The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1917, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RE RR RE renpeRt rere WEE ARE CA MTENAE 6EIBY PRO TL NIN ECL, MODERN : He Gave the Baby a “Black Look” —bub a Smile Split It in Half! WHO Dip THAT? Gimmea AN AXE! GIMMe AN AXE! |About Plays] | and Players | By BIDE DUDLEY | TLLIAM HARRIS JR. will pro duce a new comedy called “Driftwood” at the Belasco ‘Theatre, Washington, June 25, It is >) by Laurence Byre. In it Emanuel Reicher will attempt another English - eericd role. Mr. Reicher has used miglish on the stage only once oF twice before. German ts bis native tongue. Fay Bainter, Inte of “The Willow Tree,” and McKay Morris will ‘be in the “Driftwood” cast also, | K. & E. BUY BONDS. raw & Erlariger have arranged to rehase $250,000 worth of Liberty ds, principally as a matter of Patriotism. Two banks have been tn-! @tructed by the firm to buy bonds to! the extont of $125,000 each. CAUTIOUS WELLS. | His new uniform hasn't robbed Lieut. Wells Hawks, U. 8. Naval Re-/ serve, of his penchant for ideas that) carry @ married man over rocky| Places. The other day he wrote a letter to Mrs, Hawks and dated it) “Somewhere on Broadway.” In it he! explained that she musn’t expect him to give more definite information con- @orning his whereabouts, as a German U boat might get hold of It and sink bim. ee nen nearer nena ; BY WAY OF DIVERSION, Gweet Clara ts a peach, say I. She knows that living’s very high, and so she ourbs a wild desire to spend my cash and rouse my ire. She'll take one dollar down the street and,| through a plan which can't be beat, @he'll bring that dollar home intact, or almost so, Now that’s a fact. The scheme is this—she “window shops.” Before each store my Clara stops and H revels in the sights she gees, but r saves her pennies, if you please. In shopping thus she'll spend the day it’s just as well,” I'll hear her say. She has her fun and, in the end, th dey is all she'll ever spend. 1 find excellent. When in my arce @ cent, I often z 2 £ g jeans there's @t the autos gaze through windows and I find it pays. I dream of own- ing one or two, It satisfies mé through and through. You ought to try the scheme, old top. It's fine and @heap to “window sho; MACKENZIE KNEW. Od! Yez2A0! So WILD IN ‘chere is a veteran actor at one of FACK HADDA CHAE wer! THAT voice! ‘the clubs who suffers from some di- ay! WATER! r PERN HALE HouR Hem = CuRLo!$ LL ARE Y' SURE Be SHAT FoR ASea Conk” wif IT AINT ME OLE COLLEGE CHUM Yez2a! Hen = Ouse. PAL ‘ATS Met "CURLY “OLE MAN Nou DowN “TO A “WAITER” EH? DANGONE How Youue FALLEN- BuT “THANK ME LUCKY STARd —L DONT EAT rere ? ; ; } ' H ; | Sway sighing “and moaning, sounds | deep ewe Ne pp Ray send Xe " N Such A ’ MGs f ae es octoae started, Donald Macken- . te Kersh pal tiie 4 Some AS THs! zie heard them and exhibited un- , IN 1S YEARS! , feigned interest. “1 don't know what's the matter aid the veteran actor, Pie fi aquick- po FELIX’S DEPENDENTS. H Felix Adler, the boy comic, re- , fused to let the registration worry him yesterday when he went to en- roll. “How many dependents have you?” asked the clerk. “Sixteen,” replied he, ‘Sixteen?” “Yes, a wife and fifteen barten- Gers,” said Felix. CONSIDERATE OF HER, Betty Daintry, acting in “The New Word,” at the Empire, hasn't studied tp on the Liberty bond subject very much. A man friend wrote her re-| |} ently on the ocoasion of her birth- day and asked what sort of a present | he'd like to have him send her. a THE EVENING WORLD Ellabelle Mae Doolittle By Bide Dudle “I wanted to be easy on him,” eald Se are wits, ais lf Outdoorland {| deistetoonsrsincran sential @iee or flowers, so I just replied sug- = O ur F ae) F | ; Courght by the Prem Publishin Olen... 0 1 alr ag N announcement in the Delhi | a nd repeated ————————____ see tel - Me Bazoo of last Saturday shocked | ! plana he affalr. When geatins that he send me five Liberty nds, ‘That will limit his expense | Covright, 1917, by ‘The Prem Publishing Go, |she had finished Be i Delhi soolety severely and set ¥" | fo $5, and that’s enough.” (The New York Br World ) Stars and Stripes| true hist f 4 ‘fie i Stripe ue history of the origin | recog: he the Ai MERCEDES LOSES Hi8 GRIP. The Lion's Lair. | fe not the only fag !t is said that in June, 1 the whole town talking. It was inj “I want to weary Atisn Doolitt which has waved| » of Congress headed by Wash-| the form of a paid “Personal” adver- | our giste Tr, that she has been Hed on Betsy Ross, who kept] tisement and read as follows Bets , who Ker 1 Mrs. Boggs, “I ry store in Arch Street,| “Notice—Mre, Samantha Doolittle lea ay that when nib nen her fat interviewed Pettibone he Soret Mercedes, the mind reader Who] PT was 8 o'clock. All da ean find things in the dark, lost his he heavy drizzle had fallen, keeping the obhil- | within the boundar les of our glorious oe @uit case while with the riare at Washington Saturday, mebody dren indoors, So Bob and Bess le Iphia, asked if she could make t else located it. climbed into thele little white bedi Union he first| them a flag and produced a design |48N0uNces that the engagement of her|ten dollars from. thet ' semees glud to be on their way to visit md flags flung to the| Sith thirteen stripes and thirteen daughter, Ellabelle Mae, to P. Silas| Doolittle was never known ton ee | Gossip. Bisemer ANd: hoping Grae ita Gi breeze by white men | the'tiand wey euiuaton's suggestion | Pettibone is broken. Some men are| DAck anything he ever got his hand AS hae re ‘ i ars were place cle, tha Ar Jon I think Pet fe got ¢ +d | Allen Doone will open his American | would be shininy O eateee® | in America were the| no colony should seem toe more im. | Oréinless en I think Pettibone got exactly what “Ninth” Btreet | Spanish flags which Christopher/Portant than another. If any of you] All efforts to induce Mr, Pettinone| ‘My father alway back ack,”* Should ever journey to Philadelphia] to discuss the matter proved frult-|8@!d Miss Doolittle, “but if Columbus brought to the island of this be true | shall se. ee i Beason at the Thirt - i Theatre Labor Day. lombus know their wish, and had you may visit B ey Ross's house, | je ‘o8s's house, |iess, Six of the members of the that he Grace Daniels, formerly of “Prin- jae ea emit a warm welcome upon San Salvador in 1492, and which we: for it still s 1 N goog easton” hae been engaged | the visltors from Wide-Awake Lang afterward raised over the southern | Street and is well cared for. "| Women’s Betterment League took |“ "ne tue time d ry, ilove. ust be somewhere ne: ; Mi portion of our co MAR ATER awa t nA Kick Sarah Bernhardt, it 1s announced, | br! santured Boe Pte vert portion of our country THE STARS AND STRIPES, _| ‘He!F children to the Pettibone barber | called “A Kick From “a “BRgem M ob. is very fe flag of England was first un-| The flag of thirteen stars and thir-|*!0P to have their hair trimmed, but| Heart.” It 4s printed here for aie will n auctionser at the Hudson | Pini uctionser at the Hudson! warm, indeed,” Bess agreed, “but tan't \furled by John Cabot in Newfound-| teen stripes remained the National | ‘M¢ haircuts were all they got fuldance of young girls nbol seats. | it good to see the sun so bright ; |land in 14 With it was swung to; ®@blem until May 1, 1795. With the|, “My Hpe are sealed," was all the| Derher tracts (OER. tle Ceara President Frueler of the Mutual] ‘The ea look in their faces when a Brigit |the breeze the flag of Venice, Cabot | Mimission of new States it soon was| heartbroken tongorial artist would They have no ralte hove th predicts that motion picture theatres | the ssor greeted them said just | a - —J being a Venetian en Ci n thag it would be diMcult to add| Sty: However, the real story came aif Bie not worth a nlekal, will advance their admission prices | as plainly said jus PINCHED HERSELF TO WAKE UP, hproue @ ir ortor| & new atripe for cach new State | Sire Witshe eet noon wa ‘and uate you nal tng yee Naa from 50 to 100 per cent, because of | sey, as words ever could have; | —— wi tes dis A ee | brought the flag of France to the New| We had twenty States in the Union| Mt: Elisha Q. Pertle, Promptress of sitatticn & tartrom aman” ee was What adventure have you planned to! nus, “that is where Leo | faith: hares | World in 1634, and La Salle and) When Congress on April 4, 1818, passed | the Leagy ond Mesdames Cutey Whether they be fat ar bovey. number of actors ar t | take us on this day ne, tha ere Leo lives faiths | here Leo appeared and was again the! Iberville hoisted French flag o' Poe hae Ay cee men | A, tual enoitttie Tae Minion, ld, BAY Pus annie ihe Janie erat en, ROMMMs aneWered thems. ‘*fo'a.t fully with his mate year after year, | Centre of Interest time he went| Loutslana. in the latter years ee ine roe: Which finally fixed the general | at the Doolittle home sr, ht, Tomar Teta cp mate the Jung ben an allows] Aas ule lone are. Get atk az eats| air Wot and’ mado forthe vector | uimaae 18 the Ie ne of our flag pathetically asked the great jatar Ha yout -seventh Street, June | have found other ant to be drinking hole, Qne of his own kind | 8°¥e" h osntur honor of calling our flag “Old for an explanation. It was 1 eeumming bo Hore alta ere eeven Whig: wae canis’ axciilum ms ae i als b was already there slaking his thirst. Henry Hudson agailed into New belongs to an old sea captain | (Men learned that the lack of a love ra, ful, T warm you 28, a success ; sw news than| “He is coming out!" exclaimed |Jt was clear that the two'travelled in| York Harbor on the Hulf Moos imed William Driver, Upon retir- |fF the artistic in the make-up of, tn iia any; Percy Heath, the Century's preas|*ither had expected, and Beasie was | Beas, different sets by way in which |1609 flying the flag of the Dutch Bast |!" fom sea life he took to his home | Pettibone caused tt all A hush fel ro ccna agent, celebrated his eleventh wed-| PMunly timid about starting, It only| Sure enough, the tawny beast stuck |My snarled, growled and roared at/ India Company, In 1688 the Swedes flag under which he haa |, DF¥-eved but resolute, Mise Doo-| miss Doulitile rey (eo Sathering as ging anniversary yesterday by going| needed Bob to remind her that old| his shaggy head out of the cave pool, Comin obposite sides of the|landed in Delaware with the Swedish over the 2 at the timo of | tile told Just what had occurred. (Them the entire assembler nog ne Companions of both came and! flag the Civil War. The Confederates called last night.” she began, | applauded with mblage arose and home early and eating a Ereat gusto, lin the argument, until the ve | knew of and # ad in the arwument, until the ery] FIRST FLAGS OF THE STATES, |). pig dinner, | Bombus hi rehed for this flag, d always been and would | opening, opened his great red mouth in vain, He had sewed it be “and we sat on the front sywop. The moon was peeping from tighjnd yon | eer cloud and all nature seemed mellow. always be careful to see them to their |in 4 yawn and shambled forth in his A THOUGHT FOR TO-DAY SINATRA DATA : ' : h | atv sh a ‘The pine tree Mag of New England | twe Barber, IN., is the home < no matter what the ad- | Usual loose-jointed fashion. | vole . 2 [aeons ate, Aster the war he Teas Bian Deroy ee eet | venture, and for Bess to forget her| “Up you go.” coms | Bessie wax so frightened that she|c&me into use in 1704, and was the} brought out t and swung ie|! read. him a poem amed Harry Harrison her D you go," commanded Bombus, | pinched herselt flag displayed at Bunker Hill, The] to the breeze himself, saying. “T have |.With that she read the very poem, | elf, saying: “I have h as follows: vorite flag of South ( ears and follow and the next minute f roling had @/ alwaya said that df I could eee it wake up. But Bob |? at until, Ured of | und the chil- |#tayed with Bom k ound with a DR. BINGLE’S Tips. rhe first to spy the lion's den from|dren scrambling up a tree, with im, the lions by one de. llow & ®| float over the Cap: 1 If your eyebrows won't grow, it is | # “stance was Bob, “Look, there it |Bombus following after, saying, “We | Parted and the din ceased,” middie and a line underneath i nee pecan 1 thould have) Thy mighy, yard, wen mate for se ond pon, evident you don't know how to culti. |!" he whispered, “Yes," guid Bom-|are as safe from him up t | Upon parting the Professor tola| THaad on Me i Up there, and 1am ready to diem > | 1 ghetl_expect pou to bea? tay {fou the brew, | vate them. Go out and see the cows om. im up hi as if Bob that It is the way ‘Ot dif-|, CoMnecticut had a number of flags, | Di cousin: cata If you love me, dear, bold me very tight, brogse le we were out in the middle of the Pa- [ferent cliques usually act toward each |, ‘ferent color for ch regimen 1 pledge allegiance and sa Across he Sniie 0! Deo the moonlight eksing, HOW To JOIN cific, Lions do not climb, you know.” | ot oting ach! New York's flag was a white fleld|ig the country tee whine ek, 224 | Dy not ever eet afflicted with ‘the ‘ime, | FOOLISHME. THE KLUB AND$| They saw the lion settle down inal Su Isadore Diamona,| With @ black beaver. Rhode Island’s| One Nat Taal elite ics sane i would bot love « wt I'do not think, | NT. OBTAIN YOUR PIN |thicket and realized ven, No. 834 Re , +] lag was white with a blue anchor|'y Nation indivisible, with Liberty] 9) tak the word “Hope” above it, Other | {1d Juatice for all When I had read it to him, con-| d Thirty-eighth Street, New ued Mis Doolittle, “{ asked him eatin Hines Dink wet food that he ha! fared forth i |huge head rested up York City flags of original States had the words forepaws, and Bob A ‘Liberty or Death," “Liberty and| EARN A KLUB PENNANT, | W%hat he thought of it, Brazenly he| " ined they could ses Unton,” ete,, upon them, A 22-ineh felt pennant, made ri 7 | FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE f ing, yellow eyes gleam JUNE DRAWING CONTEST, The various forerunners of our na-| Klub colors, blue and phy Pld hicsaere consider it rather Ag are inseparably I left him and went into tho W 4 pieture on the subject, “How | tlon, nly he ; jing the Kiddie Klub name, will be Sud | Sua and, landing | Old Lady—-Little boy, do you chew? Mickie—No, but I kib give youse «| x Jon the opposit of the thicket, || Would like t nd my vacation,” | with Ita history, but give us litte use: "nda h give youse «| was out ght for some mings’ | Send your drawings in ae soup Knowledge of the origin of the Stars] SVen free to every Klub member why | Rouse, t told my father, Peter P giuaretto. | a jetome min hy wan poke [Anamonee 0F cme Oriel) oF Lhe Bare Sef abtpeldincar toy Doolittle, and he went out'and inter- — iene Sit are. | Fale vay ane penare pba ane a ‘awings v li ve accepted | was not original with us. The st lavas nae nein Mek ape sie ory wed the young man, When he | Bon vm rey mem § | fel ‘ for e man une 28 4 Ayia stri ery new Klub inember who brings |came back Pettibone had gone, That | ’ W § he rab ox L beast which made him a dinner lot of the Bast India Company bore flags|in with him or her four ” | st ni ; | eh ora daline etens ast ‘ ore fi him or her four other new |is all, 1 thank you! years the standard remedy. 4 vit Ry ephants and|drawings for their ages. Th rat rotation, must be sent with each| planation, called a meeti: rot opaaees pelt ape COUPON NO hppopotaml at times. You forget that| winners will be Announced and” tne atetpdd Claimed that (the stars and|name, togother with the signature, |league and Miss Doolittle attended, i mi 3) ete sien ot tenets qitid Mombus,|Arat of tue drawings wil be pabiuaies | of eens a eres Suaamneton’a cont- [ae and address of each new member | It was held Sunday afternoon in s ‘orgotten, but’ Tuesday, July & Wo shall m Anal of Ur ARE just as is required when individual | Hugus Hall and the poetess was of- Plano Playing p : ever know po: y the] kiddies apply for membership. fored a regolution of gympathy. She (i Das a r 4 \

Other pages from this issue: