Sunny Side of the Late Stuart Robson hwii wii itiw Aroenran stage jjji I have lx-en more universally be- - ' " ' " ....... ' ... 0 man Stuart Robson," Bald one of the late actor's associates, quoted br the New York Sun. "It Is not surprising to those who knew him well that there Were no public services In this city after his death. The burial was conducted very much, perhaps, as he would have had It had the details been of his own arranging. "It Is, pretty generally conceded that two of the results of acting aro irascibility and an Inclination to display temper. Some of the men who are regarded by the theater-going public as most lovablo rhurariers are no cordially hated by the people who are obliged to work for them that the wondir of It is that the crimes of the day are not monopolized by the 1(0 and $TiO a week actors who have been humiliated by their stars. "'Only onue did I see Stuart Robson lose his temper. We wore rehearsing some changes In the pluy 'Oliver Goldsmith.' In Memphis. A prominent actor associated with the company hud thoughtlessly and needlessly annoyed him by Interruptions and unsteady performance. Not a word would the 'Guv'nor.' as we called him, say. not a word would he let his manager say. although the actor gave an example of poor discipline to the rest of the company. "Hut when we began rehearsing this morning In Memphis, K started his tomfoolery. The (luv'nor stood it for a while, then, growing red In the face, he sliimmrd the prompt bonk on the table and said: The rehearsal Is off. I'm tired of this damned business. You have gone far enough. K . I won't stand your ungrate ful tricks any more,' and he walked off the Inge. "That was all. It doesn't sound very strong, but his voice was breaking with rnge. nnd those who heard knew that It was the accumulated anger of months. Half an hour later K received a letter of apology. The guv'nor was sorry he had lost his temper. He should not have spoken as he did; he realized it and hoped K would forgive him. And let me say that from that time on tnis actor caused the guv'nor no more trouble, and none In New York today mourns his loss more than he. - "Ifnfler equally trying circumstances. I saw him exhibit the utmost good nature. The Gadfly." produced at Wnllark's theater several years npo. wns a disastrous failure. During the two weeks it rnn. the audience kept growing lcs.i and lets until Robson got In the hnblt of unking before the cur tain went up If 'he' was 'out there yetr "It was bad enough to have the critics rosst the play. It was bad enough to be Inalna. thousands of dollars on the produc tion, but It seemed to me to be rubbing It Remarkable Development r i ii . ii i I construction and operation ha I t.u, rt . 1 1 ' ill. -..... iritml f r-i m ...... m to year by pilvate agencies, and since the besinninc of sn h con struction in 1K30 the country has never had to wuit moru than a year for pretty ac cuiate statistics of what was being done in that field of investment and enterprise. No private agency that we know of has under taken any such statistical record In rogard to street railways, and accordingly roport on the subject by the United Blatea census bureau for the year ending June 30, liWJ, be-' cones of unusual interest. In that year it Is found that 1U.M8 miles Of main track of street railway were being operated, and lTS of single track; and tbx earnings from operation were $241,684,697 and operating expenses $l39.0IJ.fW4 (68 per cent).. The operating companies paid dividends of $15,508,210 and carried about as large a sum to swrplua They employed t7 o mesial. With aggregate salaries of $4.63.015; 4,301 Character in Smoke Wreaths I v.. vyju.invj xv m mini manner of I smoking you shall know him, ts nifDriiiLri . . ... iun un ui a K.en oiuerver Of habits and character! jtlca. Iet him gnaw at the end of hi cigar and roll It between his llpj and you may depend he Is cynical, likely ta look always on the wrong side of human nature and not to trust any one completely. The man who smokes with his clgnr tilted upwards has the tralU thnt mukb for success. Is brisk, aggressive and likely to triumph over Interference with hU Wishes. Ths smoker who guards his cigar Jeal ously and will smoke It almost up to the point of charring his moustache or burn ing his nose Is a tactician, scheming, self seeking and with an Intense desire for power. The cigar tilted toward the chin denotes the day dreamer, the person who may hava Ideas and ambitions, but seldom the prac ticality to carry them out. The cigar held steadily and horizontally Indicate a callous, ' culculutlng' nature, strong traits, but poor principles, the sort f man who could be brutal with indlffur auoo should occasion arts, In when a well known actor formerly asso ciated with Robson came to his dressing room one night and after watching him make up as the boy In the first ext. say: " Hob. you're a fool to play a part like this. Why don't you try Hamletr "The guv'nor pursed up his lips In the familiar 'Bertie' style and said, with a slight laugh. 'By Gad. I will if Vhey get me mad!' " 'Oh. he can't help that. he said, when this Job's comforter had left the dressing room. 'He's always doing that. After I had lost $30,030 on Bill Nye's play, "The Cadi," he came around one night nnd told me that on the night of Its first production he sat beside one of the best known critics In New York, nnd before the curtain went up had told him that he was sure the play was going to be a failure. Now that was a helpful, friendly suggestion to a critic, wasn't It T The Saturday night when 'The Gadfly' had Its last production, he was In a very jocular mood. " 'Think of It,' said he. as he stood In the wings preparatory to going on. Think of It! It has cost me $1.0C0 every time I played this part. (The loss for the threa weeks was $30,CO0.) Talk about your public spirited citizens. Where do I come In? Where Is my monument? And look how calm and Indifferent those fourteen of the lost, strayed or stolen are out there over the honor that Is about to be con ferred upon mo. You'd think from the way they fit that they didn't know It costi me almost $100 apiece to entertain them. Look at that fine sample of respectability over there, with the red whiskers and Kdum cheese head think of spending $100 to entertain him". "All through the entr'acts he was In the liveliest moods. 'I have a good mind to make a speech, he said, after the first act. "He assumed a mock threatening attitude. 'Yes, sir, I've a good mind to go out and tell them that they don't know anything about art a la Mansfield. What the public wants Is a a talking to.' "At the end of the next act he cam In and said: 'I've relented they look too Innocent.' - "The idea of Stuart Robson playing Ham let will strike most people as very ludicrous, and yet frequently, when he was telling some story of Forrest or Booth or his most Intimnts friend, Lawrence Barrett, ho read tlie lines with absolutely none of the exaggerated Intonations that made his stage work so funny, nnd fre quently with a great deal of beauty. Peo ple often asked about his voice If lie didn't lisp off the stage and if there wasn't a break In It? It would surprise many to clirka, with aggregate salaries of $2,S73,!)3u; nnd 1.11.133 other employe.", with total wages of $77,437,324. They ca;Tied 4.813. ktt.001 fare passengers, employed 07.199 cars and killed 1.2H1 persons and injured 47.4'Ji. The capital stock, exclusive of 73S miles of sine track which failed to report, aggregated $1.36.277. 9M. funded debt $91.9.38 0W, and floating debt 91,8X8.371. The total capitalisation, bonds and stock, including an estimate for the 739 miles, exceeded $2,tO0.O0O.C0O. Such comparisons as ere possible with the census statistics of 1X9 followed: VK! 1W. nw s 7Kt ?;& $ in 21,!W 1.1(11 2S 6.K.1 f 4i Main line mileage Single track mllenge.. Klwtrlc power mileage Animal power ruble Steam 1 Til Honried debt $ flJS 358 fiSt! $151.R7J.iK3 HiuwnKwii carried ... 4.X3Mntl 2 0:3 mo SkJ Capital stock $1,216,277,989 $ill,77.7'J4 Tho later statistics ore probably more complete than the earlier, tut in a general way the changes from twelve years ago aro accurately preset) led. The man who. after lighting tils cigar, holds It not only between leech and llpj. but with two, three or four ringers of bis left hand Is fastidious and possessed of much personal pride. Such a smoker will often remove the cigar and examine the lighted end to see If it is burning evenly and steadily. 8uoh actions indicate care fulness, sagacity and a elm racier worthy of confidence and esteem. The smoker who sends forth smoke from both corners of the mouth in two divergent puffs Is crotchety nnd hard to get along with, though he may have good, mental faculties. The spendthrift, sometimes the advent urer. Is declared by the act of biting off the end of a cigar. Lack of Judgment, di.slika to pay debts and not over-niceness of hab its are declared by this practice. The pipe smoker who grips ills pipe so firmly between his teeth that marks are left on the mouthpiece is mettlesome, of quick, nervous temper and likes to bo tenacious of his opinions one way or an other. The pipe held so that It hangs some what toward the chin Indicates tha lim- ambltlonluas person, who might stand know that