The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1903, Page 11

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)

an — SOUT CURT STS COU TENTS ‘Tonl VORLDi MONDAY’ ENB | HOME Here Is a Dainty Gown from London that Can Be Made Ine-xpensively. The Greatest Cost Is in the Pakjng, Which a Home DresSmaker Gan Cure tail. DAINTY evening gown worn re- cently at a society function where many beautiful imported creations Were seen is reproduced: for the benefit so? Evening World readers who may be dle to duplicate it at small expense. This gown, Which came from London, was of the palest shale of Nile green ohiffon made over white taffeta, The Found neck showed a fichu-lke arrange- Ment of plaited chiffon, and below the plaited insertions and merallions of cream-colored lace. The bloused walst was formed by chiffon and Iace in- sertions, and the elbow sleeves, made narrow at the top, broadened gradually into ruffles of chiffon and cream lace, All the fashionable skirts this winter are of remarkable duiness around the bottom, but this one probably measured |, more than any other in the elty. It was tight about the hips and was given @ novel yoke effect by applications of face medallions. It wes also trimmed .with vertical ineertlons of lace, but ite most wonderful feature consisted of three circular flounces-around the bottom fully five yards long and of ‘graduated width. The billowy chiffon skirt fell over a ‘Blip of white taffeta and .produced-a really fairy-like effect. Worn vy a slen- der blond woman the yale green chit- fon was very charming, though for persons with less dazzling complexions the shade might have been trying. For a debutanie the gown could be ude of white or cream chiffon, and for ta girl who had been out a season or who ‘had“developed a longing for colors, sky Wblue or pale rose, or for a brunette maize wight be substituted. ‘The chief expense of this gown was in _ the quantity of material needed to make tthe okirt and the elaborate workman- . With the ald. of a good home * @ressmaker the latter item can be great- av,.reduced, or where the girl and her me # A LONDON EVENING GOWN or NILE GREEN CHIFFON. ’ SOME OF THE QUEER WAYS OF INSECTS. were—there is kind or sex. . IN COLOR AND ACTIONS, ‘at the Royal Institute recently Prof. B. Poulton delivered an address on Resemblance and Warning 4n Insect: thie being one of two urses designed to show what prog- has been ‘made in @ fascinating of research since fifteen years ago lectured on the same subject in the @ hall, 's the London Post. Bish and other animals tend to be latk on the upper side of the body and it on the under side; {t was long be- © naturalists discovered the reason this, They know now--and every itor to the Natural History Museum ows What they know—that ts, if he caught the significance of A. H er’a model of the visible and in- lé duck. Mr. Thayer has painted the upper part 2 one-of the bird forms of much the @ color as the background, and he Painted the under part considerably iter, That is the invisible duck, In other case, he has painted the bird the @ame color all over, and be- df the under side appears much er than the upper, with the result the “duck” is most conspicuous, is*model thus serves an admirable tration nature's intention in ie can combing to meke the dress otloally eliminated. a m2 LITERARY WOMEN. Women writers seem to imagine, eays the Sydney Bulletin, that the literary woman who wisties to make a passionate thumb taark on the milestones of life should be elther not married at all and evoke her cryptogramio carioatures of men out of her own mind, or married to a disreputable husband who wiil be a ving domestic model for the villains in her stories stare cides: making dorsal surfaces so much darker than ventral surfaces, The earth is Ut from abo and it wes necessary—if animals were not td be extremely conspioucus—that the in- evitable shadows should bo connected As Prof. Poulton put it, “The form painted Ight below and dark above, with connecting gradations, looks vis- fonary and ghoetiike, as wild animals always appear in nature.’ He was on the track of that discovery in 1887, when he perceived that the light hairs and flesh projections of the caterpillar of the brimstone moth were intended, by neutralizing the shadow, to obliterate the creature's line of contact with the hawthorn bark. But to Mr. Thayer Is due the credit of seeing the wide ap- pileation of the principle. In contem- Plating that “very great and conyincing | discovery," the professor feels inolin: @ to echo the remark which Huxley made on reading “The Origin of Species’: “How stupid of one not to have thought of it before!” British East Africa espled what he took to be @ fine foxglove. He pickea the a Having gained an education, he { future; but it shall be yours at fifty dol-/1 will buy the bottle myself, for I have | | no difference of age, Some were green some were red for no other reason than that the colony, by grouping themselves in the manner {ndicated, might be dis- gulsed as a flower spike, and so escape the notice of enemles, of East Africa—Professor Poulton has since discovered—pass themselves off as flowers on horizontal branche: In breeding geometrae the lecturer has found that those placed on Turkish oak assume a corresponding black hue, those placed on dead tvy leaves becme yellow, while those placed on paper spills go At the 182 meeting of th Brit- Ish Association a gentleman came for- ward and announced 2 covered some folis fever aa hau Tih Hh pee ids eA Sa eae 2 follows that the price has kept falling] yer eyes shone and were kind. Now | 1A GREAT | THE UNFORBSEBN, }__ the larvae: On Wehen and they became gray and mottled, Other homoptera that he had dis- But he could not) myself trom one of my great neighbors a oie) of them green, the expiana-| on this ili and the price 1 paid was | country," ne anid. “How comen It that ANNIE "RUSSELL in MICE AND iin, rest on green leaves or stalks, Beetle# also vary thelr colors in har-| the thing must come to me, Only re- One day @ naturalist out collecting in| mony with thelr surroundings. A little} member, Jt m red| you sell it for. $and of Boar's Hill, Dail, and gray in| ‘How am I to know that this ts all stalk, whereupon the great floweriets,{he gray ground of Shotover Hill, Ox-| true?” asked Keawe. at the top and the red flowers'in tte middle all flew away, leaving only the | be fullfed larv the professor found Brasshopper brown in one part} pied the man, "Give me your fifty seed pods below, which turned out to jot Heligoland and green Between the green |both colors corresponding with local| tty dollars back into your pocket, If and the red homoptera—for such they |inues. | é KH Low Qoiffure ls Now | ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. Affected by New York Fashionables—The er A Wonder Story in Which Ambition, Love and Other i Human Passiotte Are Combined with tibboned fompadour Is the Supernatural. Stylish. CHAPTER 1. And, sure enough, he had neatee sald OW come the new styles tn hatr- Keawe Duyn the Bottle. the words before hie pocket was a dressing! With January tne en- : terptising colffeur decides that a ‘0 be sure, thie {a a wonde.ful bot- wall wl @hall call Keawo. ‘Hawai! whom I shall call ald eva ‘And now, good-morning to you, my fine fellow, and the devil g> with you for me!" sald the man, “Hold on!" sald Keawe; "T goa't want any more of this fun, Here, take your bottle back." change In the manner of wearing the Toten was a man of the island of | heavy as ever, wished to travel. Bo he journeyed an 1 | far as Ban Francisco. Walking one day in a street of beaut!- ful houses in that city, he saw one i ine) ior beautiful than all the oth- er: nd as ho stood gazing at it, @) you have boumht It for tesa than 1 sad-faced man appeared at ono of 18! yq1q for it," replied the man, rubbing windows and called to Keawe to enter| nts hands. “It Is yours now. and for the house. my part T am only concerned to see the “This ts a fine house of min maid) back of you.’ the man, and bitterly sighed. And with that he hang for his Chi- “Traly,' ald Keawe, “this te a ter nese servant and had Keawe shown out titul house, If I lived in the ike of It 1} of the house, should be laughing all day long. How! kKeawe went back on board his ship, comes it, then, that you should be slgh-| Now Kenwe ba a mate on board, ing?’ whose name was Lopaka “Phere {s no reason,” waif the man.| Keawe bound him to secrecy and told “why you should not have a house aiml-| 41) lar to this, and finer, If you wish, You have some money, I suppo: Lopaka, “and T fear you will be in "I have fifty dollars,” said Keawe;|trouble about this bottle. But there ts “but a house like this will cost more] one point very clear—that you are sure than fifty dollars.” of the trouble, and you had better have The man made a computation. the profit in the bargain. Make up your “I am sorry you haye no mot said) mind what you want with it, give the he, “for lt may ratse you trouble in the] order, and if it is done as you desire, “This 1s a very strange affair,” sald lars an {dea of my own to get a schooner ‘The house?” asked Keawe, and go trading through the islands."” “No, not the house,” replied the man,| “That {s not my idea,” sala Keawe, “but the bottle. For I must tell you, al-} but to have a beautiful house and gar though I appear to you ao rich and/den on the Kona coast, where I was fortunate, all my fortune, and this| orn, for all the world Ike the house house itself and {ts garden, came out of|1 was in this day, only « story higher, | la bottle not much bigger than a pint.Jand with balconies all about, like the ) | Phis te tt.” king's palace, and to Ive there without | | An@ he opened a lock-tast piace and/care, and make merry with my friends he took out a round-bellled bottle with a long neck. The glass of it was white,| “Well,” said Lopaka, ‘let us oarry !t| hair lke milk, with changing rainbow colors| back with us to Hawaii, and if all comes in the grain; while inside something ob-| true, as you suppose, I will buy the scurely moved, Uke a shadow and aj bottle, as I said, and ask a schoonel fire. Upon that they were agreed, and it “This te a strange thing,” said Keawe;| W28 not long before the ship returned “for by the touch of It, as well as by|to Honolulu, carrying Keawe, and Lo- the look, the bottle should be of glass.’’| Paka, and the bottle. They were acarce “Ot glews it 1s," replied the man,|@Shore, when they met a friend upon sighing more heavily than ever; ‘but |the beach, who began at once to condole the ginse of it was tempered in the| With Keawe, telling tim his uncle had flames of hell. An imp lives in it, and oles pels ar aia ON inelud- that Is the shadow we behold there |/né © beautiful new house on the Kona| wart set and by those bent upon fol- moving; or #0 I suppose, If any man| hillside. It was just such @ house as| eee te ode at all hazard buys this bottle the imp Is at his com- | Ktawe hed longed tor, to their personal appearance. But the mad; all that the desires: love, fame,|_ Keawe and Lopaka went all over this bith ; 1s necessary to the fashionable woman, and, with the ald of the comb and the curling tongs, he evolves a new and becoming arrangement of her locks. Many women during the past year have clung to the style of wearing the Knot colled high above the now impreg~ nable pompadour, notwithstanding fi lon's frequently promulgated deer that the hair must be worn low. ‘The low colffure ts certainly that most affected by the women of New York's rage woman, finding it less becom- money, houses likethis house—ay, or a| House, It was the finest ever built, ave city Uke this city—all are his Aaa When they had viewed all, Keawe and| !ng than the high colffure she had yorn word utte.ed. Napoleon had this bot-| LOpaka sat on the porch. successfully for several y' hes fee tle, and by it he grew to be the king| “Well,” asked Lopake, “is it all as| tated a long time before adopting It. r' sd these doubters, however, must of the world; but he sold it at the last | you designed? ‘Even and fell. Captain Cook had this bottle, “Words can not utter ft,"" sald Keawe. | succumb to the graceful lines of the and by it he found his way to so many | “It is better than I dreamed, and I am |:new colffure arranged for T: my ening: ialands, but he, too, sold it, and was |Sck with satisfaction World by I, Bhaw, of No, 64 West The Latest Way to Wear the Hair Is a la Langtry or a Calwe Dig THE CALVE DIP, Colffures Arranged for The Evening World by L. Shaw. Fourteenth street, In this the pompadore is very much in evidence, and to produce the full ef- which has first been over the head, is parted and the part, instead of ending at the ears, 1s continued to the neck. The hair, drawn forward, in a drooping pompadour, slain upon Hawall. For once it is sold,| Before buying the bottle, the power goes, and the protection; and|*éreed, Lopaka demanded one look at tnless a man remain content with whet |the Imp oe ft, that he inleh be he has, 111 will befall him." sure It was really @ magic bottle. ? TAs vet you tall: oF welling’ your ‘ery well,” replied Keawe; “I have a For Infants and Children, Maifptiarcaue ental curlosity myself. 80 come, let us have ough Meee tty, ona.t am terontne| Che OKT OH Me Imp. The Kind You Have Always Bought elderly,” replied the man, ‘There 1s|, Now, as soon as that was eald, the) Bears the one thing the imp cannot do; he can|!™P looked ont of the bottle and in| @ignature not prolong life; and it would not be | sain, awift aw a lizard; and there sat fair to conceal from you there ls a|Xeawe and Lopaka, turned to stone drawback to the bowtie, for if « man|The night had quite come before either 8N4/ dies before he sells it he must burn in| found @ thought to say or volce to say hell forever.” it with, and then Lopaka pushed the Amusements, “To be sure, that 1s a drawback,|™oney over and took the bottl rf m4 eo igepon cried Keawe. “l am a man of my word,” sald he,| gfiBtt OPOLITAN, SENBON 1902- “and had need to be 80, or I would not| under the ese of IR. MAURICE ‘ORau. at and no mistake, would not meddle witia the thin) upon the earth, was extvemely ex-]Keawe dwelt there in perpetual joy.| wmrropot. PAN DUSE TO-MORROW tensive and was sold firet of al} ie}And the fame of the house went far| OPBRA-HOL AFTERNOON at 2 OURAN Mt aicay' 2h Ar Prester John for many milillo of dov}and wide. It was called Ka-Hale Nut-| [:A sic a {DIO a Fomine dor Claude) lars; ut {t cannot de sold at ail, un-|the Great House—in all Kona; and some THis Act legs sold at a loss, If you sell tt for wo| times the Bright House. Beats on Bale, _Pricet, $8 0,8: 60,82 00.81.60,81.00, mucn 4s you paid for it, back {t comes) One morning as Keawe rode along the | gAPIRE THEATRE. to you again, ike @ homing pigeon.’ It} peach he saw a gitl walking toward him,| Evenings, 8.20. Matin y and 40th at ed, & Saturday Hera In these centuries and tno bottle is|jceawe no sooner beheld hor than he | S0cC#Ss"—H how semarkebiy: sHeenid ROWAVA NA drm. sein, oaRnt K THRATRE Wn a. oe 0 “1 thought I knew every one in this Matinees Wedne: Saturdays only $90, I could eeli Mt for as high as 489.99, but not a penny dearer, or back Ido not know you?” — —— ———— Y THEATRE, 34ih St. or. 1 way. said the girl, “and I have just returned With CLARA be coined mondy that! trom Oahu, Who are you?" . The il wit ite Green Eyes, BL00DG00D. "IT will tell you who I am in @ Uttle,"* id Keawe, dismounting from his horse, CRITERION THEATRE, 3 © Dries, 8 15. sailase Retued but not now, for 1 have @ thought in a] "Some pf it you can try at once,” re-| ny mind, and ¢ you knew who 1 was | JULIA MARLOWE cavALaER, you might have heard of me, and you| nat 3) Dally Mationen excep, Bat nd stb 8 2. ssi ‘QUERIES AND MiecWass Hamilton Fish's Fathe: the Editor of The Nvening World: as Nicholas Bish, who wag killed by car tracks. enade to clear first stairs out as far as desired. Ma ve #harkby,-the father of Hamil- ib, who was‘Rilled In the Spanish wart ARGUER, iste Om the Outside, ¢ Bajtor of, The Kvening World: ‘Yauthe proper place for a @en- be while walking with two Igdies, between them or on the a de. ANXI0U8. “tome Rude New Yorkers. WGARE BAiter of The Brening World; Wosle are wo much deceived by be: nhathey have no more confidence ¢ T belong to @ society of the We have to go out and ral In parts of New York. City I Many people unwilling to help. iF Me, Out Of the door like a “We don't. want beggars in the they say, and shut the door in five op ele foot by easiest mothos, Relsonty over roadway frosfl firer CULE Switch trolleys. before ge on either alde for the use of bridge passengers, Take aWay middle stairs To the Bdltor of The Evening World nounced like ” B gays (he ‘To the Editor of The £venti men out of employm gration for the same reason. To the Kulor of The Evening World avenue? G. MB. To the BdNOF of The Bvening Werks and 1 wish to give my opinion on have ing war. making war, buy food and elothes for tie emommy,, od nim Whole Kebangalip, bETTERS FROM THE PEOREE. The general should cali the other Jead- era into his presence and have a real- fatic conversation with him, “How can it be a pc Trolk © run over prom: & swerve leaving a paes- from Island platform and tmprove rear stairs, This would benefit platform. Leave ground loops as at present. RUSSELL. nelation In Correct, A says the letter in Towa is pro- in Iowa ‘s pronounced like the letter in Oklahoma, Which |e right? Cu As to Tri Trusts are bad because they throw + Bo are Jabor- ving machines. So is wholesale immi- JOHN CONWAY. “UA " In the Abbreviation, What {# the correct abbreviation of A Givl's Views on War. 1 am @ little girl eleven y: ‘8 of age, 4 of spending money 7 ‘ances Ho lay, Im another, |doliara, take tho bottle and wish your! Would not ive mew true anewer. suc) Mi Pranene Huimin Bani es toll me, first of all, one thing, 7 that does not happen L pledge you my| Cn, Me Ne, fe “8 GARDEN TUBA TRE, honor 1 will cry off the bargain and)” yy tnty Kokua laughed out loud, ete it "Matinee To-Morrow and sfy:) ‘yoll, I will risk that muc esibility to gain an-|iceawe, ‘for that can do no harm other's confidence with guns and arms?” One congenial and so the war will be ende e bot- | tir a no more of § | Wed Bvg.8 sharp.oinnes 5 ‘ Another, | man, and the man handed him che bot- | 1c din diy no more Of me, aay | Weal yan i WR BLUE B nib, He, th to your fathers house,’ For | Colonel Produtie Soares “Imp of the bottle," sald Weawe, "| } we e wiiy him vewecks’ seats on 9A! Champlon Only of America, |™*" To the Bator of The Brening World ll ata HOW DU MAURIER DREW. = [{ ROYALTY AS NURSES, ampion ot the world. Which Is right? A, W. A heavy-weight ch To the Editor of The # Jn answer to Henry iris of Yorkville fi Elghty-ninth think he ought to treet beauties, $20,000,000 Was Paid, To the Kaitor of The Brening World he used (o draw twenty or Mfly times) of military nursing was the late Prin- |” \Lanche mation the scale of the block f which the’ cess Allce, who organized the wMole|- 14th, | J, who ways that|qrewing was finally printed for Punch: | nursing arrangements {n Darmstadt KEIT Sots RBA 4¢ rom Highty-fourth His studio in the Hittle house at Hamp-) during the Franco-Prussian war, saya) 4 . are beauties, ee the Bighty-third United States} the fear that his Invention would ‘at ik an active pestonal part 4a pursing him, ‘ile was alwaye say! Give Greek and Turkish soldiery who | RHOPOLIS 42d ot. and 3d me an {dea; give me @ subject. I ¢ into Athens during tue 1 Mgt SD nthe think of nothing.” He kept what be! gion nurish’ war, In Great Britain! Amelie —buws Vo Reduce Welghe, To the Baltor of Tae wrening World reduce IT have tried dict ana ercise without result, | Exercise and diet a MB the only means | tbQut iY by the subse: *, Yhereoy Seth may be harmlessly r4- nehmLondon, the French ggasi, the Queen decided that it wae not om, END — Al WLAN restore your mone; “You are not deceiving me?’ said Keawe. The man bound himself with a groat oath “it Ia you who ask quenttons,* she 'SOTHERN & ast HAMLET 4, “Are you married yourself?’ ° Hi Were King. ndeed, Kokua, I am not, replied | - Keawe, "and never thought to bo until | MAD: ON 8 this hour, But here is the plain truth Mi "814 t have met you here at the road-aide and ELIZABETH TYREE in GRETNA GREBS, to syau aWitt a KNICKERBOCKER THEA. |W nay, & 2 Jan, 20—Kothera ith at at, Bway, nd Saturday ‘And he pald over his money to the ontinued,) arcs [AME RICAN. 1, Dally. | 8. my $30 back,” dap §F AND 82 rave Skene 8h: RVICE,. 8] go imperfect was his vision during all) The only ono of Queen Victoria’s| |BELASCO THEATRE the tater years of DuMaurler’s life that | daughters who ever had real experience | Oamwealves TURAL with te ge Tletead was a curio Wvoard jthe Public Ledger, @ae visited the!» in Wax, NEW GROLPS, re |B N erie ie EAATOGRAPH. MUSEE, De Kole the Wizard, To-night at 9 areas of bia half the space hem, writes anate iy | wards daily, and apent houns in inet | f one side filed w eorge Smalley in Me beset, moreover, with letters for the wounded, and rel. 4th in see * Tho Queen o. Youn Busnes apart TAR AON MUA Ss ROAD TO RUIN, jure’s. Ha w y joke pot, ii hich he n ve WHEN com called a Joke pot, into which t Te antintint maalainaale iA NewYork, f ry ined | marines | HNN MARCHING 1 came to him by aa rer | ire 815, Ms AuCHH va persons, with | herself with nurees and their (x: te.! saturday id But he never, AS & Ki] Bhe was very anxious to be oe what was' come @ probationer in St. Thomas's opena- You coud trace, we, eradtks | Hospital, but after some consideration | HOUSE | Toot his ue ALEAN OF The Scarcity of Coal and Its High Price makes cooking difficult o ot ‘as or oil stove for heating the water a’ delicious made in a few minutes with J st ob wb ot Maggi Bouilion 4 size bottles, from 45c, sold rocers and druggists. gi Bouillon is unlike any- thing else, has a flavor, and entirely devoid of the objectionable feature of tinned soups #% % wt st b Socneliamantiememmstiaedibtemmes tenements “I have told you already why 1 sigh,”]| touch this bottle with my foot." Peaient , peat PERO ETED | said the man. “As for why 1 sell so| But the next day came very brightly, | pri frre iors at 30, OOBTTERD APM MPRUNG cheap, 1 must explain to you there ig] and that new nouse of Keawe'a was ao] Mi. Aft, Jan 34a 20°00" x pone & peculiarity about the bottle. Longjdelightful to behold that he forgot his 7 Les HUGUENOTS ago, when the devil brought it firsi, terrors, One day followed another, and WEBER PIANOS USED. Arnusements, "Maines @auurdeye Telephone, 703861. thie § TO-NIGHT, DE WOLF HOPPER “MR. PICKWICK.” ~MATINEBS ONLY Turaday, W aUaiey fi Treaty Aig itar sa ‘LOUIS ii at i tad Thur Madison Square Garden, Adm, 60°, AUTOMOBILE SHOW. & 50TH ST, GRAND CiRCLE, ans (WIZARD OF 07 for Thursday Eve., Jan, MAT, TO-DAY, Harry Kiow 4 rleoeeT The BILLIONRIE sore Sayan 2 WEBER & FIELDS 33° Sntyes @ pa,» THA MU sta TWIRLY-WHIRLY: tre, nr. tin Ave, Sat, wat @ gat | VELLOUS PRODUCTION, JIM “BLUDSO, RoverT TlLusaro, GRAND.- 25cto $1.00) Manhatian Ae KE Liberty Belle mains in the back—and. uniess bdlessed with abundant halr very, remains, and one must have reco & switch—=is combed up and in @ loose coll starting from the: padour and continuing down on # neck. The arrangement of the back shows the familiar rope twist produc by dividing it Into two equal twisting each one tightly in directions and then allowing them: coll naturally about each otter, A aecided novelty in hai the Calve dip. In this the pomp is allowed to droop forward in the eet tre of the forenead, instead of at side, as heretofore. A few stray soften the outline of the forehead. back halr is tied) midway bet crown and the and : ; loose French twist. This pompadour’ shows a novel arrangement of ribbon, which Is woven in and out the hair and tied in a jaunty bow top of the head. os Amusements, VISIT T PROCTOR'S Focmiuhir, dea ma) SILA | sah 8. DIL es “@ © HUBER'S MUSEUM: First Time in Amerion, B: Also 30 ig Paguviiie Acta’ 8T_ NICHOLAS “Stap “ollegtate Hockey Mat CORNELL, Tuesday, 2D, 815 Pe ADM, 50s. RESERVED EATS 50k. ae “wap sar. | MAT., rae 500. to $1.50. —10oth—Artistic Souvenirs, Pate wee & VIOLETTE, pee & ELLY x lita FRANKLIN, | 2 RCH DOLEER EXTRA ATTRACTION ESTON @ ALLEN, yiniTeee Lax.ay. {mt st at. uray rg prisis 3, 99.8 evi V Bouneliy Bock Cx HEARTS AFLAME. fdantay Bits Muro. M Cverwbelanieae aie ICKINESS OF OBLA" a — scanmuY + 14th Si. & Irving Place Ms, THE ey AND ere 7a | “MATINEE sone! DEWEY. | MooNtiaHT naibs sO, fis MONTAUK. Jag E. 8, WILLA “Mon, Tues, and Wed Met —THM CA) SE M'DOWELT. PLO) | Bit 30th i ee THE Ty in if vt THE CAGE, | Hl VICTORIA, 430 9 | VIOLA ALLEN a UR Hlirness THEODORA. Neat

Other pages from this issue: