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= _ | on anrpmeecinapctonen = . — ~ } * ‘ " Home and Comic Page of THE EVENING “S*MATTER, POP?” rr we rr w ut wt uw uw OOOO: About Plays ‘and Players By BIDE DUDLEY HODODOQOGDOODOIOOINOHNIOO’ 8 yo’ all Mistah Potash?’ | “Yes, sah, ah ts. An’ dis heah ‘a ma pabtnab, Mis- | tah Perlmuttah.” i Dialogue on the order of the fore- i @oing—probably not #0 pronounced tn ; tte negro dialect—may be heard at the { UP TOTSE A MAN YESSIR OF TALENT AND LEARN ING ° Lafayette Theatre, No. 2277 Seventh ‘Avenue, in the near future. A stock agement of Robert Levy, and Mr, gays be will inchide the first edition of “Potash and Perimutter” in ite repertoire. When it is known that the troupe is playing “Othello” this week it may be realised that it has the courage to attompt anything in the drama. “Creighton Thomas would be Pot- ash,” said Mr. Levy, “and J. Borres would appear as Perlmutter, We have already played ‘Within the Law,’ WORLD, Friday, April 28, 1916 i Under Cover,’ ‘Kick In,'‘Paid ia Fut! BE NRY HASENPFEFFER—However, While There's Life There’s Hope! w we we we we gad ‘Othello, and next week we are to put on ‘The Wolf.’ Our company eould do justice to ‘Potash and Perl- tutter’ I'm sure.” ‘When the play ts produced !t # un- @erstood the members of the original ‘Woods cast, who appeared in it at the Cohan Theatre, will be invited to see ft, Barney Bernard, Alexander Carr, Louise Dresser, Leo Donnelly, Lee HES SICK BAD ‘Too-We DONT Kohimar and some of the others of joe | doe Seat cam cright be able to aet| Lay ABED dot ! oF <n gome valuable tips on how to use @ AP wi ‘ Yiddish accent by accepting the invi- i @ E een Pu au 1G I Vas WHERES YY’ PARTNER. THESE DANS “HENS XV AINT SEEN HIM g ‘Ss BAD ! How yep! took sick LAar Oe D-DAY WEEK ! UH- Hu! PRETTY OUTTA DANGER tation. Can you imagine Abe Potash, col- ored, saying to Mawruss Perimutter, also colored, when the exorbitant ex- pense account of the travelling sales- man Js received showing $89 for slee} ing car fares “An’ dis heah man done said be wah fa wideawake salesman? SOME EASY MONEY SLIPPING. YS) F. Ziegfeld jr. asserts that he will ( 4 Anna Pennington to ap as per the announcement rn ard nm \ little “ @ usive” ¢ will appear Follies” and in the “Midnight Frolic” as well, or he'll kick up an awful muss. DALY “TUMS” A’ TUNE. FLOOEY AND AXEL-_If Flooey Had Been to the Game He Would Understand! we we ry Irving Berlin has nothing on Arnold Daly when tt comes to composing mu- sic on the spur of the moment, {t| seems. The night before Mr. Daly opened in “Beau Brummell" the or- chestra, under the direction of Theo- dore Bendix, the boy director, struck up a march for the actor to walk to im the Mall. Mr. Daly didn't like the tune. “L can't walk to that music,” he eafd smiling unpleasantly. “Give ine ight number—something like thie: ‘Tum-a-te-tum! ‘Tum-a-te-tum!"" “That's easy.” replied Mr. Bendix. And he thumped out the Daly tune on the piano, “Now you've got it,” said Mr. Daly, “Can you copy that down?" . “sure!” came from Mr, Bendix. Theodore Bendix now wishes to an- mounce that a one-step, which can- not fail to become popular, is soon to! be published. It will be known as “The Daly Walk.” Gossip. Jean Havez bas returned from Cali- fernia ho Great Lover" will reopen Mon- + Essex Dane is a newcomer in the cast. Alice Lioyd is visiting at the Mark Luescher Home, Shadybrook Farm, Southport, Conn not permit ~) ui \\We Lae Iw € 7 \ , mr rit , 2 TOOT yO By C. M. Payne’ ' I'D RATHER GROW, UP To BE A MAN Live You WU SFUNNy Axel \ DONT SHow uP HE ALWAYS COMES Or HE ely As a “clean up” move, the Memorial | gaged by Maximilian Elser and Rus-|“Under Fire.” The company ta tdle|ing worried, approached Dr, Carl|May 7 of “Marla Rosa," in which | pe@eeeoaos BOCOOOCOOCOOON Film Theatre, Valparaiso, Ind,, ts ac-| sell Janney as gener: representative | this week, but opens at the Forrest,/ Hunt, manager of the Forty-fourth | Mrs. Farrar-Lou-Tellegen makes her | @ THE DAY copting ten tin cans, tied together, as|or the Portmanteau Theatre | Philadelphia, May 1. Street Theatre, in the lobby of that | third screen appearance, e) SOME OF @n admission fee. Eugene Walter, Max Marcin and KAIGRERBDERER WO -OLORE House yesterday and showed him two ALLEN WhiTEe A 80NG. $O0OO7OOOOTS DOOODDODSGOSGTSDOSDOGEGIOSGSS S. L. Rothapfel, managing director | “Ate these all right for Sunday| Eugene Kelcey Allen, the dramatic The Secret. asked Doherty Grace George and her Playhouse| Sam Shipman, all playwrights, S| of the Knickerbocker Theatre under |P8h''s ‘Ramona’ exhibition?” asked | critic, has written @ ‘song entitled the little sergeant’s 0. | company will close thair New York! peared at 8 o'clock yesterday at season to-morrow night and leave im-| Eltinge ‘Mheatre to see A, H. Wood a] “y, . he Triangle FY the youth, “Throw the Dishes in the Sink; We'll ATHERINE and Margaret foun “You are. the Triangle Milm regime, announces Dr, Hunt examined them. “Surely.