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yh Lombroso Boy. -+2———_—__—— at ts What Robert Westphal Might Be Called, as jiis Head Is Asymmetrical, and His Ears, Nose and Other Features Fit the So-Called Griminal Type. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER, ROBERT WHSTPHAL, 'T last we have nized type of x in the child Robert |, petrested nominally for theft but un- Maoudtedly to be heid on a charge of wmurdering his aged employer by mixing (poison with the old man's bee It takes no knowledge of criminology the easily recog- puthful offender Westphal, boys, in the published details of the Molineux trial. Undoublediy the Molineux story was in Westphal's mind when he sald he put the bromo-seltzer \n the glass of beer that {s eald to have polsoned old Mr. Leyh. It !s @ deplorable case—this demon- stration of the contagion of example. It Js all very well perhaps to talk of criminal tendencies and to point out physical and mental weaknesses that de- velop criminals under certain conditions. The three great factors in youthful crime are poverty, nt of education and defective intelligence. It follows that the remedy ‘for crime must be i mental, moral and soclal @ducation. The innocent boy or girl of to-day who becomes the criminal of to-morrow Is expecially weak in moral impulse, and as in this case. usually below the aver- age in physique and mentality. Good habits in children, the training of the will, the fostering of the God-lice qualities of love and charity—which even the least of these little people possesses as wel! as the legacy of sin—will enable the child to overcome the criminal im- gio satisfy the oh- — “perver that this boy “exhibits many of the physical characteris- (files and pecullarities ygpt the criminacty in- ‘Plined youth. Ttisa fact of measurement Weecord that the de- qgenerate man, wom- in and child rarely Of ever lk a perfectly metrical physi- eal example. Robert Westphal ay be innocent of fie crime ot muraer With all my weart 1 pesrust it may be speedily proved that he is. fs appearance be- {{tokens moral insen- e@ibility and a weak Mantetiect. He has had jY neither mental ‘nor joral training, and physically -he has been fll-cared for. His head fs notice- WESTPHAL Tn this f{llustration all the Irregularities of the boy's features Are HEAD QUARTERED. accentuated. bly asymmetrical What is to say it is irregular; one side wf the face is longer than the other. ‘The hose 1s ill-formed and crooked. WOne side of the head is larger and of a @ifferent conformation, "The cheek bones are high, the mouth Big and indicative of strong physical tendencias. ‘The ears are large, !l-formed and out- Standing. The eyebrows are close to the eyes, “Sqwhich:are dull and shifting The braln measurement ix meagre. Every assymmetry does not neces- warily point to defective cerebral devel- ‘opment, though facial and cranial signs re closely related The boy does not look vicious, but ull—a child who has never been prop- Ferly nourished, who has probably all his fone iNe been obliged to fight agalnat é verty, }. The environment that makes of our Wpouth good and useful citizens by ap- pealing to that which {s highest and best, or develops the germs of crime Aen tha syrroundings are of the low- West, is the key to the causes of youthful ®erlminals, ln ‘the case of this boy, who by his fown confession is a liar and a thief, Shere are undoubted atayistic tenden- Peles. ® Bducation, moral ‘giave remedied these defects, but with- Wout restraint, without intellectual and Gmoral help and better social conditions, Benese instincts only await the occasion ®ana the cince to develop into criminal action. A great criminologist once said that the recital of the testimony In a crim- fnal trial invariably leads to the perpe- tration of new crimes of the same order and mental, might WESTPHAL'S HEAD HALVED, { @howing that one aide of tho face ts lar the other, ae ‘owing to the law of mutation, and we cel Know that great tragedies ax well “ga lessen tc.'anes usually occur in groups. © ® wave of suicide, of homicide, of In- Swendlaries or of robberies ts due un- “goubtedly to the contagion of example. fae would appear that Robert Weat- Wphal demonstrates the wisdom of Lom- ha , Who has sald