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CHA A CENT . Lite MY PoP} of the By CHARLE tis throne, Think of that! No, ir remember ‘The Prisoner of or “Rupert of Hentsau” you Douglas Fairbanks Hawthorne, Martin L. Aslop as Prince Viadimir. can fx the story to suit yourself, It really doean't matter. The thing to do fa to ot tight and wait for the ecrap in the second act R ni # Other ¢eate performed by Mr. Fair- banks indlude teaps over @ garden wall and@ from a balcony when revolution- fete take a shot at the poor old King. ater which he breaks into the palace through @ window with bullets from ebind to epeed him on his way. There tatke ‘business to the revolutionists Blow open the gates, and then pays off the whole darned army money he has won at Monte Carlo. The rest is easy. He simply goes ahem} and spreads American Prosperity and American slang all over to tie a can to “The Dove of Peace,” but as olive branches are put quite out of reach by the performance at the Broadway Theatre, else to do. In thelr possible attempt to fullow in the footsteps of Gilbert livan, Who happened to wea, ed art thelr toes against that large boulder wh suceess. Mr. Damrosoh's score res@mbles Sulli- van's music only In its choral qual! ad this ts phasized so strongly hat "The Dove Peace" seems \ted down with It Except for a fer pretty walts and one or two Lively touches there's nothing Wht and alry about the music. And Broadway dearly loves the light end alry! Most ad been written with great earnest- wm, but no inspiration. The first act finale in an inmesiows @rrengement of “The Star Spangle ‘Manner,” dut the music generally has tyztce are not Bicely to Te te AiMoutt te understand EES tote errr erat emerson —emeneniin cone pueomme “Hawthorne ' @ Knockout. ‘ALE ebout @ play with a punoh! “Hawthorne of the U. 8. tickets for the fight and put your money on Kid Fairbanks. ) stands In the way of a Broadway | of the numbers sound as though they Mir, Irwin's reputation as ®tDove FAMBLY DOWN, THA STAIRS! U. S. A.” S DARNTON, Herve one with a smash It's A.” and {t te giving the strenuous the Astor Theatre, example of dramatic action those keen-witted man- Cohan and Harris, have picked another winner. But they may thank As the fearless hero of th when, in his own unromantic language, he smashes the chesty Prince! trying to put it all over the narrow-chested King and put himecif on second thought, don’t think of it the place. The ead part of it is that the Princess, who loves him as he loves her, can't marry him because ‘he’s just @ plain, common, everyday citizen, But the grateful ol King fixes that by explaining that when he diea there won't be any more. Kings in Borrovina. You eee, he has come to the conclusion thet Kings eren't 00d business men and that the coun- try ought to be run on the American {nstead of the Buropean pien. Where- upon the happy hero gets down on his knees, and the Reppy Princesse gots down on her knees just to show she isn't stuck up, and the curtain comes down emilingly. “Hawthorne of the U. 8. A.” is a Tidtoulous play, but @ jotty one, and it's bound to be immensely popular, James Bernard Fagan te credited with having by the American elang that becomes epidemic in the last act, I erspect that George M. Cohan took it in hand when it was delivered here. Anyway, It's just the play for Doustas Fairbanks. He's bully fn it. Miss Irene Fenwick helps him over the sentimental places eo prettily that the play ts not without @ certain romantic appeal. Mise Fen- wick {sn't at all the haughty gort of Princess you read about. In fact, ehe tries @ dit too hand to appear as shy as & mouse, Allan Pollock gives 4 legitimate and reqly admirable per Irene Fenwick as Princess Irma. formance as the uneasy old ‘King, and Miss Annte Hughes does good work as an Engiish governess, As you may {m- agine, however, most of the glory goes to Mr, Fatnbanks—and ‘he certainly 1s entitled to it. ‘The Dove of Peace’’ Falls Flat. I may seem like cruelty to pigeons hy some of the lyrics are printed on an extra sheet in the progamme, uniess it {8 to prove that there's nothing funny in them, Amateurish treatment is be- there's nothing) trayed in the vartous incidents of the book, witch has nothing better to offer in the way of fresh anaterial than mill |tant suffragettes and muperannuated ietic boots, Wallace Ir-|members of the United States Sonate. aud Walter Damrosch have stubbed) Aithough the {dea of making an Irish. man a peace commissioner has its hu- | morous possibilities, the fun doesn’t get beyond the bare idea, The book is so dul and the performance #0 slow that ‘ithe only way to get any action at the Broadway is to take a walk between acts, The whole truth of the matter Is that ‘The Dove of Peace” falls flat be- cause It Is lifeless, ‘As the Irish peace agttator, Arthur Deagon struggles desperately to re- member his lines and look cheerful. Miss Henriette Wakefield lente a good votce to the role of Juanita, but keeps her fery Spanieh epirit under remark- able control, Miss Alice Yorke sings Cleasingly and Miss Jessie Bradbury serves @ Cull portion of good nature as a buxom ‘waitress, Frank Pollock biea! plaintively aa the unkissed tenor, and ‘Thomas Hardie aings better than he acts, But even with good acting “The written it over in England, but, judging | The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wedne on sday. November 6, = o mo to Be By C. M. Payne ¥y Sure! IM GAM THATS A SUM, tes IND FAVOR UNO Ger me some FLOUR For THE TABLE vm LATE MIT Dee COOKING @ O. Heeza Boob! SAY I! WANT TOGET ANICE BOUQUET TO PUT ON A TABLE HERE YOu ARE LENA SOME BUNCH HEY > “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” What's the Use of Being Blae? By Clarence L. Cullen. Coppright, 1012, ty The Pres Publishing Oo, (The New York World), PWAKING Generally, the Man who Rails that he won't ‘Surrender nis Individuality” for Anybody 1s Lookioag tor a Chance to Quit ‘Work! ‘The Optimist aie = Stack cessity compels we to Make a Rata on Them! For the Fellow who Makes a Business of Looking for the Rift in the Late it Must be Gald that he Always Finds it! Remorse is a Poor Hill-Citmber! No Man can Appreciate or Love Normal as does the Man who has caped the Bondage of an Enthralli: Habit! Every Time we've Looked Batore we've Leaped, and Decided not to Try the Jump, some Other Fellow hes Come Up Behind us and Breesed Over it Without Looking and Grabbed the Goody! Conscience 1s one Cop that Never Hesitates to Use his Cub! He who Hesttates is Bossed! When « Man talks about his ‘‘In- teriors" tt's a Sign he Hasn't Got Any! ‘The ‘Show Me" Man generally wears Smoked Glasses! When you Find that t's Easter to Apologize to Somebody Else than {t 4s to Square It with Yourself, you've Made a Start! — Making a Wry Face over « Biter Pill doesn’t Make tt Taste any Bettert of Peace” would remain @ very 4 bird. find that About Iive O'Clock of a wy nad, Gray Winter's Day te the Time when we have to Put Up the Stiffest Fight against our Natural Predisposition for Making Bad Breaks! The Man who Doesn't Learn Some- thing New Every Day owes tt to Mmaelf to Go to Night School! ACH week thousands of mothers meet in the public school | Dulldings of this Greater City at the time of the holding of ‘so-called “parents’ meetings.” Then and there are devised ways and means for the betterment of the pupils of those particular achools. | Thousands of these same parente—and ‘they inolude men and women in all walks of fe, in all classes of society, who are planning for the good of the whole aystem—are well-nigh distracted because of their faflures in their efforts to induce thetr own children to make Progress in school, his establishment dis- \@ixty operators in downtown came to me | traught, crestfallen and ho; | My dad, James, despite my promises, despite my entreaties and despite the sev | ‘Ws expelled from every class to | which he {# sent. No teacher seems able to control him—to make him work {in his studies, He ts fdr behind other |tads his age. What shall I do? What CAN I do? The above ts typical not only of tons jof thousands of cases !n thiggolty but of hundreds of thousands all land. The proposition at hand ts not to decry the circumstances, but to point out @ way whereby the boy oan be brought within control and to such @ state of mind that he will be tractable end attentive and take in knowledge. ‘The fault ues not with the boy but 1 DONT WAT ELOWwE! TO GMEUL + WANT FLOUR TO Cook Years to ALKING 1s at once the most convenient and the most heaktful form of exercise. It needs no trafntng, no special Apparatus, no particular place Are Your Children Doing Well at School? By William Lean Pulvermacher ‘Copgriett, 1912, ty The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World), 1—How to Better Their Work, Four days ago @ parent who employs | whippings that I give him," eald) fover the | in which it may be carried on, and it with the parent. The father or mother, who has taken years to prepare for his or her particular profession, hi given |lttle or no time to the contemplation of how best to rear his or her offepring— 4 task that, tf rightly done, ts far, far more difficult than the rearing of a forty-story Dullding. | By the display of infinite patience and | by @teady training, by @ vigilance that |! never relaxed and by the hearing of |lemsons {# the boy brought to mai j estate @ man in every sense of th word, There are thousande of parents who, | mortified because their boy haa not been promoted at the end of @ school term, whip him unmercifully, Not once dur- ing the term, perhaps, had those same parents taken the trouble to look over the lad’'s home-work or to call upon his teacher, These same parents employ foremen to watch not only each day but each minute the work of the labor- |ers in their employ. These aame jabor- ers are adults, working for thair dally bread. More te expected from @ twelve- year-old than from the man who 1s totl- | ing #0 that hig family may live | In thie fair to the boy? ee INSIDIOUS SCHEME, | “Rosa, my mother-tn-law is coming | for @ long vielt to-morrow. Here is a | list of her favorite dishes.” | **¥ee, sir." “Well, the first time you give us one- of these Fitegenés ler. got @ week's aehen | PN NAIR i a 9 How to Add Ten Your Life By J. A. Husik, M. D. ‘Corea, 161M, by The Frees Publishing Oo, (Tee New Tore World), WALK TO AND FROM YOUR WORK. che PP PRT O88 On rene Tt 19 @ very healthful form of exer cise. For, in the aot of walking, the whole organiem takes part. The sreat joints are all kept on the move and practically the entire musoular syetem of the body 1p exercised through the Necessary contraction of the avusdes, ‘The ebdoming] organs, particularly the organs of the digestive system, are all brought into play by reason of the each footfall upon the wt ts m thts manner thet the ect of walking ettmuiates @ greater and more active secretion of the digestive fluids and imu- Proves the important functions of di- Gestion. In this way, too, weak intes- tines are sometimes developed and strengthened. During the act of walking the action of the heart and blood veasols 1s acce!- erated and all the structures of the body are supplied with an additional quantity of the life juice that we cull the blood, ‘This ts distributed to the brain, nervas ‘and adding to’ their vitality. | Walking stimulates the skin to action, and with the extra discharge of per- epiration large quantities of bodily | Polsons are eliminaed and thrown off, Above all, walking takes one omt into jthe open air. Home, office, store or | workshop, no matter how well cared for, can never be as well ventilated us the outside, ‘The air in the open ts con: stantly moving, and during the greater part of the year ts comfortably cool ‘The latest researches in science indl- cate that air when coo! and kept con- stantly stirred and moving 1s as near ‘the perfect atmosphere as human health requires. ‘Walking, therefore, keeps one in an Mea! atmospheric medium. | For the many whose mode of life keeps them within doors, walking ts to be histuy recommended. ‘They whould ‘walk daily, both mornings on their way to work or business, and evenings when they return home, | A walk of one or two mfles will be of great benefit, It will exerctse tho body purity the vital fuloas of the eya- tem, furnish a good appeti | tion and in the long run wil years to Ufa dd many Jarcing and ehaking which ooour at |, and muscles of the body, feeding them |‘. f j i est—end then he broke away end vomae ‘Col. West, and he hed in his Constance, my wife! In wettiod,” 1 the war but weren't.” _ ‘Atter old Gen, Buokthorn's ments had been duly ordered up, eaved the day, Capt. Hearteoase mentary ani retnforoe- and but frag- sania ties rration of his adventures after Younded and oaptured tn ia on the signal station before the battle of Cedar Creek, Jenny Buckthorn had to w him ayt. orepiant you Jong to eee your friends, and so forth, at home, when you were tat rebel prison?” she asked. “Aw—natupally; Ray Fates ere jolly lot of chal orchestra and gave concerts, don’t you know. I had @ banjo with one string, and I played one tune on it-—-Turkey fo de Btraw,' if I remember rightly. It ent Itke this Yin c the Captain stopped to @rum tt the plano with one finger. “ a bother that!" Jenny exclaimed. «poll them abeut the ewful dangers you went through when you escaped grom prison, I'll bet you were badly scared more than once?” “No—only once, and that wae ell the time, One night I came face to face with @ Confederate of Tt was “apt. Thornton." ees What aid you dot everybody exclaimed, breathlessly, “] killed him," answered Heartease, with sudden intensity, looking up from t, then dropping back one-fingered “Tur 191323 By Henry Tyrrell (Pounded on Bronson Howard's Great Play), | fang Dattlefield. “Now, let's voice as from the ba! rene ‘che interest .entred in ™ ‘weapons, “And ‘twas Col. Wiest ha wes a-looking, 100, I'll go basi,” put im Barket, who was waiting upon Gen- eral Buckthorn at the moment. “That ton was & pisen divil for gettin’ even wid an ould gru him the credit to say Dowerful awkward mon rough and tumble fotght. “Mention of the military prisons ro- P 4 Gen. = Hi 5 I bave « letter written ‘etter Cedar Brook, i to handle in Cox with—with Lieutenant He tai secaped from thers ime tater with the considerable of officers who crawled Rose's tunnel from Mentions another eom- it, as I remember—Wwho exchanged when dying of Mved Just long enough f now turned to Ker- hived West and the last engagement in had participated, tn the Shen- Aa Sergt. Barket ad- knew more about this than men alive, including Col. ‘West himesif, the company now unani- mously deciied to give him tho floor, Barket wae in Me element, especially when he observed that old Mgrgery, the cook, had Itngered in the background among hie attentive audience. He had hat a dosen teacups and a sherry glass or two arranged on the ‘ie: rug to represent the Union and Confederate Unes, while he illustrated the cavairy fire with flour- st e a [fe ste Epstdt inte! |. Made! Belle Bosquet. Sh. would hardly recognize the old place now—but I hope her presence thers ‘Will bring {t back to tte again.’ ‘The schoolhouse and the church, which somebody was speaking of a min- ute ago,” said General Buckthorn, !n now on." “Not forgetting the boepitais,” alot Genera! Havertt, with a fond glan-s ‘They are sit'l in full commission. It is for wi ” tmmorta! Lincoln said, to ‘strive to finish the work we are in; te bind up the nation’s wounds; to care ‘or Dim who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and for his orphan te do al which may achteve and che: ® just and lasting peace among ours estves and with all nations,’ ” “THE COMING OF THE LAW.” Greatest Western Romance by ©. A. Seltses, author of “THE TWO- GUN MAN,” will begin in Te-morrow's Evening World, ee !