The evening world. Newspaper, November 23, 1914, Page 8

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f NEW PLAYS @} at It Means to a Woman” A Strange Revelation. | By CHARLES DARNTON. ‘Woman who drinks anything stronger than tea may go to the Long: | terms Reve Theatre in a cab, but she is more than likely to come away on Water wagon after coring “What It Means to a Woman.” Do you |t; ? the authors of the play, E. H. Gould and F. Whitehouse, may not of the W. C. T. U., it was whteperad between acts on Saturday they are women. It was also reported that their home te in focn- first might bave been guessed; the second was interesting, for 1 aimed to show the dan- fmptations of New York, might eve this giddy, lona- 1] metropolis as others eee it. they, of course, didn’t gently. Altogether, it was @ and rather harrowing rev- made. | MRIght we stare at the gay wife business man who told of “eye-openor” the moment @ut of bed, then a cocktail after which highbalis ‘eréer of the day, Without Grieves was an enthusi- » as well aw a Auent Mar fllrt. Shoe betrayed Mead _ traits of Madame ¥ Quality In erg a Quai te first great consideration is ators Pianos have a full, rich, deep ton: fine ‘ore quality—and the piano that has tone is the best piano to buy. Bovary without developing any of that lady's interesting qualities. It seems her father had been a hard drinker, but 11 waa dificult to sym- bathine with her on that core, since she was forever falling back upon the 1d excuse that her husband neglected |) her for hin buniness. As a matter of fact, he wan ubviously devoted to her, and there wan no occasion for her to feel hurt when he explained that he could ont take her to Chi with him on a business trip. Bhe amashed @ decanter on the floor when he stopped her from taking a drink, and’ the moment he was out of the house she called to the butler: “Bring the brandy!” | First” equa! importance is the price, and the Waters and terms are so very reasonable that you Secure a Waters high-grade art piano for about | price at, which common commercial pianos are Waters-Autola os combine bd Waters Piano with the | HUYLER’S COCOA, LIKE HUYLER’S CANDY, IS SUPREME ity and com- will be con- laters-Autola fo i there are six varietics of nougat. In fact, in the 1600 different kinds of candies made and guaranteed by Came FRESH mate @ candy to exactly sult your As Leading Druggists and at our Stores ee) OUR ‘It seemed as though the play might it It Means to @ Man” when Julia struck her hus- band In the face and told him to go to an even worse place than Chicago, The poor man certainty stood a great ? deal before he took steps toward a divorce, and at that he didn't know all that was going on in his house: For ono thing, Julia and three of her women friende—a decidedly worldly lot—joined in a pretty stiff poker @ame for afternoon amuremon:. It was amusing, though hardly edifying, to hear the women using all the slang One of the player tion for appendicitis, complat: terly at being called back to his bed- | @ide when she wan winning, and she didn't go until she bh Highball. Oh, they thetio group! An \seooeat, pachslor Netening to their cynical remarks and watohing the bets made In that poker game would probably not feel him- nelf irresiatibly drawn toward domestic life in their partioular Julia bestowed her affections on a to a litte girl who without her dinner for pulling the pet's tail, The dear, ax ce Roquefort cheene Just whose child she wan I failed to discover, But no one could be blind to the fact that # was extremely tll-mannered, Possibly was the intention of the authors to that J able of bringing up a It goes without saying ¢) no manner: than pleasant to the doc’ tended her, a former lover whom she had chucked to marry a man with Money, she displayed ber greatest animation tn preparing for a tango teacher who was to give her a private lesnon. Taking out gin and vermouth bottles from their hiding-pl ang blithely at t work as she mixed corktatis, She drank three of them with the dancing youth, but her day wan spoiled by the unexpected return of her husband just as the “lesaon” had reached tts mont inter- eating point. The tango gentleman was shown the door, and then there was another row to bring down the curtain. The next act disclored Julla alcoholic wreck with violent tende! cles. This ing spectacle attract- ed particular attention when eho snatched something from the drawer in which she had kept flask and flourished t make out what it wai xpert in the audience a &@ straitjacket. Finally lulla, after a struggle with the nurse, | fell to the floor in @ frenzy and wi carried unconscious upstairs, whe nd moaned while hi acting. Siz months Iater Julia was dis- covered completely restored to health at the doctor's bungalow in the Adi fact that he wi bi Everything, howev: inted to @ feconcillation until the juaband arrived 0} to be greeted with a storm of wra By this ti Julla had taken @ drink of wi fro: left behind had gone frouy bad @ proceeded to heap lor her failure ' ‘ife unfortunat: =~ pped down ax @ doctor pronounced ‘And there we were! We could only berger that Julia had But It seem 6 on her husban: simple! P re a@ little later |‘ At other times she df. But sl the doubt. played : very bad temper. did succeed, In the third act. in giving & realistic touch of something that gembled the horrors, Frank Mills won @ certain degree of sym- hy an the remarkably patient he . and Joreph Kilgour Jone like news In everything CORONER'S DOCTOR (5 GRILLED ABOUT RICE MURDER CASE je the poker gaimo | Cards are bad enough, but drink Is worrs, for a woman, it would seem. Let her once ccquire the habit and she in done fe opinion of the Me 1 2 decroaned $180,872, Net 95. aa & Texas for year earned surplus af Miseourl, Ka 4 " tivek, and 8192 a ie a docrense of $1 previous year. kivn Rapid Transit Co, rest 1% per cent. pay fat fesora Des. The President trunk Hine runni that every car ¢ road haw ta be a cent Is earned minal charges {1 terminal cha per car of frel a mont important ae igh ter= the targer cities. The 4 watd to amount to $14 hit. hia Btock ee wil The Phila ‘row in all de- resume business to partments without prices, with few exce Bitians ‘are to be reported to the com- mittee at the close of each days busi- nese, Annual meeting, of the Company, of jersey hi fdjuurned to De CHICAGO * M4 | AT MARK ne wih hs : 1) petuntey aks: ‘receipts _ wore rn markets were, advances o' Corn easier on favorable weather con- ditions, and in sympathy with wheat, Cloned % of @ cent off. EE NEW YORK COTTON MAKKET. rly buying and. Micattere ty! mn how: _ evidence, ee close. comm! ‘8 small acale. off. oa IN FULL BLOOM, A city ehild on RJ first visit to the pm ig | per ee 4 ‘andmother at al ofa iy, come set es. ‘Here's an old ‘ciicken’ in full Bloom! truth ts “he authors failed to esti '- lish the point that his neglect had her to drink. What little sym- y waa aroused went to him, not to the wife, wa Jolivet made Julla a shallow, selfish creature who wasn't worth @ serious thought Her ex- at may havi cessive ery mes been intended to show th frente Jeoholio exhilaration—a' te the actress ts entitled to the Se © 0000006 00027000005208F0 6060900808 6 0 6 6 @ 0 —— ‘ontinued from First Page) aw remedies in the morning, six J was called again and th her [hours Jater, the wom n Uproar, Veoplo tole shen another cup of 1 yy her husband and had died in agony “L refused to sign a death certificate, | when an undertaker called the noxt He had embalmed the body and was in a hurry to bury it, ‘They sent 1 knew around to see me and I refused to sign the certificate, holding there should be an autopsy nd Coroner's investigation, Then Dr, Hanlon cal hone and ed me to sign a certi cate or a paper stating the death was not suspicious, 1 refused. 1 heard nothing of the case for three months, had been buried and no autopsy had been held.” BURIAL CERTIFICATE WAS SIGNED BY DR. O'HANLON. Commissioner Wallstein here read into the record a death certificate in the Marzo caso, signed by Dr, O'Han- 9 | 100, In which the cause of death was; given ay hemorrhage pulmonum, Dr. Costigan was asked if he saw any signs of pulmonary trouble in the Marzo woman. “None whatever,” he replied. “O: both occasions I found her lungs |sound. There wasn't a sign of hemorrhage. The first time I called the woman complained of thirst and) 4 I told Dr. O'Hanlon, when | he telephoned me, I never saw a healthy person die so quick.” “The busiest man in New York” ts Dr, Albert T. Weston, who was op- pointed Coroners’ Physician Jan, 1, ¢| 1889. Dr. Weston, to begin with, has an extensive private practice. When he is not looking after his private patients, he is serving his country as Junior Lieutenant in the Medical Re- serve Corps of the United States Navy. And when he is not serving | his country as an examiner of re- crults at the Station, No, 24 East Twenty-third Street, Dr. Weston de- votes his time to making tours of the city examining the bodies of persons 4} who came to their deaths in a sus- Pictous manner, Dr. Weston gets $3,000 a year as Coroners’ physict Asked by Com- missioner Wallstein how much he ceived from the Government as ex- aminer of recruits, he said; “I cannot reveal any information concerning my connection with the Government. It would be a violation of my oath of office.” It was said at the juntor Heutenant, of uring that a clase men- 1 dead. ‘The whote| 1 me up on the tele." when the husband told me the woman | eConnell, of the recruiting | station you are attached to, says you the job there from mine till | was the next query from the ner of Account you able to look fter the t he made his tours viewing bodies after 1 o'clock in the afternoon. Nv made of the time de- upon Dr, of 43 West treet to do their work when Wusi- ness called them elsewhere, $a XV epiron's MOTOR CAR. We have ordered a beautiful car, it will have cymbeline body, deapatehable ble rims, epileptc #prings, fr, infernal expandin, meled headitehts, Inter- power plant, flash jubilation, three Int indention, three speeds ‘ borrid and one perverse, amateur on the dash- ani, Aggravated ebuny rim on the steering wheel, copellerator, — throttle #park | MN ber a set of lean accenrories. WHAT $10 DID FOR THIS mun: The Price She Paid for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound Which Brought Good Health. Daaville, Va.—“I Leh only spent ten icine and I feel so much better than I i] did when the doctor was treating me. | don't suffer any i bearing down pains atall now and I sleep | Met I cannot sa; ie Lydia Vegeta. be Com pousd and Liver Pills, as they have done so muc! for me. Lam enjoy ing good health now and owe it all to your Nemedien take ure in telling may fe LL pa and mal about them." HALEY, 301 Colquhone Street, Das ville, Va, No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope un til she bas given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicina ingredients of which are derive: fr. m native roots and herbs, has for forty years proved to be a most valuabi tonic and invigorator of the femal organism. Women everywhere bea: willing testimony to the wonderfu virtue of Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetab!: Compound. If you have the slightest ¢oud that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veetab!- Compound will help you vite to | Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for ad- vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. STORE OPEN UNTIL 7 P. M. VOGEL BROTHERS 422 st.at 8 ave. We Must Raise $100,000 Cash The Senior Member of Our Firm Has Retired from Business Therefore This Gigantic Sale ef High-Class Clothing & Furn‘shings At Prices Regardless of Cost Thousands of brand new Winter Suits and Overcoats, fresh from the hands of our tailors, are offered in this Great Sacrifice Sale— the raising of the necessary $100,000 cash is the only consideration, Men’s $15.00 Winter Suits and Overcoats, On Sale at Men’s $16.50 Winter Suits and Overcoats, On Sale at Men’s $18 & $20 Winter Suits and Overcoats. On Sale at Men’s $22 & $25 Winter Suits and Overcoats, On Sale at Men’s $28 & $30 Winter Suits and Overcoats, On Sale at Sizes for All Men Styles for All Men No Mail Orders $Q 50 $ | o75 $43.75 $45.7 Conservative and Ultra Fashionable Alterations Free, as Usual on | 1G St From ue Beanten (Ark) Tricounty Courier), | Yi | $12.50 s yhd DPricea@ iw | A Tremendous Sale of WOMEN’S AND MISSES’ COATS At Sensationally Low Prices = ) i a $10 This sensational sale will conclusively prove that D. Price & Co, lead all in value- giving. By actual comparison you will find the savings the | greatest ever offered. Included are the various FUR FABRIC Coats, also eoate of zibeline, broadcloth, corduroy, Scotch plaids, etc.; in every size for women and mieses from 14 to 44. “a $18. 50 A Special Feature of This Sale Genuine SEAL P.USH COATS trimmed with large skunk or fitch dyed opossum FUR COLLAR Lined throughout with guar- anteed satin. Ordinarily Sold at $25 *15 One Model as Illustrated WELL-KNOWN BOSTON LETTER CARRIER PRAISES REMEDY VAR-NE-SIS |Was Unable to Walk Without Limping From Painful Form of Rheumatism. “Suffering fro rheumatism which was » painful that | had to have my sho: cut open, and even then walked with a decided limp—that's the condition . was in when | started to take Var-ne-sis,” sald Joseph Adams, a well known letter car- rier of Essex St. Post Office, Boston, Mass. He continued: “1 had been troubled with rheumatism in different parts of my body for some time. The pain in my shoulders was ex- treme, especially when the east winds came on. It finally settled in my heel and was so painful that ! could not walk without limping, and at times was un- able to take a step. “Hearing so much about Var-neesis, | to try it. After taking it a short ¢ soreness brace? left me and about in comfort, She offi ai-uesis to every, a0 mentions rheumatism to me. Var-ne-sis is different from the ordl- nary remedies recomm for rheu- matism, because each week a letter ts published from some one in Boston vicinity that has r ierough this simple remedy. Var-ne-sis is different because It does not contain the ordinary drugs. so often recom- mende. for rheumatism and does not disturb the stomach. Send to W. A. Pre tyne, Mam, {or the Rewipeper cs. is paper is vel every rheumatic should ive oon 'Send for yours. Tall soar nwt to for Gi tanars

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