The evening world. Newspaper, May 31, 1902, Page 7

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)

and Miss Slater seemed annoyed. T saw were speaking about. Eva Fairlayse was a8 a dead woman, and her eyes/were fixed on without seeing it, She was swaying « little, was calling Mise Sliter's attention to It. shen Cecily had gone back to her seat Miss. with all the alr of having Just thought of it, emldy ‘You can go to your place now, Hva.” Riva took two steps, eame down sm and lay stone ati And al fa su kill Misa Siat 5 She had fainted because sie had no breakfast—whe was working all breakfast-time—and had deen made i ’ to stand too long, And she had been made to standigy ie had nothing to do with the subject of the lesson, Mita we soon found it was not just a simple and ordinaty Wy BY BARR VY PA IN. faint. The doctor came twice that day; next day there were two docto: The servants told us |Isva had got pneumonia—which may or may not bh been true, The governess told us practleatty no NEXT WEEK AT THE THEATRES. New Musical Comedies at the Casino and New York. a P till now it had always been my Idea that Mise Seer ie ee La Roc eey aaa axe and fenced when we asked questions; but they 5 ot made of ordinary flesh and blood, | ™ ouviot her ite, § he ts and she ath pa 1 rateven ie te ee ater athe ceat [loat her appetite. One was not allowed to bring a {mitted that Eva was serloualy ill, ‘The hows I believed her bones were of her solid leather, She was never tired, In the very hottest weather, when even madame was a little slack, she way always at it, hammer and tongs, just as hard as ever. Instinetively sient, and nobody sang about Passages. ‘That night, I found out afterward, EVa | delirious; madame wanted to sit up with her, but {Slater got her own way, and watched by her night, on the following morning a professional book in at breakfast, but Eva used to write her work our on a sheet of notepaper, so that It looked as If she were just reading a letter, One morning 1 hap pened to wake np at the ghastly hour of half-past five. I found IT was uncommonly hu y. and I re P had a now git] last term 8 | membered that I'd lett a ble box of chocolate |in my It I had known that 1 should have behal She war very pretty good t ‘s to Miss Slater that morning. : GK In one of the clase-rooms, It was cold and dark, Beit J a natured, but, ax far ax work was con ate Wall SALT thouRhET ehaneb iit, Yolllare Aetlaunposad te got better, but it was some weeks before we” the biggest imaginable Idiot, It was not that she was la out of your cublele at that hour, but ¢hen at that |®W anything of bad at one partioular thing; she was particularly bed | your there is nobody to see what you do. 1 arrayed called up Cectly and myself. ‘Eva is do at everything. Out of school she talked like any or-) myself in a dressing-gown and a blanket, and started |t0-d8Y." She said cheerfully, “I'm afraid she'll ind | dinary person, and ahe wan rather Kool at eames: bUt! of Ta taken a box of matches so as to get a light |P@ther dull tn the drawing-room by herself, You two) | tf you put her down to the piano or gave her a OOK. | iy the clasa-room, fut | didn. ed those matches, |C42 Miss the last hour's lessons if you Ike, and she became a helpless paralytic cretin. She didn't |45. there was a light—one candle—in the clasa-room |%4 have a chat with her. You needn't come into €h know anything; some days she couldn't oven mpell her|aiready, and beside it was Eva Painiayse, enying, {@Mne-hall for tea: you can have tem with her, ’ own name right. shivering and doing sums for la belle Siater, She], Naturally Cecily and f were delighted. In marog She worked hard, too. I've heard madame say that | jumped out of her skin when I came in; and I don't |2¢™¢'s Own sacred drawing-room we found Eva, logis kenlus was only an infinite capacity for taking pains. [mind owning I was rather startled to find her there. [TK auite well, and having