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BY WINGROVE BATHON. Author of “A Creole Courtship,’ “A Modern Virate,” OHAPTER 1. “Well, then, we won't J Phe eye in following the course of the sweeping} Y curve at this point received in each glance the 1 ‘ turesque panorama of miles upon miles of sugar plantations belonging to the estate of which the house was @ part, and from the water to the marble steps of the residence, lining both sides of the driveway to the river landing, a well-kept lawn stretabed away tn gradual ascent, broken here and there by a laurel or a pine, with the usual clump of palmettos at its foot. ‘The sun had set and the Venetian blinds of the house, having survived their usofulness for the day, were drawn up to allow every possible breath of alr to waft in through the open windows, carrying with with a sigh and a astened his horse, his wh “I'm certain Houston and that you e “Who would you rathe “No, 1 don't want to ch but this !s what I call a “Oh, it's not too bad, tentlous reply. “It could not be much “Yes, It could, wife had married some eremeegy rier -anpgneneer | window shutters, and the steps were banked with a] this place. ' mass of jasmine In all its evening glory. j At the foot of the grassy slope, at the river landing, [ the northbound packet was awaiting the disembarka- j tion of passengers, the majority of whom started for the house amid quick jests and general laughter as }s00n as they landed. ‘As the boat swung out into the stream again on Its trip up the river two horsemen caine within view on | the river path from the landing below, and reined In {as they caught sight of the gayly decorated house “and the laughing crowd. plek out that word ‘ruin: “I didn’t pick it out, oid it Just slipped out, Jam when I der taat To: th plea: ace seems just like Is bits, And amounted to “If Thad Mved ile ft a “Well, Vernon,” said one of them, “home again, Sen?’ {tseems to me T would bi “Yes, Julian, ‘home again,’ but I'm afraid it's a sad| to the place where I was porn, it was a plcayune piace!” “Tam glad. ‘home-coming for you, old chap.” and where my gra “How so? I come home to a wedding. That's gay tenough, surely.’ “Don't Jest, Julian, please. I hardly feel up to It.” THE DELGARDE. SUICIDE. : f the Deep. a little.” § Na any RELERANESERES by a curve of the Mis-| ‘Tuk? This ts no time for talking; this is the time Py aiss! 5 rish of St. John, inj ' F fg Leary ty low, white mansion,| “I Keow,"" eald the other, dismounting and tying his ewe stories in helght, suMclently far back from the] horse toa tree, “but If you'll get down off that horse, fiver to allow fron: its veranda a commanding view | Vernou, and lsten to me a few minutes, I'll be obliged Wi isan 2 = to you. Lam in need af a little advic Senerece in ictowtne v1 suppose you are, Jullan," his companton re- nd added, y 8 I might have returned to find my being about to marry some ono else.’ jeach ono a wave of perfume when the wandering] “I wish I had your even disp breeze stirred the magnolia grove at the side of the yes." j house. ‘ou needn't. If you had you might be what I am— | The place, arrayed for a festival had lights gleam-| a rulned gan,bler.” } ing from every window of the residence and Chineso| “Well, you may be, or you may have been, a gam- t lanterns from every tree around It. Garlands of roses| bler, but I question very much whether you are | were strung along the posts of the verandas and the| ruined. Look around you at what I have done with Look at all that sugar! this place for the last seven years have paid more debts than ary one man in Louisiana ever had before! And they could do it aga customed to thinking of m sinson Crusoe for seven years I'm almost crying, I'm so gla garde answered, quite simpl: 1 ke, joke. Let's go down and talk He dismoun: with ay na er married my rbe? Julian Delgai ange