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SE rere Ter NPA OY TRE Pe = WORLDS = HOME = silent, but ready for any villainy, I count him one ot the worst men we have, With the exception of one or two more, I think he is the worst." “Why don't you flog ‘em?’ says Frere, lighting his pipe in the gloom. “By George, sir, I cut the hides off my fellows if they show any nonsense!" “Well,” says Vickers, “I don't care about too much cat myself. Barton, who was here before me, flogged é|tremendously, but I don't think it did any good. They tried to kill him several times. You remember those twelve fellows who were hung? No? Ah! of course, you were away.” “What do you do with them?" SYNOPSIS OF PREOLDTNG CHAPTERS. Devine, a young Rnglahman, ie turned out of doors santa G1? ‘Richard Devine told that unless bis fanily name the ‘cousia, Lie url ro, Tittle "daughter Sylvia. and "tho. latter Purtor wes returns a ball Sylvia has lost, and {a struck down while doin © ONife “Gieallant a Frere, Typhus breaks out among tha pri +e ‘The fret victim le a forget named John Rex, Rew it Purfty's busband. He ie also, teader of & planned muting aunong ‘he convicts, Dawe Te tn aotsed place!" “T oan' own etori vith fig ings Jost —, he Soccts eros line the “Dawe! Be eae corey (Gees On “Oh, flog the worst, you know; but I don't flog] going in: bd Than! Dawea’a warning, the mutiny {a quelled. The con- » flog * > vlcts footing It war Dawen' who betrayed them, falsely aweat| more than a man a week, asa rule, and nover more we tlagledder of'he sist, That heen than fifty lashes. ‘They're getting quieter now. Then] on the plac Lean ee we iron, and dumb-cells and maroon them.” CHAPTER Iv. “Do what?’ “Give them solitary confinement on Grummet Island, ‘When a man gets very bad we clap him into a boat with a week's provisions and pull him over to Grum- met. There are cells cut in the rock, you see, and the fellow pulls up his commissariat after him, and lives there by himself for a month or so, It tames ‘them wonderfully." “Does it?” sal§ Frere, “By Jove! it’s a capital notion. I wish I had @ place of that sort at Maria.” “I've a fellow there now,” eays Vickers; “Dawes. You, remember him of course—the ringleader of the mutiny in the Malabar. A dreadful ruffian. He was most violent the first year I was here. Barton used to flog a good deal, and Dawes had a childish dread of the cat. When I came, in—when was it?— in '29, he'd made a sort of petition to be sent back to the settlement. Said that le was innocent of the muUny, and that the accusation against him was faise." “The old dodge,” said Frere again, ‘Dhanks."”” “Of course. I couldn't let ‘him go; but I took ‘him out’ of the chain-gang, and put him on the Osprey. You saw her in the dock as you came in. He worked for some time very well, and then tried to bolt again.” ‘The old trick, Ha! ha! don't I know it?” says Mr. Frere, emitting a streak of smoke In the air, ex- pressive of preternatural wisdom. “Well, we caught him, and gave him fifty lashes, Then he was sent to the chain-gang cutting timber. Then we put him tnto the boats, but he quarrelled with the coxswain, and then we took him back to the timber-rafts. About six weeks ago he made another attempt—together with Gabbett, the man who nearly killed you—but his leg was chafed with the frons, and we took him, Gabbett and three more, however, got away. Gabbett returned alone las week. He sald the others had died of hung There's no escapitg from this island. It is a ter- rible lfe, this. “Do you think so?” asked his companion, in un- affected surprise. ‘I like it. It's dull, certainly. ‘When I first went to Maria I was dreadfully bored; Six Years Later, 1X years had passed—years that had left their mark on ail the characters of this story. Richard Devine (or Dawes, as he was now own to all) had suffered beyond measure during this time. Sentenced to death on a charge of plan- ning the Malabar mutiny, he had been reprieved, his sentence being commuted to six years’ hard labor in chains at Macquarle Harbor, the most dreaded of all the Van Diemen's Land psnal sottlements. In fury at such injustice he had twice tried to es cape, end had tn consequence been flogged and put In dark cells, and at last ha‘l won the name of being the most brutal, incorrigible