t lnr leg Kfrieu Ma illnl
-, ,.t ! l J ef shnvmc xtrema an- act-e.
-A. Intra if tte M tMn rer a rv.
. i . er ., Her rrf of death ls-rarrpyyeura.
ou. in enlte of all m v assistance and
advice. Insist pon playing your part
aa Insanely- as yru hSTe Just done, you
will rum the whole thing, and the play
will be an utter fa'lure." . .
"I wast you to understand, sir. that
I plr any part I conceive It" Mizzl
replied with a amlle. pot the least hn-
,-."-j or me anger r the author. Ton
i'n- ir.m innignt you must play your
part with more conviction, and espe
cially you must put much more feeling
nit" ynur cry or aeath.
"If you believe that I'm
cry myself hoarse for your
ere very much miniitn i-
tired of all your fault finding.
eirurtor na tne stage mana
ay mat I play excellently, as
Is possible In a run nf that
what you think Is absolutely
rial to me. Reatdea
that vou make all this fusa not
i linn i piay wen. hut becausa
jeaioua a an old cat
She. added half a dozen more
neni remarks. aid Johnow. n
oughly Infuriated, was barelv
preeene nia caimnesa aa
1 OU would Setter Ka rmr
po not force roe to do ometbln
leu.
In the meantime tha
calm both parties, assuring the play
wright that he was absolutely certain
of the success of the play, and then
took Miss Mizzl home, admonishing her
to take a good rest before going back
for the performance In the evening.
As soon as Johnow was alone h soon
grew cool. As for his disappointment
in love, he felt his pride returning, and
then he put a special delivery stamp
on It and dropped It In the box.
' .
The curtain rose slowly and the
thestre was filled to the last sest with
an sudlence which at first didn't look
as If It had much feeling, but the
scenes took well, and after a while the
nudlenee followed the play with great
a urn lion.
hate you! The love whlrffllled my
hrart nas become a Jealousy which Jor
tures me. I have suffered too much,
and tonight, when you enter upon the
stage I shall have my revenge, fare
wefl!,x Mizzl stood pale and motionless wi
terror.
"Look out yoti will get your cue In a
moment, tne stage enanager whispered.
this thought, she Tlfted her head ant
looked around.
Suddenly her eyea landed upon thi
prompters box, and what she saw there
almost made her faint. In the place of
the prompter Johnow waa sitting atar-
th-"! !". i1' yf" b,,n- with fury.
The girl stood as If paralyzed. It was
tne moment when the
......t.y-u in npwn ana nned
IliSB a.ef
t.i - - . . .... in" r i wsi giiwuen mm u "iiiibi'vi v iu hid nrr in rnn srn trm m4 i
om io win o nimseir mat an buo.tit hrM-h iJ,M,n"w naan x rpmm nut tn hjld ftW.laTi4v1 her from h-r hWd Mhts inr mt thm trrihA k JTUK
iger both playwright. In hi. character i. le ner. flirting with him worse than aver. iZZ ZH.VTlr.Z D!T Wh"t llT?."'."? L J.ohP. stoop and take
- imir-H.ifii upon m ii - : .i rur tvuuj jV u s i. n n p m)h nonwnn th idM of vou hv1nf i mM attralsrht At ka .
ficaus, fist WUU,a Tmii : Johnow that hew.", not 'Ti of- .JZ.tF K"LJ" ff.'" !S-217l' Zn ZP.J!?.ti-
Impertl- .rpe.r abaoiu ely n-inrT when .h. .h "".,,,"rK-"nV:i"m5. X2r 10 001 " w" 1 V,n ' lM C! .J"r..?- ""ch
""l; f::zJ'Eji?i rherrn'
h raid: hr. If I onl kn,. i VTiTi Liw?.. " VL4 " 7"' .V'JT " Tr - w"" Tn. in PP "N th aurl!im
-r4ck- And johnew cnt'lnu on .. w 'uJ. LV. th uUl " L 'n'"5..?rt.V J" ?. n front of the curt. n. ' '
with at frown on his forehead, and had Jnat then a aim y.mA t,e,.a v.. . . . v. i . . .1. v-i . Johnow
m. .... .!.. L , L , - . .- ' " ....... - . - i.T ., , u.. u "J . . V , , I, ll-l- I ' 'I -TimrmL An inBA ills
iirry inirr. pn laoaen at it If n
in trie meantime tha stave manaa-ae ilmiut r..nki ki. "Z"' mr T."T """" ""r
cj. lr,fl-l. t hir found an who until now had believed that iawaa rertln M .1 ru, ki- L. . I J fTwciai oiiTery letter. en. ioiMd st U
Th.rViS.-r.". rg7.TooI'.Ti rUU,hA ..LhJ f?iLl irtoM.ril.-nnt that iiwa..n iohw-b-wrHln.'
, ' r aparimenta. out it n theatre. TbS letter read. " 1 bar ioted, bow I
whte"h meant a-Wirv mwA . - l,
Evta lf he .hotild h among the audi- Mizzl Werner never olaved t. . r,.r
Mas. for he would scnll the auoreaa
bis own piay," axid amcwhat calmer
f saer and deelare. that not for a fortune
, would sis srer go on tha stags again.