places with you, elther; nasty position. not too bad, groan. was the sen- worse.” one else, Instead of simply ition and steady ‘The crops from ain, if necessary. Yet you ed,’ i fellow. I've become so ac- elf in that character that grateful to you, really, But nce had so much more, this st pleayune out of two) Place, too. It never ek y e powerful glad to get back born, where my father was ndfather was born, even If Del- | Phen show my dear nearted enor pout your mak! t worse, T/ins have done ev T could to improve what ttle | “IE know. T know you left of your fortune. A look at this place alone | happiness to-day ts that you should come back here proves that. It's true T thought T was doing tt for | and find her about to marty agatn.” my sister, because, as I explained to you, those sail Well, she never loved me,” | for anything after all the worrying [hi | ors of yours from your yacht swore you were drowned | moodily Ana the only blot T have on my Delgarie answered must have forgotten or lost, and I opened tt and de- gan to read jn it, thinking to find even away di {n the Pacitle some trace of my love for her and the love she once had for me, but I didn’t. 1 found in| ft nothing but expressions of her weariness of me ant half-defined longings to be free.” “Temper, I suppore, after some fresh experience with your dissipatios ave had over “DON'T JEST, JULIAN, PLEASE! THE REFUGEES’ RETURN. y. I HARDLY FEEL UP TO IT." when the ‘Spaniard’ went down; but count a little in| my favor, Julian, for the thought that we went to) before you disappeared, but I never belleved {t and I gether and that 1 was your executor.” “Ido, but I appreciate most that done for Marcia’s sake, because it 1s a great happl- school te don't believe it now.'* which you have} 'T know tt ts 80. Listen, Vernon: “Ihave heard you say that before, even years ago, The the ‘Spaniard’ went down I found In the stateroom ness to me to come back and find she has not wanted} Marcia once used one of her old diaries which she “You may be right; [ don't know; but {t seems to/ me a woman would not take the trouble to write such things unless she felt and thought them.” “Perhaps; Lut the best advice I can give you ia to go to her now and have an explanation withher Tel! her you love her. Tell her to forgive you for the pastpast and to look forward to the future. Tell her that all those habit sof yours that once made her s9 unhappy died a naturat deata down there in that island, as, Jullan, they must have done. ‘Tell her you are going to begin your life over again. And do so, too. You can't blame her much for having been so dissatisfied with you. You tried my patience many a me, 1 know, I'm not reproaching you, old fellow, but we may as well look things In the face. But she loves you, I'm sure. You know how much she once cared for you, and people don't get over great passions © You have never gotten over yours and you had whatever It was she wrote In her diary to help you, if you had tried.” “T don't blame her a tit, because I helleve that my disposition killed what little regard she ever had for me. When I found that dlary at sea, thousands of miles away from her, just after she quarrelled with me, and had before me the evidence of what I had always half believed, I felt that everything was over between me and her, beyond the shadow of & doubt. And then that storm came up and my yacht foun- dered, and I give you my word, Vernon, I didn't care whether the spar I clung to for two days afterward lasted or not. [ may have teen very much to blame in the old days in my treatment of her, but when the fever of play came over me the blood that moved through my veins was my father's and my grand- father’s, and I was not myself. “But she never considered that; she never made any allowances; and she won't make any now, and wouldn't If the time ever came again when she ought. I'm Juilan Delgarde, neither the best nor worst of men, and so far as beginning my life over again with a lot of good rerolutiors is concerned, I could do that; any one could; but I have tried too often In the past to control my passions to be fool enongh to say now that I'll control them in the futur “Well, you could try; that's all any one could do." “I could try, mais oul, and I would, if that was the only thing to be considered, but it is not. The most important, the only Important, thing with me !s Mar- cla's happiness. She does not care for me, that T know. I thought so for two years before the yacht ery night | her to give my Ife for her happiness, must arttve went down, and I have khown fo since thee might. Atterward, on the {sland, two or three times when Mn d parts of that diary over again an@ very i IMmped back Into Wie water to end it all, that arly The parte Uy rts were the only rable, and for ver, down there eut me mo! seven yenre Dve been reading tt on the Posiflc, tll they irned Into my sot rord word, I'm a sorry I was ever found on that Island, and that the dice T found In my pocket and which | have been playing with seven years, have never once In all that tima answered ‘yes? when [ threw thera, down there, to find out whether I should give her this famovg release she wanted, “But no! T must be torn with Jealousy! Tumust live a sol'tary ife on a desert ‘sland for seven years! I must come back here at last to find her abdont to become perfectly happy with the man she has waited for 80 long—and I, God help me! who love her as Much as she hates me, who have cared enough for Just In me to snatch the cup from her lips as the crowning act of my worthless career! For two pins I'd get on my horse again and turn his head down: stream!" “Nonsense! You will do nothing of the sort. Mar cla has waited seven years for you, That's long enough, surely, She is young and she has been lonely, T have been with her very little, as I have told you, because [ have always been very busy with the af+ fairs of your estate, as well as my own plantations, which tike a great part of my time. I am convinced sho 1s marrying because she Is tire. of living alone; In fact, she has admitted something Uke this to me in her letters. [ have not seen her for a month my- self, as I had just reached town from a trip North when I met you on’ the street In New Orleans this morning. Don't worry. There {s very ttle heart in this wedding, I know.’ “It looks lke ft, does ft not?" said Delgarde, bit. terly, waving his hand toward the gay scene at the top of the slope. The sound of guitars and mandolins came clearly through the evening alr and a wave of perfume from the flowers swept down to them on the breeze. erely appearances,” Houston answered, looking at his watch; “come, let's go. Leave the horses here and we'll send for them. Let's go In through the garden at the side of the house and your old study. It's mine now, and I have your old rooms above it. We can go up the little staircase from the study and get upstairs without being seen, and shave and dress, Come on, let's get It over. You're mot afraid to meet your own wife, are you? You are as pale as a ghost." “Tam one, That's what I feel badly about, But start ahead; I'm ready," “Bteady your nerves. Think to yourself that it is almply a cast of the dlce."