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aie THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1917. Helpless Woman Takes ‘SOME STAGE STARS WHO WILL APPEAR HERE NEXT WEE Centre of Stage Now; : Actress Makes Her Pay Present Day Heroines* Sade, ready to leave her husband for a poet Must All Be Victims of chtefly Intent upon talking about him- Nerves and = = Appear weit. There could be no sympathy ‘ for her after she cut loose from do- Pathetic at Cost of rete ies teaving her child to talk Common Sens:2, as New |: her over the telephone, In purple ind blue, and at last in black, we saw Plays Reveal. \ play calculated only to appeal to oa highly sophisticated playgoers who By Charles Darnton. are more for the theatre than they , F anything ts to be gained from the | do for life as it 1s lived. The actress ‘ 1 theatre, in its strange revelations | who played the wite proved herself to Of the week, it is the Idea that the be merely a pretty thing that a man extraordinary woman is quite !n-| might fancy as he would fancy a toy pable .of taking care of herself.| for the moment. he ordinary woman, of course, But there is still something to be | Knows how to manage herself and | sald for the helpless woman and the her household, for the simple reason actress. Miss Emily Stevens, in my that she goes about her business sen- humble opinion, is an actress who oe’ hy. may mean a great deal to our stage. t wil! the nerve-ridden play-| Miss Stevens has found her way to @ t be a party to such procedure? | role that means more to her than the ns > ' e,/one she played In “The Unchastene called “character study.” It 1s true ers to make the hervine of hi8)that she suggests, vocally, her bril- @ victim of nerves. She may |tiant cousin, Mra. Fiske—by far the ther her cries in a pillow or| finest actress that atill sets foot on the American @tage. But Miss Btev- jek from a housetop, but the result | ong ts learning to find her own way he same. To the world at large! aout the stage. She has both intel- fs a pathetic creature, As u|ligence and talent. It happens that oi he mntay|*he has come Into @ role that she ter of fact, she is @ sentimental) ne Noy Come atte, Tam told that He Wiliam A. Brady had an “option” on 5 H/RL) OT #1 jo far as “The Fugitive” 1s con- | “ry for a year or more, ed, it would be unfair G wit of giving the role of a Cla Grace George. I be- rthy to say merely that the unfor-| 10 vise George could play Clare.) ate heroine of his play isn't able| Rut no matter! There were others, make her bread and butter. Why too, who cast envious eyes toward @ the obvious point of view when |"Tho Fugitive.” It is enough for tho author clearly indicates what he | Moment that it fell to Oliver Moronco and that he gave It a cast more or driving at—and that is @ women’s |feus to his credit 1. Galsworthy 18 too fine to be ~ vious, even though he does drive ISS STEVENS fs an actress to be re in the end to one of those r encouraged, Yet like many a woman sells h young actresses she gives too y for a dinner. In America, even | much attention to her gowns, She ts 80 h Broadway and its white lights, puay with her shoulder-straps in the e diMeult to understand the mits. | earlier part of the performance that CASPAR WRIST AN DANNY mec PORMACK LEKINGTON THearRe, Vier Worker Strom Half Hour ¢ encue Lad, Edward Dutohkies, an eight year was playing on the 4 anal Street when he sit en, by W ‘e|| the spectator watches her desperate 4 -Guilsepol Gi na whe Bed of Roses” als-|contortions and forgets the play. 663 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn hy in “The Fugitive.” are | Nothing could be more unfair to Gala- ho was ‘King on the pler. Th re than likely to say that a woman an't walk straight Into that sort | ee off hia coat, Gi ls nd_aetacd the boy, worthy unless it is the serpentine js only our gencrosity that leads us| i, which an actress is dressed—or nt eomething to the stuge. undressed—should never be broug’t m ‘to the attention of an audience, | HE trouble with most playsoers Phe attraction of sex is the moat is that they are more concerned | powerful attraction in the world, No with the actors than they @re/ normal } aby La _— ve There Pears uthor|/18 no need to make It obvious, ‘The the play. 