The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1902, Page 8

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ILANCHE RING MAKES A HIT. vy Margaret Ayer, Drina Do Wolf, _ Grayoe Scott and the Hongler | Sisters Made “Tommy Rot” Suc- " eeesful by Their Cloverness. Q Very classy, really quite awfully was the opening of Mra. Os- ‘3 playhouse last night The curtain was advertised to go ‘at 9 ofclock, don't you know, of course only the bounhre fellows that nobody knows, don't vknow—thought of going to thelr at that unearthly hour, by Jo ad everybody who was anybody, and a of people who aren't anybody, bi N lke everybody to think they are ly, waited outside in the jolly pretending not to mind the drqught. Rheumatism and society rubbed shoul- ‘in the vestibule until 1t was quite tain that the show wap going on, feats might be sought with tl of dignity and disturbance. here that society shone. Any com- person can be early In his seat, but dy the triple clectro-plating of New- can 9 one to stumble In ov people's knees and feet with th ‘amount of unvoncern. One tying detail of this performance ‘that the ushers did not receive SOCIETY LIKES “TOMMY ROT” AT EVERYBODY PAYS THE CLOSEST ATTENTION, & BES ny Leane > On eKAR~ VERY: 400), ——— (Si LAR BRIDE WILL NOT BE RECONCILED, Detroit Belle Who Left Husband ‘checks in thelr fingers, but on It was really awfully thought- ‘ful of that clever Mrs. Osborn. Inside of theatro, scarlet. Awfully Fough on women in pink frocks, but “White 1a the only classy thing this sea- ‘pon, and white is stunning against : no mistake, and Mrs, Osborn & Mttle about frocks herself— y has something to do with them “a business way—so she probably what she is about. ~ Little theatre awfully plain inside, too. tion is so dreadfully overdone tm theatres and saloons and ‘@il that wort of thing that society really ‘faust draw the line and go In for plain cts. Terribly classy of Mra, Osborn to think of that. _ Of course one went because one had “$2 and one thought it was going to be @ beastly bore, just like everything ‘ and the only thing to do was to ‘a loud as one could, just as one i t the beastly opera, or in some- body's drawing-room when one of those ‘Gives is singing at $1,000 « note; but— “Tommyrot” Interest! ‘To drop the vernacular—and it's very @ontagious after hearing it on all sidew tne a whole evening in a little ba playhouse—but, to drop it, ‘Boclety was surprised out of Its soclety Manners. “Tommyrot’ was just about @o0d enough—and {t wasn't so very ‘dad, olther—to stifle boredom for a few Bours. Not to be bored Is the worst of olass, but society couldn't help itself, It Dehaved like a small tenement child at fresh alr tarm It shouted and giggled Bnd clapped at everything, and insisted on having every number repeated again and again. Tt was after midnight when I left, @nd society was then recalling for the @izth time a team of song-and-dan @isters who clink their heels and Gear old duets about “Down by t River on Sunday Afternoon—tidd Hdaly-um, tilly-um-te-di!"" If Duse wi "88 much enthusinsm as the Heng! won from society last night, Will be doing nob! Only in one respect did soclety re- member its manners. There was a young baritone singer in “Tommyrot” ~ who had a tendency to mouth his vow- @ls. ‘Bociety laughed at him openly, Gerisively, whenever he sang. And the More serious the song and its singer, Shortly After Marriage Says She Cannot Love Him. DOTROIT, Oct. M—Mre. Rodert M. Larned, one of the belles of this city, who married prominent lawyer, of Lansing, and separated from him before the honeymoon was hardly begun, an- ounces that a reconciliation between her husband and herself ts hardly pos- alble. Gov. Bitss, who is Mrs, Larned’s uncle, and who presented her with a house as & wedding present, 1s hopeful, however, that his niece will change her mind. Young Larned, the bridegroom, also tooks to an early. peconciliiation through the medium of his friends, He 4s much Aistremed over the disastrous turn in his wedding affairs and declares that he will not consider a legal separation In any aspect. Mra, Larned's explanation of the af- fair is given as follows: “I found I did not love my husband and that I could not. I made up my mind it was better to leave him at once than to drag him through a life of mis- ery for us both." The sweetheart whom the bride, who was Miss Fannte Ide, was induced to put by when she became Mra, Larned, is reported as having loft the State. —————— Amorican Missionary Association, NEW LONDON, Conn,, Oct. 2.