The evening world. Newspaper, March 8, 1917, Page 12

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Stop Ne A. three-st ame pled In part by ex an Publishing Company J, took fire “ office on the time the fame the struc dine occu Prosectt: the bull MISERABLE FROM Newm ng To Take ‘‘Fruit-a-tives.”” 594 Champlain St., Montreal “For two years back and joints, and my hands swollen, A friend advised “Fruit-a-tives” and from the outset, they did me good. After the firet box, I felt I was getting well and I can truthfully say that “Pruit-a-tives” is the only medicine that helped me.” LOUIS LABRIE, 50c a box, 6 for 82.50, trial size, 250. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit- a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, N. Y.— Advt kewood 1 Lida Fatte Felt Wretched Until He Started | I was a miserable eufferer from Rheumatism and Stomach Trouble. I had frequent Dizzy Spells, and when I took food, felt wretched and sleepy. 1 suffered from Rheu- matiom dreadfully, with pains in my STOMACH TROUBLE count ‘ | | naid Jealousy —Green-E THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, “NEW 200 MONSTER yed, Too— Keeps Funny Girls Off the Programme. Might t the Great arden under But they weren't there. And the reason waa the addition of | an unexpected antmal to the Zoo, the| animal being known as the Green-Eyed Monster. amateur lady clowns—eight; m, elght—were to have heen American Cireus which Jopened last night In Madison Square | the auspices Vacation Association. of the First there was to have teen a regiment of clowns, but the manage. ment decifed that would never do because the audience would laugh iteelf to death. Instead, they selected elght young women members of the assoctation and instructed them to do the clowning. They did tt, too~at the ‘dress rehearsal, But not any more, the explanation belng 750 pro- tests from members of the Living American Flag, all of whom id they Christine Miller’s Art Is Re-Created on Lhe NEW EDISON Thomas A. Edison has cau ht the fleeting reality of this popular contralto’s voice. The mellowness, the soft note of sadness as she sings the familiar melodies of old, are re- created through his new art. heard Christine Miller? Come and let the New Edison introduce you to her at this special concert. Actual tests have been made in which Miss in direct com- her re-created voice on the New Edison. As the Boston Journa/ said: “Tt was impossible to distin- livin voice from its re-creation.’ Miller san parison wit! guish the singer's Concert Omorrolw You are invited to attend this special concert ot Christine Miller re - creations at our recital hall, 11:30a.m.to5 p.m. Other great artists and popular selec- tions will be heard as well, Come, Easy Monthly Terms Arranged to Sutt Program Have you 11.80 TO 6.00 P. Whispers Chiat Hope, Miller and Marle Rappold Prite Song (Dio Meist ersingur) Alvert Spalding Dare Sime Lind Verhaldt (Lohengrin) Mat Broken Dot} ow P Noni Dvorak) Je ke et Home One nd Jacques Urlus London Tape (One step) 8 Orchestre Cyistine Miller Panlo Gruppe The EDISON SHOP graph Corporation of Manhattan 473 Fifth Avenue pus: Props, ry ‘Isn't It Too Bad: vd These Girl Clowns * | Were Barred From Vacation Circus ~~ PUTSLADY CLOWNS | a ~ OF CIRCUS 10 ROUT | @ GLADYS GRETCHEN LLOYD Telephone Operator and SORVARP +3 (7 Book-Keeper...., believed they'd rather be clowns, too, | than just parte of #tars and stripe What was the management to do? | Right! 60 there was no lady clown- jing act, and only five mere profes- jsional male clowns wore the white | paint. Still, the circus didn't seem to suf fer, There were elephants and mon keys, trained dogs and comedy mules, of other features, following the | “Grand Tournament” that started the show and preceding the “Grand Pa- trlotic Pageant” that ended It, The circus features were provided by professional talent of a high order. A marvellous Japanese tumbler stood \indefatigably on his head from the opening to the close of the pro- gramme. The Aerial Fontonis, girl gymnasts, performed intrepidly on @ revolving wheel. There was a troupe of Berber Arabs, tho siste’ |Gasch, remarkable head balancers, Jand as a final thrill, jas “the sensation of five continents, executed a wild and dauntless bicycle ride and dash for life on tho inside rim of a mammoth arenio bow!, very acme of danger-daring foarless- ness. A large crowd applauded liberally the efforts of amateurs and profes- sionals alike and owing to the pres- ence of many men and women in the boxes the Garden had an unusually festive air, Miss Gertrude Kinston told for tunes In a tent to swell the receipts of the Vacation Association, and many officers of the Association, in- cluding Miss Anne Morgan, attended, The circus will be repeated after- noon and evening throughout the week, the last performance occurring on Saturday night. The circus pro- | gramme with a cover designed by Stacy H. Wood tn five colors is dis- tinctly a work of art. LESS MEAT IF BACK AND KIDNEYS HURT Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if bladder bothers you. Eating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, suys a well-known authority, because the uric acid in meat excite the kidneys, they become overworked; | get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly buckache and misery in the kidney region; rheu- matic twinges, severe hendaches, acid stomach, constipation, nid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and tee. irri- | tation, The moment your back hurts or kid- neys aren't acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salis from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine, This famous alts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kid- neys and stimulate them to normal ac- tivity; also to neutralize the aci the urine so it no longer irritates, thus nding bladder disorders, Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoidiog serious kidney disease.— Advt. head is clearer and his throat is relieved. He is glad he came back. MENTHOL CANDY } acrobats and gymnasts and a score | five | Diavolo, billed | the | “Pierrot, The Prodigal’’ when he returned home, had a bad cold, but the folks gave him some Luden's, and now his LUDEN'S — COUGH DROPS Old Instruments, JapaneseDancer, landA gain ‘Thais’ THE NEW PLAYS MARCH 8, 1917, “The Brat” Made Amusing By Maude Fulton. for sweethearts in August Armand Van Orden of N.J., asked Miss Zenla Leino, acher, to take a ride in his auto. “When something went % with the steering gear the auto They , when were [jumped the sidewalk and crashed through the door of a house on the , SHA ES C ‘ |! deon County Boulevard. Mise Leino, top dandroff s A TON lly hurt, was confined in @ hospital By CHARLES DARNTON. spol sreceneees "ro aCe nde? to woof Flere d yi f hai Mise Leino sued Van Orden yeatorday || XM oss O air 31 for fun, and t Brat,” written by Maude Fulton for|for $2 damages, he having Just || use Resinol Soap and Resinol Oin Maude Fulton ed 1 play. Though it is little more|feached the age of twenty-one. A few | reetions with each package. ‘Seid'by airdy dhs thy 1OURn 3 > weeks ago Van Orden married another | 4ii drugglete and tollet departmente than av le sketoh \ ne'hing in common with “The Chorus] youn woman, but that bas nothing to i and se € \ age——w is most of the time—|4 suit M 1 unusing Oliver M \ 1 Intent upor hucihe a 1 e 1 then to find tha is his younger e followed « her heart L strange fea- 9 . , 1) ture of the the fact re. P w nains that n still dances C a delightfully, Moreover, she manages | m n tu to. keep héraeit “quite: in” character EST. LO sind notres rtd be als while having her innocent Iittle fling. ter of Rose ahl should arry her through the play W . . h di . ° . write @ play and make the most of ‘o-lucky fashion, and when e invite the discriminating herself in it 1 No way out that litre one can honestly question dectdediy to her credit Hl her faficy to be sentimenta she is appealing. It 1s only when Miss Fulton ts con- 1 buyer to compare these prices: talent of this girl, who has made hor|cerned in the play, however, that vaudeville into the thea-|‘"The Brat” ts endurable, The two Bacon—Canadian Wiltshire Style Fa ie pe Curran women who strive for the novellst’s! —Ib,, —8 oz, Pe engages serious attention | Women w ; " rrr lass..... sopeeees quite imposstble, Nothing and occasionally returns comfortable | could be in worms taste thaa.the Makes a crisp, Restate Sg wan th pure fruit and | Foyalties to the poWers that control |soene they bring about in the last | Frankfurters—Sperry & Barnes net It is Miss Fulton who saves her lour stage. So fow really good plays | 8 Marge 6180 tO Jars sosceseseeee .26| Lemon Marmalade— | play by her good nature and tngen- see find the light these days that there | Play by her Cream Chesse<From the craw. Robertson’s Scotch Importation a4 fa no standard by which to judge| 4 rea joyous moment, too, ts ford Parmecscates. . them. If an audience laughs or dives | provided John Findlay as an Irish Pineapple — Noreca =~ Silced an |into tte handkerchief at sentimental | servant. The a ote Ket bates] Corn—A. M. & C—Fancy Maine 6 large tin.. 21 moments, it writes its own will. The/ (both 'a discreet and genuinely funny | Cream—tin......6.. 6) Immersed in heavy syrup—trom the process ia so simple that there Is it-| pit of work. Lewis 8. Stone in ter- | Peag—Noreca—Early June—tin . ‘13 Hawaiian Islands tle use In talking about It ribly apriotis as the author of “best-| ‘Tasty and succulent | Spaghetti—Heinz—targe tin..... 14 Miss Fulton, In her p ts slangy | sellers,” and ond Lowe plays the} nus girl who haa| Younger brother very well and human as @ chorus girl who has) “wong Rrat” has the elements of a By Sylvester Rawling. HE concert of the Societe des Instruments Anciens at Aeolian | Hall yesterday afternoon gave pleasure to a large audience. A fan-| tasle by Nicolini, played on the viole @'amour by Henri Casadesus, a ga- votte by Martini and a sonatine by Scarlotti, played on the harpsichord by Regina Patorn!, and @ concerto by Brunt, played on the quinton by Maurice Hewitt were the solo steal | bers. Besides there were a charming Mttle symphony by s, and “Le| Jardin des Amours,"” by Mouret, ex- | plotted by the quartet and Otme | Patorn!, All the compositions were | jof the seventeenth and eighteenth} enturies, | i Michio Itow, the Ja; , cer from the Imperial . and Tulle Lindahl, a Danish young woman, gave another exhibition of Japanese folk-dances at the Con Theatre yesterday afternoon, ‘They were sponsored by the Washington | | Square Play ind 4 large audience | Japplauded them. - and 5 fichlo Itow he most graphic numbers | ing programme, worg's Cakewalk Demon," danced t haps, were on an Interes | “Thais” at the Metropolitan Or | House last night, with Gerale Farrar, Amato, Botta, Rothter, Garrison, Raymonde Delaunots leen Howard and Bernard the east, , Kath., Beyeue in| Rosina Galli dancing and] |Mr. Polacco conducting, held the at- | tention of another large audience, | | By agreement be tween the Somt- tato Nazionale Itallano d'Asststenza | © d'Azione and the Metropolitan Op era Company a benefit concert will be given on Sunday evening, March | 18, at the Metropolitan Opera House! under the direction of Mr. Polacco | Jand Mr. Papi, Frances Afda, Claudta | Muazto, Flora Pertni, Caruso, >, De Luca, and Martinelli! will The salo of seats begins to-day, Paquita Mndriguera, the rarety| gifted girl planiet from Spain, pro: | tege of the late Enrique Granade whom we have heard, and younger brother Enrique, violinist, | whom we have not heard, are to give | a joint recital at Aeolina Hall to-| morrow afternoon, | The Symphony Orchestra, under Walter Damrosch, 1g to give gala } f The programme nelude the triple concerto fe ‘cello and plano played by three sical glants—Fritz Kriesler, Pa | Casals and Harold Raver, OBITUARY JARY NOTES. John PR many Weed, olehty-five, d last nig Join ©, Want, aixty-four, New Jersey State Senator a tory Inspector, died yestey at | Centerton, N. J dward Pay nd for y of the Univer 1 nine y| John Erving, efghty-thres, son of the late Col. John Erving, U ( and a descendant of one of the oldest families in New York and New Eng land, dled yestorlay at No, 17 West | Fiftieth Street Frederick ‘Thurston Mason, sov- | Jenty-thres, active in Philadelphia | business, society and club circles, ited | yesterday Look for the | Luden yellow package, ar Give Quiall Relic been brought by sickness and poverty | popular success and this seams to be \| EG@GS—New Laid—Maplehurst Brand—Dozen, .38 lto the Night Court, where she 1s be-|the only alm of the theatre these l¢riended by a novelist intent upon | day | Codfish—2 Ib. wooden boxes— | Tea— Special Orange Pekoe— studying her as a | Victor Brand—Newly packed.... 41) 1 1b. pkg., .J0—34 Ib. pkg....... «35 When ho brings the girl to his home | | Finnan Haddie—tlarge jer 28| nA favo , flowery cup 0 ee and feeds her, you have a far-fetched s ‘ ; Coffee—Mauna—* Mountain’ LS nee eahe catecL RIRE. te ASHINGTON Combined with crisp lettuce leaves—| haiti 35 sit on made entertaining by her | | makes an unique sala | EP ; anes bod oe directness, which finds expression tr 8-DAY TOURS : : enticing aro perfect body.” |the slang that makes up her vocabu gor, 42. 19; | Sardines — Falstaff Brand —% __| Tuna Fish—A. M. & C.—Fancy lary. But tho home to which she ine © aad | aie S| —laree tin, 26—emell tn 18 ENN IWS Oe acitine Vie eecaice $13.50 $15 $16 gerd a | _ Comy etely covered with ahighgrade| A delicate sea food steadily growing ye Inge r broth or h novelist up Proportionate Retes fr from Other Pointe Olive In popula M , Lag tA one le Pata espe trey Inerario and detate trom 0. ed Ittle Chef—6 oz. bottle .23, Grape Fruit—Medium lars, sas 5 miltecae ti 1 then proceeds to lon Fasaenaer Agent, 264 A valuable addition to gravies and ’ A for ' and Heht about the fs other meat dressings. | Oranges California — Navels— 23 all so simy at | de . i dozen ova tion. ‘It only remaihs for Pennsylvania R. R. Puffed Rice—Quaker—pkg 12} The popuiar Sunkist Varlety. to ima that she Is in love with the cold-blooded’ novellst he Ssale orn Ul e( euco with or witheut temate sauce, wager, For health’s sake drink more milk. For economy's sake double your milk order today, DAIRYMEN’S LEAGUE, dace Belt Cou Fureood Expert Say. S: i) i ‘ie weer ony evmeey | i MAT ryMeHs Lean, 110°¥eat 40th Btreo®, Bow York Oity. Gentlomen:- For y ay egies 8 hea 0. congra are now condueting t! pure whole Pate ia AY atetrnh’ ohilé (oompare death-rate among tai where milk i6 common, and China, where it is oo! bread or whole meal wuffjne it luncheon for the business man who wishes, for the hard afternoon's wor’ with whole wh Walk through the Ooncouree of the Hudson Torafnal any no 6e@ the thousands who line ne, ad exhibition of common a not be ayene fo the wetropolis. epearerthese business dey dotween 11 a.m and 2 p.m, up for pure milk and fruit auf. sense which five years ago Inatead of digai' mon have learved All this nons id Herta grave with thei de nailed by you. ‘given B,1917, 5, al food a hee naaeetian campa throagh the nowspapers.' bf of the 0 kee: cou. ent to,live.’ adout the hi, Loevot Milk-is the only oak che pork, lamb, poultry or eggs. foll the housewife to use more milk in’ cooking, down on anything but inorease the milk bill. "Double the Milk Order for Economy's Sake"«-"18 great etuff, 411 .euccess to the Deirymen's Leaguel FISH SOUFFI. 2 tablespoonfuls batter a poonfuls four onful te mi Diaapoonful mi: e can Mob fi jonful grated enton Mnko a whine sauce of the butter ) t' im the center, and serve or ur the greater use of puré si ieee, oo I am write 2 ie head oles: t has cot mre pace with the general inorease in the price of other foods, e 16¢ a quert instead of 12f milk affords more nutriment then beef, Wil | h | eS Special Recipes Featuring Milk Courtesy of Good Housekeeping Institute MILDRED MADDOCKS, Director i I, rie = OATMEAL SOUP % cupful left-over cooked oatmeal medium-sized enion chepped tablespoonful butter y leat water er ateck milk pepper to, taste in the butter till eeft. Add eeeal. Milk, wane, Dep ‘som with the salt Cook onion slo bay-leaf, celery seed, ‘strain, + jwhich you WRENCH FEA SOUF 1 can er 1 pint cooked trek peas 1 quart mt 1 {ablespoonful cerm-atarch, 1 ene i poonful salt pa , ente them, Serve milk ‘shoul@ oat dough, imal ured board, ‘roll. Tight! cat oin stripe H lsheiy, twist ence, and ft, {n deep fa . ough te » brown bie» bread im ene rve hot with het tmapie ayrap, Out Your slogan - BRAN MUFFINS 1 oe 1% cupfule mite 1” teaspoonful salt 2 tablespoonfuls molasses 2 tablespeomtuls meked butter er @rtp- Tours sinoerely,, 1 ont Dotted 1 eupful bread-fleur 1 cupful bren 1% teaspoonfuls soda ane eg TZCeMre!s cream o€ tartar ix ingredients in erder ving well beaten and sede and Cretan ot gare with corp well-all muffin pa: thirty minutes i iS’ meke EVERY-DAY LEMON RICE rUDDIN@ ia) lemon tableepeontul powdered sugar luted sugar fo waier and coek rice ia It ti % cupful gran: Add salt flour, pep- water is absorbed parsley ble botler 1 ree yolks, and Py {ite the tice and, cook sugar, Dattered fre-proot diab, 4 " ook gi even, Add milk and ate even. LEMON MERINOUR PIE CWith am) ad tad cupfale milk exptal euger ; tablespoontuls cornstarch bly mix tablespooutuls vit « et See te done. or ail, ‘tod te ened mist: two mi ve. from the heat 4 att Pash, "ee eat rea i bs on > a! . ter tee Elcetn’ latte Tgawuicee mE "alah os rewn for ton min ‘ovem, New York City Headquurters 110 WEST 40th STREET Binet: > pa sh ni

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