't jalan baideriicd helpless woman la never quite s0 help. -—— bedi lways of first importanc les# as the man who finds himself id the actor find his opportunity | caught tn the spell, This ts the les- “distinguishing” himself without |#on that the actress who plays the| lays for the | lad on the plier from whitch he ‘ oLoBe » | Hoth were treated for submersion, Nolenrinns Monastir the last few days have Bulgartan tr |cludes Florence Reed, Janet Willtam fot, Charles Dal James O° iil, Willlam H. Thompson aid of the man or woman who | helpless woman should learn, nes O'Neill, Willi coe oS ee words in his mouth and ideas , anc ek Ts the m his head? 1 looked up in amuse- agi VAUDEVILLE oming eé DANCING CARNIV. ‘AL a say t a night or so ago at an olectric AND LOEW FEATURES és | ¥ “g i SAVING TIME. mn over.a Broadway theatre not far gule DRAWS HAPPY CROWDS From the Washingtou Heral m Forty-second Street. With the Rig Mood At the Lyceum Theatre on Monday | / vaieh ae hoe muacAlvcros Annet Wan witaalee le of the play there blazed out the The bill at Proctor's Fifth Avenue | night the Charles Frohman Company Ushanatpiawe,| Notwithstanding Lent the Grand], “All ladies who masried on « bot ime of the star-—a young woinan of Theatre the first part of the week | will present “The Case of Lady Cam @ st HOW canta) dation eaenival 1A Bally And f will siand Wocre quality—-and the name of wy) han Oliahat sob ‘i he dj ; entitle maueh and 4 « mced, Manager, Gut 1 looked 1a vain) "! include Oklahoma Hob Albris ber." a four-act play by Horace An Mitted “Rough and leady | enty attracting enpacity crowd ‘Rey the name of the author 1 dllsie cowboy; the Roya osley Va ch has a Londor i k Natui avabat’ x 1 ey Mi tf fs usually the star—especially [tallan ‘Troubadour, Davis and run to its credit. In the cast W s 1 1 Maa ant ety ae =. the case of a woman—to whom Walker In songs and dani and Lyn Harding, Mary Boland, 8 0 be shown, Jy tris ¢ ; - The + “ greatest credit is given. Often! sii and Gertle : +. | Shielda, Hi Hert Wed. At Spanist 1 will wing “Celoste 1OO BLOQUENT Playwright has only himself to| Oro’ An wer » acrobats Mate erg emberty We ie more, | Alda” and Grace Hoffman will be po: Hoe 4 me for this state of atfairs, be-|Proctor's Dwenty-thind Street Thea- | Shirley Aubert aud Tlenry Dornton, {another soloist, omoter (at end of of selling his heroine tn the! tre will have vaudeville and feature} ere x office. The stage heroine is gen-| photo , age hy recognized. as a, marketable | Duotplays. The headliner at oe azy Rist will be sean 1a uct, Whether she comes on in y-olg eoatre uM ‘Out Th Mia aaacha ofa earien Of 1 m et What are the notches In your pen-| Cuutious Investor—And yet or?” we asked the successful bust- | wont eay paltry $500 ness man, “THE ETERNAL SII REMAINS ANOTHER WEEK ‘3 or silks she 1s counted upon to| be Arthur Lavine in a sketch. “Hong: | r a Cea EN lates a plays written for her by her husband, i show the number men — Pa ner ettect Gn. te a cae If} kong Mysteries" will be the chief! J, Hartley Manners,‘ Herbert Brenon'a photo-dramatio|that Ihave ined two birds with ane stan Hore y mappens to be morally Weak, #9! feature at Proetor's One Hundred| play refers to the thriller, “Phe Fternal sin,” etarring Stone” the business man, who was fiom har rance, but ‘it {# ann ond and * Nell-—"Jack ways Lam | pleoe is not a “war Florence Teed, begins the Helte~-"Here's hoping the here is something more .to say,| and Twenty-fifth Btreet Theatre. wever, for Clare, who die# like a| Amella Bingham will start her tour | bral senme of that. fe engagement at t A Goon VoL. Isoned flower in Galsworthy’s play. ! or the Loew Circuit at Leew' A Ras vw. Mids From Ue (ouster Joums author has given Clare eyes to Of tne route a Amer- role to be ’ ; screen. Impersona pice y ——— her inevitable doom, ‘To. dwell | !°¢" und Roof, Her reper RRR mun Renee Uy roine of Victor Hugo's jouse parties « ASILY » the fart that she i not able to|toire will consiet Joan of Arc," Ma ea naa ermal? has mad Yes, whe ts the Cincinnati? m her living 1# neither here nor!*tq Tosca,” “Madame Sans G Kareena nee. Ae uction « ca her wants r me pec 10 a lot of worr 6. reat Many women who me Sans Gene,” | and finds her work in tho very centre | (¢ the most tulked-of film plays seen |«yend a week or tv over the ‘on of hell, Just re. A & “A Modern Lady Godiva,” and “A of the wa 1e play i# in three parte Id not earn their living manage to| school for Husbands.” William Far- and the Sane ied in Landon | thl@ season. eee | eres je very well, It isn’t because Gals-| num in “A ‘Tale of Two Cities” will| during the fall of 1915 and behind the rthy sends Claire into a shop that| bd the screen feature at Loew's New| British front in France. ‘The support-| HIPPODROME BU. t not plenty of map A FID, Mexteo to be had. rmouth Jack 0? Laster) (Prom uve f woman; and she cries out for the | ly not know much. premman i ‘ aying the leading role, on Wednes- | Kerrigan. Colin Camphe Leonard | aottyit i Hipp Rah fa i her soul needs, ; y Mud Douglas Ross a A. BAC “Nju,” at the Bandbox Theatre en bea of istinn bay. with ita mesne| “THB WHIP’ AT PARK ay rete 8 JK, PE “pp day night, resuan , n My i ing obscured lark shadow AS FILM SPECTACLE | tho Yellow dacket ut ie | it pretty you woman, dressed in} - Theatre pkscpaig id the Junior Patrio © fashion of the day, was only too] A motion picture version of “The| | jai Shea 3 America, D he weel the sub | _ On Friday afternoon at the ‘Thirty Fitcme sitet bye Whip,” the Drury Lane melodrama seription lis eet ‘Th t \ s for " which enjoyed great success both in ty er chiidheen: the Awakens GR Por iG Solas ema Pe this country and in Kngtlend, will be|ing of Bpring,” will ‘be produced by | viyernen, the ul oratorio In if ite seveaies. 6% the Fase Thaate tat Ce oftrey © Stein under the usploes A EAS MAA Balalaea OE Gul i morrow afternoon, again in the even- | °F ‘He Medical Heviow of Reviews | tions, and the Herltoz requtem na 4 ing and each afternoon and evening | “capt, Kidd jr." comes to the Stan-| Sinqne *Y eee ak ea thereafter. Paragon Films, Inc. pre-| dard Theatre. . ——» . 3 J_|sents this feature picture in eight) Pi gga by Fritz, . “THE WANDERER” iL io eM ledy, will be presen 1 reels. ‘The train wreck and racing | 3%: uny bP prem! t SURE OF LONG RUN rg O ors tures figure spectacularly in the | —> css 3 ure , rhe Sar mows, course was! ¢(HELLO, NEW YORK!" T! week of the engagement! @ —— ised as » of the ce ted aint rT, ¢'Th Nero? ' ‘gh be re *Pape’s Diapepsin” relieves | of the picture} RETURNS TO COLUMBIA | V's, vill devin M eae a r ‘ we * horse show at —_—— . ' stomach distress in | tec 1 hunt 404 ® rage | Main Maw Soy will be s 1 F Mehts hieeere on ul five minutes, car are l the Columb i ‘ Irving | {We act bu aue t Cree)" 3 You don't want a slow reme * |} Cummings, June Ei Mc- | that had a long run at Sega * hen your stomach is bad or an un-| aliister and Dion T last W ay pee €ertain one—-or a harinful one—your Sauieene | the c Jen r ri pasiach is too valuat mustn't “THE CLOCK” AT RIALTO Lares Z a es? hak g Drool var njure it with drastic drugs. > Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its| LATEST SCREEN COMEDY | OBrien Brothers gpeed in givin ts harmless: | | figures in the morning until O'Neill has returned t th ster of stars ap chorus of girls g and dancin numbers certain unfa action in| For tts chief photoplay the Rialto} —_.— nds Feguluting sick, sour, y stomachs. |Pheatre will offer “The ( «|THE LID LIFTERS” Fee erie SAAT SANE Ee |e Seine em Ian TR AT OLYMPIC THEATRE Doctor Tells How to | } sit famous the world | 2% Farnum and Am iim playa - : Quickly Strengthen ? < h onderf 1-hearted young idler | tesque a r | Bese 1h joer omenske regard for dha taken Lente \., Your Eyesight at Home $ Bet a large fifty-cent case fre for him ever to be| Harry (W nw « Fi Brag store ond then if ntmenta. | Eetnk PF Hat somethin which Pacman lite f with them; if what they e nits bene 4 Nie ne Jead, ferments and sours and forms 1g ‘ enterta t te gras; causes headache, dizziness and id to & perform 7 ation, acid and 1 Mausea; ert a tn Water »ypled into the water. His acreams z faba hh te >IOOPOGEOPOGHO DNS POPS PVSS SOD HO DOP OOOO POD POOH OOOO OOO OO GOO OO OO® 82" BREE WITH TO-MORROW’S SUNDAY WORLD K SIMON GUGGENHEIM SMALL 5OY IN QUAGMIRE Smelting Trust Head Head and 200) MILFORD, Conn, March 24.—Afte: a ‘ A search for several hours by Milfor Others Prisoners Aboard Train and Woodmont firemen le Ralp in Idaho Sydne Hingham Jr f Ne ork wa found laet night al ot urted in CE, Idaho, March 200 passengers cau ton a train t tween two avalanches of snow on the mountain divide between Idaho and Washington yesterday slide a Buti (hat I preseribe ad of the train was behind a 100-foot odd. TI bour hing bag ar tions to tt torn out by another ue train has | pas PIXING TH FERRY SUICIDE A MYSTERY.) t¢ tho tit to repress treac treason ia fenders have Volice Unable to Learn Identity of Man Who Leaped tn Ray, The police could gain no information to-day aa to the identity of a man Jumped fre bout Qu last evening Imoraly dencribed him as looking and middie-ag The man eallad for help ae he struck the water reweu a life hoat rowed around f and hen, unable to get to the ferryboat tune of th tide, drifted off toward Bayonne and was picked up by a tug. - >- made such municipal ferry= 1, Cribb-age. bitten Saun-agy Areata » KELLERMANN 3. Bav-age er Nemphe 4, Qabb-age A EPs, 5. Dot-nge vanadinn 4. Mortg-axe 7. Garb-age CALE, 1, BURNSIDE, Quite tn the prize ring upp science seems to be old k at pred lives ond Yorm of Kn Very Modera row. rik ; feale of Prices—Every Posaldl: 1 to have beer TRAPPED IN AVALANCHE = FOUND IN HUNT AT NIGHT s! ire at) Fairview ach, ear non Guggenhetm, head of the A © play at 3 tn t and other pr ent men are among fell in aw nahi to nen of him METRO- ISADORA YH f ing cn With Her lanting beef.” Pupils DUNCAN AMUSEMENTS. 50c to $3 Luxury and Comfort for Patrons, KESULT: Capacity Au hing, and in reaching this conclu- | movements of Miss Stevens ‘before WN SOOy nd sate ee bot ore aoe te Every Afternoon and Night. we aro pretty sure to be right. | she puts ona walking skirt, The way a THERE? ne a a a firusming fan hour he’ succeeded in. land fell Re- wo tion that at embellished with new songs, ev dances, new vaudeville specialties and fresh comedy. BOX oe d OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY— —20TH CEN ora THE ENTIRE THIRD FLOOR of the GRAND CENTRAL PALACE DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO Now Admission, Including Skates, 25c | THE FOURTH FLOOR IS OCCUPIED BY THE FAMOUS frat first by, 200 Hagtrue ving Khe L rd not Need as if , oof S11 the Latest Steps in Modern Dan te We NS IF YOU DA NER. OUR FLOOR MA WIL. ea BILLIALDS AND rocker yur TAR 0 Admission Country Where re POSITIVELY NO arpa SOLD Separate Sheet Ready to Cut Out n the ‘ steve digested food ret f at hia complete re-| gp, sg en ; i : Lar ae 3 Pape's Dinpepsin comes ae! ‘forme ie effected, ‘The Rex Hesch-py | G@BORGECOHANAT STRAND %©& ts ; nS mim the stomach be ‘ rd Fecha A IN *BROADWAY JONES” ° fhe the excess uit . at t $ * Aelia RP RcoRtnese caRtaIney att Benes O NGiNeAy vam . oe " . ig ' Nu ee ¢ BY ROIRKS, ORIGINATOR OF THE KATZENJAMMER VOIDS No ee eee ee cha | mcches . plete the 3 ‘ ' 1 ‘ : : % Hans and Fritz on the Stage in Real Life at the Lexington Theatre Next Week, (See Character Illustration Above) nders is x revelation to those wha torial pa pap y it. —Adyt cist. / nu yf ia musical apositi aug. San Hees, CA nat ihe BEPC 0OS 6 COOLOESES EOOEOTESESS DOO9OS POPPOH OOS SSHSSESOOO HIOOHS COHOOIHSO OOOO POPODOO DOP OO ODO PHDP OO PODS w [Roller Skating A NEW FLOOR—TrWO THOUSAND PAIRS OF NOW BALI-BRARING SKATES, The Same Great Performance and Produc: Dancine Carnival je fails; it is simply that she 1 too| York. Theatre and Roof Mond Ing company will. include Frank *Teally, though, why ta it t trl 4 TLE KNOWLEDUE e and not enough to stand| senna Owen In "A Woman's Awatee | Kemble. Cooper, Lynn Fontanne,| WITH SPECIAL FEATURES | “ex's, crore her when a fell , ¥ nicago OPEN DAILY, 11 A, M, to Midnight, SUNDAYS, 2 P.M, to Midnight, crude, hard test of the world, SI Jeniag” on Tuesday, and “Susan'a|Catherine Proctor, Daisy Belmore — - ae ie ee Rae ea Know thyself" t# all right as a!) Dancing Carnival Grand Central Palace—Lex. A Use 46th St. Ent. more than hopgi shy ) Gentleman,” with Violet. Mesereau | Lewis Edgard, Hubert Druce, J. M-| This week has been one of record! the first.one, and she's ashamed to rb, but some men who know SRWARE (ican REANTI Che REG AD Eeanee, A \ ter 4