The evening world. Newspaper, December 24, 1902, Page 9

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)

WORLDS THE EVOLUTION OF A LOVER INTO A HUMDRUM HUSBAND. +-—_—_—_—___ Don't Imagine that a few caresses will drive the recollection of angry words _ Harriet Hubbard Ayer Tells a Complain-| tive vin ever thougnt wnat tt tn to ‘ ing Wife About The Disillusionments| 2 oi ¢7y 2078 erry far. vers of Marriage, Which Should Be Made a| maintenance ant picasuse of others Happy Prolonged Courtship. I never did until long after I had to take the place of a man in my own family. Do you know that a man at the end of a long wearing day (and wage earn- [ ‘ Dear Mrs. Ayer: your husband to a scene and lose your HAVE been married nearly ten years, | temper you send him. farther away from)!" !# wearing—you m belleve me i~ but my husband has grown indiffer-| you and make it harder to get him| Wien I eay so) ts utterly fasged dod! S ent. He works unt!! 6 o'clock and] baci, and mentaliy, When he reaches his home {t should be a real haven of rest. As long as it is s0, as long es home means loving consideration, _p) re, harmony, the man of sover habits is most unlikely to prefer any other place. There must be a beginning to the time your husband first began to prefer other gociety to yours. 1t is most unlikely he was alone to blame for his desertion. Can't you to the of the charming ways surtship? Men are 60 pliable gould be home early {f ho would, but he] I often think !f a woman could see fe mover home before 9, and oftoner it is/herself in a fit of temper as ehe !m- yop Wh oF 12, or perhaps 2A. Gi. Sundays he}preases another it would effect a cure t/ fe gone all day. And when he {s herejevery time. If you will try the old, he finds fault with me. Sometimes Ifold recipe of winning back I belteve @eel bad and have many a cry over ‘t,/!n your case you will succeed, nd then again I get mad and think I{ Remember that there was a time @on't care. I will not quarre!, I have a] when your husband loved to be with ee home and three good boys. He willlyou better than with any one else. eidige ed in his power for the chil-|When he counted the hours that must » but will never take them out or bejpass ere he could reach your side, pela them. Iam sociable and moro, What is the difference between the entertaining and talkative, I know, than|you of chose days and the you of to- ‘when I was young. He 1s not a drink-|day? ing man. He gets good wages, but seems! Never mind about the difference in #0 prefer any place and any company to} him—let us just talk about you. me and his home. I have a good home,| It ts not the years and the changes nd in one sense everything I want. He|they bring to a woman's looks that fwould break his neck to get anything I/are chiefly at fault—when husband and @ek for in apparel or in provision for] wife drift apart. the house. I have all I want. He never] A happy, contented, sweet-tempered } refuses me any place I want to go. I|woman is never really old, and if she @ould be entirely happy if he was differ-|ha§ learned the art of always looking @nt, but I miss those little attentions 1} neatly dresed she will not lose a man's @Iways had, and I think he does not care | affections because she ds not elabora' f dor me as he ought and used to. What|gowned on every occasion. It is the do you think? UNHAPPY. |soul, the spirit of the wife a man } Binghampion, N. Y. really loves. I have always found the most satis-/ Physical beauty fs a great attraction, { factory way to solve a question waich/qy not underestimate it; but without @oncerns my own happiness vitally, is/the loveliness of the loyal, gentle, un- )4to calmly and dispassionately review|selfish woman's soul the love it evokes the situation and, eliminating every one | cannot outlast a few years. *) but miyself from !t, cold-bloodedly see| The wife a man loves and does not / where Iam personally at fault. tire of ts the woman who {s a good _ Now, I really would like to be of usc|square friend, a delightful companion to you, and so I shall take the Liberty |and a tender responsive sweetheart. of talking to you as I would to myself,| Don't expect to receive without giving, any woman can Win and hold any man if she makes up her mind to and lives in the same house, Make up your mind to be so charming yourself, to be so companionable, to have such an inviting home that no other person, no other place, can vie with you and your abode, It isn't easy to forget Injuries, and you havo suffered much, but the only way to mend your affairs 1s through love— and love must not remember the be- loved's tanits. Resolve to do yourself what ts right Stop thinking of your husband's imper- fections; just love him for his many good traits and forget, really forget, his shortcomings, The forgetting must be real, It won't do to say, “I forget, but Just the same I do remember such and such a grievance.” To forget our Injuries wo must really consider they never existed. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. kouise of Saxe-Coburg Ran Off with a bieu- tenant of Hussars and Became a Forger— Crown Prince Ru- dolph’s Widow Sacri- ficed a Throne for bove— Don Carlos’s Daughter Gloped with a Poor Artist Who Was Married. epldemle of elopements royal houses of Hurope. Antoinette, Crown Princess of Saxo: who two weels ago abanoned her hus- band and children, jeaving a dummy in her bed to postpone discovery, and whom the secret pol Surope have located at Geneva w paramour, {s the latest of many princesses married and unmarried, to forsake thelr thrones at the call of Cupit. Kings and prin have from the earliest times fallen casy prey to the little god of love. Few, indeed, have there been among tho sclons of royal houses who have not had some fair Rosamond to begulle them, and it were a thankless task to follow the ways, strange and devious, which led them to her bower. The amorous vagaries of masculine potentates, however, are re- garded as simple little errors of Judg- ment which ft is the duty of their wives or sweethearts to forgive and their peo- ple to forget. But when a princess elopes eucces- sions are threatened, dynasties totter, the honor of the whole nation ts sup- posedly involved. And the princesses go on eloping nevertheless, European opinion has acttled upon the belief that the Crown Princess of Sux- HO ; .1E WORLD! WEDNESDAY EVENING; DECEMBER 24, 1902. ny has renounce’ a throne for love. ‘The identity of the favored man was not discovered until yesterday, when It became known living at Geneva with Prof. Giron, the obscure French tutor of the royal chil- an American dentist with whom Louls> was said to When a man cares enough for a|— woman to ask the privilege of spending tha life in working to maintain her, he either does care for her with the unfai-| terin) devotion which ts the crown of ‘wifehood to the blessed women who are | go happy as to win the prize, or he| thinks he so loves her, for no man ever pledges his life toa woman, intending to| Synopsis of Preceding Chapter: ? ES of her or to love her less than at| fir Carles Carew, latrong youth, | months and ir; ) — Whe hour of his marriage. jp lose with Magsio Wacome ‘engaged and be | forget you, my darling!” he repeated, Qf course I am not speaking of the| foes to hin estate at Firholme to win Bia) ing and kissing ‘ner passionately | eo-called marriage of convenience, where | wother's cousent to the weddlag. hot very Kind of her,” sald » With @ pretty pout, @ desire for fortune or social ambition —— THe oe is Itethe wors:'of it, If at mesquerades as love. It is a heart- CHAPTER I. the end of ix months I ettll love you Breaking truth that many @ man mar- Patrician and Proletariat, ast if I can forget you— io now sho wishes you to be efu- cated. ties an ideal which he belleves his| y ADY CAREW was thunderstruck | ““‘icducated!''—and she tossed her pretty aweetheart embosies. L when her gon delightedly told her|head. “Does Lady Carew think I don't eis /ANd she wants me to go away for six| be Just like Lady Carew, what do jmatter?, You prentended to IIko mo Jumt as I am. of her sweet ve him, That his peerless Mage) with her, was not to be en Kissed the tears from her the sweet quivering lips and self for having spoken of theso things to her, What were a few shortcomings in the Way of grammar, when the mouth LIKE NO OTHER LOVE ®& CHARLOTTE BRAEME., A Case in Which a Young Man Must Choose Between His Mother and a Sweetheart. , thinks I ought to give It tho test of time. | few mistakes? Suppose that I cannot it At the sight of her tears, a ice, all py should think that he found dured; —Iissed ated hin mother considers Re tne end. T take you to her, and when to marry you Then we ne it has stood the test, will enjoy the surprise.” Maggle entered eart and soul into the y rhe threw herself into his alkel for hours of the sur- prise it would be to Lady Carew when in It 1s juet as heart-breaking a truth of his engagement to @ land-| know how to read and write? I went te have to acknowledge the disilluston- | steward's daughter. ' ment of ninety-nine out of a hundred] Still more horrified was she when, mmives who watch with dazed despair |calling on Maggie, at Sir Carlos's re- the evolution of the lover to a husband, |quest, she found that though the girl Dut that belongs to the other side of|was undeniably beautiful, she was ut- ‘the story. terly uneducated, innately coarse and You have not escaped this dishearten-|vulgar and altogether ‘Impossible.”’ | ing experience, but you have still) a| What Carlos mistook for charming; good deal saved out of what appears |naturalnces she read for utter ignor- to you a marital shipwreck. But sup- | anc poss we find out where you aro at/ On her return from tho visit Lady fault. Carew was urged by her son to give A First, you make a great mistake in}an opinion of his enchantress. She wetting angry. You say you will not|dreaded to opnose him. but she saw his quarrel with your husband. What do|whole life happiness hung on his being Beau do when you get 2 Anger |cured of this absurd fancy for a woman Dever did any good, and certainly anger |80 entirely his inferior. . never yet evoked love, “My boy.” Lady Carew began, “for- ‘You need not look for @ return of|give me {f I pain you, but she Is not husband's affection as a result of | worthy to be your wife. She cannot aac getting ‘mad. speak English correctly and does not On the contrary, you may take my | pronounce her words properly; she drops word for it that every tine you treat her ‘h’s;' moreover she does not under- a | Stand the most common forms of good: breeding. LETTERS, “I¢ T were sure that It was true love, \ QUESTIONS, Carlos, you should have my advice and 7 assistance, but I do not believe it. I 5 know in my own heart that it 1s. a boy's ANSWERS. |arst fancy, Mow many men have wrecked themselves o such a rock! Oh, be warned, lo! There Is Law Against Carrying “What would you suggest,” he asked, Concealed Weapons. “If you betleved it to be true love?” Po the Editor of The Evening World: “If yours be true love, you need not a ying e! n e id Lady Carew, * a law against. carrying con-|fear the t d La Rea iereansnsy are but twenty-two, the girl Is not much HARRY GODSHALK. | more than seventeen, What I propose 1s . 3 this; Let six months pass, Carlos OD dal sara ea spend the time as you please—tra CEI AE eal Ni study, amuse yourself—but mix with the Ia It better to have visiting cards en-| ~ 4514. Tf at the end of that term you graved “Willlam F. Smith” or “Mr. vin with all your heart wish me to en- ere = tertain your proposal, then the girl must JEAN MARCEAU. 1). properly trained and educated. After Au Etlanette, Query. that I will think of what had best be fo the Editor of The Eveutng World: ‘done,! I met a lady frend of mine walking} “Remember, I need not ask you," he mith her sister, to whom I have never|said, "1 am master here, Firnotme Is een introduced, and as they passed me|mine. I can bring a wifa here when I both she and her sister sald “Good|choose, but I would ‘not do so without @ morning.” Ie it right for me to bow in|your consent, for the sake of the love future, in case of meeting her sister|there has been between us. 1 prefer to “EDUCATE: THE CLANDESTINE MEETING. Jaa AND SHE TOSSED HER PI alone on ‘the strect? K. F., Jr. | please you if I ca The lady should always bow first.| But Lady Carew would make no com-|to school for five years, and Miss Pier- Ghould you meet the sister again, sho|promise. She was firm, and would not new how to teach, I should hope. will doubtless bow if she cares to ac-|give her consent to her son's marriage | fis) y considered the most genteel knowledge your presence. In that case, |unless he complied with the conditions {wan the tose gonteel aint init; Want of course, you must return the bow. lald down. education! Wh: §. 1 Knew all the plum Pudding Is an Old Engliah| When Sir Carlos went back to Mat-| uy Dish. ton he found that Lord Stanieigh was |S? fauy Carew to eas slo a {Alig! My Tee (GAttor of The Evening World: recolved Important letters about some | @bove my position.” He took her hand In , Is plum pudding a New England dish? |mining property he had there, and was| tne q, i ae keteal NEW HOUSEKEEPER. |tompolled to start at onoe. In another| {ins as he token ne F Queries About Jerusal three days the old mansion would be} “You sce, my darling Maggie, it Map waiter ot ‘The, Evvaing World empty. this—every ‘class ‘has {ts manners, we ” habits, and customs, Tf my moth Ys there any railroad from the coast| Hiram West had made one last appeal] were to come here and take your piace to Jerusalem and can one get drinking to beautiful Maggle, which she had] she would be as mucit at a loss as you water? Is tt @ fact ¢hat it only rains laughed to scorn, and now he had to} Would be If you went suddenly to tak yg twice @ year there? leave her to accompany his master tol "Sigeie cid not look very pleased. Spain. “No person can, be, more than ‘gen-+ Sir Carlos was greatly vexed at Stan- 5 M. MOSKOVITZ. )) Mhere ts @ railroad from Jaffa (the seaport) direct to Jerusalem. Wiktered drinking water is in uso tn all ithe best hotels there. The fall and epring rains are heaviest, but it also waing there occasionally at other sea- ons of the year. rhe Latter Iu the Better Ha: fo the Editor of The Evening World: been consid * ‘The lovely My Vants. ‘Then how could he seo Maggie | NOKIA," sho went on. “1 am quite sure ‘And he would not admit the posaibility | M3" one In thin worst wants en at present of lviug without seeing | He sald to himself that he must ex- her. He went over to the cottage at Ra ae HOTA NSE Ame Lisl mother's clear to her, apasaa ith aie tuts sip. woudl ddaes [ead iotince tea Meike laweaal Aitoeott * Le - | said, ‘” ere are a Mtisn so. higtior! Acs, Geuen tray, (gia ha-seid,, "2 bave something to say |and’ manne teers woment ike we deus and Gre, or king, queen, jack, ten|t9,70u mother consider almost second nature; A" | AS they waiked Carlos broached tho|no Voice on earth Is sweeter than your: ‘and nine ject of his mother's refusal at ange. | but my mother would forget its aweet= ‘ Yes. could ee that your mother did Hot | ness if you omitted the, letter ‘h” from ed MATE you and [fer maTae OF used It unnecensariiy Youll ne cried: “IC is not that. Mi ao “don't do that!" orlea te, “You it Me anes rhe JVB ate. OF uy wo! hot thinic ‘stall soon ee foutn Saas pated exon vt ink, a\\ ot 1 had my gr ar by heart, aud! | his, caressing | ie siveet| Ma Sino aald “Tt is perhaps stealing am: nd] always | lelgh's determination, If Lord Stanletq’ 1 ulvered, and the dark look e | left Hatton he could not remain there, | Beautiful than ever us they. filel with | for the house would be in charge of ser- | tears think Lady, Carew is very [¢udaltern, wishing for a part red an introduction to a young !ady'| of somewhat large pro Tit-Bits. Ho dectined, sayin onel's da he secretly resolved to have her reven: when an opportunity offered, that uttered the words was beaut!ful as that of Venus? varios," and aid her arms round his neck and her on his—she y that ver resist he ¢ Iearn anything ius should! never forget anyth on the point of going to Spain. He had}aunt always said I had been edu at aaa Hesen Prema ou sh your mother at her Ww m duvated’ as she calls it; but you edu- te me. gle, T have thought of a pl n the dear mother; but all fs fair in ‘love. I will go away for six month jbut Toil marry y i take you with jme, We will spend six months at Sand during that time f will finish your jedueatton I will teach you all 1) the graceful, accomplished daughter-tn- Jnw presented to her ehe would recognize iked of the echeme, 2 tbr dakes told her was unsuspicious and tied to, spend. the Inthe in ttaly, and that then to thew future hanp remember the 1 vengeful threats of Hi ro be continued.) TOO MUCH FOR A DONKEY. At a garrison ball a newly arrived rtions, 82. he wou! about the soon & gf a ca as who chanced to be tho d the remark a Later In the evening the young of- On being presented ci aol a@ favor of the next wal 1° "E00 AMERICAN MAT. DAILY (Bxert Mon.), Se. KEITH'S: *A000RS OPEN 10.20 A. M HE SHUNS DAYLIG Among the many human curios to be ‘ario this season none at M. Yturbide, eccentric millionaire, who shuns da a vane ESTAR: an eUeRBA Baas SQUARE q F HtAnstibL ack THEATRE. ie HARD" 1 an enormous chich his curtained and n and ratsed draped apartment when shuttered carringe 1s driv to his heavily ficer discovered the fact of her being, he wishes to tans, a driv the daughter of his