no end of @ gamo with ® tell, this Eva Fatrlayse took all the pains she pos-| oy, you did fr {ttle black kitten. er the first enthustastlo greet +3 ings were over, and she'd told us she was quite Then one afternoon madame” nome, Amy! sibly could, but she wasn't quite am talented ax a) wei,” 7 safd, “what on earth are you doing?” } . atuffed walrus. It waa chicfly because of her tremen-| «tt, arithmetic with Miss Slater this morning, and |’! ieee she exhibited ace kitten with pride, [eis ‘ " . cane , jdous consctentiousness that Ceelly took up with her. )y don't believe I've got one right. ‘he answers come see Ga page HERE : : AN = Miss Slater got her knife into Hva Fatriayar. ‘The jdifterent every: times” “From Miss Slater, of course. She's simply always one thing that Miss Slater cannot understand is tha You silly lttle pigeon, you'll catch your death of giving me things. She's Just the most perfeot angel some people connot understand things, That's q little cold. Been up long? Thlene arena weakness in In belle Blater—as we sometimes cn!! her] "About an hour. But I can't understand them, and | “wert, Ceolly always tries to think the best of evenpe: |Decause she isn't. She got it firmly into her head that |¥ can't do them." She began to whimper again, whlch | yoay: put even Cecily was a little flabbergasted we Eva must be most abominably idle, She told her #0, } was not a bil like her. I'd never known her to cry be-|4y, : and Eva, with beautiful mournful eyes, like @ tired! fore cow, would say that she always tried to do her beat “Stop thet blubbering,” I said. “Let's have a look Eva knew nothing and did’ not get on: therefore. In at them.’ 1 did three right for her and made her be-| Eva went on. ‘They've all been very the Slaterian creed, Eva must be fdle, and must believe she'd done them herself; and 1 left two just{ nurse was a good sort, too; she left more than a week punisued, She was punished, too, punished with every | iittle wrong, so that Miss Slater shouldn't get sus-|ago, But Milas Slater was the best of the lot, and ‘a form of punishment known to Miss Slater—made 0} picious, ‘Then I fed her with chocolate and made her] I've seen the most of her. At the time when t was [stand all through the class while the other girls sat) ¢o pack to bed and told her that If T ever caught her] really 111, did she do any teaching?" |down—kept back when the other girls went out—for- ij again at that time T’d report her. It seemed that] “Yes, just as usual,” sald Ceolly. ‘pldden the dancing class, because she loved dancing] sie generally did tt on the arithmetic morning, and| “I can't think how on earth she managed it. @he and did that well—made to get up at unholy hours—/ the cold was enough tp Kill one, She said I was an|was so much with me—even at night. When one'a fl |deprived of her pocket-money—everything, In fact.) angel and Iissed me, which was rather cheeky In a}one gets fancies for some particular person, and I 7 |that the ingentous mind of la delle slater could devise: | girl younger than myself; besides, I bar kissing al-| sed to cry when she went away. And after f wasn't land the queer thing Is that that sweet and patient | toyether ‘il any more and the nurse left, I should haye been mule, Eva Fairlayse, always seemed to think that 5! It was in the big class-room in the morning. A bored to death without Miss Slater, for they don% deserved the punishment. She didn't know her work, | class of the senior giris were working at their desks,!want me to do much reading. She comes and and therefore she got punished—!t was the usual ar-| watting for madame, who had valled out, An- all sorts of games with me. I expeci my cubidie will rangement at schools, and only what she expected. lother class of juniors were also at their dexks, with | be about the swaggerest in the whole dormitory next As a matter of fact, one might as well have punished |the exception of a Falrlayse. She had told Miss|term—she's given me such lots of things for it. an elephant not being a cockatrice. Slater that an estuary was a wild bird, something Ike | There's a rocking-chair, and some pictures—but PM ‘The only governess who seemed to be able to teach |an ostrich—I didn’t hear it at the time, thank Heaven! | show you.”’ Eva anything was Miss Frobisham. Madame|—and the other giris had hooted. ‘Therefore Miss|. Eva became thoughtful, and sighed deeply. wouldn't, Miss Slater couldn't, and faulein and made-| Slater had commanded Eva to stand up for the re-| ‘What's the matter?” sald Cecily. motselle didn't. But Miss Frobisham never scared | mainder of the lesson. “Nothing much, 1 was thinking. I never used to any will present ‘Fanst," tn English, et the |her, and always tried to find out why Eva couldn't do| Presently, Cecily, who sat just behind me, got up|know my work for Miss Slater, and | was always ane nd Opera House next week. Rose Cecelia |some particularly easy thing, and why she gave some |and walked the whole length of the room up to Miss|noying her, and then she treate me like this, Whats nea will appeer es Marguerite and Barron Ber-| particularly junatle answer. Slater's desk. She spoke to Miss Slater in a low voice, | beast I was!’—Illustrated London News. ial Ie gant for Faust, Tha company bes tad ~ == ts a suceaat i pie arabe _ Amusements. yer tied! §~©=HARRIGT HUBBARD AYER Se ate “What!” [ exclaimed helplessly. Five theatrical novelties 1s not a bad record for the first week in June Workers will have plenty to con pensate them for the closing to-night of the five mos! successful plays secn this sea son on Broadway. In place of “Bezuty and the Boast,” fi | a i Oe te. wuset (a Fire- : Y Management of It =| UT "Du Barry” A‘ Modern Magdalen, zat ee ee eee ; SWEPT BY ARCTIC BREBEDS. EVE 84 Soldiers of Fortune” and the Osea: Mataget Omar Mammersteln's ble epent 7 Applies Balm to Wounded Hearts. | sycrnsy snctic themes. ‘eves. on in ports Mite. Rachel Laya, the "Chie his ‘ask 11 prob- from London, where the original pro- king foxcures will be retained Raxt werk ‘Threatens to Be Indep mt. bas Lbsaiaaah Pelli alte See anes Ave ot at : duction ts in its second season. indicate Rae ne eee ere es gee: Dee Sts ATO mapany | Gempste oles cueng with nian | jehat it will prove appetizing summer en- CL reenter Fee et ues eal taarrica |) think you wiguialesttis All eich imate y | seats (adulis) 5 rs tertainment. ‘Then there will be a few Heaaie May ‘baw found e, auccenor to for two years and intend to be Gnider ten years. 35 combs. Mae nights of Viola Alien as Julla in “The fale singing. 3 Waite. Rowe.” in about a year, I agree very nively| ters definitely before the wedding day.) ag ire Feearvedgeaza $1” NIGHTS Hunchback" for the lovers. of old. com- When Quo closes towight at thelwith my gentleman friend. There is one| There will probably be differences of! me test ‘Henerved’ chairs fi Bra: Academy, Manaj Fred Whitney will ageia when| opinion between you and your husband ; SE etn at vate [fault about him. He always anys whei y Kine “Herald Square Thestte, wmes prebebly |he gets married he'll never aak his]on very many pointe. While you @ means more wife's permission to go out eventngs.| still lovers make up your minds that jedy, and a few nights of Grace George iin’ * ‘ou’ for the curious. Sum- » tmer opera begins to-night at Terrace arden, where refreshment goes hand in pe Fal Rice's ; Nothing will sto \ fhand with, melody, and lastly | ‘The nightly at: Wallack Do you think that’s right? L, R. | these shall cause no inharmony in your Aer plitan ‘ersaren pCheperons jtincne “Of aspires Ladera) You will beat bind your husband to|home. Give up a little on both sides . . sun. : Jeuceesstul road musical fomedics, Nay, | Mt Terrace Garden in Hast Fifty-elghtth (book is said to be unusually clever. | NW PLAY BILLS. nib vine Nise hie freedom, If you| Bear and forbear with each other; re-| . é " a adele Poe s tee street will be inaugurated with Mill- oar “Joann Barri" {s the title of a tre-| 0! i + | — is Out, Full Orch. "Continuous. " roadway, Acie . Marle Dressler will be the juterlocu- face | Spect each other's rights and privileges ian art, Fu eecker’s “Black Hussar.” ‘The musical !tor ‘in’ an old-fashioned minstrel. first | set romantic drama written by Lorraice Holts, (make hig home a Derr? zeeent is —and even prejudices—and agree to dis-|AND his inspiring Hand in Summer-Nights’ Cou~ a The Messrs, Shubert, who have ob-| ‘rector will be Signor Montegriffo, and|part with which J. Sherrie Mathew's| which ts to be preesnted here for the Arat} for him he will spend as much time M cert Carnivals. Kryl.. Cornetist Girls, } & Waude, “sour Perens falned control of the ‘Casino, hope to}in the cast are Bolle Thorne, Waith | Svnday-night benefit at the Broadway | time at the American Theatre on Monday. The| there as is possible, and, when he “goos| agree somotimes, Cologue Fonmees, Arete Atty Lost, 24 Hours 4 revive the anotent glories of ihe Moor | Sinclair, Clara Lavine, Edward’ Favor, | Mheatre will open, he end men will bel oss ty in no way a copy, though ft treste If you will faithfully follow this coun- Vaude h play house with their production | Harry Luckstone, Douglass Flint and | Lew Dockstader, Dan Daly, James gee ee Netgear as tae sel for yourself I think you will make |, / venir Mats. for Ladies. Pull Ore, day evening Of TA Chinese Honey: | J.J. Cluxton. Wor Stnuay sey ning's | Powers, Harry ‘Bulger, Joseph Caw-|of the same band’s hom hi that he ‘moon, They have brightened up the | Concert “Cavallenia, Rusti Will be |thorne, Thomas Scabrooke, Bddie Foy | reigning auccess of the present dramattc season DAILY FASHION HINT, | your husband's e so happy Weraar —t and promise a remarkable scenic | sung in oratorio form. and Joseph Coyne. The minstrel show |—The Black Patt! Troubadours, headed by Bie- will not care to stray from it very often | BROADWAY THEATRE, wae roauetion of the musical comedy wiiich — will me teldwed by ve. vaugeye Teo iinea tanta pata ceaceay teh Kor W. Read Th f Colored Jublioe Bing Last MATINEE LAST NIGHT, din popularity the tuneful) Grace George startled the Pittsburg a oe AHOH LHe AGAR ECRA WEY, 29° . 46 r ‘omen eaders oo! ie She “Walked Home.’ Walter Wentworth, 75-year be. ei iyeisi present ‘The Climbera’’ at the Metropolis The- | Fo! ‘ 3 her display leciotional \erner® WH) takepart: ftrenTe Rady of Loma will be Evening World. Dear Mrs, Ayer: D ‘tom “Hartson's) Welondyke Ponpmoinenlignniiteeae tera “ piosucslory oe. TRH ARTOM" | Miss MASON’S SUCCESS. Murray “Hill. Theatr john Jusper'a Wife 1 have been calling upon a young Indy 4 sammie vee the Innd of pagodas, gorgeous xowns I present her in the same play il the songe with which “icing | one ot Frank Harvey's plays, will _gloee, the for some time, and lately, while our) Hae Hay let” a Midge Tae ( Py Freoo9a Le De Cee, Cee gil ha r Theatre for four per- jo’ has charmed Broadway, perhaps | 52000 tt ee ec ayety company ‘will furaiah atrolling, I asked her to come through ®- THEATRE Mr. & Mira t ene. weed Feces Beaerooke, s) beginning “Pauraday, Ee ae a ace ravcainiy. tise | Best, Wegk's ontertalament, at Lodi ne ala) &@ certain street which she refused to| ¢ A ari ber dathon da a aury H1Tvea.Lex.av. d& 424 st y fl ea e, ae b * Y a oh tg pric 0,08. MAwin Stevens, Van Hensssiaer Wheel-| so pronounced was the reception ac. (a litte of the ordi Teception the song | enjoy ote Monday, evening, Louie, Her sie do, and walked directly home, leaving | y site, * Sank Ev'g prise tie. ibe. t! 5 jepp | corded Mrs. Fisk enga ‘of | has met is dug to the first of the Bum-| noroittes I presonetagt me standing at the corner, Would it be C " DR BILL At the Manhattan Theatre nner eC pamela hy Stet eraastan tn ere lasers ee tuarse ean or wait for an apology from the young| | E. Bia cra HE, Donal ag Me Pema i Viola Allen comes to the Garrick = for herself a choice place in the hearts! Seven ee Peer aa ee yey cries lady? I cannot see how | offended her.