The evening world. Newspaper, December 23, 1914, Page 11

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iwi an ere inn etter solid ‘xold knives cach, NOTICE! sais tes BENCH, COVER WITH Upright Bargains Misa “Irene Fenwick played Lily Monthy WAR LL NOT CHANGE 2 PRICE é {LEAcPERRINS’ je mine, If in doabe whict ever 10 The RIGHT OF | eat! : 3P are PIANOS USEFUL OUR SPECIAL LA’ lay extremely uslt speech put into PLAYER $325 his ‘mouth by the author came off | with first hon Ernest Glendin- | | PIANOS $10 MONTHLY THIS BEA New srw 3 aN tax charm was largely in her anne $149 Phere 5175. ‘and aa the Atlantic City shop- Montniy NEW c 5190 PIANO Given Away for the Carta XMAS SPECIALS J] senso of character. She made Lily a oie papular el we lfeft something to the imagination eelock, _ Sterling, Heol Raabe Chicheciag, the last word in love. As for the Wagner, Wissner and others. laughter, when a mechanical piano and then kept right on playing after $ he had torn himself away from the | keyboard. “tias Dorothy Donnelly was like @ lhont chord as the ruined lady who ON MONTHLY PAYMENTS | ytown both stale and bitter, Like OF $3 AND UPWARD (ir, Mason, she appeared only to dis. . It was a Wi nigl on ie VISIT OUR |#fugson and no stars were out for ‘5 « Ss Victrola Department |} 27,106" 00 rifen out untlt there Metrola_Department 10 VICTOR *{5 GOE Victrolas . EASY PAYMENTS "Ms 81-87 CourtS!., cor.Livin buntdieg.” | han with the uncle, The youth, who CIIARLES A. KEENE labored under the disadvantage of be- Watches, Diamonds. Jewelry. 180 Broadway, New OPEN EVENINGS UNTUL 10 (CLOCK, |her senses after she had contem- Np 12 NOLS TP honest touch of feeling when he asked MFUL PLAYER HH) tne girl to come awa; with bim and But in ling her story to the boy who loved her, in going over her Mool, *. Muate se Benatiful Instruments, warmth, she was abso- cold. with Thomas A. F E SQUARE || \\\ 5 s the jolly uncle— PIANOS | jana ne was very good—Miss Ken- sky BROOKLYN Ne Estre Charge fer tt Little Theatre. There was a dress Advertisomenta tor The World may be lef a6 rebearsal on Monday Distt, beginning | tre last night. time, language that might hav when he wrote “The Hasies | note of sensationalism. Here you young head. boardwi Atlantic City, was de- scribed “chicken.” We saw her | slip out of the hands of an apparent! clean chap, Richard Laird, into thos: of a middle-aged Senator, who was | decent enough, at least, to marry her. | But he cast her out of his home at Tarrytown when he found her old ‘and though she was innocent egough in the beginning, this little “chicken” time. The odd part of it was that every man she met was ready to ‘ccllege youth, who asked nothing mot than to lead her from Laird’s rooms tes |to the altar. But ho happened to have & world-wise uncle, who proposed & $4 | dinner in a New York restaurant afd 1 here Lily drank so much that she be- wit: trayed herself and spoiled her other- i Ap AHL 3 UMBER, 1 rahext tn the | wise innocent game by playing base- ing a Wisconsin poet, was shipped West, and Laird came back from York England just in time to bring Lily to =| plated suicide. He placed the family coronet on her head, and though knowing her to be hopelessly bad be- cause of two or three trips to Paris she had made on one excuse or an- other, he declared her to be good enough for him, It was enough to give her a crown for her headache after a night of mixed drinks, and to \leave us to the chaste reflection that Lily would be as white as the drivel- / ing snow for the rest of her days. But we could still hear Lily crying, Thi the life!” as she took a flying leap from the restaurant table into the arms of the unnaturally gay uncle. ‘And oh, what a night it was for the actors! John-Mason-in summer flan- nels, had his day at Atiantio City only to fade from view In a stormy night at Tarrytown. He married th girl and tried teach ber Engli but luck was against him. Then Keightley, as ird, carried Lily to| New York and took more drinks than were good for him. But his breeding ‘counted most with the audience. He {acted like a gentleman, and in spite of ning was a very good boy, diffident yet earnest, and he gave the play an !be his wife. verly up to this point. girl sho knew what sho was doing. | past life, she completely missed her \greatest opportunity. In this scene, ge. wick carried off the restaurant scene \with a great deal of dash and a live | winsome little creature, though she with her dead father’s “Song of eer, Songs,” which was supposed to be Son, |}| music. itself, it was drowned in jgot the start of James Lounsberry lfound life in the Senator's house at seemed no end to it. However, like “Innocent,” to which it bears a cer- tain resemblance, this erotic play will probably keep & good many people up until a late hour for many a night to come. —_— \**Poor Little Thing” Opens the Bandbox me “Song of Songs” Is Attuned To the Tenderloin. BY CHARLES DARNTO a long list of Mt distinction N. in the fashionabl nd a “consulting board,” or; no doubt to pass Judgment on It cannot be said that the fees q ease appy one, [concert had been postponed a week | Angry skin is soothed. is ‘oor Little Thing” | | fend Laird visiting her at miAnlght |aoourelaly Geseribed to ne i Hadley 10 give him @ chance to get ready.| soon controlled and banished. All itch- is a thin and rather dull little thing, | had failed to rob bis arms and ha from the French of Jules Le-|of their accustomed skill. The he bad in turkey-trottin maitre by Jerome K. Jerome. went to the in ey: middle-aged artist adored by his|ing no modern blems to disturb fair students, and called | the serenity of old-fashioned lover rec! alls the suscep! sician in “The Concert.” Hi: to the Aca m: @ campaign along the line: It may have been to spare his blushes that Charles Frohman, returning fully. Miss Frances Carson was a! from the road as a more or less merry minstrel, stepped aside for A. H. 4 rmance generally was so slow that = = Woods, who now stands forth as the producer of the plny Edward Sheldon | “Poor Little Thing” gave the impres- has made from Sudermann’s novel. “The Song of Songs” is attuned to the |##on of having very little life, _—> ‘Tenderloin. It is brought out in language that Sheldon speaks for the first ed impossible even to Eugene Walter Kneisels Play, It sounds nothing so clearly as the ve the play for what it is worth. Ni i i doubt it will catch the crowd, for the crowd isn’t particular. ° Bauer Assisting of Sudermann and it is quite ready to let the sins of Sheldon rest upon his It knows little So there we were at the Eltinge, until after the pupilc o; 0 Theatre! Lily Kardos, crossing the| took place last aight, ee ee HE Kuolsel Quartet drew a fine rst of all, th Ban | pretty little ‘theatre. Steriave, sk in Aeolian Hall last night, de-| Poslam has freed thousands from the | acting is excellent. Incidentally it has |#pite the demands of Christmas week | awful handicap of torturing, disfiguring trons, which may give|upon the time and energies of the|Fczema. Many had tried all other rem- orld, | subscribers. Hans Lets, released trom edies without success, and thought that THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 328, 1976. errr A AA ERA RAR ARAMA OO AERE RADAR ALORA MARA RRR RAP by Daudet in Immortals.” | Hi wife becomes lous of his priz pupil, Juliet foth she and her husband make fools of themselves. h i Then their bashful young son falls in love with the girl, and ail is well. It] tino), for piano, violin, is a mildly diverting story, but it haa | and double bass. The assisting neither charm nor Interest enough to| Were Harold Bauer, the Enalish sustain it through four acts. It de- }.and Ludwig Manoly, doub! pends for Its drama’ juality upon Mr. Kneisel’s intimate lit two family rows that seem merely | musical family of four, which includ ridiculous. Lous Svceenski, viola, and William ‘On Monday night the repeated rof- Willeke, ‘cello, ‘ed with the illu- erences to Juliette as “poor little; minative art and the mutual subordi- ever, was simple and pealing as| With the spirit of a regular member Tullette, Eric Blind made the artist) Of the organization, Mr. Bauer, It the wife, and William Raymond) economic question, this fs interesting after “The Song of Songs,” to the nearness to the piano of my : tI tore. \ which an apparently eager audience listened at the Eltinge Thea- H rity. $e.Dunbar and Miss Sit. |for Mr, Bauer t# one of the ¢ On, Cc of living pianists, a mast and of profound musical un tractive in a minor role, But the per- |. greaves acted their final scene beauti- CHAT! CHI WORST ECZEMA WEEPING OR DRY By Sylvester Rawling. udience to its second concert they were doomed to endure their teaatasdl Mer German trenches, WS / trouble, until Poslam brought lasti t | bac! s place as second violin. The | relief, Itching sto when it is applied. igging and shovelling, Degree ft ing affections yield to Poslam as to COFFEE, ore nothing else. ‘The | gramme of sweetness and light, hold: | avon crige ts Tnesuey tae! ‘of | ties, $8 West 26th Street, New York. the classics, gave general enjoyment Poslam Soa; the cod toilet soa ‘The works presented were Dvorak’ Poslam and able to exert | quartet in D minor, opus 34; Brahm I effects upon the skin. | sonata in E minor, opus 38, for ‘cello #5 cents and 15 cents.—Advt, | This store has been specially favored by the people of this community by a magnificent confidence, shown in the business given this Christmas and the many words of praise and appreciation spoken and written, We are grateful for this preference shown by i Brooklyn for Brooklyn’s Great Store and hope that it is significent of the prosperity that has come to others in this community of homes and inspiring civic spirit. Hn ‘ 17 Minutes Grand Central to A. & S. Private Subway Station Store Open Until 7 P. M. from Now to Christmas A Merry Christmas to Everybody ., ANOTHER DAY, which will flash by like a thought, and Christmas will be here, with its joys for a great multitude and its rest for the thou- sands: who have toiled to make others happy. This year it will have par- ticular significance in America, for its bells will ring out the peace that the day bespeaks in this country of many people and there will be the satisfac- tion that America has sent its message and tribute of Christmas to the warring nations abroad, with the hope for a peace to come. We thank our many employees for the co-operation that has made it fossible under unusual stress for us to reach as near to perfection of store service as human hand and mind and modern method and mechanism have attained, A store like this, that is the mainspring of community service, cannot rest. \]) tains will fall on Christmas Eve, but early on the morning after Christmas the curtains will rise again and the great store spring into action with the great sales announced, IN THE MEANTIME, to the appreciative public, and to our employees who have so faithfully performed their part of the work done, we wish a very MERRY CHRISTMAS. nee m | => STRAUS Far Even Evenin Cloth Coll The cur- Dainty | From an these picture: " rol laught instead of| nation that we expect of itand never # thing” roused Been Dunbar, how-| fail to get. Mr. Manoly fell in line Special ght aE ciety Shegrenne unl instance, he, appeared rier Christmas Departments throughout the loist than as a partner with HO would think of singing a song of sixpence to-day? Mercly as an pitiful and threatening by turns as leke. The impression may to 2.30 Thursday, December 24th, 1914 OLIVES, RADISHES, CELERY Christmas of all Gifts purchased FILET OF SOLE, REGENCE roast BREN | Thursday. APPLE be 4) Ne Ol VIRGINIA HAM BRUSSELS. Serours ne SAL. S , ICE CREAM "SANTA" CLAUS" Or, if necessary, special messen- §§ | q ENGLISH PLUM PUDDING HARD AND BRANDY SAUCE RIGHTH FLOOR. Silk Lined, Finely Tailored, and There is a custom tailored air about these smart paring favorably with Custom Suits costing double, Tailored for us by men who specialize in of distinction so essential in a Made of a finely woven black, unfinished worsted —these smart Coats are lined with fine black satin de Chine, the sleeves with white silk. ars narrow sitk galloon bindingand the trousers finished with silk braid. Tuxedo Coats to Match, $16.75 Silk lined, CIGAR DEPARTMENT AT THE SPRCIAL ENTRANOB MEN, ‘4 OTEP zr sie” REE ERE RE REET Pretty DRESSES —Practical Christmas Gifts for Girls models—that will make practical and charming Gifts for young girls. CLOSES 6:00 P.M. Herald Square, ay, 34th lo 35th St. REDUCTIONS in most. ‘ POSITIVE DELIVERY within the radius of our wagon NAM. COSIERAIL, delivery service in time for ICKEN GUMBO at Macy’s up to closing time RANBERRY SAUCE DELIVERY ON XMAS MORNING if so _ requested. POTATOES RISSOLB TED CAKES gers will be used by Macy’s in ff cases where they may be required. TEA, CIDER, MILK Men’s and Young Men’s Si ior by Comparison to the ing Clothes advertised elsewhere at $25.00 Clothes—in cut, quality and finish—com- » these Coats and Trousers possess doodrei'4 Correct Dress Suit jars and cuffs are finished with a ilk galloon binding on collar and cuff. Bx pen C. B. Corsets pecially Priced 69c Standard Prices $1 to $2 A special purchase of the Manufacturer's sample line — included are the most ap- proved models of this sea- son, but owing to the fact that they have slight im- , perfections we are able to little Lingerle Frocks and smart School Dresses in newest pies pales pl babel n assortment comprisi ‘of novelt are hardly noticeable, and sque Frocks linea ON eS. on: Tega will not affect the good ser- In solid i also polka d Mustrated 4 up RT has burst upon the east side In the house where Alma once gave her address to delighted Germans there is now Jerome K. up ble as this may sound, the good peo- | ple of the neighborhood must con- ithe programme remarked on its fron gst |page. But was it? TI kept askin logue written by pretty litle thing about a bandbox. he Bai Jerome's “Poor Little Thing.” Hum- sider Douglas J. Wood in ite kid Last Special Prices |] «over. tor Me cccvor atwaya tackles MUSIC CABINETS, $6 up [7°34 teat ee Oe ate BENCHES, $3 up Street, Adolph Phillip built it to the glory of Alma, and Mr, Wood has) horrowed a picture of Richard Mans- | Meld and consecrated it to Art. e | After all, ‘the play's the thin, elf this irritating a’ . We d to “linger” for an epi- ‘oy Mackaye—a box has all the frills of the ‘Doericen Tetrion Menseose ities @ te At 2.45, with the usual amet me _ =a. | that Bot a werd be printed Important Foreword ON SATURDAY we will hold a most extraordinary sale of Apparel for Men, Women and Children, The details will be given in the Morning American, World, Herald and Sun, It will pay you to read them. THE GREAT WHITE SALES. Our Annual Sales of Undermustins, Corsets, Babywear, Household Linens, White Goods, Underwear and Hosiery for Men, Women and Children will begin on Monday, December 28. the store. It has been brought to the highest stage ever reached in a store this Christmas, years. Sizes 6 to 1 L All Are Prettily Packed in Holly Box Mercerized $ Lingerie & Repp Dr 1 .96 tee Dresses 2.89 U m the front with large pearl . down i front with lara Reith | effect so fashlonable. | Many the patch pocket, the flat collar | ‘ and rolling cuffs. Sizes 4 to 14 | [shed with velvet girdle or messa- en io aie vera organs wessnen Tmeroidered $7.4 | rca big Fine organdle or voile Dresses Inset with dainty embroidery and vice of these garments. Sizes 18 to 30. un THIRD FLOOR. 35TH ST. esses a : »ink, blue or white, Dainty Lingerie Dresses or fine jot effect; this model Repp Dresses (as illustrated at | | Use BLUE in the cenire) fastens | the igh) in the long waisted . || TRANSFER Cards If you intend shopping In “i S| models from which to select, fin: more than one department line sashes, Sizes4to 14 years. chases with you, ask for a | any floor. Shop withit and Details will be given in the Sunday papers. ; ’ This is an ideal coat for : : ify Rubberized Tweed Outfits, $3.49 motorists: Made of Natural FOR LAST MINUTE NEEDS trust to our telephone system, if you cannot come to In fancy mixtures. Russian Calf, full furred th ks; soft messaline ribbon makes the sa and rosettes, | whenever you are finished et 4 years. THIUD FLOOR, 36TH STREET, | shopping you will find all _ ee eaS ar ey eee || your pureiwens assembled, i packed so as to be con- Rainy-Day Outfits || veniently taken with you, PRACTICAL GIFTS |) itairmcr' 2st Smartly tailored Raglan Coats, with slash pockets, con- Automobile vertible collars and tab cuffs, Hats to match in “Tam o' Fur Shanter”’ effect, with stitched brims. Thoroughly rainproof, SIZES FOR GIRLS OF 4 TO 16 YEARS. Coats, $1 7.75 Rubberized Cassimere Outfits, $4.96 skins. Roomy cut Coat and For School-Girls In navy blue or tan color. heavy woo! lined, ‘THIRD FLOOR, 35TH STREET. FIFTH FLOOR, BROADWAY,

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