The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1916, Page 8

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ALON EN AT EEE GEN 5 RRR Rt er eg A il THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, ANGUINS SAVED). «= Marie Dressler, Heavyweight Heroine | MIFTON'S MEN of the FR STARVATION SR TEMBER 11, 1 of the Movies, Tells of the Perils Fulton Street Bond Street That Turned Her From Gay to Grave ba ae i vo poasn fF DAILY PERILS TOLD Party to Sail for England Next Week—Chiefs Thank Chili for Relief Dresses aiid \ pus IS NOT merely a Fashion Show or Opening. It is THE FASHIONS, in complete exposition of the accepted ideas of designs in Dresses, Gowns and Millinery, These are the final decisions of style, made by the greatest originators of the world, presented in their full variants; accepted and sogenree by the women who will wear them. It is only the survivals that appear, no longer ideas to be “tried out,’ no ex- periments, no vagaries or tentative designs; none of the models to arouse curiosity and excitement~-only to be forgotten in a few days. The presentation is as remarkable in its exclusions as in its inclusions. It has been chosen with a sure instinct for the tastes of Amer- ican women, especially those arbiters of good taste who are patrons of the Loeser Store. Every marvellous Hat, every wonderful Gown, is distinctive, beautiful, desirable, practical, and, above all, eminently wearable, . The collection is instinct with the very spirit of Fashion. It is worthy of the attention of every woman, no matter what her taste in dress, whether for the quiet and simple or the ornate and striking. PUNTA ARENAR, Chill, Gept 11 Preparing to sali tor Bagiand Werk, Bir Wrnest Shackieton's r eued party are Auding time to the Getatie of ther lite on foe bem Blephant isiand. The toilowing, exemple, le & sample of their daily menu’ Breakfast, penguin fried in biubber and « drink of water, Luncheon, Seaweed end limpeta, or Discult and Few biubber, Dinner, breast of pen- @uin and « hot drink, One fenst-dey Gnner was undigested feb taken from For “tobacco” y padding. r ‘The party will leave for Buenos for assistance in the rescue, With ropay e+ “ne Recovering From Her Ducking in Surf While Working ast a Screen Heroine, Marie Dressler .. ~ SSNS hen Mo sored Paris Itself Can Show Nothing Newer or More Beautiful hs LIP os goven' hy Zl * "Mi. . : ‘ lee / lg at pod siren dv ps phew Ia Moved to Tell Would Brpenvn nor even greater variety. This Style Show is the more valuable because it so accurately indicates the trend of ay pe ge Figs Henge rp Be Actrewes How to 7 Fashion until another year is writ upon her calendar. swept the 2,000-foot eliffs. Succeed. . The beginnings of the mode have been shown here and otherwhere, in the past few weeks. This showing is on Sentry aan Ghasioen sak the by Sia Mave Yo BRO sg Fashion itself, concrete, crystallized, authoritative. five men who eet out for South Auto “Aue In THE ore Georgia Wild and the Scnare ot the farty were omabet te By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. q Every Model Is Fresh and Unworn tho skin, and a fortnight elapsed be-/ = Marle Dressler lived through “Tillie's Nightmare” and “The Mixup.” | |——— i it passes i Y ssion it thus becomes perculiarly YOURS i 0 i fore their semi-frosen clothes could / she has now survived a worse nightmare, a more terrific mixup. For at | |———— When it sae ant Your poseene 4 J & arly ‘ RS—uninfluenced by adaptation to he dried, for the stock of dried blub-|Coney Island the other day, while rehearsing a new “Tillie” moving pic- any other personality. These are Hats, Gowns, Dresses just as you would choose them yourself in Paris, just Se eae etca' Gite canerok Oe ture, Miss Dressler was thrown into surt forty feet as you would want to wear them. This Exposition represents the ‘yor the det three weeks Semon 1 o:val a Thies tes we pense Bet bled For the fret evveral of posing. : : ° the party eulfered from frostbite and was bit by the heavy structure and she was pinned| . Final Judgment of America on the Artistry of France 4 eda Lnedow'g Ur it hala ta Tanti dant caivees Rrouek is eieaes eee ieeartceeTameyecctanee on ine Therefore the impression of permanence in Fashion is one of the strongest conveyed, as strong as that of oe Who are the artistes represented? These world-famons 5 suction, So I just dived as deep as This is no faded and washed out season. The colors glow aS ae ae 4 a famot Hurt by Drop of Foot 1 could and swam and swam under like jewels, each seems lit up by an inward joy in its beauty. originators and Loeser Studios, no whit behind them in dis- p water, I must have been out of sight M . tinction: and a Half. for quite a while, and of course There are marvelous tones of green, blue, rose, pink, orange, ’ Matthew J. McGrath, champion | those watch OR eagre Were afraid peach and wonderful wine-hued shades. Suzanne Talbot Caroline Reboux Evelyn Varon weight thrower of the United Btates, | that 1 had b Seen Mi EPR: aT z ; : 5 ; ial. Th Maria-Guy Andre Groult leanne Lanvin PvE eM inet, Sentan tan lets Tame un wan peetty The fabrics are lovely, magiiificent, imperial. ere are Tacks Hamer Maison Lewis ‘edaleina that won such a@ signal victory in the | weak, Then 1] had t pulled ashore | satins of exquisite texture; chiffon velvets of an unsurpassed Georgette pinnaens pp international games at Stockholm) through the surf, There was a res- lusciousness; laces marvelous in pattern and workmanship; Gain an Hee ere setrig at tha Veusptesr (Sue ae in the pict tulles, Georgettes and chiffons of a fairylike filminess. The Ee at es Poop: A , ’ " | Motor boat flung. We use 4 ; : ; fc Belgian Blue Bordeaux Russian Green Han Gra , more peeled tied he wien ty ay of it e SELF-RAISING because There is a regal sumptuousness in the decorations, the Chestnut Tau, lia Blue Prunella pene . falling « foot and a half. hands, 1 was FLO shimmer of sqguins, the gleam of beads, the somber splendor Periwinkle Blue Chinese Red “ Sapphire, etc., ete. d McGrath ts a policeman, attached eure nana ' of ie So ery of Wheto page! Sorua heye Wes owp scart The Furs: to the Oak Strect Station. st y is 7 ching exactly in color or decoration, r : ign" bie trying doors on his beat, peal as te US ane a he GUICk It is SURE it ts EASY hot re is a barbaric beauty in the use of gold and silver Lapin Argent Ermine Blonde Seal Mole —Kolinsky ei in front of No. 3 Spruce Sireot, ‘The /{tnougnt T couldire mand. it Thine nea Med Fach 62 one Saply add the rill embroidery, Oriental motifs, ete. Belgton Here or Liege And’ Othere z fall Injured his spinal cord, sprained | roalized that. water had #0 muct , 4 a our, other materials, : 7 heats yeas 7 : ey) his back and caused contusions of the| power, 1 wis pounded until 1 was Srascning, mney re Follow the recipes according to the For three days, to-morrow, Wednesday and Thursday, this authoritative exhibit of the new in Fashion will m A right leg. rt) 10 Flour in in and on ever: reci i ns A * 4 . y A 1 | Hor the, Now York Athletic Club | We went out toa dedner place to exactly the right pro- package, and atl Thare’ Ra 2 continue in the new Costume Room on the Fifth Floor and in the Millinery Salon on the Second Floor, } the policeman won first metro- | [jut 1 felt that the automobile body Portions, You can ever you're making operation i a 8 8 WATT tru teati, aes tae ‘ politan and then the national weight. Bet hicead thatthe thing asl take anvitiing fora will ie eure psi) sat aay 8 File This is YOUR inv itation to attend a woniertal prey of beauty gh as a convincing exposition of the ee a manta, dae ren fy Que ores | RINE, Oe ee te Rona hee biacolia to Aeriate out just right— merely a matter of | authentic in style. You will findeverything to delight you and a new demonstration that only Paris itself can y ound 1d looked he'd bee es in a jiffy. everytime, i A act "3 i i i : . MPT. sirisita to gaot Gocres | enent mening tami , ean iy y baking. compete with Loeser’s in the instinct for smartness. which shelter was taken on the island oon became uninhabitable, owing to rations for eix weeks, but realising that rescue might be delayed long beyond that period, Wild determined to exercise the most stringent econ- omy. He decided to husband bis Prepared rations, which were in the form of @ staple substance. The stocks of tea and cocoa having been exhausted months before thia, this ‘was the cnly hot beverage they pos- sessed, and was thus issued once a day. ‘ Twice weekly the food was given out to each man, without water, an a meal. ‘The members of the party took turns at reading aloud from the only surviving books of the little library which had been rescued from the Endurance; the Bible, the Encyclo- peedia Britannica, Browning, Car- jyle’s French Revolution and Ba- con’a Essays; the books being read in turn, On “Saturday the evening was marked by & con- vert, the feature of which was banjo playing by Hussey, This was the only musical instrument the ma- yooned men possessed, Shackleton ftouk it off the Endurance just before she wae abandoned, tonic.” “When was the war over?” was the first question Wild and omrades put to the rescuers on Aug. 20. They ad heard nething of the outside world since October, 1914, when the Endurance left Buenos Ayres. ——___—. CHAMPION MATT M’GRATH IS INJURED BY FALL Weight Thrower Sufférs Painful “as @ mental fn his home. Court A jury in the County 2 NO PITY NEEDED, bi ed peas a @on't lowe any sleep over fle poverty. { ‘Waiker twice when he found Walker | the director that I of Kings County acquitted | was in such a condition, to the shore, { SOLEMN, There weights. (And “all over,” in the case EASY TO BE A FILM HEROINE IF YOU CAN SWIM. “What is this latest nightmare of ‘TiMie'st” I demanded, after Miss Dressler had inveigied me into the most comfortable chair in her eftting Teom at the Hotel Astor. “Oh, it wasn't much,” Miss Drese- ler modestly disclaimed, “You see, I know how to swim. So I was all right, though the people on the shore thought I wasn't., They wondered, I guess, what had become of me. “But it was very simple. We went down to Ravenhall’s to take the pictures, I had to do things in the surf. Finally an automobile body was fastened on @ raft and towed out into deep water, They put me on it to do my stunts. Thtn sonf¥thing| went wrong. I could feel the auto- mobile part of the raft slipping, and I knew it was going to push me under, It slipped down on one side of the raft, tipped it over and tipped me off. |. “ZT had on a dress; in fact, I wore all my clothes. As I went into the! the head, I was a little but I didn’t lose consciousness, I went under, though; was pinned un-/| der fora moment. Iknew that I must not let myself be pulled down by the T said that I was afraid, while th 4) him. He was dismissed from the * she edded more force, but was reinstated Aux. 15, | finally found a 1915. place in shallow wat where the | pictures could be taken, |NOW SHE'S IN FAVOR OF THE SIMPLE SCREEN STORY, et you rehearsed to-day," I r ehe said simply, “The Do you wonder that Miss Dressler has suffered a sea-change into something grave and strange? only temporary, I am sure, but when I talked with her yesterday afternoon It's Joke or a jest or a gen Jape in the whole interview. And I tell you frankly that I didn’t feel like | asking for one from a woman who had been doughtily rehearsing all after- noon when she felt as if she had been hammered all over with ten-pound of Marie Dressler, means a lot!) Picture had to be finished, It didn't seem to me as if I could go down there again and put on that awful dress and stand in the surf. But it had to be done, and I did it. “Do you know,” she added reflec- tively, “after yesterday's experience I'm beginning to believe that what the public likes best is a simple story well told, instead of these halr-rais- ing adventures.” “I should think you'd feel like a simple story for your next ventur I remarked. “Would you advise any of these film-struck young girls to try to get on the other side of the screen unless young?" “Yos, and they want to die 14 Marie Dressler, soberly singly. “I think !t would did thing if every young girl who is stage-struck could go into the movies and learn that business, She would have to work. And the trouble with the young girls on the stage at present is that they don't want to work. “If there's one thing I have found out in my life it's that you can't get anywhere without working. These stars of the moment—what are they? They win place because of a@ pretty face and some man's tnfluer They water the automobile body hit me OD | Cosremen That's why you ought now to be using resto Ls was SERIOUS, not to say) Mhors of Wot “The girl who wants to be @ suc- cess in the movies has got to work and work hard. The little things out | in front who envy the life of the film actress ought to realize that there's precious little play to it. The girl who wants to make good in the | movies must know how to ride, swim, row, shoot, She must have a strong, healthy body. She must be plucky. She must know how to keep her head, MOVIE GIRL MUST BE PHYSI- CALLY FIT. “If I had struggled when that raft capsized with me yesterday, tf I had let myself go, opened my mouth to shriek, lost control of my muacles— well, it would have been the finish of the picture for me. The movie girl must be physically fit and she must have good nerves and tron self- control. She must have brains, too, and must know how to use them, for he has to convey every thought, every emotion, by pantomime, the spoken word 1s hers.” | “But I should think a movie actress would get gray hairs and wrinkles worrying over her stunts,” I pro- tested. | “Oh, it's the healthiest life in the world,” protested Miss Dressler. “No late hours, a simple diet to keep one's | self fit, plenty of exercise, life in the | Topen air, Of course, moral conditions| ought to be bettered. A good many! studios need to be cleaned up. Giris'| mothers, and tho girls themselves, ought to be careful where they go to japply for positions.” | I thought of Miss Dressler’s famous discovery that “Heaven will protect | the working go,” but I didn’t dare| intrude a fiippancy—she was so very serious! | “Yes, 1¢ you want to act, go into the moving pictures at @rst, girls,” she concluded, “It will give you the work habit, anyway.” Not even vd Marvelously Beautiful Gowns Dresses, Beautiful and Practical Exhibited in the Costume Room, Fifth Floor include everything for the street, the home, the restaurants matince and theater, for reception, ball; or the opera. Each occasion has its own expression, every individuality finds something in the completest harmony. There are simple serge Frocks, demurely plain, but mar- velous in their cut, design and making. You will find richly elegant Dresses for the more formal of daytime occasions. You will find confections for the dance or the restaurant, sumptuous Gowns for receptions, balls and the opera. Perhaps the most noteworthy point in the new silhouctte is the Commingling of Straight Line and Flare the two extremes meeting in a common mean of beauty. Sometimes a Dress, particularly those of serge or serge and satin combined, merely shows the straighter lines, emphasized by long plaits from the bust. Here and there is a Dance Frock flaring from the snug girdle line. Often an imposing Evening Gown is fitted and clinging over the hip with a flare beneath to the ankle, or it flares from the waist at the sides and has the straight line panel back and front. The Fabrics, Colors, Decorations Are Sumptuous - SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDER ; ! i Balon Becond Floor, Dresses ena Gowns, Costume Room, Fifth Floor, beauty, of suitability and good taste, of practicality and satisfaction in wear. You will find what YOU can wear and will want to wear, your own expression of the general fashions, ex- treme in loveliness, but with beauty asthe only extreme. Millinery Opening Demonstrates That This Is a Season of Diversity Exhibit in the Millinery Salon, Second Floor So long as one bears in mind the real points of influence | and decoration, one may choose any Hat preferred—secure of an accurate interpretation of the Fashion. » Three nations—Spain, China and Russia—and one indi- vidual—Napoleon Bonaparte—dictate the lines of the new Hats, Ae acorsont must be sae a hal Lsdrspaayepeed embroi- leries of the Byzantine type, veils lavishly embroidered in lace- lke effect, furs of sy t and unfamiliar colorings. The Spanish type includes the sailors, especially with brims retrou se, the tam and toreador lines. There is, besides, a “shep- piraete Aye of the Epes stead ins suggests the man- ja and the deep coque! e Spa:.ish demoiselle in the eyes veiled beneath its tilted jas . y The Chinese influence is shown in the Hats with straight brim above an enframing crown which shows even more below the brim than above, and is trimmed above not at all, with discrimination beneath the straight line of the brim. Russia is responsible for the military tendency of the Hats made upon the lines of the Russian military cap and the shako. Many of these have the short brim like the visor of a cap, the lines flaring widely above in the way familiarized by recent portraits of the Czar. Others are straight and high, like the | turban worn by the Russian of middle or peasant class. No cold type can depict their beauty, no description convey their unusualness and charm. See them! Tius only can » clear conception of the Fashion movement be obtained. In no other way can individual comparison and selection be so satisfactorily made. ¢ : A Ss.

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