II, Theaterstücke 3, Das Märchen. Schauspiel in drei Aufzügen, Seite 90

LeN iS CiemkeHED AibN
Dechs DEUTUTES
To mbei. C. CihT.
J. F. Considine, Foreman for
Blue Island Car Co., Re¬
veals Graft Secreis,
ROAD’S INSPECTORS PAlD
F. H. Niles and John M. Taylor
Are Accused in "Report
Doctoring' Charges.
How officials of the Blue Island Car &#
Equlpment Compang are said to hare“doc.
tored“ books belonging to car inspectors
of the Illinofs Central Railrond was re¬
venled in Munlelpal Judge Bruggemeyer's
eourt yesterdag Ju tbe trial of Frank B.
Harriman, Charles L. Ewing and John M.
Taylor, all ex-officials of the railrond, who)
ure charged with conspiraey involving
frauds amounting to over 81.000,000. The
next hearing will be heid on September 19.
Following the testimony given br l’eck.
former clerk at the Östermann Company's
office, that car repair bills were “padded“
with false items, John F. Considine, 1323.
East Seventy-second street, testifled that
he pald car inspectors for the railroad
varlous sums of money while agting
general foreman for tbe Blue islind Ca
& Ronipment Compang.
Inspector Corroborates Considhe.
Richard Roth, 817 East Eightkenint
place, a car builder employed by 11 IIlI-
nois Central who was detalled #e a ehr in¬
spector and checker st both#ihr (ister
mann and Blue Island Company’s plluts,
gave testimony similar to that of Caus
dine.
Considine testifled that he was offerdi
position br F. H. Niles, then presiden
the Blue Island Compang, and went
work abont August, 1007, and had ehhr
of abont eighty car repairers.
In reply to questions by Attornev Fiher,
Considine told how he paid money to[Paul
Kovaleskl. a car Inspector for the raikoad.
The amonnt was abont 810, ihe wilness
said. Later he paid Roth and John Sthain,
who sncceedled Kovaleski as inspectors, 1520
u weck while they were detalled at
Biue Island plant as item checkers.
Roth’s Desk Broken Open.
Considine also stated that a desk which
was used by Roth while he was detailedlut
the plant was broken open and two bodks
used by Reth to keep an account of jhe
rennirs on ears were destroged.
Roth, who followed Considine an the
stand, told of missing the destroyed books
and also about the'doctering'' of other
bocks.
1 was handicapped in keeping acconnt
not having enough mein
of the repuirs bi
for checking.“ said Roth. Oue day Niles
told him he
asked to sée my books.
wonld have to get permission from my su¬
periors before I weuld gire them up. Her
then called un Mr. Taylor and later I war
put on the wire and Mr. Taylor told me 10
When
allog Mr Niles to sec the books.
che books were returned numerous Items
uad been changed.“
The" Taylor' referred to, Roth explained,
John M. Taylor, oue of the defend¬
7
guts. then general storekeeper of the com
pang. Roth admitted that he had reccived
abent 820 a month from Ostermann.
Alma Tademas Spring“
Bought by Westerner
Palnting Now on View at Reinhart’s
Galler) Sold for 322,600; Once
In Verkes Collection.
Winners in the Examiner's Prlze Tour Contest
Snapped on the Start for hellowstone Park

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Nazimova, d Poser, Still in Mansfield's
Class, Her Dlag Bold.—Ashfon Sievens
had. That was what made him such a
By Ashton Stevens.
the reserve that is witaln the equip¬
modern rooster, so full of high theory,
ment of all the other big actresses.
twenty
so free giving in liberty for the hen sex.
She has yet to forget the art of posing.
W
(X minutes be¬
But when one little hen whom he
She Is still in the Richard Mansfeld
fore tweive
dearly loved came home to roost and
perlod, and bless us! this is the gear
ut the Garrick lust
tell her weary story, he kicked her dut
1910.
night Artbur
of the yard, so to spenk.
Schnitzler’s story
But the play is unquallfledly the
So to spenk, for the hen, in thls mod¬
was over. The
thing. I kad a terrible moment after
ern instance, was a yo##s Viennese
Fairy Tale'' was
its middle act. The girl had made
actress enacted by Nazimova. The
her confession to him In bis studio—
not n fairy tale.
poet-journalist was Brandon Tynan,
of her first lover, a brute; of her sec¬
The world was as
who revenled the weakness of Man
ond. a soft urban sympathizer, who
old as it has been
with unflattering realism. As bis great
picked up her weary spirit and warmed
ieed to be. The
iden of equality between the feres
it till it was time for him to depart
girl who sinned
crumbled, so crumbled Mr. Tynan. He
and marry respectable and settle down
onee, twice, went
played the part for its worth, nothing
and the night and its curtaln feil
back to the gilded
more, nothing less. He rose and fell
upon his embrace, I thought that the#
cafe in The Easi¬
with it.
conventional unconventional ending
est Way.“ or to
was surely on the way.
It would not be fair to say that Nazi¬
its German syin¬
Rut I might have known that that is
mova giided the girl. Exqulsitely she
bol. Perhaps she
not Schnitzler’s way, even with Nina
gave to her the quality of girlhood, of
wound up like the
Lewton making the English dramatiza¬
youth in ita teens, yet youth In its
pitiful but persis¬
tion, for I had seen bis “ Dxplation,“
tragedies. But she acted in a part that
tent little einse¬
WMOY STMN
in Mr. Sunder¬
and bis Täterature''—thut precions
was the better for the less acting one
found in 1“. She acted all the time.
satire! Even so, I was so ribald after
mann’s novel. The Song of Songs.“
She listened eloquently, she “reflected“
che second act last night as to sug¬
At any rate the idealistie young post
wich wonderful fachalisms that partly
and journalist who had advansed be¬
gest that the moral of The Fairy
gond the common code of our day and
atoned for her more rapid delivery,
Tale“ is that any girl is entitled to
Inughed at fallen women“ really har¬
which could barely be understood in the
eight or nine sllps and four or five
aceldents.
second row and not at all in the twelfth.
ing #fel,“ falled to “make good“ when
But at times she listened so intensely
Rut the flnish proved the splendor of
the girl of hls own love made her con¬
fession to him.
that her listening was louder than what
the play, the hard truth, of it, the
It was the old, old story that min
she was listening to, and at times she
tragie fact that woman's fall is net
enn slip from the narrow path and re¬
Preflected“ so athletically that other
vet the fairy tale which the young
cover his footing with ont disturbing
faces than her own forgot to be visible.
poet started out to believe it 1s, Every¬
the complacence of the universe and
thing changes but numan nature. And
Nazimova Still Lacks Reserve.
that woman cunnot. This man was a
this boldest and best of Arthur Schultz¬
Nazimova Is a wonderful nerve, a
modern that laugbed at wedloch¬
er’s plays is human nature without al¬
smiths, but tried by his own modernity
nerve that thrills, but she still lacks
lay.
he failed, as most men fall, modern or
Danungpesete enne n Premmngunn
dn eneenen
Twen“y centuries of elvillzation have
separated man from virtually all bis
superstitions—virtually all, save the one
that permits him to be a chantieler
K.
even whlle he Is demanding a faithfnl
S
past of the little red hen.

Man Becomes Modern Rooster.

Iie thought that little red hens had as
When the
much right to selection as he bimselr
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