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Sper ner THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, to have reported to the police are Samuel Feinberg, furnishing store. No, 189 Hoyt Street; Joseph Se home, No, 367 Ciicton Place; Sanitary Control in the cloak, sutt | and dress trades. | ’ naeed ers —— Dr. Price was one of the sy lat the Labor Forum {tn Stu ant When the Children Cough, Rub 4 sea : Musterole on Throats and Chests home, 3 9 —— Hampton s Avenue! tlon and Mehting conditions have { No telling how soon the symptoms _ No. 539 Sne proved In the last five years, he said, | may develop into croup, of worse. but are still far from ideal, And then's when you're glad you have bs No | Other speakers were Dr. Louts 1, | a jat of Mustero! ‘ns Ae hand 0, give thefts entailed losses running as high | Harris, chief of the Bureau of Indus- | Prompt, sure relief, It does not blister. a as $1,000, In most of the last named | trial Hygiene of the Department of ‘tan i db Ra and & certain remedy, , instances the police have made ar-| Health, and Dr. Royal Meeker of th: k Sens As gg You should keep @ Hold-Ups and Assaults Cause "8 | Department of Labor, who sald sta. | Motters know jf You s Terror in Flatbush and tistics might show that the tron and| ~ Jt is the remedy for adults, too, ustry was more 4 ous Relieves sore throat, bronchitis, ton- silitis, croup, stiff neck. asthma, new- ralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, chile Dlains, frosted fect and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia), | HALF OF NL FAGTORIES i" | ARE FIRE-TRAPS, HE SAYS The Park Slope and Flatbush sec- | se ‘seceding man and Mayor Mitchel gent ¢ toms are the ohtef sufferers in Dr, Price Tells Labor Forum More | wishes, was held at No, 82 tnion Brooklyn's latest epidemio of bur-| — Prisons Would Be Needed if | Sau Be yas eranoe yun but Slaries and hold-ups, Since Feb. 1 Law Were Enforced permanent organiz more than thirty Brooklyn homes a r oop , with Alfred J. b. have been robbed, and hundreds of r cent. of all factories arc n, J. Fehr, Treas householders across the Bridge are and if the law were en R, Beoretary. The he Asking for permite to carry revolvers forced the prisons would not be able ies to keep them at some to hold all offenders, according A $100 Jewelry theft from the jow- YF George M. Price of the Board of elry store of Samuel Huttman, No 1654 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, terday gave Detectives o . Whittle and Kaufmann several hours work and resulted in the arrest of Adolph Kuttler, fourteen, of No, 1495 Myrtle Avenue and Edmund Kness, fourteen, of No, 320 Grove Street. Both boys confessed and took the de~ tectives to a iot near Evergreen Cemetery where they had buried the loot, | That the gang of thieves operating , in Flatbush {9 inclined to scorn the police protection afforded ts illustrated in the entrance last Tuesday of the home of Oscar Vail at No. 623 East ‘Thirty-seventh Street. Mr. Vail, @ broker, was at his offices at No. 136) Broadway, Manhattan, and Mrs, Vail was at @ matinee when two men were | seen to enter the front yard and verandah, When Mrs. Vail returned a fow hours later #he found the door had “wen jimmied. The thieves had ran- sacked every room in the house. For- tunately Mre. Vail was wearing all her | jewelry. The bure'ers got about $75 in cash belonging to the Vanderveer Park Christian Church Sunday School, of which Mr. Vail ls Treasurer. ‘Tho same night the home of George B. Livingston, at No, 1761 Eust Twenty-fourth Street, was entered when the family were attending @ noving picture theatre. The thi forced a door in the basement and got | away with $700 worth of Jewels, cut | xlass and silverware. George Dresser jr, who Ives on Coney Island Avenue at Dunn Court ts one of the recent victims. His vome was entered in the absvnce of the family and $100 in cash stolen. | A case that arousea considerable indignation against the poor police protection was the hold-up and rob- ery of Desmond 0, Everhard of No, 38 Midwood Street, Mr. Everbard is Secretary of the Oh!lo Match Bales Company, with offices at No, 100 Hudson Street, Manhatta As he was about to tur xate two men jumped from edge. Ono 8 with @ blunt ! im unconset ven took his diamond r he munittons industry. Atte r the meeting @ Labor Sanita tion Conference, to which Gov w Park Slope Sections. jand for ‘ orga purposes to co-operate wii the artment of Health In enfor Aws and in gbtalning addittona fon for workers, by legislation “Mild? Sure! s worth rer cy nn — but they Satisfy” This cigarette goes beyond mere- ly pleasing the taste. It does anew thing for smokers, the one thing you've always wished a cigarette would do— Schuta, sev: conducted a jowelry # trees, A fow days \ gas stove which h ving room above the st rd two mi alled and told im the stove to his room. As ‘he urned on him with t him into inseni downstairs, Chesterfields let you mnow you they “S.4 TISF'Y 7 they're mild / are smoking And yet, This new smoking-result is due to the new blend of pure, natural Imported and Domestic tobaccos, And the blend can’t be copied, the identi ights ago he wrenched from his tinge When Philip Tres Try Chesterfields today and see, of No, 17 Hamburg two men who held him u ind Hamburg Avenue Lig 7 Te Meyers Tobe a inthe right arm and leg. He was robbed of his gold watch and chain and $10 in cash, Among the victims of thefts known 20 forlO¢ tins of 100 Cher: 50 dealer eannot # A Ce weather aches follow exposure. Soothe and re- lieve them with Sloan's Lini- ment, easy to apply. it quickly penetrates without rubbing. Cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments, does not stain the skin, For rheumatic pains, neuralgia, gout, lumbago, sprains, strains, bruises and stiff sore muscles, have Sloan's Liniment handy. At all druggists, 25c. SOc. and $1.00, | iim hesterfield CIGARETTES of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC tobaccos — Blended Liniment LLS PALIN The majority of people in these United States think alike on real big issues. country, they stand by their President, and they are seldom divided on vital facts. Therefore, when in any particular matter you find that the leading authorities agree absolutely, you can usually depend upon it that what they say is RIGHT AND TRUE. About two hundred and fifty plays are presented each year in the different theatres of New York. These plays cannot please everyone. If they did, none of them would fail, and we would not have so many plays produced. There are two dozen dramatic critics in New York, brilliant and brainy men who have specialized in the technique of the theatre for years and who are em- ployed by the newspapers that hire them because they are recognized as the LEADING AUTHOR- ITIES ON THE DRAMA IN NEW YORK. These men are of widely varying character; some are scholarly college men; others are clever writers who turn a neat phrase and elicit a kindly smile; others—but not many—occasionally sting with satire if they dislike a play, just as they enthusiastically applaud When they approve. Under such circumstances the most difficult thing in the world for a theatrical‘manager is to produce a play which will PLEASE ALL OF THESE CRITICS. Yet that has just been done. Read what some of these critics have written of ‘“The Wanderer” West 34th Street What Alan Dale Wrote of ‘“‘The Wanderer”: “All the opulent magnificence of artistic stage setting was pitted against the more unusual excellence of a perfectly selected cast—and the actors won! It was a triumph for the actors. It was they who made history for the beautiful and haunting production of ‘The Wanderer’ at the Man- hattan Opera House. Although there was a wonderful second act, in which the sex motive that appeals to the mob was flamboyantly and alluringly offered, it was the poignant pathos and the exquisite diffidence of the inexhaustibly human story of the prodigal son that will be remembered. Nadina’s house in Jerusalem where poor Jether was tempted, and where he fell, succumbed in interest to the charm and the wistful appeal of the scenes between the mother and son—scenes filled with human nature, simple emotion, and eloquence. This was somewhat extraordinary, and it must have surprised the producers of the play Messrs. William Elliott, F. Ray Comstock, and Morris Gest. To be sure, they had engaged the best actors that the modern stage boasts, but that the prodigal son motive should have eclipsed all the decorative glories of to-day’s stage must have given them some shock. The delicate scene in the last act when the prodigal son returns, spent, broken, and done for, and the agonized cry of the mother as she sees him, will prove to be as unforgettable as the most novel invention of the tear-stimulating dramatist! William Elliott, as the prodigal son, was in this episode at his best. Nance O'Neil, Charles Dalton, James O'Neill, William H. Thompson, Florence Reed, and Beverly Sitgreaves added to the glory of this admirable cast. “It is no secret that the producers of this play called in David Belasco at the last moment, and gave him full scope. As Belasco is the father-in-law of Morris Gest and William Elliott, this proceeding was not only legitimate but rationa]. Belasco’s name,dick not appear upon the bills, ‘but his mighty hand was recognized. There Were a dozen touches that only Belasco could have engineered. The whole production of ‘The Wanderer’ was a splendid success. It will appeal not only to jaded New York, but to the freer out-of-towners. They should make a bee-line for the Manhattan Opera House.” Louis V. De Foe of The World Said: “In addition to being a gorgeous, impressive eye-filling spectacle ‘The Wanderer’ also pro- vides an exhibition of histrionic art whiclt is the best the stage now affords. There is more gen- uine acting ability exerted upon half a dozen of its roles than upon any half dozen plays now occupying Broadway theatres. Both as a series of stage pictures and as a dramatic performance, it should appeal powerfully to every one.” Charles Darnton of The Evening World Said: “The result is a big dramatic spectacle that has all the elements of a popular success. respect ‘The Wanderer’ promises to be another ‘Ben Hur.’ * * * * be said that ‘The Wanderer’ achieved a sensational success,” Alexander Woollcott of The Times Said: “*The Wanderer’ has all the scriptural and circus elements calculated to lure from their homes that great mass of people who very seldom cross the threshold of a theatre. It will please millions,” Of Course You Can’t Read All the Papers: But if you will take our word for it, the ape of the Manhattan Opera House positively and absolutely assures the readers of The Evening World that EVERY DRAMATIC CRITIC IN NEW YORK joined in the chorus of enthusiastic praise bestowed upon the production of “The Wanderer.”’ These criticisms were so extraordinarily in favor of this great play that a special booklet containing reproductions of the criticisms of ALL the critics of New York has been printed, and will be sent free to any address upon receipt of a request sent to the management They love their at the Manhattan Opera Mouse, In this Altogether, it may f “The Wanderer,’’ Manhattan Opera House, New York. This great production and wonderful cast of over two hundred and fifty people can be seen at prices within the range of all, This great combination of stars can be seen for ACTUALLY LESS money than many theatres ask for a single star not half so well known as some of the score of 1 actresses in this cast The Wanderer" are 2 rmance there are al 50e, 75c and $1 The prices for the Evening and Saturday Matinee , $1 and $1.50, There are NO HIGHER PRICES, 300 orchestra seats for $1, At the Wednesday Matinee Special attention is paid to mail orders, OPERA HOUSE Evenings at 8.15. Matinees Wednesdays and Saturdays at 2.15 P, M, EXTRA HOLIDAY MATINEE TAURSOA, FEB. 22 (“oienipay. great actors formances of At every per! the prices are 25c, 90C, 79c 1917. ta Once in a Great While — All of the Critics Agree Wa “YtNy