* "Oh," he sald, stopping short; th “there {s a risk, , of course not,"” Houston replied, impatiently. "I only sald that to calm you. Suppose there was? You have played for large stakes often enough. Be calm and come on, or we shall not have time to ares “Yes, but I am not alone concerned in this. I have changed my mind. I'm going back to my Island!” He walked back and laid his hand on the bridle of this horse (To Be Continued.) A box turban with a crown formed) wholly of a brilliant and apparently | very game rooster! Such is the latest millinery ovelty from Paris which In) the last few days has made its appear- ance in New York shops. e Nothing | it has ever been seen before either {h showcases—where the most extravagant creations usually remain—on the city streets. And at first glance one would think that the woman who would first wear the exceedingly novel creation on Fifth avenue or Broadway must bu brave indeod. But this latest dream of the fertile Parisian miiner is undoubtedly as pretty as it 1s novel. Quite the most conspicuous hat shown among the early fall importations at one of the leading dry-goods stores was one of these rooster turbans. It was made of chiffon mingled with chenille in a very effective black and white pattern, the only trim- niing belng supplied by the shimimering green and black of the large cock with a red velvet crest forming the crown Paris has evidently planned that the coming autumn shall bring with it a} taste for cock's feathers, for where the whole bird is not used his plumage has ‘been woven Into a wondrous material of which the hat Itself is constructed. Oni of these novelties was a large | the Gainsborough order made ent of black and white cock's f ranged after the fashion of the ‘80 popular In -the ¢ Another bird which the nonste makes its initial appearance on fashion afte millinery 1s the cockatoo, “will be seen on many of the 8: ‘? fall hats. But the rooster leads, and proudly on the heads of the fash|c * "women of the coming season, wi © over the commonplace by th 1 and for ants, have ° parrots tha ehtet ornan’ the nent larity—the may ry Fifth avenue e with all the brilliant plumage of the barnyard. season THE ROOSTER HAT. NOVELTY] ‘The mention in a press despatch from Farmington, Me., describing a drown- Ing accident of Lake Mooselookmagun- tle, recalls to mind the fearfulness and wonderfulness of the aboriginal titles with which some of the charming Inland waters of the Pine Tree State are bur- dened, says the Rochester Democrat. Those who urge tho retention of the Indian names of American localities and natural features’ have much reason on their side. Certainly those who have substituted for them modern English names have seldom been happy tn their selections. But such aboriginal local names of Jakes and mountains as Med- dybemps, and Passadumkeag, and 8! ladobsls Bashaheegan, Umbacook: Mollechunkemug, and Mooselookmagun- tic, can command undeserved admira- tion only from enthuslasts, They are undeniably cumbersome and are hardly likely to strike cuphontously on the un prejudiced ear Possibly they are re- plete with poetic suggestions, but they LAKE NAMES IN MAINE. A WELL don't convey them very clearly. Theodore Winthrop had the poet soul in him, but he strove in vain to get poetry out of the names of some of the Maine lakea he loved best. Mooselook- maguntic suggested to him only the ef- fort of an Indian hunter, with an ex- ceedingly imperfect command of the English language, to tell how he had unexpectedly seen and quickly shot a moose, and Mollechunkemug suggest- ea to him nothing more romantic than the thought that the lake had been named by some woodman after his in- amorata, his short-faced Mary, his Molly of the chunky mug Now and again the residents of locall- ties aMicted with such names as these petition the powers that be to change them to something better fitted tor ordi- nary daily use, and are therefore abused as vandals by all cultured persons in other parts of the country. But it [s pos- sible that the most cultured persons and the best of from twenty cents to fifteen cen An agent will cal THE NEW Y 55 Duane Street, 45 Wea 26th Stroct. Telephone Electric Light is the unsurpassed illuminant— electrically lighted gains in prominence—goods are more satisfcatorily displayed—more easily sold. Aker September first the maximum price for Inpandescent and arc lighting will be reduced average use of the Iamps exceeds two hours | list of Electrical Contractors of New York, on request. GENERAL OPPICES—S5 DUANE STREET. Offices, Contract and Inspection Department, Telepdone 1061 Mad. Sq. LIGHTED STORE. advertising mediums. Thestore ts per kilowatt hour, Large discounts are made when the datly 1, or we shall be pleased to send you our ORK EDISON COMPANY, 1980 Franklin. 117 W. 8 Westchester Ave. 125th Street. Telephone 2638 Harlem. ‘Telephone 663 Melreas. would sympathize with the vandals If they had to summer and winter with Mollecnunkemug ana MooseinoKmaguntig Amusements Excursions, and the rest; had to say all that every ime they were asked ence they came or whither they were going; had paln- fully to write ft all out every time they sent forth a letter or a telegram. i BEAC DAY at VALTZ EQUALS A HALF- MILE. Dancing {s a pastime proper to the | Keavons unfavorable to outdoor eport, and apart from its social advantages t !s entitled to regard, {f only by reason of the muscular eXercise which {t ¢n- tails, sines this ts indispensable to health, says the London Medical Press, A correspondent. who is also an ama- teur statistician, has taken the trouble fo calculate the distance covered by neers In the course of an evening. He finds that a waltz of average duration represents approximately a run of thousand yards, This Is the longest dance, with the exception of the quad- rille, which, with Its four figures, covers nearly 1,800 yards. ‘The mazurka {s only equivalent to about $00 yards, and the HARR “Have You Writte headet RIET HUB About Black- jar ent of the ope mediately fills up again, whieh am ach tine in given be carefully followed. For two or thre ARD AYER REVEALS BEAUTY SECRETS. weeks until the skinjand dry the skin thoroughly before ap- polka to 800, while the lazy pas de quatre is barely 700 yards, Carrying DANCING FOR HEALTH. uy I “THIS SUNDAY and HORUS OF TONIGHT Tren PAIN’S {xcu his statistical ingenuity still further, he estimates thet the usua! series of dances at an ordinary ball, beginning winterize, Semen TO MOD EVE SLC Tepresente no less than 56,00 steps By Ly 00) PSIGHT THE equivalent to nearly thirty miles on level |ATS!. M. Famor's BOSTON! Browns Presenting RONIN HOOD Admitting that dancers are tew in! yum CTOR" degenerate days who go conscien,| VISIT PROCTOR through the entiro Hst of dances | 81H $1. ! rev arabia Provided for their entertainment, the | 3p) §],} IDEA | | th T N fact remains that each man and woman | Fone \ TENN who does his (or her) duty accomplishes STH ANE.) a very respectable amount of exiiiarat- | !25TH SI, exercise, The value o 4 physiological point of view Is greatly Hf enhanced by Ite exhilarating ottects, ana || DEWEY this is one reason why the daily “‘con- Bast ith st stitutional” falls to yleld the health-giv- | MOONLIGHT MAIDS BURLESQUERS. THREW GRBAT PARCES—GRAND VAUDEY 25c. and 50c. ing effects of cycling, golf or dancini the only drawback to the last-named bi ing the lack of fre ing, the lack of fresh air and sunlight, ment and salutary outdoor exercise, POPULAR PRICES ~ terially to the enjoy:] ACADEMY OF MUSIC. 1. effects of all formas of | °° exo moina “eHe oneat jto rinse the soap well out of the face Dr. Lyon’s Hows, 35,60.71 Amusements BROAD WAY THEATRE te. poe| force #7, (As? Repu POSITIVELY THR aches a ee Mean: FIRST TIM ON AN E. GEO. W, ‘LEDERER'S. SALLY die ALLEY. Mucle by Ludwig Englander. Mook by Geo.V.Hobart SEATS NOW ON SALE, { m KEITH'S Theatre, nr Gth ave Mats Wed w Sat. j A BIG HIT" —Joarnal, Wesley Hovenquest’s production of COR 4 ) Dear Mra, Ayer: creasing tn size and becoming imo /!s thoroughly softened apply one of the] plying the cream or skin food T um seventeen and my facd Js all|mallgnant In appearance, cigais or skin foods, formulas for| At the end of two or three weeks of | Dlackheads. 1 did pot always ha Blackheads may not only be removed which may ound in these pages,| thy treatment the blackhead may be +'"them, Also every little while L get a] Without leaving any scar, but on ! Make this application at night, after| forced out by pressure of the two PERFECT Jot of pimples, Kindly give treatment. | of them the patient need never again be face well with a pure|thumbs If a moderate pressure will not ve A, 7, | troubled with them, if the advice here h and hot water, Be sure|esect It, make no more herole attempt, If you are suffering from blackheads]! ————— a —_——_. a | but try a lotion or the ereen-soap treat= the enlarged pores hay caused by ment, which rarely, if ever, faile x en ducts and it will take a jong | | » J PIMPLE LOTION.—Carbolic acid, 18 Pe Gretetase ines sernsl| WON $30 FROM KING EDWARD, [arm orag a area: eircorme thus] MM ELEGANT TOILET LOKURY, He a : “King Baward wan always intorinat in {™4™F2 (4nnin, 99 xeaine” alcohol, 1 quia] Used by People of reflnemen\ I have nearly a hundred letters ask: | THE GAME WAS WHIST T itn i ofits Rie 1| ©; vose water, 26 fuld ounces. Mix} for over @ Quarter of a century. 4ng for treatment for blackheads and = 2 = SUE : ldmvatatuinway in “ 1 dinsolve, Appl and morning | veyplmples, 1 hope all the writers of them ate ' ‘ i SPAHR ; mirase thi repli, am st iw impomalbls B aden Madi navi my 30.8 ritlgh of A Wall from a tnd Mead, Amusements H vewhere so many letters deal with one fon ly & willKnowa | § ¥ ! ince of Wa 40 Dear Mrn Ayer a at Oe hg enjoyed an tating ne ne on 1 id you kindly Jet me know If OP ave ton to write separate letters £0F ance with iii Edward of wid sald , Anderson.’ That wax | ther inything that will muke the GRAND Housm {Sate Aug. 23 them. Jain, and at one time won 8% from him his way natine nd good |halr grow? 1 have Jost all my hair in fOUSE Seve BLACKHEADS—Blackheads {ndl-| at whist, suys the Atlanta Journal Atured. {front and am almont b i in ‘Ny dela ROLLICKING cated by little black specks on the skin, ‘nd am almont bald. Kindly ad-| f [ROARING chiefly about the n forehead and!) P'fof Anderson became —acqualr Mt another time T was at a bali at Ye me What will make It grow again, | € OW MUSICAL c ‘chm, Each speck tructea With the King w rving as ( which the Prince of Wales was one of TB, |e SCommOY? Suslet of the sebuccous glundy, and if States Knvoy Lxtraordinary ond Mints the chief guests. 1 called i leanttn Aid maseage with the proper lotion | yo “TO A | 3 Se ee ter Plentpater to Deamark, from present Mra Anderson, and he ‘eft in!” to make the hair row on 6 peMmmice Ja made 20 AGIEE AMO ROIDRG| Noi es PST RG EM Ly nl tbo yp a than any otter, treatment|? PERSONS Ir white worm may be pressed out Upon | Ward: ” " eta © of Wale ret Bernard or Danish hounds know Ny nn : si ve | married dau: r of King Chriatla : anal ive rr mula for at ointment YD ‘Thea, Biway & * ©” careful examination this so-called worm! id i s diy tr and went | ; fi ICKERBOCKER * proves to be a mass of hardene Si ane month at Copenhagen every, » the dizice movements as nicely | fram whieh ; avn had good reports, KNICKt ‘ ck EO Etihad, sebaceous matier, which has amu ma db | MN fox Onin there ts nothing that | ap Wil, Close with the thie ahape by being pressed through ¢ Ri of Werson saw K our Tho Prince of Wales had a gooa|™} 1 tas @ the place of aculp massage, THE WALD ROSE, jouth och ates ane »| small outlet of the follicle. The black| times a week during the latter's annual knowledge of American politics oa aineteaine Ree ee ae , OF GARDEN. Teh Ma Ady speck, giving to this Uttle oylinder of] visits to Coperiagen, whlgh would make while cluttng with me he sald: 't have | Oe" é af PAROUEY: WeAuOee; ARAN Ox Madisn Sq. Boor eae. ue Adm, 606, fat the appearance of @ head, is simply |the total number of thelr meetings about me from Germany. whore L met |? ured aus a aunce, F WPA BY NIGHT 2 ries | accumulation of dirt, There ts but/aixty. In speaking of Ingulahed countryman, Blaine. ub Well jnio (he scalp. Shampoo) Sore yt Ny | e way of getting rid of blackheads, {ing at these tavetings, Prof. Anderao 1 cnarmiig man, a man; | eee 8 meee oer ° 4 <o HAM MELOTEIN'S, 424.0 B waraTt ‘ and that Is by forcing them out of the seid he'll nover b ur sldent Ter VaR ACPO T BE CPOE TA aa tad “clogged pore. They cannot be drawn At the diplomathy rece WA att th point of sch nf 4¥} ENCLISH HUMOR. | BADISE I php ; an AAA ack whence they came, and in press-| royal palace there used to be Kamen of Se eral pos King Kdwurd| lord Kitohener Je ati) with we fits oeilin TART OF { i thems. ant before the skin Ie property | whist, Once 1 Grew a ele with the superior of i apean users, | Lordenip Is na Inconic as ever, anya the (00) PATURI a softened and prepared for their ejection | ihe Wrinee of Walos, tho Austrtan Min pi King Oscar of Norway and Swe-| London Tatier, In an. interview which | pc: Mal. Ta " patient wiuat bo very careful not tol inter and Prince Hans of Denmark, At den. During my residence abroad A retined 19 a wall noway fcurnaliat Casino is) A CHINESE HONEYMOON lure the delicate tarue, causlny an Laninwitting 1 won by 10) polnts, getting.) met them ail, and base my opinion on] was requested by Kio go to the Mext HERALD sisi. ( /THE DEFENDER ‘@ personal acquaintance, letter in the alphabet, THEATRE, | Bas, | ‘ugly tile acar, or, more Ukely, 4 en] avout $9 from King Edward, ifs 4 sia BRIGHTONB ANMAT TA SHANNON'S ,2,, BAND | AFTHRNOON FESTIVAL OF MUSIC. ORCHESTRA OF 50. 9G ANCIENT ROME and | nd MAID MARIAN. G00D-BY | &, DOCTORS. | ites, MONDAY MAT. iG THE GREAT ACADEMY, QUINCY ADAMS SAWYER. 100, Mate Wod.& Sat 2 Eve..8.15 FLOAT! NG ROOF GARDEN. RAND REPUBLIC. Pet, exces Brooklyn Amusements AUTOMOBILE RACES | Entertaiging Beyond Comparison. Mim A itractiona from all'parta of the world. A 4 riders and steer-catcbers from the Plains of Mexico. Grand Hi EVENING, Gien Isiand clam bale, Dinners a Ia carte, Deutschland." Dairy, Boating, Bathe rag, Bowling, Billlerds, Pisb. -AIR CIRCUS PER. E DAILY AT 2 P.M. TIME TABLES TO CHANGE—STEAMERS LEAVE: pier, 9.00, 10.00, 11.00 A. M., 19.00 W, 3.45, 515 P.M Beidy Brooklyn. 9.30, 10.90, 11 D FIREWORKS | {F0S.TI0K MGHT | ANS Mat se: ing. | Cortlandt wt. only: 11.90 A. M. for Rast 324 2.00 Mand 1 P.M. for Corte 0, 5.30, 6.00, ee ly Matinee TO-M'W EVENING.| L Mth at, Aes FS eo 9.20," 11.00 A. M.. bait bourky 40, 4.40, 6.10, 5.40, “6.00, 6.40, 7.10 ), $10, 340, 9.80, 10.60 P.M. Bxew Fare, 400, La N, 1LLE Y. 2% minutes after S4th at, N. Y., via 89th ot, Bo. with BR St. & Irving Pl, FARE we 4 Battery, 9 PM How IN TOWN LONG HRACH i’ ih ue RON. Y, week dara, 7, } AY ADTs Ton eaturanten fete Seat 4 PATTEN LINE © 50c.-LONG BRANCH AND BACK-50c, 80:.-ASBURY PARK AND BACK-80c. EACH ROB'RT KMMET, ‘Wi pays TO-MORROW HIGHLAND BEACH—PLEASURE BAY ~ a ’ i803, Admisson 50 cts. A NEARBY SEASIDE RESORTS. i 5: Gv W LTH aT. 8S AM, BOP mt. q PASTOR'S WON sr & aD AVE Grand Stand $1.00. Giyuxpavs soi aM. 124 2402 Me pF CoN tte Geman | eeeuuarienyy tne 109) St, 30 4 Johovam, Davengart & Lorelle Hajmard tas BRIGHTON uitfilis | EYTUUNO onaseat 718 08 aoe Be me onhera Family, Dedini @. Agihur, faitiea 8 r 7 TERRACE GARDEN GH “ERMINIE, NIGHT Summers Nighte’ Band Parnivale ate) 815 ALM, 9.50. 10.40 A My 10.90 and 11.10 A.M. 20 and 445 P.M Mit Arctic Hirweres we ‘ ALL C Eves $35 Mae vot 4 tat q | METROPOLIS iff, Wise PiRsda, ~ 60c, NEXT WrEK—THE P HONOR SENERSL SLOG Musee, eben Camesnie and Voral e cite |) BAN aR aMO Aa, 12) Fah ey TAR 4, Jann .! GLEN OVE aod GLENWOOD. we Ne wath Man 1 Ma | . PORT $1.50 y au ainanket gate , CHERRY BLOSSOH GROVE, v.n0",4%s (NEWPORT es cM, Desbrossee street ALTENBORN iss a JAUSS AND OWENATIC BUNT, ea ee one