The evening world. Newspaper, October 15, 1901, Page 5

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Gorgeous Costumes in the New Casino Pro-, duction Surpass Anything Heretofore | Seen on Broadway. Understanding that Founder Bradley, 0 desirous of ¢ Jersey politic: suggestion. Let them decoy him te Theatre and allow him to gaz costumes of the bath! act of “The Little Dt marshal when he dls iriumphant in bu we beg ¢ ¥ roviding they ho gibbet. Kath dito m) sacrith pleases the nie Un Sothern was exceedingly happy in «leading rote and PW. Witon's a wi a strikingly Ver aracter work, Mr. Wilson are th honors with atts found a. sympa: atheriny and Suzanne guette, the sweetheart of | days, made a siight ro. minent. The staging was bur it ers are! with his avowe: mediately become pe “The Little Duchess” is a costume plece. It 1s clothes all the w clothes, Such an exhibition of xowns has not been seen on the stage of New York—well, possibly ever. Weber & Fields started the lavish display of ar. al 1 a, dozen curtain | dresses this season. George Led in phi i or, a set and spoke twice, “The New Yorkers” outstripped them, | {hits Wma gte lok zine for Mie Mecar: and now comes Mr. Ziegfeld with a di play of feminine apparel on his chorus| “F1,ORODORA” IN NEW QUARTERS that makes the audience sigh for colored | ine transfer of "Florodora” to the glasses. The gowns alone should carry |New York Theatre, concerning which ike show, some trepidation was felt by the man- Anna Held, of course, was the most|2kement, promises to be a successful linen so to speak. The programuie says} iast night and the same enthusiasm pre- her clothes were made In Parts, On this| Valled as has bea’ seen at the Casino polneswejralee:no| doubts Howsahel gets Ene play went better than might have into them ts what a male would like to/ heen expected for the first performance know. in new quarters. ‘The chorus has been In the second act the costume of Sigs Krently enlarged cand: th cast of prin-+ Held is the culmination of labors tha: |“ P*" ree x) must have given a few French tailors softening of the brain—if they had any brain left after bullding thein. Also, in this act, 1s a collection of twelve pretty girls dressed in clothes that will ce tainly make them the envy of every|? chorus performer in New York. Two ot| these sirls wear gowns modeiled afier|} the scarlet and yellow affairs introduced by Lilllan Russell in “Hoity~ rirls are pretty. but they £ their model when {it comes to displaying what they have on. Yo divert from the dry-goods to th show. Jt ty not a great ple: fe "Sweet Marie until a long, Harry B, Smith evidently w ooks a J for the play with the words under the Influence of a Welah| !ussell Hrothers at the Victoria. Farebit. Mr. Reginald De Koven has| 4 nig audience wan kep written some music that is extremely |laught aight ‘The Love Ma rest Lov eum ven more suc sor, ‘The new jalland more s which replaced last Saturday night tre, promises to be ‘esful than its prede- ay gives Miss Rertha | disp ay her ver- nat her bem. judging from the au- tain age from Mara’* Flelds's 1 “Diplomacy.” Me sny ty-Tolty’ is played to crowd ses. ' ager Hammerstein has pruned and In roars of ur Cohans in "The nretty, The most of it is reminisce: olent nearly everything that has made a hit 2 tai on Broadway this season. Good audiences nightly applaud Mrs. Fiske acting In “Miranda of the Bal- There !s a fatr chorus, Come and Float Me," in the tir: feature of the programm conv," and the play will fl out tts in- tendéd run prosperously. RAISE EWS 0 A. good vaudeville bill at Tony Paa-| See type ts called “Wading We G: Urltors” Fourteenth Street ‘Theatre this) trnmpha, young women are wheeled on the stage | week includes Nat Wills, the Garrisons, 4 ad Violette nd others. omen and e do. by four young men. ‘The young take off thelr shoes and stockings, ee rep ppse tices lene week at the Fourteenth Stree ing it for, Jast night In “The Cipher C i r 2 : . e@ Cipher Cod 3 “Chloe,” @ goon song, sung by Miss} icoierd gets three curtain calls ¢ John FE. Kellerd entered_ upon ‘After the show. ‘The best thing in the BLOEst erformance fs a chorus In the last act, “nichelleu.”” with Daniel FE. Bandmann Pine Fencing Girls,” ably” ied by {in teerite cole te eat ee migveat Frankie Balley. ‘ the Murray Hill ‘Theatre. Charies 4. Bigelow, Josoph W. Herbers orge Marion are burdened with | eprRE CHIEF! comedy parts tha: have no comedy in} An especially good vaudeville act In to merstein make-up and a Fanclulli dia-}be seen at Keith's this week in Joe duel is comically treated in the la; It would be a shame to tell how it Is done. the act Is indorsed by the Fire Depart-| ROGERS BROS.’ LAST W1 clothes will make “The Little Duchess," and the quintet singing of Mr. Maxwell | jy iilt Is the last w: should destiny decree that “The Littlo|and his company In expecially fine. erbo Clothes may not make the man, but/ment. The comedy dialogue ks excellent Duchess” shall be made. David Warflotd In “The Auctioneer contint ak box-office records at SOTHERN IN NEW DRAMA. eee cheaen s It's long lane that has no turhing, E. H. Sothern, admirable actor but cursed] J. H. Stoddart entered upon the with a penchant for acquiring bad playa, | fourth week of hix engagement at the Theatre ublic In the dainty has at Inst secured a costume drama] yrler Bush. worthy of his ability. “If I Were ae King." a romantic drama from the pen|_ ‘Time seems powerless to exhaust the a é pleasure that “Arizona” affords the au- of Justin Huntley McCarthy, achleved a} Giencen at the Academy of Muste, ‘This triumph for actor and playwright at the| pl Gardén Theatrelast evening. of ‘s run Ix now only second to thie Florodora.” | That prince of good fellows and most| sm, eatin, : : fascinating poet, Francis Villon; the|on at Dalyn and James T. Pavone, forceful climaxes und clothing his dia-] @tre last night. TRIED TO PREVENT DRINKING OF CARBOLIC ACID, “King of Foxes," Louis XI., and Kath-| mirera are growing with every perforin= erine’ De Vaucelles, a court beauty, are] ane. the leading characters in Mr, McCar- ay requer thy's historical conceit, which does much| srantien Sinetbela eed eet He the violence to correct tradition. But the DI please the patrons of the Mberéies/the playwright allows himself his iwreek, are condoned by an exceeding cleverness| An interesting re in arraying stirring incidents, providing | Tosca” was gt {val of Sardou's "1. nat the American Thee logue ‘in language of unlooked-for Ilter-| The Rays in “A Hot Old Time” are ary valu nicking It warm for all competitors at The story {s too complicated, too| the Metropolis this week. fraught with incident of Ilve import, to tell In vendensed space. In outiine oxcelient per: “ the action of the play deals with a prank Day aibelennec wanietvonat ne Nar: of Louis XI on the poet Villon, whose| lem Opera-House last night and will Mil woem, “If I Were King," had stirred] out the week profitably. Deth admiration and resentment. Villon,| phe Tipperary ‘ y erary Christenin after wounding the King's marshal at| merry offering at the Third Avesne the behest of Katherine Do Vaucelles,| Theatre this week, frantically and unsuccessfully laat night dragged from prison to the palaco for e trong man, and awakens to find himself a courtier. | aamaen at Proctor res <Beime His sitting in judgment on his drunken|Street Theatre this wee tavern mates Is a delicious Incident.| ,, SETEL : Louis tells -him that Mme, Butterfly" ts taing beautifully the love of Katherine he shall have|‘U" Talser: his Ufe, The haughty boauty gives her} “What Happened to, Jones ig, the§ mother walking about the room. She THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 15, 1901: PRETTY GIRLS AND DAZZLING GOWNS MAKE “LITTLE DUCHESS” BRILLIANT. Hl i Be i) .J\| BIRTHDAY DINNER | EA.S0THERN- “If 1 WERE KING drand Opera-House last) comedy offering at Froctor's Fitth ave- from India" has come to nty-third Street Theatre got a Joyful welcome. There will be no 1 Phillpp'« bi at the y Land of the Drew's pre: Second in Comm. this sterling The wax figure « in the group of Ru: William Faversham Rival,” te an successful as ever at the Criterion THEATRES the big bur- “A Message from Murs, Held, (Waa whistled down ‘roadway | Mght'at tne Miah of the performance, | Mawtrey and | for a jong run at with Charles King's Carnival One of the moat artistic performanc in town is that of Louls Mann and Mi; 1 AT KEITH'S, Savoy. to Brooklyn. Marie Dresale There has not be performance he play's tr r Square Theatre, act-|tion of Fire Chief Croker's office and| “enough said’ as to ite popularity, lect. Bir, Herbert ta artistic as a pro-| Maxwell's musical comedy, “The Fire] teties'” fessional French duellixt and the French |Cnief."". ‘The scene Is laid in a duplica-|the Madison best plays, Was re Jat the Columbia Bunier, In th of the “Rogers Washington" at the Knick- ward J. Marga & Walker's a hearty Tecey company Hurtig & Seamon’s Music Hall, rtot Maryian and Opera- House a Hrooklyn girl. ‘There 1a no longer any doubt but th: 3 work won the praiseo of the audl Daly has “caught on" Dan She died ate Brown was the Domestic uni DIED IN Bristol sue Dinenne Near STREET. “MRS. DANE'S DEFENSE.” Fen-Year-0la Effort Frultiess—Woman Deter- old, of No, 631 West Fitty-second street morning In front of per man Holahan, of th street station. Ten-year-old n ambulance to save her mother from self-deatruc- Ifty-« tian veaerh ‘The two lived together on Creamer street, No other houses are near, closest neighbor ts half a milo ntiss, Who respe J. maid hat the shanty far out According to the neighbors, the woman had been drinking heavily during the past week and they advance the theory that death was probable due to alconol. body wus removed to glory lasts! rendered at Proctor's Cae Hundred and | Brooklyn. only for a week and then the gallows|Twenty-fifth street house, this week, | The 1s his end, but provides that tf he wins| With “Her Last Rehearsal” for a cur-| away, the night Irene heard her | the station-house. a WOMEN WILL FIGHT FOR MORE: SCHOOLS ANDCLEAN STREETS OOODD at orerererey | OY Mrs, Clarence Burns, Vice-President of the West End Women's! Republican Club,/& Tells Why She and/¢ Her Fellow Club! § Members Are Taking! | Part in the Campaign |2 | Mrs Clarence Burns, Vice-President 8 of the Weat End Women's Rar abatonts| KO} Club, ts one of the New York women who are taking an active part in the! sampaign) and has been in work of| this sert alnce 1896, Previous to that she was engaged In work among the tenement children, and * says it was her conviction growing of observations in that work that! led her to take an active int et in polities, which seemed to her the only. force that can really better the condi- | tlona she found in her philanthropical | work. | “Iam interested fn politics," she said! to an E: ing World reporter, “for the same reason that every mother, and, tn- | deed, every woman In New York. ought to be Interested. Hecause, for inatance, there are now %,000 children in New York who are attending school in half-day class three hours a day. Think of that for the tenement children who can only go to achool until they are four- teen years old! And we haven't had a public school built in the city since those erected by Mayor Strong, There is $100,000,000 spent in New York City an- |MECSCCECeses: nually, and wouldn't you think %.0%.0) nuence the vote of their husbands and | End Republican Club, of which she te of it ought to go for schools? fathers. Before there can be legislation | vic ealdent. She is {gentined prami- ‘Then I am interested in politics be-| there must be agitation, and we can help|nently with the charity work of the cause I know what the streete are like, | ',that way.” Little Mothers’ Association, which meeta te | This te why Mrs. Allen and a number |at No. 236 Second avenue in the winter lay after day, in the tenement district. |of the members of three of the four| and 4, house at Pelham in the sum- | know how the streete of the lower promen'a Republican clubs are going to mer, and ie gor the children who pavete spend every afternoon unt! u day [care for ‘01 je dey. 1e raat aide are never cleaned, but are left | before election at two of the mena Re. | is one of the chiet workers aise in the nan unspeakabie condition, and there| publican clubs on the lower east and | Bloomingdale Playground, No. 29 Nine- cilldren have to play. have had ppinted cir. | tyeninth street. and conducts ite meet- . Italtan and Yiddish St. . T believe that for both these evils | addressed to “Mothers and fathers.” and| For three yeara Mra. Burns had charge the present city administration is to/explaining the tmportance of thelr in-[of the effort to raise money for Induss bame, “And I think because of them, | MUPTes wien these circulars they will by the State. Federation “ot abana ; re ey wilt | by ©. Fed {f for no other reason, the women of the| take possession of the clubs and, wel-| Clubs. Mra Burnes tien Saaliorneve poorer and the richer classes altke|come the women of the neighborhood, |the last two elementary years in echool should be doing all’ In’ their power. to- | Scent slrcata wnert tae women ated in | saalsted Herrineteinetae ie cea ee e d her In ing t = ward bringing about better things, We | the doorwayn for the air toward wight. | fore the Kchool Haatd, but it Ras wok gat cant dole Seal, but we ean bring | The members of the clubs will talk with | succeeded. al eh to the attention of other women | chem, and give th- Iterature to the he Is a member of the Professional sietight ard eee’, to sive it no | children in the strents to take home. — | Women's Leaguer ancy eo te enone thought, and thelr Interest in {t will in- |" Mra, Burne ts the founder of the Weat | Press Clube m hiatal DITO pod COGOOOAAS fara! TOO EXPENSIVE. “qyicen oriny But Miss Imogene Leonard Thinks Francis Wil-| son Shouldn't Have Discharged Her. |ITALIAN SUCCUMBS TO INJU- RIES RECEIVED. Actress Imogene Leonard, who was{cab, with a real horse, antil very recently a member of Francia| Yorkers’ sounded the e]cord that has arisen says she will sue | and George Lederer, his Police Arrest Man in Whose House her ex-manager to find out whether or| many seatons i Ei Fight Occurred, and n not {t {* legal for a manager to discharge Mr. Lederer thad olanned for Re Daly Companion. aha a Very effective entrance in the first . t chorus girl almply because she invites | 10 eP tne New Vurkera’ In atypleat | sim to be her guest et a $500 dinnce}fondon cab, Driving briskly when her salary In $18 a week. This, | etage, Mr. Daly wan to hop off th Gaetano a: Ue the animal to a “prop” rccording to Miss Leonard, ts what Mr.| (le the animal to a) pr Wilson did. Not explained to Mr, “It happened in Baltimore,” sald Mian| weeks ago, when It wax time ty t Leonard when seen by an Evening| the horse. Mr. Duly was invite eer the animal past a leg drop World reporter to-day in her apart-| centre of the ans jamatino, twenty-two years ywever, was] Old. Was taken from his home, No, 767 >| Bergen street, Brooklyn, last night to Mary's Hospital, suffering from a nev cut in the head which he sald he i ‘ recelved on Sunday night during a mente at the Vendome. “I gave a little! "My friends.” he said. “once there! quarrel uhm come supper after the performance In honor | as & beautltit mica eerie any first, His condition became so serious that of my twonty-frat birthday. One comes} entrance in a dalloon. The tol the police were notied by the hospital age but once in a’ Iifetime and I] swing down from the fii Muthorities, Glamatino made an ante- zs uate and a x01 i wanted to celebrate the .occaston. tiinavewased about: ten: fect ‘riem statement, and dled at 4.30 “So I gave the order at the hotel for] stage: and at the first rehearsal it oroke| wclock this morning an a peault of his \ dinner for thirty of my friends in and] and T took a arom aie gf Amur out of the company. I sent Invitations thenk ntm.: but that if he insist upon| The police shortly afterward arrested to Mr, Wiaon, Stage Manager IHol-| the cab 1 shail te obliged to cancel mY! Angelo Albarn i Washington brooke and Fred Scott, the asslatent | contract at ne eal nue, and Joseph ( stag? manager ta\ueed in’ The New Yorkers.” Grand street, whom Glamatino had ac- “Mr. Wilson didn't come, but we had euiihe zis cused, The police would not tell the the Jolllest kind of a time, and I did aries Klein, one of the authors of] Ciuse of the quarrel, but sald it had not think anything more of It until the| David Warflel’a play, “The Au next day, when Mr. Wileon sent me a ro hag running tye other produ note saying that he wauld dispense with In hia new comedy aT my services. I anked for an explann- viaying “The John Grix: (aa iEsenia ManatinesiMee wrilon Olaa'e Henry. Miller will again do “Heartset "at the home of Albarno in soners were locked up In the avenue station and will be ar- riQgned in court to-day, ——___ IM necond-hand that Mr, Wilson didn't Henry Miller will again do "Heatinrens, ‘ant a girl In hia chorus who waa rich! toap in ine Weat and South: and Jette DRIVER BADLY HURT. enough to stay at the same hotel he did|son De Angel Playing ni chics worn fee nd 16; 91 9900, Ginter: eee net ee nin bank account to) °Mry Relrinthal Ran @owm by “I propose to find out If thet 19a legal| happy proportions Electric Car. geanon, Thad just, been re-engaged by elise nce Henry Belrinthal, of No, 118 Jackson Mins Amelia Bingham's secretary. who|atreet, waa driving a horve and ra ip of @ statistical turn of mind, ts au- a ‘se and wagon thority for the assertion that since January, when she first produ Fitch's play, “The Climber y all summer, and 1 had even been poted into the ‘elght,"” #0 there could Jat Amsterdam avenue and One Hundred [and Fifty-frwt street, thts morning when the wagen was struck and overturned by an Amatentam avenue electric car. Betrinthal, who is forty-nine years 1, Was thrown to the wt t and sev M t é been no question about my com- getency., I do not care for the money, of Course, but 1 propose to ge! some port ne a trese-manager haa read upward of 2 Pee Meyers Manda todapit the case in| Taye. Only three of the number have Stine Leonar ‘a Very handsome | Peen accepted. young woman, Who at qn early age mat- jeral ribs and one of his lege. were ried a Germi aron.; She secured 2] ‘The advance guard of ken. He was removed to the J. Hoot divorce and In receipt of alimony | theatrical forces arrived Ixht Hospital, John Menteli, the Orman. w Hundres lon suMetently large to pernitt her to It in she pleases, While with Mr. Wilson's | 11. J, Loveday, the stage man company It was her whim to distribute | Mosare, Darer and Highland, © her salary every week among the stags | ecutive ff. Mr. Loveda banda, stage manager for Bir I She is now bent on taking out a rom-| latter became proprietor 0) pany of her own, and ts negottating with) Theatre, London, In_187%. "Buda" Tons, the comedian, for the] Sir Henry, Mise Terry and the star part In a farce comedy with whicn | pany arrived on the ner Sin he is about to tour. he. The company wt vin 8: Charles 1." at the Knicke or refusal to drive a reailtre on Monday evening, Oct in the Weat second atreet can line steamship St. Louln. — Kear Improving, rancis J. Kear, of the W Ighth otreet at G fon, was suid to morning, He ts suffering nia, but is not yet out of dang rom Dan Daly: brought to Marsetiies by ming} Your steamers early to-day that tie 9 east winds which were blowing 9 nea would carry loon «| pric ©) coast of Spain or to Gibraltar Moreo the late: pannengers of the balloon {1 ‘ DE LA VAULX COULDN'T CROSS} !' was proceeding very slowly THE MEDITERRANEAN. two factors probably caused Cour Vaulx to abandon his v4) —— —— ‘Nohemian Girl" by Castle Sanare Strong Winds mpeded Progress ; ie Balfe's “Bohemian moat auccessful operas Bquare Opera Company, # PARIB, Oct, 15.—The attempt of Count} the Broadwuy Theatre ia audience was well 0) With Mattress 1 our speelal price k Dine fam . tr, Be de Ja Vaulx to croms the Mediterranean | een eee ae aia away “tina sea te many excellent solox were en ttt : CASH OR In a balloon, which left Les Sablettes, | many execlient | never its $2.48 near Toulon, Satuntay night, has failed. | Miss Rennyson sang Ariine and Tae pert took. the role of Thaddeus, The Minister of Marine, M. de Laneasan, | fore Hottie toot ae Yow ll, lesmember has received a despatch from Toulon] Hit, MPKINE Of tit rectiv« farts. at $11.75 GOVERNOR YATES. Indorsement of Paine’s Celery Compound, Attracts the Attention of Medical Journals. Thousands of Such Cases— Mr. Storms’s Letter. A medical journal, says a writer in the Boston Traveller, has the names and addresses and full histories of hundreds of cases of chronic and acute rheumatism that have Deen per- manently cured by the wonderful remedy which has recently boen at= tracting wide attention since Gov. Yates, of Ilinois, publicly indorsed it. Nothing else has ever been known to cure like obstinate cases. When all others havo failed this marvellous remedy for blood and nerves has made sick peopie well. Paine's celery compound corrects unhealthy nerve action and feeds the nerve centres with the clements need- ed to build them up again into healthy tissues. It cleanses the blood of every trace of poisonous humor and encourages a rapid growth of the red corpuscles upon which the vigor of the entire body depends. Its action is perfectly intelligibteto every able physician. Diseases of the nervous system do not come without warning. Rheuma_ tism, dyspepsia, insomnia and dis- easos of the liver and kidneys are but loud cries for a prompt increase of nourishment for the brain and nerve centres. Paine’s celery compound feeds these vital parts, and it is fts marevilous power of nourlahing all the nerve tissues ang’ pane the blood that its remarkable cures depend. Weariness, Inck of energy and de- spondency are more a matter of nerves and brain than of the mus- cles. At this season of the year when thousands of over-warking people ara entering upon the drudgery that will have no cessation for nearly a year to come, many are already showing the symptoms that sooner or later, re- sult from hurry, cure, anxiety and haste without the amount of rest and recreation that nature intended. Thousands of tired mothers, school teachers and too ambitious scholars will reveal the strain before the win- ter is over, It Is high time for all to strike at the root of the trouble. Begin the work of recuperation and cure at:the earliest moment. All who try it will find strengttY and freedom from disease in Paine's celery compound, which corrects un- healthy nerve action and supplies the asarrio, of No, ¢|Velns with pure, more abundant, more vigorous blood. Paine'’s celery com- pound is almost universally pre- scribed by physiclans—who differ on many other things, but who estimate on avenue. at {ts proper worth this greatest of all remedies for the prevention and cure of disease. It Is no exaggeration to say that every week brings hundreds of letters from those who have used Paine's celery compound and have been benefited by it. Above fs the picture of Representative G. H. Storms, one of the cattle kings of Kansas, who says: “I regard Paine’s celery compound as the most henefi- elal and valuable of remedies, espe- cially during the fall months.” He writes as have mony thousands of others of the good the remedy has done in his own case. Let the reader try it ant prove for_himself the abundant truth of all that has been said. It is not what Paine’s celery com- pound says, but what It does, that tells the story of its world-wide fame, — WHERE THE MILLIONS MEET— ik at the Roosevelt Hospital The Want Pages of the Sunday World every Sunday. Advantage fat 1 e Lighthor | SEA BALLOON ieornie ca ise ajaeas| anid | It’s to Your The result of the experiment noe To Buy f ee Us 1 We offer a better class of goods at from ro to 20 per cent. lower $s, show you a superior assortment and fill your order with more despatch than you'll obtain in downtown establishments. METAL COUCH BED. }; Round Quartered CREDIT. jee BROS., — announcing that the cruiser Du Chayla, Meh aA hid sata aa which waa escorting the balloon, 18 re-| The Road to Success is via Sunday Columbus Ave., bet. 103d and 104t! ; Cong ae eee e nicked ap ton mite Werkd Wants, Elevated Station 104th St. Open Saturdays Until 800% &

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