The evening world. Newspaper, January 5, 1917, Page 12

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is THE EVENING WORLD, Ent Few me COLLET PPO TIL LETT PRTITOD POTD OPIPPODIPLL LT PPL PRY TY PELLET POH TY SLTT PARTY PEARL OF THE ARMY By Guy W. McConnell. (Copyright ty Guy W. McConnell.) GYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING EPISODES jal it cmted with the dafens Me ironla maker the’ nana’ visble™ on temas (n° are'ctt ate hen, the Greaedian Ambassador. Ie found dont ty aly inane ‘thanking. Larne ne for hat" be jad done fog “orenada 18 mmanier of arte A Gant ra Sart ‘ r ym, rho Bit arn Ma, he ta thrown inte coxayany with nrain ls wre ad th Boar! Pare asonmmpanion her a8, WI Last Ten Days! On January 18th We Will Be in Ly New Store, N. E. Corner 33d & Sth Ave. Final Price Cuts New York’s Most Sensational Clothing Values at the Harris Store Never Such Bargains Before— Perhaps Never Again! must move from this store before January 15th. Not a garment will be taken to our new location. That means the most sweeping sacrifices. Thousands of dollars’ worth of handsome, up-to-date Suits and Overcoats at 4 Price The models, materials and patte pon) men buy’ eagerly and weet with le. ‘we a Tie flarnit fitort 1 UNION SQ SQUARE sey ane ia, GOP 14th St. Opmaite Lincoln st AMMA DALTILE mama wer of the family for months.—Advt. Brent, covering hie. i i ar i i a {he Prpema Canal and cnrtatn chemical ws the borler TO, Adama, @ pri- Biates forces, T Episode MAT belt, ma'am,” @luded the pursuing Gi sets him right,” into which they had find, Tut Adams did not ehare her good opinion of Major Brent. An Incident in their filght from the Paso del Morte eames to his mind due the lonely vig now beginning. \«Hande Up! Marchi” Ordered Pearl. The Grenadian invaders of Amert- | Can aoil were being pursued by United States cavalry and @ detachment under Major Brent was engaged in a clash with Bolero, the Grenadian ban- ‘ait leader, In Soap Bad For the Hair Bonp should be used very carefully, it your want to keep your halr looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much clkall | ‘This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins ft. | The best thing for steady use fe Just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oll (which Is pure and greaseless), and ts better than the most expensive soap or any- | thing else you can use. | One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse | the hair and acalp thoroughly. Simply | moisten the hair with water and rub it in, It makes an abundance of rich, iti fi lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive ofl. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and {t leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsified cocoanut of! at any Lidge it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every mem- | chauffeur, Toko. | fastened in No. VI, said Adams, after he and Pearl Dare had renadian raiders, “was the property of the—of Captain Payne.” “That explains why Major Brent wanted me to have it, and Pearl murmured, touching the belt reverently. Then the girl went into the tent Adama had rigged up for her in the ravine There were two prisoners in Bi lero’s party. One was Pearl Da The other was Ber- tha Bonn, Brent, to whom the girl beckoned, ignored her plight and turned and dashed away. While Pearl was sound asierp Adams took the belt from her, closed the tent flap and stole away, When Pearl awoke at dawn sho found Payne's belt gone and a sub stitute in its place. A imissive was the buckle, tits by Adama, and read: “FORGIVE AND FORGET MB.” Tho girl started in to reconnoitre Coming upon the open road she be- held two men in grim combat. Ono was Adams. The other man's face was not exposed even to Adams him- self. But he bore a strong resem- blance to Toko. Adams was finally knocked down. When he struggled to his feet hoe caught elght of a horse and rider specding away. Pearl Dare faced him with @ revolver, “Who was that man?” “That's what I mighty near found out,” Adams replied, ruefully, and tapped the bel “I don't know what he was fight! for. Moebbe this.” “Naturally, replied, with trony. “Everybody seems to want that belt— you more than any one else, Let mo have it!” “Now's not a safo time," he pro- tested, and pointed toa rising cloud of sand just ahead. “Come oni” Grasping Pearl by the arm, Adams started to pull her out of the road. liut It was too late. Armed Grena- dians swept upon them and before Adams could interfere they over- powered the girl and started away with her In their possésston, Then Adams beheld an army air- man in action, The aviator had lo- cated the raiders and was hurling bombs on the party. A bullet fron a Grenadian rifle struck the attacker. The machine volplaned to the ground, and its occupant lunged out of the seat In a dying condition, Pearl sprang from behind a pile of Doulders and leaped into the aviators seat. In another moment she was soaring toward the Amertean border. An hour later, after a tramp through a changing landscape, Adama, now in Grenadtan clothes, came upon a hut at an abandoned silver mina In a corner crouched a frightened, cringing woman. They started @ conversation in the Grena- dian language, when there loomed upon the threshold the figure of Major Brent. “Hands up, Orderly Adams!” cried “Drop that I i ia im ni ly Ma ws by il hi every respec Satie Uo tetect che SPERRY GOLD ana 29¢ GREEN STAMPS (Wo aise redeem Seamer Hage me"ttaad eee fe ft a raed: f SF Sale of High Grade Period Suits ve Ln POE St Bet JACOBEAN OAK DINING ROOM SUIT (10 PIECES) chine Closet Extension Table Serving Table Buffet pop id Ber. Price AQ, 79 | Ben. 0" 25. 34| Ben. “Brice 67.49 26045 Cosh or Credit oh. Fexular Prise of “the ten Dlecos Open an Account with any carriage and pay for It Our Special Outfits % Rooms Complete $89 Orn © com Reg. Price 620.05 20.95 Cash or Credit Saultary uphol ready to start house keeping. % 3 4 AND 8 room OUTFITS ur to 144-146 WEST 125° pg Bet. 7th & Lenox Aves. NEWARK STORE, c whether Your Resour ts"open oe Tt you have clomad cal OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 0’ CLOCK iT ALL THREE STORES gos EVERYTHING TO FURNISH YOUR HOME COMPLETE jock ana Weil made: LIBERAL CREDIT AND Le LOW PRICLS Fe ACOOUNTS OPENED FROM $5°t to > $e 000 In Small Weekly or Monthly Payments, Any article or as many as you want up to Larger and emailer amounts tm the same America’s Greatest Furniture House 3510 36st. gumanhn 9 C@mpy Me 49-51 MARKET ST. lee pi Cuthte are. inclu intend furnishin an non ‘With Any Style Victor Victrola Including Your Sclection of peas trom $15 to $350 And Pay For It in Small Wei Monthly Paymenty wy °F This $35 VICTROLA OUTFIT $25 VICTROLA “NO. Vi. Golden Oak On! $10 WORTH OF SMALL ACCOUNTS ESPECIALLY INVITED 4 single ad na you wish to *|abuse, mostly anonymous, of course. FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1917. qate, and in @ scrimmage with Grenadian raiders they found themselves cut otf from the United | gant You have exposed yourstif at lagt and are under arrest!” Adems held his nerve. “What's that locket of Bertha Bonn’s contain- mak your photo worth to you?” he ed the Major. Ten minutes later Major Brent left the shack alone. He carried with him the supposed belt of the late Capt. Payne and the prized canal defense plans which had been se- creted In it, with which Adama had be neahatt bartered for his free- om. That night Major Brent and Miss Dare, who reached Fort Gordon after her adventure, were despatched to Washington with the papers. The train was attacked and held up whilo crossing the Rio Grenada, Major Rrone was ellettly wounded and un- able to render any assistance to Pearl, who, with the papers in her possession, was abducted. After- ward, when Pearl collected her ecat- tered wits, she missed the documents and found herself in an automobile which waa racing along a desert trail. “Toko!” she exclaimed in astonish- ment, catching sight of the driver's face, Toko turned a grim visage toward her. At his feet lay a black muffler, Pearl saw it and gasped. “The Bilent Menace!” The Seventh Episode of + PEARL OF THE ARMY Will Be Published Friday, Jan. 12 @ ‘Das Rheingold,’ The Bostonians, And Sembrich\j By Sylvester Rawling. AS RHEINGOLD” got a emooth, flowing, one is tempted to say save for the inopportune intrusion of #0! mem- ories, splendid performance at the Metropolitan Opera House last night before one of the biggest audiences that has attended German opera this season, The swimming of the Rhine Maidens was a mechanical triumph and an artistio illusion altogether ad- mirable, All four ecenes were well presented. The lightning and thunder evoked by Donner’s hammer made many people Jump, so realistic was the effect, Only the rainbow bridge to Walhalla missed effectiveness. Surely, after all these years, it should fit to an inch, but it didn’t, Mr. Gatti continued his innovation of last year and gave a twenty minutes’ intermis- sion between the second and third scenes, with no injury to the play and to the comfort of the audience, When, in this column many years ago I ad- vocated this departure from tradi- tion, I was assailed by a torrent of Apparently it is come to stay, thank goodness! Most of the principal eingers were old favorites. Of the Alberich of Otto Goritz and the Mime of Albert Reiss we May not expect to see the like. Johanues Sembach’s Loge was finely sung, and if one could forget the in- imitable Van Dyck, and the capabio Burrian, it should be said equally well acted, Louise Homer made Erda impressive, as she always does when she sings the part. Then there were Hermann Weill a8 Wotan, Melanie Kurt as Fricka, Marie Kappold as Freja, Carl Braun and Basil Kuysdael as the Giants, Paul Althouse and Car! Schlegel as Froh and Donner, and Lenora Sparkes, Vera Curtis and Kathleen Howard as Rhine Maid- ens to ma’.o up a great cast, Last to mention but first in importance was Mr. Bodanzky, who conducted in a manner to warm the cockles of the heart of the oldest Wagner devotee. The Boston Symphony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall last night gave its third evening concert of the season |manner in which they exploited tt. | reach | the one great voice of humanity find- | evening of eulogy of Judge Bartlett, before, aa al nowadays, crowded audie The prin number was Cesar Franck's sy: phony in D minor, More beautiful | and significant symphonies than this | have been penned, but we must have variety, and Dr, Muck and his play- ers are to be congrat ilated upon the climax of the in the bacc! he concert was anale from Wag- ners “Tannhauser.” In this excerpt the orchestra achieved @ perfection of ensemble, @ tonal balance, and in-| dividual and collective virtuosity such as 1 ckes the organization unique, The “Rienzi” overture, al- though splendidly played, was an anti-climax, Marodla Bembrich gave the first of four historical recitals at Aeolian Hall yesterday afternoon, It was devoted to folk-songs, Mr, Krehb' that the art song re , {t Is “born, not made. . Krehbiel does not point out that the folk-songs of all peoples are basic- ly the same and, therefore, upon one programme become monotonous, Nevertheless underneath them all les ing its expression in song, as some day it will find @ larger expression weld the peoples of the earth to- | gether, But to return to Mme, Sembrich Love her as all of us do, It would be absurd to credit her with the yolce that once was hers, Yet the Nor. with really brilliant effect. In her “Loch Lomond" she missed — th tch spirit, and in Mr, Burlotgh’s| “Deep River” the atmosphere of the | plantation negro, By the by, as 1| told Mr. Burleigh the other day, th song of his ts di by becoming hackn ench song “Les Trots C: was one of Mme, her interpretation of the Hungarian song made popular by Brahms's or chestral setting was dazzl F La Farge was Mme, Bembr companist at the plano, Dorothy Berliner gave & piano re- cltal at Aeolian Hall last night, Her programme embraced Cesa prelude, chorale and fugue, and com ns by Beethoven, Schumann, fel Faure, Maurice Ravel and ¢ hopin, —— Lawyers Honor Bartlett. A teatimontal dinner and reception to Willard Bartlott, retired Chict Judge of the Court of Appeals, were given last nigh. by the Brooklyn Bar Ass At the Hotel Bowsert. Almet B wa toastmaster of the dinner. tho epeakera were former Chief Judge Edgar M, Cullen, Stephen C. Baldwin and Martin W, Litueton, Tt was an i —$——r Our Fics* 1917 “ae Monroe Clothes Shop ‘ Opens To-Morrow Upstairs at Broadway and 34th St., N. W. Corner Right in the Centre of New York’s Busiest Shopping District. Canadian Customs officials ap- praise Monroe Clothes as $40 Valuss—read this letter! To the Manager, Monroe Clothes Shops, New York. Dear Sir:— I have just received a Monroe dress suit purchased at your New York 42nd St. store, and must say I am delighted with it. The only measurement I gave was the chest measurement, and I assure you it fits like a glove without any tailoring whatsoever. The custom officials at the Montreal Post Office appraised it at forty ($40) dollars, declaring it was impossible to purchase a suit of that kind for the sum of fifteen ($15.00) dollars. Only on the pur- chase bill being shown would they allow me to be charged duty on a fifteen ($15.00) dollar suit. I purchased two of your suits last Easter while in New York, and they have given me as good service as suits I have paid much more for. Thanking you for the good service rendered, I remain, Yours truly, B. E. CLARKE, 287 West Sherbrooke St.; Montreal P. O., Canada. ‘‘Reduction Sale”’ prices hold no attractions for men who know the real values of Monroe Clothes at $15. Caine y and et acquainted with Monroe quality to-day! Ri it’s your first visit there’s a pleasant surprise in store. Suits — Overcoats — Evening Clothes — $15 AMERICA'S LARGEST UPSTAIRS CLOTHIERS Monroe Clothes 42nd St., cor. B’way—Times Square ASSAU ST., Cor. Frankfort—City Hall "WAY, Cor. Fulton Street COLUMBUS CIRCLE, N. W. Cor. 59th St. 34th ST. and B’WAY, N. W. Corner 125th ST., Cor. 7th Ave. BRONX—Bergen Aves Sor iaeth St. a ourt St., Cor. Montague St- Brooklyn Fulton Bt ¢ Cor. Hoyt. December 23rd, 1916. No Alteration ch Autti arges. Charg: Open Eeenin stills Saturdays till 10

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