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“Tis HOMES ¥ $000. RICHER Ring Woke Up Huge Audience at the Metropolitan, and: Splendid ‘Bill Was .Given at Big Benefit. Fe atv gee 5 ‘BESSIE CLAYTON’S STORY. » (Becrecy Over Marie Cahili’s Rumored " \ Marriage to D. V. Arthur—Grace |: @eorge’s Matinees—Doings of ‘the. ! Player Folk on Broadway. i: . @reesy Blanche Ring had''em all sing~ fag “The Good Old Summer Time” at! the Metropolitan Opera-House yester~ @ay. And when you say “all” you say @ g00d many, for the annual benefit of jhe Actors’ Home of America attracted edgar @udience which packed the great Everything and everybody peceraege @ bit, bot none “caught the ;@fowd" like the bonnie Eilanche. { Firat whe gave them “The Relle of jtAvenue A," then, when: recalied, she *eanched into the lyric about the season @very one's waiting for, Bhe extended @ general invitation to join in the Early diffidence by the people @n the other side of the footlights was ‘evercome by her good-natured raillery, eich I am ashamed of you out there,” and “Come now, help me out,” ,@nd it wasn't long before’ the whole shouse was joining in the song. Another popular hit was the double @extet of stars in the ‘Florodora” song- @nd-nod. “Jimmie” Powers, in frock oat and tall hat, presently relieved his Aressed-up /feclings by displaying a placard: “This suit for sale after the show.” Tittle Katie Barry fell down acct- @entally by getting switched onto the @uterowing train ahead of her, while Bam Beynard fell down purposely and ontinuolisly with utter disregard of his ne raiment. Miss j3everly Sitgreaves, who plays the Prijcess Marie in ‘Resurrection,” @nd who 1s to be sent on the road in SSOSCO RSOSLEOCO CO Art—the nude in art—ts now the fancy of Miss Pauline Chase, the “Pink Pa- Jama Girl" of Inst year's “Liberty Belles.” Ge attended last night's picture sale in Mendelssohn's Hall and bought Lefebvre's “Truth” after spir- {ted bidding for $410. Mr. Lefebvre's {dea of “Truth” when he painted this ploture was as far from pink pajamas or any other kind of raiment as he could get. According to the catalogue, “Truth 1s symbolized by the nude figure of a woman holding a dazzting mirror aloft in her right hand.” No sooner was the picture put up than Misg Chase made a bid and she kept right at it until she got it. Thé young woman, whose fame aa an actress came principally from the grace with which she wore a pair of pink pajamas in ‘The Liberty Belles," ts not on the stage this year. She {s luxurt- ating in the fortune she made while In her pajamas, She ts a very beautiful young woman, of Dresden china pink and white, and she may be seen almost any fine day in Fifth avenue with an up-to-date automobile. It Is a coupe of usual appearance, ex- cept that there iano seat for the chauf- feur outside, Miss Chase runs it herself from the inside of the car, the motor bar and the rest of the apparatus being right at hand. ‘The coupe creates a sen- sation among those who see it for the first time, as {t appears to be running 9999900996 S009GG0G99E 29896-9959 S3725900SO00 090004 SOOO HEOHS wild. Not until It comes abreast of one van the fair face of the owner be seen, with her hand on the lever and her bright eyes fixed ahead of her, steering with great skill through the maze of carriages and other automobiles that throng the avenue, Miss Chase’s rise to affluence shows What @ clever girl may doin the chorus {f she applies herself to her work and saves her money. A year ago she was earning perhaps $25 a week and applause enough to turn the head of any young woman. Now she has automobiles, fins pictures, a beautiful home in which to put them and all the luxuries which fair women love. Miss Chase has never let the public into her confidence as to how shg In- Vested hor earnings, but there are stories afloat that she was exceptionally shrewd in her stock investments, thore- |by again proving the old theory that there Is no better point of vantage from which to study the ins and vats o} Wall street than the front row of the chorus, especially if one weare luk pa- Jamas over a beautifully molded figure, but, not the kind of dancing I do now,"* said Miss Clayton. “While I do not belleve my oresent atyle of dancing is injupious, I must confess I have grown yory tired and feel that I need a rest. Thén, too, my dance has Jost its novelty. ana t belleve the pudlic has grown tred gf seclng me do the same old, thing. I'm going to try to make a success of something entirely different. ee Grace George is contemplating the presentation of one or two plays other than “Pretty Peggy” at her matinees while she is at the Herald Squi One of these plays will be “Frou Frou,” in which she appeared last June at the Garrick, and which 1s especially adapted to afternoon audiences, and the other probably will be George Bernard jets “ Tell.” Ro {reC wilh be leading man In all threo productions. the chyracter of Maslova, gi a mar- qwellougly true imitation of Di “A “Bunch of Buds from Broadway's Beau- “Wes” /scored in a musical sketch written . Py Grant Stewart and Manuel Klein for the occasion. Blanche Bates, George ‘Arles and Robert Haines were capital fa, a new and clever ones ce.” A “acts''—to use a vaudeville jade up the dij st show of the cried and the receipts approximated r ey . “It 1s not because protracted and vio- Jent dancing has proved injurione to her health that Bessie Clayton is to leave “Weber & Fields's company a few weeks nce. : ‘ Despite the recent deaths of divers @ancers, due, it was sald, to the exces- aive exercise of thelr calling, Mies Clay- ton asserts that dancing has been dene- *Acial rather than harmful to her. “I have been dancing for twelve “and in all that thme I cannot say that my health has been fhurt in the least. Perhaps this has been © Because dancing has always been nat- taral to me. I walked at nine mo: and when I was two years old, they te: me, I couldn't keep my feet still.” . “Did dancing run in the family “No, indeed,” she laughed, “Neither of gay parents was given to such frivolous pastime, and both my grandfather and jancle were preachers. I can't imagine ‘now it ever got into my feet. My ite used to wonder at jt. When I was ry very ttle gi n appearing at private enter-ainments, and at the age 3 eleven I went on the stage. Though ‘my home was in Philadelphia, I made my first appearance in New York, at the ak Theatre—what is now the Herald ‘Phat was in John C. Rice's pany, play Nece called ‘A Seer Age ror t gion three years T was foyt's company, ani ave now been Cam with, Weber & Fields." Slayton will leave the Weber, & pany before it starts on tte ing tou “and will Immediately devote Bared to the cultivation of an excellent ‘soprano voice and the study of acting, Marie Cahill 1s modestly reticent con- cerning the rumor that she !s soon to bscome the bride of her manager, Daniel HE have nothing to say on the subject.” is her evasive reply to In- terested Ingulry. . Monday night's performance of “It I Were King" at the Garden Theatre will! be attended by the Francois Villon So- clety, @ French and American organiza- tion composed of admirers of the much- maligned poet. THEATRE TICKET SCALPERS’ WAR ON Test Case of Collister Against Hayman Is Begun Before Jus- ‘atory to playing a part in a musi- seedy which her husband, Jultan| ~ tice Truax. tchel], and Hamlin will ch hext season, Victor Herbert Is 45 write the music, and Miss Clayton Is to, have one.or two of the best songs, shall dance n.ttle in that World Wants Always Lead! 97 AB Fos Paid The war between the ticket spezula- tors and the “Theatre Trust” was on again to-day before Supreme Court Jus- tice Truax, and this time st will be waged to a finish in the Court of Ap- peals. The original test case of William H. Collister against Al Hayman, of the Knickerbocker Theatre, was revived by Max D. Steuer. Collister lost in the preliminary stages before Justice Soott and the Appellate Diviston. Collister has been a lcensed ticket epeculator for fourteen years, paying the city $25 annual license fee, In De- cember, 191, Hayman posted warnings in the lobby of the Knickerbocker that tickets bought on the sidewalk would be rejected at the door. Agents of the Paid Help Wants in this morning’s World, Help Wants inthe 13 other York papers combined, JANITRESSRS .. .. 2| theatre gave verbal warnings to intend- KITCHENWORK ... 6/ing purchasers of tickets on the ei LADIBS' PALLORS,. 6| walk. MACHINISTS. 9| Colieter got a temporary, injunotion MEN .... + 15| restraining Hayman's agents from inter. MILLINERS. MOULDERS NECKWEAR . NURSES . OPERATORS , PACKERS .... , PAINTERS PAPERHANGERS ., PHOTOGRAPHERS . PIANO HANDS, PORTERS PRESHERS SALESLADIES SALESMEN SHIPPING CLERKS, SHOR MEN. ‘ PAINTIRS SKIRT HANDS... ., STENOGRAPHERS . TAILORS .. TINSMITHS fering with his lawful and licensed bus). ness in either of these ways. But Jus- tloe Boott refused to continue the in- function pending his sudt, and the Ap- pellate Division sustained Justice Sco on A. H, Hummel's argument that “a theatre ticket Is a perconal license to ait in the theatre and is revol will of the manager, and notice to that effect on the b ticket made tliat @ part of the contract between manager and purchaser,” The sult iteelf wae brought before Jus- tice Truax to-day av a preliminary to going to the Colrt of Appeals, for which ever way Justice Truax decides it whi be appealed by the defeated lti- few| The trial was set down peremp- ily for Monday ae aa int lS STRUCK BY ELECTRIC CAR. O14 Man Receives Fractured 6k Crossing Eighth Street, Harry Gibble, fifty-six years old, of cond CARRIAGE HANDS. CASHIERS . CHAMBERMAIDS . COMPOSITORS .. SS eres TYPEWRITERS JEALOUSY GOT HER INTO CELL. Mme. Gossning Smashed the Door of a House Where She Thought Her Husband Was Concealed. TWOWOMEN TRY TOLEAP TODEATH Goaded by Grief Over Sudden Death of Mother and Sister, They Fight with Police to Jump from Window. MADE A GREAT UPROAR. ‘The whole trouble seems to have come about becausy M. Gossing has been a husband beyond compare. According to the testimony of his wife, in all th years of their married life he has never failed to come home to dinner but once, onc@ landed her in @ police cell. Gossning is a French dress- maker, with an establishment at No. 25 Bast Thirty-first street. She recently went to Paris to look over the spring models, She came back a few days ago, wondering what her husband had been doing in her absence, the way women will sometimes. Last night he did not appear for din- ner, Mme. became very much excited. Such a thing had never happened before. She began to dmagine that some one he had met in her absence had attached a string to him and wes keeping him away from her. She went into the street in search of him. She found some cne who told her they had seen him go into No. 116 East Thirty-finst street. She went there and dena admittance in an uproarious manner. She didn't get it and she broke the glass panel in the front docr. Then the head of the house, Michacl Pardee, who had never theard of her husband, came out and had her arrested, She was locked up in the Kast Thirty fifth street station, Later she got bail and returned to the Pardee house. While she was again demanding admittance, her husband happened by and persuad her to go home, He must have e plained satisfactorily his absence, fi when madame was ed in Yor ville court to-day she was most meek, und accepted ther $10 fine without a pro- test. Jn fact, she admitted that she had been foolishly jealous, and so excited shat she didn’t know what she had been olng. HUSBAND STABBED WIFE. She Said He Did It After He Got Tived Beating Her, In @ quarrel with his wife last night Peter Gordon, of No, 19 Goerck street, stabbed her in the left cheek, He was arrested, “My husband got tired of using hin hands and feet on me,” said the wife to te Seller in the Essex Market to-day, “and #0 he used his Court kn e dé is a brute,” sald the Court. “! your face is covered with bruises. y body 18 also covered with them, she replie The husband was held on a charge of felonious faenaul YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE DR. KOCH, Celebrated Consumption Specialist Will Leave New York Shortly, Eawara, Koch, tue, great Gernias cla dod Invemtur Of the Koch lnpala lon, which has revolutioulzed of freating consumption, auth nn catacth. te atith tn New York wud cau “ng Cure offices, findreds ee ror copsumption OF "aay gud asthine are callin, lag Koch and secure bi oui! this Teason bas pos! hi rf omcen ete are STRUGGLED FOR TWO HOURS. Miss Anna Schoenfeld, of No. 600 East Fifth street, went to the theatre last night with Louis Malitz, of No. 238 Clin- ton street, She forgot to take the key to the front door of her home with her, so when ehe and Malitz returned at 2 o'clock this morning they rapped on the door, intending to have her mother, Mrs. Leah Schoenfeld, who weighed about 300 pounds, throw the keys down to her from the sacond story window. Instead, Mrs. Schoenfeld essayed to come down and open the door herself, and as she was fitting the key in th lock she dropped dead from heart ease, Two policemen helped Malite break in the door and carry Mre. Soho- enfeld's body ac! Mra. Schoenfeld’s sister, who had slept through the noise, was awakened, and she refused to belleve her sister dead, So did the daughter. A doctor was calied from next door, and he tried to assure them Mrs. Schoenfeld was really Oithey would not Delleve.bim and x0 licoman sent to the B for an ambulance, ‘The surgeo: there was no doubt as to the wom: Bh An's ‘Iifeless condition. ‘Then’ both ithe | sister and daughter became hysterical and rushed for the front windows, ‘The police restrained them from leap- ing out, but !t was necessary for them to remain in the house two hours, the women threatening to do away ‘with themselves the moment they were left a.one. The police were relieved by the relatives of the famlly arriving. fitting. 30 inches long, 17 strapped s value $30.00, at..... shoulder capes, at... all sizes, 4 to 14 Lord & fit 22 inches long, 17 strapped pos taffeta lined; valuc $25.00, at.cresesececes wrercece Long Travelling Trein Coats of taffeta, sala THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 13, 1903, “PINK PATAMA GIRI” PAYS $410 FOR “TRUTH,” A STUDY IN THE NUDE BY ARTIST LEFEBVRE. DEOESOOSES LOL DSO9O OHHH HEOODLOSDEELESEDLEDVODOOHHTHD HOHHOSHIMGHHHGGDY CHANCED NAME TO BRING SUIT. as “Mrs. Flowerton,” Equivalent in English. JURY DECIDED AGAINST HER. Maude Carlin, an athletic young wom- an, who sues for $30,000 damages, tes- tiled before Justice Dugro and a jury to-day against the Motropolitan Street Railway Company. he sald rhe was returning from an entertainmen: in the music hall at Eighth avenue and One Handred and Fifty-fifth street, and was standing in the middle of cm crowded open car on the night cf Aug. 11, 189, when the car gave a sudden lurch and sho was pitched out Into Central Park West at Bighty-four:h street. She is a writer and singer and had been able to ride a tbleyole, play golf, run races and do all |sorts o fthings in the line of athletics, Dut since the accident she has been a physical wreck. |When she wi worn the handsome plaintife gay name as ‘Maude Flowerton."" Henry L. Scheurman, on cross-examination, asked: “Was your name Carlin or Flower- ton, when you brought this suit?” “It was nolther; {t was Blumberg.” Teplled the witness with flashing eyes, and above the volce of her attorney, G W. Hoplins in objections, she added: “I did not ike to