The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1912, Page 4

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ns Sal as, atiaal ENS b> ih. emcee an meee semet eee eed tl - are Ser ‘ ‘ THE E NING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1912. TOLESOFIN? |Why Do Flirts | o a.ott® Question Is Answered by the junit mits TOBE PRODUCED Appeal to Men ® | @ FIVE SWEETHEARTS 22 in “The Affairs of Anatol” ecg." are at — “THECOMING WEEK man of charm, wit, and, for the game, “The Point of View,” a Prob- Her married life is evidently very @rab In tone, a8 shown in the pregnant line MISS ISARELLE after Anatol asks if he shan't see her LEE home: “Yes, they'll be fidgeting.” no doubt as much Imagination, N much curiosity, and as much cowardice ba Cuona) and her husband ig as s Tesman. Along is losing something out of Ht —_— fem Play, Will Be Brought Pi " } Out at Matinee. —_ looking forward to the ‘ that engenders happiness with ‘ ‘ MISS DORIS {ta very hopefulness, and she falls tn ¥ ' TRGFELD'S “Fotis of wit" wit : KEANE \ But the “only way” he proposes 1s be shown at the Moulin Rouge camry not the only way her conventions ad- on Monday nist. The book and . ¢ ‘ amit, and they part, he not guessing her lyrtece are by Harry B. Bmith, the muste PA vw cowardice, and she sensing idling. { ‘Raymond Hubbell, The scenes ine wey ‘Their meeting outside the florist’s shop is a revival of old memortes that leave her only with regrets that she didn't have the courage, and he with the con- solation that he has a rendezvous with \ i & “Deauty palace,” Herald Square C ez night, the Boardwatk at Atiantic a As ZEe » Times @quate, a Bowery restau- ( / / , ‘ gud a Caroune sac im @arwels, 10a Adame, Josie Sadier, +4 Bert pesos \fegioael by tes tj Re y : Errol, Bernard Granville an jam ; f ©. Schrode. There will be the usual i R gold dh tal Ee +1ANCA) ‘ — aege chorus. My ag tra sat the Forty-cigh T™ DAINTY i Ret tos ‘ttl OR } t produce “The Point of View,” by Jules —_IS Zs> | the “dear little g! —_>——_ LONA IS THE CRISIS OF ANATOL’S LIFE IN “WEDDING MORNING.* HERE COMES a crisis in every man's life (not necessarily the a \ day before his wedding) whea Whoever crosses his path, girl or man, ho clings to tenaciously. Lona's acele dental Ing with Anatol proved nearly fatal to hi Her pursuit an? capture of him BY ISABELLE LEE. MISS MARGUERITE CLARK Wie _~ CHILDA)Y Goodman, for a series of four ee performances preparatory to making it the regular evening pro- gramme at another New York theatre. ‘These performances, after the coming Friday, wil: be given on the following Monday, fussday, Ween Sead Prt HAT are the seven ages of man compared with the seven sweet- A soulless Uttle creature. Being able to |ing her—and then she must have amused peo boa sai day. Mr. Goodman's play alms to treat |* hearts of man? The difference between Shakespeare and Schnitaler Tar wale kaa Geta tae a deeaad te based emmatineane Morp irreaponsibie than Bieeay ohne the woman problem from a new angle tn thia instance 4a mainly a matter of numbers.’ In shurt, the lady arto hotise has been such & ¢iminet GABRIELLE IS SMART. the man seeks in hours of depression, “fhe | sj * trtumph for her that ehe has not had I. ’ and Anatol, who “does not fee) nik ’ when the girl who has stumbled in the|loves of Anatol, as trotted out in “The ‘Affairs’ of Anatol” at the Little time to realize that there is anything! WITH A CONSCIENCE, IN | r¥Ing." found ono more irresponsitie ik ge be thipetglgee 2 apeligad reer ution | Theatre, are reduced from the original aeven to the all-suptcing five. deeper. Charm and personaiity had won! “wow RIGTMAS PRE. SENT? | ha” himsett In Lona. ponsible Wed Lasene any Ute ie an The actresses who represent these varied butterflics of romance have | msg for her her piece in the opera, but one * | Hone ts buoyant, self-reliant, peppery, — at’ tim { cast will be Emily Stevens, Luciiic Wat-|written for The Evening World their opinions of Hilda, Bianca, Mimi, KATHERINE caves bo ‘Sonettater BY KATHERINE EMMET, sorting in her wet Eire { son, Madge Kennedy, Grace Griswold, | Gabrielle and Lona, Taking them one by