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{BER 18, 19v2, MARIE DRESSLER STORK PAYS VISIT IN GREAT DANGER, TO PRIMA DONNA, Actress’s Physician Says She Is|Cradle Songs Will Engage Mme. in Very Serious. Condition and| Homer and Prevent Her Ap- THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, NOV ait : f SORNES PROM TATARE WHO RREGENTED THEM LAST’ NIGHT. “The Eternal City,” Kate Carew Says, Is a Very Highly Pol- Still Delirious. earance in Opera Premier ished Gold Brick, but the Po- —— - : ' ; lice Won’t Interfere. Marie Dressler, the actress, who {s suf-| \fme. Loulse Homer, leading Amer- fering from a relapse after an attack} ican contralto of the Metropolitan of typhoid fever, was reported bh's morn-| Opera Company, was cast for an Impor- Ing by Dr. Frauenthal to be in a very} tant role in the opening production of THE POPE VS. LOCOMOTIVE. serioux condition. the season next Monday evening, but “At night her temperature runs to 105] she will not be able to take part. Mme. and 106," said the doctor,” with @ slight] Homer will have all the opera she Many old people are 1 What the Big Mogul Is to “The Nine- moderation In the morning. Her great-| wants for some weeks to come at her ly all ‘ is est danger at present fs from heart fall-| summer home in West Chester, where | Nearly all are weak. ty and Nine” the Pontiff is to ure and hemorrhages, Because of a|the stork alighted yesterday and left Worst of all, is that feeling lack of nourishment, her heart may fail|a@ baby girl. at any moment. Again, the intestines]~ Mme, Homer is the wife of sidney] Of languor, of inability to act, may be perforated at any moment and] Homer, the composer. She did not go] of weariness at trifling exertion. Viola Allen's Razzle-Dazzle Melo- { drama—“Allahs!"” for Author. the hemorrhage would reault In death.|abroad this summer as usual,, but re- ‘ She t# 0 very sick woman and is recetv-| mained at her home in Pennsyivania.| Nothing will make the old At Forty-second street sind Seventh best of Ing f 1 will « (Wf eve’ ing the very best of care," While waiting for the Interesting event Avenue last night a large and thickly- At the Luctla, No. 16 Forty-ttth| which has Just transpired she learnea | YOUNG again, but Vinol gilded theatrical brick was sold by a street, where she Im, it fs sald that she | Several gitstng the’ coming season is to | prevent 99 out of 100 old people soft-spoken little man with ruddy beard {g still delirious and continues the repe-| "Her first child was born at, W el a at West titlon of her stage “business.” Chester a few years ago from feeling so old. and tresses trained Shakespeareanly— @ serious little man, a solemn little 4 man, as mild a mannered man as ever Won the confidence of a stranger from the farming districts, There won't be any trouble about tt, for, although Hall Caines look alike to me, hall gold-brick operators don't look alike to Mulberry street. Besides, there is no complainant. The audience that bought Mr. Caine's brick last night @loried in its bargain, and so will the @udiences that will buy it for many nights to come. All they demand for thelr money 1s that the gilding be lavish, and Mr, Caine {s the lavishest gilder of literary and dramatic bricks in this generation, A Razzle-Dnzsle Melodrama. Peel off the Hall Caine gilding and "The Eternal City” reveals Steelf as a razzle-dazzle melodrama, not half as exciting, or touching, or amusing as| Broadway and “The Ninety and Nine,” which you can| night. eee from the best seats in Fourteenth| Such Is the frony of theatrical des- street for a dollar. tiny! As for the writing—well, barring the Has a “Flat” Past. R circumstance that Mr. Caine's hero| As Lady Duncan Miss Sponge has a does not call his villain a “party,” | ‘flat’ past, whioh is inflated during the there's not a speech in “The Eternal] proceedings until she ts carried high City” that couldn’t be bettered from/into the air of’ suspicion and threat- e the rip-roaring sentimentalities of the|ened with a disastrous drop into the locomotive drama, outer world of soclal oblivion. What the locomotive ts to “The| Happily, however, @ signed confession Ninety and Nine,” what the pump was} of her indiscretion saves her a fateful to Mr. Vincent Crummiles, just that {s|finish and she is permitted to go in the Pope to Mr, Hall Caine. Every| peace and marry a trusting old codger ” melodrama must have its sensation.| who has more than enough money t+ “The Bternal City” has a terribly black | pay the rent for the rest of their days, villain, a terribly® white hero and a| There wouldn't have been so much terribly persecuted heroine, but that 1s|trouble {f Lady Duncan hadn't cast goo- (not enough, It is necessary to be|goo eyes at Jack Frere, otherwise Mr. talked about, How? Aha! The Pope!| Faversham, and helped a trio of ham- Brilliant thought! For Fourteenth|mer-swinging old women to try to street, a mogul locomotive in a forest}make it appear that innocent Miss fire; for uptown, the Pope in the|Marr was the—ahem!—lady who shared Vatican! the historical flat with naughty Jim WME CHILL BECOMES a ILL a wil ake line kif Mie. ; F; ; se it as directed w! Etta Butler Now Has Typhoid, | “Whitlock’s Folly,” Known Later right away. and Mabel Bouton May Go| 8 Casanova Mansion, Sold religve thelr lameuaa rt West. to Plaster Syndicate. brighten their spirits. at does thie D ester e ’t blame the o i Tae The lst of actresses under medical] The mutability of all things ts !lus- treatment In still, Inoreasing and now| trated by; the announcement that the| being blue and cross, Marle Cahtli's namo ts added to the list |!FFeverent hand of commerce will sweep| home a bottle of Vinol. of unfortunates. It Js a cage of poison. | ‘fom existence one of the best known| ee » ’ Ing in the instance of the comedienne in |!atdmarks of the Bronx, for the Cas- , there: was great fear for her life, bellum festivities of cotton kings and , er the rendezvous of Cuban fillbus- 6th AVE. ane st The actress took dinner with ner}! a abehgheces Sos oti P d brother, eat! ern nitions 0 Sormicer bel eel ae tne Cte war, 1s to disappear to make room tor | Mail Orders Supplied, $1 por Bottle, Exess taken violently 11 and a physician was|® Plaster mill. summoned. Miss Cahill suffered worse | Th® homestead was originally the} Dp, * | f than her mother and brother. It wae| Property of the Whitlock family. It Dr. David Kennedy's a |several hours before she was pronouneeq | descended to Benjamin M. Whitlock, a Pepe and out of danger, Df. H. L Constable say-| cotton merchant with large Interests in EDY ete, Fortieth street last Re raubered ta the Gouth. At the close of the clvit ae ee red from ptomaine | 7a Whitlock, whose fortune was lost, | ares meet or oat Chicago Youth Carries Chorus) yr ie verca and her brother sata] ¥a# forced to sell the mansion with th ; ; lobst acres of land about It Girl Up Masonic Temple|" rns “sree patter, Ie, another “orig |Lecame @ tangled thick . : “ he name then given the woman on ‘the sick lst, @he fe in| Folly" was t Stairs to Prove His Love. Roosevelt Hospital seriously 1 with | house. typhoid fever. She was with the ‘Lap-|_Jt Was afterward bought by Senor yp! ever. anova, chief of a band of Cuban ii ides et erty Bella” company last year and was| patriots, “at pubile auction. “He, filled THE MAG CHICAGO, Nov. 18.—Willlam Haynes.) renearsing a part for the coming pro-|the wine chambers with, rifles and gun- os an athletic student of the Chicago Unl-|quotion of “A New Clown” when taken |ROWder and fitted out’ ships for the versity, does not think very highly of | 41). a Oban Ter olar on ear ben Oats the feat of Jean Gaussin in “Sapho." Miss Mabel Bouton, who has been ili|the house was again filled with revolu- kidney, liver or blood trou- bies, Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Greaves before he married the large He has outdone the love-sick French- of tuberculosis at Manhattan Hospital | 0 tionists, but when war was declared inst by the United States Da Barry Topserturveyed. | iaay who has to walt for the sporting | But what to do with him? Aha, lextra to find out just what a “cut-up" | again! Make him the father of the har-|h uneq to be, assed hero, There's a “$itugtion’! and : a half! Let Fourteenth’ street pale with POG) SEAM SR MING CES: anya! When Mrs. Greaves gets wind of the It fs Du Barry topseyturveyed The |8lngs-on before she took a hand in hunted and wounded revoiutionist takes |the same she rummages through Jim- refuge from his enemies and is put to|mle’s desk and finds a bundle of sen- bed. Not by Du Barry, but by the Su-|fimental | letters from “Wang” to Preme Pontiff. So original!’ ‘These letters are connected with Miss Nor Is that the only reminiscent inct-| Marr, who in time confesses that sho dent in “The Eternal City." Barly in] Was “Wang. and that Jimmie vsed to the play Miss Viola Allen performs a/that she formerly lived in Victoria emashing feat that vividly recalls Mal-|street,, where this self-same fat waa ‘ @anado in “Iris.” She 4s a sculptor poche lesen sie ‘ lady, and has mace a bust of the fugi- atens to do serious dam- ‘ tive hero, and when the wicked Baron']age to the engagement of Miss Marr tries to photograph It for the romues'/ Ad Jt a tay etineart by Teatalig gallery—bviff, ker-smash, and she has it|/from Jimmie's former valet that Lady man by & good many filghts of stairs,|on Blackwell's Island, will be taken to not ot speak of a few filghts of fancy,| Flower Hospital to-d: the benefit at | Spain. property was sold to a and if he did fall unconscious at the top| Mrs. Osborn’s playhouse having raised real esta cate, from which it has, of the last fight that does not prove Sufolent funds! “When strong enough now passed Into the hands of the pro- that faint heart ne'er won fair lady, |* CU as sectors te The Sapho in this case is Myrtle Vance, a‘dimpled chorus girl with whom Haynes had fallen desperately in love. “Carry me up the stairs of the Ma- sonic Temple, from the first to the nine- teenth story," she said, “If I do will you marry me?’ asked Haynes, “Sure,” repiled the dimpled one. Haynes was privileged to have four five-minute rests, no more. He breathed on the fourth, tenth, fourteenth and sixteenth floors and fell in a faint on the nineteenth, Myrtle stroked his hair ova left America and died in Thi Popular Price Suits and Overcoats. Do you want the snap, style and fit in your suit or overcoat at a popular price? There is but one place you can get it—-the Saks “Shop. We don’t buy apparel indiscriminately and sew our label down and out before you could say Dun a mee geen a rs SE au de came to, and they came down in “Jack Robingon!"" rt ld at large and the large ‘BH vel ma , 7 But f you refrain trom peeling the|jady in'particular, Tete disclosed THA | ot stoniatn and, Virginia Carvel, the|Mona, Dumont exhmuea mas ameroor tm wy ell 40 and she will marry in it; every Saks garment is our own handicraft. Do you see x silding off the brick you will be greatly | Miss Marr lived in the Relghborhace, | erence etcin ia, clever wreuent ee | eee ene pant ited | bla nine toot bate cl rag f cl disocd hard .- uplifted by the thought that you are| but wi : and (brings ‘the play to an agreeable | “Xn entertaining "vaudevie. bil was | SAW MAN?S FACE AT WINDOW. the advantage of that t took a lot of cleverness and g witnessing a profound and world- M Lewis seer: ne Ce ds waste dignified) analole: given at-Atlantle Garden. | . b ki b fi ald offer ae eter a el for Hxte ieee tirring work by the Sage of the Isle of| Jeffreys Lewis was the large lady— 4 ——_—_—_ eae i efore we co! Man, Nie ts ENatogranned with finger | Mrs. Jim Greaves—and she was Ilkewlse pare ee EEE i Wistepnes THE “STAYING” SHOW. |So Pulase Called for Help and Cap- thin ing y PP. “the hit of the ple Her comic anger ducer than an actor, Miss Charlotte| Familiar attractions which began tured Would-Be Burglar. money than most shops. But that was the principle upon which ico brow itor fevers mesesine) GUduw hoes bwoer jon, made up the) Walker caught the spirit of her role|fresh weeks were Mrs, Carter. in “Du . Mecsas amous aii a out gah apart ty ter “gta aa Spe Reh arta ‘wat the bevy nh Weber € Fieldse, Manel G fs lower Fulton ateet” police” station we founded our business. ‘To give you more value for less money, Meare Uplagc Cea UTGeeet tne Fear she, ahve promise ot coming Into See eel uphalee Hopper ‘ougee de 1h bursary a the nome of sone | Palas, than you have been accustomed to getting. And we have succeeded. Beri ycinamnvaccielscenerrmonsinnt snQo the backsroud by ‘feminine, shed, | abe gy BY Joseph Brennan, Fnomas |Party... Hrineess; “A Chinese, Honey-liiveg at No, 165 Jay street, Brooklyn, Prove it? Gladly. To-morrow we will have four large windows nearly 20 arlletic an that used by Duse (9 the donilata to have a tooth piled |Raveactorg see ney Competent char~ | herioek, | Holmes”, Henicksrhnoker: | Pulase was awakennd early to-day by in our shop devoted to that. The first is the twelve-fifty suit and at the same theatre, probably coat abut inter he brightened up and put con. jie appiaise at Wallack's last night a siderable 8; is Ww 9 indicates that New ork's Sout great deal more money, and In a cee all the curtain calls unto himself and| colony predominated in the audien way gives a satisfactory glimpse of] Miss Davis until the audience plainiy|In a speech before the curtain Mr modern Rome. And the actors are|indicated they wanted Miss Lewis to; Hackett referred to the Independent floor of his home, and he saw a man's face at the window. The fellow was| trying to force the catch, and Pulase| an to a front window and called for overcoat argument; the second, fifteen; the third, twenty; the © fourth carries c8nviction at twenty-five dollars. Each is the rep- esent,"" Ga t understand the favor In which she Wa8/theatre movement and declared that raicart Piesaelet ee Peieni haadal the stein Hels. pavie, the new leading woman| Rext feason Mrs. Fiske, Miss Crosman, pdison Ral help. | f its own worth, and e isa Davis. mself and’ ot control : : very big black type. Miss Allen has alwho has come over from England. 1n-| theatre intevers mieten sclty ey innthe suntan t ‘enn’ HINGE |, Rolteoman ta yes heard the alarm and resentative of its class---a mute argument of i ’ very Important finger in the ple, for) Sant con Ri Mig rather. tall, and | county pea telte Mrs Osborne ouse; "A Country | Ina hallway of No. 22 Fine atreet, he the advanta ‘es! of specialization in apparel. the heroine was made over into a strict- | MISS, ith a rofreshing, girlish charm ; > Girl,” Daly's : and Ning" | found Willlams. was taken to the | the a P {| slender, W ri a "| TO-NIGHT'S ORATORIO. Academy of Music; Bos‘vck’s animal a aa! ° cl | ly proper young woman because th's|whieh. impresses one as wholly un: station-house, where “two watches, a | ening rater has resolved never, Studiea, The Oratorio Society of New York | Show, St. Nicholas Garden, woman's necklace and a allver butter | Fore asnid fo play ake bl GIA HOE A Disngreeable Part, wii ingugurate {ts third season to- a Knife Were found tn his pockets, Pu- At $12.50. } aero tte In Juatice to Hall Caine lei] -Miss Spong id all that could be done| night at Carnegie Hall with a rendition) IN HARLEM, Jago Identined him as the man he had | s| ae age parts, In jus all Calne lety Msthne disagreeable role of Lady Dun-|of Mendelssohn's “St, Paul.” ‘Che so-| John Drew, in “The Mummy and the dow. 's S her single‘or double breasted, of the newest patterns, “a ee | {t be recorded that It doesn't make the|®0 (intr “who. helped score. on the| lotsis will be Anton Van Rooy, Shanna Humming Bird,’ drew a fashionable au- —- Men's Suits, either single-or double breasted, rit oo { least difference to his melodrama | feminine side of the ledger, were iis. | Cummings, Jatherine Pelton. Ellison qience to the Harlem Opera-House. er Named. in Cheviot Mixtures, Black Thibet, or rough surface Suitings. wk | Mrs. jekson, Annie! Van Hoose, Albert olski and Rob- 4 > ; muainee tue parneaiiied ian) Heldpettee Rae Ana neuen Lowell ert Hosea’ Me Frank Damrosen wii Geurge W. Monroe, in “The Doings of wr not. ‘The comedy, though It has many| conduct. ‘To-morrow night the Metzler Mrs. Dooley,” had an uproarious t has appointed Fernand Du _ A great deal of speechifying falls to|pright lines and some Ingenious situa-| Symphony concerts will be Inauguarted at the West End Theatre. Prof. Con-| yart y to be Swiss Minister at| ~ Donna Roma’s lot, and Miss Allen per-/tions, ts a. BS too TnRORAS pantial r irae te Pe Ossip Gabrielowitsch ot amend continued {ts concerts at} Washington, Mr, Du Martheray is now) ° v yhat m! e e solols' he st, sorataryvotile Mee Gistee ot RAVIRE, Wally; ee NEW BILLS ELSEWHERE. BROOKLYN BILLS. i MADE A TURN OVER. Becker al “Be careful what neighborhood you| Piquant Anna Held, with her Sadie, Joseph Jefferson played “Rip Van Switzerland, Nov. 18.-he Men's Overcoats, 40 and 45 inch, Box style, of good grade Black or ; Oxford Frieze. so At $15.00. At $20.00 At $25.00 Men's Suits, single or | Men's Suits for business Men's Suits, loose or | Bund “Gates Ajar’’ and other triumphs of the | ,oye into—especially If you happen tol girls in new gowns and “The Little! Winkle” ¢ large audience at th Any One Can Du It, ; 5 8 Q large audience at the ke " florist’s art handed to her over the foot-|fes woman. Duchess" dreeses and dashler than! Montauk and will be seen in other plays double breasted; an ex- or semi-dress of high close tng Sock Costes %} Ughts and smiling over them’ with ie ” ever, began a two-wesks' engagement ‘during the week. “Hoodman Bilnd"| 4 principal in a public school in t single or double breasted; Sweet and startled emotion. HACKETT IN “THE CRISIS. abithe| Grandlonerk: House doseoh Wvetres ney lvediau the Columb! ceptional assortment ol grade Cheviot or Tweed also the new Chesterfield be familiar to many school teachers. MRS. NATION ON THE STAGE.| “The nara work of the schoolroom Sey was so wearing that I was complete- rx with Burlesque Company |)y worn out and could barely walk styles and fabrics, which Mixtures, pure Worsteds and English Walking include Cassimere and Frock Coats. The ma- Cheviot Mixtures, Thibet of neat patterns, black or terials are Imported and eursed with care and shrilinena, Lasking \hidramatio situations (i¢ ie fall | wes: the aiken and Says (IMell's No Joke,” home at night, and at other times I! and Rough Serge, in blue blue Thibets, and the Domestic Tweeds and aeTOarek Ge Polleville: wae hand: | nue Theatre.—“Not Gulity" Is the namo; SPRINGFIELD, Mass., 13] Was so nervous that It was with and black. These are rough, unshorn suiting Scotch Suitings; also Some villainy with a high polish, and|of atmosphere, The stage pictures are| 200 Keynote of the melodrama at the | + Methane oes ‘a-|much difficulty I ate or slept. I at-| ‘ 7 i Henry «Harmon did a clever piste of admirable and the production finished to| Blar—"Prince of ‘Taiters Isa new | “Ji0ll ts no Joke.” sald Mrs. Carre Na- jill Caley | ote oe Bape OT ate) well tailored and well fit- fabrics, Worsteds and smooth Morgan's ¥. M. ©, A. Personality.| Winston Churchill's roe Scul ; ie Hemert played . ir, Edward Morgan threw. his wi-|%°0nd book play presented last evening | o | role ‘of the Kat Y. M.C. A, personality Into tne |to a Broadway audience, affords ilttie| “The New Magdalen % hero's part, and when it came to curting| scope for James K. Hackett's talenta, the sadly misunderstood» heroine, be! put it will fill his managerial coffers.' Smith O'Brien, | } Ohio had a food experience that will | | | i POR Pe Xe His apraaranee sea gte | play Hes In the daring, clever aud per-| Sotropotie.—Al. Reeves's COMPANY HAVE At her description of the etern’! tormeat| be Necessary to quit my profession Men's Overcoats of bet- en's Vvercoats in 8f tailoring 1s of the best. i Suggested an Eden Musee triumph in| {clly falr manner ann! us eae naval Show | Which she averred awalted scoffers. or get some food that would sustain | ter grade Cheviot and almost endless variety of | Men's Overcoats, Sur= | wax of ‘the present Pope, But, of | ments that div RESP ANG POUL AD moved| Mrs, Nation ma Ty nerves, Frieze Coatings in black, rough and smooth surface _ tout, Box, or loose strap~ “Fortunately enough, at this junc- ture I discovered Grape-Nuts and am/ arse, that waa accidental—as Mr.| led to unhappy war are presented. It . he aE ‘i te Ww! up to the New York Theatré for a | member of the faine If it wasnt. Why, the programme) thyes one's breath away to hear the weak, of evening and afternoon mite Barth" burle ped back Greatcoats of Cambridge or Oxford fabrics, cut in the new Scotch plaid, embracing Mixtures. Well tailored he author has’ placed the ac- turalot which ts.a ahoris of UW Bays, 'T tion of the play In the future, hense no] elegant Col, Carvel speak of Abraham | formances. : 1 very grateful that I did. After using ; is | aidens In much abbreviated +k rts y | Surtout, 42 and 45 inch . . ersonal reference of any kind. ix in-| Lincoln as “poor white traeh,” but in mainte more respect for the man be.{the food for a month I felt decidedly d lined; cut to suit th UrtQu Ne all that is new, both in $33 nded'—so that Hall Caine has derome ath Judge Whipple 4s glor!.| VAUDEVILLE OPENING. ANC hartnan: forviheeohuroneeolne Panew. | PRUE pieiene thie: Bere DESK SN Be ines | Qotale Girged and dedale ‘Gardiner in AUMOS Res AI ure NS RERIET ADC Ike o Dew. Bia Tunearrncted figure and taste of most Box Coat, and long 50- fabrics and style, in over~ ) @ prophet as well as a sage. tain from the grave. The sluggish feel for them, ahd thore’s f Plat wats " a; | ing, headache and nervous spells any man. headliners at Keith’ b have all left me and I feel young and} pa hit with his yarns and songs at Pas- rt active. | tor's.—Proctor’s Theatres: Minnie 5 { can better concentrate my mind| Mr, Caine took his cu ike a Nittle| fying him, Mr, Churchill ts of the post- man, with hia hand on his hi here=| bellum generation, and, though unques- 'D._ Ww ea spevaudience Cede Allah-l| tlonably with the North in sympath; a i prostrated itself several times. he learned the intimate story of the war , KATE CAREW. |in the home of a gentleman who was inch Greatcoats. garments for Men. . Saks & Company “The Soubrette and the Cop,” wero! « h . , the flower of Southern chivalry. It fs a upon my work, because my nerver ReMONDS “IMPRUDENCE.” cause for regret that this nobleman, the Eh Dike v presented by 6 i have been strengthened and eneray| lust to think of Hilda Spong Col. Brinsmade of the novel, does not art and company caught on’ I ES MOINES, Nov 18.—Congressman| hag returned, and I take Interest in tig up her skirts trom the scot of “Iris” | appear in the dramatization. Dane ees only a Farmer's’ Hull has announced that be will recom-|{my work, which before seemed a SPECIALISTS IN APPAREL FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN, t wherein ehe was a good-hearted, re-| ‘Though a war play in every line. The | Fifty-eighth erect house, mend the appointment of Richard P.| phurden. it A Texas fe sevtadle Iady—to chase over from the | Crisis deals less with gunpowder and! Steer” chased away the ‘diues' of Clarkson for the position of United| “1 use Grape-Nuts every day, be- Broadway, 33d to 34th Strect, Criterion to the Empire and run plump {swashbuckling than with the social’ fa einticc: pact of the aaraeale Guy, States Pension Agent for the Des! cause it is the best food for my’ sys- | X r ts of: that divided in Newark.—Ross and Fenton, who ap-| Moines district, tem, has restored my healt red in an amusing travesty were | Mr. Clarkson {s a brother of James! am correspondingly gratefu me} of i at Hurtig @& 9 Clarkson, Collector of the- Port’ of Tea, "the wleard, Con: New York, and was for years editor of] 100 by Postun Co., Battle Creek, ‘at ‘the Eden Misee.— The Lowa State Register, Mie!