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ABOUT | Plays and | Players BIDE DUDLEY E © TO IT!" the musical play at the Princess Theatro, will end {ts run to-night and start for Chicago, stopping at reveral cites on the way. Ed Rosenbaum jr. has gone out ahead to blaze the way, The production opened at the Princess on Oct. 24. It ig probable that the Messrs. Shubert will furnish an attraction to succeed “Go To It!" at the Princess, Another play that ts soon to end its New York engagement is “Under Sentence,” by | Rol Cooper Mogrue and Irvin Cobb, It | will leave the Harris Theatre next ‘Thursday and, after playing the out- lying houses, head for gir etry g Avery Hopwood's into the Harris next Saturday eve- ning. in her support will be Walter Jones, Lowell Sherman, bifingham Pinto, Gwendolyn Piers, » Seiwyn, Robert Fischer, Waiter Hampden and Thomas F, OU Malley. CARRIE V. KING HERE. Carrie V. King of Paris, known widely by her pen name, Siovektog, has arrived In New York for a visit. It is understood she brought with ber & number of plays for various mana. to inspect. She frequently acts Seticent in Parts for New York the- atrical producers. BY WAY OF DIVERSION. ve got to say a pieces in school tovmertow afternoon, My mother wrote it out for me. It's all about) the moon what looks down from a autumn sky and amiles on them! what's good. I'd ruther take a Nelin | than to speak ily would. That bunch. of kids w git my goat; they'll jest set fhere and grin. 1 know that ll fergit the words as goon as 1 begin. My mother's sure taj be on hy me do y etunt) and little eters will be settin’ | out in fron Oh, well, Pll make ea} stab at it got to try—that’s all | It I fergit the words I s'pose I'll| simply have to stall, But if that gang of kids gits bad and puts me on the bum, I'll punch a half a dozen} jaws—and I kin battie some. IRENE BORDONI'S EYES. Irene Bordoni, who will sing at the Palace next week, asserts that she has the largest eyes in the world and is willing to bet on It, The reason is one which concerns heredity, Her father’s nam Isaac ‘and her mother's Ida. was [__comre race] Evening World Daily Magazine 1 “’S'MATTER, POP?” YerH © | IN DEED . 4 sRRER ENPFEFFER HUHT LAND SAKES WHOD EVER look AY AN OLE. FROG ah, ike You? Wass HENRY HA DAWGON(T~ "TH" ove BoY MUST OTLLE RETAIN SOME OF HIG TAKIN’ WANS” WAT TH "FEMALES? “TS-NIGHY PRONED To PAPA “THAT HES OTLL AW WOH TH LADIES! FLOOEY AND AXEL_ Tins NEW COMEDY (S GONNA BE A CoRKER! YOU AND AXEL WILL PLAY “THE LEADING PARTS . IT'S ANOTHER AUTOMOBILE COMEDY AND ITS FuLL OF “THRILLS AND SLAPSTICK! You KNOW THE STUFF ~ COLLISIONS AND SkIDS SEROME SLIPS US ONE. Jerome Eddy, the kid press agent, | arises to announce that Joseph Hart made him chuckle all over recently | with the following story Old Peterby was rich and atingy. | His nephew, his only heir, was about to be married. “On that occasion you ought to do something to make him happy,” said a friend. And then old Peterby roplied: “I} will. On hls wedding day I'll pretend | to be dangerously ill | MONTGOMERY BOWED. Thursday night James Montgomery | approached the Longacre Theatre t ax the crowd was coming out| “Nothing But| red the lobby r. Mr, Mont- t and bowed gomery took off his low. And then Charles Evans Hughes | lett the theatre. A NEW MARBLE SKETCH. Anna Marbie (Mrs. Channing Pol- Jock) has written an_ entertaining playlet called “If 1 Had Married You,” which is being produced by Arthur Maitland, who will also appear in the chief role, Others in the cast are Henry Jewett jr, Marie Vernon, Helen Driscoll and Gladys Merrick. COW WOULD SELL SIX LEGS. R. H. Burnside, at the Hippodrome, last night received the following let- ter from Fort N. J. “Sir—H ith T inform you that| I have a cow with six (6) legs for) sale. If you are not interested in this matter please do me @ favor and in-/ troduce ane to a show which hundles stuff like that, | “CARL HACKENFELD.” ACCORDING TO B. BROWN. [a E. The fly are a litte! animile what} sits in the butter in the gud old sum-| mer tyme and dropps ded in yer! koffee in Novembir, It has foar| leggs—two to walk on, two to tickel! with and two to shuffle togethir. Bawled heded men luve the fly yer | on becawse he has eyes in the back AND WRECKS AND A J AQLIFF INTD “HE Rene a ARE Y'Game 2 0-0 -ceRTAINLY | on Yes ! Ou! I Dotty Know! DID You NoTIcCEe — THAT BEAUTIFUL \WNOMAN “THAT WuZ STANDIN' LOBBY AS WE CAME “OUT OF TH’ How ?; What Uncle Si Should Have Said Is “Can You Beat It?” PLAY some “ist IN ST'RU MeN On HH — eveTH ~ IND eED| Coprnant: IT Prams PUURMING Oo OMY. Rremng Wort) W6T “THAY FROWSY LookIN’ DOLL WCTH “TH WHY “TH SWELL DRESSED E PUFFS, MADE UP WOMAN IN TH PRETTY BLUE DRESS AN Ls ee” (MUTATION FOX FURS AN’ LAST YEARS IN "TH" HAT?P ~~ AN’ woTSmoRE — HE WANTS US To Use YOUR FLIWWER IN THIS PicTuRE ! GEE — VLU TELL Axe ABOUT IT— HE'LL No DOUBT BE FILLED wih ENTHUSIASM Wt No INDEED-I DIDNT NoNCE HER! wy 2 AY BANE TIRED OF VORKING ANYHOW ! FF au), we'sHourn Peer’ f WE'LL JUST LOAF AN’ Go TO ALL THE MOVIE. litte! playmaite, B. Brown, dean't think. The fly kin nott ye snuck up 8 been engaged to ging for a aph company. Wallace MacDonald has been add- of his hed rite nere the shou! ed to the cast of the new musical blades, The fly luves to git a} pi “Girls Will Be Girls." baby's noze and shuffle its fete. It Is Harry Lewis and his act, “A funn to leve him thdre if yer mothir ain't around to land on you fer it. The fly is commonly called a insekt butt it haz anuther name. My fathir, Hennery Brown, callz it a hellv nuisance, BOL BROW. GOSSIP. To-day Doris Keane will appear in ‘Komance” in London the four hun- | dred and fiftieth time, en A. H, Woods returned from Chicago | Be yesterday, He is arranging to build! There are hundreds of them, & theatre out there, Dr. H, L, 8.—Don't know where Townsend Walsh recently bought | Virginia Ethel Fitz Patrick is, $73 worth of old etchings and play- | brreryrd bills for his office at the Little The- | FOOLISHMENT. Said the canadbal, chi a sirender of Vaudeville Cocktail, new Anna Held show, “Follow Me!" Marcus Loew will open another theatre in Harlem next Wednesday evening, when he takes possession of ‘he York, A picture policy will pre- vail, ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES. 2. Hatch—The song isn't rinted here. a vaudeville agent, will be in the bad ugh to be K with a grin 1 named Pine, tre, KE, Bopth Jack has gone to san | Francis to become associated with | the manage t of “Intolerance.” | Joe Drum passed through town yes- terday en route to Providence as Paul | Kevere for Tom Wise and “The Merry | Wives,” Olea The jot bes ire Aue. though you are Ured uit mor soon be mus! . toa in. FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE, “What sort of a peace does Ger- many want?" Petrova, through Edward “A piece of Franc eae THAT US A WHEN YOU WERE A BOY \S SURE Givin’ SHORT MEASURE 3 IN POTATOES VLATELY. 7 By Jack Callahan } YOU GO HOME AN ASK YER’ MOTHER FoR SOME SALT AN' I'LL LET YA’ | | ROAST YER’ MICREYS" IN MY FIRE WHY DON'T YOU DEAL WITH SOME ONE GROCER. WFUL TA ING WORLD’ Dicky and Dot in the ‘*W onder City”’ By Mary Graham Bonner Covyrabt, 1918 dy The Press Wing Co, tine New York Erening } In the Movies very strange was OMETHING happening. But just what’ it could be neither Dicky nor Dot | could make out, “That man standing up on the high box is shrieking at every one,” said Dot, “I think he Ys pry cross.” “But the people don't seem to mind what he suys,except they move about s he tells them to," said Dicky They don't look as if they thought he was ang And then they noticed that the man standing up on the high box talking to them. He 41, dew * Satur round, Don't especially in when we are a are now? “Klub Pin.” as we ‘to attend j clothes to be bought to guard and lessons to the coming of old Jack what with the first of the away, how the world does s things I am doubly proud | steady flow | Kiddie Klub |for one sin columns hag was THE MAN WAS TURNING A LITTLE HANDLE ALL THE TIME, had a large . Diack something before him, and he the man, “You can see yourselves on was turning around a little handle the screen, Now run! And when the time you have gone far enough J will call ow, children,” he was saying,| to you to come back.” “run as if you were afra | “But we're not afraid,” said Dicky, putting his hands in his pockets,)"We love adventures and we're not afraid of anything, We've had too good a) W time to be ‘frald-cats!” | were at t At that every one lau; man on the Off started Dicky and Dot running for all they were worth, and later the man told them to se themselves on tain theatre, en the day came Dicky and Dot tre before the doors . “We've come to see y told the man at the] ast it opened, a certain day in a ci were of d and the high box laughed too. We don't want you to be frightene continued the man, “but ourselves, door when at t} “You have, have you?" sked the row og Me scat the | man “Well, I'd Just like to tell you children hia ‘°| we're having Charlie Chaplin to-day The picture for the movies," said| on the screens, We don't need any- - | thing else.” Onan 6 | } How to Join the Klub { a anematemnasnatnasnennceeeen | Dicky and Dot didn't pay any at- | tention, ‘They were too excited «stumbled into the dark th finally the pictures be, Charlie Chaplin to. b | y , butt They aire ahd an. There was sure—making tly Baat sate | suspected as being the famous rob- ou Apo tes: | bers running away, And there Dicky not} and Dot saw themselves! How thrill OPENED. name, age, ac faster, faster to keep up with them ft a Ay DOLLAR BACH for accepted ideas | membership certificate nun | We've been in a wonder story!" ex-'for these Wonder City Stories con-|top of your first page. claimed Dicky " tributed by Kiddie Klub members. |der Story Editor, Evenin; The idea for to-day's story wascon: Suggest only REAL “wonders” re 63 Park Row, New York Cit VENING WORLD | “KIDDIE KLUB" here is A ty | ine Ht was! A wonderful story, made tributed by ANNA FARBER, aged. Dicky and Dot might see and a mon » cerificate . | up just for teem It seemed! And ten, No, 911 East One Hundred and city. there (they were running—actually Fifty-sixth Street, New York City. Write only on one side of the pi PIN COUPON Jrunning while some music played ‘The Evening World will pay ONE Put. your Cousin Eleanor’s ‘‘Klub Kolumn’’ ur Cousins, another rday come they speed one right after the other, a season all so busy What with school study and inst Frost, and big winter holidays only a few short Saturdays | pin roun | And because of all this busy state of | that your of contributions to the not abated DICKY AND DOT WERE AT THE THEATRE BEFORE THE DOORS in the big r, Idress and mber at the Mail to Won- World, No, ity. q aah ter iy a Lit of gina for the broke juet_now wus "sorry Dot accept hie invitation. 1 tang “hte Shue Rouby. londhumt, Nod, e did more e Mreet, NIGHTFALL. e Klub membere Ra JOSEVH WALSH (ago tem), TINY AND POLLY, was @ poor little girl who had so ome world t ‘Noy. her ittle” dog. a front, cas uw with it ed quickly up the ine Tay in her arma, went he fond tr luxurious drawing peste a kind ‘bis, dtuat or Delage © you will be fa “hitele’ gil ay ald repaid," the ‘ \ you all be her slater, ryt var rom you’ and wil hauplly @aether me da Tha capone 470 Cenwral @ark Wet. si 0%, Stem, phBa No, 210 Wyckoff BOY-GIRL, Once RoOn a Lime | there was @ little Ms Pert plc, Fonid” in das ined ¢, ands to "Bed wi oat tra he ae at boett a4 ce the chair vid at “te nowt toward las oe Muzaie''” “and he began iol” household had Ft AAP theo wan athlete ihe cra Ih motlie mile” ham’ wear vate 1p {0% house. remen for plinigiment ake treaking ile Sted dues called Bovy.Girt ie wes " elculietyinat day Bite Monday, "ify 28, 0g nue tor ta “OT 202 Weat Sixtioth Aires ity, (462 eleven), KIDDIE KLUB, In this Aub the Ite ‘uruttuens' septum "oes £98 While this klub leat we Miata” eae ar ee ate le vit pre s New 1 ~ | Pg