The evening world. Newspaper, April 12, 1913, Page 9

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ail l OV" a York Gayer Than Paris--- _|Bas, Racine. Cricket Oh, Much! Says Gaby Deslys “IAM AW New Baseball Beats Racing, Cricket and All Other Sports, | Declares Meg Villars, After Seeing Her First Game — WOMAN? HANDY INSTRUMENT IN ARGUMENT with BURGLAR el i : Nor 5 ponteD ] ‘ 4 ve PARIS ! pager aaa | Everything Very Quick Here, Especially Friend-| ih ships, and Gaby Sees a Titer Evenrbony's ! Quick Finish for the Ca-' sa ‘Dorwe er baret — She Thinks the, Turkey Trotters Will; they don’t see me for eight months, s0 once more I am attraction." MBG VIMLARS Get Tired—Yes? As for | And she nodded her sensible head — BURGLAR | emphatically at reaching this conclus oO Herself She Feels Like sion, The fact Is, Gaby Deslys is as , bright he dollar, an Old Woman and) wore were vutit tor comfort and with:| pare paige a aah for which she a > C enone in Doesn’ out heels, i thing Is ke th n’t Dance After| soy. wnat ts tr she shrilied over os. rattled OA Weaseine hie seats ae ~ A hoor. 6) Hours. her lurehing shoulders, “A gicl may not be a big artist on the THe onan Day~ ! It's @ bear,” was my intelligent 8M! stage, but she is 0 full of life that she - That ve way ww Surety !" she cried with delight that| interest me much. Perhaps that is why i NG HAs Cocw — y "she cried wi ght she hody il turkey trot—th : BY CHARLES DARNTON. | was snared ‘by ner mother, who had bite Gta flannel ragtime stert “fm Tired of Using the re playing every move 4 5 ITH her chin in her hands} dropped in to order a dressing room 4in-|immediately everybody begin,” she of the game themselves, Watch them and her elbows on her! ner for her promising chiid. xey,|S#ded, again setting her shoulders in| Phrase, ‘I’ve Never Seen | umping about in their seats, bobbing up knees -| "Kem it Is & bear and not a turkey.) motion. “Always to be lively—that Is Ps SOE: GOW 10.6- 7080: FR RUCeLy wer los oeibly- dasused Gany “Dealye Gols | inst ia:igs. Sade quwaye the lnusio:ta We| Acccetn, “eee t (alcks he cobaeel it Anything Like It,’ but} those gay colored triangular flags, hurl a a same—ragtime. Only when T go back! mnish very quick here, People will get 99 | NE advice, encouragement end ana- 1 am older in my character than| to Paris I must found something new.ltired, ‘There are too many cararets, in| What Else Can I Say??? | tiema at the payer I seem—yes, that is so! like to go out at night. I do not I work 8o hard I am too tired. Perhaps I am} ‘They will ask me what are they doing tn Ameri The tango It Is too old. Always something new Paris must have. In Paris they love to dance. There \s what we call bourgeois—you know?} every afternoon the dancing tea—very Ha! People say: ‘Oh, Gaby, she go] popular. ) out every night and have big life!’} Pretty Gabrielle of th But my life it is very small. like an old woman.” In a mere slip of something pink overhung with those inevitable ‘pearls, and with her blue eyes Tam / dancing almost out of her head, she looked more like an animated French doll happy in the possession, {for me. of hair beyond price. But don’t pick ber up for a beautiful doll. She is as practical as an adding machine. I guessed as much when she said: “T am not a dancer—I know that. Sometimes I say I will be an actres But fn France one cannot make monsy Liles mereiy shrugged her fair shoulders at the agita- tion over the turkey trot in this restless metropolis. “If the people must dance no more after 1 o'clock, perhaps they should be grateful they have one more hour than in London," she reflected, with a sharp laugh, “But to me 1 o'clock ts noth- ing. Only on do 1 go to a cabaret heve. 1 don't Uke it. Also it ts bad If 1 go one night In a weck then the people they would ‘Every night Gaby Deslys is at the cabaret.’ I think an actress must keep always behind something like this," she explained, screening her face with her hands, “If you see her everywhere you 0 you will not go to the theatre to sce her, Is It not’ ao? that not true? Every night people go everywhere. In Paris it is a small circle of people that seek amusement in the restaurants. Always in the same restaurants the same people. kvery night for ten ycara a man he go to the same cafe. ‘If 1 do not go,’ he say, ‘then it will be said I have no money any more.’ The women she say, ‘1 must put on dress and Ko to thi races, If I do not they will Tam finished.’ In New York the people they really enjoy themselves. But Paris, it is blase, New York is much—oh, much wayer than Paris, That Is the truth, I think it is more easy to make friends in America, But the American he Is like children; he forget very quick. Ho ts a very quick friend—-you understand? But he do not remember you for a very long time, Jn London it is more dif- cult to make friends, but they real and true when you do make them. They do not forget you next week, But here they enjoy themselves very much all “I Couldn’t Have Torn Myself Away From That Riotous, Glorious, Fas- cinating Game “It’s a Sport That Has the Unfathomable ‘Something’ That Sends the Crowd Crazy. BY MEG VILLARS. Well it suttinly is some game, dear New York, and it was even more suttinly some crowd! 1 am tired of using the phrase tv It's great to hear the way, with yells, madening footings through mega- Phones and the wildest “yah-yah-yah- yah"-ings, the crowd manaxes to rattle the pitcher of the visiting team! e- tween you, me and the inkwell, I won- der whether impartial justice and a crowd go hand in hand? Not when we want the home team to win, T guess! Personally 1 wanted the homo team to win (and they didn't, bother them!) for the same reasoy as I always wanted Cambri Sam- bridge boat rac hot preferred the thelr blue and white sults to the drab and red of tho Phillies, Piffling reason to give, isn't it? However, a poor one but my own. An I said before, I am not yet able to epprectate the intricacies of the Kame, so any protext to side with a team doce! 1 used to wonder, before I actually saw &@ match played, why on earth the playere wore such hideors cloth Thinking thet baseball was mer: glorified game of rounders, I didn't escort patiently thoroughly explained to me, The details are vastly bewtldering, but T quite thought I'@ got hold of the Alas! I woke up to the the knowledge that I am as great a juggins as ever, when I saw the paporg afterward. Perhaps I've grasped the ‘but I'm worried ft I Well-nourished looking youngster that Mascot was too, I guess he doe @ big trade with the peanut merchants! Tt seems that peanuts are “correct form" at the circus, at the Bronz Zoo and at the basaball match in this coun- | try. When all else fails and I am poor all become a peanut merconnt and get to the matches that I know that I am going to get badly, you eee, and thet here during the 3. B. ate to keep away end although looking néce pavilion, flirtations and strawber- ries and cream, it isn't as exciting end attention compelling as baseball! No, nothing beats Daeeball if you're fond of thrills end you like to eee a bercel of men risking all they can risk from aheer love of @ sport that has unfathomable eomething ¢het sends the crowd crasy, and aged I broad outlines, know how they are desorbed. tance, what does “Daubert sat mean? I can only imagine that It happened when one of them sitd the slide at second base and made his Panta #0 as his mommer will have to was sitting down | the B. B. fe: weason I shall not from the ‘ball ground. certainly beate everything I've Horse recing te all very well, but the actual thrifla lest atout three minutes each race and the rest of the time you have to epend sneering at your neighbor's frock u: -Card’”’ New York with a vengean I'm not quite certain what “rooting” when the Infants’ the human frog, mascot behaved in comedy, Rejane? Ah, but y She becomes—| the time. They are like children, and {t could be really etrenuoui rs \s not G alansl Only ihe pvt ball what you call It?—cheap. Jn Europe] they have a good time, But I wore so|Rever seen anything like it,” but ny honed it tie played in o And the Real Thin pa: Suppose I take a comedy~'La | tM Stress must not be seen muci|hard I am tired. I tell you Gaby Deslys what else can I say? Sapristi! What- ake manner and that Passerelle.’ for exampletwhat then?|{" VPS. In eeu * oe cay fei gas mrpeimether=799?” would - you - that - I - should-say-to- dihoys wore silk shirts -__ went, craning my neck woree than I From a teacher I learn how to say HOw WARD 4 E90 TACK to Farml” Feats ou-mayself? I am getting quite par-/end “shorts.” did at the three-ring circus, trying te thia and how to say that--the intona- fended Mech have a care|. (Yee—i know what you're thinkine Battling Nelson’s Wife, keep ack ot every cheoter in the tons—everything--ha Inculeates. Very | Some women are born kind o! jah! changing electric ‘t ads. Gheer ex- food wut tam not mvett in tne| How Would You Like to Pay Out $7,500 —_|se of entuustasn. ees on Her First Visits) iittion at ast drove mete the Talk about enthusiasm; {f yelling! Now r've seen them falling over] Finds Manhattan Is} teatne music hall the personality tt Is every: | { 2) D ' thing. It ts more diMcult to be an; ‘ ? denotes that emotion then apectators| themselves, doing cannons off the cush, |. ¢¢; ing? Next morning bright and early 1 artist like Al Jolson than to learn to | Every Day on Bills ? The Circus Does It, at @ baseball match fairly sees all) tearing the turf and knocking chunks Up to the Billing. «rabbed my “emerald roll” and beat tt play a part. He tt and every: j —————-+¢e- lout of mother earth and making a Te for the “apectal bargains.” @ay, I think records and the enthusiasm {fs a: contagious as measles are to children body laughs, N Jolson, he is won an learn thet, must Mave started I take to the “so one of my ancestor that thing, becaum seven-course meal of grass and rocks, As they bite the dust Iam left wonder- A Fortune Goes to the Feeding of An Army of Men and BY MRS. BATTLING NELSON. She might have been speaking of @ Jungleful of Animals. im holiday time! 1 did my Uttle bit | ing why they don't wrap up even more. W one my impression of New) vicn of atuft like @ Guck to water. Coquelin, For a moment her adinira- “s ; \If I were @ catcher in range of those - After » few hours in Broadway ghope lon left her speechless, but only for a to the best of my ability; though, soq.miten-a-minute apitballe T'd bavelr isa a Wor onder eutuimeae vad roster]! discovered Fifth avenue, I think I moment. by Is a chatty Uttle thing | AG any one ever figured out what athe animals the daily consumption of | being an absolute novice, I didn’t « complete silt of cast iron armor, and | °. acquaintance with your eltg_. | 4scovered tt by the increase in prices, ( and that's no pur mint of money it costs to operate | food Is seven tons of hay, 200 bushels of | quite know which elde I was yelling wouldn't be content with @ mere salad} ny the great dorire to go bargain| th? “liveried door openers,” the dig “In the music hall you must do some- the biggest present-day circus?| oats, 159 bushels of corn, 60 bushels of at Yes, 1 yowled with the yowlers basket over my head and @ padded|) ining pome day in your big stores, | Teen buses, and the “match box” thing,” she enlightened mo, "But in| Wintering the Barnum & Bailey Cireus|Pran, one and one-half carcasses of} 111 4 ial 4 oh, how fancy Walntcoat But 1 was never quite certain that 1| °rrlames Paris they give you nothing. In the | alone consumes $140,000, Independent of | becf for the lions and tigers and 700| impartial energy, and oh, how .. of those baseball requisites ahautd, After having perused all the ede tn revues {t 1s awful. In London I am a| repairs and building new qguipaxe. But|Pounds of vegetables for the other|I enjoyed it. must come in quite usefully to the! wienever any of my friends left the| newspapers for so long I felt them to bigger success than here because they | it's when the circus gets on the ruad| animals, Then there are needed aix| | feel J have the makings of a first-| players’ mommers, sisters and wives'| w be the real guide to New York, As for New York I had a respect And I stepped off a trolley car on let me do what 1 like, Here they try|and New York forgets about it for) tons of straw for bedding. ‘Vhe glove would make a fino kettle- Wo: holder, and it seems to me that the bat as I arrived at @ delicate point financially I glided home. class fan in me, but I’m going to learn the rules and vocabulery of the bordering on reverence for them. when to make me more like the American | eleven months that the Mnancial strain) What about the foodstuffs for th: } sil. They don't go in the right way | ts felt. Kach day requires an expenili-| 1,600 «nen and women who comprise the muat be a dandy tnatrument to une In} Forty-second street and Broadway for! 1” the afternoon a good friend, up. | amo “ham,” playing emal! time, owned ' y’ with me~you understand? I am eure | ture of at least $7,500. Figure tt out for| human personnel of the circus? Here in| ame by heart, and also tako a course arguing with any midnight intruder of| the firet time it seemed to me 1 mad! Porting @ limousine, took us for @ spin the smatiest house in Brooklyn he'd die ‘ the public would Ifke me to be abso-| yourself for a season of eight months] an itemized Wat for a day in Brooklyn, |of deep breathing to try to develop felonious intentions. shack Neavanmadd the. UAnaen 1 | We sailed up Iverside Drive and, as{ Of Drosperity, Brooklyn looks good to lutely Parisienne, Is it not and see how much money is put Into cir-|taken from the statement of the chef: | my jungs more before Igo to another, If Enxlish policemen were fur-|, ee diecevered ‘that tt ta the| the uovelists way, we drack all the| ttle me, you bet. It may not be run- There couldn't be any doubt about it, | culation each year, ‘Three hundred pounds of beef, 150 s nished with clubs like that and allowed] hentrieat sy ees es Mt on | View: We dusted through Central Park, | Sing at the epeed limit like this aide of A pair of blue eves make a powerful| Salaries of the performers range from| pounds of mutton, 200 pounds of pork, | Match. Glory be, and what wonder- theatrica istrict; #0 asn't @0| the river, But {t's going some, too. to use them for a gentle Jape with the auffragettes, the dear ladies would have a Uttle decency and respect for other people's property knocked {nto them, By the way, I'm thinking that perhans | y Mayor Gaynor will have to send round and stop the turkey-trotting | Wa glided up Fifth avenue, ‘The homes on the avenue we found ‘ & little disappointing, as I couldn't at district looked ty @ lke a glant car- . \ frat ae pulder-to- Est Paige papesyer aE Ey ket the arite of that shoulder-to MRI pean shoulder line up without any romping Kround for a lawa mower, Tt struck ine ax great to see all m favorite atreet car ads—staring out at] We shot down through the Bowery, much wrong about the angels! ‘We sped along into the famous Green. When I spotted all the lights the! ‘wood Cemetery. I came back to New | York in the subway. And I consider that at last I've had @ real car ride. Zip! and you’ re I wouldn't have missed it for the world. argument. What ts there for a man to say? ‘Nothing worth printing. So let's et on ta the next Gaby glide. “I do the turkey trot in Paris—tho first one,” she proudly announced ‘Now everybody's doing {t there, Paris $30 to $600 a week. May Wirth, the young Australian equestrienne sensation, gets @ season's sum that would keep the average workingman on a vacation for the rest of his life, It costs a barrel of money to get the animals 5 chickens, $00 loaves of bread, half a barre] of syrup, 72 cases of exes, #0 gallons of mijk, 1,0 pounds of butter, 1,40 pounds of fish, % bushels of apples, alternating with California oranges, peaches and pears and other fruits in ful lungs you have, you baseball spec- tators! I've heard the sinister mur- mur of the mob during the riots in Paris, the loud cheers of the crowd at the Grand Prix when the favorite tthe base. it emile if it hear anybody aay the| which comprise a great popular feature! season. mins thalkbame valls ct ihe Baviaian tei siaiones’ vars vice af It didn’t took @ bit wicked to me-from| OM Yes I saw the horse care! Great turkey trot Is shocking. There it is|of the circus, The mother of the baby] Condiments and oanned pres cca (aahe aia Binvaic rare, (alruak up Vmmeen aia WINK UB sa hand @ua wring | 1081 mAehIne treat! The first I ever saw. But then - called the grizzly bear—but {s all the| giraffe cost $14,000, Tom, its father,| bought in cases by the gross P : ° " Na eamea the Raltsdauas oataLGrh ABA ee eee rite | We flow over Manhattan Bridge. 3 got] *,00% Sy Stet lamb tn Central Pari same. And you know where {t began? | cost $12,000, 4ining-room attendants serve this varied | When they nearly tore the Poof Off ey totted in the Hmited xpace bhe- to sigh and moan for “dear|'Y first real @ant at that famous I look in my dictionary, and there I] The equipment for this season's show) bill of fare and the high salaried chef| because the French crack beat the tween the benches! Brrr! It wa [hanging basket—Brooklyn Bridge, and iW Krom th i Broadwa r conversa- thrill, fas Ab dep:s come inn gm Seth bus areroea Bs Sulby oY Mee Hi eid paren: of eight wtans. The | German, I have heard Eva Tanguay pleavure, and a shocking a | tons T gathered that when they were! far beyond ft=the Statue of Liberty.| phe Dutldings stand ‘higher, in my reel hytats Pe ee ene ne ne Beier taney cag eailieent My with a cold {p her head; but all those raxitude, 1 4 hav exe an 6 my] at home they we alway 4 eating thete| 1 an imagine how rood she must look—| estimation, than anything el ane t eat in the andstand refrig-|three “squares at Churchill's {holding up a Ab wala 7 p step on @ hot plate and first he burn|1s valued at more than $200,00, ‘The IT 18 OFTEN THAT way. noises are as the gentle ripple of a at behind the “plate” (that Live ili Hat, nayte a Amertenh sovtnig home’ tama ihe] call the highest ones off by eame and *¥ one foot and ho lift it up, then he burn| horses and thelr decorations are worth| « trouble with you.” he com-|trout stream compared to the boom- nical, (ent (U)) to he & mere eet ihe Auocihe in Poa L "ID T feel aw if I had reached the acme another foot and he lift it up, too, lke | $40,00. The menagerie ts estimated to! TOU Aan Alwaye Wials line Teaenl afl that ccaan! wave; rian (tleaciiars CHL in the wabin sunmtlion meen ited hem Suokliie Si ARSED 7 ek a | Oe Oe this, have cost 872,00 and to be worth more|ing for something I can't afford to get Br fo wav ake ae ene dentin ME OF | i ANG Wey sale iO) “Naw. all | he heard about Brod ‘The women are stunning, the men are | ‘Taking a hand mirror from her dreas-! than that amount by reason of tricks | for, |the cradles are out in the dining ight Ghatatiekneah: tiga , in fron! K-/ ton wan ach Jokes ae that of the gentle-|handsome but @ bit extreme ‘The i ing table she placed {t on the floor and| drilled into the animals by trainers | ¥ the| room and the commander begins to , iv t had aoa, thal é 1 - ite afod late bee ete i Pater wy Ave 5 laies look as 1f they had just + proceeded to show me what a hot time) A tabulated lis: of the items nended | assure the ladies there is no danger. fur i: with three weeks sn Med, L couldn't | H an positing 0 , THOHEEY man It CDA, ODIO Rone (et ee net 06 SatenaR MAL RAMA Aan. Ao Faris Fhy cipnese hy bens ul Mingser Zen Fer seas ib se Dab marely comand ia "aneciain” 00 Kalrwe Kicrious tascigating gate whica Lp ong ade and dowa we other 4 way, gow, take th from me, Mf that alley, ese up to tbe billing! tees

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