he could and would Pgeurease crime if he could control the ‘publicity given by courts and newspa- pers to the criminal and the offense, Pit ip Voubtful if this !atest contribution Sto nology had béen made without _jithe inctntive of a recent recital in the eriminal courts. ‘ “ ‘= Rebert Westphal, an unprepossess! sboy, rather dull than acute, and of; mis- J, ¥ Will be maid. for 10. conte pulse, for if we would only believe so and act as though we believed so the force of a good habit is as strong as the force of an evil habit to change. THE ‘WORLD: WEDNES DAY EVENING, DECEMBER 10, lvv., LETTERS, QUESTIONS, ANSWERS, Jersey History. To the Editor of The Evening World: UST a few words to that person who showed his ignorance by asking: “Is New Jersey a part of the United States?" Perhaps if he went to night school he might remember Washing- ton’s march across New Jersey and tho battles of Princeton and Trenton. J. M. Cc. Sweet Potatoes Grow Underground tor of The Evening World Do eweet potatoes grow underground? JOHN M. F. 1800. Yale 32, Princeton 0, To the Editor of The Evening World. In what year did Princeton and Yale play in Brooklyn, when the stand fell down? What was the score? “BLONDIE.” “Longest Battle. To the Editor of The Evening World Did J. J, Corbett and Kid McCoy ever meet in the ring? What was the dura- tion of George Dixon's longest battle? G. M. McCoy and Corbett fought Aug. 2). 1900, George Dixon's longest fight was against Cal. McCarthy and lasted sev- enty rounds. SA Love Query. To the Hitter of The Evening World: I am engaged to a certain gentleman. A very dear friend is staying with me. My fiance's attentions to me are be- coming lees and he {6 becoming more devoted to my friend. What woui advise me todo? HEARTBROKEN, Perhaps you are unduly jealous, His attentions to her may be merely what he constders due to any friend of yours. If, however, he admits he cares for her, give him up; and consider yourself lucky to have discovered the fickieness of his nature before instead of after marriage. Emergency Is Correct, To the Pittor of The Bvening World: Which spelling fs correct: ‘Bner- gency” or “Emergency?” Does the “m" pronounce like ‘'n?* MIRIAM, The Jatter spelling 1s correct. ‘The “m’ is not pronounced like “n."* Médovern Fought Broad. To the Editor of The fyening World: Did McGovern ever fight Kid Broad? SPORT. Days of the Week. ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: What days of the week were the 2th of April, 1845, and the 26th of July, 18437 Mis. G. W. LINDLEY. Sunday and Wednesday. Nearest Evening School In 285 Bast 125th Street, > To the Editor of The Evening World: Please inform me where the nearest evening public school for men ts from West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street. PIERRE. HELPS FOR HOME DRESSMAKERS. MAY MANTON'S HINTS AND PATTERNS. FROCKS FOR DANCING SCHOOL. Wihter brings its demand for dancing school and party frocks for the young folk as well as for the elaborate dinner and reception gowns of their elders. The very pretty dresses illustrated sult auch occasions thoroughly well and are charm- ingly graceful at the same time that they are simple and appropriate to young girls, ‘Te smelter girl wears soft white Persian lawn finely tucked and trimmed with a bortha of heavy white gulpure lace, made low neok and with elbow sleeves; but the pattern provides high neck and long alcovon az well. The waist is made over a fitted boly lining that Is faced to form a yoke when bigh neck is desired. The skirc is straight and gathered at the upper edge. The quantity of material required for 21 inches wide, 3 7-8 yards 2% Inches wide, or yard of velvet for yoke. the medtum size (4 years) is 4 3-4 yards 21-2 yards 44 inches wide, with 1-4 ‘The pattern (No, 4,286) in sixes for girls of 2, 4 6.and 8 years of age, will bo mailed for 10 cent: The older girl is cressed in rose-colored volle tucked and trimmed with cream Venetian Ince, anf wears a sash of Loulsine ribbon. ‘The wais: Includes a deep yoke and is tuoked for hort distance at the front. to give f ® below, for its entire length at tho back. The sleeves suggest the Hungarian idi« and are tucked to fit snugly at their upper portions, form full puffs below, When preferred