one, the question is: In what EMMET play to realize that he meant her to heve HAT DO I THINK of Gadrieniot| Ms Wedding evening, and of course thore i May Malloy, Helen Campbell, Howard | way goes each flirtatious type appeal toa man? Here are the answers: ® touch of vulgarity. ta not neces-| Autor ia nor rest a4 SHE found HIM, Wiles Peorsio and. George (GABRIELE) One knows that Mim('s lafest affair Dut essentially| care of herself, and she doce an take « with the man in the orchestra will not universal as Anatol, in] One wond: ; ee ld tism. ‘nis pl b; | Ibe dirs} ot & series of revivals ot| HILDA MYSTIFIES US has eeiaeation that ehey. wauie net: ey ndeZawad be of long duration. She ts too muoh| tact, That many men in Americ: } talon} cofmedi¢s is to be made at the) ALL THE TIME IN “ASK {it again. = @ creature of opportunity. I feel cer-| suffering from some form of “Anatoll-| god, may n 8 Schnitzer su, t ‘of Mesic.en Monday, when ME NO: QUESTIONS.” |, She loved Anatol in « babyish, kitten. | oneness tain that the manager of the opera house] tis’ as in Paris or Vienna or Peking,| throw him back Into Lo ‘Milt wih be produced. Th * [lah way, and was able to wind him is lurking just around the corner. I doubt not. He is @ sort of tea-taster | arms and clinging hands—hande y The Red wi or hh ene ——_——_ round her finger, while near him. When/ her to register anything, except her|tentions, and the art he displayed in| “ao me one of the subtiest character-| of women. And for every Anatol sooner | With Well sharpened nails ready for use, will include Stella Tracy, Sadie BY MARGUERITE CLARK. | ®way he became suspicious and feared! profession of circus girl. ordering @ dinner appeaied to her. But! .veaiing and most amusing part or later in his career there will be a m Lona's point of view ( the werey, Vrorence = Seine, Priscilla she was untrue to him, but as soon as| “pint,” with her fearless sophistioa-|1 cannot imagine Mimi listening with Anatole of life ever @ point of view?), to Kno Neil MoNell, Walter Wills] QQOME PHOPLH seem to think Hilda |), with him again he felt it cruel ba play Gabrielle. be used and thrown in the t pd eusthen: should be a common type because| ty acunt Nem ca he ewuld mot reste her | ton and worldly wise alr, ts really rather| any comprehension or Max has asked Mimi to explain herself, | “ghe is of the conventional, smart| guiting. And I fear the lesson oh rll + 7 thas orl af the taheoeme Pind” she later married @ milkman, but|ingenuous manner. Ie therefore refused | ® 600d sort, one of those carefree, happy| tol’s subtlety and distinctions, saya with great satisfaction drawing-room type with what we call a| is one that will eventually bring Anatol i with Charlotte Walker, be the at refined girl has married a/to ask the all-Important question when| Wanderers, snatching her pleagures|that in spite of the New England conscience. That does| back to ter aide later, curious, ¢aaci- cueen F the Ghent ¢ House. he had hypnotized her lest he learn the| whenever she can. Affairs of the heart|‘t#ste in wines s! r not prevent her having @ capacity for t MOver Night”. will be geen at the| would not necesita truth, He could not bear to be distilu-|are really her dally bread—in fact, 1| 0" Of his reasons for being bored with loving, but Imits her capacity for giv- we End Theatre. When I first read ionized. hi imagined her rather in the light| "er Was that she had become bored ing, perhaps. She is what Schnitzler i Mowner* wit be played by the stock Whatever Hilda did or 414 not do, she friertsr a with him. 1 woman of the| ories of old times—caused Anatol to % ) coer” Win’ Web * et Hilda es @ poor shops at least kept us all mystified, ‘This Is habit Soni elo Mim! ts Anatol’s complete defeat—all ; the antithesis of|get the posstble result of the full bai Semen Med ee Ae seederar } who was refined toe certain desres | her peculiar appeal e, Bibl might have been more suc-| 1:5 philosophy, all arguments and pro-| Tere, ‘nothing negative in Mimi; ie y Sat asia ot eee toe ae caeatatne AEA On ar Ga Comma Theatre. Sst adi acapatthiny-rtpenttienr gotten} —_—>— cessful in recalling her glowing hours} tegtations leave her entirely unmoved— | independence of Anatol, his analytical woman of breeding, ¢ [less head, or he would never have se “The Gay Masquereders” wit be at/ for one who did not have dels super-| pIBIIN ‘AN EPISODE” era ebsol hea ate) too, troubled to| she doesn't understand them. Mim! is_soii! must have been interested in atu A woman with pride of intellect newed the intrrrupted relation. z Marrey Hil Theatre. ficial refinement. thought eep ol ics, but I fancy the box| = : bt Hurtig ang Seamen's will be “The| de Greased modestly, but in a 1S VERY MUCH LIKE containing her “past” would have been ; - 4 appeal as much to Anatol as her ALE ANATOL,| ™ch turaer than Anato'’s. : would permit. 4 FEM. sad stn, ite her frivolities, there is f he seemed the most simple of all his something sweetly serious in her nature, f People's Theatre, we Own OS Garni ae’ eaves” oon bd Big pier ip cveatty [Cry ecimoamecrcrs, ponven, Oy hee’ tae : 7 to to anpeat, Buo.| in her lite e } abiitty to” him, sho felgns re- tane's Hore in i. #0 short, she Is so fearfully ePl-| monypanee, When it fect 1 don't think Detrayed herself while under the spell odio, there is scarcely time for m whe ally places him, It's'rather pathetic, too—Max, the ope man for whom she has a sincere friend- ahip and ts hastening to sce after three years’ absence, calls her @ “harmless, worthless baggage,” although he was really glad to see her despite her worth- leasness, Bibl, to t necessarily E Slish elnging come- “How much are those musical instruments worth?” ropean. I vin feed Poor be > a remains at the Colonial. Others “Close to $1,000." nationality. Ho’ a ik Dill will be Ida Brooke Hunt! <qrow much are they insured fort’ . How many girls are like end Cherldah Simpson in songs, Gere! wwe have them insured for $5,000." her—harmless little flirts, fitrting from rude Vanderbilt and George Moore in cea'h Goat N one love affair to another, never really and dancing number, and Tim “Why don't yen! caring for any one. Perhaps this ts “How J LeReReneD their appeal to men, OU Gordon at the Alhambra, “Nothing left of ite sweetness but ‘The Alhambra will have among othera| “We ere living in a great nation of olties, States and bluffe—mostly bluffs."| gust.” Poor iittle cirous girl! Uncon- Lulu Glaser in the operetta “First _—— aciously,'she teaches a leason, for after dave,” Oaiva in ns evienming nA gv. Stuart Barnes at the Colonial. ‘ all, such ire always become dust, exhibition, Kate Elinore and Sam} «pve nade cinch in the Garden of Eden, but she wasn't satisfied with a| or ashes, don't they? geting es Teh Pr Wade in alsrns [S004 thing and she started.eossiping with @ sneke. You know her finish. Now @heiby’ icken Dinner,” any time « man gets drunk he sees snakes, and I don't blame him.” ANATOL BORED MIMI, Features.at the Bronx Theatre will be OR, Stella Mayhew in songs, Ed. F. Rey- Zulu Glaser abf Tom Richards at the Alhambra. MIMI BORED ANATOL, Be ard, ventriloquist; “Honor Among] Glaser—I always hed the earache when I worked at that house. IN “FAREWELL SUPPER. pagal wale eat efey —+ yd the Big Richanis—How #0? ity Four urns a ton. The bill at Procto Firth ‘avenue Glaser—The keyholes were so draughty. ‘Thea “Pus ti rere tavananeat Morgen Tatlee ana| Glaser—Did your uncle meet with an accident? {atic of Mim! {s her utter absorp- Morgan, the rathskeller trio, Felix Ad-| | Richards—Yes, and married tt. tion in herself. In her own way ler and Charles F. Semon, At Proc- tor's Fifty-eighth Street Theatre, Lew Mawkins at the Bro: although, ike him, : ee ee ine chet tac:| Parsop—What! You want to marry this man? ...°s drunk, conactoub of it. I fe n ¢ or ovem er head the bill at the Twenty-third Street Bride“Hurry| He might 4 edn infinitely One Hundred end Twenty-Atth. Btreet begins one of the greatest series of love letters ever written These letters were written by a Confederate General to his future wife. Composed in the thick of FUN AT THE VAUDEVILLE HOUSES. Maalon Brothers at the Alhambra, Hotel Menager—What 414 you boys do with that “Not to be used except in case of fire” sign you stole from the extinguisher in the hall? College Boy—We nailed it over the coal bin. » : caneers” will be at | me } BY DORIS KEANE. O ME the most striking character. eTheatre will have Don Fulano, the trick emOn the bill at Keith's Union Pauare | “The Concealed the struggle. they will go down in history as the tenderest memory of the great war between the “Bunty Pulle the strin THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS REWARD States. They touch our memories of the lost cause like a roseleaf on the graves where lie a | OFFERED BY THE (teds te lerdtegr meee ow ol ni my 5 " ' | ae tase, Gack, Wowk, ivsiey | ANNUAL BUSINESS SHOW COMPANY The four years’ struggle between North and South is over; the knightly hand that penned these | plind Montrose, Joe Lannigan, Girard letters is forever at rest. Yet, as you read the letters, you hear once more the thunder of artillery, | ‘ae muela To Stimulate Interest in the International Contests the scream of shot and shell; you catch a glimpse the great soldier’s sweetheart wife in her FOR SPEED AND ACCURACY IN TYPEWRITING desolate home. In these letters the Confederate General unlocked his heart. pa ER ' DEDICATES FIRST SCHOOL. Palisade Out te Comm Bvent in Loon! History. Palisade, which sits on the top of the | Palisades in New Jersey, was turned!) ‘Wrong side out last might by the dedi-| cation of ite first public school. The gchool cost $90,000, and is big enough now to take not only all the children in le But their parents, too. | ‘we'll grow to fit the schoal,” said | Mcrowing ¢o ft the epirt was what | to was wi alike laut | “ .”* he wrote three days after Gettysburg, “I can as feel ae eta at etc te es ee to . A eee It seems hat to say I love potty with those hearts that are stilled to love. Your fer deen Who was this man—bravest of soldiers, most chivalrous of lovers ? Read the Letters in PICTORIAL REVIEW id will know; but’we are pledged not to tell you his name, for the noble woman who inspired & levotion is still living, and now after fifty years has permitted PICTORLAL REVIEW pe them to the world. Northerner and Southerner alike will respond to the thrill of these letters—human documents of a kind never written before, never to be written again. This series of great love letters begins in PICTORIAL REVIEW for November $1,000 to the operator who exceeds last year’s record by writing the greatest number of words in the Professional Typewriting Contest for the WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP FOR SPEED AND ACCURACY. Open to all except Professional contestants of 1911. $50 to ANY typewriter operator for each word a minute in excess of the Professional record of 112 net words a minute, established at the International Contest of 1911. FIVE PRIZES of $200.00 each to typists who write 108 net words a minute, Open to all except Professional contestants of 1911. hear them cheering as I give the order, ‘Forward.’ Oh haw faithul es ha FIVE PRIZES of $100.00 each to typists who write 100 net words a minute. Open to all except Professional contestants and Amateur prize winners of 1911. One prize ONLY to any single operator. One hour's writing. International a7 pewriting Rules to govern. Entries received by Contest Mgr. J. N. Kimball, 1858 Broadway, N. Y. City, — ‘Thip Beflale Herd Thrives, ‘WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.—Despite the| He wes svrencing aan tn THE BUSINESS SHOW OF 1912 ment to-day shows tard AT THE NEWS-STANDS TODAY hard is privately owned and te said tobe / 11 69th Regiment Armory, Lexington Ave., between 25th and 26th gage Tabi Streets, New York City, NOVEMBER 1ith to 16th, inclusive, will be ‘Thane wishing extra copies is edion will soon be exhausted. ure ham at November PICTORIAL REVIEW, on sale today, 15 cents per copy tony PRENSA a Fwo-year-old Hanley Klein, who fell Berson crea une sa tne et THE GREATEST OFFICE EFFICIENCY a tela EXPOSITION EVER HELD IN THE WORLD Hoaplte!. His jureq AGE. ..++sserererevecsonsese City & Bate... .rercrerererreressreence: june Te) yan To 1) vane Comyn verre cTre eee am af p20 nv tnensreentnmtaterretelssnasareaent in

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