| 41) Go to the Movies mediately for Chicago. Mr. Woods went down the fire esc: Why not?” he repited. “The Dawn,” a new drama by| ‘The Hippodrome, on Sunday, M. George D. Parker, opened at the Shu- | will be the scene of an All-Star Movie that the big theatre will cease to bo Magazine. vite. TOOOO00000 00000000000 0000! DOOQOQOSHOS. DDDDIGHOHOODODIDIGODHGODOGSGHOOOSIOSINa wn ——— wife Same Age. Heroic Treatment. | fathers (66g Belgium,” sald Will Irwin, "T | eames ] knew an artillery blacksmith | who carried on the sleeves of his uniform the hammer and pincers the insigna of bis calling. “Wot's them things on your sleeve | ® ho sald with a wink at me. “Dentist, eh? sald the civilian, ‘The pincers, then, are to pull teeth out with But the ‘ammer—wot's the ‘ammer fur. | “The hammer, satd the black- smith, ‘le for use in bad cases to} ‘choloroform the patients.’ --Wash- ington Star. | ——— Goodby to the Sergeant. She employs clerks to do the routine work. She ventures everywhere in search of information. RIVATE DOHERTY was 6 feet 4 She draws a sharp line between business and social life, Convrisht. 1018, by The Prom Publishing Co, )this sum and are satisfied.” So aays) pense to prooure nocessrry evidence.|own ground, fe it fair to don fom-| her business and has genuine respect in his socks; the sergeant was Sie Hee Sens“ Bimang Word.) | Miss Pugh and sho te in @ splendid) Nor pains, nor energy, nor daring, | nine attire? Miss Pugh thinks not. for her clients, never discussing a a foot shorter. ‘The sergeant ee Dates . | either, One can (and she does) make up for| case, ether publicly or privately, in oF | 1, Why Success Came. | Position to judge, many of her clients) ""Miss push will go unfinchingly | all this outside of business by wear-| outside the office, When uw case ta| !0ked along the line, 18S PUGH says the primo| being women, She 18 a suffragist and {nto such corners of the eamh as) ing the frillest of frills, but women| given her, after gathering all possible| ‘Head up there, Doherty,” be cried reason for her success is that loves to fight for her own in court, but| Hell's Kitchen (as she did in the| should draw a distinct Mne between | information, she makes her notes ‘and | Doherty raised bis head. | day and their social life,| maps out the line of procedure, This, “Up higher,” sald the little aer- | finds the above the cause of compar-| Poindexter case) in search of in-| their worl 1 she WANTED to succteed.| atively few big successes among|formation just as any conscientious | does nothing to antag-| filed away. is promptly dismissed | geant “Ig you want a thing badly enough to| them, | man lawyer would, (Reason four.) In nin her business world.| from her mind until she finds it avain!” “There, that's better. Don't let mo pursue it with all your might and] Heason number two for her busl-| fact, Miss Puxh forgets ne likes. t} has found| upon the desk, where her secretary | seq your head down again.” fnain you'll get it. Most women are| 28% conquests ts that Miss Pugh] entirely in business even tot just and decent and num-| places tt on the day before the case} “Am I to be. alw like this?” | never has allowed herself to bother| which is as masculine as possible among them many tried and true | 1s to be called, — not anxious to climb to the top of the| with the petty details of office rou-| without going to the extreme of|friends. But she is always just| All these excellent qualities, which jadder, When they get @ position| tine, She hires plenty of competent] adopting trousers. She says what we| another lawyer, and as one respecting| would be good for all women with Bumstead’s Worm Syrup. with © salary of $30 or 90 a week thoy| Serie go that ther mind may be free ail know, to witt “Hemint is| brother professional said, “she asks no| business aspirations to adopt, have ce who! : trying to advance, They mt y Upon the case/ designed to attract mei Kor 50 yeare the safe and sure .” ‘Then | quarter of any man.” ted for this daughter of one of Th ia oiue petite ti {n hand, when a woman is in a profession! “Success Reason Number Five: Miss! North Carolina's best families in an are he a oe ca Gately decently and dress neatly op Reason Three: She never spares ex- where men should be met on their Pugh ie et all times conservative with income of $20,000 dollars a year, Eat, ’ M.D. 1 "Ss G staring away head themselves seated next each} “Then I'll say goodby to ye, ser-| “All right, Jake,” said the offelal. geant, for I'll never see yer again bert, New Haven, last night. A. H.| Jubilee under the auspices of the Mo-/@ Picture house after to-morrow | invite said the “ 0 other at a dinner party and im-| Boston Transcript have no money to buy it with, we'll Woods is the producer. ton Picture Exhibitors of America |night, Triangle Films will be pre- Geren mee ie yates fay FOOLISHMENT, mediately became confidential. ooo Ket you a sack. But see here, Jake, Rehearsals for the Friars’ Frolic will| ‘Tho Drama Society 1s arranging to/ sented at the Rialto, Mr, Rothapfel's | areesanine,’ © ’ fh Segeueemeut nom, 1 sae, watte, “Molly told me that you told her Progressive there's a circus coming to town im a begin on Monday, May 8, at Bryant! sell tickets for "The Tempest,” at the now theatre, The Triangle lease on TE als dont eat un chat peven 1. 40ld vou net 40 Bll her,” ig . few days, and if we get you a ack Hall. George M. Cohan’ will be in| Century, to school children at prices the Knickerbocker does not expire Caen Aus states, Sh aah kg is : CLERGYMAN had taught an old| of flour are you sure that you will charge. ranging from 10 to 50 cents. until Sept. 1, How the house will be SUBTLE HUMOR. You Ike it, you my? Ob, go04 if Whispered Margaret. . an in his parish to read and| ot sell {t and take your familly to Owing to the illness of Lou-Tellogen,| Recrulting, of which the Govern. used until then has not been def-| The management of the Btrand an- a ‘Oh, dant ane the mean thing! TAG Aw PATAD 10 Faas the cireus King of Nowhere’ will not reopen| ment has known nothing, has been nitely decided, nounces that the illness of Geraidine| FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE, |easped Katherine, “Why, I told her found him an apt pupil, Call-| “on, no," sald Jake. “I already got @t the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre un-| going on in New York for. several — Farrar and her husband, Lou-Telle- | “Arthur will be there.” not to tell you M t. “Tr tola | BE at the cottage some tine after, be) tat sated up. Yes, 1 got money to go beck Eo . days. Men have been qualifying as HE WANTED TO BE SURE. gen, will in no way interfere with the! “Arthur who!” a uit it Saree. tle fond only the wite at home, to cireus."—Youth's Companion, ert Edgar Long has been en-H member of the German Anny In A young man from Brooklyn, look Showing at the Strand the week of “Our thermometer.” EP GRA ta none diatetvesyteaye| VERTA iat heh ott aalal tel pains Aas “How does he get on with his read- PROPOS of a youn, irl'e wich MEN No. Il._—Conclusion By Eleanor Schorer Hie Greed Duke ct aazecwal | Nioma ant A carcisce, caver “Hemel COOOOOTOGASOOANASADIGHS oes OOOOOVOANAGE 5 | mar bad én Germany & renus| git somteto mya cee fle sald at a reception In Akron: S LUCILLE PUGH, Attorney, Who Won High Standing in Her Chosen Profession Through Determination and Will Power, tation for perpetrating “bulls.""| “Bible, sir! Bless you, he was out| “Our girls don’t marry disadvan- ce he came across two schoolboys|of the Bible and into the sporting} tageously as often as our boys fo. In ie RADII III owe looked remarkably alike. “The|Papera long ago."~Tit-Bits, the whtrl of love the female doesn’t A —~»—_____ seem to get as dizzy as the male, aw lads must surely be twins,” he sald. . ; = "ves, Your Highness,” replioa thet Saving for a Sunny Day, | q..\2iy,, Wi, (old, me the other oa father. “Ah,” said ig Gise8 Duke AKE PENTICOFI’ was a unique | rich landowner, } : "Six," answered the boy. “And you?” and although he was reasonably | ouny weeacher mee took py |he sald, turning to the other lad.—| diligent in the use of saw and axe on| so much last suminer,’ 3 | Boston ‘Transcript. | the village woodpiles, ho frequently | ‘The girl smiled, | —— | came to seek aid from the city “Deeds speak louder th A NEW EVENING WORLD FEATURE vilian asked him one day, | @ 2 e , Mithhey mantmanermy dni? * Tae Kiddie Klub’ 4 WILL BE INSTITUTED AS A NEW DEPARTMENT For Children IN MONDAY’S EVENING WORLD TO BE CONDUCTED BY Eleanor Schorer A PIN FOR EVERY MEMBER AND OPPORTUNITIES TO COMPETE FOR MONEY AWARDS EACH MONTH “Sleepyland Stories” (By “Uncle Bill’) A FEATURE OF THIS DEPARTMENT ———E———— Order Monday's Evening OOD STORIE above) “I gotta haff a sack of flour,” eald Oo 'TOOODOGOOOSNG ake on one occasion. "I and my family iss starfin’. all out, “If you need the sack of flour and The Voice of Cash. she satd."—Cleveland Leadet World for Your Kiddies