Evening Star Newspaper, May 5, 1894, Page 13

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IS PARKS —_ es 4N PAR (How the Little Ohildren Enjoy Punch and Judy. ALONG THE CHAMPS ELYSEES “The Thrilling Story Acted for the Little Ones. (HE NURSEMAIDS’ PARADISE rwecial Correspondence of The Evening Star. PARIS, April 16, 1804 T 18 ALONG THE avenue of the Champs Elysees, in Paris. ‘The audience is at- tentive. The little curtain of the mimic theater has risen on another bloody com- edy. The pieces all W/7/ are classics, yet the AZ children do not tire FY); of them. Thev sit > / serious and taterest- ed, following with de- lighted eyes the vio- mt evolutions of the Notary, the Gen- e, Punch, Pierrot or Guignol and his mrades, laughing with eclat, as they say French, applauding with entrain. Polichinelle is talking to fhe Notary—"t f going to espouse the Mother Gigone. ‘Fe ther Gigone is excessively rich. She @ big bag full of money.” Notary—“You do well, my friend. t will bring you back to steady habits. le, he, Mamma Gigone!” Voice—“Here I am, here I am!” \, The Notary—“Oh! oh! the good big mam- | What @ wife for a lawyer!” ‘The Punch and Judy theaters are in the air. There is no danger, as in other eaters, of fire. There is no fear of bombs, who would throw a bomb into a crowd of fifty children and a dozen wet urses? The theaters are underneath the shut off, perhaps, on one side by curtain of green baize, but in t! air, where the breezes now are blow- @ fragrance from the lilacs. The trees e Champs Elysees of Paris in the spring- ie A Pleasing Sight. , Im @ thousand carriages the ladies go MJolling to the Bois; thousands of fresh faces “bnder new spring hats come to reflect their ity in the pictures of tle Salon; thous- ands of loitering Parisians sit on the side- ‘walk chairs and benches; and thousands of Rourists gape contentedly at one of the few fatghts of Europe which is not disappoint- v The French Punch Judy. It is an avenue that has its hours. At ing time vague words of fin de siecle Pongs come fluttering through the twilight Phades, and he who passes leisurely be- mes aware of myriads of lights festooned ike Chinese lanterns beneath the trees on either side. They are the lights of the great cafes-concerts. “What is the latest thing they say” At the Am! irs’ Cafe?" The Ambassadeurs, the Horloge, the Al- eazar d’Ete—who has not read about these fairy palaces of song and dance? The Three Old-Timers. , There are three old-established Punch and Judy theaters along the avenue of the Champs Elyseeg and two of them are backed directly up against the presidential garden. The palace of the Elysees, where M. Carnot lives, fronts on the narrow Rue Saint Honore. But it has a back yard full of stately trees which would be part of the Champs Elysees were they not cut off from them by a great stone wall. So Presi- dent Carnot, if he chose, could mount upon his garden wall and take the shows in free. But he would only save 2 cents, which is the price. These Punch and Judy theaters are not @iMficult to manage. The impresario of ‘wooden-headed puppets rents a stand from the municipality at from $80 to $120 a year. ne government censorship of the theater joes not meddle with him, neither does the efect of police exact, as in the other eaters, that he shall take precautions will return to Cassandre, who will give me his daughter, and we will divide the mar- Pert, Pretty —- big rrff rrff! you have saved my ee e! “Rrrtftr’ “We will be’ friends till death!” “Rrr: “You saw the crime?” “Rrrrfft!" “Then come!” “Rrrrtftf! rrrrffftr’ Mild Refreshments. ‘When the curtain falls on the first act a fine old dame comes peddling licorice water. The parents and guardians of the children need not fear it for them, for the water is from the artesian Wallace fountain, at the corner of the avenue and Place de la Con- corde. Perhaps some of the bluod that caked that sinister square a hundred years ago, when all the guillotines were working day by day, has worked its way down to the rocks by this time; but the water is clear, fresh and sparkling and free from microbes. The only reason that the dear old lady uses it to make her licorice drink is that the fountain is so handy. If the water of the Seine were nearer she would give it to the babies. There are three heavy thumps behind the scene, and the accordeon stops its wheezing waltz. Colombine and the false Arlequin are about to sign the marriage contract when the true Ariequin bursts in accompanied by the pig. “Let me speak! I bring here with The Last Act. me. as witness to an outrage———" tentively at the pig): entleman, I must get Polichinelle and the disguised Pierrot hide themselves in a large closet, leaving Color bine and the true Arlequin alone with the pture! Pierrot pulls the pig into the closet by the tail ‘The lovers all engrossed in their own con- versation have not missed him, until Cas- sandre comes: “Where is the witness?” While looking under chair and tables each is struck from behind by the hidden Polichi- nelle, who wields a long-handled stewpan from his closet h! la! la! you beat me, Arle- quinr’ Arlequin: “And you! you strike me, Co- lombine?”* The injured damsel flaunts out, while the dude crawls after her with groans. Poli- chinelle and Pierrot come from the closet with the pig, whom they have killed, scraped and cut up.” “Quick! bury him in our stomachs. The dead do not return!” When Cassandre has . ‘There was never a remedy so highly recom- returned, the pig is eaten. “Where's the . ‘mended as Paine's celery compound. gr Which is the true Ariequin?" ‘There was never a remedy in such universal de- am, “I am.” Cassandre: “The in hon ofe is he who will bring the of money to the marriage contract.” Neither of the suitors have a sou. Po! chinelle and Pierrot steal all Cassandre's kitchen utensils and sell them to an Au- vergnat. “Eh! pere Cassandre, behold the ecus!” “We'll’ sign the contract and be married in the morning.” Pia lost!” cries Ariequin. The curtain 3. The Denouement. The last act hurries us to the denouement. It is night. Polichinelle and Pierrot each Me tossing on a mattress, “I cannot sleep!” “Nor I. Arlequin’s witness lies heavy on my stomach!” “Do you not think, perhaps, upon your conscience?” “IT am agitated!’ “I suffer enormously!” Enter the ghosts of a gendarme and a po- ice oe bot =~ 1 & Sausage and an andouille (tripe sausage) appropriately costumed. . sau 2 » and as for deft and nimble there is no star who can excel her. chipper, vivacious, the very soul of motion, nerve and muscle under perfect of all, she is unique. that she does has the Della For of this celebrated artist and com- of interest. It shows, too, how sense and pare grit can accomplish with real ability. worked her way up in her profession ith indomitable determination and that nothing could discourage. With Bopper and other managers she has Won so many successes in so many cities that no artiste in comie opera is better known throughout 3 the country. darme rolls Polichinelle upon his bed. rm andouille-commissair Pierro: “But I have Rad to work for it," she said to « chest. a Speers 9 | seporter in New York tho othor day. “T am strangling!” odteae plore nt oe smerteee| REAL ESTATE GOSSIP ‘Grace, grace! I wish to kill Ar- lJequin. I ate half of his friend. I sold your kitchen furniture. I am a miserable! I The Steady Growth of the City Be- yond Its Boundaries, THE OLD CLOTHES ENTIRELY 700 SMALL confess my crimes and I — ee “I, too. Oh, I have eaten too much!” Cassandre: “Ah, brigands, go get fon selves hung elsewhere. And you and I will sign the contract, Arlequin!”* Then Arlequin, the dude, makes a pro- found bow to the audience, while the be- Dies take in the morality wide-eyed. “Mes- A Method of House Enlargement in a New Application. | Upon & bed of roses. I love the stage dearly, and THERES NOTHING LIKE IP. Della Fox Was “All Ron Down’~Paine’s Celery Compound Made Her Well “You needn't think that an actress’ life is spent | a am very far from wishing to find fault, but, in deed, the life is more trying than people suppose. “You see, we go through life with a rush. I have no time for anything. Singing every night and rehearsing every day, with whatever time there may be left over spent in railroad cars—that ‘s my yearly routine. Of course, the result of this sort of thing is a severe strain upon the Bervous system. The effort to identify one's self with the character upon the stage is very trying. “I bave frequently found myself, after @ par. ticularly successful engagement, so nervous that eating and sleeping seemed luxuries with which I bad parted company forever, and I wondered if fame or fortune achieved at such a price were not too dearly purchased, after all. Last summer I was particularly run down. The least thing af- frighted me, and I shrank from study with loath- ing. “I was then in Washington, and the wife of « U. S Senator recommended to me @ cure which she said had enabled her husband to bear up during the strain of the flerce debates in Congress while the force bill was pending. I took it at her solicita- tion and was rejoiced to find an almost immediate improvement. My spirit picked up and at the end of two weeks the same old exuberant health with which nature blessed me had returned. “I ate and slept as I bad not done since I was fl &g i E H tf i i i | | HAS at ii i af iff Z R F 5 § if s i ge | E Hf ti § i fe 2 & E | A iii} Gy) Sa | juet the city streets are extended through it on grade. The Phelps property, at the head of Connecticut avenue, is now following in line. The grade of 16th street has recently been reduced, so that it can be used in the daily traffic of @ city, and in other respects which might be mentioned the portion of bee es —— to the boundary of the city Is rapidly becoming a part of the city, | a good one in building circles. At the office not only in name, but in all the features which distinguish the city. of the inspector of buildings the clerks have Sometimes people criticise the present | been kept busy issuing permits, and the in- mode in the development of the city by | spéctors have been hustling to keep up with are not yet occupied and therefore there week Ie no, Reed of ‘providing city’ lots tm ‘the Foutering: tee cetiee teat eg em, encis ubur! ey even go 80 as to calcu- a issued late how many square feet of bullding lots | :ni"ty-#X permits a remain within the limits of the elty not yet built upon, and then estimate the num- ber of years it would take at the usual rate of growth to occupy all this space with Building Permits for the Week. Taken altogether the past week has been The French Children. French children are not spoiled; they are demure, polite and as.reliable as little ani- mals trained for the circus. But when the villains plot against the hero, when the pig ungraves him, when the pig confronts the plotters, when the nightmares glide into the bed room, they shriek with mingled horror and delight; they jump upon the benches with their feet. It is easy, looking at these fresh and rosy children,restless, ardent, satisfied with mere existence, overjoyed with a mere supple- ment, to flatter oneself with a superior dis- crimination in play acting. Yet modern au- diences of grown people listen to pretended masterpieces without life or action—master- pieces which they bring from Belgium, Ger- many and Scandinavia and every other country, before which the initiated sit in admiration, so much the more as they un- derstand the less. It would not be so diffi- cult, by the same misty speculation made familiar by the apologists of Maeterlinck, Ibsen, Gerard Hauptmann and Richard Wagner in particular,to prove the Tragedie @’Arlequin is fat to bursting with the deep- est mysteries of existence, Polichinelle and Pierrot advance to the assault. In the hope of succeeding they employ prayers, presents, tricks, frauds, violence, all in vain. And the fellow who succeeds,is he more worthy than the others? Who knows? The choice is made in ad- vance; nothing can change it. Colombine wishes Arlequin, and so it is Arlequin who takes her off. Each obstacle becomes a stepping stone for him. Alas! we others in real life, when we are suitors, not in mar- riage only, but for the honors, the happi- ness, the riches which our hope, like Pere Cassandre, shows to us complacently, in vain we make our bows to that fantastic Colombine we call success. Blind and ca- Prictous, she has always given her hand to some alert and easy going Arlequin, who smiles on us indulgently as we Behind the Scenes. @erinst fire. The assistance publique, Which levies a tax on all theatrical receipts, lets off the guignols with an annual $12 h, and there are no benefits to give for superannuated stars. The orchestra, which is a man with an accordeon, is the chief expense, apart from the continual outlay for new costumes and new wooden heads, which suffer greatly from the knocks and tumolings, without which the babies would esteem the play a trifle dull and dragging. ‘The trade is a good and fruitful one, paying clear to the actor manager from $80 to $50 & month. In a city where the theaters are failimg constantly and each new backer burns his fingers it is a lesson not to branch out with risky novelties, but stick close to the old traditions of dramatic art. A Thrilling Scene. It ts 2 new piece and the tin cup has been passed around for the money. Each piece lasts twenty minutes, then yoy pay 2 cents again. Some children weep on being Jed out a having seen a comedy, a tr , a farce and a domestic drama, be- t breaks their hearts to leave the hes sssandre Is talking to his daughter, Coiombine: “My child, behold three young » wish to espouse you; you will tween the three, They are M. ho is a loafér} M. Pierrot, much, and M. Arlequin, who is even worse. As there is no real prefer- | off to Pere Cassandre’s prophecy: ‘Go, guce among the three, I allow you to} gands, get yourselves hung elsewhere!” choose.” STERLING HEILIG. Beer rane aes “'Pends on W'at You Axes Fo’.” Which he | From the Paducah News. Receive an ex-) an old darkey who was asked if, in his experience, prayer was ever answered, re- plied: “Well, sah, some pra’rs is ansad, an’ some isn’t—pends on w’at you axes fo’. Jest arter de wah, w'en it was mighty hard seratehin’ fo’ de cullud brederin, I "bsarved dat w’enebber I pray de Lo’d to sen’ one o’ Marse Peyton's fat chickens fo’ de old man, dere was no notice took ob de partition, but w'en I pray dat He would sen’ de old ‘man fo’ de chicken, de matter was ‘tended to befo" sun-up next mornin’.” Polichinelle offering the demolselle a piece of ham)—“Accept this nourishment and my eart, Pierrot (coming with a bottle, has uncorked and tast cellent d and a perfe: e a bi you well.” the man for me! says tors Jump out of the win- Cassandre goes to fetch the >t _entice Arlequin they beat him fo a pr r {ato inser with ¢ . “Ob, the poor little ArlequinI” snuffies ty ABOUT PRIVATE STABLES ‘The disappearance of the hill which has closed the northern vista of Connecticut avenue for so many years is a noticeable change in that section of the city. The pile of dirt seemed to have immense proportions, &t least to those who are not familiar with {Se way that raountains are leveled and valleys are filled up to make smooth and plain the pathway of the progress of a modern city. However, when the shovel and the pick, wielded by a gang of men, begin work, if new worlds are not created at least the face of nature is materially al- tered, and entirely new landscape effects are produced. In former years the brow of this hill was crowned by a residence, which was the home of wealth, comfort and the sloping lawn shaded by large forest trees came down to the edge of the city. For years it seemed to present an insurmountable bar- rier to the further progress of the city’s streets; in fact, the extension of Connecti- cut avenue has turned sl'shtly in order to avoid this ground, but that ceviation from the straight line of the avenue was oniy re- cently determined upon by the city authori- ties, and the motive did not lay in the topography of the country as much as it did in the per foot value of the land which it would necessary to condemn for the use of the public, There used to be a good deal of talk about the barrier presented by the range of hills which borders the northern boundary of the city, but so many barriers of the Same character, both within and without the city, have been removed, that the ob- jection of engineering difficulties is now sel- dom heard. In connection with the plan of street extension, which is about completed by the District Commissioners, objection residences. While it ts undoubtedly true eran oben permten tae e ae that there are vacant building lots within $26,000. The northeast got permits, the city, still there ts no known way | which are estimated to cost $11,500. The by which people can be compelled to either build a house on locality or not at seems hardly profit- able to discuss the question at all. If the people want to build in the city and have the money to do if there is no law which can prevent them, and for the same reasot southwest got three small ones, costing $8,410, while the southeast was a bad last with one permit, costing $2,400, New Building Regulations. The principal feature of the week was the nm they can go into the suburbs as far as| CC™mpletion of the new bullding regulations. they see fit and locate their hearthstones. The Demand for More Room. All of the new amendments have been printed heretofore in The Star. The one of However, in spite of these very ordert7 most importance was that relating to the people, who evidently @an't ik construction of theaters. The old regula- vacant ground in the city, the subursen | O08 Provides that before a permit could be Population is rapidly increasing, During | °>t#ined the signatures of a majority of the the last few years the water system and the | *esidents and property owners in the square sewer system has been extended in the| Where 1t was proposed to build the theater suburbs, and if the Commissioners had the | S04 first be obtained, together with ma- money a great deal more would be done in | Jority of the residents and property owners has been urged to the direct street exten- sion, and it has been advocated that a sys- tem of streets be laid out which will con- form to the topography of the land. Those in favor of this plan have dwelt upon the beauty of retaining these elevations and of the diversity which would be the result of such @ plan. The method adopted by the owners of nearly all the property adjoining the borders of the city shows that this pic- turesque idea is not a very practical one. It is evident even to the casual observer that the city in its growth has already reached the old municipal limits, has, in fact, in many places, pressed over the bor- der line, and if the old lines are regarded, what is considered as a part of the suburbs is now being built up with rows of city houses. If the extension of the city is to follow these lines, it is evident that there {s no place for ungraded streets as in a residence section that is not very closely built up. Not Alone in Name. It is pretty well settled that in @ city public convenience demands uniform grades of street. Kalorama Heights, the residence of Joel Barlow and of other notables in the early history of the country, with its stretch of swelling lawn and wooded heights, some time ago fell into the hands of the @ivil engineer and of the contractor, and that direction. 1: is ridiculous to su; on the square .rontk.g the proposed sit ippose | $e tne ewes Pro) ite for that a city that has attained the popula- tion that this city and fc forging ahead at the rate the United States cens hows that it which were fixed more than a hun dred years ago by the first President of the| tion succeeded United States, Building From the Bottum Up. The residence at the corner of C.xnecti- cut avenue and K street, which h:s recent- | to the Commissioners ly been improved by the new swner, Mrs. Washington McLean, excites a good deal | ;mmissioners decid; of attention. There used to be high steps/action. All of in front leading to the parlor floor and a | ™municated with, but rather high terrace at the front and sides |TeSulation forbidding of the house. The steps and the terrace have both been removed, and the main en- trance 1s now on a level with the street. | Drevailed. The result is that another story has prac- tically been added to the house, as the basement is entirely above ground. A some- what similar change is being Stanley Matthews house, corner of Con- necticut avenue and N street, which was recently leased by Mr. Mendonca, the Bra- zilian minister. Unlike the the basement was not used except for the kitchen and other domestic purposes. It was not available for office rooms or bil- will be confined t tween 13th and onfin jo the limits ted made in the | Shepherd house, | Go, W. Albaugh applied for per- @ theater on H street be- 14th streets he was con- ith the regulations. The opposi- When Mr. 3. mn to in preventing him from 3 jority of the signatures, an Te. quired, and th. theater project was aban- @ened. It was then that the builders’ ex- change took the matter up, ard appealed to change the regula- lons. Several hearings were held, and the miss to learn the laws in ‘ore finally taking large cities were com- all failed to tate any the erection ting a m cities the ofa theater. In fact, it was learned th: was the only city where such a restiation hose who fi = wat 0 favored an amend. mmissioners finally d Siaed's nally dec! t regulation, and me .t — as stated in The Star last Tuesday. Mard rooms. When the alterations now in | and the ote el bending amenduents, progress are completed the basement story will be entirely above ground, and the house will be enlarged practically by the addition of an entirely new floor. This method of increasing the capacity of a house by add- ing at the bottom instead of at the top is| 1. J, not a new one nor ts it peculiar to this city, but it serves its purpose just as well as if it was entirely novel. The Private Stable Nutsance. The residence occupied for so many years by the late Justice Hunt, at the corner of Connecticut avenue and De Sales street, had ast@ble attached to it, with an entrance from Connecticut avenue. When the stable was first erected the locality was not very|Wm. A. Kimmel is thickly built up, but have been put up all about it, and it is Ince then houses | Johnson the architect. e issioners sent the lot u fot ag “i a new set ‘of bulaing regulat 9 expected the; ready for free distribution within a ment Building Notes. Hodgson has commenced the erection of a handsome three-story and basement brick dwelling at 906 East Capitol street northeast. The: house will be provided witn all modern convenierces and be ‘sated throughout by steam. R. C, Mangam is the architect and G. W. Flather the builder, Ground has been broken for the erection of a row of nine two-story bri from to 239 Oak street, Le Deore Bae the owner and J. C. A nice improvement in the shape of a row probable that the sounds and smells of the |of seven two-story brick dwellings is now stable, as is usual in such cases, have pene- | being made on trated the dining rooms and bed rooms and | Howard University subdivision. C. parlors of the adjacent houses. It is now|son is the owner and J. C. being leveled to the ground because the | architect. space can be occupied to better advan- Brightwood avenue, in the M. Tow- Johnson the A handsome three-story and cellar brick tage. But it serves to emphasize what|dwelling is being erected at 1508 Rhode everybody knows who has had the misfor-' Island avenue for J. L. Shedd. J. G. Hill tune to come within the range of the cu- rious regulations governing the erection build is the architect and W. C. Morrison the er, THE MONUMENTAL, Fashion Leaders in Fine Millinery. Mot another uiinerr Department ality, Variety & Pri Summer Opening FRENCH PATTERN HATS AND BONNETS Monday and Tuesday, May 7 and 8. ‘& cordial invitation is extended to COOKIN i SIX Soda Water 3 Tickets, 25¢ eldest and most @elicious Soda The American Catarrh Cure is the result of 26 years’ the bout ackall Bros. & Flemer, r. 14th & P Sts. N.W. And oth & H Sts. N.E. my? study and j vitaliry. 7 Pre- MLD. 1586 st, For sale systema and increases by W. B, JONI <— i B. JONES, mrel-sktum ith and F ste, LADIES, BE BEAUTIFU —eraceful and healthy. vigorates the cuticle and scientific method restores youth. masaage. Alcohol rubs with Swedia: vluate of Stockholm College 1p attendance. es and get our Auti-Freckle Cream. continue tis Week with « jar of Skin Food « free treatment. DE ARMOND P, ap28-s&w1mo 787 13th st. ow. Shopping Baskets, 9C- Made of German Willow, Were mever sold less than Japanese Straw Seats, ge. Last summer you paid 2c. for Wdeutically the Japanese Tea Pots, oc. ‘These are reduced from a reduced price, Were first 22c., were then put at 15c., and uow at the above price. Co These prices bold good Friday, Saturday and “Washington Variety,” : *~- 824 7thst. CROCKERY, H. H. HENSES, Prop. cat, strong and Gorahie eV ereeees Cor. 7th and D n.w. In Baltimore—i N. Charles st. Every Woman Used Ail Over lal iS s. r We beads las Spectaci 0 or cles —or | he City » whose in peeds them~ebuald call nA lal and be fitted with» pair of our = OR aaaiee. aly $1 Glasses. DELICIOUS | Hard Rubber and Polisbed Steel Frames— ity. Once used bundreds and bundreds use them with . Children 1 ibd highest — satisfaction — Finest lenses — No Adults: ey a eat charge Mi examining eyes scientitically. cAllister & Co., Opticians, 1311 F ST. N.W. imext co Son Mag.) vised ° al 5 rown Bread —— Is the most HEALTHFUL bread | #5 — in the ‘world—anti and | . —— fattening. 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Tt STSSHSSSSSESOSESOSESESEOOSD be seen at 516 Oth you're bere Colebress@ Lewis Bee Cones. can Can’t Be Duplicated For the Price, bed and $10," Sul ant fia. Houghton Co., The 99-45. liege wt a ralt Wanchms’ ‘either Eigin m, more pick ecli tee With every watch. Ruch an of NEVER been made fer a watch yoo worth. Think of it—s.ly fof Bottles ered Gaily — ite sale te SXizaily ‘on “the “increase — rateress Cries ath eeehing © epuitaity. order, sa sler aguia, and blew the M. Schuster, §|}otterburs’ ittia wet Nature's own remedy for Dyeprp- a Indisestion—Stene-ta-the-Mindder Watches, Jewelry and Silverware, ~ ~Jgver and Kidney discases w 77 Market Space. piss ag it's clewn cones a Joniy Ter vulepallon botthe, Botte geturned. H. &. Barrett, Agent, ‘Sbcrehar Drag Store, 15th cod H ; = Ltn Aad Drea s — Store, eee bey Ladies Know The Value Gre kar at any price. Rubber Hose all kinds, for garde: All sizes, all grades, § Hd anes Noe § d We are headquarters for these goods. Puamine cur stock before you buy. Goodyear Rubber Co., RUBBER GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION , 309 9TH ST. N.W., APOVE PA. AVE. * : . im MELVOLLD JINDSAY, Mev

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