t-.-v; 1 : ' I- . v, -v CN U BERTH LOUTS TIe Crudely Printed, Visiting: Cards of the Apaches Are Generally 1 Treasured as Souvenirs by Their Thrill -Hun tiny Patrons. This Card Reads: "At Large Temporarily. .Louis Le Balle (The Strangler) ; Escort Cafe Green Snake; Late of the Sante Prison; One and One-Half Years on Devil's Island." PARIS. HOW would you like to dance with. Tough Jules at the' Cafe of the Dead Man's Thumb? How would you like to trot and toddle in the grip of a genuine Apache? A dyed-in-the-blood thug a stab er a garrotei" a real mean ruffian! He's got notches on his gun and blue welts on his jaw where his grisette tried to mur der him with a hatchet. Jn a rusty, husky whisper he'll tell you about it. How would you like an hour's tete-a-tete with this fascinating devil from the CHchy under world? Say, dainty ladies, would it thrill you? It's thrilling the smart women of Parls that Is, the women who find the ordinary thrills of life too passe for words. They,, are the rich aristocrats who have kicked over their heritage of convention, tha restless wives of money-mad husbands, the high-steppers of upper Bohemia, the Ependthrift American visitors, all the fragile and discontented feminine crew who have only one occupation; thriH-hunt- lfigg- ' . They were tired of gambling. They were tired of the gay boulevard cafes and. the bizarre boulevard revues. Shimming lost its kick. ; Everybody was n" to the dives and the dope dens arranged like bo many stage settings.- The fight betweea the two absinthe fiends ' was just hocus pocus. The women with the pungent and purple past no longer found a Ustener, It was getting so that sin, viewed from the .side-lines, was as dull as Notre Dame or the Louvre. , - "How uninteresting!" complained all the pretty ladies. "We could see an that in the movies. We want some real rongh. stuff! We want to have it not just look at it! We want to be thrilled! And, to, their, blank hut submissive, husbands, "Why don't you do something to amuse us?" Enter then-rthe Apache. He rode in on the crest of, a season distinguished for its "cave love" atmosphere. The musio shows headlined naderworld dances. The Grand iGuignol's shockers showed the marauding I mala in his most mauling moments. The THE OBEGOK SUNDAY TOTJRNAIV POBTtiAKD, SUNDAY HORNING, 7 &8 vV V PROVISOtm 143 BAU heroes of the popular novels were sheiks who dragged heroines around by the hair, and the heroines themselves liked nothing better than a good clubbing. Jt became fashionable for Paris smart setters to "adore" crime. ' That part of Paris which makes a living by the fads of the rich, was quick to catch on to the new opportunity in thrills. The taxis had put the "guiding" business on the blink. Nobody, it seemed, wanted to visit gilded haunts of peacock pleasure any more. So the guides and the personal conductors harkened attentively to the cry of the pretty ladies: "We-want a totigh guy! We want an Apache!" ! They got him at 100 francs an hour. That is the standard price in Montmartre cafes which make a specialty of Apaches for hire. In the case of particularly tough Apaches, however, or an Apache with an especially bloody record of crime, the priee is higher. The Cafe of the Dead Man's Thumb and the Cafe of the Green Snake are typical examples of the many where thrills are sold like so much caviare, j Here, any night from ten to two, the thrill-hunters come for contact with, the. raw, rough, red-blooded side of life, as personified in Tough Jules, Jacques the Tiger, Little Scarlip, Louis the Strangler, Itaoul the Butcher, and a dozen pther sinister highbinders who have learned that slitting throats is not nearly so profitable as describing throat-slitting to widqpeyed neurotics with a passion tor vicarious second-hand blood-letting. These women themselves are the lncar nation , of beauty and refinement. They rustle but of limousines like so many deli cats butterflies velvet gowned andi silk shod, shimmering with jewels and radiat- ing the faint breath of perfume. Only their eyes, burning with excitement, hetray the primitive craving for abysmal sensa tion, beneath the shell of luxury. 1 h A row of six basement windows blinks level with the sidewalk. Across ne of them stretches the black silhouette of a skeleton fist gripping a knife. Stone stairs lead downward to a massive door. II This is the 'Cafe of the Dead Man's Thumb. The guide will tell you it was formerly th r r "1 "to ft rendezvous of the notorious Chicotte gang which disposed, olj the bodies o its victims by .running them; through a huge5 sausage grinder, s He j bints that the cellar might reveal strange secrets even to-day. He forgets to mention, what is well known among old ; Montmartrans, that until : last Summer this fcasemeot was the site of a oarDer-soop.n i 3 ; . -t ; The door of -the cafe opens into a spa cious 1 room ioecoratea as sumptuously as many ot tne Douievard caoarets. on a dais at one end, six jazz musicians are At Ri'sht, La Danse Brutale," by u , 1-1 sis f - 1 ?v t - v v. r : : 1 . : I II- Mansoloff , Who Are Furnishing Thrills at the Folies Bergere. playing madly. The dancing space is crowded; ! around the walls are tables and. settees occQpied by a motley lot of diners. ! : The latest arrivals' perhaps are making their initial visit. She is a hlue-eyed little ' exquisite 'of , the baby doll type. He is fat, I wealthy, Ibald'headea and resigned. His face seems to say, "Weil, here we are. I hop!? you're j satisfied.: r Bring on the .Apache!", j j A44 the Apaches, possibly six or more pt them, surround the table. I I l Here is one! burly fellow with a face like a gomhvMjHis wrists stick out like hairy ' iron pipes from the sleeves fof his bine sweater, j and 1 he has & horrible trick of "squinting. It has won him many partners y 1 r Coprrvtt, 1923, fcr IntemUoiua yeatm i fit 4 5s- "1"'" Mile. Etoile Lenoir and and a tidy sum in fees. He boasts that he was just released from prison last week and is on the police records for a doien crimes.! If Mademoiselle is wise, she wfll choose I him for 8 w partner. : 1 Price 120 , francs an hour. J ;Tr.i u i ll r ;5;T. ;." I Here Is another,! a rakish youth" ot tiine-4 ' teen or twenty, who would be handsome were it not for a ragged red slash running from ear to chin across one cheefc, ! Ho j , wears, a ; red silk . hsndkerchlef knotted ' about his neck and' a cap pulled down over j his lefr'eye. " He announces that ho Is "terroriste" and dances the can-can like a demon.: He," too, has been in prison numer ous times and is a blood brother to Iiandra. Srrlas. lac Great Britain Sifkts MAY , 1922. Smart Paris ! Women Have Disciwered -ltDdncf-jmth Stranglers and ex-Convicts for t i - - i. f v4 4 ,::,:-;,;:5- V -rr -?-r-T - f -Ulr -iftwi'iv ".a '"nn " i f" Above, One of the Apache Dances, as Interpreted by Mallaso and Cario, Which ! May Have Incited the New Craving foe Caye-Men, Pancing Partners. A third candidate presents his card. It pears his official rcjgue's gallery photo graph And a list of his sentences and the crimes he has committed. He hints ! (strongly that the card doesn't tell the half ' of it- For instance, behind that little mat .1 Iter of the strangled waitress ah, well, if Mademoiselle only knew! And be smiles fiendishly and spits out a few picturesque swears. J ?:',; .. J ;; t:A-' u . y.. And; Mademoiselle who' likes i to be called; that instead jof Madame shivers f with delightful dread, fastens i her baby stare on the unholiest . and ugliest brute ; of the lot, and coos, ("Isn't he just wonder-" nil, cherief I want him for mine? Do y0u -fox-trot, my big bear?'' i -. : : j " f ' l' : 1 , I f Herr big bear does. The losers retire, growling huskily.L They will practise upi a few more arts such las squinting, biting a deck of cards In half and crumbling bricks . between their hands. They will go over their crime records again and brush up the Woodiest.-; A"'-j -.yriA-si-' ' i': -i . "f- j Little bright-eyes and her gritzry vanish among the whirling (dancers while friend husband settles dowift to his pottle of winej -; He seems not to carja that bright-eyes and the bear are putting, on a shimmy that would make Mallaeo and Cario, original ; Apachs dancers, look like partners in an old-fashioned minuet. - Perhaps friend husband is wishing for a 1 Abysmal 1 A ' " Mile. Marie) D'Albaicin, tho Gypsy Beauty, . Whose Savage Dancing Has Created j as Wild a Sensation Among thej Men Thi Hectic Veari as the Apache' Has Among the .Women. t' ! female Apache for himselfc! But, if he does, he only yawnB at fhe notion. By and fey bright-eyes and the bear will return. Bright-eyes, boredom drugged temporarily, is willing to go home. ! 'Thank heaveni" yawns friend husbandy "Hope youli bVsatisfied' for a week now, anyway. Coine onf I've paid your Apache." -1 At the Cafe ot the Green Snake the Apaches go the Dead Man's Thumb one better. Their star performer is Therese, a black-haired firebrand. She is the foil by which many a Louis and 1 Pierre boosts r his nightly income. ; !r - Her role is that of the jealous grlsette, for the Apaches have learned that nothing Increases their desirability in the eyes of dainty visitors so much as to be desired also by another i woman: j To dance with an Atfache who a moment before has flung his sweetheart into a corner, is to enhance the thrill of the experience; two-fold. ! Madame has selected her partner and is Just about to yield herself i to bis arms. They start forjthe dance floor. That is Therese's cue. '; Up from her settee she leaps like a wildcatbrandishing her fists and lashirig her f'homme" with all the bit ter adjectives a. her command.. : There is a scene. Therese, confronting eiitor and Apache, threatens to put a ife in his back if he dances a step with the woman who has charmed him. He Snarls back at her, if : she 1 doesn't keep quiet, he win cut her heart out then and there. Madame trembles. ! 'She is shaken by mixed emotions of fear and delight. Perhaps it would be better if she picked out a bruiser who wasn't ! mortgaged.; al ready by some other woman. ; j i But, before she can change her mind. Tough Jules has acted. One hairy band shoots out and grips the biasing Theresa by her throat, j He shakes her just enough to make her teeth rattle and, with one thrust, slams her bence. In the same in staat he turns, sweep Madame off her feet and Is away with heri !; 1 . : 1 I ' This scene is repeated perhaps a .dozen 'times a night at the Green Snake.: And !for each shake, Therese gets her commis Ision from the shaker. He, in turn, has profited accordingly. For is pot an Apache who risks a knife-blade in his shoulders worth twice as : many francs as one who merely killea a gendarme last week? i He Is take it from the ladles. And from their l.A'r ,1 Ti ;tj 0 ; ll H' .i-i . t- i If ilii