convict on the island. John Rex had been assigned by the Government (as. was often tho case with “trusty” prisoners) as ser- vant to his own wife, Sarah Purfoy, who had takea @ cottage in a pleasanter part of the settlement, but had tried to escape, and had been in consequence sent to Macquarie Harbor. Capt. Vickers (now Major) had been appointed military commandant of Macquarie Harbor, where he lived with his filghty wife and Sylvia, the latter being now grown to a beautiful and lovable—tf self- willed—child of twelve. To Vickers's house, on a December evening of 1883, came Lieut. Maurice Frere, bearing an order from ‘the Governor of Van Diemen's Land at Hobart Town, the capital. ‘The order was to the effect that Macquarie Island was to be abandoned; that the convicts there should be transported to Hobart Town on the Government 7? vessel Ladybird, end the commandant's family * ghould follow, under care of Lfeut. Frere, on the @maller vessel, Osprey. Frere was et this time in charge of one of the emailer convict stations at Maria Island, and was already noted as a@ cruel mamntinet. He and Vickers were watking up end down the « Intter’s veranda on the evening of the Lieutenant's arrival. “So Rex tumed out to be a bed lot?” said the Lieutenant at lest. “Oh, a very bed tot,” returned Vickers; A FEMALE CANFIELD, ; DOES JEROME KNOW: The extent to -'' ); bridge whist for high stakes is ! by the society woren of New }v!« has not yet been fathomed, though the prese has repeat~ edly denounced the practice and the pul- pit has thundered anathema, In March, 1901, Rev. Dr. William Hunt- ington, in a sermon to the New Eng- jand Society in Grace Church, de- nounced the playing of cards for money by soclety women and asked, “What avails @ crusade against policy shops and pool-rooms, whether by five, fifteen or fifty, if behind doors which no de- tective ventures to pass such things as these go on?" At the same time Dr. Rainsford toli in an address of a young woman who had boasted of winning $50 at bridge and strongly censured the gambling spirit among New York women. ‘The gambling amusements of society women centre largely in bridge whist and stock speculating. There are s0 “A matoh? his eye. pre “quiet and * Healthy Puscle and the Htigh-Toned female’ Gambler Who Runs a Swell Game in Hotels— New York Women Vice tims of the Gambling Pania. Young Women Which an Expert Has Aronged, and Tested. By MARIE F. GILES. VOIHTY women of St. Louis, if the statements made by several of their number are to be be- have succumbed to the gambling “mania. Mrs, L. J. Silva, a well-tnown ~!matron of the Western city, declared » Yeeently thet she knew women who , Were accustomed to losing $200 and $300 @ week at bridge or poker. Still others, e sald, were obliged to pawn their Jewels to settle thelr gambling debt 4 brandies, wines and beer were ‘ imbibed at the bridge or poker parties, ) and the nervous tension of the society / phangers was lessened by the soothing fumes of the cigarette, So much for St, Louls. Quite recently @ Philadelphia divine startled the state- “ly matrons of his congregation by in- veighing against the playing of cards _ for money and the evils of drinking and T has been said that one-half of the world does not know how the other half live, and matter of fact it ts only @ fractional part who know how to Uve at all. Living means eating. It at thelr leisure, but which confronts the average wage earner three times a day. The girls employed in offices. and the many women stook blers in New |Sileswomen behind the counters of the York that there hry brokers’ |@epartment stores of this city peoehe offices elaborately fitted up which are |°? 4 arenes Laledgaaidigo #0 Lge iv, run exclusively for women. sorae leas, Out o! @ must pay Masquerading under the namoa ef | St te least from $2 to 6260 9 week for a clubs, pool-rooms run exclusively for|®™ell furnished room. Out of the re- Women do a rushing business, [hese|™4@lnder she must take her dafly oar places pobt entries, make books and re-|fare®, unless #he be so fortunate aa to celve returns from the race tracas In| lodge within walking distance of her New Orleans and San Brancisoo, Other |Plac® of business, must keep herself less exclusive resorts are enelly reacned ently, Creapec nee provide hersel¢ with through the side doors of saloons or |‘ * through the hallways of cheap fate,| Te writer of this article has made « They ave patronized by women of all] 97ecial study of the average meals taken classes, from the fiashily-dressed person |>Y the average typewriters or sales- with “money to burn" to the poorly-ciad | women. and the result 1s as follows: working woman hatarding the Iast off BREAKFAST.—A cup of coffee, five her husband's hard-earned dollars, cents; a plate of hash or @ meat stew, While District-Attorney Jerome busies|ten cents. Fifteen cents, inclusive, himself with the falding of pool-rooms| Sometimes the broaktavia differ, end o i: more secluded haunte of|oereal of sore kind at five cents and ie ret ae unmolested. 49 pieces of toast are substituted for Women as yet have no ‘Wanfleld's,’* meat. but they ears fg true, their Canfleld—| LUNCHEON.—Cup of tee or chocolate, ‘a beautifully-gowned person who sup-|five cents; roast beef sandwich or a ports herself in luxury by visiting the plate of pork and beans, ten cents, and different hotels of the city, principally | @ piece of ple or @ cream pulf, five cents, high-priced hostelries like the WaNorf-| Twenty cents in all. tAstoria or the Holland House, and or-| DINNER.—A oup of tes or coova, five ganising games of bridge or poker | cents. Clam chowder or meat bails, ten among the women patrons, from whom | cents. Rice pudding or @ baked apple, whe reaps a large profit. This is no flo- | Sve cents. Twenty cents, inclusive, tlon, Such a woman existe and she in| The meals vary, of course, A ham or well known to the gamblers of her sex. |‘ongue sandwich can be had for five Jerome eight summon as witnosses be-| cents, but the average girl will spend fore the Grand Jury wealthy New York |™more rather than ime fe the smounls women who have played in this Canfeld- | @voted, witch are the choapest ut the ette's rooms, They could tell many | eet expensive place in the city. Added story of high play, here or at Long 4t comes to 55 cents a duy, or $3.85 a Branch, Newport or Atlantic City, for week. Leaving 15 cents for a possible the woman moves around with the|#n4 more probable extre sandwich oF changing seasons so ae to be near the (tc? of ple during the week and the H = gum of #4 will quickly evaporate, fair gamblers who have mimey to lose. |" ‘The food wo taken ts clean, but the| @ sensation, number of women whether ip stocks, cards or the racgs, increases annually in New York City, It 4a generally conceded that women ure the most reckless gamblers, for, unlike the masculine players, they gamte with other people's money—the hard-earned | From London comes a report of a well-known member of the emart set © lowing $40,000 at single sitting. * But what about New York? Are the ‘women of the metropolis lesa addicted e gambling habit than their sistere the water or in the West. No, In gambling, whether by women in the drinking of cocktalls and ing of cigarettes, the city that Broudway is ahead of the game, ———— OAKS FROM ACORNS, = £ in Hexvins * Sh 8 ake fractional, @nd yet for less than one half of the expense ehe can have three The only necessary requisite ts common pense, ° The tea, coffee or cocoa taken by the average women mt these restauranis comalng but @ small proportion of nu- sons. and milk whioh they contain, The white anindtieateamamenaed +:vad used in making sandwiches iy Ailing only. ‘Phere is of course a” emal HINT FOR THE FAT WOMAN, Sante edienotain sation ia the pase ‘Walking ‘s one of the pleasantest| tongue and chicken, but the proportion ways of reducing fat. Walk guickly|in one eandwich is exceedingly ama). and energetically; i pei ee ornare ge paebgpe dere Rare Bn cgeag way is not effectual, in 4 minute amount of nutrition derived from it ta! wood meals a day of nourishing food, | but one soon gets used to it. satisfaction to me, by George, in keeping the scoun- drels in order, at you as you walk past to pleces, if they dared, some of laughed grimly, as though the hate he Inspired was thing to be proud of. “But imagine an innocent man condemned to this sald Frore, with a laugh. be hanged! They're ali innocent, If you'd belleve their fire, the man I told you about. have some brandy-and-water, and we'll shut the door Rufus Dawes, desperate, mad with loneliness and exhausted body and mind by exposure on the cliff at Grummet's Island, watched without comprehending across the bay the lively preparations for abandoning the settlement at Macquarie Harbor, He knew a boat would be sent soon to take him back to servitude. The thought was a horror to him. He swore he would make one more effort at freedom. Sul in irons, he collected his scanty store of food, found a log of driftwood, and, borne up by this, at- tempted the dangerous feat of swimming back to the mainiand. The swift current and the tremendous ef- fort necessary for such an enterprise had placed if far beyond the calculations of his jailers. Yet, after an all-night swim Dawes was victorious, He landed at & point far above the settlement and started to work hia way through the “scrub” (under- rowth) to some place where he might procure other clothes and a disguise, He walked for day. dragging his heavy irons, His stock of food gave out, and he utterly lost his way. Finally, half dead with hunger, he made his way to tho convict settlement, eager to surrender; braving the certainty of a flogging and other tortures, for the sake of obtaining food. Arrived at the settlement, he found to his amaze- ment that It was deserted. not a scrap of food remained. A boat had been sent to take him from Grummet' found, and the supposition was that he had committed suicide by leaping from the cllff. Dawes, finding the settlement deserted, saw nothing ahead but starvation. until dark, head Late at night he looked up, It was & fire kindled on the shore, With a cry of hope he rose and staggered toward It. . 8 Preparations for moving the convicts had taken lit- tle time. Vickers, with all his prisoners but ten, had gone ahead In the Ladybird. The Commandant hed finally arranged with Frere as to his course of action. He himself would accompany the Ladybird with the main body. daughter were to remain until the galling of the Os- which Mr. Frere, charged with the task of final destruction of the fragile buildings, was ¢o bring up Blood Plaking Diet for: is @ problem which the rest may solve | { i There ts m. ‘Gad, they'd tear me m and he “Innocent man, Hallo! what's that red light there?” on Grummet Rock," says Vickers, Come in and to Not a convict, not 4 guard, id, He had not been He sat among the empty sheda 1 hands, hopeles: Ad His whe and as oner: work out of the |: Vickers accordingly departed. The others, thetr work done, prepared to follow. On the morning of their proposed departure Frere sent the ten convicts ashore to wash thelr cloth: while he and the two soldiers went out in the ship's Mrs. Vickers and Sylvia were aboard the Osprey, under the care of the remaining soldiers. They were to sail with the night's tide. The afternoon passed off ausptclously, prisoners went ashore and washed their clothes. aoe names were James Barker, James Lesly, John yon, Shiers, William Russen, James Porter, John Fair and John Rex. This last ecoundrel had come on boat latest of all, He had behaved himself a little better recently, and during the work attendant upon the departure of the ee ee conspicuously useful. gence and Influence among hie fellow-| = bined to make him a ay Pr oamere and Vickers had allowed him privileges from which he had been hitherto debarred. He was to heave Salled with the Ladybird. The day before the Lady- Uird sailed Rex, rejoicing in the hope of speedy do- parture, had suffered himself to reply to some more than usually galling remark, and Mr. Frere had com. plained to Vickers, “The fellow's too ready to get away," said he. “Let him stop for the Osprey; {t will 6e%a lesson other boat fishing. Vickers and Sylvia. Sort of; 48 soon as possible. “I will leave you @ corporal's guard and ten prison-|o: I like to see the follows’ eyes giint}ers os a crew,” Vickers sald. easily with that number, To which Frere, smiling at Mrs, Vickers in a eelf- satisfied way, replied that he could do with five pri y, for he knew how to get double y dogs. If necess: Benjamin Riley, him." night fell. Vickers assented, and John Rex was informed that he was not to sail with the first party, rades vowed that this order was an act of tyranny; but he himself sald nothing. The reason for this compliance was soon revealed to the other convicts who remained. Rex planned with them to selze the Osprey, kill Or maroon the soldiers and Frere’s party, and away to some country where they could lve in wafety. Tt was a bold scheme, and in its boldness lay its hope of success. When Frere rowed back to the Osprey that after- noon he was confronted by ten levelled muskets in the hands of the convicts, who had secretly re- tufned to the ship in the leutenant’s absence, corporal's guard of soldiers were offered the choice of death or of joining the mutineers. accepted the latter alternative, Frere was bound and conveyed ashore with Mrs, There the trio were left just Mrs, Vickers and Sylvia were treated with the utmost respect throughout by the mutineers, Frere they treated lke a dog. “You can work her of her child. arms, resigned ‘The ten William Qheshire, Henry His intelli. rhat important personage, be recaptured, of the commandant. His com- of morey, and to land, Tho} tempt at capture, the carried ashore. we've used you badl visions.”” To @ mun they ful. I didn’t expect this. A WEEK’S SCHEDULE OF 23-CENTS-A-DAY MEALS. Gollars of thelr husbands, fathers or | tition and that only trom the auger | | fully, they will last @ month and more, . BREAKFasr, Stucer Cereal with Mus, Whole Wheat Bread. One-Third Fionea Haddie ing because her vitality ts * pees | that she Is unable to generate enough electricity to produce heat, can, if she will put into the furnace of her body pure, nourlehing, vitaliing food, which will replenish her blood with red cor- puscles and keep it running warm in {her veins, imparting health, hove and havpinese at the cost of % cents a day, No restaurant figures {n this plan. The asary requisites are a bracket to fit over @ gas Jet, & small saucepan with handle, and @ Ux box. The cles can be found in any of the fi nd ten cent shops of this olty, To begin with, she will take a quart of Un. Bhe will buy two pack-| of the best breakfast foods, which do not require cooking, at 16 cents a! sed Hberally, but not waste- for making the cereal pert of her breakfast cost 1 cent & day. he will supply herself with @ loaf of whole-wheat or gluten bread, which ¢ ge | auth appetite two days at least. breaktast sho whole ‘been beaten, Cuesday, “ BREAKFAST, ‘Saucer Cereal and Milk. Whole ‘Wheat Bread, Toasted, Orange. DINNER. Log Chop. Glass of Mith. LUNCHEON, Pint Boule Milk, LUNCHEON, Square Eating Chocotate, ‘Whole Wheat Breed. Bolled Egg. Gturea Bread Sandwiches, Bana to sleep she caught he FOR THE TERM OF HIS NATURAL LIFE. BY MARCUS CLARKE-—A STIRRING MYSTERY IN WHICH LOVE AND HONOR ARE THE POTENT FACTORS. ‘There Is no need to dwell upon the mental agontes tit miserable night, Perhaps, of all the five, the one least qualified to endure |t realized the prospect of suffering’ most acutely, and noodle as she was—had the proaching danger, which fs in her sex a sixth sense, She was a woman and a mother and owned to a double capacity for suffering. Her feminine jmagina- tion pictured ajl the horrors of death by famine, and having realized her own torments, her maternal love forced her to live them over again In the person Rejecting asristance, the poor woman withdrew behind a rock that faced the sea, and, with her daughter in her herself to her torturing thoughts. Sylvia, recovered from her terror, was almost con- tent, and, curled in her mother's shawl, her little soul this midnight mystery of boa muskets had all the flavor of a romance. was obvious ‘that papa—the supreme being of the scttlement—must at once return and severely punish the impertinent prisoners who had dared to send ashore his wife and child, and as Sylvia dropped oft If with some indignation, pitylng the mutincers for the tremendous scrape they had got themselves into. A Mscuasion had arisen among the mutineers as to the propriety of at once making sail, but Barker, who had been one of the pilot-boat crew and knew the G@angers of the bar, vowed that he would not under- take to steor the brig through the Gates until morn- ing. During the evening a feeling of pity for the unfortunate party on the mainland took possession of them. It was quite possible that the Osprey might in which oase three useless murders would have been committed, and, however callous to- bloodshed were the majority of the ten, not one among them could contemplate in cold blood, without twinge of remorse, the death of the harmless. chill John Rex, seeing how matters Were going, made haste to take to himself the credit M Frere's v. “T propose,” raid he, “that we divide the provistons with them. There are three of them and ten of us. Then nobedy can blame ve." Thus urged, by self-interest, ag well as sentiment, to mercy, the provision was got upon deck by daylight, division made. A live goat (part of the ship's tores) was added to the stock to be sent ashore, dawn this provision was all piled in a boat and rowed Lying off as the water shallowed, Rex called to Frero to come for the cargo, and three men with mus- kets, standing up as before, ready to resist any ron * and Viokers—lay: en instinct of ap- says Rex, “ for we've divided the pro- The sight of this almost unexpected succor revived the courage of the thr After the horrible anxie that night, thoy were prepared to look with kindly eyes upon the men who had come to thelr assis! You are good fellow TYPEWRITERS MAY LIVE WELL ON 23 CENTS A DAY. y they had endured all Mrs. Vickers, “Yes,” affirmed Frere, Rex burst info a savage laugh. you tyrant,’ sald he, forgetting his dandyism in: recollection of his former suffering. “It ain't benefit. You may thank the lady and ohila for Tho swindler and forger then took off his I with quite an air. It was five years since Indy hed spoken to him, and the old time when he waa Mr. Lionel Crofton, a “gentleman sportsman,” oame | again for an Instant. At that moment, with iberte his hand and fortune all before him, he felt his respect return, and he looked the Iady in the: without flinching. “I sincerely trust, madam," said he, “that you get back safely. May I hope for your good myself and my companion Tho boat made back to the ship, which sgon set sail, For three or four days the shore party did ably enough, expecting each day to see the with Capt, Vickers aboard, return for them, But as day after day passed and the store o& toa began to run low, their faces grew grave. One night after Mrs, Vickers was asleep Frere | Sylvia sat by the fire. The child could not avold « involuntary feeling of hatred and repulsion for | Meutenant, She had felt it from the moment she had seen him, and it grew as time went on, He, he liked the child and regretted her aversion, a much of a bully not to enjoy teasing and to frighten her. As they sat by the fire ‘onight be anes donly asked her: “Why won't you be friends with me, missy?" s “There are persons,” said Sylvia, ‘who have na affinty for each other, I read about tt in a book had, and I suppose that's what it 1s. I.heve no for you. I can’t help it, can I?" “Rubbish! Frere returned. “Come here and” ™ tell you a story.” ‘The wicked wish to frighten this helpless crentute came to Maurice Frere. Prats “There was once,” said he, “a castle in an old and In this castle there lived an ogre, with grent gle eyes.” “You silly man,” said Sylvia, struggling to\be ‘You aro trying to frighten me!"* aa “And this ogre lived on the bones of little gira, One day a little girl was travelling the wood and she heam the ogre coming. ‘Haw, haw! Haw, haw? "* Mr. Frere, let me down!" ‘Bhe was terribly frightened, and ehe ran, and ea y on ran, until all of a sv ser sne saw”— A plercing scream burst from his companion. oh! What's that?” she cried, - .d ching to her outor. ie On the other side of the fire stood the figure man. He staggered forward, and then, falling om knees, strotched out his ‘hands and hoarsely ag lated one word: z “Food!” Vea It was Rufus Dawes, t (To Be Continued.) “you're good fellows," figure gue tenders ot To and Besides it slept At Son, t and all, were you ean't say they felt grate- Amusements. Amusements, METR GRAND Under the D: ‘Jan. | Bun. ‘Evg, Jan, STABAT 'M &. WERER_PIASO8 USED. NETHOPOLITAN OPERA-HOU TONIGHT ATS, A.so To-in'w School for Scandal, | re ea PASTORS nS ifn [53 OARDINER & VINCENT: STINGON & MERTON, EMMONS, "BMERSON Manhattan MRS. ROPOLITAN OPERA ort Attat 2 Prices, $2.60,$1.80,41.00,76s. Mueray Hult». Lex.ay, AUSTRALIAN BURLESQUERS, oNDAY' iON, VISIT. PROCTOR'S $o:Riiee. NESERVED EVERY AFT. iB ribs tlnonenT9 dat SL. ea on aia oh hie, 1% Around the World nd the World ta eo a "the other Se ihr Favoriten, ¥ DAS RHEINGOLD GOIN SL! Asta DGlnSL) Ss Jas. tie a Ma Pina Dpst STOCK COMPAN! Big COMEDY VAUDE OPERA SEASON "1902-1 TR. PL fz « iy AT DUSE "yer" Runt BS at ne i arr PARISIAN BAUR ‘Terrace berg ‘The Real Pronal ONLY THIS WE MADISON SQUA! NEW YORK POULTRY, pre Beninien Torte, Incebeteen, Sone taal Pa ie SKATING RIN K | MATINEE TO-DAY, nor the Mayor, ‘Ts GRAND CONCERT. Be. 50s, BROADWAY &@ 33D 8T, Hve., 8. Matines dat. at & FISK MARY OF DALY’S Me prevnt"* The BILLIONAIRE seroat Brien | Present— MAGDALA, Biway & 80th Ce, Ey. st Mat. Wed, & Sat. Overwhelming ‘Success, mew ‘YORK A; VE var Oud ADM. 600, RESERVED ‘TS 50a, 14th St, Theatre, ar. 6th Ave. Mata Wed & CH a HAURIG Present 4 dramatieation ot HOM. JOHN BATS | BROADWAY pees age 222m (SEM BLUDSO, uinlts ira. = Silver Sie EMPIRE THEATRE, | LAST 3 NIGHTS. LAST MA’ | Wallack’. Sy | WM, FAVERSHAM in IMP Bway & 20th | Wea, ry te 7 | Grominaien “The ‘uteht of of the Party. EVERY SUNDAY NIGH’ 00 wane Ellel Grand Martin Harvey WEST END—RICE'S SHOW GIRL. Sunday—itioe’ | aerate $00. Nest | Week—Brow, Byrne, 8 Bel iz ASIN OF UT, JAN. 12,—EMPIRE 00. IN Tix U OARRICE THEATER S5un Lest 9 Nights, 8.20. Mate Wed. & Sat., ARS. LANGTRY.Thn Oras THE GIRL GREEN YES mapreor: Loy HO at. ,08, ‘Next Matines BLIZABRTH TYREE in GRETNA ee CRITERION THEATRE, a Ib. Matines Saturday, SM Bt. 8.16, Mat, Har, ONCERT NTRY MOUSE, by ‘MARROTY. Sot BOMTYBOIe, precedes Nat Wk—Bertha Galland, p." Crowded Houses, bl b: Eve. ‘Buy MONDAY —Ci BELASCO THEATRE 2izin0 sts, "i David Helasco presents BLANCHD BATES: DINNER. Slice of Lives. Whole Wheat Bread, Glass of Milk, though the writer does not eat or ber Heve in the nutrition derived from an!- Vic Celery, mal food, there are as yet many who Cake of Eating Chocolase, 40 and who are unable to discontinue its @ cont iss ack th aamaill naskeasen 1 ha tread If she is unable to return for lunch- ¢on, she can prepare two “wheat bread and fill @ pint bottle with milk into which a raw ess has To prevent the possibility of pouring, the milk can be heated be- which wiil| {9re the egw ls added, and then allowed to cool. me ean buy two Ia) . In this luncheon she {s taking « ee percentage of nutrition in @ pleasing form For dinner she may get cam of pork and beked beans at the bakery for five cents, which can be heated over the gas As beans are both nutritive and satis- she will probably eat all she wants coste 6 cents a loaf, and will baat aj and have some left over for breakfast, An apvle at one cont with her i ‘mas ee ant ; use, or chicken for her sandwiches same price. A email Finnan dwiches of and will keep without foe, ourht for 16 cents, can bananas cellent, other column, as obange is so eapential to health. possible a glass of mill, going to bed, Bhould there! conteln the greatest it on) Oe elena io Amo A cake of In place of the beans she can sub- stitute @ pork or mutton chop for five cents, and in place of the exew who can substitute @ can of minced has, toncue which, cut in pieces, will do three meala be e writer has and does practise what advises, and her dally expenditure for food ts less than the amount she quotes for others, and her health is ex- Menus for the week are given in an- These menus, costing 23 cents a day, contain a variety of foods, If = ehtly heated, should be drank each evening before It will be noticed that milk, banenas and chocolate form an important part of oregon aff sy foment toe amount of putriy Wie | 15. JULIA MARLOWE GARDEN ZEEATER. The 6, ves, 7.45 sharp. Mat, Saturday, SOTHERN 4s HAM KNICKERBOCKER THEA. Bra & Lan 2 Weeks, Evga. at 8.15. wt GOODWIN ite fo ‘THE ALTAR OP “MARAE GILMAN rdo F rp. Mat tn THE DALLING 2 OF THB GODS, v.9.16. Mi Nome, iovne THE ETERNAL CITY, KEITH AJESTIC "Yt Rice Brothers, & Niobe fenttioate Hale | Me apa AMERICAN. er PEED Jonsson, Sydney Grant, DAILY | rr ean Moa ), Bo. Next wh, The ee bea |i nest BHLOW Ly TOW. MARKS’ BIG CONCERT ath'st. | PRICIS 2be M. (Bx0’ TD td zs ww York, Bve.. Saturday oni oe Guibas > » BS. pT Tag Lex. Ave., 107th &¢. Matines Bat, Weber & Fields’ ¥ Hrbog ™ * Tait 7 TRE MUSICAL TWIRLY. “y He MARRIAGE VOW, AuaURDITe H Next Wetk—il0 ZAG ALLEY, | And new burlesque, The Stickiness at cal | ri MUSIC, = a wenxs. NO | Prive. I Hi E A _—— yt N shy iy at 2.15, rnin RICHARD cates 16. Dive socteaay. Oven 3 © etter Nees 4, »