they can be. made full length ag shown In the small sketch, ‘The skirt is cut in five gores and is tucked at the hips to give a the tucked graduated flounce, The quantity of material required for yoke effect. To its lower edge is seamed the medium size is, for walnt, 3 yards 21 inches wide, .2 1-2 yards 27 fnches wide or 1 8-4 yards 44 Inchea wide, with 3-8 yard of all-over lace for yok: wide, or 4 3-4 yards 44 inches wide. for skirt, 6 3-4 yards 21 inches wide, 6 yards 27 inchea The waist pattern (No, 4,162) in sizes for misses of 12, 14 and 16 years of and tho skirt pattern (No. 4.976) in sises for minses of 12, 14 and 16 years of in win Bullding, New York, city She Loved Him. & Stirring Romance in Which a Music Hall Singer and a Woman of Title Are Pitted Against Each Other in a Duel for One Man’s Heart. BY CHARLE SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Lord Clyde Leyton, @ young spendthrift, mar- ica Hemle. Harewood, a musl:-hall artiste. Sie foes not knuw bis true-name and rank. 16 18 L by Lady Ethel Paulett, who resolves to separate him from Bees!e, Through the ald of Cat. Doreh ho hates Clyde, Lady Ethel meciren an interttew with Bosale during Cly Seance trom home, Lady Ethel persuades Heaste that Cyd future depenta Saher giving: Bim Up Urged by Lady Ethel, Bh leaves bome and goer sback on the music’ hall stage, |A Ore secure there and Identified i ts Fann. Cyd Recovering, he oes abroad for ay return he is invited to visit hi Duchess of “Swarthmore.” Ett Ruerte ‘There Ethel tries in vain to win hla, love and’ maneges, to ‘et him see how. much she Toves ‘him Civde'e tather |e on the brink of nancial ruin Nothing but Lady wthels wealth. can-mave tm, | Actuated by thie, Clyde proposer (o hor and la accepted, les Garyice’n nove) | Condensed from C by permission of “She Loved Him Geo. Munro's Sons. (Copyrighted, 1895. by George Munro's Sons.) CHAPTER VII Back from the Dead. EANWHILE, what of Bessie Hare- wood—or rather, ‘of Bessie, Vis- countess of Leyton, to give her her rightful title? lto bey Jail your fnery S GARVICE,. the fuss, and I always intended that Clyde should take his bride trom my house if It were possible.” Lady Bthel kissed her “You are always so good and kind to ua, she murmured, "I ‘would rather go to Clyde from you than from any one else {n the wide world. Clyde accepted the Duchess's offer in his usual quiet wa: ly F selection of dresses h for costliness and beauty could not be equalled. “T mean to create a sensation when we come wick to town next spring, dear,” she sald to the Duchess when the old lady hinted that so many dresses were scarcely necessary. T want Clyde ud of his young wife, don't you gee; and I ftend that he shall be. Od ’ sald the Duchess, "Well, vou'll want an extra maid to Took after a I belleve you are halt killing your present one with work, as tt is." Lady Ethel laughed. “Because she looks pale? she sald carelessly, “She always looks pale, deart"* For she had not perished in the muste | hall fire. The body buried beneath the! Why shouldn't she work? I don't keep her for my amusement or for any BESSIE ACCEPTED A MOMENTOUS DECISION. THE COMMISSION, tombstone bearing her namo was not hers. She had essaped from the fire, fly- ing unscathed among the panic-stricken wretches. Next morning, reading the account of her own death in the papers, she saw in the mistake the chance for which she had longed—to blot her name from the earth, to stop forever Clyde's searching for her. She accordingly changed her lodg- Ings and sought other moans of livell- hood, ‘Turning her aatural tastes to account, she quickly became adept In tho art of flower making and in design- ing the floral deooratigns for soclal functions. So proficient along this latter art did she become that her services were soon in demand throughout fashionable Lon- don. Of Clyde she heard literally nothing, pleasure I get in viewing her death's head countenance.” But Agatha Rode, if she were over- worked, as indeed she was, made no complaint, but sat up half the night over her mistress's things, working with the silent patience which characterized her, Lady Ethel, notwithstanding her hap- piness, had not treated her maid In any Kinder tyshion than she had been wont to do, and all