The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1908, Page 14

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8 Evenin “Little of Spe the “Peter Pan” Nemo” ctacles, BY CHARLES DARNTON. LAW & ERLANGER opened a huge and gorgeous picture-book when they revealed their latest spectacle at the New Amsterdam Theatre toast night. “Little Nemo’ grew from one novel scene to another until It was ®o big that you felt like borrowing your neighbor's eyes In order to take {t all in Master Gabriel, a child actor who tn getting ready to cast his third vote for Bryan, went through so many adventures in the highly colored dreams that wame true to the audience that the proc spectacles and 1 along with Gabriel took It al! so sertously! ‘Th iis eyes. Harry RB. nothing 4istin original smith had given tive In the way of the ideas were good and jay Dr. Pill (Joseph Cawthorn) puts Lit- tle Nemo (Master Gabriel) to bed. ner he first genuin wakes” th all due ned them. offic ather “Raindrops” qu! raindrops st!!l has was a iight fall had a tiny umb it brought on a second showe Ww the rain was by his trusty German d adm v on her the t t; Harry K Van, wearing a hand-painted face. found themselves on The Isie of Table @'Hote, where they told a 3 Stories that Mr. I lect for his African ca: was one about the wh yof that al- most proved fatal. “The whiffinpoof,” explained Mr. Caw on canned at and ts ver, The house capitalized the and then sank back exhau The comedians! had things entirely their own way every Bot to- ether, and on the princip t one @ood “gag. deserves anot they drought back ancient recollections of Joe Miller with a devotion to the pas that was Uttle less ublime. But fact that they were not guilty of a “topl cal song,” kept them on right side of the autience Park in the Jungie Marrowbone race! funnier, glory was funny enoug shortcomings of his ha petitors, ‘trong men” of vau @ burlesque wrest! he laughte Little Ga ‘American colors. Even Geor of Juty,” and Mr. HK end seeme battleship br. Dave Abra honorable Beaumont refe Bunt seriousness o ry golng uni rel to sho n Cohan mig y of Co ring from stage nore. m ty as a t that he A Revela New York oo (Gopysieht, S001, by Robert W. Chambers.) live! was features, at wou wads over 8) head. ree comedians a] ammunition. cat, a d to Gladys, the cat, as Juction developed into a “Peter Pan" of interest human » wonder Lit to make him rub more t an enow Ms fancy free rein, and if there was nothing that stood out as strikingly ishly rippled along ¢ pletured, Victor Herbert's music relessly until It struck a full note in “The Chime of the Liberty spirit if Dell,” a number that rang with and vibrated with deep, rich tones you hungered for more “Babes in T. land” music you got at least a touch of ft when the toy soldier came to life for & moment “Won't You Be My Valentine?” was prettier than some of the human valen- tines who hardly lved up to the beauty of thelr surroundings. St. Valent! Land, with {ts delicately sentimental color scheme and {ts skipping, singing valentines all as pink as love's young dream, was as wonderful as any youth- 1 fancy could paint. It was “sweet! ." and Miss Albertine Benson looked perfectly at home and sang her dainty embroidered ditties as thou life were an unending va ne’s ety, There was a charming dance, all too short, by Miss Elphye Snowden, that was a valentine tn itself. She was like aw e-wisp, now here, now there, and then away! It was discovered later that she had whisked herself off to the weather office, where all kinds of weather were kept on tap with the ex- ception of the “frost that has been known to settle down over a first-night. Here, as Tho Weather Vane, Miss Snowden kept her gladsome smile work, and with Miss Benson and Bil predictions in song @ surprise in “Raindrops.” There were be a credit to any well-reguiate ration it must be confessed that ¢ Nhe poet who tells us all about danc When these “Raindrops” danced there blue figures, and every “Drop” elly, a ber as a deacon, 4 Billy B. Elphye Snowden as the Weather Vane nt have envied “A Dream of the Fourth onifnental soldiers marched to the front pendence, But the flreworks at the fright. A scene showing the deck of a y man did his duty and bear and a squirrel, He deserves kept his face straight when Miss Rose The audience was so delighted that , Joseph Cawthorn, accompanted World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, The Jollys’ Bull Pup Follows the Twins to School ** ®y 1-0. Mccitt | \ | | 29-95905:998399$9009$606SOO O00 SOOH00S HOF OOHO4 | “The Thin One” Can Get Fat--By Margaret Hubbard Ayer! 233 99993HS99HH G09 909 $O9-00$O- 00999009 00004-06 5:803.00605 D9 2LHSO9E$99090OO09D09OGO05 professor of|are particularly recommended to wear SS A physical|a brace or some contrivance which will culture has laid| hold the shoulders back, keep the chest down the latest|up and create a necessity for using the advice for the|lungs to the fullest extent. Women thin woman who| Who work in kitchens and at sewing DO02D2O® o4 GERMAN and coffee are forbidden. Thin women open as much as possible, even !f it’s) ing through it five or six times a day necessary to wear warmer clothing. | for from two to four minutes, inhaling Prof, Gerling insists that the lack of| through the nose and exhaling through pure air ts the cause of much leanness| the little tube, and 46 particularly responsible for! ‘phe cornetist, the trumpeter and the sunken cheeks, hollows under the eyes! players of the oboe and other wind in- and emaciated neck and shoulders. To struments tnvarlably have rosy cheeks fill out the muscles of the cheeks te) and well developed cheek muscles, and Advises getting a small tube and blow-| prot, Gerling insists that any woman | who will try this tube exercise and kecp |it up for a couple of months will obtain the same result: wants to get fat. | machines should wear one of these to keep the Prof. Gerling’s| braces and try windows TTT] regimen for ‘The ‘Thin One" as ho| calls his patient, a] 1s very | Prof. Gerling, who goes back to ne and as all women| wao are not too fat consider themselves [ture for his physical exercises, believes too thin the instruction 1s worth re- jthat the finest exercise to be found is membering. the natural one that accompanies an | embi ed yawn, atural lfeahatnnintion<tiaccorainaktorGeriing unembarrassed yawn, ‘The natural stretching of the muscles in the act of yawning brings every part of the ana omy into p It even affects the muscles of the ears, and the tdea of re- Jaxation and tension of the muscles which underlies al] the modern physical culture movements js !llustrated here in @ natural and very convincing way Prof. Gerling’s Thin One must stretch herself with unrestrained vigor several times a day. After that, any of the well known West Point exercises can be practised. must sleep from elght to ten hours, During meals she must observe peace of mind and concentrate her attention on the food she ts ¢ With all three meals a large glass of milk must be drunk, but the milk must be taken through a straw, and at the end of each mea! the Thin One {s to rest from ten to fifteen minutes, lying ‘on a sofa or in a comfortable chair. No alcohol of any kind is allowed, but all | Kinds of unfermented fruit juices. Tea] SPELL OUT THE NAMES OP THE DIFFERENT OBJECTS-«THEN ADD AND SUBTRACT AS INDICATED. WHAT IS THE RESULT ? tion of octety |caretutly ¢ st away their cigars when | primer, the secret composition of which October 21, 1908. 20 a DOOD OU BODOG of The Love Pirate ” w : ww and the 3-Mile Limit ; By Nixola Greeley-Smith HICAGO has sent us a new phrase—the love C Mrs, Benedetto Allegrett!, in her sult foi againet her husband, invented It. ‘The love pirate, according to her definition, t# the girt in ‘the downtown office who Is a constant menace to the wife tn the home." ‘The woman In business, she avers, has holsted the black flag and Is making the wife walk the plank Tn the Jady's unhappy delusions concerning the business woman the only thing we mey take seriously is her happy phrase—the love pirate. Though {t applies far less to the girl who works than to her idle alster, It {9 descriptive of a class to which either may belong. Any woman Is a love pirate who takes a man's affection without giving full measure In return. Therefore the girl who marries for money fully deserves the term. I Welleve the laws of a country apply to a vessel until it is three miles from shore, Considering matrimony as the port and haven of all feminine hope—let us still flatter the sterner sex by encouraging their fondest illuslon—we. must assume that Uiree miles outside of it all men are fair game for the love pirate, If we want to be very conservative We may count the engaged man as within the three-mile Hmit, and therefore safe—though why it should be con- sidered honorable for a man to persist in marrying one woman when he has discovered he loves another I have ever failed to fathom, Ouiside this limit, sailing gayly the high seas of life, every woman hag the right to be and ts @ love pirate, her fell purpose that of making a man prisoner and compelling him to walk the plink—tie narrow, slippery, waxed plank of the hurch aisle, up which the new shoes of the quaking bridegroom creak unroman- teally, Alas, not to every love pirate comes this sweet music! Among thes mariners on the high seas of sentiment are many Vanderdeckens, Flying Dutoh- men, compelled to sall around the Cape of Good Hope forever, without ever welghing anchor in the port of matrimony, Each summer finds them at @ @if- ferent watering place, with different gowns, a manner copied from a new actrt ropefully stalking the ever-elusive eligible. Hut never, never is the curse lifted, {They must sail cn and on till a merciful death relieves them, | What does it matter that many a love pirate, grown old and fat and discon- tented with her prize, envies them their wild Mberty, thetr irresponsibility, thelr freedom from all the compromises the married know? It Is nevertheless the fashion to pity the unattached spinster, and let us fel- low the fashion at all cost to truth, ‘There are many other varieties of love pirate, some against whom the welght and countenance of the world are set in righteous abhorrence. But whatever and | wherever they are, Chicago has taught us what to call them and deserves eur | thanks. pirate. separation NIXOLA GREELEY Stn ANCY sleeves that fit the arms some- | what closely are among the latest de- erees of fashion. Here are two mod- els that can be util- ized both for the new gowns and for those that are to be remodelled, and they ae exceedingly de- | sirable for both, All {the thin materials that can be shirred and tucked success- \ fully are appropriate Jand the sleeves will | be found satisfactory for guimpes, tor gowns and for sep- arate blous The tucked and gathered portions are arrang- ed on fitted founda- tions that keep them firmly In place, but ff a transparent effect Is wanted this lining can be omit. led or can be made of such material as alffon or messaline, The quantity of material req utred for the medium size is 2 yards 21, 24 or or 1 yard 44 {inches wide, for full length sleeves; 4 yards 21, % or i8 yard 4 hes wide, with 31-4 yards of band- ing, for either three- | quarter slee Pattern No, 6112 is cut in three sizes, small 32 or 34, med um 36 or 38, large 40 or 2 Inches bust measure, F Tucked or Gathered Sleeves—Pattern No. 6112. Call or send by mati toTHE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- to TON FASHION BUREAU, No, 182 Bast Twenty-third atreet, New Obtain York. Send 10 cents in coin or stamps fot each pattern erdered. These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plaialy, snd al- Patterns, { ways wpecify size wanted. By Robert W. Chambers, Author of ‘‘The Firing Line” and “A Fighting Chance.” obey 3 | for a year. I ] ” course- Lo experime! verybody pre-ythe green swel ite 5 . they did enter, and mated themselves | ho alone knew, ‘That waa the key to the | in necessary pment iasknes real er aera ee ea ota G20. 811 | ARSE Din Sener mapas Levatrbeg?: bree Ae sree awella Ghat kien: wlgndlly.(iet Gel myp tier leaked sunulterae BYMOTHIS OF PREVIOUS INSTALMENTS. |!0 @ Nervous circle {n yae largest room| secret—the composition of the primer! it in bi, RGA AUR DS AAD ALAM | RY SD REMLY Pon tound tb 7 Gen} sendad: Intersak, ui fom, vere. plneere) |ehorewarn: monerily: admitted that Selr /ciingy iat tne Atlanta Ocean, Hip teiwyn, of an old New York of the cottage, Here thelr eyes Instantly | charge jie Dig ent, Ae 8 bursting |gharwe| suppose you'd go and offer 3 to Ger- | and of the sincere, few were unselfishly | wyn was “sweet,” particularly in & One man, often the least auttable, 1s realgned from tho army because became glued to a great bo: Pichtwanil in ditiarselte 4 = ractic satisfied wit } but many or Japan before our own Govern- | interested—his sister, kileen, Drina andj) ecanve on a moonlight night—in spite of ual) r Cc (; ae, slivorced hin to mary Jack POCAmne & > creat Dow! which was)! ‘'I used to play baseball in college,” he| timo 1# required to knbw Siow. tt acts|ment had the usual chance to turn it | ansing—and mayt wo others shty DE DEED iD ane BF HeMally ne: RO ANID RMA Ohaine Of: ithe, rs leader. Returnin, piled high with small rose Unted cubes! observed, smiling—"and I used to be al es ABO the UEuAl Chante to 2 etal lee Mayne OD" OF:AWe: OLIETE welghty mother heavily afloat in| younger sort where, in the disconcerting w Sirk, Selwyn freauentiy meets the of some substance which resembled! pretty ood shot with a anowball’ | cine et storage or on the bores of down and break your heart. But why | However, tho younger set, now pre- | the vielnity | summer time, the youthful congregate Ruthven te turing youag. Germ nmetrical and translucent crystals of hey followed him to Hiry clift's edge, eine whan exploded Qs @ propelling|can't the Government make arrange- rant from Wyossett to Wonder) “He's nice every minute,” she said—|1n gerrulous segregation iH agtpin: Eoee Piel box TINK GUAKIE GGUIAL TRA CNT HAE e el alrite rene Rene e)Ae wee, shang y _nleonw ane, humibg fo Lawn, mente with Lawn's company—if it de- made up parties to vistt Selwyn's y fibre of him ts nice in the nicest| Their choice they expressed irankly uy : wh ons ‘0 blow the ee a ano ec i endously obliged to you for| sires to? cottage, which had become known us | sens : + 4 atesc f cently. Maga, | ohiget is) tha war wok ow th enti Uf into smithereens, | stuff he handled with such apparent|coming—and for your offer. You see oN . tt yn Goy- | The a Set hag - is knowr © He never talks ‘down’ at you-| and innocently; they admitted cheer- at Belwyn's ross ag Mere aware of ft, and they | carelessness, ‘There was a black seal how st 1s, don't you? I couldn't. riskierg, an can't exploit his own Gov- hry's anc wyn goods | ike an insufferable undergraduate; and) fully that Selwyn was their idol, But Her busbar dit with respect satad road “| 7 , isk/ ernment; you all know that as well as edly exploded a pinch or two of the| he is so much of h || that gentleman remained totally un- ne ee p soaked rock jutting out above the waves; | taking money for a thing which might : re ft for their amuse f nu @ man—such a rea ly un. Shedience. Helwyn's business partner, Nec. Iiret of all Selwin laid a cuble crystal Selwyn pointed at st, polsed himself, | at the end, prove dear at any price’ |. vo, Teturned Selwyn, siniling Pee elt Amusements and never be- | mant—that 1 ike him," she added| conscious that he had been set_up by Fete Pees re eee tout’ theetirm, | Of 4D anvil and struck tt sharply and| and, with the long, overhead, straight | “I cheerfully accept that ren As they all turned away to retracw | {rived the slightest annoyance or bore-| naively; ‘and I'm quite sure he likes| them upon the shores of the summer Rotreand unce "Gerald ih on ore tor yeatedly with a hammer, Austin’s thin| throw of o trained ballplayer, sent the| sisted young Lawn. et oa rte a heir ateps across the moors In the di- | COM Prine she eh LeHieye AMIARIY, me, because he sald go." ¢ ingipacion be | hair rose, and Edge ; . enade o 4 hy - i Ady) rection of erside, fe lightly | (Urin® & ous interruptions that he | 1 isure , 5 notorious, Rely. at wacrifive of art hair rose, and Edgerton Lawn swal- | grenade like a bullet at the rock to do ail tie worrying, Capt. Selwyn." | cuon Of Bilverside, Lansing Wently | on the hearts of the ca ger set, who | Nike him.” said Gladys Orehil, “be In ‘lolaure moments he offen came Or geet ir taney Mt ofdas | lowed nothing several times; but novody | ‘Tiere came o bitnding flash, a stun-| But Selwyn merely shook his hena,|N2ked his arm into Selwyn's; and Gere |) ee eb ae he has a sense of humor and | 40M to the bathing-beach at the hour , count, went to heaven, q ° » cube! ning, clean-c eport—bu t the! repes ~ ‘ : alking thoughtfully on the other | 2" Ame to be unanimous con a ¥ a made fashionable; he conducted nsel: visligthe, Austin country x Aven, and the iittie eube| ning) neeut report—but what the repeating: “You see how it 1s, don't aimee aol Tete a ion that there was nce In the | stands straight. I like a sense of | Made fashionable; he conducted himaelt Phare he exveriments with merely crumbled into a flaky pink pow-| others took to be a yast column of| you? 1 turned over and over $n his min Roy inner Faramentn eat humor and—good shoulders, He's an|®™@ably with dowager and chyeron, fe probate 19 ican. "shy, ail: det black smoke was really a pillar of dust! "I see t).at you possess a highly the proposition offered him—the specta- | i.e untitted und liked the aroma, | enigma; and I ike that too, © * ¢ rm/| *Ith portly father and nimble brother, loves him, but only In Then Selwyn took three cubes, dropped | —all that was left of the rock, And) Veloped ci " ¥ Mel ole of a modern and needy man to and Jike aror a4 with the late debutantes of the younger apd rejects, him. Gerald's , dropped c he noc ndj| veloped conscience,” said Edgertor Sethi serie ane kolng to investigate him every chance 1 late ¢ pusales Belwyn. io fears the lad| them into boiling milk, fished them out| th® slowly floated, voitling lke inist| Lawn, Iwughing; “and when 1 tet s Ny{ Whont money appearet to be the last is nae Tawn, @ big, leiaurely, bic Ket set and the younger matrons, individue trouble. again, twisted them into a waxy taper, nthe Waves, Jeaving nothing where| that we are more than willing te tant| consideration in & plain matter of busi ned gir who showed her see ally, collectively, impartially a placed it in a candlestick and set fire to very chance for failure"'— {ness “Also he turned ove nat: | When abe laughed and shook hands jike) Dorothy Minster liked him, too. "He's! 425 ang Gerald usually challenged CHAPTER IX. it, ‘The taper burned with a flaring brill Kdgerton Lawn, wip-| But Selwyn shook his head, “Not | {er !p his mind; and moved closer may Gaoiateg bin “adorable” but i BOW ME IMA ANG OK se rollers \ sponson canoe waen . verry + NOT ore. fe be: b " ® nsatisfactory hn started one ¢ r 4 I ad » eee a Ww (Continued,) | Janey, but without odor porspiration from his| ®t" he said; doa't worry; 1 need the] 3¢tyyn wal : w gra Hater Pe errr yhiel ne of Aare aes wre < ld was there for the week-end; or, | Then Selwyn placed several cubes in a you have made gc money, and I'll @aste no time when a] °%e% bent on the groun ‘ 4 A pe \ ersing came down, the two A Novice. ee © mad Oey: At hen a hd pie ie or, and mew, 1 turn, ventured the in-| and not talkin minute when you f / or » pounded tran to wader with Dense oy bulk, yur, Squat deal is possible Butl e ° nt | took i swims seawaeG or cruised T ut I a cent opinton that S m nit w talk, Mriends,”” she was early in August that Selwyn) an Jjron pestle, ages .seasuring out the act primer seem to do! tell you this; that first of all 1 mus atier of busing r stood bY most people—an inference 8 ure mos \ In Gerald's dory, clad in thele had come to the conclusion that his| tiniest pinch, segrcely ‘enough to cover 1d think 1 may say|ofter it the Government. Tha 1 Jed i Jer Tne SPARS ots ric NET aes RPP RY do re nt in nr uits; and Selwyn's youth Chacaite was likely to prove a com-| the point of a penknife, placed a few tat Lawn Nitro-Powder Company only decent, you see" Lawn's company sen v m al amilad ee hanaalts qian vane anete sais ecame ewe s manner almost arcia) success, And now, in September,| grains in several paper cartridges. Two is ready to nisiness, too, Can you] “Who ever teard of the Govern-|Selwyn and wrote him a great many thie observation, up to ner neck in the f . rR ar on the/y that the es which 4s experiments had advanced so far he| wads followed the p r, then an| come to town to-morrow? R's merely] ment’s gratitude broke in Austin, |letters—unlike the ment, whi nd Hilean, hearing the re pitching rafts Vab intently, but cu te corners hie ‘aad ventur to invite Austin, Gerald, | ounce and a half ef shot, then a wad, matter of figures and signatures now Nonsense, Phil, you are wasting tim: had not replied to his t ty tentat miled to herons, too. felt t ‘ nothing edther ta 1 ¢ 1p ed. a the Lansing and Edgerton Lawn, of the | and then the erimping say so, It is entirely up to you “I've got to do it” sald Selwyn, | suggestion tet Chaos NA Sread ghtest bit uncomf = that}? Pele tar he tre ich hag awn Nitro-Powder Company, to wit-| ‘The guests stepped gratefully outside Selwyn only laughed. He looked| “You must that, of course. ty exa tested end lered mated brunet ie ‘ yt Mt age ne faded back over ® 8 a fow tests at his cottage labora-| Selwyn, uving a light fowlling piece, at Austin | “But I don't see began Lawn,| So the matter © 1 abeyance, ing up dripping on to the oul ast ‘ 1 s clear 1 hougd tory on Storm Head; but at the same! made pat after yattern for them. 1 suppo sald Edgerton Lawn,| "because you are not in the Govern-|and Selwyn einployed two extra men md the bre fra jas " ' f 1 His time he informed them with characteris: | and then ali trooped solemnly in- | good-natur (hat yOu intend to| ment service now" leuhinemsiaiiaalaibeane tenia and ace hat the sins tor ander tle modesty that he was not yet pre-| doors again and Selwyn froze Chaosite | make us sit and hex; or de you mean) "Besides," added Austin, “you were| memed with rifled and smooth-bore seiwyn's 1 ital did 4 ‘ whieh revealed, at the pured to guarantee the explosive and bole and baked ft and melted itt rb ue jHot a West Pointer, you never were | tubes, wateht uncert yet as to adorable b 1 4 silver About noon his guests arrived before 4 look all sorts of haly raising Mber t Selwy 1 want more tyne; under obligations to the G the necessity of inve a rolvent to and that she me ox h < p ' the f ation of the cottage in w solemn file, halted, and | ties with it; and after that he ground 't tale (hing. 1 want te kpow what it We not all under o | neutralize 1 r tera pro- |b at every Oph ut ttle things w china: bi ‘ i sort for the ido’ they bad did not appear overanxious to enter the! to powder, placed a few generous piel does © inter.o AGed shells qndjasked Selwyn so simply that pelling charge had & xplode hela Minster, seated t " aire h and the the sands of Sliverside, ¥ ob Blorm Head. Also they in ® email hand grenade and affixed @ in fixed ammunition when it We stored fushed, ~"™ Bverybedy in the vicinity had heard’ edge, swinging her siockiaged legs in impressionable; aud when they thougut! (To Be Continued.) ry 5 :

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