Evening Republican, Volume 59, Number 101, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 May 1917 — Page 3

The Real Adventure

THE FIRST PERFORMANCE OF “THE GIRL UPSTAIRS” IS GIVEN WITH HUGE SUCCESS FOR ROSE-JIMMY WALLACE, DRAMATIC CRITIC, MAKES A DISCOVERY

• Synopsis.—Rose Stanton, of moderate circumstances, marries wealthy Rodney Aldrich, on short acquaintance, and for mbfc than a year lives in idleness and luxury in Chicago. The life pails on her, she longs to do something useful, but decides that motherhood will be a big enough job; She lias twins, however, and they are put In the care <»f a professional nurse. Rose again becomes intensely dissatisfied with idleness, so.over the protest of her doting husband she disappears into the business world to make good on her own initiative, gets a Job in the chorus of a musical comedy in rehearsal and lives in a cheap rooming house. Her taste and intelligence soon get her a place’ as assistant to the producer. Her fashionable friends think she has gone to California.

CHAPTER XIX. Success—And a Recognition. There is a kaleidoscopic character about the events of the ten days or so preceding the opening performance of most musical comedies which would make a sober chronicle of them seem fantastically Incredible. This law of nature made no exception in the case "of “The Girl Up-Stairs.’’ There were rehearsals which ran so smoothly and swiftly that they’d have done for performances ; there were others so abomlnaMy bad that the bare idea of presenting the mess resulting from six weeks’ toll, before the people who had paid monpy to see it, was a nightmare. Of all the persons directly, or even remotely, affected by this nerve-shat-tering confusion. Rose-was perhaps the least perturbed. The only thing that really mattered to her w*as the successful execution of those twelve costumes. The phantasmagoria at North End hall was a regrettable, but necessary, interruption of her more important activit 1 es/ She wakened automatically at halfpast seven and was down-town by half-past eight, to do whatever shopping the work of the previous day revealed the need of. At nine-thirty—an unheard-of hour In the theater —the watchman at the Globe let her in at the Stage door, and RosA had half an hour, before the arrival of the wardrobe mistress and her assistant, for looking over the work done since she had left for rehearsal the day before. She liked this quiet, cavernous old barn of a place down under the Globe stage; liked it when she had it to herself before the two sewing women came and later, when, with a couple of sheets spread out on the floor, she cut and basted according to her cambric patterns, keeping ahead of the flylug needles of the other two. Afterher own little room; the mere spa- , ciousness of it seemed almost noble. I In keeping with the good luck which had attended everything that happened in connection with this first venture of hers, she was able to tell Galbraith that both sets of costumes were finished and ready to try on on the very day he announced that The next rehearsal would be held at ten tomorrow at the Globe. She persuaded the girls to wait until All six were dressed in the afternoon frocks and until she herself had hnd n chance to give each of them a final Inspection and to make a few last touches and readjustments. Then they all trooped out on the stage and stood in a row, turned about, walked here and there, in obedience to Galbraith’s instructions shouted from the back of the theater.

It was dark out there and disconcertingly silent. The glow of two cigars Indicated the presence of Goldsmith and Block In the middle of a little knot of other spectators. The only response Rose got —the only index to the effect her labors had produced was the tone of Galbraith’s voice. ‘‘All right.” he shouted. “Go and put on the others.” There whs another silence after they had filed out on the stage again, clad this time in the evehing gowns—a hollow, heart-constricting silence, almost literally sickening. But it lasted only a moment. Then: •’Will you eome dOWU here. Miss Dane?” called Galbraith. There was a slight, momentary, but perfectly palpable shock accompanyiug these words a shock felt by everybody Whin the sound of his voice. Because the director had not said, “Dane, come down here;" he had said: “Will you come down hpre,. Miss Dane?” And the thing amounted, so rigid is the etiquette of musical comedy, to ati accolade. The people on the Stage and in the yfaaudidn't know what she had done, nor in what character she was about to appear, but they did know she was. from now on. something besides a chorus girl. Rose obediently crossed the runway and walked rip the aisle to where Galbraith stood, with, Goldsmith nnd Block, waiting for her. She was feeling n litfle nmr.b and empty. Galbraith, as she came, held out a hand to her. “I congratulate you, Miss Dane.” he said,- “They’re admirable. With all t.ie money In the world,

By Henry Kitchell Webster

Copyright 1916, Bobbo-Merrill Co.

I wouldn’t ask for anything handsomer.” The rest of it didn’t matter to Rose —the more guarded but nevertheless cordial approval of the two owners, who had yet to make sure on the figures ; and the details of settlement, which left her more than a hundred dollars’ profit, even after she had deducted the hundred . she owed Rodney. The point —the point —settled by Galbraith’s praise—was that she had succeeded. It was, on the whole, a good bargain on both sides. But Goldsmith and Block came back next day and drove another bargain, principally to their own advantage. “You’ve certainly got a good eye for costumes. Miss Dane,” Goldsmith said, “and here’s a proposition we’d like to make. A lot of these other things we’ve got for the regular chorus don’t look as good as they might. You’ll be able to see changes to make in them that’ll improve them maybe fifty per cent. Well, you take it on, and we’ll begin paying you your regular salary now; you understand, twentyfive dollars a week, beginning today." Rose accepted the proposition with a warm flush of gratitude. But, from the moment her little salary began, she* found herself retained, body and soul, exactly as Galbraith himself was. They’d bought all her ideas, all her energy, all hey time, except a few scant hours for sleep and a few snatched minutes for meals. She gave-~her employers, up to the time when the piece opened at the Globe, at a conservative calculation, about five times their money’s worth. Even if she hadn’t been in the company, she’d have found something like two days’ work in every twenty-four hours, just in the wardrobe room. There wasn't a single costume outside Rose’s own twelve that didn't have to -be remodeled more or less. On top of all that, the really terrible grind of rehearsals l>egan: property rehearsals, curiously disconcerting at ’ first; scenery rehearsals that caused the stage to seem small and cluttered up, and, last and ghastliest, a dress rehearsal, which began at seven o’clock one night and lasted till four the next morning. If you had seen them that morning, utterly fagged out, unsustained by a single gleam of hope, you’d have said it was impossible that they should give any sort of performance that night—let alone a good one. But by eight o’clock, when the overture was called, you wouldn't have known them for the -same people. There vas tlte feeling, ou the edge of this first performance, that they were now on their own. ’

The appearance, back on the stage, of John Galbraith in evening dress. Just as the call of the first act brought them trooping from their dressing rooms, intensified this sensation. He was going to be, tonight, simply one of the audience. Rose, herself was completely dominated by the new spirit. Her nerves —slack, frayed, numb an hour ago—had sprung miraculously into tune. She not only didn’t feel tired. It seemed she never could feel tired again. It wasn't until along, in the third act that the audience became, for her, inything but a colloid mass—someand worked as you did clay. to. get I t into a properly plastic condition of receptivity, so that the Jokes, the sojtgs. the_dances, even the spindling little shafts of romance that you shot out into It, could be felt to dig in and take hold. But along in the third act, as she came down to the footlights with the rest of the sextette in their “All Alone” number, one face detached ltseif -sndririilj fmm life" pasty gray surface of those that -spread over the auditorium; became htunan —individual—and intensely familiar; became the face, unmistakably, of Jimmy Wallace! \\ .. It is probable that of all the audience. only two men saw that anything had happened, .so brief was the frozen Instant while she stood transfixed. One of them was John Galbraith. In the back row, and he let his breath go out again In relief almost In the act of catching it. He guessed

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, IND.

well enough what had happened. But It was all right. She was going on as if nothing had happened. The other man was Jimmy Wallace himself. He released, too, a little sigh of relief when he saw her -off in her stride again after that momentary falter. But he hardly looked at the stage after that; stared absently at his program instead, and presently availed himself of the dramatic critic’s license and left the theater. As for Rose herself, tn her conscious thoughts she didn’t recognize the hope already beating tumultuously in her veins, that he would tell Rodney —that perhaps even before she got back to her dismal little room, Rodney, pacing his, would know. It was so Irrational a hope—so unexpected and so well disguised —that she mistook It for fear. But fear never made one’s heart glow like that. That’s where an her thoughts were when John Galbraith halted her on the way from the dressing room after the performance was over. ~ *‘l know you're tlmE”~lie said brusquely. “But I fancied you’d be tireder in the mornings and I have to leave for New York on the fast train. So, you see, it was now or never.” Strangely enough, that got her. She stared at him almost in consternation. “Do you mean you are going away?” she asked. “Tomorrow?” “Of course,” he said, rather sharply. “I’ve nothing more to stay around here for.” He added, as she still seemed not to have got it through her head: “My contract with Goldsmith and Block ended tonight, with the opening performance.” “Of course,” she said in deprecation of her stupidity. “And yet it’s always seemed that the show was you; just something that you made go. It doesn’t seem possible that it could keep on going with you not there.” fine compliment—just the sort of -compliment he’d appreciate. But —-the old perversity again—the very freedom with which she said it spoiled it for him. “I may be missed,” he said —it was more of a growl, really—“but I sha’n’t be regretted. There’s always a sort of ‘Hallelujah chorus’ set up by the company when they realize I’m gone/’ “I shall regret it very innch,” said Rose. The words would have set his blood on fire if she’d just faltered over them. But she didn’t. She was hope-

One Face Detached Itself Suddenly.

lessly serene about It. “You're the person who’s made the six weeks bearable, and, in a way. wonderful. I never could thank you enough for the things you’ve done for me, though I hope I may try to. some time.” “I don’t want any thanks,” he said, something very different from gratitude that he wanted. But he realized how abominably ungracious hjs words sounded, and hastened to amend them. “What I meanis that you"aSitwF me any. You’ve done a lot to make this show go as well as it did. inmore ways than you know about. It wasn’t for me, personally, that you did it. But all the same, I’m grateful. You’ll -stajf-with this piece, I suppose,as the furf'Tasts; But In the end. what’s the idea? Do you want to lie an actress?” ' “The notion of Just going on —not changing any tiring or improving anything; doing the same thing over and over again for forty weeks, or even four, seems, perfectly ghastly—Just to keep going round and round like a horse at the end of a pole?, What I’d like to do, now that this is finished, is—well, to start another ” His eyes kindled. “That’s it,” he said. “That’s what I’ve felt about you

all along. I suppose it’s the reason I felt you never could be an actress. You see the thing the why I do —the wlnfle fun of the game is getting theJJjlng. Once it’s got ? . He snapped his fingers, and with an eager nod she agreed. “Well then, look here,” he said/ “I’ve an idea that I could use you to good advantage as a sort of personal assistant. There’ll be a good deal of work just of the sort you ditfWith the sextette, teaching people to tatk and move about like the sort of folk they’re supposed to represent. It would be done more if we could teach chorus people to act human. Well, you can do that better than I, that’s the plain truth. Under this new contract of mine that to sign in a dax or two, I’ll simply have to have somebody. And then, of course, there’s the costuming. That’s a great game, and I. think you’ve a talent for It. “There you are! The job will be paid from the first a great deal better than what you’ve got here. And the costuming end of it, if you succeed, would run tp real money. Well, howabout it?” “But.” said Rose, a little breathlessly—“but don’t I have to stay here with The Girl Upstairs’? I couldn’t just leave, could I?" “Oh. I Sha’n’t he ready for you just yet. anyway,” he said. “I'll write when I am, and by that time you’ll be perfectly free to give them your two weeks’ notice. They’ll be annoyed, of course; but, after all, you’ve given them more than their money’s worth already. Well—will you come if I write?” “It seems too wonderful to be £rue,” she said. “Yes, I’ll come, of course.” He gazed at her in asort of fascination. Her eyes were starry, her lips a little parted, and she was so “still she seemed riot even to be breathing. But the eyes weren’t looking at him. Another vision filled them. The vision—oh, he was sure of it now I —of that “only one,” whoever he was, “that mattered;”- ~ “I won’t keep you any longer,” he said. “I’ll have them get a taxi and send you home.” She said she didn’t want a taxi. He didn’t demur to her wish to be put on a car, and at the crossing where, they waited for It after an almost silent walk, he did manage to shake hands and tell her she’d hear from him soon. But he kicked his way to the curb after the car had carried her off, and marched to his hotel in a sort of baffled fury. He didn’t know exactly just what it was he’d wanted. But he did know, with a perfectly abysmal conviction, that he was a fool!

CHAPTER XX. Anticlimax. 4 It was out of the limpo of the unforeseeable that the blind instrument of Fate appeared to tell Rodney about Rose. He was a country lawyer from down-state, who had been in Chicago three or four days, spending an hour or two of every day in Rodney’s office in consultation with him. and, for the rest of the time, dangling about, more or less at a loose end. A belated sense of this struck Rodney at the end of their last consultation. “I’m sorry I haven’t been able to do more,” Rodney said —“do anything, really, in the way of showing you a good time. As a matter of fact. I’ve spent every evening this week here in the office.” “Oh, I haven’t lacked for entertainment,” the man said. “We hayseeds find the city a pretty lively place. I went to see a show just last night called The Girl Up-Stairs.’ I suppose you’ve seen it.” “No,” said Rodney, “I haven’t.” “Well, it was - downright funny. 1 haven’t laughed so hard in a year. If you want a real good time, you go to see it.”

The last part of this conversation took place In the outer office. Rodney saw tlie man off with a final handshake, closed the door after him. nnd strolled irresolutely back toward Miss Beach’s desk __ It was true, he’d been taking It on rather recklessly during the past two months'. But they’d been pretty sterile, those long, solitary evening hours. He’d worked fitfully, grinding away by brute strength for a while, and then. In a frenzy of impatience, thrusting the legal rubbish out of the way and letting the enigma of his great failure usurp his mind and his memories. “Telephone over to the University duh," he said suddenly to Miss Beach, “and see if you can get me a seat for ‘The Girl Up-Stairs.’” The office boy was out on an errand nnd In his absence the switchboard was in Miss Beach’s care. She arose obediently and moved over to the switchboard, then began fumbling with the directory. “Why. Miss Beach!” said Rodney. “You know the number of the University club!” He was looking at her now with undisguised curiosity. She was acting, for a perfectly infallible machine like Miss Beach, almost queer. Without looking around at him. she said: “Mr. Aldrich, you won’t like that show. If—you gfyyotfU- lie sorry.” j While he was still staring at her, young Craig came bursting blithely out of his office. “Oh. Miss Beach!” he said, and then stopped short, seeing that something had happened. Rodney tried an experiment. “Craig,”, he saidp “Miss Beach doesn’t want metn see "The Girl Up-Stair*-’ She says I won’t like It. Dp you agree with her?” A flare of red came into the bdy’s face, and his Jaw dropped. Then, as well as he could, he pulled himself together. “Yes, sir,” he said, swung

around, and marched back into his own cubbyhole. “You needn’t telephone, Miss Beach,” said Rodney curtly. And, without another word, he put on fils hat and overcoat, walked straight over to the club and told the man at the cigar counter to get him a ticket for tonight’s performance of “The Girl Up-Stairs.” -ft- was after five, and he derided he might as well dine lyre. So he went up to the lounge, armed himself with an evening paper, and dropped into a big leather chair. But all his carefully contrived environment hadn't the power, it seemed, to shift the current, of his thoughts. They went on dwelling on the behavior of Miss Beach and young Craig, which really got queerer the more one thought about it. . . • He flung dfAvn his paper and went into the adjoining room. The large round table nearest the door was preempted by a group of men he knew, and he came up with the intention of dropping into the one vacant chair. But just before the first of them caught a glimpse of him his ear picked up the phrase “The Girl Upstairs.” And then a lawyer in the group looked up nnd -recognized him. “Hello, Aidrich,” he said, and the flash of silence that followed had a galvanic quality. The others began urging him to sit down, but he said he was look* Ing for somebody, and walked away down the room and out the farther door. He knew now that he was afraid. Yet the'thing he was afraid of refused to come out into the open where he could see it and know what it was. He still believed that he didn’t know what it was when he walked past the framed photographs in the lobby of the theater without looking at them and stopped at the box office to exchange his seat, well down in front, for one near the back' of the theater. But when the sextette made their first entrance upon the stage, he knew that he had known for a good many hours. He never stirred from his seat during either of the intermissions. But along in the third act he got up and went out.

The knout that flogged his soul had a score of lashes, each with the sting of its own peculiar venom. Everybody who knew him, his closer friends and his casual acquaintances as well, must have known, for weeks, of this disgrace. His friends had been sorry for him, with just a grain of contempt; his had grinned "over It with just a pleasurable salt of pity. “Do you know Aldrich? Well, his wife’s in the chorus at the Globe theater. And he doesn't know it, poor devil.”

The northwest wind which had been blowing icily since sundown, had increased In violence to a gale. But he strode ,qut of the lobby and Into the street unaware of it. He found the stage door and pulled ft opem An Intermittent roar of handclapping. Increasing and diminishing with the rapid rise and fall of the curtain, told him that the performance was just over. A doorman stopped him and asked him what he wanted. “I want to see Mrs. Aldrich,” he said. “Mrs. Rodney Aldrich.” “No such person here,” said the man, nnd Rodney, in hfs rage, simply assumed that he was lying. It didn’t occur to him that Rose would have taken another name. He stood there a moment, debating whether to attempt to force an entrance against the doorman’s unmistakable intention to stop him, and decided to wait instead. The derision wasn’t due to common sense, hut to a wish not to dissipate his rage on people that didn’t matter. He wanted it intact for Rose.

He went back to the alley, braced himself in the angle of a brick pier, and waited. He neither stamped his feet nor flailed his arms about to drive off the cold. He just stood still with the patience of his immemorial ancestor, waiting, unconscious of the lapse of time, unconscious of the figures that presently began straggling out of (Jie narrow door that were not she.

What do you suppose happens when Rodney rpeets Rose at the stage door? It Is a thrilling meeting they have—and the emotional stress takes them almost to the breaking point. The next installment tells you all about what happened.

(TO BE CONTINUED.)

Why He Came Home.

Roscoe Boone, a Muncie electrical Htfernoote to- find - Mr*.- Boone -enter«tuining a company of women at cards. He had forgotten about the party and besides it was the usual period of the day for him to remember about the evening meal. ~ ———— “Oh. Mr. Boone,” said one of the guests as he stumbled upon the room filled with women, “did you come home to supper?” “Oh, no; not at all,” he replied gallantly, even if somewhat confusedly. T Just came home to- see what time it was.”— Indlanapblis News.

Spend More for Sweets.

American people are spending more for cattdy every year. according to figures compiled recently by the census bureau. They spent over $185,000,000 for factory-made sweets last year, wfiich is an average of nlmut SI.BO for every man. woman <|nd child. I igtires recorded Go years ago show that the annual per rapini consumption of candy was then about.lJl cepts. ■■ , . ■ < ■

PEG’S WHITE WINGS

By SILVER TURNER.

When the captain answered, “Aye»i aye, sir,” to the last orders aloft, Peg-, gle was left alone with the sail shop oifther hands. It stood down on South Water street, over a ship chandler's, a good, airy, sunlit loft, filled with the captain’s belongings and all the implements and paraphernalia of his trade. He had lived there for efghtteen years ever since his retirement from the West Indies trade, ever since Peggie had been a baby. And she loved the old loft. It had been her shelter and playground for years. She knew everything It contained, and all the captain’s customers. So it was quite natural, after the captain’s death, for her to keep his name outside, and his trade within. There was old Ben to act as first mate,, so to speak, and Mrs. MacGowan to look after the sewing of the sails. Peggy was in charge of customers and accounts. Mrs. MacGowan had kept house for the captain for years in the snug little flat over the sail shop, so naturally, after he had grtne away, she stayed on, looking after Peggy. And with Ben and his three assistants they remained a contented household until the coming of the Roving Lou. One morning after Ben had opened the old-fashioned wooden shutters outside the windows, and Mrs. MacGowan had started the whir of her sewing machine briskly. Peggy, from her point "'Srvaiitage on the stooL looked.aut..andL beheld a strange craft anchored in the slip where usually the sober-looktng James B. Gale lay, a lumber boat from Providence. This one was a three-master, with* high deck lines, and her prow sticking inquisitively up in the air. She was ocean-going, too, and weather beaten, and she needed sails badly, Peggie’s business glance discovered at once. Her general tone was gray, with touches of red and black on the cabin and deck trimmings, and over her rails there leaned one lone sailor. “Looks like a Portugee, don’t he?” said Ben. Peggie could not have told why. but the stranger had a fascination for her. She had grown to know the names of nearly all the customary callers along that water front, and this bird of passage puzzled her. And then the door rmened. and the master of the Roving Lou came into the shop. He was tall and young, and no Portuguese. “I want some sails for her,” he nodded vaguely toward the Roving Lou out of the window. “How long will it take to get them?” Ben got out his pencil, and figured In his leisurely way. while the strange captain looked boldly and fixedly at the slender figure on the high stool. Hft came often in the next few days. Ben liked him and sb did Mrs. Mac-" Gowan. He would sit up on one of the long wooden tables and tell stories of the cruises of the Roving Lou that delighted them. She had sailed the seven seas, now with one cargo, now with another, as It suited her master. Perhaps he talked too much around the little back rooms behind the chandler shops and the eating places. Ben said so. Anyway, there came a night when Peggie was wakened by shouts and running feet. Then came slmts. and when she looked out of her window she saw that they came from the little dark slip where the Roving Lou lay at anchor. Ben was already down the narrow stairs and on the street, pulling into a coat. Peggie laid her head on the windowsill and Mrs. MacGowan, big and motherly in *hpr white nightgown, fondh’d her wisely. “That was never hl3 cry,” she said. “Don’t you fret, dearie. He's a fine lad, and Ben’ll look out for him for you.” But Ben stayed over in the slip long, until the first amber light showed the East and the street lamps wo»t out. When he did come, the strange captain was with him, and he ha»iess, with a bandage around his JwwL Peggie went down to meet them. fstie and eager-eyed. “I thought it was river pirates.” he told her. “Two of them got me in my berth, and when I shot they hit ine with a blackjack. The Portuguese woke up. and we found two more in the cabin. It’s all right now. They didn’t believe I was after new sails."’ He grinned happily. “Two went overboard, and two got away with the marks of the Portuguese on them.” “What did they think you had there?” asked Peggie, anxiously. “Rifles and shells, filibustering for the Gulf. I don’t deal tn contraband, I told them—nothing more risky than pearls.” He drew out a little leather sack from his inner pocket and opened it flat on his palm. Inside > lav thne unset pearls, tender and beautiful as the dawn that was breaking. “I’ve carried those for three years.” he said. ‘They’ve waited for the bride. Like them. Peggie?” Peggie nodded. And she liked him more than ever because his first kiss was on her hair, on the little curls that lay close to her forehead, as her arm stole around his neck, and Ben called down the stairs that the coffee was ready. (Copyright, mi. by Newxpa-

A Pious Thought

One of our life’s ambitions is tn figure out sojne scheme whereby we ran cost our wife’s relatives Someth 1 ng, preferably a good deal. —Ohio St ata Journal.