have my child known by a Hebrew name. It was born shortly afterward, and so I sued in. my old_ name." “I thad been the Widow Carlin, but was then remarri¢d to Mr, Blumen- beng," was the reply. “I fixed {t all right afterward by having my husband change, tis name to “Flowerton., You know ‘Flower! is the English trans- lation of ‘ton’ or ‘town’ for ‘berg. Te defense of the Company was that it had never received any report of any such accident as Mrs, Carlin-Blumberg- Flowerton had described, and did not believe any such. accident occurred as it was practically an impossible acci- lent. The Jury found o verdict against the young woman In half an hour, lum’ and Established 1845 For fifty-eight years the “WATERS” have been known as standard high- grade pianos, and are famous for their fine tone and great durability. Sold only , our Own fo stores: Not sold at De- partment Stores. Women's Covert: Cos, in the smart, “Corsette” shape, a Two styles for Sat ped seams aud close tes $19.50 jeams, taffeta lined; $23.50 $25.00 Girls’ New Spring Coats, A comprehensive variety in all the new effects, em. bracing many exclusive styles in cloth, silk and Etamines; | Specials for Saturday, at $5.50, $7.50 & $10.50, years inclusive. Taylor Broadway and 2oth Street. | Mrs. Blumberg Didn’t Like That of Her Husband and Testified| Its AMMEYE 6th Ave., Cor. 20th St. Opening March Sale In Our Basement Of New Spring: Footwear 5,000Pairsof Men's Shoes Sold Goatees for $3.50 ld by us at 12.25! Our price tells the story. When we say that we sell $3.50 Shoes for $2.25, we do exactly as we claim. We guarantee the shoes to you. Men's $3.50 patent leather button, lace and Blucher, also box calf, hid and velour calf Lace, 220 Men’s $3.50 patent leather Oxfords and patent leather Blacher » 25 ° Oxfords, See Window Display of Men's Patent Leather high and low Shoes for $2.25. Also Great Bargains in Women’s and Children’s Shoes. Women’s $2.50 and $3.00 black kid, welted I 9 0 sole, LaceShoes, ° Women’s black, hid lace with patent leather tips, ie Women’s $2.50 and $3.00 Oxfords, assorted styles, in patent leather and black hid, also black hid Colo- nials, 1,50 Women’s $1.50 patent leather vamp Oxfords, 7 00 Bones f} oe oe and $4. 00 Fancy atent leather Slippers, 44.4 20 eee 1.50 fomen’s $1, faci ido stan Sale, 79 len’s ‘eloar calf Oxfords, 2. 00 ? len’s iggeee and baa ace joes, assorle styles, ih J 0 Children’s Shoes, Child’s $1.50 black kid and box calf Batton and Lace, if 00 B, Cand D Widths, ° Misses’$2.00 black kid and box calf Batton and Lace, B if 2 5 and C widths, ° Misses’ large size spring heel and low hee! Button and ie, 50 Lace, B,C, and Dwidths, Open Saturdays Until 7 P. MM. 6th Ave., Cor. 20th St. including stool and cover, $195. Guaranteed for ten years, Pianos delivered on first pay- ment of $5, Come to-morrow and secure ‘one in this great March sale, au CARS TRANSTER TO ANNAN aii ANS Sunday World Wants Work Monday Morning Always Use the > Tin me Wenders saver Money BOYS’ CLOTHING. The assortment for Spring and Summer comprises x Norfolk, Double-breasted and Vest Suits Py x in newest combinations, igh Sailor and Russian Blouse Suits of fancy mixtures and colored serges, single and double-breasted, with Sailor, Eton and French collars. Dees; Suits of Black Velvet, White Pongee, Ben- galine and Moire Silk. Washable Suits of White Pique and Duck, Cotton Etamine, White and Colored Linen, Plain and Striped Seersucker, Saxony and Scotch Flannel. Top Coats, Reefers, Shirt Waists, Blouses, Hats and Caps. e. ee & a Eighteenth-Street, Nineteenth sey Sixth Ave., New*York. BLOW CANDY... ..........ececee seceee eee sdb. 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Third Ave. and 1224 Stré 609 8th Ave., 39th and 40th Sts. 162 Bowery, near Factories: 401, 403, 405 East 91st St., Manhattan. To Let 5 Time Is Here. Kee Before the Millions in The World’s Lis