In his ordinary conversation his voice was rather deep than otherwise and that when It 'broke' It was nearly al ways, so It seemed to me, a conscious break, for the accentuation of the point of some funny story that he was telling. "He early learned the value of his voire and I think it rather hurt him a little that. In all the criticisms of the 'Gadfly' nothing was said about the fact that it was a different voire If not a different personality. For three acts he went through a part that was most serious and although the same public had been accus tomed to see him In parts that were the acme of the ludicrous, accustomed to his squeaky voice and Jerky gestures, little was said about the epparent disappearance of what he knew the public regarded as an Inseparable -part of him. " 'And they came all prepared to roast,' he said, which was. In a way, the truth. There was a strong undercurrent against the play and the actor. The Idea that Stuart Robson should play anything seri ous was an Insult and yet, although they came to mock and stayed to condemn, I cannot remember that there was any one there who ridiculed. "One of the reasons of Robson's pop ularity was the deference he paid to the opinion of every actor, no matter how un important. Ills dresser surprised him one night by suggesting a change in his lines, and whether It was to please the man or rot. he tried the change at rehearsal, after notifying these present to whom belonged the credit for the suggestion. "He was interested, too, In the outside life of his actors, an un frequent occurence among Btars of either the old or the new schools. Once, In New Orleans, a queer little comedian, known along Broadway ns Jimmy,' received a tearful letter from his wife In New York. Evidently he paid no attention to It, for he received another In a few days, saying that If some money was not sent to her at once she would sell his dog. as a mxn next door had offered her a dollar, probably Its full value. "Jimmy, now thoroughly arouaod to tha seriousness of the situation, came to the manager and begged for an advance. He was too old an offender, and he was sternly turned down. In tears he went to the Guv'nor. He got ten. " 'A man would be without humanity,' Robson said afterward, "who could listen to Jimmy talk over the possibility of losing that dollar cur and not shed tears. "Ho was very fond of telling how onco he 'barked' for the show when he was playing' In Chicago. He was coining over from the hotel to the theater ono night, and as he reared the entrance to the theater three of the Street It will be seen that street railway mile age has been nearly tripled; that nearly all of it is now operated by eloctric as con trasted with horse power only a dozen years ago; that passengers carried have more than doubled In number, and that capitalization has been Increased out of all proportion to the Increise in mileage reflecting in part the increased cost of con struction and equipment for electric as compared with horse roads, and in part the inflation schemes of syndicates and pro moters. Public attention in the last few years haa beeu especially directed to the vast quantity of securities thrown upon the In vestment market by the trusts. Specula tion and Investment have centered largely upon these Industrial consolidations, whereas in former times of great specula tive activity steam railroads have led In . tho storm of inflation and new capital com mitments. But it is shown In the abov statistics of street railways that this field of Investment has been broadening to an Irrational and without the capacity to put their powers to use. Men of quick vivacious temper hardly tout It the tip of the cigar with their teeth and after taking two or three whiffs will remove it and hold It in their hand In absent-minded fu;hion. They are men who change their opinions and ambitions often and require the spur of novelty or necessity to make them exert their best powers. Men who let their cigar go out and then try to relight It. also those who, after smoking for a while let tho cigar go out Slid then throw It away, are likely to be up to such responsibilities ss come to him, but would never seek them or strive for high place. The man who fills his pipe hastily, hap hazard fashion, and emits Irregular puffs of some Is of Incautious, generous Impulses, the sort of man who is a good comrade and haa powers of entertaining, bat whose friendship Is not likely to be lusting nor to warrant implicit confidence. The mun who rills his pipe slowly, nnd methodically and smokes mechanically and 'regulurly ts likely to be reserved, prudent and a good, dependable friend, wldle not of showy exterior. people looking at the lithographs blocked tils way. '"I wonder If that show la any good? said one of the men. evidently a country man In town for the night. " 'I understand It Is a very good show,' said Robson. " 'Seen It?' was the inquiry. " 'Sure.' he replied, 'a dozen times.' " 'Guess we'll go,' was the conclusion. And the actor left them on his way to the box office. "'Just added $6 to the receipts,' he ex claimed to the treasurer when he reached his dressing room. There's business enter prise for you. "Stuart Robson, barker!" how does that sound T "No man loved more to swap stories of old times, and when he and old Henry Weaver, who played the part of Samuel Johnson, got together, there was a fund of anecdote let loose that held for hours those fortunate enough to hear It. His stories of the times when he was a page in the house of representatives, his memories of John Wilkes Booth. Kdwin Booth. 'Lawrence Bar rett, Forrest, Cushman. all well told and enlivened by his keen humor, would make a book of the most Interesting kind. "The pleasantest memories that many have of him is, however, as he appeared at his summer home at the Highlands of Navesink. During the three or four months he spent there he would probably not move oft the porch more than a dozen times. He was there for comfort and rest and ha took It, smoking big black cigars all day, reading, copying passages out of favorite books and sticking them up on the walls of his library, and. what pleased him most, listening to the specious arguments and the recital of adventures of his 8-year-old boy. "Thert was hardly a one-night stand that we played in the west or south that the au dience did not call on him for a speech. He had several In stock for occasions like this, and the or.e he liked best was In part something like this: " 'When I was a little boy In Baltimore I was very found of drawing a picture of a big house with a large room, which I roughly indicated as In the front and in which I hoped some day to play with my boy companions. That dream was never realised. "Time went by and another little Stuart Robson came and he, too, had dreams and those were realized. For the house waa built not quite as big as I had imagined it and it has the room in the front down there by the Highlands of Navesink. The curly headed little chap is playing there now, and I hope he will live long to enjoy it, for it was his dream and my dream and perhaps some day his boy will pluy there, too.' " Railway amazing degree and without attracting general attention In comment upon the financial situation. It is made apparent that within a dozen years almost $iX), OOC.COD of stret railroud securities have been manufactured and sold, which is about oqual lo the amount of new steam railroad securities put upon the market during that remarkable period of speculative expan sion and inflation extending from 1867 down to the panic of 1S73. Yet this marketing of $2.CC0.OC0,fX0 of street railway stocks and bonds has figured as little more than a mere incident in the general capital com mitments of the time. It can probably be aid with entire safety that the financial and industrial capitalisation of the country per capita of population has never before been expanded so greatly 'within an equal period of time as during the last half dozen years. Last of the Mary Ann (Continued from Page Thirteen.) gale at sea or was wrecked on some iron bound coast to the north and every soul perished. No sooner had the body of the lata cap tain been given burial and the ship's paper overhauled to find its port of destination than it was headed for the port of New York to be delivered up to the consignees. It was a short-handed crew to work such a big craft, but every man tried to do two men's work, and It was recorded on the log that Nancy Hopewell steered her tricks at the wheel and kept lookouts with the men. While they had been despoiled of the "Mary Ann", they were to find themselves largely the gainers by It. After a run which was bare of event the derelict wiia safely moored In New York harbor, and Captain EUisha bade Nary remove the tar from her hands and slick up to meet com pany. It Is of the long ago I have written. The tombstones of both Klisha and Nancy are moss grown in the old cemetery, bqt the salvage money received from "Vorne" gave them years of comfort and happiness. People sometimes wondered that In their old age there waa no abate ment of their affections, and JCHsh would always answer them with: 'Then, by Josh, it's because Nancy ia the bravest and best woman on earll., and I don't care who hears me say !"