The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1916, Page 13

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THE NEW PLAYS “Follow Me” a Working Basis for Anna Held s Eyes. BY CHARLES DARNTON NNA HELD ifs still having trouble with her eyes in “Fol- low Me,” the musical comedy ‘that has brought her to the Casino. Eee “CASCARETS” FOR HEADACHE, COLDS, LIVER, BOWELS Enjoy life! Don’t stay bilious, sick, headachy and “I Want to Be Good, but My Eyes ieee anneal Won't Let Me” is the burden of her | Guthorizing coins o chief song. In this case you can only | from copper an regard “Follow Me” as a workin __ THE RVENING report, made public to- recommends passa; of a iaw that denomination nickel. e—_—_—_—_— is basis for eyes that are as famous as | the milk-bath of earlier years. Miss } Held doesn't hesitate to remind us of other days. She has not been dis- couraged by the fleeting years. On the contrary, she appears in milk- white tights, when fairly young, while at other moments she makes her old love of display evident with elaborate costumes and oodies of diamonds. It is also her pleasure to screech rather than to sing. In other words, she is Anna Held. “Follow Mo” is musical comedy of the common or Broadway variety, given largely to ragtime, In Its orig- inal German form it may have been a thing of melody. With the local tunesmiths who have been brought in to hammer out numbers that mean little more than noise, makes only a clamorous appeal to the ear, The rest is vaudeville, Various the piece | CLEANS KIDNEYS PL att If your Back hurts or Bladder bothers you, drink lots of water. | When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don't get scared and | proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinar, tract. | Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by fiushin {them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal ac- | tivity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can feadily understand fine! Cascarets liven your liver, clean your thirty feet of bowels and sweeten your stomach. You eat one or two, like candy, before goin, + to bed and in the morning your head} is clear, tongue is clean, stomach! jweet, breath right and cold gone. Get @ box from your druggist und enjoy! the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Cas- carets stop sick headache, biliousness, indigestion, bad breath and constipa. n. Mothers should give a whole Cas- earet to cross, bilious, sick, feverish children any time. They are harmless and never gripe or sicken.—Advt, ADVERTISEMENT. Stolen was adverti unmasks America’s You must see fearless, at all leading t Watch for AupuBOn, CROTONA, RIVIERA, STAR, NEMO, BEDFORD, ‘BAY RIDGE, FOLLY, COMEDY, JAMAICA, CARLTON, TERMINAL, The Story of the Package A package, containing the secret plans of the Canal fortifications, as having disappeared from an apartment in the New Ebbitt Hotel in Washington. This package exists only in an author's imagination. Perhaps we owe you an apology for the series of advertisements that have appeared. If so, we offer it freely, gladly. For the purpose of these announcements is a very eerious and earnest purpose. _Many good authorities have asserted that International spies are actively engaged in this country right now—that our future is menaced by these secret enemies. As a nation that does its work in the open, most of us do not realize that the dangers that surround us are very REAL. “PEARL OF THE ARMY” A Story of “America First” country to-day—the perils of a nation that must be roused to wakefulness, PEARL WHITE, as the American Joan of Arc. It is your patriotic duty to see this picture, and it holds a thrill for you that you will long remember. It will be shown soon, in 15 episodes, one each week, WILL BE SHOWN THE WEEK OF DECEMBER 4TH IN THE WILLIAM FOX CIRCUIT OF THEATRES, FOX’S NEW BRITAIN, New Britain, Conn, FOX'S SPRINGFIELD, Springfield, Mass, the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water—you can't drink too much; also get from any | harmacist about four ounces of J. Salts; take a tablespoonful in a g! people who have been identified for a long time with the two-a-day kind of entertainment are conspicuous inj the performance. One of them, tiny Sylvia Jason, deserves a hearty wel- | Sal come to a new field, for ahe embodies | of water before breakfast each morn- in her small way both grace and hu- ing for a few days and your kidneys | a ihe not only eft ell, but she will act fine. ‘his famous salts is | wel hed en dag Bd {made from the acid of grapes and | knows her way about the stage. Her /jemon juice, combined with lithia, and work, which seems to be pleasure to} has been used@or generations to clean her, is #o refreshing and youthful, and stimulate clogged kidneys; also to that she might be called the musical ; neutralize the acids in urine so it no comedy sister of Peter Pan. If vaude- | ville can give us a Sylvia Jason we may forgive Eva Tanguay, With this charming mite Harry Tighe dances amusingly. But en- thusiasm for recruits from the vaude- stage cannot extend to Henry| Lewis, who has far more assurance | than talent. The sort of bumor to which he gives himself can serve only to cheapen the Casino, Some of the chorus girls are good- looking, but most of them are awk- ward. Those exceedingly cl ish dancers, Eduardo and sino, give an exhibition that wins} admiration. Mise Held’s variation of , longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot In- jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, | also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what be- came of your kidney trouble and backache.—Advt. ST 40% to 60% fF oft ‘ 5 Cash Dixcount off reguine List Price. GUARANTEED BRAND NEW. {9 pleasing to the ear! and the memory. But there is. an- other song touching upon the Dar- inian theory that ts in such b ast » make it quite out of pla at the Casino, [t gives a tone of v garity to the performance that is n) eaaill forgotten. For that matt Pay Cash Save the Dealers’ Profit ow Me,” from start to finish, leaves a great d&al to be desired. site DEMAND FOR 212-CENT COIN. WASHINGTON, Dec. 1.—A 214-cent piece 1s demanded by the country, ac- cording to the Director of the Mint, ___ ADVERTISEMENT, ADVERTISEMENT, From Ralph Payne secret foes—reveals the menace that surrounds our this great serial, featuring PATHE’S peerless, heatres, it. Broadway, at 165th St., Tremont, near Park Avenue, Broadway, at 97th Street, Lexington Avenue, at 107th Street, Broadway, at 110th Street, Bedford Ave. and Bergen St., Brooklyn, 72d St. and Third A: rooktyn, 15 Debevoise St., Brooklyn, 194 Grand St., Brooklyn, 314 Fulton St., Jamaic: Market and Halsey St., Newark, N. J. 84 Park Place, Newark, N. J., ‘match at $10 to $25. wee, Former’y A. T. Stewart & Co. WANAMAKER'S Broadway at Ninth Phone Stuyvesant 4700 ISTMAS STORE Store Open 8.30 to 6 The Spirit of Christmas Calls All Over the Store in STARLAND JEWELRY WATCHES GOLD NOVELTIES At $21 to $50 an individual | Exquisite hand-chased gold collection of women's 14 karat Vanity cases and useful little boxes to hold one’s emergency gold bracelet watches. Round, powder and puff, Stamp boxes, square, oval or octagon cases jnives, pencils, thimbles. with trustworthy movements, "Articles for the lover of to- mounted on flexible gold brace- 4, lets or ribbons. — GOLD jEWELRY Gifts for him—authoritative styles in men's links, cuff but- tons, dress sets, scarf pins. Gifts for her—brooches, bar- pins, bracelets, lavallieres, neck- laces, rings. SUN DIALS Accurate sun dials for Christ- mas gifts must be chosen within , the next few days. These time- keepers of the sun are planned especially for the locality where they are to be placed. Lately we Repay ogi segad Med ind the proper regulating of the Porto Rico, Cuba, Texas an watch and for its engraving. Alaska. DRESSING Table Silver in an unusually large variety of fine open stock designs at reasonable prices. Jewelry Store, Motor Entrance ot Tenth Street. Also the new very small jeweled watches of platinum on ribbon bracelets. Men's watches with Waltham, Elgin or Howard movements. Men's dress watches of white = eee For girle and boys bik dace watches at moderate prices. Time should be allowed for ‘Christmas Book Selling of Standard Sets White paper and the cost of manufacture have gone up since we bought these books. But we have not raised their prices. You will find them the best values in New York for standard library editions. Charles Dickens—Complete Writ- ings; 40 vols., cloth, $13.0; full flexible leather, $27.50. Honore de Balzac—Edited by George Saintsbury; 18 vols., cloth, $10.50; three-quarter leather, $15. George Eliot—10 vols., three-quar- ter leather, $12.50. Henrik Ibsen—For the first time a set of this noted author at a popu- lar price in English ; 6 vols., buckram, $7. William Makepeace Thackeray— 26 vols., cloth, with author's own illustrations, $17.50. William Shakespeare. A fully an- potated edition with notes by Gol- Janez and Hudson, also glossary and study questions. ‘0 vols. Cloth, tla) three-quarter leath- Ralph Waldo Emerson. 5 vols. Cloth, $3.50; three-quarter leath- er, $5.25. Don Quixote de la Mancha. 4 vols. Buckram, $3; three-quarter leather, $4.50. Jane Austen—6 vols., buckram, 4.50; three-quarter leather, 1 fis ; nother edition with Brocks illus. trations in color, 12 vols., buck- ram, $10. Robert Louis Stevenson—10 vols., buckram, $6.75. Turgeneiff—7 —_vols., 75. Charles Dudley Warner. 15 vols., cloth, $10.50, Robert Burns—The Gebbic self interpreting edition. 6 vols., buckram, $4.50; three-quarter leather, $6.25. Edward Gibbon—History, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire— 6 vols., buckram, §5.50; three- quarter leather, $6.50. First Floor, Old Balldiag FURS—New Ones and Fine Ones for Christmas Just in, more of the much Beautiful ermine furs. Care- wanted seal-dyed muskrat fully chosen collections of na- muffs at the special prices of|tural raccoon, black fox and ‘ beaver at prices 10 per cent, $12.50 to $55, with scarfs to or more below the market. 4 ‘ Ermine muffs are $40 to $160; ait toss ganas specially priced searts are $21 10 $250, an 3 scarfs, . eaver muffs are $18. $ Skunk furs of deep natural | scarfs $15 to $50. b m tones, long of hair and Black fox muffs are $15 to $65; rown am g 11 iced scarfs, $16.50 to $35. glossy. Muffs specially priced,) “Natural raccoon muffs are $12.50 to $110; scarfs, $10 to $50. | to $32; scarfs, $9 to $23.50, Hi Fur Salon, Second floor, Old Batlding, Smart Coats, Special Prices, for Young Women New for Saturday. Clearaway of Suits at $15 to $25 At $29.75, 50 velours de laine Our own stocies, marked very lew coats with seal-dyed coney or| to clear them quickly. Wool poplin «half.| gabardine, wool velours, and broad- raccoon collars and cuffs; half-) {oth suits, plain and fur-trimmed lined and interlined; a really! Fach coat has its peau de cygne stunning model, Burgundy green and brown, lining and flannel interlining. Each skirt smartly cut. Other coats—majority are parts of special purchases, $18.75 upward. buckram, Han Poe. 6 vols. Buckram. three-quarter leather, Vict 1. Hu 10. 10 vols., cloth, $4.25; Mirescniartee leather, $9.50. : Brown, burgundy, green, black, navy, Sizes 14 to 20 years, Becond floor, Oid BulRing $25 for Plush Coats | $45 for Silk Velours Coats 225 coats at these special prices for women, At $45, fourteen different styles coats, loose or belted; all lined with of silk velours coats, trimmed with excellent satin, good furs such as natural raccoon,, At $16.75 to $35, special groups beaver, skunk-dyed opossum, or if you of wool velours coats, warm and yet like them better, plain. Cut on/not very heavy youthful swinging lines, with or with. At $50 upward, evening coats out belts, | that are now half the standard prices. At $25, nine styles of the plush Becond floor, Old Building. Afternoon and Evening Dresses Now $29.50 to $85 Perhaps you remember that charming satin dress with moleskin which Jenny of Paris chose to wear this Autumn? We had it copied to sell at $42.50, The last five or six dresses left are reduced to $29.50. Similar repricings have been made on a number of other unusual dreses, Copies, adaptations and individual models in serge, satin and crepe Georgette, * New prices are $29.50, $50, $75 and $85, Evening Dresses, $13.50 Gay little dresses of satin, taffeta, net or chifton in pastel colors, ‘They have charm even at this price. Geound Floor, Old Building, a a in the Big The Wanamaker Christmas Toy Store has become an insti- tution visited each December by more people, we believe, than go to any other single exhibit. To miss it is to miss perhaps the greatest Christmas sight in the city. tell us we have surpass: Toy World This year our friends ch ring attached. all previous efforts. Will you come Fourth Gallery, New Butiiing, Silk Stockings—Always Welcome and see for yourself? poy welcome if the stockings come from the Wanamaker Silk Hoisery Store, for they will give lasting pleasure and service. A very wonderful collection of silken hose is here. Never such choosing. Plain colors, $1 to $2 pair. Embroidered, $1.50 , With embroidered clocks, $1 to ake pair. With lace imtrtion, Bo beats $8.60 oma Novelty hose, $1 to $2.25 pale. ‘With open-work ankle, $2 to $12 pair. * Fancy sports moegings, $2 to $6.75 pair. iain floor, Old Building. Ready! Leather and Fancy Goods q Fitted over-night bags, fitted dressing cases and traveler’s needfuls, and fancy stationery leather goods such as sewing cases, jewel boxes, music folios, etc. @ A complete little shop of men’s gifts—leather or silk pocket books, bill folds, etc. q And a shop of women’s beaded, fabric and leather bags. q Fans and photograph frames and the cutlery store where one gets pocket knives, scissors in cases, manicure sets and safety razors are a part of the Leather and Fancy Goods Store, every part of which is radiantly ready for Christmas, Main floor, O14 Buflding, With open-work clocks, $1 to Tan hide traveling case for men, $8.50 Pin morocco writing case, $8 Women’s Christmas Gloves, 85c to $6 Wise Mr. and Mrs, Santa Claus are choosing their glove gifts first this year They know how scarce good gloves are, and they are afraid, just as we are, that when the size-assortments of these are broken it will be impossible to duplicate them at once. Princess May gloves, $1.15. Mocha and capeskin gloves, $1.50 to $2.2 Royale gloves made in France, $1.50. Woolen ves Bbc tosh. . mes Finest of French gloves, the Reynier, $1.85 to $6. Children’s gloves, 50c upward. Main floor, Old Building, Slippers for All the Family Children’s comfies, $1 to $1.15. Women’s comfy slippers, $1.25 Women’s Japanese embroidered slippers, $1.25. Women’s Men's comfy sli 8, $1.50 to $2.50, Lira Men's leather slippers, $2 to $4. Bo: Bedard slippers, $1.25 to cretonne slippers, 41.75, Women's ribbon slippers, $3. Men's—Burlington Arcade floor, New Building; Men's, Women’s and Children’s—Main floor, Old Building and Down-Stairs Store, New Building. Christmas Gifts tor MEN Things men need. The kind men buy themselves. In great variety. 5,700 Dressing gowns in woolen fabrics, some imported. ...$12 to $45 200 Dressing gowns in pure silks, exclusive patterns........$15 to $75 $10 8,000 Blanket bath robes, 200 colorful patterns 12,000 Neckties in imported silks, all exclusive designs. 12,000 Neckties in every conceivable tone.............. 6,000 Neckties at $1; 4,000 at 3,000 Neckties of Spitalfields and Macclesfield silk 8,000 silk shirts, exquisite patterns and all-white........$3.50 to $10 50,000 shirts of madras and other cotton materials.......$1 to $2.50 5,000 suits of pajamas, cotton, flannel, crepe and silk .$1 to $12 3,000 sweaters, $3 to $8 for domestic; $15 to $20 for imported And a Fine Group of Fur-lined Overcoats ed They range in price from $55 to $300, The shells areall black broadcloth, Collars are Persianlamb, beaver, Hudson seal (dyed muskrat) and otter. Sizes 86 to 46, At $55, a quilted satin lined coat with otter collar. At $70, a full skin muskrat lined coat with Persian lamb or Hudson seal collar, At $80, a full muskrat otter collar, At $110, a better grade of muskrat; with otter, beaver, Persian lamb or Hudson seal collar, At $135, marmot, with otter collar, At $175, Jap mink, with beaver collar, At $200, a beautiful black rat, with otter collar, At $300, a black rat made up of matched backs, with mink collar, lined coat with beaver or ases, $9.50 hand-engraved Burlington Arcade floor, New Building, OWder compart- memo pad and TT SS 7)

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