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Play Gtven for Charity. The performance of “Hit Holliday” at the Astor The Tight was riven for the benef ie Center for the Blind End Avent, which home for blind girls and the-Trail “t Why’s “Gets-It,” for Corns, Like a Kiss? Because Everybody Tries It, Every. body Likes It, It's Painless and Takes But a Moment to Apply. ne om of pour toe, No Kwives, Fasors and scissors, + no tape, no trouble. it’s simplicity It- welt; ‘Quick, painless, ‘Try it also warts. all droggtete, 280 Dottle, oF sent direct by BE ren Co. “Gete-tt” Theda Bara in Great Prison Scene In Fox Film “The Galley Slave’’ | WAR'S PSYCHOLOGY Fulton Theatre Spectators Ana- lyze Feelings of Soldiers Who Faced Death, “If the unwounded German prison- ers of war, taken the recent battle in the Champagne, are seen to be smiling and apparent- *|\Iy\ happy as they are being marched Credit Terms tor FURNITURE ‘Worth, " Weekly. 100.00 00 4 50.00 000) ono 1000-04) 0.00 Oo naw 2, : csr BA "Cu anon hi Baryon cdeber CLOTHES ON CiEDIT At Our Gih Avenue Store Only) rs] Ane Purchase io €25 Terme of Down and $1 a Weck. MONDA & SATURDAY EVENINGS MICHAELS BROS 3 SHORT BLOCKS FROM FULTON STREET Karl K, Kitchen who asked ]| the question yesterday. As an answer to his own query, he added: “Ie it true that the men appear happy? The younger ones certainly #0 appear. I think it would be a mis- take to take this as evidence that even these smiling boys are glad to be out of the fighting. I would rather say NAY BESTUDEDON THE WORLD FLMS by the French at! away to the rear, who can rightly 4] |Judge the cause or tell what are the ]| men's real feelings? | patriotic a woman is as a woman, as |@ mothor she cannot but rejoice that |her son has done hin bit in the war | and escaped with life and limb safe It i natural that mothors should feel that way and the German boys know It “An to the majority of the men, I think their appearance is simply that of relief. Their terrific anxiety is over, They have no dread of being captives because they know that all the captives are being well cared for, But all the wounded Germans I spoke to in Germany and all the captives of other nations—tI visited the prison- ers’ campa at Berlin, Ruhiebon and Munherberg—were keen (o get back to the front, “Curious as it may seem to those who have not fought in the war, many of the men have grown to like the life in the trenches, Life at home me dixtastafil to them be- ea) ems insivid and uneleas. As to French cooking, most of the men say they have lost the ability to taste foods and that gill dishes have the same flavor to them, no flavor at all, “Similarly their other feelings have become blunted. Death, wounds—the jaight or thought of them has ceased to count. If these German captives really do seem happy it 1s only be- cause they look upon capture as part of the game, the winning of which they confidently leave to their com- rades. Some have to be captured just as some have to be killed, they say, and they think no more of It. “But the pictures show how dit- ferent it is with the German officers, THE EVENING WORLD, WE — a i4 © THE NEW PLAYS o “The Ware Case” Develops a Dramatic Surprise. BY CHARLES DARNTON ve NP way of passing one of the long winter evenings now descending upon us is provided by “The Ware Case,” which did not reach its oli- max at Maxine Elliott's Theatre last night until long after the clock bad turned 11, Then it was that Lou-Tellegen, wild-eyed, tense and drawn, Jeapt from an inviting couch with the cry “T did it!” This was the answer to “Who Killed Cock Robin?’ otherwise Eu-|and Maud Hannaford played a nice mace Ede, a youth who bad been un-| Young gir] engagingly. "The Ware Case” ig too long—the able to remain in the same room With} aqaresses of the legal gentlemen at & wasp only to be fished out of @/the trial might easily be left to the pond as dead as the proverbial mack- | tmagination—but It is interesting as erel. Threo acts had failed to throw|® “Mystery play,” and in the end in- || that even their smiles are cynical.” Their deep depression is obvious. A Mr. Kitchen, who has just returned | German officer feels that capture is a deep disgrace and he would commit from a tour in Germany, was rofer-| suicide to escape it. But even the ring to the discussion which has mothers of officers are not immune arisen over the attitude of the 2000 oer the natural A ee relief when a@ son is captu: I. was = unwounded German captives seen! thetic in Berlin to observe the gind- on the screen among the striking ness, which most of them kept to motion pictures of the fighting in themselves, though others frankly ad- France that are being shown under mitted it to me.” the auspices of ‘The World at the! ,osnmnle, the discussion biome. the Fulton Theatre. Mrs, Gertrude crowds which are througing the Ful- Atherton, the noted novelist, has| ton Theatre daily to see the official asverted that these Germans seem ob- viously happy at being captured. | motion pictures of the French Gov- ernment which The World ta exhib- iting. These pictures were takon by “Mrs. Atherton says,” continued) yd om er ou cred | ” the ‘enc! rmy for ational Mr. Kitchen, “that the Germans have QW niveg of France and were loaned heard of French cooking. I am in-|py tho ®rench Government to The clined to believe that what most of World through its war correspond- these young Germans are thinking of EN ne a. naeel ‘en jw thelr mothers. ‘They know their te oy ee i eech “Emiaswy at mothers will be glad, No matter how Washington, Seen me FOR COLDS; HEADACHES They Gently Clean the Liver and Bowels, and Stop Headache, Colds, Sour Stomach, Bad Breath. Enjoy Life! Take Cascarets and Wake Up Feeling Fit | | and Fine—Best Laxative for Men, Women, Children—Harmless—Never Gripe. | Cascarets are o treat! They live your liver, clean your thirty feet o bowels and sweeten your stomach, You eat one or two Cascarets like candy before going to bed and in the morning your head is clear, tongue is clean, stomach sweet, breath neg cold gon and you feel grand, Get « 10- or &5-cent box at any drug store and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experi enced, Stop sick headaches, indigestion, furred tongue, offen- sive breath and constipation. Mothers should give cross, peevish, feverish, bil- ious children a whole Cascaret any time. vy are harmless and never gripe or sicken, much light on the supposed murder, | ‘ensely dramatic, It was apparent that the author— DNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1915, Dandruff Soon Ruins The Hair Gitle—if you want plenty of thick, tiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dand for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don’t Tt_ doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do get about four ounces of ordinary id arvon; apply it at night when re- iring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. morning, most, if not all, of your dani more applications wi solve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your bair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails —Advt. down on the programme as Georg? | Largest Popular Price Garment House in New York D Prices @ iwi Tremendous Reduction Sale Pleydell, but said to be George Ban- croft, son of England's celebrated theatrical ‘Squire—and deliberately fet out to deceive his audience, We have a George, of the equally cele- brated Cohan family, who has at times shown a fondness for playing this rather dangerous trick. The appeal of “The Ware Case” must rest upon two striking phases— the fact that the audience is made the jury at the trial of Sir Hubert Ware for the murder of his wife's young brother, and that, after his acquittal, he proclaims his guilt to the horrified Lady Ware, and then takes poison. ‘The play has many of the defects that 60 with @ plot built merely to produce & sensation in the end. The first two acts move so slowly as to become tedious, and it must be said of the third aet that we have been pretty well “fed up” on stodgy British trial scenes, But the fact that the audi- ence site in judgment, with Ware making his protestations of innocence straight across the footlights, gives this situation @ new interest, It is shown that he would profit by the Corner 188 2,250 Coats 1,900 Suits @eath of Eustace, inasmuch as the The best selling styles boy's prospective fortune passes to from our regular Lady Ware, and this at a time when stock at the following Sir Hubert has found his debts press- ing him heavily. Having squandered money on women and gambiing with all the recklessness of his nature he is as good as done for when the youth's body is dragge@ from the pond, He is arrested because a ring of his is found near the spot of the tragedy. A bad ict in bis way, he is still generous enough to give his last five-pound note to an oid, broken- down “bookie,” and it is this grateful raee-course wreck who saves his patron by perjuring himself at the trial, The dramatic tug of the play was felt the moment this loyal “bookie” took his place in the witness stand. But the big dramatic surprise came in the last act when the man who had regained his freedom after two months of prison revealed to his wife that he was the murderer of her brother, i Tt remaing to be seen whether audi- ences on this side of the water will view “The Ware Case” as a play of horror rather than thrills. This is the important question before the “jury” that will settle the fate of the play in the long or short course of dramatic events, There can be only one opinion as to the acting of Mr. Tellegen in the final scene. ‘he man can act! In the earlier scenes he did a lot of strutting about, and of he couldn't in_ the least suggest an Englishman. Moreover, his “make- up” was tod highly colored. The statement at the trial that Ware had wed the greater part of his life in ance came too late to help the actor, whose pronounced accent put him hopelessly out of character, There is no reason why this explan: tion could not be made in the opening drastic reductions: 00 95 0 Formerly up to $22.50 Formerly up to $12.50 Formerly up to $16.50 0 Formerly up to $30.00 340 COATS 240 SUITS 560 COATS 425 SUITS 650 COATS 690 SUITS 700 COATS 645 SUITS NEW YORK | Formerly up } Formerly up }Formerly up } Formerly up a, to $12.50......$5.00/ $7.95 to $22.50...$10.00 to $30.00...$15.00 to $16.50...... act, It was not until almost the end of the play that Mr, Tellegen was seen to great advantage. Then, white, exhausted and with staring eyes, he expreswed vividly the des- peration of the abnormal, highly etrung creature who gave himself up to a wild, hysterical confession, Here wae sensational acting of the French school, if you like, but this doesn’t mer the fact that Tellegen was su- perb, Gladys Hanson, too, after a rather colorless performance as the wife for three acts, brought real feeling and tenderness to her work when the broken husband staggered back to 219, 231, 928, 225, 327 Grand Street Cor. Driggs Ave. BROOKLYN 164, 166 and 168 Smith Street Cor. Wyckom St. hig home, and then, at tho last mo-|1 $125 Worth of Furniture—No Deposit—$i1 Weekly ment, succeeded admirably in con- veying a sense of the woman's terror and horror as she recoiled from the murderer and sank to the floor. A. P. Kaye did a very good bit of character work as the old “bookie”; Montagu Love was Cag | and sincere as the advocate who felt a deep affection for Lady Ware; Albert Bruning was keen and effective as the prosecutor, posal Mintintch Rn Ain redettiely AUTO HIT MAN, THEN FLED. Hilderbrandt Probably Mortally Hurt is Front of His Home, An automobile which got away with- out identification struck and probably fatally injured Frederick W. Hilder- brandt, an insurance agent, sixty-four years old, in front of his home, No. 658 Broadway, Williamsburg, early to-day. He was taken to Williamsburg Hospital with a fractured knee and internal tn- Juries, —— Indlet Fifty tin Chicago War. CHICAGO, Dec. 1.--After a Grand Jury investigation of charges of slug- cing, bleckmatl and disorder tn connec- tion with various strikes, State Attor- ney Hoyne announced to-day that in- dictments had been drawn against fifty men implicated in the labor troubles and would be retv-ned to-morrow, The In- vestigetion o..upied several weeks and Diate giese, 500 Weekly taany labor leaders and employers testi- a8 A fhed before the Grand Jury. 1) aay ana “Fumed cmeasipaannenia Cardinal Farley to Preside. At St, Patrick's Cathedral on Sunday, Dee. 12, Cardinal Farley will preside at & formal celebration of the centenary of the birth of the Venerable Don Ronco, founder jon of St. Fran- of the Congregat: No Deposit; 50¢ 10 Discount on the Dollar Allowed ‘0 Purchases W Opening Lis SRN ti, yaa SSS = No) I nN eras’ 1 ia on Your Credit New Account Weekly nc CONTINUOUS FULTON THEATRE 46th St., West of B’way WOOK These official Motion Pic- tures, taken by order of the ; Great General Staff of the FRENCH ARMY for the FRENCH NATIONAL ARCHIVES, are the ONLY Motion Pictures that have been exhibitedat the FRENCH EMBASSY in Washington. They are a part of the war’s history just * as are the reports of the generals to the minister of war. The official government cameras are the REAL eye witnesses of the grim give and take of the conflict, as it is being fought out from the dunes of Flanders along the 300-mile battlefront to the wooded heights of Alsace. In the official motion pictures now being continuously presented at Fulton Theatre you see WAR JUST AS IT IS These Pictures Were Loaned by the Government of | France to ‘Through E. ALEXANDER POWELL, its War Correspondent, for Presentation in the Unit States and Canada Because They ARE Official, these are the ONLY motion pic- tures exhibited to the Allied Diplomats at the French Em- bassy in Washington, Thursd November 18. i il To see these official pictures is in a way like being on a personal inspection with the commanding general’s pass to take you whither you will. War these days is not so much blade against blade. War has taken breadth and has called upon the very genius of destruction to aid it. War now sails the skies, and you see in the pictures the armored vultures circling and dipping as they seek the enemy prey; war burrows as do the beasts, and you see the trench run-ways and the rolling waves of gas set loose to suffocate all who may be near The pictures take you everywhere—the vivid moving panorama showing the long bores at Champagne, the Alpine chasseurs with their mountain guns, the bombardment of Hill 830; where the very trees crashed down under the persistent fire, the smiling prisoners of war. Every phase of war is shown and a full orchestra provides music which makes the action the more real. Continuous To-Day FULTON THEATRE 46th St., West of Broadway, Management Morris Gest Part of Receipts for the French Red Cross Society