The evening world. Newspaper, August 22, 1918, Page 10

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SK — a ps ee ‘ten THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1918 Broadway’s Famous Dancer, Now ‘Maurice of Red Cross,’ | Hard at Work 1 in France His Feet Perform + Now One fe for — Wounded and His Hands Have Found New Work to Do Caring for War’s Little Waifs and Keeping Things Moving in the Red Cross Canteen. ‘0 THAT UNCLE “A ‘Pal’ for Every U. S. Soldier’’ SAM’S NEPHEWS WHO GO OVER S WON'T B. ATTENTION TO THEIR NEEDS THE “‘W. A. A. C.”) OF ENGLA ADVERTISED FOR 5,000 YOUNG WOMEN TO BECOME THEIR “PAL! AND Or HAS By Helen H. Hoffman Copyright, 1918, by The Pres Publi (The New York Evening World.) ARIS, Aug. 6.—-From the bright lights and gayety of Broadway to the | / Zo ! CaS OE —— P Way’ stations of sorrow gnd despair along the battle route of | A REGOLAR pany \ = MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORSE. France, where innocent old people and young children seek refuge | P LINCOLN, the aushor, } Yrom the merciless enemy, is a step that many well known Americans; | > | J rémarked at a social gatheri have taken Zz | we are often too prone to Yesterday at a big railroad station in the war zone 1 came upon| 4 {eo n about things that might be} Maurice, Snuggled against the shoulder straps of his Red Cross uniform @ j@ Whols tot wares, aud tld he ens was a little war orphan of five. Between sighs and tears she gave expres- | to? [SRO AIRDS ee caltiiat aalenaaes | j sion to her grief, for only the day before her mother had been spddenly! ‘* ce bereagirieaan ame eo | snatched from her side and taken from her forever by a long range shell j i iatall deb vrscmne matter (bat was ; er 80 a PENING NTX from the German front. i te printed about him in one of the local | SUNDAY NIGH’ 5 Since March last, when Maurice quietly stepped out of the ga ‘ - ‘apers of Mis home town, and cx- TNICE VAULY THEE q y Pe Ray 7 MY i tum of vile Cory dancing life of New York and put on a Red Cross uniform, his work | — titedly. galloped inte the sanctum of | ia among the refugecs has presented a strange and wonderful comparison to My 5: wok : boisterously | ex- F orence Reed : Pp. + a wok here," he boi F the life of pre-war days at the Broadway hotels and theatres. H PER UCS kMg tal a eae 2 ik aN claimed, with an accompanying dane | i pass through this station now,” said] after file of American boys trooped ° ° “What's the matter with it?” asked . iH 4 Maurice, “During the drive’ last| past en route to the front i | the editor, without show syt ide spring, however, we cared for big] Rounding the corner of the big sta+ U S e nh 0 U c U e e |toms of tacking on his wings and numbers of them. For more than| tion, they in font of this | F cA A A ‘ vey [ing for to the matter with it?” two days I had charge of six hundred | low-roofed, board building. This ‘Lady Pals for Soldiers” Stuff Gets a Rise Out of the Rapid-Fire Waitress—* Those \ shouted the perturbed politician, “Why children ranging in age from three to] Here the Stripes an \ 7 : " ne ' ¥ " ; ‘ot q tis es, and know it!” eee Oe ene antennae hele a Birlbee (eas Girls Might Cheer the Soldiers Up,’”’ She Says, ‘But They Ain’t Going to Shoot Any An tien, what are you. kicking y 5 elco: ‘ A es . ¢ | pout?” was the smiling rejoinder of be practical, and all that, and forget |and this 4 room, wh Cheer Across the Big Creek to Us Dames Left Over Here—About the Last Thing Se titon ne we had told the | | Wyyr veare & oT eo atte yut 1, only a fe minutes before had borr a ; : *hiladel) a Moshi tua \ Pe emcee a en ae SE LAN | Og eo nee ators aso) a Lady Tells Her Beau Before He Goes Over the Bulging Blue Is to Hang Of the | truth | about FH Saee his om these people and ever accustom him- |New took on a sew atmosphere. I Flirtation Stuf !—And Lily the Towhead Bears Her Out. \ " aia self to the horrors that war inflicts | seemed to fairly speak of hope and CONCERTS AND MUSIC. Eesti dticie panei BeleRiutleN’ God tteedone ake By BIDE DUDLEY SEAT SALE OPENS TO-DAY The big, gruy-looking station t ergy Coygr ty The Pree hing G. girls are supposed to associate with | edged a step nearer to get a better | weeks ago handing me a lot of lovey ‘ut Box Office for Concert by ‘ is Ammar t York Events | Pr ed an to brighten with noise and ac. | tt marten, Loy stacked thoir! ¢ NE of our victims, who|te American soldiers and cheer them | earful., mush stuff and telling me I was the | URCI tivity p the broad stairs fle| suns und army equipmont in ihe) ‘oO was tn tere a while ago,| UP." | “Listen, Lily,’ he says in his best | queen bee of all the women that ever - a pe Macuia oe tiraccrate ise te left a newspaper for me] “That's it, eh?" came from Lucile, | chauffeur English, ‘I wouldn't look| come into his Introspection? Well,| at Geran rare IN, 1) Auditoriom | a e 4 jee took charge of i “ ar be ar ie salads te ws i} Most Decorated Soldier rivaly as he had taken charge ot the| it the place of a tip," sald Lucile the| “Well, say—lemthe tell you some. [at another etn no matter where she] did, sad Io meant every word af CMC a 82.50, . + | refugees a few hours. t ana| Waitress to the Friendly Patron,|thing. ‘Those girly might cheer the| obs up at. That's how I got an af-|it—the misspelled and the sound| Gp an OPERA CONCERT! io $ | fe tm crany ¢ " 4 Sea 4 | In the Allied Armies. how to make them-| “and I found an article in it that’s| soldiers up, but they ain't a-going to|fectation for you. I'm crazy about /ones, too. I'd trudt that guy In the | isin, t« | COHAN & HARRIS § Wanye | ut this big American! got me all mixed up in the mental-| shoot any chcer across the big creek |¥U, you yellow-headed mutt, you!’ /Sultan’s harem. That's the faith I Tota ate from, Mowt_Paseiva hay Tee Written, anteen. tables the boys sat| ity.” to us dames left over here. About “Well, sir, it sure made Lily fee} | sot in the poor boob.” | ens Wet STICAD ruse dict [THREE FACES EAST] own to @ hot lunch ‘Oh, you never want to let a news-|the last thing @ lady tells her beau | fine » gives him a sweet smile Lucile went to the kitchen and re. : <r THREE FACES EAST EPay the boys completed their lunch, paper article worry you," he replied | Defore he goes over the bulging blue that is, as sweet as a female with a]turned in a short time, — LYCEUM ith St. nF. Binay, v9 ai ay | Maurice ae Be. al les distributed) pi easantly, “What was it?” fs to hang off the flirtation stuff. chromo for a face like she’s got can} “What do the foreign pals do for Of +0 Te DELASCO Poon SPIE es gh = ’ seni acting 88)" «tt was from some town called] “Lily, the towhead at the pie} and pats his cheek on a blg scar/the American soldiers? Wise me up| a! TIGER ROSE mor a eons on say ager ahs Associated Press over near London,” | counter, told what was supposed to/he got at the Carbarn Club's enter-| littlo on the subject, will you?” Wc: AND PHOTO PLAYS. i \\ Pariah AATAINAL rie i Lucile went on. “That's a funny |be her best beau goodby the other|tainment and dance, Then she} “Oh, they probably dance with the ‘D5tH St \q ae sha | HUDSON Mak S 8,00, Iname fe ee | day on the instance oing to| says: 0 play cards with the | Oye STILE ALARM LOUIS INavy. ‘This distinguished looking {Name for a town, 1 know, but those | day on the Instance of lim going ys; Play car i m and) Perea tes ar BERNARD ws» ‘French woman was gowned in d French places have all got riddic|# Ship to entrain tor the other ab That's nice, Tim, But you will |possitly mend their clothes,” he re oR ING Re ©. Mark Tone i eRTRNOLY rnb mourning. Like the poor people, she| handles. The article says that 5,000! Listen, Tim,’ she says to bim.| kindly also remember that I'm go-| plied | LIBERTY 45 y had been helpipg that morning at the!women was wanted to be concluded| ‘You're going far away on the old!ing to mash your coco with a brick} “so they dance, do they? Welt, 1| AtAt Nec Mare WW “5% Tg Ns she tod had felt the cruel) into a battylion, or something, to be|Dillow thing, and what T want tol or something as lovely if you fiddle|can see Lily's Tim slipping. ‘That Dat i erin * GOING UP’ wit an, und of death that had swept intol what they ealled pals for the Amer-| know {s, are you going to be true to; around any of them dames over} jazzbo would rather shake a few toes | Kear ut A Knee tom's Cal irs" rt my ¢ irele ae sullt of war licen antdienat! | your Lily?” there, It ain't the bullets you gotta) than eat. Ob, lady, lady! If there's | Bes akland de Co, Sr ase PHOTO PLAYS. : a ved oe [know about that,” said the} “Really, tt would ‘a’ slipped me a,dodge—it's them. dames with the/a member among the squad that can | Olt Ht, ant. ie as | OCOHAN'S De 1 va phase war : ‘i ert ; Friendly Patron That battalion is| laugh ff it hadn't been on a subject misbehaveable eyes and the get! do the hitch-around step, all I got to nt Aime an tent ’ of & Bove ai being organized in England. The| typical of sad partings, so I just) away-closer manner, say ts, I know a towhead ple dis Laew's New York Theatre 4 Bek ae fArithe i plasify Lily, She gives him a nice} At that point Lily, the towhead,|] Loews American Root | ‘ i little punch tn the face and tells him | approached Lucile CA the Orient. Astle Yr i oys. ie Pr \ Toy. Mob fi Serene no ‘try stuff goes with her, Then, of 1 been listening to you, kid,” she )[ $sant Comedy Four. Othe, Nd pre Mau | Because He Wouldn't Be Skunked by a Polecat, Tommy course, him being quite a gentleman, | said. “You don't need to worry none | AVIS) MeLN TSAR, UFRUCSON in ta g the bo: hou Edison Became a Great Genius. }he prom absolutely to tell Satan} about those pals making love to your| P A \ AC E VOLL Ga tiee iis ty of dance OMIM Y would have bee bright boy had he paid more |to get away from behind him any! Joe.” Biway fe Teeny aL To SORA | TADG 5 braid ney t | ‘f ts hid euudies and quit rnat fooling-—-at least, so his he- |tine temptation comes along, S| “Sure, 1 don't,” repled Luctle E RSON’ s? Ha | F Only Was — ! in litle red xchoothouse out in Milan, ©, said of him when [everything is lovely and Tim beat it “He won't care nothing for thelr HEND Pony Cres Wat | ch ty 0 On entity eal sacle nt y was in MeGuffey's Third Reader, It is only fatr to add that this dis-| looking the Har he is beauty.! | lo,| Mani othere laying aside itch to take part | parugemer w osely after nny had set 2) oput, io get back to this pal ide: “Sure, he won't." # After t ' haan HOE ene eee ee een Andes Tdon't know ast on plnsny 0 Kf Lily paused to lend effect to AMUSEMENTS. foe ata M finishes t Tommy was of a red@less and inquiring mind, His {onto it, It sounds a little bit flooev remark, “If that boob had pt] RST TIME | viewnity pera tala Uther shot the skunk, all right; but Tommy's round- j to me.” for beauty,” she said, “he Phir i vrnas bike ‘i PAT tena i” RENE Berra the wh gumut of man Intere Vout and oll the rest of his clothes had to be buriod: | sgust a little Jealous of the Eng-| never would ‘a’ hung around you.” AT THE TRAN cay Birand Orchestre n th war Oram BIDE br Out of experience was born, however, the first vivid |) ake wae Tha Salondie B Lily retired laughing, and Lueile = UST why the K bestows so, rat ir nius which was to light te | !i8h pals, eh jas the Friendly Pa am Tel, Schuyler 8060, ar wh a ws op Ba ! SHR ebIeh Was te TENE TS rola comment turned on her heel and went to the} Bt nH {0 the Wood, matter yet to be figu At by A HUSTLING TOWN. “Who me?" replied Lucile, “Weil,| Kitchen. Approaching the Friendly | PTE ena TET I \luly in France, “gee Ag Pace re ORD NORTHCLIPPE, at a far The bright lad pondered upon the nervous tem-|{ should sic a negative onto that|Patron again five minutes later, she} AL ERPOSITION BURLESQUE. know that when decorations are 1 woll dinner in Wa mex paceman’ OF the enue’ ANH GaoIsa tbat could | statement without brakes. Say,, lis-| sald | ie LYMPIC \;\.. ) “AcMilecas” stowed upon 20 f the Allied remued =f ach for bv ee ae ten, 1 don't want to join any pal] “Don't pay no attention to Lily Iason 10 4 datiuat, | NAc! P 2 {eat out of his hand. so he saved hi ' Mat. Dail nor | Ame ; Tend ARE OME OE HIE TADS. Beste Bey AO ids, No, Ble=aob mel Ae for|Ghe's jealous of that pal bunch and| @ROLUMBIA LUMatin Ltt Minute Gi sons a ane a8 . ind bought some “feddety" egal name as ind /me being Jedlous, why, I haven't got] 1 ain't t say, If you ever get 4 Cc STEE GIRLS oanity. ' ' you know how that smells), He drenehed his a jealous bone in my bead,” Jehance to grab off shippage for me! Wits Va \ ny 48 With the tuft, Dine chore the wkunk family tived,| “Have you got a man friend over) for London, lemme know, will you? rin “ shaded Three skunks died, and one of the younger and less balanced skunks Wouldn't Joe get @ knockout sur CONEY'S FUNNY PLACE, y ne Ped = soaey iB red a ef man ‘l| wen: insane and thought itself a house cat, with unfortunate results Loy ne, the fellow that sllpped prise if past to iy pal supply H athing. ts ie = Vj sel f ‘ ne EB Pommy's second boot to be ont tn the base d ring, went over. Wt | place to pick out one and was slipped rox Vib. IP. palms om his Croix de Guerre, the 4 When were you there | the Edison home, i French Besiiary Medal, the Legion | st? raid he rt “ar masdan slong wih tbe pee 98 And Tommy's papa took him to the wood | those pals can't never “a him. He's|his lady friend, the best two-arm 4 auvate Ab Hi ia cokes Ge ne - ‘ow al shed r an interview, vy 0 2 ‘Oh, well’ sa fi ‘headl but his education was complete, The bright boy had proved (ho imperious to loye on foreign soll.) waitress in New York? He'd be de- RVING tomen har newt? « Serbian, Bel- smnh of mind over matter, | | | QuiITE PROPER “FOR PALS (en, easy 4 Didn't I get a letter trom him two’ lighted almost to deati—I hoyp,” LONESOME FOR WANT | | spite of jas a silly Englishman. man behaves as though she had Ju cut loose from vaudeville, and N ei has jimmied the way for the original in “He Didn't Want to Do It Tho crooks in this instance are music that reach the ear and die there, Mr, Broadhurst, with Walter Hackett, concocted @ crook farce for London, according to report, and when London yawned the sad affair was set to music for New York. Mr. Broadburst has written almost every- thing but “Hamlet” in his time and he is still young enough to twirl Yorick’s skull on his thumb. Byt in his ability to write well- turned lyrics he cannot hope to get very far in the musical comedy field if this is a sample of his new work. There's the old farcical touch in thy song that runs “What chance has a chicken with a wan who can foo! a hen And this song, incidentally, gains a great deal of humor from tne way it's sung by Ernest Torrence and Helen Pierre. * But the one rea} hit of the perforin ance is scored by three dancers—one of them a beautiful, black-baired | young woman with eloquent legs. Mr. ays amusing in , 8 ner, and well within bound Helen Shi Torrence is a Ss familiar Perey Ames jacts A, Sparks works his hard-boiled voice | for more than it ts worth Even tho,chorus girls who rush in| from timo to timo don’t mako “He Didn't Want to Do It" seem worth AUGUST 22, sort of music that is familiar to the ear, 1918 o THE NEW PLAYS o “He Didn’t Want to Do It” Is Excusable BY CHARLES DARNTON UR old melpdramatic friends the crooks have broken their way into musical comedy—and may they perish there! George Broadhurst m and Silvio Hein has written the In other words, there is nothing " at the Broadhurst Theatre. quite as harmless as thé words and THEATRES, WINTER GARDEN Even at 8 Thos Mata, Thiam & bs) a BROADHURST Thur AND DANCED Ths, Way (a ROAD, AY IT," Herat HE DIDNT WaNt TO Do it on any stage hate wie clom W and aaek Good .,, treat, Mumor, harm. h Shettey ARTHUL HOPKINS presents Very Good Young Man Wallner Wddinger & | OTH TAN 4 LONGACRE **\. THE BLUE PEARL ©! ASTOR Mr. Sidney Drew in (rtp Her ‘i Maxine Elliot's P93) \or omg Ms ALLEGIANCE _ ith PLYMO W, of Bway y A el LYRIC way Eves nt, aud 8 a Batning, AOW UF on Wolter K | cit oh, Wat, Mai, Mast Gente 6,

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