through the busy time as If she were addressing a slave whom she had purchased in the open market and whofh she could send to the whip. ping-post at her sweet will and pleasure, And Agatha Rode ‘never, by word or glance, seemed to resent this treatment, Silent and Impassive as ever, she did her mistress's behest with dog-like How should she who scarcely eyer say a paper or exchanged a word with liv- ing soul excepting the landlady? In her plain black dress, und closely velled, she attracted little attention as she went to and from the shop with her work, and her quiet, reserved manner exacted a respect from Mr. Barker, the proprietor, which he did not always ac- cord to the rest of his work-people. * © © © © # 8 The news of Lady Ethel's betrothal to Lord Leyton was duly chronicled in the papers, and everybody declared that It was in every* way a most admirable and suitable match, It produced an especially favorable Impression in the city, and was of Immense advantage to the eminent firm of which the Earl was the head. The credit of the great firm, which, if {t had not been exactly shaky, was not #0 good and unquesticnable as before the panic, was now fully restored, for it was rumored that Lady Ethel on her marriage would invest a Targe sum in the business, Lady Ethel did not throw any ob- stacles in the way of an early date for the marriage. “Tt shall be as you wish, Clyde," she said, looking up at him as she rested upon his arm, with all her passionate love in her eyes. “If st would make you happy, and you wished it, I—I would marry you to-morrow’ And she spoke the truth, “Ot course I'm happy,” ehe said, to the Duchess, when the old lady remarked that Ethel reminded her of a child who had just been given a coveted toy, "I suppose I ought to hide my happiness and look demure and rather sorrowful, as most girls do when they are first en- gaged, the hypocrites! But [ am not ashamed, dear. I have loved Clyde ever since—oh, ever since I began to know What love meant, and.pefore, I this: and am glad, glad that I am going to be his wife; so glad that it worl be no use pretending that 1 am anything else. 1 should break down in the attempt It was arranged that they should be married on the first of December—but Uttle more than a mongh from then— and there was a great deal to be done. “You'd better be married from my house in Grosvenor Square,” said the Duchess, “It {ns of no use opening your father's house for the day or two that will be necessary; besides, 1 shall like faithfulness. But sometimes, in the middle of the night, she would pause in her work and look fixedly before her, and a smile which Lady Ethel had never seen would creep around her thin lps. Two days before that fixed for the wedding Clyde went to town. “I want to get my hair cut,” he sald with a smile, “And I expect Stevens will Ike me to try on my marriage garments; besides, Ethel may want me, To his bride-elect he was the most devoted of cewalters. y Not for the first time he was worried by the consciousness that he waa sin- ning against himself and Ethel in keep- Ing his marriage with Bessie secret. He aught to have told her before this; he must tell her to-night, He would have told her everything the night he had proposed to her, but she had atopped him. and thouth he made several ef- forts to do #0 since, something had al- wava prevented him. But, when he attempted to broach the subject. Ethel, for reasons of her own, would hear nothing of it. “But. Ethel.” he persisted, “suppoe- ine {t should be of such a nature as to change your feeling toward me?" She smiled up at him with tender, passionate gravity, “Nothing could do that," she safa, slowly. and in a low, intense voice. “It you were to tel! me that you had com- mitted—murder, it would make no dif- ference. Ah. Clyde! Do you not under- etand that I lo you, yourself, just ay vou are, and whatever you may have | done or left undone? I want to know nothing. nothing, nothin; What could he do? He lay awake nearly the whole night long, brooding over that past of which Ethel would hear nothing, and when he fell asleep, Bessle—his dead wife—came and stood beside him, and looked down at him with her tender, reproachful glance. | He fancied that her lps moved, that she was trying to say something to him, Out he started away with the effort to/ catch the words, and realized that it, was the day before that of his marriagh with Lady Ethel. That morning Beasle recetved a post- card from Mr. Barker, asking her to go down to the shop in the afternoon. “Oh, I'm glad you've come, m! | he he spoke to her and ordered her about |% WHEN NOBODY WANTED ANY ANTHRACITE, ‘The early Pennsylvania coal barons trled for twenty-seven years wo get peo- ple to buy hard coal and went bank- rupt half a dozen times before they could make householders and manufac- turers believe that “stone coal," as they called it, was good Tuel The firat anthracite sold in Philadel- phia brought $21 a ton, and was as great a curiosity’ then as it is this winter in Chicago, says the Chicago ‘Tribune. Twenty-seven years after the first anthracite coal baron began bust- ness the price of this fuel in Phfindel- phia was still $8.40 a ton, and in the eighty years since then It hag not reached what the public would cal! “reasonable limits." Anthracite was discovered tn Pennsy!- vania as early as 1790, but nobody knew how to keep {it burning after it had been ignited, A few early ‘barons had falth in {t, however, and bought a tract in Lehigh County, where the coal cropped out through the surface, Tpey formed the Lehigh Coal Mine Company and were the originators of all the troubles that have perplexed anthracite users ever since ‘The Lehigh Company was in advance of the times, however. The country then had wood to burn, and people who Ihad wide fireplaces and andirons coulan't see any use for the ttle hard lumps that took so much trouble tq fgnite, and refused to keep burning when {gnited. The Lehigh Company bullt a wagon road down from its surface mine to the Lehigh River, nine miles away, and rent ‘a boat load of the fuel to Philadelphia, when the water was high enough, but there was no market for It. Then a navigation company was formed in 1798 to clear the Lehigh of stones and snags, and interest In the new fuel revived. The Lehigh Coal Mine Company, which had become dls- couraged, leased {ts property to several men, but they alvo failed to find @ market, The people went on burning soft coal and wood until the war of 1812, when the blockade of the coast Uy Great Britain made Virginia coal too expensive. ‘The bankrupted Pennayivania coal barons then tried a third time to get the citizens to burn anthracite, Five boat londs swere started from Mauch Chunk for Philadélphia. Three boats were wrecked on the way, but two Teached the city safely, where wire- makers bought the fuel for $21 a ton. Even then no one knew how to ignite the fuel properly, according to Prof. John Bach McMaster. The workmen at the wire factory apent a whole night trying to get the furnace started, and then shut the door and started home in Aegust. One of the men forgot his coat, how- ever, and came back to find that the closed door had solved the draft prob- lem, and the furnace was red hot. After that anthracite was in regular demand by the manufacturers. ———————————SE the Duchess of Strathmore. There's a wedding on to-morrow at that big house of hers in Grosvenor Square, I did*he: the names of the parties—John, what’ the name of the gentleman who's going to be married to-morrow?” But John had been badgered and bullied into a heavy fit of the sulks, and did not oreo te hear, ate “It joesn't matter. Please do not trouble,” said Bessie indifferently, “My ‘mind‘s all of a whirl this ‘morn- manager, “or T should rt We've got carte-blanche, ci yy amount of money, and I should like the decorations to be tptop. ‘There's only one room, but it's « b one, and you'll want ‘all those, an mote, perhaps.” and he nodded at the hampers. “I'll send a couple of men and two girls to help you. Bessie, little guessing what hung on her words, accepted the commission and started for the Duchess's house, (To Be Continued.) [a4 CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought ae LopWetn Bignatare » € Amusements. EMPIRE THEATRE. Broadway and 4th a. Ev'en, 6.20. Mats. To-day & Saturday, 2.15. Wi. FAVERSHAM int IMPRUDENCE Blondines, The Chemical Lady Has No Place in the Gallery of International Beauty—The Blonde All Right. ~ Though, and the Brunette a Queen. President of the Italian F an experimental Don Juan were in- | terrogated as to the woman whom he preferred among those who are born at Paris, at Rome or at Vienna he must probably reply thus: For 4 mother and a daughter I would want an Englishwoman For a sister, a German. For a sweetheart, a Frenchwoman or! @ Russian, For a wife, an Italian or a Spaniard He would then surely be provided’ with a garland of flowers, all beauties, with beautles of various kinds, In this garland, independent of race and nationality, we can distinguish in woman two diverse and, characteristic types—the blonde woman and the bru- nette woman, The blonde {s naturally first from Scandinavia, then Russia, then England, Germany, France, Holland, although she appears sporadically in the brown races. The brunette, on The contrary, appears in Italy, In Greece, in Spain, in Portugal. Blue eyes, gray or greenish, nearly always come wit blond hair. To the dark tresses belong black or brown eyes. ‘The Andalusian maiden {s at the pole of brunette beauty, the Engilst girl 1s at the pole of blond beauty; and, as God Is just, he has given to the first the defect of a short stature and excessive languor; to the second hands Ill adapted for caresses and fect which can scarcely fall to be seen as they escape from be- neath the frock. But when an Andalusian Possesses the coloring of the English- woman, when she adds to this her hands and feet already small, then we have divinity upon earth; the two superior forms of life, those of the two most splendid creatures in the human race. When the European is transferred into another hemisphere does she become better or worse? I belleve I can say that the woman transplanted to America 1 bettered, Of the daughters of Wash- ington I know of nothing else to may save ¢hat they are more beautiful than the women of England. Ay to the wom- en of South America, I can speak with certain authority, having known them for years and being shared with one of Never. BY PAVLO MONTEGAZZA. Anthropologicel Society. them for more than half my Ife, Ae for thelr beauty, it is needless to say that It {s marvellous. Let us recall the women of Lima and of Porto, The Ttallan woman, physically Beate ful If she is a brunétte, ia artistic, pas sionate, ignorant, modest; she im mensely pleases the man of the nort. ‘The Frenchwoman, serpentine, feeble of aspect qnd indefatigable in the mo¥t terrible struggles of love, full of graée. without being beautiful, triply feminine and triply delightful, 1s amtable, clever, coquettisp without a rival, The Spanish woman 1, magnificently and sovereignly beautiful. Extremely religious, extremely ignorant extremely Jealous and extremely indolent is her character, ‘The German woman 1s less graceful in outline and movement, but she fs solldly built to resist the injuries of time and of love; blonde, white and azure eyed; made more for prolonged tendernesses than for momentary flashes of love. Ingenious, studious, far more cultivated than other women: an @m= | | cellent mother of a family; passionately — fond of the dance and music; idealistic, spiritual, imaginative, always disposed” to admiration and to mount the high horse of enthusiasm. The Englishwoman {s of a blond type, at the opposite pole 4fom > the Spaniard without beimp iter Inferior. She !s beautiful m a different way. When she !s powerful in figure—dnd she often ts—she unites all of the most com- tradictory qualities, of richness and @aintiness, of grandeur and grace, is the perfect woman. Reserved to the extreme, active, a slave to human Ne spect, and, Ike the German w devoted to her,family, much lke @ she dominates’ men allke by the of her heart and by her intelligence... The Russian woman ds an Oriental transplanted too soon to Europe, where it follows that she, being beautiful <i culttyated, unites in her ali the “st seductions of woman and of the savage — initiated in the refinements and short comings of clvilized life, She ts rotic, extremely affectionate changeable. YOUR CREDIT IS AS GOOD AS YOUR CASH, SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS. Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit} ° Credit eet iamondsees: Credit Credit Credit Credit creat Watches Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit Credit J Credit Credit Credit Gredit Credit Credit Credit Write to have our man call with * samples. Meyer & Postley Jewelry Co, 50 West 22d St, ,;Phone, ‘8311-18: (20 Stops from 6th Ave.) Open Evenings. Credit eet Jewelry Amusements. Broadway, 30th at. BIJOU FIFTH “et ti' WEEK OF THE TRIUMPH Mabelle Gilman in the Most Refreshing Lyric Play of the Year, vz MOCKING BIRD BY ROSENFELD & SLOANE. RIPPLING MIRTH GET TO JOYOUS asUSIC. Amusements. VISIT PROCTOR'S. #9:8idur. Henerved Every Aft. & Bve.—Full { Continuo , anserttie Lae, the Bry relia dat SL (Garroll, Keogh@eBatlard, 45 Btar Hl Ni ve le Tom's Cabin, Miss Lee Willard. All Fa { Alvin Joolia, Adelaide Hata, TO-DAY 25, Res. 9 Big Stock. Vaudeville Howan) Fowles sath St. Theatre, ss "3A"% au st MATINEE TO-DAY poy me oaTee” | ona Limerick Towa Next Week—JOB WELCH in THE Pi METROPOLITAN OPERA. GRAND OPERA SEASO: Under the direction of Mi TO-NIGHT, Dec, 10, at Fri. Eve, 21, Dee. Bat. v., Dec. Bunday Eve. Pop. Dec. 14, at 8.30.Grand-Pop. vEBPR ‘PIANOS UsED—— The. Lex. av. Marray i iricon Boe, ibe be; th Yr. H.V.Donneliy@tockOo. MR. ORBSTON CLARKS: HAMLET. ACADEMY OF MUSIC, 14th St. & Irvi Ae A Pure Melodrama with Thrilling NINE. THE NINETY AND Pricos—265,50,75,1.00. MATS. Wed.& Sat..2. By. MARY MRS. FISKE xi eeBxtra Matinees, Christmas and New THEATRE, dst at. and BRONDWA, ene ae THE SILVER SLIPPE CRITERION THEATRE. Broadway @ wan. Evenings at 8.15. Matinee Gaturday, 2.15. JULIA MARLOWE o47#Ber. KNICKERBOCKER THBA, — Bway & 38tn Ev'gs, at 8.15. Matinee Saturday at 2 + hg R. Ne O. MISS MAXINE GOODWIN — ELLIOTT ia ‘THE ALTAR OF FRIBNDSHI GARDEN THEATRE. mn KEvenings, 8.16. Matinee Saturday, E. S. WILLARD casiil, Thursday Matinee, ‘The Professor's Lor. MADISON SQ.THBATRE, th st, uF, Bway Bventngs, 815. Matinee Saturday at 2. Liebler & Co's ‘By Mary AUDREY, fans METROPOLIS. "ANRC, DAY ATS“ GOCQUSA Restier Price POR, MATINEE. _ Beats GARRICK Byenines 63 CHARLES FROHMA Manager CHAR atinees To-Day & Saturday, he = | Bevery effort to eatend Miss Mannerin, geqeiuent at thie theatre baving failed on a. Extn of previous contracts with Mra, Langtry and Attsa Annie Russell, ble to secure anot rk at the present t) NESS OF GPRALDIN Mindrawn tn the height of Its success, but Wilt return to New York at another theatre Mittin the next few months and continue In: Jeanitely. ‘The present engagement at this theatre will terminate Saturday, December yr Renta for all remaining performances how on eal MARY MANNERING G) tn “Clyde Fitch's Latest Success, must be temporarily said in the midst of his flurry, “We've lzot a very particular order to-day. iobn, put those labels on. It's from ‘The Stubbornness of Gereldine, ’” extha" marines Siras, Holiday Geata Now Ready. WEST HURTIG & SEANON(35°* cee ieaeh epee ere es Oro, Weber & Plelds” HUsic | Brostwar a som, HALL. | Mats. Tuss,, THE MUBICAL > Aosta, TWIRLY~- And Burlesque, HUMMING BIRDS & THE | MATINEE TO-DAY, DEWEY World Beaters Burleetaaay i ; : Bldth St’ The Matrimony Clud. “Wenerwurst Ina® f Ki MATINEE To DAY. PASTOR'S 19,575, Zokttbes DOLAN & LENHARR. au SHON Sa DELLA STEWART & DAVE FITZGIBBONS, | HERALD | Pre. at 8. tata (sar stidnn MANSFIELD THEATRE. wm __ JULIUS CAESAR. PR Biway, 29th St. Eve. 8.30, Wikao. “HEIDELBERG.” Aisa GHSINO rsctz"e Se” A CHINESE HONEYMOON Agtauez, SOUSA. “zinewe West End "iit" 4 COHANS, Sunday Night at 8.20, EROR'S Original Co, In 15. (POPULAR fa | PRICES, ARCHING HOME) LAST WE TURSDAY, DEO. 16. Dav MRS. OSBORN'S Eve, at 8.45 sharp, Mats. Thurs. & Bat.,2.90. ‘ATORE and his Dang, | WALLACK'S OF ih eth. 12" HACKETT ails CRIS VICTORIA, 421 VIOLA ALLE Grand--DanDalyis:, 20 87, AnD SEAS, vi Wihves or nuaga’ | ext week, A Remarkadle Casm O.THEATRE Spice D BELASCO presents {C20 DA! ‘CHE BATES in | OF THE: yp e «fad AnD POLL y & 30th. Dre. 8.90. Mate. % Last 3 Weeks "Mat, To-bay and Ghte, lle 7 v8.16. Mal Nett ose AMERICAN MAT. DAILY (Bxo"t Mon), 260. | te ne BLAN Bway, 7th HARLEM fren. 8.15. Matinee rovssllt. MARTIN HARVEY g!t HOUSE Every Sunday Night—SACRED Cone EDEN]! worn IN WAX. New Groups. MUSEE ne NEMATSGRAGH.” ESIIR “i RAGGED AERO.” vr 236 | GIRGL THEATRE, Bway & 60th’ St, Herbert Stock Co, & Bijou Brooklyn Amusements. OLUMBI i es Ev'g Prices: 10,