The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1911, Page 10

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Evening World Daily Magazine, Saturday. September See Osler. Such Is Life! ‘ark Row, New rk. 4 : SPH PULITZER Junior, Sec’. nd Treas, |, dOSEPH PULITZER Jun By Maurice Ketten. the Fost-Oftice at New York as Second-Class Matter. nd : arauaea aes ‘ ‘orld for the Waited “sta ae! Pont Chuninct in the, Anvernstonst : ze Verivectesy + $3.50] One Year... WHAT A IN NEW Yori« " See Ftt. u "30|One Month...» COUNTRY ory Pu HUDSON RIVER MOST BEAUTIFUL VOLUME 82......cecscseceeveerseee vevegee NO, 18,981 1 CouLd Gaze RIVER IN THE WORLD ——- ——— re AT IT AU Ay LiFe MIMES AND MUSIC. | he official nt season ABOR DAY marke opening of the amus at the metropolitan playhouses. From a material point of riew murs is the greatest local season of music and drama in the world. At full tide there are a hundred stage “shows” cunning, without taking account of motion pictures and concerts. During the aext thirty weeks New York will spend fully $3,500,000 — according to Copyrigh:, (ihe 'New Past ea patie Co This Volume Ie Affectionately Inscribed to My Dearest Sweetheart of Them All, the Only One Who Has Not Jilted Me, MY FUTURE WIFE. (God Only Knows Who 8he Ie.) LILLIA. HAPPPNED one Sunday morning into a Fifth avenue church, and some professional estimates the INN x before the services were over I E\ i YORK had become smitten with the contralto in the choir. She was a brunette of ¢ruly " 5 - nal ante . >, imposing beauty. and I have never heard fi mtralto vol utside of figure will be nearer $5,000,000—on musical entertainme nt alone GoToBED WHEN enna eard a finer contralto voice o' The artistic aspect of this great carnival is less imposing. On nN f THe OUN RISES 80 impressed was I with her voice and her beauty that for a time I was @ the dramatic side, at least, it is more than questionable whether we \ regular worshipper at the church, It was she that I came to worship. ; : One evening she ig that simple but impressive hymn ‘The Ninety and are getting our money's worth. Z ye CLL Nine."" The memory of that little song, as the fair Lilla sang it that night, one hundred theatres, some of them veritable “tem- Hib / G | | will Be with me always, for never before nor since have T heard it sung In all these one hundred ¢! 5 thn Y ples of the drama” in architectural beauty and luxury of appoint: 80 well. That 1a @ little hobby I have; for I feel that too much encouragement cannot ments, there is not one permanent repertory stock company of play- DE IRVGA 18 PEOTAMDIOBAI AFdlate 1A Ray Une WHS aataine tasaet aOR : t ems. ‘The leading actors and actresses who might be capable indi boy ually of interpreting the roles in the classics of our language are While I hardly expected it, I cherished a faint hope that the fair Lilla mostly detached for the purpose of “starring” in ephemeral one-part would favor me with some sort of response to my note of appreciation, but Ja pieces made to order to fit them—tnade to the manager's order, and IN THE COUNTRY I had told her that I would continue to come around to hear her sing, and so I did. I would sit in the front row of the balcony, with my eyes glued on the this I was disappointed. fair Lillia down in the choir, trying by the exercise of my hypnotic power to no one else’s, Vaudeville and musie-burlesque take the place of wit * catch her glance and compel her to recognize in me her unknown admirer, mi . UP in THe But the tair Lita, when she was not singing, was too much engrossed with and satire, and costly spectacular productions are offered as a sub- |} 3 Boer THe ; S att S the organist, the basso and the tenor to respond to the waves of thought which stitute for ideas. The important novelties are foreign importations, NIGHT To SEE L . = a eseeeiae in her direction. And, finally, disheartened by my failure ee and it is always a chance if they will pass our none too strict moral THE SUNRISE exc er en rapport with me, I abandoned the task in despair, and left the churc! one evening never to enter it again. A short time ago I went to se and when I observed the fair Lil and looked again. Yes, there it was, sure enough; unless it was some one else of the same censorship. The New Theatre, designed and capitalized to be “the most notable dramatic institution the English-speaking world has seen DING BusT IT | since the day of the great Elizabethans,” fell considerably short of : & performance of the opera “Tannhauser,” @ name on the programme I rubbed my eyee name, the fair Lillia wae now in grand opera, and this evening she had the role i, j ; P \SN'T THERE A | of a pa Tealizing that exalted promise. In the post-mortems which its late PoRTER HERE I could hardly walt for the second act, for there were no pages in the first. i i r, i ilure see 0 be ibute he / Now came the notable gathering of guests in the Wartburg Hall to witness chested by SE alts oC ML, a be ha ToCARRY. M the contest of the singers, The visitors as they arrived were conducted by four fact that “it could not live down its reputation as an institution fos- BAG To THe TAXI pages, and among these I at once recognized the fair Lillia. in apite of ber yel- tered by men of wealth.” | F low wig and abbreviated attire. : auc ; ('M NO DELIVERY She seemed to be rather self-conscious, and I noticed that she was atin at But these identical men of wealth have heen fostering the Metro- her old tricks, for she exchanged cabalistic signs with one of the brawny knights rolitan Opera for many years past, and that is still going strong. | Z standing near, and more than once the other pages could not represen a titter at her antics. But the very idea of giving her the part of a page, with not even a note to sing! The role of Venus, now, that would have been more appropriate for her, and then the audience would have heard something worth while. No wonder she appeared ill at ease. Imagine a race horse hobbled while it sees the run- ning of the Derby, or a canary with ite bill sealed while larks and thrushes ware ble near its cage! When I reached home the same old desire seized me to write the fair Lillie another letter of congratulation. I did write one, but on second thoughts I tore it up and never wrote another. I decided that she needed no further encour- agement from me; besides, if she was inaccessible to me as a member of @ church choir, how much more so was she now that she had a place behind the footlights of America’s leading opera-house’ At any rate, it pleases me to think that I know @ good singer when f iene hear one. HOW TO START A FORTUNE J. ADAMS BROWN (President of the New Netherland Bank) SAYS: “IF YOU SPEND YOUR MONEY ‘LEGITIMATELY’—NOT FOR AUTOMOBILES AND SUCH THINGS—-YOU ARE ON THE ROAD FOR FOUNDING YOUR FORTUNE.” ‘The same man of business who “managed” the New Theatre as much as his official associates would let him was and is the manager of that dazzling success of popularity, the Hippodrome. No, it could not have been the mere atmosphere of patronage to the people that killed the New Theatre. More likely it was the at- mosphere of patronage to American plays and playwrights) which | filled the place to suffocation. The Actors’ Society, whieh is not an organization of men of wealth, and has no theatre of its own, cither new or old, makes publie its offer to furnish the casts for “trying out” new plays free of charge, if anybody will provide a stage for the experiment. This | sounds modest enough—but it was in just such a manner, a decade or so ago, that the Irish poet Yeats and a few kindred enthusiasts started in a hired hall in Dublin the National Theatre that to-day | stands for the most yital and significant movement in the modern | English-speaking drama. If in New York a Newer Theatre is to rise out of the shattered | hopes of the past and the chaotic uncertainty of may be a serviceable hint in this policy of “tryin rv} in the wild and woolly O West,"" remarked the head pol- | isher. ‘where women sit on| Juries, female jur-| ors are balking on | sitting up all night | in the same jury room with male | jurors,” Ls “Why not have|the Republicans are doing the howling. women jurors eX-) They are attacking the bill on all points clusively?” asked |but that which hurts them most. you the laundry man. | “The Levy bill provides for personal are obliged to cut in small pieces | Copyright. 1911, by The Prom Publishing Co, /that they meant real business and were ja long story short, to-day these four) “Well, first of all they kept thelr ex- “Women in ~~ registration upstate. The Republicans = | (ihe New York Word) willing to work out their own salvation, |young men have a surplus of 600,000." | penses down as much as possible, and| suffrage commun [don't daro protest againat that because sete the bank was ready to help and this 1s| ‘Just how did they proceed in thelr tles insist on the|they started it by wishing it on New * present, there out” the untried. | Wisdora of the Ancients. * “To gain success you must continually keep the money “The young men of to-day with grit need very little of a business in the business.” money to start with.” “It is ridiculous for people to deprive themselves of the 3 ‘To start a fortune or gain a measure of success, the necessities, and no great fortunes were ever made fellow in dead earnest has no trouble in getting that way.” ‘backing’. “Saving is absolutely a matter of habit. “Marriage has nothing to do with the saving proce: (HORACE, E to whom his neighbor's lot 18! POOL! you praise a mullet that | agreeable must of consequence | weighs three pounds; which dislike his own. | Fine I do not wonder if some I is worth whil to be acquainted | persone eat up their estates, with two kinds when they had made a little money’ they sauce | i : ye | rights that men en-/York City. Personal registration uj - . @ common case I am quoting, To make |venture?” I asked. id not go off and buy automobiles or THAATIN @REEND i : — & By Sophie Irene Loeb. |* a - invest It In stocks or property, but they Joy, | among sald |atate will prevent the voting of srave- ITHER all ot ye Come near me T Rome you long for the countrss | ¢¢ HIS thing of saving may be put it right back Into the business and | rights being that of x vlog on ites stones and Gelnlene “who cross the As order wht 2 convince you When you are in the country you summed up in one word added to ite growth all the time. Outside of those who look upon border on election day to cast thelr hat you are mad | extol the absent elty te the skies, habit, raid Mr. J, Adams a vi recarious means %f livellhood I|pallots for the Grand Old Party. road to forming four fortunes, But with | jury service with the same Joyous de-| howling about the personal registration, the attractions of the time it was not|meanor noticeable in one bound for| but they are howling about the tm- easy. Jad). pending. gentruation of fuslon, ele ia * a Gen: “Here {es a chance to occupy |a politician's last sort, ne Levy aera aor toes olatlne anee time of women after they et the vote. | bil! will cause the votes upstate to of pink and| pleasures, &c. In fact, thes did not| Let them do all the jury duty and let} counted as they are cast and not OR everything, virtue, fame, glory, HIS fault !s common to all singers, divine and human affairs, are sub- I that among thelr friends th servient to the attraction of are never ine'ned to sing when riches. asked, but unas! they never desist. | Brown, — president of the New Nether- land Bank at No. 41 West Thirty- fourth street, “You Just a Glimpse Into , The New York Shops © sho) ten- cludes the dainty shad Hg Henkon Cab Tbe TT" shops are now making exten: jes the dainty HERE are some whose gentus in- LAS, how indiscreetly do we or- vents notiing but new kinds ol A da severe law against our pastry 5 he men attend to their legitimate busl-| they are needed. aiver. : sive displays of heavy dress ma-| blue, as well as white, at $1.0 @ yard,|deny themselves any creature comforts, | t pie aels | MAES " ie uk eer eee terials, the striking featare of] Cheviot is one of this senson’s popu-|but they advanced slowly, carefully | ness. If necessary, ae eo earl (____StI Room for Willcox. ae — e hal saving, i 0 | “ VED THE DOL-| right of a m om 7 ine : item een | ip had which 4s the diversity of color lar materials ani navy blue Js the pr ‘THEY CONSER PRA es rh RRA DOPE I re Ore Hreaies Gm ster W's 1 am in my senses nothing | he grit never do tt | tyandgome corduroys in all shades are| ent leading color. A Mnch wide navy |LARS AND THUS THE HUNDREDS | hiv peers oan he geansies: cull: OM | atl ease rene polanee, TU c+ Reena i rae jas i iad sa ‘ “It ts one of the cheviot rd, SARE OF THEMSELVES, AND | ‘The female f | a v vey boing shown and these are especially |diagonal cheviot can be had at $1 a yard, |TOOK CARE a his Buro ton,” ee elncsse | 1a) Par, fow things that] irable for the demi-tatlored sult or| A long Dlack satin coat Uned with} THAT I8 THE WAY WITH ANY IN-| many reforms, In te rat ae ae | br ashe 1 nee Fer gen a POPHIE TRENT 2008 ROE come 10 1h. separate skirt. An excellent cordu-| broadcloth 1s an entirely new atyle note. | DIVIDUAL. TAKE ANY MAN WORK: | recruited for jury uty ia ek . i. | fits and starts, To | ‘he xquisite colorings, twenty-one| One seen has the Ining, the deep shawl/ING IN THE STREETS, FOR IN- | inaulted on the stand when toes put #0 much away | 10% 19 exa inches wide ts $2. a yar collar and fancy cut wide cuffs of royal|gsTANCE. IF HE ONLY MAKE A| amination as to their mental ant oe The displays of waists are unusual | purple broadcloth The collar is trimmed | DOLLAR A DAY, SAVING A LITTLE | itberative qualifications oy fresh JAW: Dart of @ Berson and nearly all accumu | ceh ag to variety and styles. Most of| with deep alll fringe and the price isloUT OF THAT WILL GIVE HIM CON-| yers. A talesman to-day ts in the same Jation of any worth t# the result of this | tery are in dark colors of clinging tex-| #76, FIDENCE IN HIMSELF AND THUS | position as a man foolishly seeking farve nF hantt tures, the fashionable bright color be-| The neckwear departments are con-|GREATE A HABIT WHICH CBER-| join some burlesque secret society. He “It grows on the Individual and he z each week or sach month becomes a | Addreas Kes! r Norma) College, Park Ave. and GSth St, from his dream and brings him down to th and the ¢ ns rte unt burglars . ing afforded by the linings, trimmings| stantly offering something new in fancy TAINLY WILL STAND HIM IN GOOD | ja the butt of the cheap wit (98 the Fe the Editor of The Evening World the same benevolent State, headed py (C&M! resist It. Habitual savers think | a4 embroideries. | novelties. ‘The latert {9 an attractive|srmAN WHEN HE NEEDS 1 MOST, | counsel for the prosecution and e Where can I get full particulars as} its Governor, the 2 jy, [they are loss when, for any length | » waists of crepe-de-chine are) ornament, made of coronation pratd, in E TROUBLE WITH A GREAT ‘Another reform would be the !nabll- rnor, the nd Assembly, Handsome waists of crep THE tgs to the requirements for entering Normal | rushes Jof time, they are compelled to keep | »,. 8.60, y have the|the form of pete’s with centres of|sANY PEOPLE 18 THAT THEY | {ty of the judge to pan the Jury When) wants to find out how thin ru t t cellar steps being offered at § They ha MANY F y ih College, courses te be taken there and | throw ting arms around the |{0™ Putting any money away, And! onesided double frill, and while very! French knots, They are good repre-|MHINK BECAUSE THEY DO NOT | {t brings in a verdict against his {deas n the subway during the rush hours length of courses? 8. H. A. | poor persecuted burglar, and shouts in h sine lo all the inducements | fayhionable they are al decidualy | tions of marguerites, daisies and|yAKE VERY MUCH THAT THEY | of what the verdict should be. A judge] it's a good thing he came back now, Crammer tte ber Ame! i joud Sena 0 to its offte {n the world will not make them realize | pretty and Just as serviceable, since! asters, From the one “flower” are sus-|MUST OF NECESSITY LIVE RIGHT | feels no hesitancy in speaking to @/if he had walted a month there Se fiveat ine, tho great necessity of saving or rather | they are in dark colorings, | penced three others, giving a pretty ef-| Up ‘To IT. jury of twelve reputable male citizens | wouldn't be room for him," To the Editor of The Evening World ahaik aot sii conserving that which they have, The lavish use of frintes Is bringing| fect. They are obtainable in various To settle a discussion kindly answer This is true perhaps in some particu- | ag though they were a bunch of crooks holds 1 up for another $10, Mie BIG PORTUNES OF TO-MOR- | out quantities of this trimming, ‘The| colorings at 0 cents, lar cases, but the whole thing {s largely | and panhandlers. ‘The judge would regarding correctness of the grammar) Wit LiaM STONEMIIDGE Yor ROW WILL BE MADE KY ‘THI! piain silk fringe in the one-inch width| Handbags of faiile silk or burlap can}, matter for the individual—this ‘hing | have to be courteous to a Woman Ju vaed in the following sentence: “Re- one |YOUNG MEN OF TO-DAY WHO fap cents, while the two-inch width| be had stamped in various designs for|r anding the road to wealth,” “Ag for the verdicts, they couldn't be Green Room celved your answer in reply to my offers ln. ane gait, JHAVE MORE ENERGY THAN |e 50 cents a yard embroidery. ‘They are in the large en-| “Do yov think that marriaa people | any more foollsh under feminine au ing of dark leaver for which F thank | yy tere MONBY BECAUSE IT TAKES, Chenille fringe promises to be very) velope shapes end close with a large! gave better than unmermed ones?” T Jc. T. | New York Seving Glintings worke pices than they are row whe BRAINS TO USE MONE rO AD-| popular. The black tn the two-inch | button, They have cordelieres and can! avked a }out by males. As a matter of ‘act, the y ° r in VANTAGE THESE DAYS AND WHAT | width is 60 cents a yard, A large line| be had in all prevatiing colors at 75| “1 do not think thet marriage makes a Intelligence of furies would By Frank J. Wilsta , Years old car on in WHAT | I ped ere i. Corps, World Building music at little oF no cos v ro EASY INVESTMENTS | of threednch wide chenille fringe tn-' cents. bit of difference in this matter of RV | eee erent omen want ji To the Editor of The Evening World : NOT 80 BASILY TAKE ——— |ing. People can ave sust as well mar- ag in favor of giving them > Win you kindly give me information Pra OR EPA Ecol aM > OF TO-DAY, ‘THI ried a they san singly if they wan? to tH privilone ot hogging the whole ver- wo Hee Fae Bore fannie tea in regard to evening swimming classen (a. eye paitor of The kvontug Worlt PLENTY OF MONEY IN TH ” . Laat a) \ h , for women; classes other than the |7“{™, "4 PEO e sc GRY AMI AD Ia NO CA Dre The Hed gevi lle Editor “gome men have been known not to| formance ees winter the critic tans him, Y. W. C. A. and Teachers’ College; lo- | “Oia Timer,’ to know that modern THING FOR YOUNG MEN nave anything unttl they: were married [Howling With a Partisan No HEN an actor Makes a hit there cation, fee, if any, etc, anywhere in| ghemistry does not teach aif ly SO CALLED “BACKT and others never saved afterward. It |'—— — — ferret Oe APEC TAA upper Manhattan or the Bronx, Or if! then the old in so far as the use of sult, WERE IF THEY CAN PROV By John L. Hobble A ea cath wate Speaking of politics.” ald the head jenty of knockers, ypot separate swimming classes, gym-| in the manufacture of lee cream ts con. ITY AND BACKBONE IN “But what I wish to emphasize in this |polisher, “that Levy election asiums to which there are swimming | cerned, His reason for th actress has a difficult time to maintain a fat figure on her con- ition.” matter of getting anywhere from the |ing @ lot of oppos' A financial viewpoint is the great neces-| ‘Sure, replied the laundry man. @vols attached for the use of students. | iy exactly the same as wh a ATHLETIC, | ers derived from exper! nw, Four ye ENTORPRISE, | K NOLDS says when you AWYPR RASP says they ought to 1 know of one particular case right E have made 4 mistake and don't I pass some mor) laws becau: et and @ slim one otherw ng men went Into a blame tt on, some boddy else you there win't enuff things unlawful sity of making @ practice of saving so | “Every anaien id eau ba eer nde DAS ASAE RUG » Arms and the Man. our ovurse in physlos at the business with very little capital four! are gettin’ emarte! | now to make @ respectable livin’ for all| that it becomes @ matter of course, and /oppositign bec mee, | breed o Re- AS actor does not have to go to Ver- ©0 the Editor of The Evening World: lot Commerce two years ago, years ago. They had much enthusiasm, | eS | the attorne: all other mattera will adjust themselves |san, Dost Fyeall 0 ee Sea mont to be slated, Gale Siate of New York forces a ctt!-| A COMMERCK GRAD, 19, Hy, but little monoy. | Jr) OY HARSH saya that his wite can| — accordingty, oA Pan lone RP TT tas cleation. Dill the to pay a dollar for a permit to fg- | County Rewister'’s OMice, They had some difficulty in getting a| R get more enjoyment in plannin’ to EV FROST ways to delteve overy-|_ “THE ONLY FORM Fon |e see ny hel! re poerne (4 camively swear ta hover, protect wis |my the Editor of Tw Evening World Jetart for lack of funds and I do not spend one dollar than she can in R thing you. ébo'h beat, bug 18 you |SHM POUNDATION OF & PONTUNM | that caused, the helpiess, Remociere omy the woman who tmegretically loves Where can I find all {ve rightful owns overlook this element in my argument, |actually ependin’ five; 80 he never doss| heay anything (he chances are it)18 THE CULTIVATION AN AB: up an Z @TO\—end then w: , okp wakes bim er of & certain Louse? > a. W. But as soon as they showed the bank |enything t etep the plannia’, don't true, is. [SORBING HABIT OF SAVING, ” + “Qlow the Democrats are ln power and est th - " : me hw \ ctr RRA CREE NE SEO ERI = .

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