The evening world. Newspaper, December 22, 1902, Page 11

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, SACO LI ee Ole le HOM MAGAZI _ HARRIET HUBBARD A AYERS YER'S ADVICE TO WOMEN WITH CHAPPED HANDS. Proper Care of the Hands Will Ma Make Them Pro Against Cold Wea ther— Washes and Cos- metics for Rough Skin—How to Be One’s Own f _ Manicurer. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER 18 THE FORPMOST WRITER SPE- OIALIST ON WOMAN'S HEALTH AND BEAUTY, — Philadelphia North Ameri: innumerable letters asking for re- Nef for chapped and rough hands. It isn't diMoult to have soft, pretty hands even in winter. The great point is to keep the hands scrupulously clean and to pay atten- tion to the nails, which demand dally ware. Quick changes from heat to cold af- fect the hands just as these differences tn temperature affect the skin of the face, Many women imagine that frequent washing injures the texture of the hands. This {s not so, provided you {know how to warh them. If you arp accustomed to housework you should save your hands from un- Becessary contact with greasy or dirty fwater by wéaring rubber gloves. But whether you wash dishes or Berub floors or not, It 4s of equal im- portance that you keep your hands clean Qnd that when the tissues are impover- Setiod. they always are when the kin gets red and harsh or cracks. > / Uf -your hands are what we describe as grimy, before scrubbing them give them @ cold cream or vaseline bath. Rub the ointment in well and draw on B pair of big old gloves. pats icouree (of an hour’ scrub your Mands with a bland soap not castile. (Rinse several times in tepid water. It fe quite as important to get the soap ut of the hands after washing as it is @esirable to use {t for cleansing pur- Poses. Dry carefully. Many cases of chapped hands originate in a shiftles use of the towel in drying them. \Avold quick exposure to the cold after Rhe scrub. When the hands are rough @ skin feeding ointment is required, One of the best for thie purpose is as T= article is written in response to follows: Chaps and Rough Skin of the @ands.—Suet or lanoline, 1-2 ounce; eamphor, 20 grains; glycerine, 1-2 ounce. Melt the ingredients together, then pour ‘the mixture into some vessel and allow At ta. cool. Soften a lump of the salve in fie palm of the hand and rub it well fnto the skin before retiting for the “might. ‘When the hands are obstinately red Bnd coarse looking, try wearing cos- Mietic gloves during sleeping hours. This is how to make cosmetic gloves: ‘Use soft, targe leather gloves, three or «four sizes too large. Rip them open @nd spread the inside with one of the * following preparations, Sew the ripped up after spreading. The simplest, 4 tierefore the least troublesome, to make are the following: Cosmetic Glove Paste,—Ground bar- © Jey, the white of an egg, a teaspoon- @ul of glycerine and 1 ounce of honey. Add Mix the baricy with the glycerine. ether ingredients, Cosmetic Glove Paste, No. Flom: made soft soap, 1-2 pound; olive oil, 1 gill; mutton tallow, 1 ounce. After boiling these together, remove LETTERS, QUESTIONS, ANSWERS. He Is Eligible for Presidency. oe the Editor of The Evening World: Is a child born of American parents uring a temporary visit In Germany @n American citizen and eligible to the Presidency? A, NAUMAN, Yorkville Gir Mo the Ealtor of The Evening World: have red with grest interest the tet Rera of people in different cities claim: mg >that the handsomest women are found in their towns. The majority of them think they are found In New York, but none of them mention what particu- far section of New York. It's in York- them from the fire before adding spirits of wine, 1 gill, Ambergris or some other perfume to an amount to auit the taste, always belng on your guard not to scent things too highly. Cosmetic Glove Paste—No. 8—Refined pine tar, one teaspoonful; olive oll, one pint. Melt in a water bath, scenting with rose water or some other perfume. Thia 1s a preparation which does not spol, The following preparation, for use with cosmetic gléves, is slightly more elaboratet Myrrh, one ounce: honey, four ounces; yellow wax, two ounces; rose water, six ounces. Melt the wax in 1 water bath and add the myrrh to it while it ts hot. After beating them together add the honey and rose water. Beat all up and add glycerine by the teaspoonful until you secure a pete which will spread nicely. Every Woman can be her own mani- cure, Once a week {s often enough for the regular seance, but the hands should be looked after dally and the selvag kept pressed back from the finger nail: or it will encroach upon the halt moon, ang {t 1s very difficult then in one treat- ment to control It. If the finger nails need cutting, use clippers Instead of solssors: next shapo them with the file, If there should be any ragged eurface or roughness, amooth this off with the little emory board. Shape the nail to correspond with the form of the finger tip. If you have round finger tips don't try to have pointed nails Next soak the fingers in soapy water for five minutes. Dry them carefully, pressing the selvage down during the operation. Next remove all foreign matter from under the nail with a sharp-pointed end of an orange wood stick, and press the cuticle down with the flat-polnted end of the same stick, taking care to wrap about it a tiny scrap of antizeptic gauze, so that the surface of the nall may not be injured. If there be stains or discoloration: remove them with the juice of @ lemon rather than with the liquid Bigaoh. Dip in the water again and dry, apply a lit- tle rqse paste to the surface of the nail, making the application from the base toward the tip. Dust on a little nail powder, and polish with a brisk movement, back and forth, never up and down. Wash again, using a scrubbing brush. Apply the nail enamel if desired and polish again, ‘Any one can make the nail cosmetics. The formu I give are excellent and inexpensive, Reduce the quantitles pro- portionately for each if desirable. Polishing Powder for the Nalls..— ‘Talcum. powder, 1-2 ounce; pulverized pumice stone, 2 ounces. Mix thorough- ly, add 15 grains ofgarmine and a few dops of oll of rose, if a perfume Is de- sirable, Sift through sili bolting cloth. Rose Cosmetic for the Natls.—Sper- macet!, 3-4 of an ounce; white wax, 8-4 of an ounce; ofl of almonds (sweet), G-ounces; alkanite root, 2 ounces; oll of rose, 1 dram, Melt the first four in- gredients, strain, beat until nearly cold, then add the ofl of rose. Pour into wide-mouthed porcelain bottles or jars. Recipe for Nail Bleach,—Cltric acid, 9) grains; rose water, one ounce. Mix and use further diluted. A nail bleach ga strong ad the one for which recipe ts natls am Opaque or emg-shell appear- nee. Of| The juice of a lemon ts much to be preferred as a bleach. The following otntment is excellent for roftentng cxl- losities around the nails and curing hang-nails: Recipe for Liquid Enamel for Finger Nails.—Paratine wax, © grains; chtoro- form, 2 ounces; oll of roae, 3 drops; car- mine, enough to color a bright pink. Mix the carmine with the oll of roxe, add tho, chloroform and paraffin wa Apply very sparingly, as before ex- plained, with a small camel's hair brush Many women are greatly annoyed dur- Ing the winter by brittle nails. The paste, for which I give formula, wil keep the nails from breaking if used persistently. ‘Take equal parts of refined pitch and myrrh, or of turpentine and myrch melted, and mix together and spread upon the natis at night. Remove in the morning with a lttle olive oll. Some- times this paste will nourish the nails and make them stronger. THE SPRING COLORS ARE ALREADY NAMED. ROM Paria comes a new gospel of other lers colors for 1992, cry year when! after birds, citles