| H[JBER'S GASINO, 1494 Gt THR _| MATINEE TO-DAY, Theatre for the first three days of the nes” has been knocking | 2 the Audiences that nightly are crowd-| Tyny Pastor's, dee , comes spree LE aud Opening. Big Vaudevitie B TO-DAY, Week, presenting Sheridan Icnowles’s | , famous comedy, “The Hunchback.” | Miss Allen has been playing the role of Julla on the road for five weeks and | has been highly praised: Messrs, L.lob- tng Daly's f 4 Broadway theatres atl tows iy . Growing applause each aight when| lon", Lu ehieI Gneltineaeed teed Will only, get its fret |sne appears in the part indicates that] aro, Cou ead iq “Moder Match” Mhiraiag nickton Te Mor |the admirers of her clever stage work | Firtn “Aven act at th fadav night: In prep- | are {noreasing in number. The knowing | avenue wi 4 © Led-\ones are predicting for Miss Mason|‘twenty-Afth street, Hill & Silvieny: et Fifty. 'H & 69TH 8Ts., Tt acems to me that the apology ts due) TERRACE GARDEN, Aer at fs ‘ou rather than from the young) | PARISIAN WIDOWS, Lay, ‘It certainly was not gentlemaniy| isnt, THE BLACK HUSSAR. mw Night, Grand METROPOLIS, 7" cry At One Hund: UMIM glya” dally concerts ler & Co. have provided a splendid L to allow her to go home uneacorted after! ‘{'o-morrow, Cavalleria Rusticana lta Pe t0r Bast Ly anic equipment for the producti rer hits beet ple De dvancement to a more proml-| eighth. street, ‘Trovollo and) tho Twenty-third jai Perel } » CAval ISUICAMIA. | searixie TO-DAY. Otis in ynne Gnd en elteter company, in yr wre [OF the Doreador,” jaheney anvein ano” cant enn saverallsineeres ious otra, Han a having asked to accompany her on a) _QPEN-AIR CONCERTS EVERY EVE'G. WWk=Amela Tingbem't Co.. The Cita hiben” Fisnpton, Aubrey Bouc eping Beauty and the Pees ence ny tre caver Uetm ame roran| panesa comeaion ving Art studies are pleasant § y did — ; Jameson Leo Finney, Adelaide Prince, [Panes 10 fil the ranks of his chorls- \iantes have made her since “Kein apere of the, rp standing on the vorner? You were not AKABENS AOC conined wets @t| AMERICAN {225% ANDTE AYR Leslie Alien and J. H, Benrimo, sensational beauty show that will hold D002” came to Rroadway. Laat USAIN ramalia MIIl, te opammat tor tee tled there, were you? It really looks as Aye lnaRe tt rasa tretian: (MAN) DAILY CATY UF NEW YORE” Interest all summer. “the Chaperonca | ALONG BROADWAY, Tea psec rye is ouritinallabyaialcgsarurstnn way : TO-NIGHT, 20 PORN | Meson Next week, Janae Du Barr, BIQU THEATRE, Last Tham. To-night the season of summer opera ig full of tunefal melodies and the! The James W. Morsieaey Dugiish Opera Com- | Marine t vou was becauss you baal In\some Sunday Night, ¥ : RT. 22. Tos: way offended her sense of propriety. | 145 6 Theat HAM COMPANY, STORY WITH SAD SIDE, FAMOU SSE mon SERIES TIRELESS MR. YERKES, Perhaps the streot you asked her tol jim Qh healls | eye y” ae nA MODERN MAGDALER. , Apropos of the inauguration of Prosi- Referring to the many schemes of-! walk through was not a reputable one. TO-NIGHT ACAPEMY_OF MUsiC, iy st. & Ine fh Beat Palma in Cuba it may be interent- R | itrerring to tne Any rchemes of. To cut this nlne-gored skirt tn ened. | Walk throuk wan noc & reniiaile one | TORS GRANDPIE tan ei | 4% QU oO VADIS aa so rotate a iitile tneldant which oe | Paes ies Taondon adequate urban _{Fanaportation | 40m site 18 4 yarde 31 Inches wide, 73:4 | choone the route, and 1 can sto no F SOUVENIRS 23" her thas epee al 1.00, Mat. To-day, 2B ee curred at Old Point Comfort recently, the Blectrician, publighed in that city, #9 i son for your remaining on the corner ra 2 ¥ when President Palma left this panes NO. 1, ways: "It really ous anit 19 thle mag-| inches wide or 48-4 yardu 44 Inches wide | oe ied ome alone unless |PASTOR’ LTH ST. 8 93 Ave GRAND ‘ F i Matinee To-day, for Cuba. The Cuban President and hi | inincene project of the «irelees Mr, {Will be required. = ou knew you had displeased her. ; D 0 AND WY OTS im |\CARMEN, ie Yerkes wo have the one practicable) The pattern (No, GM, einen 2 to Ml ri tt over in an honest, manly spirit. | MOYO MAGK < LAWKENOH, JR88 DANDY, say [Bier asic ia ee steamer which was to take him to hie solution of the problem of organising | WAlst) WH! be sent for 10 cote, | die a find you owe her an apology do THis BATCKDAY «1 BHOW KEITH’ § and” | 20—GREAT country, and, surrounded by his staff, . & central authority to control London| Bend money to “Cashier, fhe World, oo Gaiay to make it frankly HEATRE, Bway & 394 at | ~ 1h ae i Be and Be —_ ‘waa receiving the final honors from the underground railways. As wos char- | Pulitzer Butlding, New York City Manhattan Mey wat oes York. [ MAT. TO-DAY TWLL OF FE United ttates, says the Pttusburg De- By CHRYSOSTOM. wid by that great man, MRS FISKE in DIVORCONS oa spatch. A detachment of marines trom eased are they that mourn.’ Yet captive by envy, nor beret by any other ‘There Is no une of hav- For f and LITTLE ITALY. the navy-yard at Norfolk and a com |gurely all mon wall them miserable. | pa pany of artillery from Fortress Monros | wor therefore Christ wrought the mir-| sess mere drawn up on the wharf at Old Point, and there waa a large crowd of ppectators, A farewell address had just been made by President Palma, and the soldiers, sailors and people had giv ‘three rousing cheers for Cuba libre and TRE.Hroaaway LAST NIGHT, od 40th pte Excursions. 40 = thelr grief ai ve wholly pos-| in big ideas unless you have the money ill ie Di: ral area them. Much more wii! they who| te carry them out.’ Mr, Yerkes ts not ious and Nervous Disorders |*%:,7 ct-|mourn for their own #ins, as they ought | the only man who has big ideas on Lon- ; ; d | ; euraicn iis IMrONTANE A BEACH \itled| te mourn, whow forth @ eelf-denlal| Gon traction; but Mr, Yerkes appears Sick Headache and Constipat ion, een ee ae ae ROCKAW. Y BE and tne rllions necessary to carry Chars TAKE gumiee 2. THE WILD ROSE vA { und the millions necess carr: ye" . <a uaricgng canny BROOKLYN BLBYATED | LINE and out.” Possibly the plans of the Tenkes promoter were the first which showed BW fA TRE MKh ato LONG ISLAND RAILROAD. ROBERT "EDESON oF 0 Sundays and Holidays Only, & practicability suMelent to command | CHARLES Bway aah Ty PHOUMA CRITERION, Mat Mata? | Leave Beoalway Ferry hourly 6 A, Mb tel) ; : ae woles beforehand, that in such ments as these he might be ei to credit, And here again he desig- | greator than this nated not simply all that mourn, but, Next, what is the reward for those? all that do so for sing; since surely that| ‘For they shall be comforted,” said He. ? Tell stat had just boarded the special “BLESSED ARE THEY CHAT MOURN.’ Kind of mourning is forbidden, | Where shall they be comfor othe ite new President. As these cheers died away over the water of historic Hamp- und that earnestly, which relates to!me. Both here and there. For since the HP-lanything of this life. thing enjoined was both exceedingly fon Roads an elegantly uniformed mem= i wy ose then he too calla blessed, whose | burdensome and galling, He promiscd en Set of Prasdent Peina's staft siopped |, roy is ot tha kind: yet not simply |to give that which moat of al made it] OLO STORY NEWLY TOLD, 5 ) enthusiastically, ‘Three choers {them that sorrow did se designate, but| Mght, Wherefore, If thou wilt be com-| In @ reannt speech Benator Carmeck CRT Peete caldent Molein'c—~ unde nirange {them that sorrow Intensely. ‘Therefore|forted, mourn: and think not this n|eaid that Gen. Junston was the great- LKSLIE CARTER oi2 ater feok came over the crowd, Realising |‘! he not way they that sorrow, but! dark saying. For when God doth eom-lest captain who ever wielded the jaw- lo DU BARRY. a 7 they that mourn, For thie command- fort, though sorrows come upon thee] bone of an