The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1915, Page 7

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POSSE KDE TD HEEL 9946-44940 4 OOF 44 + reaeteee the gyps then leaves for Vivian behind. @ Richmond gambler, who re- With $500 and the command to to follow “The Diamond from Mile, in the Kast, pretty Es- has come under the influence of Bky.” ‘a mother. She the elderly woman's kindness Js She does not suspect that the elderly woman's kindness is but @ mask. One true friend watches He ts Quab- grinder, who, Esther night y to see that she is kept from @ mask. Basther's every footst da, the hunchback organ Sana monkey, fol uch fun ii Reread English lawyer who Btanl duke, with a horror American etn. ridom ever is found, poms o England and claim his due.” Marmaduke = speaks. “Away from the bloodthirsty Yan-! kees and their bally big blooming That is how diamond.” On Biair’a return to Richmond his mother informs him he must marry Heather de#pits the fact that legally Meanwhile out John Powell, Vivian {ts his wife. ‘West Arthur, aj wn rich by hit fin ke Lovell is wai the sand he finds is bitten by Jewel falls again to desert eund. Riding a “of time. enizes Arthur. ia silence with a rol! * "Back in Riehmond, *"Moyed by Blair's attentions. ‘omes to her from Arthur. Impulsive- Jy. the girl resolves to flee West and oun in the man she loves. | Agnes Scott and Henry Keane in bba waits b; the side of the nd ish figure clambers down. gone, alone in thi the man she loves. the chapters Balanced and intere grows each week. _so ~ “OLDE SONG REVUE” ON AMERICAN ROOF.) “Ye Olde Song Re days of the week. Allen and Francis, * a dramatic si Righ Blain @en, Mp in a new comed: will be shown. “French Folly Burl ning with a Monday girls, Added features are ose juggler, and Princess Conchita, Ric! She wires does not ep. lows introduced by Mar- | maduke Smythe, the lamb-chop whis come | to América, the land of the buffalo a I atthe instance of Lord of Warwickshire. Marma of America and nounces his return to If thé real heir to the Eng- let him id. In the deser ndering, the sun bi cross the de The latter buys | Fritz! Scheff, accompanied by August 1 of bills, lolph mans hi 6 night, sting. ketch; Cha “FRENCH FOLLY” AT THE OLYMPIC, | The ‘Disacie ‘Theatre will have the) bei Int jesquers,”” matinee, King, the mi broposition, on leav- has, crazed from lack of water and from injuries received in the fall from the train. Luke is apparently dying. There 1 “The Diamon From the Sky," but as he seizes it he a rattlesnake and the| ked rt, Arthur comes upon him in the nick Luke Lovell from the jaws of death. At once Luk is snatched | Bather is an-/ A letter | Higgins, That night | the wistaria vine at to seek thus far shown | No. 11 stands out as reir 4 well | slaging and dancing act, Conroy and e ten aity of “The Diamond From the Sky’ preening | ‘pongs and scenes of long agu, offered | ,itors an unusually generous number by five people, will be the feature at| of freg attractions. Lowe's American Roof the firet threo; Others on thi bil! will be Foy and Page, comediane the Three Chums In 2 musical and | dancing number, Bernard and erts in a travesty on the war and| musical comedy | favorites. The bill for the last halt of the -week will include “Wrong or Betts and) Chidiow, singers ana dancers; Mabel| its four hundredth performance at ‘Les Jardins, Burns and Kis- nd many others, Charle "The woman,” Rob- ee Ralph Morgan, to * MAX SCHMIDT ¢ Great interest is shown in the Brighton Baths, New York's gigantic Amusement resort directly on the jooean. ‘This “Riviera of America” has made it possible for New Yorkers to remain in the city this summer and enjoy even more pleasure than they ‘an secure at the seashore, while at the same time having the comforts on thelr own home. Here one can pend the entire day without moving Out of the confines of the Brighton Baths, and the list of amusements is ‘9 varied that one can attend day after day and each moment see some new thing to interest, amuse and ex- | hilarate. The exclusive bathing beach | of nearly a haif mile in length, the Sreat bath house of 600 ‘rooms, the tennis and handball courts, the sun parlor, the circular swimming pool, the bathing houses exclusively for children, the popular priced restau- rant, canoes, skating rink and coaster, concerts by Schmidt's White and Gold Band, the Turkish-Russian Electric Baths and Moonlight Movies on the ocean front dre some of the many unique features that serve to make every moment spent at the Brighton Baths one of surprise and enjoyment —o— PARKS AND BEACHES; FRITZI SCHEFF ON BILL. At the New chton ‘Theatre, | Brighton Beach, the bill will include | rt | Kleinecke, in new songs; Mglviile and in “Putting on Airs,” the Bell family in a musical number, ‘The Final Decree," ‘A|sey and Jack Boyle in er | Chauffeur.” Henderson's Music Hall, Coney Island, will have among others Paul| Morton and Naomi Glass in a new and James Hus- “The New | Le Maire in “The New Physician,” | Dorothy Toye in songs, and John and May Burk in “A Ragtime Soldier.” The dancing contest which started Friday night at Steeplechase Park, {Coney Island, will continue “every Ft Shae 4 night urtil the season's end. oe many attractions are now all ‘Luna Park is offering Coney vis- TWO FARCES ENJOY STEADY POPULARITY. | 4a” theta | “Twin Beds,” the farce by Salis- bury Field and Margaret Mayo, with | which Selwyn & Co. have had the longest run of the season nears the Harris Theatre, ‘Twin Beds” has an excelent cast, including Irene Haisman, Reginald Denny and Helen | Raymond. | At the Longacre Theatre Monday “A Full House” will begin the tenth 4 week, of its run, with no indicawon | that playgoers are beginning to tire of this’ merry farce: The. heat has had no effect on the enthusiasm of and the P= in~ | he) the players or atidiences, ‘company are Mark Lea, George Ward! piece will probably continue to al and forty others, the greater number| t who appear in two burlesques. | In the cai May Vokes, Elizabeth Nelson, Edgar Norton and t crowds for months. are Robert Corthell, Parsons, ad | George Hugh Cameron, ___BURLESQUE. BURLESQUE. | a a BS 7 pRoso MONTH © ALL. —POPU BEHMAN SHOW PERFORMANCE ! FUN FOR ALL AND ALL FOR FUN! First ‘Summer Show" in the Still Going Strong! Come and See Why! LEW KELLY LATITUDE OF GREAT NOVELTIES! Tin THicese SMOKE TF YOU LIKE. TH ST. NEAR J ‘AVE PRINCESS CONCHITA THESEVENING WORLD, BATURDAY, JUL¥ 1 “THE SCAR’ FILM FEATURE AT VITAGRAPH THEATRE. For the week commencing Stnday the Vitagraph Thoatfo will present ® programme that includes-a number of the Vitagraph's best liked come- dians in exceptional comedy bs jects, Mr’ and Mrs, Sidney Drew ap- pear in “Following the Scent,” the Vitagraph Big Comedy Four, Flora Finch, Kate Price, William Shea and Hughie Mack, in “A Palr of Queehs,) and Marry Davenport and Rose, Tapley as Mr. and Mra, Jai in Jarr’s Big \Vacation.” T Broadway Star Feature will be t tense three-part drama “The Scar,’ in which Hafry Morey plays the lead, while, by 1 eans the least of o the features will be Chapter X. “The Goddess.’ with Anita Ste Earle Williams and a‘ powerful cast “The Scar” tells the story of Dr. Clifford Stanley, a drug fend as well as a hard dtinker, who plans to-be revenged on his rival for the hand of a girl whom he wishes to marry for her money. a IMPERIAL BALLET AT 5TH AVE. THEA TRE. At Proctor’s Fifth Avenue Theatre the Gist half of the week Leon Per- n.koff and Ethel Rose, assisted by a half dozen girl dancers, will appear as the Imperial Ballet. Among others will be La Pine, Hamil and company in “The Electrical Pony,” John O'Malley, the Irish tenor, and Paul Nevins and Ruby Erwood in "The Coalman and the Maid.” Proctor’s Fifty-elghth Street Theatre will feature a minstrel act, “The Btack and-White Review;" Watkins, Mason and Watkins, Devoy-Faber and com- pany in “Some Lawyer.” ‘Tempest and Sunshine in ne songs will head the bill at the Pala Theatre. Thero will also be Hyam! and McIntyre in “The Quakeress, ‘Trixie Friganza in songs and dances, and Odiva and her seals in an aquatic novelty. Moonlight Open 12 A, M. til 1 Ay Mf, No iquor sold. BE — AMUSED, keep the conaforta ble. 30) Tay hd gente on ALL Votitien BARGES: hal World PHOTO PLAYS. VI Last Times TO-DAY FRANK aR jotol DANIELS | ““"“ * Ses in “CROOKY” Week duly 18, Grand : $2.00 Gian Theatres | On 1 Floor TION, ‘‘After Dark.” WILLIAM*SHAWAND THED., “The Clemenceau Case.’ NY’ 10c AH, Prawwe's: SAR I PA BY FRED JACKSON BRR A LAUGHING CURE Tt LAIR HARRIS. N 4.9" WEEK SELWYN & CO.SHIG LAUGH FESTIVAL TWINBEDS Tennis, Canoeing. NEW, YORK’S RIVIERA. Circular Pool- A THI E SCA AR mm in THE GODDESS anon ‘ er Hk prevente Tommy Barclay from being AND THREW MERRIMST OF MERRY COMEDIES ‘The Night of the Wedding” and Chapter XI, The Goddess. 46th Street and Lexington Avenue 3- RING MOVING PICTURE CARNIVAL. Show for WM. BRADY'S MAMMOTH PRODUC. —SEE—HOLBROO BLINN AND ALICE First time ever shown. 8 Hours’ Continuous Entertainment, 11 to 11 Realismand Art in Ethnology by ‘Dwight Franklin Dwight Franklin ts an artist who has specialized on museum work. He has mounted birds at the American Museum of Natural History; he has made wax models, and he has done field work, He has also painted the birds an@ animals upon which be has been working, #0 that he bas had an all-round experience. Mr. Franklin Is now engaged tn making museum groups. These are “Wesigned and built up by him in miniature, and are intended to teach science in a popular way through the agency of the eye. In the old days ethnology was a less exact science than is now the case, and the art was less advanced. A stuffed bird or a stuffed animal was a stuffed bird or animal, as the case might be, irrespective of group- ing or environment. To-day the artist,/ working on museum groups, must have proper settings. This calls for exact knowledge, based upon field work and artistic ability of no mean order, to paint, model or cther- wise produce a forest scene, a desert, with its proper atmosphet es flor nd its fauna, as it really is, by any y gpeane { ans pom re srandpoint 2 of the cl It ts one oe ee an artist to sit down in @ luxurious studio an® paint his plotures, and quite another for the same artist to gu into the field and paint the landscape, with its vegetation, ita bird and animal life, on scraps of paper or mill baard, resting on & log or against a tree, and to get results that are accurat This last is the kind of work that Mr. Franklin has been doing for a lons time, and for which his former work in the museum has fitted, and pre- pared him. He is now working on a series of groups for the Children’s Museum of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and —Skating, Movies.‘ CHASE Peeey, Ph Bins @' Breer Boiences that are to be-instalied in the tution. These groups have to do with geo: raph Mr. Franklin now has under construction at his studio in the Lincoln Arcade Building half & dozen such groups which are to be the beginning of a series. One finished group by Mr. Frank- tin has beet placed on exhibition at the Children’s Museum. It graphi- cally shows the jungle people of Bouth America, The tangle of the woods is presented as it could be in no other way, the birds are shown in proper plumage, the monkeys ewing from the trees and an Indian stands in his place with his deadly blow gun and its poisoned arrow ready to deal death to the swinging oimian. Hy moans of spectacular Nghting the detalls of this group are acoented and emphasized !n a most delightful manner. ‘The desert group, upon which Mr. Franklin is now working, pictures the great Sahara of North Africa, The desert population is indicated, and the Redoutns appear. The relation of the people to environmont ts eloquently set forth, That tho desert inhabit- ants are hunters of necessity is made evident. Water becomes the theme of the group. A dirty pool is intro- duced, There is a woman shown as cup bearer. She gives a drink to the camel rider. The sheltering tent, the paims of the oasis, and the no- madic life, all bloom as flowers tt this group. Another of the Franklin in groupe fe concerned with the Afstralasians, The conformation of the country, the kangaroo, that wonderful marsupial, and the methods of hunting these ant- mals by means of boomerang, throw- atick and by stalking are all set forth. The South Sea Islands inspire bev other group. The fact z the isl eople Deine. indolent indteated, he surf, the fisheries, “ine dugoutes or catamarans, the cocoanut palma, bananas and the thatched huts of the natives, together with the volcanoes that are characteristic, all show brill- fant in this group. Still another group pictures the Af- ghan peoples. A band of these war- ike people are shown upon a beetling cliff, The altitude is high and the conditions are windy. They are en- gaged in preying upon the vallev a write | SATURDAY, quLY BS, Mews Jottetnin "Tionire, 14en 81, ‘The pictures at iw he a tieetne ty pa Port Hamilton Be. troonl pe [5a "Pentre, “Pligatwen, "Ss lg Pastime, 7 Theatre, Newark md Tlaatre, “000 Maret "8k, Now. rend Theatr, 941 Kast 180th Bt, Snew Theatre, 304 River #; patie Thani Bridge Fatenson ne es 9 1 isas''§ ay hie PHOTO PLAYS. dath & & Broad DRUG HABIT, Tariling ‘Bltuations > Climaxes hung by inal Palace Conaplete Shows For 1 Price 10c BRADY in “The Boss.” CHARLIE CHAPLIN in “Caught in a Cabaret.” 10c ono. ‘COHAN'S & iad St, Eva, at 8.20, t PAYS TO ysis RTISE! RTISE’ Ate CIBERTY W. aD ai TWICE Daily, hay t} Bree hla Sa eae ine he. boc, 81. D. W. GRIFFITH'S GIGANTIC BPROCTACLE. Symphony Orchestra of 40. WinterGarden 27274 200%. Bre, a: 6 THE PASSING SHOW OF 1915 LOUIS ANN feo Par NOBOD BM ayhouse gi een ork PLAZA “ty. 4% Ago oe Festuca Pine Piy Tho Geebroled Seanda” Qeegn and Brighton th St, Mount Vernon, Y. Soren "Theatre! ‘Sth Ave. and 140th St, Koy: slivpay, JULY B.S, Moss's Thee and View and x, Ae. City ‘abd Oth "abi Atlantic ave, Theatre, 280 Fulton rgreka Theatre, 250 ist St, Hoboken, Muller’ Theatre, Coney Talend, 1, Ggrdea verry We erect Ate. iron Movies ‘Theat ity, Winulon Fatig 1h Homer foria. Thea! St John Brookiyn, ah eon Fifty ninth Street ‘Theatre, 813 W. Peete * cere) 9012 2 th Ave, Bet cerlese Theatre, 9612 Sth Ave, B’kiyn, 1 667 "Prospect Laughing as," AMERICANROOR Atop American ‘Theatre 42d St. & Ath AY Every Eve, at 8.15 | {iii All Seats Reserved, 25c, abe & 50¢ | S.ow 'HEN you go on your vaca- tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailéd to yeu every day: Evening Werld, Gc por week Dally Werld, 12 per week Sunday World, 5c per Sunday can eupecribe for a week of Musical ¢ Comedy Revues | | Charhe Cha din tear Chaplin Night, otha LOEW'S 12—Act Vemtori Me | Continued invita miantign ‘eos Photoplay! and William Rowell. Th They are Save This for Future living a wonderful story that is Reference. entertaining millions. % Wa Fende greet wal tn 1008 MARCUS LOEW’S THEATRES CHAPTER TEN, CHAPTER ELEVEN CHAPTER ELEVEN SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1016. ‘TURSDAY, JULY 18, 1! @ATURDAY, JULY 28, BEB. ket sete he ‘Ghote, Booattey & Mirani Oy ‘soak, im, Loew's Shadert, Broséway & Howard Av., Bin. Loow’s Hijou, @mith & Livingstos Sta,’ Balyn. SUNDAY, JULY 11, 1016, . “Sa: St Seaw 6 me Logy’s fultes, Fultoe @t., ene Mestad Ave, Loew's Bhubert, Brosdwar & Howard Av,, Gin. Loew's Bijou, @mith @ Livingston Bia, Bkiya. a si ‘ett ditlieont Xv WEDNESDAY, SULT 14, 1015, Hest san, Benet Airind (Ave, New 1 Wtatirond ae nyse * North #1 Oirmpte Weet Viniow. tera Ho Apollo, Jackson Ceneuty, Mine THU! ore ie x pT Qrteon, 148th st arin Ae fey tag, oie ee nt Linh Aig “ Ay 7 ED Nd ‘York a tell Wate ~ Ave. "a ‘td .s ube a et Pas hE a eae Rektrn, W' Biont 8t,, Platntiets vada % tk iy Mont A Main Bt,, Walllogtord, Conn Pamvlre Bristol, oan Lincoln, 625 So. Ny, Newert, N, . ai i> o 5 “fem MR a wt wt ‘ast Main St Grand ; tap. St 4 cok ark, foant, Pieasant,, Piadantetile. marin Brook, H{gonprome, ‘Bis’ Coutral Fireey ony, Aa ian O10 ee let ‘Kve.. Brooktyn, Read the Story in the New York Globe See the Current Chapter to-day! Study It every week! Some one will win the $10,000.00. Will it be YOU? ilm Corporation's EXHIBITORS: F or bookin ng Produced by The American Film , care of Mutual lor see The North American |Film Corporation, 71 West 2 d St, N.Y. City information write, ‘Representative, L.L. Beaud i Of One Year of War, Shown | R ESU LTS! in the Changed Map of Europe ~ Double-Page Feature, Printed in Colors, in the Illustrated Magazine Section of THE SUNDAY WORLD Showing the Territory Now Held by Austro-Germany.. Deta’'s About 12,000,000 | The Real Situation on the | Boundaries as They Eiveted Casualties, Eastern Front, on August ist Are Shown; Germany's Important Econ, | The, Exact Battle Line in | Present Fighting Lines Are omic Gains. France. Depicted. Big Magazine Feature of tho Big TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY WORLD ie iE ae nae '&

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