—The convention of the American Missionary Assoolation held its first convention yes- terday, Charles A, Hull, of Brook- lyn, Chairman of the mittee, read his report crease tn the number Charles E, Jefferson, xecutlve Com- ing an ta- . The ferred to the coal atria: the miner is at the r procession our Lord ts DokS HAR: —— = mark the positions of the actors. hh oracklug witty Mitle jokes, THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENI C what acue 2. S 2 DIED AT FIVE SCORE AND SIX Oldest Man In New York Passes Away Surrounded by Numerous Descendants. Simon Raphael, the oldest man tn New York, died at the home of his son, Kassel Raphael, No. 72 Chatford avenue, Brooklyn. He was 106 years ola. A won, six daughters, forty-five srandchildren and twenty-eight great- Grandchildren survive him. Rabbi L. J. Finkelstein administered the last rites and closed the old man's eyes. He was conscious to the last and his mind was clear. He talked of his friend, the late Rabbi Joseph, the inci- dents of his busy career, and the growth of the city during the thirty-three years he made New York his home. He ro- called circumstances of his youth in Russia three-quarters of a century ago. ALL MAY VISIT LAKE GEORGE. t Mem Establish Hotel for Working G on Its Side. GLONS FALLS, N, Y¥., Oct) 2A hotel for working girls will be estat- Nshed at Lake George next summer to be operated under the auspices of the Girls’ Friendly Society. ‘The old Cronby- side Hotel and tts cottages, formerly belonging to the estate of the late Con- gressman Henry G, Burlelgh, of White- hall, has just been purchased by George Foster Peabody, of Brooklyn, and Spencer Trask, the New York banker, and {t Is the Intention of the purchasers to adjust the prices so that a vacation at the lakeside will be within the reach of many who oould not hitherto afford this luxury. ———— — Schwab Leaves Ven VENICE, Italy, Oct. 2—Charles M. Schwab, president of the United States f| Steel Corporation, who had been here for some days, took # special train this morning for Milan = \ SLE sage) MRS. “BOB'S:” SOW TaN >) o ris BEAUTIFUL,’ NECKLACE LINT IK AW rv AT MRS. OSBORN’S SHOW—11.30 P. M. They will appear when the “400 audience gets ANARCHIST PLOT TO KILL LOUBET. Three-Time Convict, Armed with Poignard and Revolver, Caught Climbing Palace Wall. PARIS, Oot. @ (Wednesday).—The Figaro this morning says a man was otected early Tuesday morning at- tempting to climb a wall of the Elysee Palace. It is believed that he intended to hide in the Palace garden in the hope of obtaining an opportunity to assassinate President Loubet. He wag arrested and was found to be armed with a poignard and a loaded re- volver. He has been recognized as a dangerous Anarchist who has already ‘een convicted three times, and upon two of these occasions for manufactur- Ing explosive machines. The police are trying to keep the mat- ter quiet and refuse to divulge the man’@ name. STABBED IN A FIGHT. Night School Classmates Quarrelled and One Used a Knife, George Ferguson, a clerk at No. 268 La Fontaine avenue, will be arraigned to-day on a charge of stabbing William Wilson, of No. Hast One Hundred and Eighteenth street, in the cheek. Hix plea will be self-defense. Wilson and) Ferguson attend night school and quarrelled over somothiog trivial. Ferguson says Wilson struck him first and that he used his pen- knife to defend himself. ‘The fight oc- curred In front of the school building at Fitth avenue and One Hundred and Bixteenth street. Wilson was taken to Harlem Hospital —— ist Minsionary Convention. SLAND, Oct. 2—Bishop Ed- Andrews, of New York, called to order sionary convention Episcopal Church. Two thousand dele- Kates, representing all parts of the world, were Dr. James M, Buckley, of N “Meth= odlst Missions of the Nineteenth Cen- tury." or the Methodist SMT A os: Wine Ma ah kN NG, OCTOBER 22, 1908; CIAL OF EIGHT STEALS TO EAT. Little Persis Thacher Has Taken All Money in Sight Since She Was Three and Spent It for Food. FATHER’S HAIR TURNS GRAY. yesterday the first general mis- | Saves Fruits of Peculations Till She Has §1.25, Then Devours Three Meals and Says She Is Starving at Statlon-Hou! Little Persis Thacher can't help steal- ing. Since she was three years old she has never lost a chance to take money and now Magistrate Olmsted is puzzled to know where to send her. She is money mad, her parents say, and perhaps behind all ts a voracious Appetite, Persis ‘a eight years old now, Her father, H. P. Thacher, a olerk, who lives with his wife and daughter tn comfortable circumstances at No. 809 ‘West One Hundred and Forty-first atreet, has grown gray-halre; from worrying over the actions of his child. The mother, @ patient little woman, has pleaded and coaxed and punished in vain. Persig will steal. When Persia is sent to the grocery store she nover brings back the change. Her mother's pocketbook 1s never aufe when she {s !n the house, and the neigh- bors have learned that they must never leave money !n sight when she comes. The money given to her for Sunday- echool oollection never reaches the basket. But the child does not crave money to"| buy dolls and other playthings generally wanted by girls of her age. Persia wants to eat. The money she steals is spent for luncheons, fruit and candy, and the list of things Persis has been known to eat in one day would startle with just ordinary She does not her money tn drib- lets, If she manttens a dollar or more at once she eaves the nickles and dimes until there le a ttle pile of the: and then she st. for @ good tim Re- meal in a cafe at One cently shi First she Hundred and Twenty-fitth street. At Fifty-ninth street she devoured four pieces of ple, some cake and a glass of milk, and later at Twenty-third street bought” candy and fruit. This about ended. her money, and she told the ma- tron at the West Twentieth etreet police station she was starving. She was fed and when her father came and took her home she ate a porterhouse steak, It was then that her parents decided to take her to the Children’s Court. Her case will be decided on Friday. ———————— ACTOR SHOT AT ANOTHER. Jesiousy the Cause of Affray in a Boarding-House, Actuated by jealousy, Herbert Brown, an actor, of No, 38 West Forty-third street, fired a revolver last night at Robert Cummings, another actor, who boards at the same Brown, who had been on the road until yesterday, returned and, according to the police, Jocked Cummings out. ings broke in the door and was in his room when Brown came in and, Cummings says, in- sulted him. Detective. Walsh says Cummings climbed out on the roof and ran down through No. 36 West Forty-third street. The janitor of that place, thinking him. a burglar, qe chied: with him. He estab. Nshed his identity and made a complaint of felonious assault against Brown. Brown was held at the West Forty- seventh Street Station. He wanted is prefer a charge against Cummings, but was told to do so when he was ar- raigned In the morning. - sei CZAR PAR) NS STUDENTS, MOSCOW, Oct. 22.—The Czar has par. doned all students guilty of panmticipa- Hon in revolutionary street disturbances ere. Lambert's First Reason for Making Jewelry Is to Have the Best Jewelry in the World. The second reason—though it is not so important as the first—is to be able to supply it at prices which competitive re- tailers cannot approach. LAMBERT'’S reason for importing dia- monds is to be sure of their quality and to supply them at first cost. Neither the LAMBERT JEWELRY nor the LAMBERT DIAMONDS enter into competition with any except the ac- knowledged highest -grades. There is no such thing as cheap jewelry which isgood. Money may be saved, but it must be saved y dispensing with the middlemen’s profits. It wiil prove of both interest and profit to investigate the LAMBERT FACTORY and the LAMBERT STORE—enlarged but still under the same roof and with the same adamantine foundation—the LAMBERT GUARANTEE. : Guard Chains Which Show Their Quality in Each Separate Link. Have not grown so common but that they are noticcable. A chain is more or less an index to the character—an indication of personalepride or the lackof it. The ‘ two shown are fashioned with slides, a little larger than those sold last year—a tribute paid to a style set in Paris, where the sareer ones are greatly in vogue. The LAMBERT artists designed them and the LAMBERT artisans executed the designs —so we know they are 14-karat solid gold. Each chain is 48 inches long, with handsomely finished Etruscan gold slides set with diamonds. The one with the heart-shape slide, in which the diamond is set flush, costs $24. The other, witha circular slide, set also with a good diamond, costs $20, The Joint Product of Two Styles from Fifty The Artist and the Jeweler Solid Gold Vest Chains . Is seldom shown to May not give an adequate idea of the betteradvantage many styles with which our showcases are Pea Eee filled, but we have a larger assortment to 9= MINIATURE 4raw upon and can safely meet any require- y Yz BROOCHES, ment in vest chains, as well as all other “which remainapre- kinds of jewelry. BPS vailing style in Paris, London and New York. This Sone is 14-karat solid gold, beauti- fully set with 12 whole pearls and 12 small trefoil clusters of dia- monds.. No illustration can do it justice. The centre is to be filled with the miniature already in the brooch, or at small additional cost @ miniature it on ivory (in which work our artists are adept) may be substituted. Price $125.00. OPEN RYBNINGS UNTIL 7. BWA VASES AS ASAT AAS OLE ALA The two here pictured are 14-karat solid gold and hand made in every detail. Con- sidering their unquestioned quality, they are offered more reasonably than similar chains at any other store in New York. Your choice of either $19.00. Others from $12 to $60. . OPEN SATURDAY MANUFACTURING, NIGHTS 3d Avenue, Corner 58th St. UNTIL 10, 121st Street: _ Chatham Square: 2226 to 2234 Third Ave.} 193 to 205 Park Row, the harder society laughed Jouder grew Sts contempt Ments, until one migh Jim Dumps was harassed by the thought Of tons of coal that must be bought At prices which he felt would make It costly work to cook or bake. “You don’t cook ‘Force,’” they sald to him,, He bought; It made him “Sunny Jim.” Corner 1214st St. Chatham Square. \ EVERYTHING FOR HOUSEKEEPING. Everything Reliable. CARPETS, BEDDING, STOWES, RUGS. » Sale of Iron Beds. Pier Glass. 40x18 bevel mirror, also We have bought the entire factory calgary Alt: Tae output of these beds—double thick handsomely carved, castings, chills and rods—4 ft. and highly polished, base 4 ft. 6 in. sizes, and offer them at ¥ has Kentucky marble remarkably low prices. Fi REGULAR PRICE $13.50—REDUCED TO......$8.49 top. Reduced for this week only to With Extra Brass Rods, $19-REDUCED TO...$11.98 OTHER IRON BEDS from $3.90. ’ $8.90. “Old Reliable” Blankets $4.90 $5.90 $6.90. All Wool. © Bot uplifted by the ‘lal education that _ tTommyrot" Was worth not red to enjoy If. Blanche a None of the men in the cas PS aributed much to the gayety of ion. It was the fluffier sex that feored. Miss Blanche Ring, after her Dest song, owned the premises; before her last owned Fifth avenue. Her t contribution was a tough ballad— The Belle of Avenue A." She would ‘be singing it still if society could have \d ite way. ie __ better than a ‘ “don’t worry” club.) "Miss Margaret Hubbard Ayer, fresh ‘from her artistio triumphs tn Paris, weparkled bravely as a gay widow, han- "@lcapped by having the Hengler song- PP And-dancists for twin daughters, Many Be ithe avaitors had hoped to hear one be et the eighteenth century chansonettos ith which Miss Ayer sang herseif into rity in Europe. They were dis- ted. Miss Ayer was required to @nd although she frivoled ingly {t wouldn't hurt “Tommy- bit to introduce something in i lime of her own exotic art. Mra. ‘shouldn't waste such a strong Sweet, crisp flakes of wheat and malt. Oak Mantel Clocks, 8-Day Movement; Stands 22 inches high, yee Boott and Miss Drina De A Godsond—Those Days. (Galion Celery —_10-Inch fand capered fascinating, A Bo ay wage ois 8 tend in hme dai of costly coal and Righ-petced meat, Pitcher, ar aot tag nd}4-Tube Gas Radiators, ange enti s ks, of course, from Mrs, Os ee ON PS Sra Foun.” acl best cRYSTAL Lass, {Nickel, $2.98, Bronze, $2.48} of..0.. $1.98 z 2 a Gash dd to thelr A CASH OR in hee stone peste ears brags oy 4 suiting thelr own convenience, at i4 LIBERAL CREDIT : ; _ No extra charges of any kind, |: Li ni

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