chief, and thought |are alway, it well to retract his former vyrhaeay pL at a Turkish path tem- and as conditions in ine Jing rooms of the Casino are abou game he sometimes ventures there, os ataatecrsteceaitte telat in! the evening, be in love. But in the elopaments as well as the marriages of royal women the man {a a mere matter of dotall. The Crown Prinonss {s a member of the {J-fated Austrian house of Haps- burg. The family of her {llustrious rel- ative, Francis Joseph of Austria, seeme to have been marked py Cup!d for bis very own. The tragic death in 1889 of the Crown Prince Rudolph who, with the Countess Marle Vetsera, committed suicide under taysterious circumstances at the shoot- ing box of Meyerling, left his deserted wife, the Crown Princess Stephanie, sec. ond daughter of King Leopold of Bel- gium, a whiow, young ,deautiful and still unloved. ‘The Crown Princess pub- Uwhed last year a volume af reoollec- tions in which, after dealing very frank- ly with the mysteries of her first mar- riage, sho sald “Is {t possible that T have passed through a long dark night and now fhe black clouded sky {s flashed with rising ight and a gleam of hope which presages the splendor of the sun? Shall I bask in its warm beams, and will it Ices the tears from my cheeks? Come, O sun, come, You will find a poor, almost withered rose, from which the hand of fate has stripped the thorns. A woman's life 1s her love. She does not really be- gin to live until she begins to love. bassy at Rom ‘There were grave doubts in the minds of the Princess Stephanie's relatives aa to whether the sun had really risen with this very commonplace, distinctly third-rate nobleman of thirty-seven. But the Princess did not bother about their opinion. For one woman like the tamed shrew Katherine, willing under masouline direction to call the sun a rush candle, there are twenty ready to christen a rush candle the sun at the dictate of their own eweet will. © When the almost middle-aged Princess announced her Intention of wedding CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought le Amusements. NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 44 st. near B'aray. OPENS XMAS NIGHT. THE GIRL “rite GREEN EYES, Sitoocooo. BAPIRE THEATRE. Broaden aad 40th St, Evgs., 8.20. Mati wa. FAVERSHAM iia IMPRUDENCE xt Week—-Wednosday, eEERION THEATRE, —Broadw Bvenings at 8.15. Mats, Xmas and Gat JULIA MARLOWE cayiiier. GARRICK THEATR. i Last 4 Eves. Sats, To-Day, Xmas & Sat. Aa |THE STL MANNERING | Of reirie tite Dec, 29—Mra Wie y in The CrosssW KNICKERBOCKER THEA. Bway & 38:3 St. Ev'gs, 8.15. Matinees To-Morrow @ Sat., 215. se GOODWIN 2X8. ELLIOTT in “THE ALTAR OP FRIENDSHIP,” MADISON SQ.THEATRE, 24th ot, oF. Bway Xtra Mat. Ry'gs, 8.15. Xm" AUDREY, snfhat'tts GARDEN THEATRE, 2 Maginon ai {sicus E.S, WILLARD. AS, OSBOR'S PLAY, HOUSE oc FAD AND HY ‘Week 1 and Ede. MAS DAY, Mal nee Tay, The sun whom the Crown Princess 60 poetically apostrophised rose jn the per- gon of Count Elenoir Lonyal, at one time Secretary of the Austrian Hm- Count Lonyat-the consequences of her imprudence were put before her by her father-in-law, the Emperor Francis Jo- seph; her father, King Leopdld of Bel- glum, and by other Jess influential mem- bers of both families. She was told that sho would no longer be first Iady of the Austrian Court. She would lose position, power and money. for the still unknown quantity—love. Months of entr the Archduchess Elizabeth of Austria. cess Loutse of Gaxe-Coburg. Princess Loutse, oldest daughter of the King of the Belgians, waa married to Prince Phillp of Saxe-Coburg when she was barely seventeen years old. From thet time until her elopement in 1897 sho seems to hws been a fairly | later ao far forest good wife to a man who maltreated her remember, no shamefully that several times she|‘ieath her rank. On San ae of this fled from him to her father and mother, only to be told by them that it was her duty to return to her husband. All of these, however, the Princess had had,,\so she was willing to discard them ty at last won a re- luctant consent to the marriage from the Austrian Emperor, and on March 23, 1900, Stephanie wedded the man of her choice in the private chapel of Mira- mar Castle, at the same time renouncing in accoréance with the ustyian law all her titles, which were bestowed upon her daughter by Crown Prince Rudolph, ‘Tho most notorious royal elopement of recent years was that of the Crown made the game worth Princess Stephanie's older sister, Prin- after all, an old, old eine and not 8) rtioulart pret! cand Foulse of x0 Gobur alone could etzter Whether later she still conformed! rigid requirements 9@f court and asked the leuténant to slope. whether the suggestion came enterprising but not parti Gi ofMicer is not recorded. Su tive February of iso? the couple ether, bas there was a duel between Princess's husband and the Liew Later still at Monte Carfo the paid her clamorous tradespeople Rote to which she or ber oow had forged the Lee pel wes anie’s name, The Fates was rested on @ Ceara Cl ek and the Princess prea Eads ced In an asylum jn i Helghea she has been confined ever since. happiness was certainly brief. its intensity ecuated st ae ‘ee And they say she is insane. When the Crown Princess Gteph married Count Lonyal the most opponent to the match was the: duchess Hlizabeth, her daughter. Nevertheless the pertng Poe she had inoue, He mother to in order to marry the man of Prince Otto Von Windlsoh. renounced her righte to the Al throne ice followed in the steps From the interval 4t will bo eeen that | Steph Duty took the Princess very far, but io ie. ‘The ‘serigation in royal cfrotes @ elopment of. Dona wr the winter of 1898 ahe met for tho firat|dnughter, of bon Carlos, tender timo én her lite a wayfarer that thrust|the Spanish throne, with dount, Duty aside and took her further and, gad to relate, in m different diréation. ‘This wayfarer appears to nearly all of us under different names, but Love was the particular alas by which he tntro- duced himeeclf to the charmed Princess of Coburg, Gho met at @ court ball Geza von Mattachich, an Austrian Lieutenant of Hussars, and the Princess, as a royal princess must when the man is of blood not royal, asked him to walts with her, Amusements. METROPOLITAN, OPERA ~ HOUSE. RAND. OPERA SEASON 1902-1908, Under the Direction of UR. MAURICE S OR AU. TO-NIOHT, at 8. LA “Stabat Mater ‘woll, Sallgnec, WERBR PIA’ HURTIG & SEANON 125-30 1, Leech and 3 Rosebuds, Louls Simon and Grece Gardner, Delmere ant Lee; others. CHRISTMAS DAY MATINES TO-MOR! SO-GORON: MATINEE T° DAY Es er OTOL AR oy West 0c OPEN TO Tite PUBLIC EXODPT MONDAYS. ADMISSION, Sc. MUBIC, SKATES FREE, RUSSELL, BROB. & CO., BARRY & HALVERS Manhattan = MRS. FISKE WAGE Lta.| 42 NEXT MONDAY: REPASCO THEATRE "sit28.F52 David Belasco presenta | ta % AN NYDER @ BUCKLEY, _SHTISTMAS DAY OPEN THRA. Dewey @ a 334.8. iat. Thur. & Sat MATINDE TO-MORROW wh NEW YEAR'S. _ IQ By 8.10. Mate, Wade, Xmas ry couitiy GIRL. LLIONAIRE,”* ith JEROME SYK ay =e EDEN|°tt DIN M WAX! New Groups, ATOGRAPH. BE. [DeRolimine Wiese Ta: eo Christmas Day. aust. /|MABELLE GILMAN | ip THE MOCKING BIRD. CHRISTMAS DAY “THE DARLIN OF THB GODS. VIOLA ALLEN ae WALLACK'S, D'way & 90h et. LAST 5 NIOHTS Evgs., 8.90, Mate. T orrow & Sat., 211 THE CRISIS. 45 a | WHEN COMES | AOHNNY fr@imer NS 30, Mata, moored an ¥, Herald JRINCE, S.. nD wayA2an Bt. Ey Mr, Aubrey Boucieau! Undonbeed triumph in Heldelberg’—< MateI’d'y,Xtas } and Gat 2.15, GHINESE HONEYWOON’ WEST END “Fines SPBCIAL MATIN! DAY, ee ee American News Company prot an artist and @ married sna The Princess met fala t in love with him ‘they Tan awey/- ogre’ On. heart news Caries fesued the followin ‘bulletin to reo ts ep porters: “You are my family, “4 dren, and I eres by dust to inform you that dren, she who was, yira, {8 dead tous all. {nite nary: have pity on hoped the Princess<Envire: Jo him ever since, Amusements. VISIT PROCTOR’S Fo:sitdirn RESERVED EVERY AST. ist. a By DAS | ae eee Cook, Clincen, Rens Acta, Open 10.30 A. M, Xmas Day ef "OI Ne. sitar OBN SL skeet ee Bec eae At, Den USS) Saas (ape Rock. Vente, J. Mort ‘BEST STOCK GRAND 4 DESPERATE Xtra Mat, christmas, CHAN CE 250. to $X.00. Weber & Fields’ sxei° ie hed EXTRA MATINEE 2 CHRasTacka Dal PASTOR'S 0:55, Siri | Usui”: TWIRL Y-WHIR And new burlesque, The Stickiness of é * RALPH STUART as BONE CRISTO, “Seine” BROADWAY. Cre Seem ‘Extra Matinee To-: THE SILVER “SLIPP “a | Erg. 8.15. Mats. To-m'r'w & tocar, | FRANGIS WILSON in The 1 xt Week—B. RD tn Posen snare "NOW ON GALW. Teast MATINGS TO-088 St ‘Amusements, Se... MONTAUK SAT) “WILLIAM G GILLE: Published official figures ‘es conclusively that the daily el ages: ree TG GHARITY BILL | eon o¢ ‘The World. tn 1 pest

Other pages from this issue: