The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1911, Page 4

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t WOMAN SWEPT FROM DECK OF UNER BY WAVE? Miss Florence Missed When Old Do- minion Boat Docks. LAUGHED Steamship Officials Puzzled Because High Rail Made Accident Impossible. Bfforts are being made to-day to clear ap the mysterious disappearance of Mise Florence M. Warwick of No, 416 Orange street, Maven, from the 014 Dominion liner Monroe, on which she had taken passage at New York last Tuesday for Richmond, Va., to visit her borther. She was a member of the old Warwick family of Virginia. She was last seen about $20 o'clock Tuesday another woman, Du and Wednesday morning the Monro ran through a forty-mile gale, Other passengers kept to their staterooms, but Miss Warwick, who conveyed the tm- pression to others that she was « good eallor, kept to the deck Her disappearance was discovered when her personal baggage, consisting New night with of a handbag, a small travel bag, @a. umbrella and her hat were found tn her stateroom after the ship had docked at Norfolk. Her stateroom had not been slept in oat in which she was walking bareheaded with the other Woman was missing, also some valuable Jewelry, part of it heirlooms of the family, and all her money OMicers of the Old Dominion tne say @ 1s hardly possible that Miss Warwick could have fallen overboard, as there is & five foot railing on the Monroe and mho is an unusually steady boat, not given to pitching. She usually carried her money and Jewels in a chamols bag around her neck. She was forty years old and had travelled all over the world. Nobo ‘on the boat could be found who remem- ber what woman was walking with Miss Warwick. There were two| hundred passengers. The steamship OMejals searched the Norfolk hospitals and hotels, but found no trace of her. While New York Mixs Warwick fwas at the home of her cousin, William H, Smith, ) St, Nicholas avenue, a lawyer of No, 6! Wall stret. He said | toeday she was in good spirits when! ad never been troubled and any theory He said she fond of rough hie sailed and with mental d of suicide is was a good sailor weather, and Word Is Recetved at Miss War’ »NPW HAVE 1 1—Wont was received here last night of the h of Miss Florence M, Warwick, who liv at No, 415 Orange street, in the exclusive residential section of the city Miss Warwick was prominent here and was the daughter of Major Wiliam B. Warwick of Richmond ul whom she was to Visit, #tarted an ine quiry when he went to t! ation in Richmond to meet her on the appointed train, He learned she had left New York, but had never rea _— “The Mystery of tho Burnt Barn” ts another of the Red Trinnglo series of complete Detective stories in book form being given every week with the Sunday World. This is a thrilling story of a perplexing myrtery and its eventual solution by the great London Detective. Get it free with next Sunday's World. hed Norfolk. rey ee M. Warwick AT STORM. | walking the deck| ie all that night) THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, |She’s Not a Star—Yet—| but She’s Lucky and : Superstitiously Lays It All to “‘Granny” anda Black Cat With a Hump in Her Dressing Room. | | New York Women the Youngest in the World, Says This Lass, but She’s Not So Anxious to Be Young as to Be Tall | and Important. BY CHARLES DARNTON F you were looking for Youth I could you go to a better place than Ireland to find it? Well, then, we etart without any argu- ment. The only question fe whether you've seen Youth in all her charms, her freshness, and her daintiness {n verywoman.” Have you now? Then a word tn your ear: She's as Irish as the seventeenth of this very | month. “I'm from Dubdtin,” says he “From Dubin!" says 1 “The same," says Patricia Collings. “That's where T got my first name You might have guessed.” Now, Miss Patricia Colfinge te keeping you guessing It's my fault, not hers, She ts the innocent victim of @ Mttle plot against the ‘star aystem" a applied to newspaper “productiona’® And perhaps you'll agree that tt'e @ re lief to get away from “stare for a change of reading matter, When they talk for publication {t's like turning on electric sign in front of the thea- tre. ‘Their views are worth a great deal in advertising to themsely “One of the Company.” It's different with Migs Patricta Col- linge, She fan't @ star, she's just “one of the company," and when the night’e a dark side street and waits on @ corner of the you may have discovered for yourself, long line of parts at the Herald Square Theatre. he not only playe Youth, she 18 Youth. x be tlneteen tn September,” she sa! |The ‘Thunderbolt’ at the New Theatre, [ciren were dreadfully worrted about me, and while that play was in rehearsal I was hurried into ‘The Blue Birt’ to play The Blue Child. The other chtl- they knew just what the «trl y chosen for the part had done they kept prodding me made a pause, and whi ais 1 work ts done she probably hurries along | Gor Rreaea the poetry it. “I don't suppose we ever think about for a car that never gets within a block | youth when we have it, do we?’ she Great Whke Way. But, ae] remarked, vel at it, She might easily be the Fairlie Child of “The Land of Heart's Desire,” for | of Ireland is in her blue @ and her flower-like face. speaks her volce goes to prove the stat ment #0 often made that the best E , With the courage of her years.| woman is the young They're quite un- on the subject of youth un- “And still it seems to be very important thing with women, this simple, unaffected qirl gives a per- | walking along the streets formance that {s by far the moat ag- | #truck by the idea that women atrive in tistle achievement to be found in the] every I've bes ‘ay to look young. They dresa in a way that gives them a wonderfully youthful appearance. Nke the women of Dublin and Londou in achieving this effect, and I stil ma 1 dare say the New York woman fn the ‘And haven't I been lucky! I've been} world, But I'm not anxious to keep lin this country only two years and al young. I want to be tall and—impor- | half and T've already had four parts,| tant. It seems to mo that tall women I followed Flora Parker in ‘The Girl|Siwaye look important. Nobody con- and the Wizard’ with San Bernard,|™4ers me of the least Importance. In " the theatre I'm treated as though I ‘Thon T was engaged to play Joyce | \erg a eid.” And when she lish in the workd ts spoken in Dublin, All Her Dolls Actres “It was through going to the Christ- mas pantomime in Dublin that I got the In en B- le shop and tt because I'm Ir! above too dla: it we in to om, Tam Oo 14 ck eat in my Ase ould a failure people. LAttle M hei sketch them for the benefit of the world generally and tlenlarly, She br t a sketch- ore than 5,000 tick- book that showed her to be an uncom- monly clever artist, and the sext in A special train has been chartered for | ant aha akreed to pit black | the Tammany men !n Albany who will! and white Ler artis ath, /attend, and there will be a great num- “In the vined, “I try Der of up-State politicians present. | to give t ather than Magistrate Frederic Kernochan will be mak a tinct charac in itself, | t floor manage r mas eryt A she bring: good to he nd very, largely red dog and th for * has ry ving n the alw supe and 11 um dressing-room, green pig oman’ I along When I was nt titious, perhaps lieve in luck to every I'm Ike that, upon my L always have with tho 1 knew d never been » 1 bring luck A Clever Artist. s Superstition trotted and The then rom ised World par- me | grue: I sho serio} supe! I'm carried o: Youth in “Everywoman” Is Irish Youth--- some as it erems, after all, But puldn't like granny to see me when usly, An¢ rstitious. then she's so awfully But she is wonderfully we ee ee MAROH She might take {tt too! reg 11, 1911, FIVE NEW EVENTS Patricia Collinge ot Dublin, 11 You Please} \NSURE A |VELY SKETCHES MADE BY MISS COLLINGE FOR THE EVENING WORLD. WEEK ON STAGE John Mason to Play a Jewish Character—Constance Col- lier in “Thais” Dramatized,: IT with theatrical events, among | the first of which will be the ap-| pearance of John Mason In Augustus ‘Thomas's latest play, “As @ Man| Thinks,” at the Thirty-ninth Street | ‘Theatre on Monday night: The play deals with a wife's attempt to exer-| cise the right to go where life interests her just as the husband has exercised that right. It 1s the business of the play to show that this right is not an| equal one, because the wife carries a greater esponsibility. The principal character {s an elderly Jewish phy- aictan, impersonated by Mr. Mason. The wife commits a fault which !s) | suM®cf@nt to warrant a separation be-| tween herself and husband. Through her consequent suffering she 1s abie| to revise her ideas of the wifely rela-| tion and to return to her husband. Mr. Mason's support will include! Chrystal Herne, Amolia Gardner, Char- lotte Ives, Vincent Serraffo, Walter Hale, John Flood and Willlam Samp- ' RE coming week will be crowded son, eee Another play to be produced on Mon- “The Confession," by | James Halleck Retd, which will be seen at the Bijou. It depicts the devotion of @ priest who hears the confession of @ murder committed by }Canadian fisherman. | priest's brother {s accu the father confessor c | self to say @ word in his behalf even to save his life. Among others tn the cast will be Orrin Johnson, Theodore Roberts, Ralph Delmore, Helen Holmes | and Olive West. ’ ce “The Pink Lady,” a mustcal comedy, by C. M. 8 McLellan and Ivan Caryll, | comes to the New Amsterdam Theatre | on Monday evening. The story is taken |trom the French farce “Le Saty It} |tells the adventures of a young Part-| | etan blade who must shortly forsake the | |Joys of bachelordom for the humdrum of married life, but who plans one more | luncheon with an old flame in a quiet rant in the forest of Compiegne. lin this, as well as all of his escapades, jhe has told his sweetheart that he has day night is a French- the me, nough the ort lucky. I probably owe my good luck|been out with a fictitious friend, one to” her—and the black cat with the|Dondidter. Innocently, she selects the hump. It seems to me I'd rather have|eame restaurant for @ little luncheon luck than youth.” lparty. Separately they come to the re- And she's lucky enough to have sort, to find that the wife of the pro- it | both! prietor has been kissed by a satyr, a Smt cummed Parisian Beau Brummel, another Don- nual ia THE MULLIGAN BALL. records for attendance at the an- ball of the Lawrence Mulligan As- tion at Te rden on March] tondon this year, tt ts ex-| Hegeman, 4a a kiss which gives her Instantly the reputation of being a famous beauty. In the company Willlam lott, fety. Fred Kelly, Cranford and others. will be Frank Lalor, Hazel Dawn of the) Alice Dovey, Alice} Wright Loulse Kent, Ida M. Adams eee At the Criterion Theatre on Tuesday evening Paul Wilstock's dramatic ver- sion of “Thais will be offered with Constance Collier !n the title role, 1 rone Power as the Hermit, and Arthu pered my lines to me at the opentng|ionging to act,” she sald. “twas only | for tt should be, of course, a part of| ong those Who have bought boxes Forrest as Niclas, “Thals" tn tts drav performance for fear I'q forget them.]a baby then, and I tried to act almost |Hverywoman, It is her y | hy D, Sullivan, John C, Fitz-| atte form ts not a dramatization of th But the only thing that worried me| before I learned to talk. All my dolls} When Youth dies 1 do my hardest rederio Kernochen, Thomas P| novel Of Anatole France, eltheagh Was the vell I wore, It kept getting tn] Were xreat act “and they appeared |acting, though no one could possibly J. Mulligan, Francis] play \s founded on the same aati my mouth and made it awfully diffcutt|in any number of plays, I still have|belleve it. I try very not to AWhits | Stach adhenga inns closeiy to the: nove ltor me to speak distinctly, I'm glad | them. breathe and to look as though L were ohn | Shae 4oea. the, Messanst oem. OF 18 Youth doesn't have to talk through a| “But they've retired from the stage?” | dead rerfous part of it ends, Dardon, Jos Joseph |same name. Massenet's music will de veil.” no, Not exactly," laughed Miss col. | though, when U'm carried off on the) B. Adler, Thomas Neligan, M m-|a feature of the performance, re. ala sear th ao s|bler, The boys who carry it bounce) enthal, Thomas Powell, Jullus Kauf- ‘a ye Under the Hat. ee ‘onan bat My sae sua be ten |me into the air, then raise one end of man, Louls Weber, Walter Egan,| The Winter Garden at Broadway and Youth wore at this moment! signe with a Ddlack cat, a red dog, a|the bier as high as they can and send) J. Hallin, Jc F th, M.| Fiftieth street opens on Tuesday night ed up over a hat that may OF green pig and other mascots. T have | ine sliding to the floor, When I'm sup-| Dunn, B, Davis, He Joseph | with the bill announced last week. ay not have been a shade less than /q great preference for green, of course, | Posed to be dead Iam expected to keep! Dunn sr. Thomas F 1s, Jacob *. @ 8 nineteen, It wasn't a hard Job to find| Sut T really think the most of the blac Fan eve on the altar boy's to see that, Strahl, Timotny Foley, W. Armstrong| Wiltam Gillette returns to the Fm- jout whether Miss Collinge was keeping | cat with a hump. 1 bought ft In a china e y don’t chew gum. So it's not so! and Martin idler, I pire Theatre on Monday evening for HONOR OF THE BIG SNOWS, |!ove (00. perish of one’s own halt many thin happen in La | 1 ins—storms of snow and Bement Pinar ar ns sich selons—before thie truth is | 66 sa . ana | pinot erate | her, and ain Jan tas ed ’ : rust while] , eaag | bound in 1 a room tn a Paris ash J | ans 108} Gustave Reudet, a floor walter, dies} jad : ofa ar 1 reve A ; ar 4b as MM th ulled ry »), and V * another ot Ma min ‘ c garct auses Ha al a plote at everness and, ape P 1 Thoreau q of ed resour For into t « time 4 Disto: Lupin But tn t 1 mself fiw by a) counter who challen r worthy of his own best effort chase, he know ¥ tia ” ort e is not, ike has come t heart nd d with scruples against the years. If bh ting} e killing now, he w part Li me . e lead + j wood nd to # the murder Ja ven w 1 > riddle of the he ky , * where certain changed are hidden, He tak lips ar and drea him w w he siall be dictating Jett hy t Ino} 1 foreing Germany earl ly clakne that seem to \lsace-Lorraine to France, the record of In e It naive Lupin who te thus creed of the Cre’ {s a fatal thing. pres and, if one must say it, @ As the story works ow}, !t is found Lupin rather less convincing than in te be better to trust a pure woman's! the book of bis first appearance, He triumns over “TL. M." af fashion, marries and hurries to the tragic endyTn the third place he has fallen 4n love) to economize so much ‘he can afford ex- hut his dream of greater glory ts still « r boc with the girl When Auli CES aARMan ethan WODILD to be fulfitte | \ta and her princess aunt, the|discovered asking Miss Brown to pray| with this repulsing of the serpent PORTUNATA., Re vuble-living and| current dniquity, Indeed he sollloquizes| Second Husband” (Alternus), the second 25 | el * miasmie, (o that effect, thu “Di find some] Venture into bookmaking of Corra Har- A y Who Be-! Y Portunata «|honest work to do, There must be some-| "8, known previously for “A Circuit ches a Britinh Lord |when she exchanges It for a cold Bi ing in the world cleaner for me to} Rider's Wife."* NATA determi by mere! ish air, ‘Then comes an inherited mals | touch than Horace Vernoul and all his "s first husband {s the editor of a of will to become pretty, She! Wy and the chloral road away, «0 far! works, I'll go ; country weekly. When he has been ow € Irregular fea AA One) Ir Fons: OY ing y sald! And events aid Oliver in} gead a little while she marries the man tNahini? Ou aia | t eping of his resolve, The bubble} ag nought weekly p! and good Ss beg’ 1 " | THE ROGUE'S HEIR ¢ eked speculation ts suddenly Ne Mita a j 4 he_ bes " er alr, | ill 4, “‘Vernoul, out of pocket, is deep | Wil This is Adam West, and he ring to wa D Ourl, to: UAAUIALS. | sete ct Guae In Whiek hn wrath, ‘Thus and worse should it be] foes far—from the Legislature to Con- Rae tande 7 am and @ j Wink and Gold Lon ver with the false, As for Oliver and and tien to the Governorship. In- . r pot is with her e SAN BROWN and af Susan Brown—well, a united pair of attendir pa om balancing | is b and @) lovers is the noblest work of the popular of a social road the paper basket 1 ng fletionist. Harris's pages ) the smooth ar e nad to this confession relat Till o6 auiarn emer vs) e: | sot srattsin) joywE'S SECOND HUSBAND. ve Was eghteen and unmarried | ene “So 1 went a-courting—directly of 1 2 wa arly | : ‘ course, as a F . T arranged sis ae ia seg ot An Adam Cleverly Retakem from! °°! pation of t rs she grow unbea Apia une th proclama F Fortunata ¢ , i HPN EVE, at home in Tennessee, | the most attention, T wore white mune , | W learns that Adam, representing|}ins that fla endor If ie a from three | his constituency at Washington, | ished with | uftles : , Fe ys of old a temp vutside the} looking as te's ; i ay garden, she buys a baby grand] every aft ut the time mother : ate this v piano, a calico pony and ote of new | fat down behind the vines on our ver- fe aad ely a behing the be ckHaM furniture and has the bill sent to her| pri, with the darning basket before sunhier ofan | lg Payee, (t, man, ; conquered, Nothing could have been | e 1T ; f sa I better, e writes, when ex-] more innocent or effective.” to the of her aunt, a vont pt ona are demanded, “ for a wife] Nevertheless, Eve makes a good wife, 1 i, and grows] Pounds @ hancery and] to krupt her husband than ¢ with tact and a sense of humor. Nota follies | *n eve tn vd) wleulate the Values of all) ON the Phat Prince Raoul de taj oral Gallon's SPARKLING, Tour Hichelle,” cries the Princess, one | ! ss" (Dit CCEH ALL day pointing to a tripping old beau! 'ns in @ buf Waistcoat, “He is as old as} T Methuselah, rich as Croesus, and| the wicked as Silen If h >| pe Rome J am determined you shall marry him," jat It {# then that Fortunata begins to | in train for beauty, With her charm . visionary face and the coffee \ eyes In which she can make a BY TEST seem to ear, she 1s dent 1 ! playing to tracting an! rejecting lovers 1 ’ 1 tha THE WORLDS PUREST SPRING WATER who for tie most are too * i e too far - her uses. In due time she es ie rascal ‘ as - y) i Wie vib gus Serie Ain ¢|asstereea te bitee eoeaiaes te SUN-HAY WATER CO., twinkling for the handsome young ter days. Also, he is rankled some Ellenville, N. ¥. Y. Office, 34th St, & Broadway, Eng! hman, Lord Trevers, wh 1 she! at Vernoul's azen use of b vonty, NOVELS OF THE DAY TOLD IN A NUTSHELL GREEN ROOM GLINTINGS. | Frank J. Wiletach. Bome managers “recognise the profession” —a mile awey. Lovely hadite are nice for the stage, but dongerous to aoquire, The aotrese who playe © think- ing part must speak only with her eves. If the old actors were anything Uke their plotures they must have been horrible, |] Stage polygamy: The actor, wed- |] ded to his art, who leads the sou- brette to the altar. In the old times they hitched their chariote to a star; nowadays they present a limousine to her, The actor who has hie ups and downs lives on the top floor of the Mills Hotel and epends Ma spare momente in the lobby of the Wal- dor. . Ae the theatre-goer has his likes and dislikes, hie favorites and his Gntipathtes, we can't very well deny the same privilege to the eritte. When the actor has to struggle against the least amount of mean- ing in the greatest amount of lan- guage he {8 up against a handicap which rarely gets a hand. & season of eeveral weeks. jecr Service” will de the first play, and dit ing the engagement “Held by the Ei emy" will be revived. Mildred Holl Degins an enzag ment et the Garden Theatre on Mo! day evening in “The Triumph of an Empress.” ewe ‘The new policy of the Manhattan Opera House will be inaugurated on Monday night with H. B, Warner in “Alias Jimmy Valenti as the ate tion. eee “Phe Country Boy" comes to the Grand Opera House. Konrad Dreher in ‘The Jolly Pet ant” will be at the West End Theatre. o ee “Dora Thorne” will be played by the stock company at the Academy of Musto, eee Robinson's “Crusoe Giri to the Columbia, cee The Murray Hin Theatre will t: Clark's “Runaway Girls. . At the Olympic will be the Columbia Burlesquera, Al Reeves's Beauty Show neon at Hurtig & Seamon's, VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. At Hammerstein's will be ‘The Darling of Paris," The Son of Solo- mon,” Stepp, Mehiinger and King, Mor- ton and Moore, Thomas J, Seabrooke and others. The bill at the American Music Hall will include George Lashwood, Alice Raymond in “A Night in Egypt,” Clar foo Vance, the Roherty Dancers, Miles Stavadale and Maxini and Bobby. Among others at the Colonial will be Wil Cressy and Blanche Dayne in “One ight Only,” the Jack Wilson Trio, the Top of the World” dancers and Char- lotte Parry in “Into the Light.” | The Alhambra will offer Vi Suratt in “Bouffe Varietie," Hunters," James Thornton, Gus E wards's School Boys and Giris, Worl? and Kingston, the Musical Craigs a others. At the Bronx Theatre will be Valeri Bergere in “Carmen,” John G, Hyme. in “Tom Walker on Mars,” Howard and North in “Back to Wellington,” | Tom Edwards, ventriloquist, and others, | ‘The bill at the Fifth Avenue Theatre will include Mme. Adelaide Norwood tn operatic selections, Charles Grapewin and Anna Chance ‘in “The Awakening of Mr. Phipp.” “Circumstantial Evi- dence,” Harry Fox and the Millership sisters, and Harry Williams and Jean Schwart wih be “The Man COLORS, You can travel directly So Travel E, the case may be. which they travel in search of apartment, 273,374 i TO SAVE They Kei Learn a Lesson from Your Watch of miles and your watch will show the watches and clocks you will meet on your journey. st or West and your watch will be slow or fast, as And so it is with Homeseekers, themselves slow, on time or fast, according to the direction in’ “To Let"’ Ads. Were Printed in The World Last Year—76,514 More Than the Herald, jun, Tribune and Press COMBINED, TIME READ SUNDAY WORLD “TO LE TO BE ON TIME ANSWER THEM PROMPTLY, Strietly Up to the Minate with the Offerings They Show, BURNED HIS WIFE, Mrs, Short Had Been Out Late and Refused to Tell “Hubby” Where. Edward Shott, a plumber, forty years old, was arraigned in the Yorkville | Court to-day charged with having es- | saulted his wife with a red hot tron. 'Short woke up last night and found | that his wife had left the house while he slept. At 2 o'clock this morning she returned, but refused to say where she had been. The infuriated husband poker,-thrust {t into the ato jshe says, attacked her with it, inflicting severe burns about the body. | Her screams brought Policeman Dur- owsk! of the East Twenty-second stree: station who broke in the door ana ar- rested Short. Dr. Wilson of Bellevue | Hospital attended the woman, who said she would be in court to prosecute her husband. | ——— -—--- nr 3 an Oance Platinum, which is far more costly | than gold, has been advancing rapidly lin price in the last few we Yester- jday It was quoted in Malden Lane at | $43 an ounce for hard platinum and 641 lar ounce for the soft metal. These are | the highest prices ever reacched and indicate an advance of about $10. an ounce {n the last six months. i for You | AIL the attached coupon | M to S. Liavanaeety Bea | Brooklyn, and you will re- ceive for one year the Rheingold Magazine, brim- (BBE ming with wit and humor | and interesting information, { Distributed free with com- | pliments of the brewers of Rheingold Beer. | PALE RIPE RHEINGOLD H $1 a Case (24 Bottles) Name | Addrew. | | The Army of | Constipation | toon br E | eess, bndigestion, Sich Headache, Sallow Skin, | SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICD Genuine mate Signature flterF¥o ord, B. Altman & Ca. 10,000 YARDS OF FRENCH SILK MARQUISETTE BLACK AND A CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF INCLUDING OVER THIRTY OF THE LATEST PARIS SHADES, 42 INCHES WIDE, WILL BE OFFERED ON MONDAY AT A SPECIAL PRICE, Fifth Avenue, 34th and 35th Streets, New Pork, uth or North for THOUSANDS same time as the other They find a house, flat, furnished room or ADS,— ¢ \ } SHEALERES, WIT RED HOT RON ‘ 4 |

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