The evening world. Newspaper, January 24, 1918, Page 12

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Ee Beer-SmBSE SOFA“ ESCP ESS OSA te eee M1 eB GSAT SE reaeSEe eG EEL ET Anata ee 8 ne ar ee CSE PEOPLE OF STATE. a [ mothers and thelr children Among other things he you and the people 1 the success which the pensions) bas hitherto it has accomplished those familiar with the — —) Ef = —~ wo == | ae | — a ae a cs c-> ——| » figures that have been but even tf the number less than that the work was one 1 Was justified If It has kept to- ‘ Int to four, or five, or ten thousand homes, bill stands for the home. It » mother and it stands and these are three to me Gov. W mee Says Mone} Spent for Child Welfare Is Returned Manifold. OUR DEFENSE — Our boys are defending; neglect his own machinery this country on the high seas! more than that of his auton 7" fe Mi woe Inatitationss ff the last and on the land. Our own mobile or his guns? Yet *'"**' omar a ete oF the WIATG, GEUREOLTOR OE defense against a common most peopledoneglectthems (70°) "0" t of our poopie for the ohild. It enemy is to keep the system selves. Their tongue has a 7” sting “san is the best Investment that can be clean by ridding the body of dark brown color, skin sal- “"” PeRield ced vate it Re st ia vee one 10 the toxins, or poisons, which low, breath bad, yet they fail... ,, Wu Gh ia, wees 0 Ste Ne Saree are bred in the intestines. to see that their machinery ony, or a ‘ ‘ sure.” When you feel tired, sleepy, needs attention. o nV 1 ® hovertor: edged ils Fab port headachy, when your breath} Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- ne Wid Henni¢ IIR EL SRCOC EEE DTNa Ree is offensive, or pimples ap-|lets have been known for "*’ s : refit a Boies teal pear on the face and rect nearly halfacentury. They joss wos sep | dou't like to use the word ‘char it is time to recognize thelare made of May- apple, irene toev, Cuatrme ak pte Niehonan aha ee danger and protect your|leaves of aloe and jalap, '™ Einstein, who \ giving to ita bodily health by taking ajmade into a tiny pellet and SHG TUSGGIIN Wak Breed pear Ke EUR TE yak cor se good laxative or liver medi-| coated with sugar, ‘They are want in twats of Uuen. ho , cine, ‘standard and efficacious, You principal wddiessns of the day were | n The machinery of the body can obtain them at any drug " WEL MESSE ah Ati Pe of the Widows’ ator William H. Hill ylyman Martin MeCue, ¢ tributes to the nm who made th needs to be oiled, kept in store in vials for twenty-five | Addington of Albany good condition, just as the!cents, Ask for Dr. Pierce's rea H. Johnson, Store une or machinery of a ship. | Pleasant 'Pellets—and get no ‘ary vf the Stale Board of Chariies Winsteln and hy should a human person other! --advt. Ireng Loeb, . Loeb, and both atated that ina sure itis 4 We ; : vieh they both pera THEATRES. THEATR point out K ; pl decd EMPIRE oss WINTER GARDEN "\5".,° 9? oa eTHEL BARRYMORE, THEO Boot Theatre ene Mt, Rive k 0, MF buvert 1 the possi: aM OVER*TOP A prose i This Wi Interest : a tho Ing, whict ‘ Vanlvernal Appea!. "Herald. Stomach Sufferers nat q wa un, prescribes “SEVENTEEN” : BOOTH {i p¥,t.uran, Big 19 Mat Saye Indigestion comer from an excess of hydrochioric acid. SHUBERT 4), MAY TIME |¥ A well-known wuthority states that stomach trouble and ind LIBERTY a3 fyi [PLAYHOUSE S°\ ie oraieenttvacinice THEHERITAGE; hydro. “GOING UP ithe law. THIS HUDSON B BOULEVARD BEATS THE ONE ON LAND five tome ASTOR SPECIAL MAT. TO-M'W nausea He tells us to lay aside all digestive sand instead, wet from any pha ' the f mwey four ounces of Jad Salts ar : WICK ARBUCKLE ake a tiblespoooful in a glass of ‘ ina. teh Neat nde WL ENi LOU TELLEGEN vite uit ‘The Gipsy Trail? PLYMOUTH %o santa Feats at THE NAUGHTY WIFE REPUBLIC '., $5. MLA nua, Wei & Ottiee ODDSmoENDS n MA BATE ib heise TIGER ROSE BELASCO "iii tii be tre EATHA MATING TO-M KGW. POLL PAST COMAN & Ki fA ee a eM A TAILOR MADE MAN MoROSCO 4 DIGGER COMRDY IIT AN YEAuts, LOMBARDI, LTD. DAviL me With A CHICAGO GRAND OPER LEXINGTON OF YOUTH CASINO Wh & Bees. tes 94 Ky ELTINGE ‘yj Business keiore Pleasure With Barney Bern T WAS WiitarsS ed. al Sat. Mut. Ramen et dullette, Vix Mturw " nard & Alex, Carr. Sit, Night, Svar, wie Midd fe THE Pe " Sun, Nieht, ¢ reat Svat rOWhEK dirome. FLO-FLO | LONGACRE Yi 4" lI YESorNO STANDARD (yy? Week Pain laiep STONE aime JACK O'TANTERN™ Wei. Shehte easton tine NEW AMSTERDAM 4) "' Greatest Musical Stow nn ha Ma’ ht W t "LEO DITRICHSTEL N Coineie “THE KING’ 4, {.00'%ta0, Pf GAIETY jar ff, bom ae [| ' ENERAL) Wis. UUURTENAt G. POST | ion A. WISE ’ } MANHATTAN Hy Keene LOEW'S 7TH AV, /225) as its Mate Metiya Vite i \ vie. NM [: els EXPERIEN | : TOLD LADY Mae) ih ma Oe PRICES: Wh win ; . ening Re Les Freras Karamazov Arotian Mails Me LEN AMUSEMENTS, _ cae ae wie 7 ry ie ‘ Haram . ee Muar 0 ny Che ano hy HE DIAMONDS _ VAUDEVILLE g «i WATCHES | RITA yy oe ' ipnoa 12529 #1 weekivi Oren oaity SAUCONY OF LE. ouvET| FFPRO ICTOR'S SSR WT Ae : LEST WEFORGET| te Hi Ale pied a poner Ayes jt YHE SIGHT! Loews NeW YORK THEATRE at or, MOTOR BOAT SHOW GRAND: CENTRAL PALACE CLOSES SATURDAY Jan. 19 to 26, 10 A.M. to 10.30 P.M. Adm, 50 T. NICHOLAS RINK, al » LE SOUPS EN. FQORS ABOVE ST Se MONG. Vs (et call crunie rie foil fs Cala 44 mn" L WOULETs@. Bd DIAMONDS 8 CREDIT PHOTO PLAYS, ae VALrES Guranteed, He “GED EbYS CHARITY, A sivas ‘ . IVOLI 5 ‘in ah 43) Agent ca as the ita si tie Loew's nierian Kop Wives KIENDS OF SIU Announces KNON . Ane rn " BAUER rs h 81 AND any th Dway eA Oe aiid X a, BURLESQUE OLYMPIC)", MAT, DAILY IP a ek TPS * TARTA OF THE a3 Gunday World Wants Work Wonders You Like, “AULO Girls” *erysh Attractio mT bate ‘y oi | toe \ APES | aU NbaS" bo. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1918, (hie Glories of c Ancient Bagdad May now be seen in all their wonderful beauty, reincarnated in modern settings, restoring for the present generation the marvels of a by-gone age. The most glorious and brilliant metropolis of the world of a thousand years ago has been transplanted from the past, and now the dreams of the historians are visualized for a ‘Twentieth Century audience right here in New York. Bagdad-on-the-Tigris will ever live in the memory of all who know their Arabian Nights as the golden era of Romance—the wonder-period in the world’s history when all that was brilliant, beautiful and gorgeous gathered together in the metropolis of the Kast. The Oriental pageantry of the days when the Caliphs reigned in Bagdad will ever remain the traditional apotheosis of all that made life worth the living. Bagdad-on-the-Subway—otherwise New York——is the modern reproduction of that great centre of magnifi- cence, opulence and gorgeous pageantry. It is therefore especially appropriate that in New York, the artistic Capital of the New World, there should be reincarnated in this marvellous manner the magnificence of the great Bagdad that is no more. “CHU CHIN CHOW”---A MARVELLOUS SPECTACLE AT THE CENTURY THEATRE MATINEE TO-DAY 25c to $1 Theatre, located on Central Park West, at the corner of 62d and 63d Streets, there has been brought into being the most amazing, stupendous, spectacular reproduction of the Bagdad of a Thousand Years Ago ever conceived by the mind of mortal man. ‘This is the beautiful musical tale of the Orient, “CHU CHIN CHOW,” a gorgeous and colorful romance of life in ancient Bagdad, written and created by Osear Ashe of London, with music by Frederic Norton. It has been running for nearly two years in London, it has been presented in New York on the most colossal scale ever known in a theatre by Will- iam Elliott, F. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest, and it is now packing the gorgeous and palatial CENTURY THEATRE to the doors at every performance. WHAT YOU WILL. SEE IN “CHU CHIN CHOW”: THE FIRST SCENE—A PANORAMA OF BAGDAD THE EIGHTH SCENE—AT THE SILK STALL In the distance one sees the spires and domes of the great city Hlushed with joy over his new found wealth, Ali Baba repairs to the silk and minarets rise to the horizon, suggesting the romance and the myste y toll, and there arrays himself in the finest raiments that money can buy. the land of Oriental magnificence Nur-al-Huda and his sweetheart, Marjanah, likewise share in his prosperity THE SECOND SCENE- and good fortune Avgreat linll Of blackiand: gold, a: fonst’epitad by (he tichsmteer Kaiba tn THE NINTH SCENE—THE BLUE PALACE OF KASIM honor of the Chinese mandarin, the great Chu Chin Chow. Slave girls dance In the blue salon of Kasim's Palace, the miser Kasim and his fat wife, for his entertainment, rare wines aud dishes are served, and Zabrat-al-Kulub, Jom, are entertained by dancers and Pe: players, Ali Baba loves the slave from the desert, reveals the trath that the supposed Chines m, and when he arrives to pay the 40,000 golden pieces that chant is really Abu Hasan, the robber sheik. the enemy of mankind gir! Marjanah, free, he finds that Alcolom loves him too. Kasim meanwhile sets off with mules to visit the robber's cave and obtain the rest THE THIRD SCENE BY MARJANAH'S WINDOW et fl of the gold therein Ju the harem of Kasim is the THE TENTH SCENE—THE HAREM OF i Nur-al-Huda, the son of Ali b sold in the slave market next n While Kasim is feverishly racing to the robber's cave, Ali Baba regales himself with wine in the boudoir of the fair Alcolom, and with her joins in singing “Any Time's Kissing Time THE ELEVENTH SCENE—THE CAVE OF GEMS + In the robber's cave, the miser Kasim gloats over the fortune of gold and s gems, and while filling In the beautiful and superb Century THE PALACE OF KASIM BABA mer sets the girl, Marjanah, bel poor brother of Kasim nd Nur-al-Huda by oight sings beneath venutiful slave Marjanali is er window aod tells hee of his THE FOURTH ‘SCENE the city gates, 10 # cactus grove, IN THE CACTUS GROVE Ali Baba sleeps off the effects ol WU golden pieces with wi Near much wine and ponders on how to raise 4 the slave gitl, Marjanah, for his sor h to by his pockets with The earth opens before Marta gold! is aurprised by the rises at the command “Open Sesame,’ and the robber « Abu Wh nd when they return, The sheik, Abu Hasan, and his band kill forth with bis Hand uf Forty Thieves to raid the slave murk miser and cut his body into four quarters with much glee and music. THE FIFTH SCENE—ENTRANCE TO THE CAVE THE TWELFTH SCENE-—THE FASHION BAZAAR Zobrat-al-Kulub, the desert girl, escaping from the robbers, plans to foil \bu Hasan when he and his band enter Bagdad again to slay and kill. Mahe bubah, the shrewish wife of Ali, comes with her new-found wealth to the ar of Bagdad to purchase new and suitable costumes for her use. sees the wonderful “fashion show of Bagdad ok. |B Strange and beautiful costumes jd to be sold | THE THIRTEENTH SCENE--IN THE ROSE GARDEN eview, and the wild | Ali Baba is frolicking with Alcolom in the harem of his rich Chinese | when word comes of the miser's death Ali Baba, his to plund all of which they ea After the robbers have tiful Marjanab, ent rare wines and silk ), Nur-al-Huda, and en of rich gems, sac t way unknown to ther the ca THE SIXTH SCENE-- THE SLAVE MARKET OF BAGDAD He In the slave market the mest be ings and the barterings of many elim to the highest bidder, Dozens of beautiful slaves pass desert women display their gifts ‘Then Abu Hasan merchant, Clu Chin Chow, raids the slave market and with 20 mannequins laves of Kasim's hare brother Kasim ee Ali inherits his fortune, and all plan olcest to celebrate the wedding of Marjanal and Nur-al-Huda. | THE FOURTEENTH SCENE—THE GARDEN BY MOONLIGHT } The wedding feast is about to be celebrated when a ed as the es off the cb staves and all the gold. THE SEVENTH SCENE—A MEAN STREET IN BAGDAD 1 ine merchant wi In the humblest pert of Bagdad, a+ ith Iny house beneath the sheltering palm | 40 casks of oil, asks the courtesy of storing them in the garden. ‘The wine trees, lives Ali Baba and his shrewish wife, Mahbubah. Here amid the beggars, | merchant is Abu Hasan, and each cask contains a man But Zalirat kills all the poor and the humble, Ali Baha brings the gold taken from the robbers’ | by pouring boilir tothe easke and stat volher sheik. Then “om hen “oi cave and scatters it broadcast | with je wedding The Most Gorgeous, Gigantic, Colorful, Magnificent, | Enthralling, Fascinating and Superb Spectacle far Known in the History of the English Speaking Stage COMPANY OF 300 PEOPLE “Back to the Box Office” » | Econoniic Prices BALCONY - - - = = = FAMILY CIRCLE MATINEE TO-DAY 25c to $1—MATINEE ALSO ON SATURDAY NEXT WEEK—MATINEES MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY THE WORLD’S MOST BEAUTIFUL PRODUCTION CHU CHIN CHOW AT THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL PLAYHOUSE ICENTURY THEATRE 62d St. Near B’way. Phone Col. 8800 MANAGEMENT WILLIAM ELLIOTT, F. RAY COMSTOCK AND MORRIS GEST ET Vcc LTS

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