The evening world. Newspaper, November 28, 1919, Page 36

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sppnglt The Evening World, ee atins: vehi’ ercaisat pyle ebed HOLLOW T is hard to thrill the West Coast city with startling feminine com a0 ? Dorr “Tho short-skirted ballet—ueh let] Ay an expression of Joy In life, ‘natu | 4. ; oe | con tis ue ues because the stars Ca con+ bs 1% speak of it again!” he €xX-| 14) dancing’ is delightful. Miss |%4® 8 not dancing—it is a beau! "BAREFOOT DANCING fantly are regaling the natives and tourists with the ultra crea Huyelaimed, “The ballet days of short| Gui, ruse ¢rom the chair in front of |P0d% beautiful arms and legs, frat in 18 ALL Rigiee wusien | tions of the world’s most famous designers, but when the short trouser ria ets, a oe Se of pink tarlatan and | +... dressing-table and skipped lightly | Cee, apache! rer in another, Bat ONE 1S ALONE AND tires too much 2he legs which ahould costume appeared on Broadway recently it created a real sensation, oll eg pig eee eee lead ig | Mbeut the room, her hands lifted over here ie aonipelistrr att opto peor ears PREPARING TO RETIRE be used for dancing, Sitting with| ‘The daring wearer almost required the assistance of traffic cops be E plgpant reper. Seni cce ive dane, | er bead, ‘with its straying, soft WP veal ately pee eee ghee | your knees crossed is most ungrace-| fore finally making her way through the exclusive shoppfhg district, 4 hs eee saat en ne eee antag | Drown hair. “There!” she exclaimed Spiga alata Do they ful, and bad for the circulation of the| According to the “ayes” it is a dream in looks and comfort—a relief a eakla They must not be flutty ang| Witt 4 smile. “But cannot any child | ONG Lee Raleiacetes ts ; legs. Ballroom dancing makes the| from the tight skirt, but having the appearance of one. The “nays” a ‘and fall; they must be able to{4°,1t? There 18 go much extravagant | so seiee,” “they are ph acatclrarg id ankles stiff. declare it “impossible.” Dame fashion says the style will be generally i nite beak atthe bade.” talk about the beauties of ‘natural| /2tCte oy ee Of course, from doctors before she is allowed to| ‘The best possible position for the] adopted. ‘ dancing’; then why Isn't ‘natural ; cultivation of grace is to sit with| - Lee i ‘To which Rosina Galli replies, her they are so very natural that I do not enter, in order that there may be no ~~ —~ Drown eyes flashing, “Kings and singing,’ the sort any one mjght do often dance them; & fear I am too mistake about her strength and the | Your feet higher than your waist,/the American man, but my teachers;the proper graceful line, a woman im Srinces pursued the short ballet exirt| “@king along the atrect, equally in| oi se tee nave eonquered houndness of her lungs, A girl with {Resting them on the table or even the|in Europe advised me to sit thus tong | should sleep with a pillow under her Y ‘when they wero indifferent to the demand? Why, instead df listening Burope. When I was there the last & week chest ought not to be a|Mantelpiece,” smiled Rosina Galli. “I/ ago, and I often do it. Also, to make /head_ and another under yher waist. ~ «ff & theatre and to music. In its futty |‘? Hootie acted do people M0ck | time everybody was fox-trotting, one- dander: on the other hand, if a gin {am told that is a favorite attitude of |the back perfectly straight and with/From a litte baby she should sleep | ; folds is a whole history of romance |‘ ear Caruso stepping, doing the sh is naturally well and strong dancing | ————— ie Wie tais—and on her back always, * pping, iz shimmy, ‘The — —— - - - ~ | ee Li at 4 that will alwdys live. This year, per- How about barefoot dancing?” I] american way’ was the law in the makes her more 60. e |Neyeron ber side \ fl peeps the pubic likes the longer skirt | asked. batheei® “gt the epera school the girl stays | {| » Beauty culture searns§ stsaple os a : —next year it is likely to be shorter| “I love to do it in my nightgown, «po Ameri re for eight or nine years and the rule !s e ove orl es jormange, gompared to the culture o is jJand fuller than over. ‘Tho ballet in| before I go to bed," confessed Rosina | aancers™ xabapell ene eae ed ss OC SUS. Fe - Her mother gives her up 1} | fact ai y " a 10 custom here to make them wor! ohe anageme i} f short, Duffy skirts is a form of art, | Galli, “but 1 would not do It at a pub- | iss Galll's answer tatereating, iome aus reais aon — Ory [to the @chool managem: nt and she) | AMAZING PERFORMANCES. : qn to say it is over, ended, is as if|Uc performance—inless T were trying] py nature,” she said, “American tthe omen sehen e y there 18! jearns what is necessary for her ag a| 5 | HE flying men wore boasting a > ¥_. you said the paintings df Watteau | to depict some special era, such as the in} the opera school, to which the mother) iaqy and asa dancer, At 17 or 18 she pill bee girls are excellent mati little about the risks they had 7 , aterial for | brings the little girl of eight. She re- Coprrteht, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) a y ’ 7m vwete no longer beautiful. Greek dancers, But there ts no system andlceives two physical examinations | "0, 1nhed Performer. b rh run and the falls they had urs ™ “What I cannot understand,” Miss What many people like to see now- | — < us faminations! «But here the girls come to the Al ert Payson Terhune vived, and the meek civilians listened ‘4 - Metropolitan f and I try t x bavi d % " - ——__——— Metropolitan for a year and I try to , ne Sis tes = A pec eh . il mpgs = Ay aa es o t No. 17—*‘UNDER TWO FLAGS,” By Ouida. and gasped. One of tho latter, how: : TW teach them certain things—then nex ) ser) was S51 Gt 05. , A Remarkable xam le of | MINUTES OF OPTIMISM year they are offered a little more PRTIE CHCIL, heir to an old and honored English title, | seemed, wor . | B ; money for some position where they was 2 gambler and waster, yet with a tatent force and| "You're not telling us anything so epuias | y Herman J. Stich will learn nothing more, and they go. nobility in his nature, To save the good name of a|jonderfull’ he remarked. why, | & elinw ! by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) They do not want to sacrifice the time woman he did not love he was forced to disappear. He|army, and yet he dropped seventy fect Bay 08 = oonuen 7 and the hard work necessary, if one was supposed to have died in a railroad wreck, but in} !nto a vat of s% aiding wetee and wee rere No One Can Cheat Her. is to be o real dancer. reality he went to Algiers, Where he enlisted as a pri-|O0 wih’ his job." \ ene a. oir ¢ Nor is*that all. Here are some of} vate in the Ghasesurs d'Afrique Regiment of France.| And they were incredulous, ee TACILE victory is an easy vic- | and toil till we have made the lay of | the things a girl must not do if she “It's true,” said the civilian, “Mhey | There, thanks'to the hatred of his commanding a @ bas tory, an easy triumph a fruit-| the land fairly smooth; watch, wait| would be graceful—the primary qual- h : |were pigs’ fect, you know.”—Chicago = MON less triumph. land work till the occasion is just|ification for a dancer, Acco.ding to ofMfecr, Cecil's life was made miserable. His courage | News. es whut Every once in @ while the sporting | about right. ‘ | Rosina Galli, the candidate for grace and high Pepe ding sisal onal attention ofa sane \* = gt ai: Mrs, Char- world is bombarded by @ newspaper| Infinite painstaking, incessant ef-|must not sew—it rounds her shoul- poodle io Wine VERAEN TCIRAFSLA "<8 pel oF Oe ADVERTISEMENT. ee Be. Cadieron, champlon, a boxer who has bolstered | fort, ceaseless labor and conflict,|ders. She must not ride horseback . cis peas a banntieil aad andinetnlined gutce iy P . up his record with @ long list of deci-|oftentimes agaipst destitution, | or skate~skating makes her walk like | the people. She was the chum and the idol of the soldiers. Yet she held If ou love Phy. author and sions over dead ones and who sooner | squalidness and despair, is the price/a sailor and riding makes her tess) them all at arm's-length until she met Cecil. Then for the first time in y m wey ell or later finds that all his strength lies | nature exacts for pretty nearly every-| stiff. She should ayoid stairs @s/ her adventurous young life she lost her heart, ~s nt traveller, re- on pasteboard and none of his|thing that is worth while, No one;much as possible—climbing them She fell madly in love with the handsome and melancholy exile, But, hand 5 a turns from strength in his following er in his/|can cheat her. | makes her knees weak. Walking| to her amazement, he refused to regard her as anything more than a vulgar vost a wal FRIDAY, NOVE Rosina Galli, Who T Ballets, Answers th Fokine, Don’t Ride Horseb and a tongue as House. Migs Galli’s terpsi- chorean and mim- icking abilities, since as a young and little person of, seventeen she danced into the $50" teeart of New York over in the Man- gots te but twenty-five, yet the success of hhattan Opera House. Even now she > % ey the Metropolitan ballets may be at- a i 9 '®° trituted langely to her personal per- an hy As ore ing the dances and training the per- "*' ‘Alaska and formances and to her part in arrang- formers. As the most notable ex- 1 “ponent of the classic ballet in Amer- 010 ton, to-day, it seemed to me Rosina © 22°) Gall should have an opportunity to io. om) ohael Fokine, the ‘answer the recent criticisms of Mi- Russian dancer, @ome of which have been printed in toes, which we have with ever increasing MBER 28, 1919 _*Lithesome Ballet Danseuse {~ Says Our New Dances Are. * Childlike Expressions of Joy rains the Metropolitan ¢e Criticisms of Michael the Russian Dancer — Galli’s “Don’ts” for Girls Who Would Be Graceful: Don’t Sew, It Rounds the Shoulders; Don’t Skate, It Makes One Walk Like a Sailor; ack, the Legs Become Stiff; Don’t Sit With Knees Crossed, ’Tis| Bad for the Circulation. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Coprriaht, 1919, by The Press Publlsbing Co, F ballet skirts, of barefoot dancing, of the popularity of the Ameri- can foxtrot and shimmy in Purope, of the rules for being graceful —discoursed Rosina Galli, premiere danseuse, with an intelligence (The New York Rvening World.) nimbje and eloquent as her clever ah watching for several seasons lelight at the Metropolitan Opera The best adjectives have been none too good for Galli added, launching a little assault of her own, “is why the Russian dancers call themsefes creators. The dance, like the song, has always been, here. The Russians, Pavlowa her- self, studied with the masters of the classic ballet. What the Russians have done is to take that ballet, the |Spanish, the Greek, ‘natural danc- ing’—oh, every kind—and mix them all up together. Even their idea of dancing to interpret music {s not new—it was done for Louis Quatorze and Louis Quinze. “Why all this criticism of the arti- fice of the ballet, and why the glort- fication of ‘natural dancing’? Is the ballet, is any highly-developed form of art, natural? Are not long yea: a FRIDAY, NOVE muscles, It is the hard-fought battles; the Girls—Would You Be Graceful in Dancing? _ Give Heed to Galli’s Advice—and ‘‘Don’ts’’ . SLEEP wire PILLOWS UNDER MBER 28, 1919 All in Favor of Accepting @ | This Style Say ‘“‘Aye¥ Mies ISABELLE WAGNER WHO RECENTLY STARTLED Los ANGELES WEARING A _NEW_ 8HORT TROUGER CREA- camp hanger-on, She disgusted him by her freedom of manner and her profanity. embroidery cae shar > ‘At first this cokiness of Cecil made the girl furiously angry. But her foie Northwest wringing soasning, wearin. tortor | GIR Same Here [8 A Recipe) wv'ras tr sroorer pan ver re, And daly she grew more ant more "9 Canada with the bouts which call for all devoted to the man who snubbed her. You must see the . anada wl @ man's stamina, skill, nerve and grit; Fell Madly in Love Out from England, on a tour of the Eitase specimens of Hiv pets pelle ap ltt tl For a Perfect Lover ean rid Feito, Natt R,came Cleine former chum, « Marvel Hand a ab ith Handsome Exile, nobieman known as “The Seraph,” ani , : i ~~ #" tars worth Gey fo Saesiy Wrong ftom detent tins with him his stately young sister, Venetia. E mbroiderer, many thou- " sands of dol- lars. ‘The pho- tograph shows make the man and the fighter whose services command an enviable wage. A good many people want the honey but won't brave the ating. They are finicky, fussy, particular. ADIES and gentlemen: Stop right | up and read what Clara Leavy, twenty years old, of No, 1604 Madisgn Avenue, New York, has to say on what constitutes a perfect lover Opportunities must be just so, the Clara should know, because she romped Ve ja chanced to meet Cecil, who at once fell hopelessly in love with her. By chance she learned of “his \dentity—and she proceeded to clear the way for his triumphant return to home and rank and friends, For Venetia had by this time discovered that she returned Cectl's unspoken love for her and that he was the one love of her life. Cigarette found out the two lovers’ secret. and could not understand why’ her sweetheart should prefer this seemingly She was instantly jealous which enables you to embroider ~ most beautifully your hat, your is ho |1ay of the land njce and smooth, the| under the wire with a silver loving | and could Rpt BUGAreRUS Why De ame nana pan ia ell Mrs. Cameron | oscaslon exactly right. They are sure | cup, the prize given for her essay, Sit oF rid po ee ands De Te ratt the tio ana'ts belrevahiesd ¢an\Gecil'e| g ’ if ne see wearing an Es- Shey couln Go. speders If only. shay (Signs were ailag AnEd 6 CUTTS H slighting her own adoration, Almost at once her bitter wish was granted. | ens ——in magic- mee Tomo Parka had European libraries, exchange pro- | RECIPE FOR A PERFECT LOVER. For something happened which, by martial law, rendered Cecil's life for‘eit, | ally short time beam! imo Parka fessors, up-to-date laboratories or| (Ingredients may be secured at any} His superior officer—the Colonel whose grudge had mades@ecil's career ° i with mukluks. worked where the boss could be im-| moving picture theatre, wrestling in the army so unhappy—insulted Venetia, Cecil thrashed him, For strik and at little COSte, ; Li atiw - i pressed with their potentialities, But| arena, opera house or ringside.) ing his Colanel the exile was condemned to death. | Pe ene The edge of the library of our greatest men was! ‘Take the face of Wallace Reid and The Seraph and Venetia used all their influence to save him. But at) w first their efforts were vain, It was Cigarette, finally, who secured a re ‘ the Bible; the laboratory of our fore-|the voice of Caruso, Thicken with most 2 tists a tea-kettle; the| the body of Elmo Lincoln and stretch Mix in! prieve for the doomed man. But when she received the paper ars the headgear is 2" trimmed with ga rr pardoning Cecil she was many mi ‘Come see ielp |initial job of our leading business men | to the size of Jess Willard, eT Cen Rarer ieee inc ead taal : . somewhere in the sub-cellar, the agility of Douglas Fairbanks and : De coe ecane tion tas ccinte fat : “ wolferina, the Gouattunities acacthoaly sean slits | tee ay ot eee eee Dl Rode Across Desert ‘me set for b ution wae close at a le + / {ute the muscles of Jack Dempsey i > tip only fur on |the lay of the land seldom smooth; | with the disposition of Fatty Arbuckle Bringing Reprieve. ‘Across the desert rode the frantic girl, sad ‘ |the occasion hardly ever exactly, Moisten with the spirits of Harold hoping to reach the spot in time to avert ‘ Lhe yas which the | right. Lloyd. Add a dash of Bot the death of the man she loved—and whose life she was saving for another at the Marvel Salon ve ae | . Set on stove for twenty woman. But one delay after another hindered her, | M 1. Needk Bis “Breath does not | Most of us have'to shed our collars, |{et it shimmy, Rub in the mind of i. | Marvel. Needle- h 1 y, do! a 7 e as ¢ od facing the levellec " 4 ee roll up and hami D. W. Griffith and the talent of She galloped up to the Crison Just ds Cecil aipod fAoing the levelled guns kraft Works—309 e Pp our sleeves an mmer and) \ of the firing squad, Leaping from her exhausted horse, Cigarette rushed forward and flung herself upon Cecil's breast as the command to fire was given. The bullets which were aimed at Cecil tore through her young body as she shielded the doomed man from them, he reprieve had arrived in time to free Cecil, but only because Cigar- freeze. Richard Barthelmess, Stir with the heart of William Farnum, Add the sweat, broil) strength of Joe Steoher and the J —==|cusy of Owen Moore. Flavor Ww | the gharm of Eugene O'Brien, Cover the whole thing with the luck of Mack Fifth Avenue, just below the Waldorf, An ideal Christmas gift. Come today! And remember, no pound upon opportunity till we have | made it more or less A BLESSING. A guide has been invented that can} gennett and sprinkle liberally with | v] : he sewed inside a woman's hat go that | the income of Charlie Chaplin. Pour | ete bad given her lite for wi pS her ring. UrentD 1 pepperet ts substitute can equal a pin will pass through the same hole |earefully into mould and turn right) ‘avences” if . the MARVEL, eee it ia inserted, olde mp. Result: One periect lover, * reed 5 ‘ ‘ RT wi shay a ame

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