The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1905, Page 9

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A | ) : The Ryvemi ‘OWDY Mra, Warren has pointed 90 many morals this eventful ‘week that I think she might be used to adorn a tale, The tale, with your permission, ie of “the moral lesson,” Wome bia gesines typifies {t may not look the part; her tourth-net face may not match her first-act clothes. But, of course, we can't expect her to change Mer face; if that were possible we would all be busy at the same job! All that she that sop which playwrights delight to throw tothe pink con- can do, poor thing, 1s to bask in the chastening light of tho calcium and science. These expedient gentlemen are always ready to give look as much like an angel as the circumstances will permit, ffitty-soven varietics of newer to the question “Why, man of morals—tell Zaza is a shining example of that form of regeneration, When her why?” Tho real answer is that “the moral jesson” is usually set up as lover returns to the bosom of his family, which he has shamefully neg- protection against publio condemmation. Send the public home in a vir- tected for three acts, Zaza betakes herself to a holy music hall and beconms State of mind and it goes to bed like w good littlé child, “But “the moral lesson” must not be too strong. It must be vidlet- not dark red, Sometimes, when it 1s too much off-color, it galls out ‘fhe police. The mob follows, and there is @ great hullabaloo, We might take the liberty of substituting “New York” for “Britivh” 4when Macaulay says, “We know of no 80 ridiculous as the British public in ‘one of its periodical fits ot’ morality.”, The fits thrown on these fhocndfduie are of\én, nioré dreadful than tho cause of them, Words whfch ; better off ini the dictionary are dragged out and given an odorous airing, aly posed pelesboot?* ruminated an estimable young woman, putting week, 01 this “I never isdown © paper’ and picking up a dictionary, ono day th ‘fnew whet thatword meant before. ‘his agitation over ‘Mrs, Warren's Profession’ has at least added an- ther word to my vocabulary.” But Rhat's another story, or another moral » Messon, na you Iike, Be “nor Tesson” of the dubi- ‘gous drama is what I started to talk bout. In mine cases out of ten it is ragged in by the hair, The play~ wright is never without it, He keeps it on fce.for the last act, “There !” he says with virtuous generoe Mity as he trots it out, The lady who TABLE CLOTH GET ANEW , TABLE-0¢0RW” 86 MAUDE ADAMS will open audience asses the redekins, who are M her New ‘York season at th® friends of Pan. The children after Wmpire Theatre on Monday evén- a while think they, should return to ing in J. M. Barrie's fairy fantasy their parents, and the redskins agree “Peter Pan,” She will appear a8 th® | to escort them across the border. But boy. who wouldn't grow up and WhO | the pirates, led by Hook, who ts an arch Mie th the’ Never Never Land. with @!l | enemy of Peter, attack the IndJang and ¢ the other lost children untfl he came/ drive them away, so that when the flying into the window of a nursery | ohiidren come up out of the cave they looking for his shadow, whitch had been | arp captured and curried to the pirate eut off by the sudden closing of the! sloop, Peter comes to the rescue, and window while he was listening to Mrs.) combat ensues end the pirates are Darling telling a story to her three | thrown Into the ee oy the valiant obfidren, He awakens Wendy, the little | member of Peter's band. Hook, the itl of the family, and she finds his/ chief pirate, is always pursued by 4 shadow and sews !t to him. Ee dances | crocodile which, having eaten one of with glee and tells Wendy all about his | his arms, wants the other, and as the band of fairies. The children want to| crocodile nears the sloop Peter wins In see the Never Never Land. He teaches |q hend-to-hand/combat with Hook and them to fly, and off they all go. The |throwa him into the sea. Then the ‘pext scene Is in Never Never Land, | children start for home and find tho whore Peter's band ts waiting for his | window open just as they left It when retum. Mero Wendy and the ebtkiren | they flew away, Their parents are over- come, and the band builds her a house | joyed at their return, , Wendy begs end she promises to be tholr Mttle | Peter to stay, but the old desire to mother and tuck them tn bed at night |mever grow up and to always be a boy and tell them stories, Then they all go | is predomioant, and he goes back to his down to Peter's house, while above the By Nixola Greeley-Smith. yes RB. ZOOK, Mayor of Ballard, wherever that may be-the clue to Its location Mes in the fact that the despatch concerning him comea from Seattle—has broker fs engagement to the>Young woman of his chotee bechuse she refused to allow him to lumpest her: Jungs for tuborculosts germs, by means of the X-my, and is now being sued by her for breach of promise, * Her. name Js Rosena Grover, Remembur ft, for she thay be oir next candidate for the Hal of Fame and; dwell -with the select company of Frances Willard and the other famous ladies here, whose fameg T cannot redlnk it dmestyy'to she ‘cabnione of Ait Sex. Bhe sacrificed her inclination to preserve the sacred pig-in-a- pitt G ° y of courtship. 7 oat suppose she Peataliewed Ber, lunge: 20 be exashined Wy Mr. ook! Ha been eendoldened straightway to osk her to let Bim pull her’ It It gould come off, or examine her feoth to determine if chey bas @ preveder im no Knowledge of the Disraeli dictum ther eke ‘encdiirage otter engaged men to slmilar to eo the bride until voll ‘ner features & sanctified prima donna, Art is pure—perhaps that's “the house In the top of the trees, ang | Wednesday afternoon-and Friday even, mR al lesson,” Or perhaps it is “There's a hole in the tabie-cloth—get a new table-gloth!” It all depends on the point of view! ‘ Camilie coughs herself into forgiveness, and, we hope, into Heaven! A ing. At the other performances, “The Merchant of Venice" will be given. Raymond Hitchcock in “Rasy Daw- Wendy comes 0 gee him once a year just to do his leaning. t house-cl YRC The Castno Theatro will reopen to- | son will bo at the Grand Opera-House, | might with Eddie Foy in “The Kael and! at proctor's Fifth Avenue Theatre the Girl,” an English musical comedy | Amelia Bingham and the stock com- by Seymour Hicks, with music by Ivan) pany will play in “Fedora.” Caryl. The company includes Georgia) at the Murray Hill ‘Theatre “The Rawlitons Viclbtce Hate Maite Meu) Ninety and Nine” will be the attrac- Victor Morley, Bernard Dyllyn and | Uon, W. HL. Denny. “Breaking Into Society,” with the ee aha Four Mortons, wijl be seen at the Fourteenth Street Theatre. On Thursday afternoon, at the Casino, Elfie Fay will appear at the Amori- Miss Alice Nielsen will make her American debut as a concert ainger in| can In “The Helle of Avente A." Donizetti's "Don Pasquale.” ‘The Harlem Opera-house will hayo he ed Inly Glaser in “Dolly Dollars.” At Daiy's @ new vemion of “The! “zost in a Big City” will be the Catch of the Season,” in which Miss Y is starring, will be given ttraction at the Third Avenue Theatre. Eine Ma’ begrteed Monday eventing. “Dangers to Working Girls" will be 4 Fovealed at the Thalia, "9 At the Garden Theatre Robert Man- tell will appear as Hamlet on Monday y for ttl N Ie, Math “Shoth® Hiussel wil pity Opkoh: ee On evening Ben Greet will present “Much Ado About Nothing’ at Mondelseohn Hall, It will be repeated Santley and Adams in " ors a Broker will beat’ the Mketopolis ea Yorkville Theatre Miss Anne sialon ‘Masiova. in ols me and Ty" will be the attrac- Me, ‘et a 4 “The” burlesgue shows will be Phil, | the first, Please answer my question, All perplexed young people can ob- B, L., Bay Shore, expert advice on thelr tangled Quit thinking about young men at all for the next three years, You are uch too young to think of love, Try im youreelt, and become an in- telligent, attractive woman, He Is a Married Men, bad Does Not Care For Her.’ “it ve! waa reg oe ee Css wppear to he ts altogether a new eoquaintance, Gan He Live on $50 Per? | _ BETTY’S BALM FOR LOVERS. ° ry: ‘ Of eighteen and Seen a t eix monthe ana ferred her to you, Ho ie @ very con- Where Is the Hidden Steed? No i Sad Ne i oop Saturday Ev hacking cough amd plonty of white powder work wonders of salvation. The feline Nethergole, you may remember, made the affair as a color scheme. In the first act she dressed Camille in pink to show she was not as red as she was painted, Armand and Jove brought her out in blue, and finally white was used to show the new-born purity of the ead, unhealthy lady, There you had your “moral lesson" in colors, which is the next best thing to having it in capsules, The town rushed to court to find “the moral lesson” of “Sapho,” and then went back to Wallack's to see a foolish young man carry it up a stair caso almost as winding as the lady's career, It was only in Montreal that “the moral lesson" of Rejane’s plays was questioned. Anything goes in New York when it's French. There is a limit to the understanding of the police, If the dramatic critic of the force saw “Le Passerelle,” for instance, he probably concluded it's a wise man who knows his own wife, and, swinging his club Instead of lising it as a bludgeon, let it go at that. Mme. Charlotte Wiehe, at the Vaudeville The- atre two years ago, also said what she pleased in French, “The Wife Without a Smile” escaped with her doll, because the doll TP BOP GEE ea rat Ahem was on Its good behavior, “The Notorious Mra, Ebbsmith” Was condoned because “her sex found her oui.” Morality was satisfied when the luxury- loving Iris was driven into the street with her gilded furniture broken bo- hind her, Give the public gilt with gulit, and it is seldom shocked, Paint a thing prettily, “and unawares Morality expires.” oP It is only in the cheaper theatres that vice dares to come out in {ts true coloré, Every crime in the calendar may be crowded into a sensational melodrama, without interference from the police, Some of these pieces are veritable schools of crime, and they are offered to audiences of a peculiarly impress{@mable character. Yet I have never heard of a single one of than being suppressed. Year by year they grow worse, more daring, more dan- at the Circle, | Idalens Cotton, Staley and Birbeck, Mr. Sheridan's Ls A Sports the Crackerjacks at the Dewey, and the /and Mrs. Howard Truesdell and com- | European Sensations at the Gotham. | pany, Billy Van, Clifford and Burke, To-morrow evening the third of Vic- | Cabaret's Canine Wonders, John Eberly | tor Herbert's orchestra concerts will bo | and others, given at the Majestic Theatre. The] Josephine Col foloist will be 'T, Humbird Dufty. “iriday, the en Nella. er nee aid Houdiu, the handcuff king, will be the VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. headliners at the Alhambra. Others Williams and Walker continue th head | will bo Fred Niblo, Pat Rooney and the Dill at Hammerstein's Victoria. bis hase Boe ry Bk dD. Brvap fae Another? headliner is Miss Anna Laugh- : nar) merican Girls, itn, formerly of “The Wiaard of Om" | yiittut Duan will return to, vaude- Others will be Searl and Violet Allen | Messenger Boy, ler, Abdul Kader and his th: and company, Ward and Curran, in | M4 a ree “Phe Terrible Judge;” the Peschkott | comenn sre” Ets trie comedy troupe of Russian danoers, the Three | Munroe, Louls MoCord ‘and company, Camaras and Will R, Rogers. and Stuart Barnes will be others, Proctor’s Theatres—James T, Powers cony Paster bill will include Chris {fn “Dreaming will be the headliner at | Benno label Re Susle Lavine. Tiska and” xine ine the Twenty-third street house. Other | flawking, Irene Franklin. the Delmar attraotions will be “A Night in an Ens | 7 ‘others, Charles Schroeder ana Daisy lish Musto Hall,” John Hyams and | Pptne. fate Malniyre, Ada Overton, Walken ped ox, win head the Dill at Hur. mn Cade’ ond Errol, the Red Ra: Sompahy nde erro The Karayanze. troupe ie "0 eerobats will be the feature at the ‘At Atlant Garden the thy ni arden Barr an Wilson ana ) the nd the uartet i the Tan- ths te Hilti Street The- atre By eles Russell, James J, [Corbett Rice and Prevost.” Clayton White and Marie Stuart in “Paris,” and others, At the One Hundred and Twen- ty-fii street howe ‘The Banker's ter" will be revived. | At Kelth's will be Nick Long and | Brothers, 4 Mvana, vem § PLAYS % Mae and John K. Howley wil) be on! tre has been gunk to the ground floor, sits Sh i teste ea! PF wet ue ? er “SOMETIMES TT CALLS OVT THE POLICR” - gerous, But say one word against him, and the maker of melodrama will point to his “moral leason.” You will find the same anuwer to your argu- ment everywhere, In that respect the sensatioa-monger of Third avenue > ¢ does not differ from the dramatist of Broadway. Hach takes refuge In his “moral lesson; each uses it for what it is worth, The shrewd playwright. knows when to pull down the blinds. Then he opens the front door and - loads out his “moral lesson.” It may walk lame, but he doesn’t bother about that. If it has a leg to stand on it anewers jhe purpose, It is the scrubwoman in disguise, It washes out the slimy trail of all that has gone before, and the delighted public, feeling itself quite proper again, says to the author, “Go and sin some more!" CHARLES DARNTON, MISS MAUDE ADAMS WILL PLAY THE BOY IN J. M. BARRIE’S FAIRY FANTASY, “PETER PAN.” | the Dit, |, Blac He | brandt, will race with Bobble Ci pik Thoin d's champion cyclist, fuver’s Museum, IN BROOKLYN, the balcony has been reconstructed, @ new gallery has been built and the stage has been equipped with whe finest ot ¢lectrical and mechanical, devices tor display and the quick handling of sten- ery, Bens, ridden by Nellle Hilder- oy «3 Ch “ Burke” | wh eae ae es ee Another New York playhouse way Secured by the .Bhuberts|- pesterday when they obtained tha Lew Theatre for the remainder of the bon. Oscar Hammerstein, the bull “ ows et of theatre, sult retains ce x4 beh it under the contracts the Siu: berts Will have the exclusive bookin fi and will present thelr ‘or one year, own attractions there. Mr. \Hammete stein recely Sapte. es & percentage of the re Jianche Ring, prima donna of “It Happened in Nordland," who aint i" company . 21 after a quarre) with Ime she left Miss she would “never step on Me Td tiv Btago unt! he‘apo'ziged.” ‘The ap og was not forthood..ng, and Mikes Ri elgned with “The Pic isa pany of Chicago. Therenpon Mn. fi REBUILT CASINO TO OPEN. The Casino Theatre, which will be re- opened to-nigit with “The Barl and the Girl" after having been practically re- built, was lighted for the first time last evening and inspected by agents from the vartous city departments, Several artists, playwrights and theatrical man- agers also were present, The remodelling of the theatre haw cost the Bixby estate nearty $150,000, and when the house ts turned over to Shu- bert Brothers to-day one of the hand. somest and safest amusement palac in America will be added to the firm's rapidly growing string, Py Little but thée-four walls of the ola historic structure remain, as the orches- ked for a court order rest: rom appearing, Rofore the c act Miss Ri lezrap! return, cach, si es lives with his wife, but claims that he )temptible person, and he inaults you and loves no one but me, I had been going | hs wife equally by seeking You \out with him ever since he was engaged to | this girl, But we @ quarrel and | OW. Your mother ts entirely rieht, and fale ae he mi ried. her. jit you have any dignity or self-respect Now we heave mi ‘Up ag and ‘he | you wil alls atthe house to take me oul. but | WHt Rot wee him when ho calls, my mother is against my golng with rna"foanoteryone man Oe, oh Shall She Forget Him? care for aa well aa Dear Betty: is married mi A AM a young, a iM Bineteen years old me Nu months aj Man about aaven never taken Mme | away and works and he did pot write, but ho said to, me ho matter how long he is awny | | fig wil be trae fo, me es one Se for him, or pet his love? ‘The young man would not have mar- rled the other girl if he had not pre- This je @ problem which your own foelings must determing, It Is generally better to forget any man, we are ably to en The Fall and Winter Hat " ELVET hat facings are the V order of the day and velve: crowns are introduced on felt, beaver and alk brima, There are few Hlower-trimmed modes this weason than formerly, yet for evening functions fhowers ‘will be worn, Roses, always “why rive tly of the "Brus- wols a “q tha ote righ In color, Tn colors the must ‘popular shades a brown, prune, green and blue, h mi; ture of @ray and brown, dull green and blag. jo Feathers Are mounted.in preference co lying “Mat, and wings long and morrow | [are very good, | Tn ribbon many fancy weaves are used; changeable effecta are very teiching in G2 ' Many a ‘dons moire effects especially favored, nwire, Many of the most effective créa-| the yolks of olg) slow atiavish display of allk,| fire and keep con HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. Bleach and Depilatory, Re-Here are f i the remedies you have aed for: For Freckles and Brown ipots—Biohloride of sermury in coarse owder, 8! grains; witch hazel, 2 unces; rose water, ? Ounces; rose Ww: 2) ounces, Agil atl a olution is tained. Mop over , 0 affected parts, Keep out of the way of ignorant per- Sona and children, ‘ A #004 depilatory is composed of barlam sulphide, % grains; powdered chalk, 400 grains. Mix with water, The barium sulphide must be absolutely dry to be effective When It Is mixed with the chalk. Enough water should be af- terward added to make a thin paste. Witch Hazel Cream. Ky won three ho urs take half q ing. As to the effect of cold cream, in some cases it may cause the hair to Stow, but It is dependable altogether Upon the natural tendency, When well Washed out of the wlin there ts little to be apprehended, ‘Try the following; 2 maceti, 1-4 pint of olf of almonds, Melt; pour into a mortar, which hae been twated by Ddeing immersed add three ounces of rose water and one ounce of witch hagel, and assidulusly stir the mixture until an emulsion js formed, and afterward until the mixe ture is nearly cold, Practical Housekeeping, D.—You can find excellent helps E, ful books on the subiect/ of housekeeping for sale at anv of the large book counters or stores. Your best plan will be to read all you an find on the subject in the Magagines and paners, and then put In practice tha. rules that sult your caso, ‘Talk with | your yount married friends on the beat plans for home and housekeeping and learn the best ways of doing your work, remembering that there is nothing too trival to do wel Spoonful of tincture of tida in half @ pint of water. This will often afrest flatulence after eat- —_———~1 HINTS FOR THE HOME. Potatves with Chease, mixture on the joe Beat a quart uf | mis Keep et'ring after placing the piv and boll the. po‘atoes, hash! wiipped creem to a froth and sad to them, but rit tod Ana: out them in |ihe mixture, Put all In a mold, over & buttered diwh, add pepper and j Closely and place tn a bucket of waltod silt and powdered cheese, Keep moist | jog for two hours or wore, Wipe uff with butter Over the ton snrinkl?| the mold carefuly fo that no particles bread crumbs previoudly toasted and| of silt remain, dip in warm water, rolled fine, Serve hot, | (Pn out and peeve Immed’s aly, Cate Parlait, [French Peas. OR two quarts, tae twelve punces \KE a can of June peas, strain of freshly roasted coffer (do not | ha colander an} pour wr ating It), Put this (90.0 #'rap, add lev over thom th @ pan i plnoe it on the (a piece of butter, pepper and walt, heat nly #t thickens, take off a Fango dnd teaspoonful of minced parsley, — [ ounce each of white wax and sperm | time in bofling water, Very portion » ‘ tirred ntl thevougoly, adda pinch of sugar and & > mh Teport for duty}

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