both Ink America! after furs and are wrapped In snow and the mind of browns, whi the or wor fs fixed on the “eh deauty of her heavy street Rown and| With only the pom of her winter furs, on-| posal tts terprising Parisian @ressmakers and! biiers of milliners get together and decile the new colors of the new ye ‘The nation which devised ways of pp ing eggs and Ing for the elgut ally, met a and other less noted lakes ng gowns of dive, glori" in| figure {In the s w atumes by . favored as in th wh pagne sev ms incre fashion shoult named ne, rs are the as “Madetr thelr dix- that or of case figure or n COLIPR at witin 1 that seen In the fasion a similar miracle with the seven pr woman's costume | matic colors. 1 sand + In favor, but Last year Paris took 1 tlon| Is no blue will bo the | from the pt ‘a plumag 4 blue} Preval ot It wi not be cam and green In ry combination that the} Yned with for that Is od, but milliner and maker could Invent] With a more daring color—yellow were the rage, | New pinkish yellows known as melon This year their ideas have takan al and resembling the Insite of a ri geographical turn, for the w shades of | canteloupe, provi one of the best blue which rything Indicates is to be | h ponies for the lake blues which the leading spring color bear the names| will be most popular. For the more} wn in a udless Varlety of while \ie w shades Ix prov _|VALET TO A BEGGAR NOT THE ONLY F all the pe tha until y at hi st is, pel ‘on rand In riday la Ly nit 300 from af asked by the corning oeounat had formerly fore that had wit riet miltioralre whi mG le | "Vale “A Assiatan curt? excls ined 1 no Jand une el The been known asa vei gation of citizens, recently who was acquitted of been mn Atte ur by followed 1 An je strangest. tf stea!- Ws tr rhay tina on nin the t been av orney the iw aome haps, leman." od Gillwt med the astonlahed Diatriot-Attorney, the witness stolidly ms and I dressed him and took care of him I got $10 a week for It." beagare of New York have long ry prosperous agere- this js the firet (Copyright, 199%, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) HEODORE VAN ALDINE was a fit lucky, dog At least everybody ald so, ond what everybody says {s true, according to an old saw. But he not happy. In fact, he was distinctly discontented and m\ser- able. He was a@ clean-cut, well-equipped young fellow, was Van Aldine, and born to an humble estate, where he would have been compelled to work out his own: salvation, might have carved out a great career—or have been the founder of a great fortune—as had been his pa- ternal grandfather, with the Dutch blood and thrift. ‘He had tired of the luxury and the conventionallles, and had become moody and discontented—even to the point of serlously considering the losing of his identity and enileting. ‘This was at 4.30 ojglock In the after- noon on the fourth day of October, in the year 1893, . - Milly Conan had been born to poverty and service. There was good blood back of her—no question about it. But It was the blood of the patriot and the martyr and not that of the successful trader and money-maker. «And her father, who ‘had been always a gentieman at the er- pense of carrying even life insurance, had died, mourned and regretted by hun- dreds of friends—and elucerely mourned, too, but leaving nothing but the repu- tation of always having been a good fellow and a zentleman—that {s, nothing excepting a select assortment of debts and a large quota of regrets. Then the mother, a trifle more practical, as mothers gre—but more a lady than a manager, sincerely loving her husband, had pined and died. And the upshot of ft all was that Milly had been left ata very early age to the tender mercies of a not overly cordial world with no visible aasets excepting a very sensitive nature, the Inherent Instincts of a Indy and a healthy appetite—not counting a face of considerable promise from the standpoint of beauty, a figure and a disposition of rare sweetness. Tt waa fortunate, indeed, and very charitable on the part of Aunt Martha that Milly's. mother's sister, having gone nearly blind and being the relict of old Grigsby, who had departed this) Ife prematurely, but not before he had wisely Invested In life insurance to the given, if used frequently, will give the HELPS FOR HOME DRESSMAKERS. MAY MANTON’S HINTS AND PATTERNS. wvilley that part of New York between 9 Borty-second and Eighty-sixth streets, that the handsomest women in the Waited States are found. Now put that {n your pipe and smoke it, you boys who Thave been smoking oabbage leaves til | pow. LOUIS, < _ Hilg, Mother's Nanie. the Bdltor of Thy Evening World: ‘I read the claim dies Bearing the name of Kate were ¢ unenviable possessors of somewhat minable tempers. In my experience T always found the reverse to be strik- tpsty # My first lady of the 1 and y mother) wears the name of Kate, if is a model of enue Kindness, as are ‘@li-the gentler sex of my acquaintance ef that name, VALENTINE, ** Deseriben Water Famine. Bp tho. Editor of The Evening World: I ive in one of the nice little two- fai houses In the Fourteenth Pre- einct In East New York. The nice tin tubs (2x6 and 2 ft. déep) are O. K., and it {s impossible to fill one with + water in much less than a week» We ‘are lucky to get enough water to do a ttle cooking with and sprinkle our oes, sometimes not that much, Many ws I have gone to work with un- ed hands and no breakfast, because . but straight RDINE PLACER. Means fis and My Rig! tor of The Evening World: ‘ that the motto, “Dieu et Mon that most young ‘This very pretty Jacket Is white lawn but all washable fabrics and such simple stlke and wools The fronts are tucked In groups, two of which conse at yoke depth, The back is tucked to the waist line; there lat free, ‘The sieves can be tn bell shape or gathered Into bands In bishop stylo, appropriate, ‘etween whioh arc rows of applique. na preferged, A PRETTY HOUSE JACKET. Quantity of material required fog the medium sine ts 4 yards 27 inches wide, 2 1-4 yards s Inches Leseia Tsk ihe sabe Maes with 8 yards of applique ENPIRE THEATRE JULIA MARLOWE offre, WARRING (77% with trimming of Valenciennes applique, sult the purpose are to a lifetime of benumbing service, lalter decided to go across the city to make a call niece boarded a cable noon on the fourth aay the year 1594, on the rear seat of the cable car, Theo- wi. *PAVERSHAM. in iMPRUD| eee THEATRE. KNICKERBOCKER THEA, THE FIRST MEETING. _ SS A MAN, A GIRL AND A CABLE CAR 8Y¥ BISHOP HOWARD. It Took Cupid Just Two Minutes to Do This Job. ALDINE OBSERVED HER CURIOUSLY, amount of a few thousand dollars, felt) cheerful. the need and necessity of a companion} and the girl to steer her about, and eelected Milly|that she was for that important post, thus combinirg| which she received oniy complaints. charity with business. To be st the} ‘The girl did not show resentment, but post proved exceedingly trying, not On!y jlooked out upon the runshine and smiled from the standpoint of physical work—/at radiant nature. And such a smile ag may be imagined when tho querulous/as jt was! It rivailed the sunshine Itself, nature of Mrs. Grigsby Isr embered,}Van Aldine observed her curlously. patience ang girl in order relative who but also of the exceeding tact required of the young to get along at all with the more and more as the months rolled by strengthened her hallucination that she was dolng an act of exceeding charity | {sh old wom: extracting fr sunshine Aldin and lux Jn feeding and clothing her niece In PAY” What was It she had that he had ment for work which she could not Tr au 1 made him smile and sc have had done for ten times what y his eyed on the Kitl's fac Milly's keep cost her. | more, he looked, the more, abe interest Things being at this pass one oy’ Of changing expressions not only fas- when Milly had reached the age of fojnated “hin, but gave him some sug- etghteen and had stifled all the aspira-}keation of the wllve iateligence behind tions that came to her and settled down Hg Roe ¥ ihe thought came him the ow ere and accompanied by her | H8sidous ar, ‘This was at 4.0 o'clock in the after- of October in on ere is 0 carry, dw! Smoking his Havana somewhat sulkily she tur dore Van Aldine’s attention was at-| their ¢ tracted by an old woman, accompa hers and a by a young girl, who boarded the cor. pales beck The woman was querulous, and complain-| oe the car and & Ing, tho girl pauent and apparently | covered dim. potahdacit ahah st Ae Ratatat DS Amusements, ‘The woman was nearly blind, took ¢ made Here was a girl tled to a cross a and sh the nuld bel among tn and fashton 1 our maxing U sod. nty ay a and do it with he ruminated the Walle Hardly eyes hi Amusemen pains to see mfortable, for 7 d self- seemed to db ) alr and the t than he, Van fre me and daughters of wealth who has th d such as this girl a cheerful more In- a uftused pon than sie ht the 11 | address Ito meet her Of course it alized It quick, Lita fresh clear f the window: et, and dn the utes he had the pretty litte ting her toad so bi girl in all the worl! stimulated him an Interest In life had since he that's abou te all the humiliation: he became force Prowest Ail y And the str {is the happlest Milly nor only whe to th strangest of 1 an inter had nad «con he never lost th press been hay elght 9 Amuse: Broadway and (0rh St. Matinses Xmax xt Week—Wednesday, New ¥ Evenings at 8.15. Mat GARRICK K THEATRES at, near Bway, Last 6 Bv’gs, Mats, Wed., Xmas & Sat. A RY STUBBORNN: UF GERALDINE, By Giyde Fiteh. anstry in ‘The Cross Z25C€ Des. fo—Mra, 1 ae GOODWIN "Mk, ELLIOTT /UP YORK St Brae, {a “THE ALTAR OF FRIENDSHIP." MADISON SQ.THBATRE, 2h at, or, Doway aia ut AUDREY, 858%) Mat. Sat, at ene Y THEATRE, 27h at.,Sindinva ai faaexie B, S,WILLARD 1 & Sat che aye Bu Tuesday THR Mustcal ABSURDITY, And new dariesan BROADWAY: xtra Xmax Mal David @arrick. NOVELTY SHOW, { Madison Square Garden, 10 A. M. —EYDRYTHING FOR THE To-Doy Triple-Ploted Sauverl’s to tte Firs! 500 Pol Acmissions. ADMISSION 14th St Theatre, nr, sin cea, Xmas an MUSIC | Brosdway & 30th. HALL. | Mats. Tues. & Sat. Webor & Fields EXTRA MATINE! TWIRLY-WHIRLY ‘Tho Stickiness of Ge! THEATER, Eve, Nata end NE‘ THE SILVER SLIPPER, ALP. M HOLIDAYS — 25¢ CHRISTMAS DAY, 41s. and Ty way. Mat,, oe. to $1.50, YEAR'S ira Irving Ph | Bye. LAND NINE. |tetropots 5 odsaiian.,& By, 10, 1428 wt. polls Are New York, Sivas 45 ins. OSBORK'S te Evenings “Taurs VICTORIA, (21 at, Brwas ORLD 1 EDEN |“ HERALD, tne BQUARE usatieg| ReHARD was ridic made up and becar hig patern ndfa, Ing of his fortune. Ther Within a month, Van Aldin an “were quietly m » disgust wre to w e fourth day HUBER S “4 MUSEUM ml LAB, MAR EATING LON. ‘sait’s 90. “FAD AND FOLLY VIOLA ALLE , and he than anybody He and looked steadily But he could not space of two min- his mind that Mue-eved girl carry- ruvely was the one 1 for him, The idea d gave him a gi and. affairs could rem tall the: Do Wh ts to the nd exper- to frighten her by t he to ¥ good to learn her name, ns. He contrived familiar with of her poaltion, indignant and went hand with all the s that characterized m her husband © point of wort atl strange phen af October, is nip. bout 4.30 P. M.," or Van Aldine ‘wcqujred | of which he never on before and which a ast UD to athe \ Aldine) married for nearly | ments “OPEN 10. TOP. M, LAY HOUSE dain 8 ar bth Ave, * hae Week Bv.9.15. Mat Sat, wel NTH IN ay N WAX. MUSEE| ns Rien piacere uuate at 8. MANSFIEL ny In JULIUS CAESAR, RINCESS. — B'way | dOuNAY Ras! 15, Mate, Wed, & Bat. rusreiay Hebel, |= sou a Mason? se ein" GUINESE Lie ‘en FURS Chiropodist. case on record of a mendieant rich h to employ a valet, even as the kilded youths of the Knickerbocker Clu, or the stald Croesus of the Metropolitan. Beggars there are, and many of them, with fat bank accounts, Quite recently one was unmasked who jo dail | pathetic appenia to the charitable wh {owning a row of well-filled tenements Jon the enst side and a neat balance of $i 000 accumulated in ‘his trade. To many of these beggars, of course, $10 Q week for a valet would be a mere bagatelle, but Glilwicz’s Inte employer Is the first one apparently who wished to Indulge in the luxury of having his face washed and thus created a new occu- pation There are innumerable persona in New York City at the present time who make their ving in unique and original ways. “Unruly and wayward boys disciplined at parents’ residence,” was the novel ad- veriisement which a Mr. Wiilamson Inserted In a New York newspaper ten years ago, when fortune had proved fickle and he was looking about eagerly for some ‘employment to keep body and foul together, “My method," he explained to an anxlous parent who had written him concerning an unruly youngster, “Is to talk confidentiaily with boys, and when I find them incorrigible 1 retire to a private room—when the youth returns to the world (in one-half hour) he haa a very penitent heart and @ very red anatomy, I do not hurt sertously, only enough to bring forth promises of amendment, Nothing has been heard of Williamson in the Ist few years, and whether he has retired on @ competency, accumu- lated by admlulstering persona! chastis ment to rebellious youngsters or has abandoned his strange trade for some more usual and, perhaps, less exhaust- ing occupation, is not known. Leonard Strother, an adventurous youth who found himself stranded in New York in the autumn of 1898, discov- ered a profession which at once lifted him from his condition of penury to one of financial ease, Btrother invented the profession of human dummy, and wag the first man to stand for hours in the window of a fashionable tailor, using his magnificent proportions to exploit tweeds and chev- fots of exclusive cut, and simulating as nearly ag posstbie the mute insenslbility of the automaton he replaced. He made up his complexion to resemble the pink and white cheeks of a wax Ggure, and not one per cent. of the crowds who watched him daily knew that he was a real man and not a lay figure. Hie su ess wns so great that at the close of his first season in New York he went Jon the road with properties consisiing of seven ultra-fashlonable suite of clothes and made money rapidly by posing for leading tallors in fashionable towns, travelling a regular theatrical elreult. A queer Ittle old man, with wlened features and bandy legs, puraues in the very heart of the pulsing east side one of the strangest professions in the city. He la Hans, the doll doctor. His little | workshop Is Ittered with hundreds of \Maxen-haired beauties in vartous stages jof dilapidation, sent to him for skilful surgery ‘There are jumping-Jacks with frac- CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought , Signature ot The only place to buy, Mable goods at less 1 wholoaale, Broadway, near 10th at; 6 W. 1th Gutlohn Fur Co. st. det, gin and Orn ave, 3tS1 for the loss of thelr biond locks, deftly mended by the doll surgeon, usual call! we of dolls’ Wrenn, for the dainty mintature creations in the large department stores. reif. Washington, who unique ooo consists in golug about from house t& house to out the talons of pet Tt is a well-known fact that birds” the proper length and that they curl cauelng the bind Intense pain. sna are not properly cut the canary Ss ikeely comfortable Hving trimming bind. York" Is the name given to Jakey, who from the hesitation played by an undertaker acqu: to go over to North Brother the body of a smati-pox patient hit his very remarkad! hood, Accomiing to the rules |small-pox cases, an undertaker sealed up the bbdy of a victim a body to shore. When an wi was sbout to make the trip Jakey his opportunity and volunteered to tured femura awaiting sotting, pr : blue-eyed court beauties being treated Nttle baa-lambs whose fleece must be old German's wife follows the more dressmaker, & profession which Dickens immortalized in his touching character of Jennie There aro several of these dolls’ drewe makers in the city who gather materiale, later adorn the swell ladies of dolidom — from the garbage cans of milliners and dressmakers, They furnish many of the — costumes and hats for the dolls exhibited Chiropodist for canary birds” te the iven title of an old German fm to die, and the old Geman makes @ “The most vaccinated man in New — = in a metalic casket must Vaccinated before returning with the captivity are unable to keep thelr pation a means of Iivell- the casket across, be vaccinated and re- turn with the bod! was accepted and he now has a Inrly established business, the he trangports netting him from two: fitteen dollars apiece. Jakey's ai and legs are, scarred from the inn erable point-scrapings to which he submitted, thorities regard him as immune and longer require that » be vaccinated every trip. Among the Coit, other in the city who from cholce or ni pursue strange callings ts @ young man who for a quarter a pair will your new ehoes and wear them am strange places likely to suggest ideas, Out in Detroit is man who supports herself by grave@ones, and in day for tt. plied a lat of the extraordinary exercised {n the French capital. these are “ratters,”” who capture rlous beasts: ci ‘ctors, who stoppers at the sewer gratin: ers, who beg oread crusts, which sell again, and bira trainers, fer their services in the public Amusements. ‘TO-DaY. VISIT PROCTOR'S 33:3iire. RESERVED EVERY AFT. & BVE.—Pull { Continuous Vaui 1 Hit. "Holly Tree I Cook & Clinton, Po: Old Aie.! = OBINSL x IDbln SI, ie Btock. V BRST STOCK COMPANTRA IN NEW YORK. | iam Bramwell, “Minnie nee man, All Favorite 6toel Piha aspen’ AO ASE WOMAE, Bae. Vues ( ALONE IN NeW vie Amusements. HT HURTIG & SEANON ai rdner, Delmon CHHISTMAS DAY MATIN TH WEST 123°5 GRAND * DESPERATE ORDATEST SE. Manhattan MATINDES CHRISTMAS & ei yYeare” METROPOLITAN, OPERA - HOUSE. | ‘A SEASON 1902 any tection o of TR. ae Be RAW. 68 HUGUENOTS LA BOHEME UND 1E0LDE 3... t 8 (at Pop. Prices). “orRLD OSGEDER PIANOS. UBD, 2d Mate, Wi 7» B10. Mate ¥ Gout cit THE BILLIONAIRE MATINEE TO-DAY. | Topsy-Tarvy Burlesquets, bin Poxy Grandpa's Visit to N.Y," Hivgs &.16, Mate, Xman Day & Sat. "ae | if Tn fat RD n Repartaire *| BELASCO ae David Belasco presents SCHE BATES Y sq. | im THE MOCKING BIRD. s#its READY FOR THE HOLIDAY MATINEES DB lichnindhlisensnnntal an shinning WALLACK'S, Diway & 30th st LAST @ Eves, 8.90. Mats, Wed., Xmas Day and Set, 2. 2 lente ‘JAS. K. HACKET? tn “THE Sa Next ae ‘Ade'a “SULTAN OF re 7 TH PASTOR'S »,:3, sim B'way |DEST SHOW owt! KEITH'S cst | aecgteae Doors open 10.90 A. Ot. Christmas Day. AMERICAN sn ry SLA. DAILY ALONE IN LONDON, Gee's Sten), 260, | Next ‘Wonk, Tos OrLViem i 85 AVE. Hat today” cet Ton Nats Wa \ Brooklyn Amusements, +) $l. sFIONTAUK ha WILLIAM G GILLE QUICK "ANSWERS — but now the hospital ai enough to make them comfortable ana who picks up sensational themes for preachers too busy to visit. the ‘evada a Mrs, Maud Whiteman pursues the novel career ag shcoting wild horses and getting 3% @ M. Rossignol, a well-known police offt- a" cer of Paris, several years ago C@m. "ies, Carte" CHANCE it, Cartman. CLAN THRA. Dey & BEB Riva, §. tet. Thur, @ Bott MRS. FISKE 2285.04, E 30—0) a PRICES, 20. and rats and se'] them to exhibitors of @u= Sewer grease and ele the corks, aia rd and all ‘Favorite Nie ih Se Pag otter a oem Sa AVE. CONTINUOUR, re * i

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