The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1902, Page 7

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THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVE peor , OCTOBER 24, 1902: proved upon. J. H, Gilmour as the ht band had moments tt fori f be ‘OY OF LIVING” IS REALLY SD. KateCarew Classifies Mrs.Pat- | ! rick Campbell's New Play, from the German as a Soft- Coal Drama. MRS. CAMPBELL AS BEATA IN “THE JOY OF LIVING.” G cut onsum and R. —_— Dena. H Lady Biddolpn LONDON, HEROINE A PREACHY MATRON THEORIES ABOUT FOOD. She Has Gone Platonic, but Isn't Also a Few Facts on the Same Subject. led for * un be toms who Hyved Justice, although her sentiments are gumthinorful, @bout her than Pauls to prove t human stom: Heve that our sturdy ance she has less nonsense a Tanqueray, Mrs. Sorry for Her Past, and Hilbby We hear so much nowadays about health foods and hygienic living, ebout vegetarian pas wesning Soupe. Bue RUE ism and many other fads along the same self When He Finds Things Out. Nha. ry Restaurants may be found tn the ; cities where paattysorc fRor name is “Bayahta,” and to do her served and kK ts tn hh and argum lore Sbdamith, Iris: Bell fourscore yearn In robust hoatth, on ronst peot, p nutton must Nave been “Bayahta” is the n bor of beef, pork and mutton must hay rata grossly Ignorant of the laws of health. | Beenie: Our forefathers had other things to do hood. Booty vel tre, where Mrs. a@trength of act » food they ad common gense Aro ow in matters of dlet, | and a mixed die ains, fruit and meats is undoubtedly the best. As compared with grains and vegetables, meat furnishes the most nutriment tn a| highly concentrated form and {is digested | and assimilated more quickly than vege- tables and grains, Dr. Jullus Remmson on this subject says: | Nervous persons, people run down in health | and of low vitality should eat meat and | plenty of it, If the digestion is too feeble at first it may be easily corrected by the regu- lar use of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets after | each meal. Two of these excellent tablets No her prey k, produced nd nqueray dness of men. is made of aterner stuff. No baby act for her. A weaker character might have grasped at the late coal strike as an excuse for the black freckles on her fame and the murky atmosphere In which she moves, But she scorns ex- delivering still more sermons on the Joy of living, and taking digitalls drops for her heart. ‘The scandal ts lald bare by Baron kiss would cause her to be gathered ers long before the fifth act. is no necessity for Kissing, ars since Beata deceived her ouses. Moral soft coal is so much to Ih ber liking that she never wearles of | hushand—twelve years, I think. Twelve | Richard's political opponent. Beata and Seater at acres Poin he extolling it In long, long speeches. years to think It over and feel sorry | Richard confess, Beata’s husband | (0, fh three hourn, aad no matter how ry “The joy of living'—that is her text./in. Only Beata isn’t sorry. No, she'’s|*takes on,’ as mlght be expected. weak the stomach may be, no trouble will Bhe reverses the copybook maxim, and| glad. Her husband Js an awfully de-|quel is impossible for political reasons, SiN preaches “Be viclous and you will be|cent fellow, who worships her and be-|put Richard agrees to commit suicide, hi daeeianars taut eee happy.” Neves in her—but she’s glad. She has} gince some one must die, Beata deter- eBoy iaupply) the penuin aid dlaataeo neces: a yellow-haired daughter who cuddles |prettily at her feet and is golng to marry the son of mamma's old sweet- heart—but Beata 1s glad, glad, glad, and continues to make long speeches about {t, interrupted by heart epasms, and persuades her confiding, warm- hearted husband to give up his seat in the Reichstag to make room for her friend—now platonic only—Baron Rich- ard yon Voelkerlingk. mines that it shall be herself, and takes an overdose of digitalis at a political lunch party over which she presides in her atunningest frock. But before going out to die ehe preaches a final sermon on the joy of living, as if she feared that some one might suspect her of belated leanings toward the anthracite morals of con- ventional people. The way she puts it to her husband ts, “I feel that I had attained the har- mony that nature intended me to at- tain.’ The proper spelling of her namo ts Beata and in full she is the Countess von Kellinghausen. So, you see, the jolly aisterhood is climbing up the social Jadder. True to her aristocratic aMflla- tlons, Beata—pronounced at the Gar- » fen Theatre “Bayahta"—behaves her- self throughout like “the perfect lady." + Never a rude word or look escapes her, and you have to know something more than the three R's to realize what sort ef doctrine she Is really preaching. Lovers Gone Platonic. Oh, it's all very refired and discreet—| Don't make any mistake. It isn't @n the surface. There isn't even a kis8|poata’s fault that she and Richardt @ ithe whole play: refuse to write out his full name again— Not Even a Kiss, have “gone platonic,” ‘That 1s not your Perhaps it's just as well, for Beata's|Aunt Beata's style. It ts because heart is weak, and the audience {s tofd | Richard could not bearto deceive’ the that a sudden shock would kill her, |husband after becoming his friend. and @ repetition of that Aunt Jeannte|Beata can only relleve her feelings by sary to perfect digestion, and every form of indigestion will be overcome by thelr use. ‘That large class of people who come un- der the head of nervous dyspeptics should eat plenty of meat and insure {1 pin, diastase, fruit acids . actually perform the wo! digestion, Cheap cathartle medicines, querading under the name of dy: cures, are useless for indix 5 have ‘absolutely no effect upon the actual digestion of food. Dyspepsia in ali tts many forms ts simply | a failure of the stomach to digest food, ani the senslb to solve tho riddle and cure the 4: a ts to make daily use at meal time of a preperation lke Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, which tx indorsed by the medical profession and known to contain active digestive principles, ‘All druggists sell Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab- lets at 50c. for full treatment. jar and Company Clever. Mrs, Campbell reduced her audience to a very gulpy condition, Never did she look so superb or act with such exquisite and moving art. And the work of her company could hardly be im- in the Growth of the Lambert Jewelry Store Is Reflected the City’s Expansion. New Yorkers wear better jewelry now than they ever did before. They are in the midst of splendid business success. efined tastes have had an opportunity for natural growth The wherewithal to indulge these tastes has been and is piste The public has developed not only , into an appreciative mood, but into a mood of nice discrimination. It knows the good from the bad, the spurious jewelry from the rich elegance of the genuine—the cheap, defective diamond from the gem. It has learned, also, not to pay two prices where one will do—not to pay two or three intermediate profits when the highest grade articles may be purchased from the maker or importer. This has caused the steady and rapid growth of the LAMBERT STORE and the LAMBERT FACTORY. The store and factory—one building—have been lately enlarged. The stock is full of the very newest goods, and the factory is continually adding articles of new and exclusive designs at prices which are not approached for the finest jewelry made. Fair Specimens of Brooches Miniature Brooches with From the Lambert Assortment. Portraits on Ivory. Serve as samples of the public’s ability to buy the highest class jewelry at more rea- sonable prices than were thought of in for- mer years. The turtle brooch is of solid 14 karat gold, rose fin— ish, set with three fine diamonds and an olivine in each eye. Can be worn as a watch pin. The other brooch may $16.00 be used also as a pen- dant or watch pin. It is of floral design, handsomely finished in variegated enamel, ,, the most delicately beautiful effect possible. One fine diamond in centre. : New Design Solid Fourteen Karat Gold : Watch for Forty Dollars. Watches of this same weight case and with the same move- ment were sold extensively at the LAMBERT STORE last year for Forty Dollars, but the engraving on this newly designed case removes it at once from The growth of refinement is effectively expressed in the de- mand for these delicately painted miniature brooches, The frame is scroll work, 14 karat solid. gold, set with 12 finely selected dia- monds and 12 fine whole pearls, beautifully matched. It is the exclusive product of our artists and artisans. Price $150.00. Hand-Made Solid Vest Chain Sold According to Weight. The beauty of solid golds difficult to describe. Its presence is never doubted ina LAMBERT hand-made 14 karat solid gold vest chain. All of our chains answer the same descrip- tion—the difference being in style of link and weight. ‘This one is hand-made throughout and guaranteed. In different weights, at $15, ff, $18, $22, $30, $40 and $50. The size shown is a $30 chain, Seamless Wedding Rings With a Seamless Reputation. In the United States and Its Dependencies We Deliver Free. SPECIALISTS IN APPAREL FOR SUITS and OVERCOATS for MEN. An Exceptional Opportunity. We have exceptionally good apparel in this shop; it is better than the average good store has, and at least three times the variety. It’s not a promiscuous gathering—it’s our own work. Every garment represents the Saks standard for service, style and fit. It is endowed with specific character and individuality. The integral parts, particularly the unseen ones, are all they should be. As for the fabrics, you have never seen a more represen- tative exhibit anywhere. It includes all the newest, and not a few that are exclusive. To bring the truth of this home to you practically and forcibly, we will make a concession in the price; it's the first our clothing shop has offered. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY. MEN'S SUITS, single FALL OVERCOATS or double breasted Sack of tanor brown covert and Coats, or the new Chester- twill coatings, in box, pad- field and English Frock dock or surtout style, lin- - Walking Suits, with or — ings of silk, serge, and Ital- without flaps, in cheviots, ian cloth, exquisitely tailor- worsteds and cassimeres. ed and finished. Regular prices, $24.00, $25.00, $28.00 and $30.00, Your choice of either, Saturday, Eighteen Dollars. Saks & Company MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN. Herald Square, Broadway, 33d to 34th Street, THE CHILDREN’S SHOP. ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR. scope and purpose. radical an innovation. cost of the desired article. the following items will correct: BOYS’ CLOTHING. Two-piece Double Breasted Suits; a large assortment of patterns _in Cheviots and Cassimeres: sizes 8 to 16 years, Our usual price $5.00 and $5.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.50 Boys’ Overcoats of Oxford Frieze, cut extra long; sizes 8 to 16 years. Our usual price $6.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.90 Boys’ Knee Pants, in blue, black or mixed cheviots; sizes 3to 16 years. Our usual price 75c.. 50c Boys’ Laundered Shirts of fine percale, cut man-fashion; a large assortment of patterns. Our usual price $1.00, SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 50c. Boys’ Derby and Alpine Hats, new Winter shapes.,.$1.00 HATS FOR GIRLS, Some of the daintiest conceits imaginable have just found their place in this shop. Not hats in the style of those for grown-ups, but dise } tinctly to suit children’s faces. They are of velvet, felt and beaver, with appropriate trimmings. The school hats are not neglected, We also have suits and overcoats from $12.00 to $50.00; the inter-|cither. Here are a few that you may have with a generous reduce vening prices are well graduated. Full Dress and Tuxedo Suits} tion- from $15.00 to $45.00; Prince Albert Coats and Vests from $18.00 to $40.00. Men's high grade Winter Overcoats of Imported Blysian or Vicuna Coatings, black and newest mixtures, best of silk linings throughout, and cut on the latest 40, 42 and 45-inch models. Coats good enough for any gentleman to wear, atec+o.... 00 Suits for the young man; very choice new patterns in standard Cheviots or Tweeds, well lined and pro} ay. tailored; sizes 28 to 36e« FIFTH FLOOR. UNDERWEAR FOR MEN. No matter what your proportions may be or how fastidious your taste, you will not find the Saks} The growing feet of children are often distorted through ill-fitting, shop wanting. The popular woollen garments find|crudely made shoes. Better see that your children are shod with’ a place as well as the heavy silk or imported hy- gienic underwear. There is scarce a brand which you will not find with us. Then there is “SAKS- ONETTE,"” the underwear we have made espe- cially to fit the short and stout or the tall and thin men. The prices are right, too. This is a good example: t Men's heavy winter-weight natural wool Shirts or Drawers; shirts are made with ribbed bottom; both are soft and well finished. Our usual price, $1.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $1.00 MAIN FLOOR, THE SPORTING GOODS SHOP Has prepared to make things hum on Saturday. The interested folks will realize what we mean there is either in apparel or paraphernalia, that we cannot supply. They will also realize the greater purchas- ing power of their money, especially in the stand- ard articles, such as the following: HUNTING REQUISITES. The Lovell Single Barrel Shotgun, with automatic ejector, 12 or 16 gauge, 30 or 32 inch barrels; thoroughly guaranteed. Our usual price, $5.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.25 Arrow Smokeless Shells, 16 or 20 gauge, loaded with B. C. Powder, waterproofed; box of 25eece..sesseees SEC Canvas Hunting Coats, corduroy collar, side shell and full back game pockets, at eoee eoceseeeesess 9100 CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES. Korona, IIIa and Ila; double valve shutter, with bulb; rapid rectilinear lens; rack and pinion; reversible back; double plate~holder and sole leather carrying case; listed at $22.00. Our usual price, $12.50, SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $7.50 The Blair Wino Hawk Bye, 334x3}4, 1902 model, made to use Eastman or Blair perforated films; fitted with an achromatic lens, set focus, three diaphragms; improved three-speed shutter; handsomely finished in morocco leather, all metal parts nickeled; complete, with full in- structions; listed at $8.00. Special ate $3.75 Focussing Cloth, finest Trays, composition,5x7. 16c; serge-rubber esce.cees 4X5 oo cc,0cce cccc, cece Saks M. I. Developer for all Print Rollers, 4 in, metal, makes of paper,incapsule _ per bundle.s.seeeeee.. tubes; box of six.ee«s25¢ Saks guaranteed Plates for the staple articles. The same effect, indifferently shown in the Rcut, was never before attained in a watch case of this price. Solid 14-karat gold case, with choice of Waltham, Elgin or Lambert movement. Fully cov- ered by the LAMBERT GUARANTEE. EVENINGS TILL 7. =< om No other Wedding Rings ever manufactured have attained the same reputation for full-weight honesty and lasting quality as the LAMBERT SEAMLESS WEDDING RINGS. They are in their twenty-seventh year of high favor with ee the best women in the world. Made in the 18 Karat, LAMBERT FACTORY of purest, assayed $4 to $16, gold, without any intermediate profit, and guar— 22 Karat, anteed forever. $6 to $24. No charge for engraving, OPEN TO-MORROW NIGHT HR on UNTIL 10. ay LN ARAL OS tebe Saks combined 8 oz. Ton- clear, brilliant negatives, ing-- ee. +eI5¢ extra rapid, 4x5. Saks Metol-Hydro Developer, 80z+-+ seeceess FOR THE BOYS. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY. Peck & Snyder's concrete extension Roller Skates, Our usual price, 95c. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 65¢. Boys’ fancy striped all-wool Sweaters, Our usual price, $1.00. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 75 Asa GOLF CLUBS. Daklanioal Girls’ School Hats, simply but tastefully trimmed; plenty from which to choose. Our usual prices, $1.25 to $5.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 75¢- to $3.75 UNDERWEAR AND STOCKINGS. Boys’ and Girls’ fleeced-ribbed Shirts, Pantalettes and Drawers, colors natural or white .coee..seeeeseesees Boys’ heavy-weight fast black ribbed Cotton Stockings, double knees, heels and toes, all sizes. Our usual price 40c, SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 25c. Boys’ and Misses’ fast black Cotton Stockings, fine or corduroy ribbed, double knees, heels and toes. Our usual price 20c. per pair. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, 2 PAIRS FOR 25c. SHOES FOR THE YOUNG FOLKS. the Saks Shoe. They don’t cost any more than the others, SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY. Boys’ and Youths’ Shoes of Enamel, Patent Calf or Box Calf, neat and comfortable lasts, will give excellent SCIVICE wove coco races cveerererccacncecsecvccs secede Girls’ Shoes, either lace or button, medium or heavy sole, newest lasts, all sizes and widths..++.sseseee---- 91.75 Regularly $2.00 and $2.50. GIRLS’ REEFERS, DRESSES AND SKIRTS. Little garments that will make many new friends for this shop, That is why we have made such generous reductions in the prices, We have the imported models also; but these will interest every= one. Girls’ three-fourth Reefers, ‘man-o'-war" style, in navy blue pilot cloth, with boatswain’s insignia on sleeve, fin- ished with naval buttons, lined with red flannel, 6 to 14 years. Our usual price, $9.75. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $5.90 Girls’ Sailor Dresses, Navy and Blue Serge, trimmed with white braid and embroidered insignia on collar, shield and sleeves, finished with sailor's knot of black taffeta, 6 to 14 yrs. Our usual price $5.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.90 Girls' Dresses, in blue, brown or red Serge, prettily trimmed with braid and taffeta silk in contrasting colors, Gibson effect, lined throughout. Our usual price, $5.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.90 Girls’ Dresses, particularly stylish, in navy blue, brown or red Serge; Russian blouse effect, with yoke of fancy silk; trimmed with serpentine braid; 4 to 14 years. Our usual price, $7.00. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $4.90 Girls’ Separate Skirts, 2 styles, one in Navy Blue Cheviot, 7-gored flare, trimmed with fancy white stitch- ing and small buttons; the other style with yoke and panel effect, trimmed with straps of black taffeta, finished with crochet buttons; lengths 27 to 39 inches. Our usual price, $5.00. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, $3.25 SHOES FOR MEN. If you want a really good Shoe, one that possesses style, comfort and service, you want the Saks Shoe. There are three popular styles---the two-fifty, three- Each is a better shoe than any of which we know at their respective }f ” We will } make a price concession to convince you of this. }I fifty and five dollar kind. prices. Only actual wear can prove this. After that you will be glad to pay the usual cost. Men's Shoes of Enamel, Box Calf, Vici or Satin Calf, heavy soles, newest lasts, thoroughly well made. Our usual price $2.50. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY, $1.95 MAIN FLOOR, HALF HOSE FOR MEN. you wear a pair of these. ever wore. 200 dozen Hose for Men, lisle thread or cotton in an ex= tensive collection of very choice patterns, embracing ver= tical and horizontal stripes, embroidered silk figures in a variety of designs; also embroidered or plain open or black ingrain heavy-weight lisle thread; Our St. Andrews Golf Clubs, either wood or tron, strictly high price, 50c. to $1.00 Ps ee . - grade thoro fuaranteed club. Our usual price *- SPBCIAL FOR SATURDAY, 3 P. » FO! _ £000 SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, ae. MOR ee : aoc come SS = <== — eee There are still a few who do not understand its The mind is slow to grasp so. To concentrate every dress requisite for either boy or girl, from birth to its six- teenth year, on one floor is certainly an innovation, Some seem to think the convenience adds to the ff Thatis a fallacy which You may well afford to turn up your trousers if They are not the best we have, but they are the best at the price you||

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