ass, says the Pittaburg Dis- OPENING cy" i hls mistake instantly the Cuban etait r : F e snowlakes, thou wilt] patch, ‘Tw reminds Representative They cure Giddiness, Fullness and Swelling after meals, Diaziness and Drowsiness, |CASINO , uxt wontay, JUNE 2, ROCKAWAY ‘BEACH H . Ci the confidence of capitalists. NIGHT. & nce this seweon, Officer corrected bimself, I mean Presi. | Ment aguin is Mited to teach us ontire| by thousanda Ik | . rh ” i ¢ | Holt o!, for If those who grieve for| be above them all, Since In truth, the] Curtis of Kansas of a story Chills, Flushings of Heat, Loss of Shortness of Breath, Costivenesss | 4 CHIND St: q 9 a A Gren with vin. And the cheers were) aren, or wide, on any. other relation|reluras that dod wives are always far| “What did Samaon slay his enemies peel the Skin, Peres Roop, Beene ‘ful Dreams andall Nervousand Bremb- | Peete ge Le SEATS ON SALE a STR, aN LOCUM one trol © ‘ondneas for | greate 0 vith?’ asked Sensat! ¢ First MALL #0 5, Mal Te-hay. 4 i MVERY ayer FRE Eo RP ST betty ere en ee ar, ors Weal Storch, od Liver and Impaired Digestion |CULY GLASER “« HOLLY VAROEN, won oft NBAY DURING JUNK, A MARE’S EPITAPH. thelr sorrow; {f they aim not at glory,| at Mourn to be blessed, not after the] No one could er act iike Magic". Every sul ever ie sonnet pvited to try a Box of these . Wont 201 FE seventies : Y Value of what they do, ‘but after His} N°. ch fil be acknowledged to be WITHOUT A RIVAL. {ATLANTIC i AANLDEN, Bowery naar Canal at wal In the oehtre of @ eld at Wavernill, [are not provoked by Inaults, nor ied | swn “love foward man ‘omnis eee Pa ripren hans. ad to HAM'S PILLS taken as directed, will quickly restore females to complete wane’ “ atte inte’ La Veen | BAY atin anita, Be. a ell i a Pa ] 4 eh whore of an uae was the| health, ‘They promptly remove any obstruction or irregularity of the systeni- ’ Mi covering the grave of w mare which died NEW CUSTOM HOUSE. SPONGES OF RUBBER, prompt reply ‘ | U, & A, Denar, 268 Canal At. New Verh te bexas, 10, and 286 WOILT IN WAX. New Groups in 1862, inscribed as follows: ‘Polka! Boston ts clamoring for « now Custom | Novelty is shown tn @ sponge that hax —_—__—— — MUSHE orchestral Concerts "Veal ! 4 @he never made 4 false step. Koclo-| House, and expects the next Congress! made its wintes 8, 19th verve.” A reference to|1o appropriate money for the erection | manufacture ebapter and verse ahowe the following: }of a bigger and betier arr “Bor that which befalleth tho sony of ling than the present old atructure on|alate chiefly of hol pearance. It Iw of Russian TALL FAMILY: Phare Pe A vt ad reemen HN 8 | aie tn Cary Gad dee R UMA Ets? DALY'S. KING DODO, | itaeytoatin's tt te date ed bulld-|dark brown sponge, but while it oon- 3 ) HOUR, whatever sola |#ons, of @an Jone, Cal, measure among WIRE SCREENS AVE. & 101TH Mat. TO-DAY LiL. heso | them Bt feet & Hes of statur men defalleth beasts, even one thing |State street, The city's merchants say | material there 1s of it Is rubber the| " CUSTOM ESTAR a tt aT A STEAMER GRAND REPU! efalleth thei the one dieth, wo] that with collections exceding $90,000,00 |eponwes come in (wo iaed, oblong, with | tallest and shortest belng two sone, who | ROEBUCKS bd we nae tate Hroubedonre dieth the other.” This Is probably the}a year and much money now paki for] rounded corn Whether, being made 6)-4 inches and s Ki CHEAPEST : Q aide promiseu the ‘ bf rubbs ae povtively. The only inatance of @ teat from ihe Berip: [rent of outside promises the port merite|of rubber, they are less likely to form ‘hel combined wi tures appearing on & memorial stone to) the new building and the @evesamen!|rerm repositories than the genuine antl and are ai ob eae luuaeel, h anes ul mould prot by ervoting it clea remains to be seem, feted nl a . " MADE WALLACK'S, Wine | SUNDAY, JUNE det, UP Te BERT | fone ica RIGE SSH TO WEST POINT AND NEWBI SEN Wai al wane | it di

Other pages from this issue: