The evening world. Newspaper, April 26, 1916, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a a A SS = a ne wer ee reer reeeayneri ne ring come one — . — Home and Comic Page of THE EVENING WORLD, Wednesday: April 263 1916 ‘ “*S*MATTER, POP?” we wt ow a w we we we a : EB SHOULD BE About Plays fe PoP! ; CERTAINLY Flere 1s A ree Ir we weved and Players \WILL YA “PLEASE yg BAD Bor Him age ) Dousa Me OuTSIDE AN WILL You RUB N +2 15 THROWING YouR WHISKERS L Gia Mp ( THINGS AT = Xd. y Onis FACE § the motion picturg cowboy the Comal 4 real thing? | Guy Weadick, who 1s pro- moting the big demonstration of | @ports and pastimes of the cow| country, to be held at the Sheeps- head Bay Speedway, Aug. 6-12, 1s of | the opinion that the genuine article fen't to be found in the film business, Now and then, Mr. Weadick admit, an honest-to-goodness cow puncher | gets a picture job, but he either gives! it up to avoid artificiality or becomes #0 contaminated with theatricalism | that he parts his hair in the middle| and wears @ wrist watch. Mr. Wea- dick admits he may be wrong, 60 he'e! wong to give the film cowboys a| chance t> prove thelr mettle, While| the “Stampede,” as the show 1s called, is on there will be compett-; ttens in bucking horse riding, roping and steer bull-dogging for cowboys ye cowboys in the world’s championship | finals. The prizes are to be decidedly worth while—in several instances as| D9 ' BAY LET, AC GIGGLING RememeerR Pyou OUD Sermaittod to compete’ wit the other | ‘Ee -Hee! | AT ~ ME —HUH 2 Pane ye es Hee -HEE-E-* \ LAN’ SYou WENT ~Y AN’ SAD TH’ } " WRONG WoRD!}) > pe e! q Ti LiL WORD" THAT WouLD ‘much as $1,600 tn cash. Coa uct z 4 2 ° whi SR bi MAKE Y'HAPPY FoR LIFE, cath, 9 let's r wie” TIME , WHEN Sou q 5 Pa Ra Rr ny ia a Proposent oS '& the boy please page Douslas Fair- ‘A bs ‘ =, y Is » Art Acord and a few of the other rip-snorters of the range? | MI88 BROOKS RESIGNS, | Virginia Fox Brooks, daughter of! Jeeoph Brooks, theatrical producer, has tendered to Cohan & Harris her resignation as a member of the cast 5 V/ “The Great Lover,” Leo Ditrich- = . 2 SS atein’s play. Miss Brooks created the | . part of Ethel Warren. While she was ’ 4 ML recently Betty Callish played it Although she elved much com- mendation for her work, Miss Brooks has not been happy in the She! has several offers of eng next season, but has de ing except that she w in @ play under her father’s ma ment. While she thinks Mr. Bro fo “just the sweetest man in the! SeRTRAA. 1010, Prone Peenains Co. (¥_Y¥. Sveuing Were.) world,” she prefers to continue her FLOOEY AND AXEL—We're Certainly Ashamed of Axel, but We Think He Oughta Get the Whole $5! career without parental assistance, ue’'s OUT 144 $ 44 | A NEW “HIP, HIP, HOORAY!” | Beginning next Monday there will) be practically a new “Hip, Hip, Hoo-| ray!" at the Hippodrome, Every | principal in the cast has been called am by Director Burnside to introduce a new number, and the entire equip- ment of the show will be made to conform to the new order of things. -So T teT Him Fwe BucKs GEE , HE OUGHTA Ms ' . SAFE VUN MILE ff THAT GUY PoNT REACH FIRST You Gate Hi OUT AN! VLE : spurt EVEN witha ya! ~ aerial ey, —-+an' av OnLy Ger S222 For 1 2 HEY 2? new “Hip, Hooray!” wall run right through the summer, | BY WAY OF DIVERSION, You've heard of Bill Shakespeare, the fellow who wrote a whole lot of dramas and such? Well, say, I'll ad-| mit that his fame gets my goat. He! wasn't so terribly much, You differ with me? Well, T don't want to ro! his friends of their reverence of him, but put up his fame against that o} Ty Cobb and see tf it doesn't grow | dim, They're mnking @ wonderful fuss over Bill; they're praising his name to the skies. Perhaps he de- serves ev'ry bit of it—still, it wouldn't c@use me much surprise if, were you to take a straw vote on this duck | compared to li. Kauft and his bat, you'd see Bill run second—'way back ja the ruck; and what would you make out of that? TP Notes corm rr Ae Ovvtetatt, 1919, Frame Pueriahing On. (1. ¥. Brectne Wont A POEM BY JOHN MASON, rescence Se John Mason, actor, is spending the! 4 NEW VAUDEVILLE TEAM gossip. “ get used to] SOHDOHDODHOSIDDOHOCGOOOOGSIOSOOO POFDHIOODIOS’E GOOD DHOOHDODIOS’ BOOS e e . y of the Fuclid Avenue Opera House, ‘Mr. Cooper, try and us to) § OO, O, Mie summer Facet BATE PeeN AT Lary” Kelly, who played opposite] Gaby and Harry. will aail for Eng-| Cleveland, is in New ‘York seeing tho| Mr. Dunn.” |8 WHEN YOU WERE A BOY By Jack Caliahan his summer place at 1 eral weeks. Although Mr, Mason has|Jlzzie, the in “Wa Your] land Saturday on the St. Louis. sights. He recently shook the hand +o HHCIO'9OOHT0HHOHOSSOSOHOOOSHIGOOIOIOINSTCO® C860 SOGOOBO Deen quite ill he doesn't jook it, I pt" called on Charles Dillingnan| | Allen Ki, Foster will detil the chorus Of Tris Bpeaker, ANSWERS TO INGUIRIEG SSS _ inadvertently gave evidence of {lin cata for the Winter Garden's new summer mf THE however, when he told Martin | “ive 5 show. THEY KNOW ENOUGH. | REpEN Sie Bree ere || SEDIERIBER, SAE CUR SSS : Aw, PoP. man of & poem on which he (th Well, how's Lizzie?" somebody Kelso--Texas Guinan gets her first |FATHER GAVE YOU FOR cH HIM, ‘ asked, James Spottswood is the latest ad-| 1. A. Hoffman, the New Orleans tor) had apent considerable tit | name from the State of Texas, wher Re Secenn coarse A he replied, Then he ad-| ‘ition to the Manhattan Players in| man who fa to send two young women | sie once Iived. Her age? Oh, geo’, [DIPPING YOUR BREAD IN YouRSELF THING THAT YA’ You KNOW DERE AINT eon. “I didnt know i wae, Mr, MAT aed, “1 think she's golng into vaude- | Rochester, through college, saw “Robinson Cru-| You ask hor. : | YOURE HIS CAN'T SWIM gon. didn't know i was a post, but| dit, sin RULE tite Yang The "Ziogtela ollie” wil ond foe Je.” last night. He deniod any an | KNIFE HAS i} NO COMPANY y at home.’ weason of forty-e! a tion of selecting members of the F MENT. ‘ maett's Near tt" auRgested Mr. Her |e ee op an act?” Performance in Bridgeport to-mgnt. | Winter Garden oborua for scholar: eit eae tee toes i A DULL EDGE. HERE — ‘Mr. Mason cleared his throat and| “Oh, Pete will play his mandolin| The Treasurers’ Club of New York, | shipa, however, ta ple each day and always mince, recited the following delicious Nttie | and Lizzie will sive mitations of me,|made Up of theatre treasurers, will —_— Be Sting ines mmast bee Dear, tape: tous ttle | Gaby, Mra, Castio and Diamond Jim|have a beneat at the Hudson Bunday sats 2 hsb ba Ses ceneie| Brady!” Oran Martie rissa ears tg [ication oleae: FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE vi = Richard Bennett ve ha new ion came " me ates ode ema wey wo | pce oa ine inevitaiie Qad to Habs | argelea about June t 00 erento toe] %o est cn the Miao district iast| Magietrate—Officer, a this prisoner it's @ long way down, “their ry will be about fifty bonas| in “Upstairs and Down,” which Oliver| night. John reer? introduced a] hard character? Mr, Herman advised him to consultia week Morosco will stage. Chicago man named ir to Eddie Patrolman—He must be, Judge. @ physician. After which ho beat tt. James Jawpe, press representative! Dunn, es follows: His name ts Rockwell Stone, DBDDOOODIGHOODIHOSGHDIDSIOHOHDOS. HODHDOSS WOGDOODOGDODOHDOGHGODOHGOOHHGTODHDHOHHHGSDHDOHOHHODHGHHHHHGOHHHDGHDDHDGHHDHHDHDDHHOOODOSGOOGDIDOHHOAG 3 LIFE STORIES OF SUCCESSFUL WOMEN No. I1.—Part Two By Eleanor Schorer BOSH FDDSOGHOOOOOGHDHDDS|GOIWOGOVONAIAGOSS TOBE DHDOODHDODOGOODGHHHOHDGHDIDDHODOGHODOHDOODHDOGOHHHEDHOES ©HQDOHPOHDGIDGODODGHOGHHOOIGGOOD, | MISS LUCILLE PUGH, Attorney, Who Won High Standing in Her Chosen Profession Through Determination and Will Power, | BQDQHODHOOQGHDGDOOHHGHODOOOOS 2 YOU! A Difficult Task. HE government offictal had been | telling a eimple old Scotch 1OOODGHOSHIOSHOGHHSH/AGHOSDOIOVS {| | farmer what he must do in the OOS99HS9 oe A) case of a German invasion on the Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing cast coast of Scotland, “An! hae 1 reely tae dae this wit a! ma beesties tf the Germans come asked the old fellow at the finish. The official informed him that such was the law, “All live stock of every description must be branded and a . riven inlas “Weel, I'm thinking I'll hae an aw- | fu’ job wi’ ma bees."—Philadelphia Public Led; a Her parents disapprove of her studying law. She attends business in the daytime— . and studies at college In the evening, Power of Suggestion Comerighs, 1010, by The Veewe Pubivhing Co.) ptenographer, #o she pleaded a com | well rewarded tt was no simple under- of her argument that she decided to] has not handled. Tut the one that 4 4 ng World promise—she would go to New York| taking to work in the day time in|awalt Miss Pugh’s admission to the| brought this twentieth century Portia HE teacher, wishing to imprese i for @ while to fill a position in the | onder to get enough funds to pay | bar and to be her first client. most prominently into the limelight on her pupils’ minds the vast : one's tuition and then attend college| Miss Pugh was graduated in June,|was that of Leroy Poindexter, Her Early Career. office of a friend of the family and| jn the evenings. But Miss Pugh was| passed hei population of China, eat bar exams in July, took | cused of murder, One of its most] “mink, children, twe Chinese die she would live with her aunt This|not to be daunted in her enthusiasm up the case, fought tt, won it and has) remarkable points was that the d every time you draw a breath," ITH the determination to be | wish was willingly granted, jand her determination never waned. | never been without @ case pending, fendant was a negro and as I have|~ A minute later, observes the W lawyer unalterably firm {1 n6r e e ee een ennai ed in her |¢ Made such steady promress that | since. | before mentioned, Miss Pugh 1s from | ane Journal, ner attention w mind, Miss Lucille Pugh! ,) oon ne aie wan her parents were too proud to think| rom the very beginning Miss Pugh | i¢ South. She defended him vigor-| tracted to little Jimmie James, who Poached tho subject to her parents 20% Postion Miss Pugh Dewan to of thoir former objections, |has been in business for herself and | 0Usly, pleaded his case effectively and|etood puffing vigorously with face “ subject ~ | Plan for ‘her career, She was ad-| One day, when the termination of | has rarely refused to take a caso,| “spite public sentiment and great|reddened and cheeks distended, and met tn them @ determination | mitted to the evening Law School of| her atudies was in sight, Misa Pugh | She believes that lawyers, Hie doc. | lds of Various characters, saved his|*What is the matter, Jimmy?" asked quite as intent upon her abandoning | the New York University (one of the expressed her opinion to how a|tors, are public servants and should |!ife; She was the first lawyer of herl¢ne teacher, “What are you doing?” Tae gzobition fow colleges hero @ woman aan certain sult’ for an allmony debt |be at the beck and call of those who |" to defend a homicide, "Nothin, Miss Mary; "just killin’ study aw) ere » studied ought to be handled, The prospec-|need them. ‘he consequence ie that| (Noxt tustalment will eae on | Chinese,”—Philadelpia Public Ledg- \ Glew Miss Pugh was an bxpert | diligently and though ber pains were] uve complainant thought og taverably | Were ate tow sorte al oases that ahe | Urideyo 5 aah here 6 RE REO cS ‘ |

Other pages from this issue: