The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1903, Page 15

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” bal i a Bal ar ie hed MOS he id al -_T TR ae ee ae ee ee ee Terre germ ‘2 THE w EVENING .¢ WORLD'S w HOME ws MAGAZINE ow ‘LOST LIGHTS OF THE TENDERLOIN. THE CHARM OF THE THE LATEST GAME OF CHANCE ‘ One Who Had Delusions of Grandeur Sighs ee Unol-| MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN, PLAYED BY NEW YORK WOMEN, tainable Profits. By Harrict Hubbard Ayer. [" you were to ask several very distinguished men, among them Mr. Will- FRILAY. Devan MAY 1, 1903, an |] tam K. Vanderbilt and Lieut. George Coruwallis-West, at what age a —*TIVOLI” ACKRON. woman {js most alluring, most desirable, most charming, each would! r Hing! erett. Ackrun) Who didn't fit, and out they went. Ea pesre Oh Vie . ’ | gazes Into the giass of memory, seeing p.ctures of en brought thelr wives there for a touch of gay life, ‘After she har passed girlhoud; after she has even left behind her} great days. and they suid they would never believe without seeing it the years between girlhood and ma-| It was Mulvaney who, regretting the days of his youth,|that the Tivoli was so mild. Some didn't know the differ- CUFity MPATLARahGd Nasicwellteodnded|| paid he had put his ‘fut through ivery wan of the tin com-Jence, aud they just thought they had been awful wicked. Tan NaleucatStealiahe - mandments ‘twixt daylight and] A politician insulted sume respectable ladies there one night i q of all’ the dark, drank the froth off me]and was beaten, Then I was closed.” emotions a wellerounded Hfe can |pewter, and went to slape as} He told the story in detail wi does not ft into this draw forth—a woman is at the most! quiet as a child. Ab, I was @ perrelya) aes) cane a ithe WR eo Cia ChE eit charming period of her existence.” | Livil of a man! ning through August and into December. Labs : Ackron was a “@ivil of a|doors were shut and the lights out; sometimes the lights It has frequently happened of late ‘The ten commandments | blazed and the crowd came not. years that the mature woman has In his short] ‘*Phe polic® can clone you any time they want,” he sald. captured the most eligible and de- SlTenaertotn career he made more}"You may have the law on your alde all right, but the HRGiW Wasndiok qr) @doWenlee tie moment and often the marriage reg- N exile in East New York, Charles E the depths impress on that district than|wardman gives out the tip that there is to be a raid and iny of its Mghts, from McGlory|no one comes near you. There are people who cant afford to Corey. He came from Os-|to let the judge sew thelr faces too often.” {ster has shown a great discrepancy wego, N. Y. Storm and stress} Ackron had, as a resource in case of the Tivoll's closing, {n years, the bride in some Instances were in the signs of his birth. ‘Two tera in penitentiaries,|a place at Seventh avenuc and One Hundred and Twenty- belhg uwalve; fifteen, even twenty : Ging Ging and Trenton, and some years selling clothes on the|ffth street, "The Farm," it was called. Lt was projected in foad, preceded his advent into liquor selling in New York, | Tivol! days. It ran one week. ; u In 1898 he op. the Tivol under a ‘hotel license. The| ‘They couldn't touch me on any point Dut one,” he sald the mature bride Is enormously rich | hotel was « ruse, for in the Tivoll game one sails very |"'I had noglected to get a building pe@mit. They sous i {n such cases and the young hus: ‘ . slose to the rocks of the law, and all the tricks of sea-|out and down came my pavilions. Ran just a week an WEA AEI ‘ ARESLOTRICOMDIRhETe 5 . adele kha nesestaty in sick valerate eas as Fender: Wand poor it ts only natural to credit finance with some share in tho lady's ous for viclous men and women, a resort for those who ove much light, loud music, Tenderloin talk and drink, It “ead the flash of more conventional places; the scale of ‘prices was higher than obtained in rendezvous for the k plaborately dressed. : Mhirty-fifth street was dark when Ackron entered {t; it pas quiet, (f not wholly nice. Ackron filled it with glare. In East New York yesterday he told the history of the her husband's senior, Where} attractions, hee " wane ‘ors are used In their decoration. The game is played on Of course, no young girl can understand the admiration men feel for Jeu d’ Automobile Threatens to Supplant ping-pong board, and at the word “Go!” the cars stast the older woman. Bridge and Poker Among Fair Gamblers. simultaneously to race up the board, back again and ones more down to the winning post. They never will understand the attractions of mature womanhood until} Sees iis ihe lige eare ahawersihelontpoeeae they have hud all the experiences and have lived all the years that must} weil, experts are at work making a spectal course for the pass until they themselves reach the age of the belle of forty-five who has N’ W YORK women are gambiing-mad over a new game.| “Jeu d'automobdtle.” caerind | Peliee Charming! ont Goal uaded (help ves) ones: Bridge whist and ping-pong have {urnishea amuse-| At the start of the game a pool {s mad Eps io motor-cars, the two to the right anu the two to the left the four outside Mivoll’s rise, its high tide, its ebb. 7 7 ment, but the newest thing i# the “Jeu d'automoblle, “All eorts came to me. You know the kind. They were It doesn't explain the witchery of the w n past forty to make caustle and gambling with motor cars instead of cards Is. the fad ot] contributing 2 per cent. more than do the five on the inside. bed and good. The bad came fdr their own ends; the commont on the taste of the man who prefers her to the rosebud beauty in| ihe hour. Ever ready to lighc upon some new device to} This In because It Is more diMoult to steer the outside cara, good came to eee the bad. Do you know, such places make ber teens, entertain and at th e Ume sa the gambling instinct, | The three divisions of the course are numbered, and a break- ¢ Bs much money out f respectable people as they do out of ety bas bee taken whh the miniature automo-| down in any one of them costs the car a sum in inverse « If a man {n love were te attempt to analyze the fascinations of the woman beantiful of forty-five ie could answe' “What can a man sce In a woman of middle age old enough to be the rncing races ratio to {ts distance to the winning post. Every foul upset ar game, Which’ as {ts name implies, ts al brings into the pool 2% cents if there Is a man or woman orintion, ple so far ay principles are| near. If the miniature human beings are not in the vi t gieat SKill is required before the game may | !t costs nothing. A policeman thrown on the table brings | fhe other sort? They want to see life; they want to be Wevilish. They go scouting around, looking for something bad, and what they see {s so tame they're disappointed. Wid I make money? Why, it came in so fast I couldn't the oft-repeated question: grteel it away.” mn , ‘ | . and consideraie expenditure Is enta HL. doe { Masre was trouble with the police, mild trouble, and this mother of the season's beauty, that | All of the pleisures of aut g ure saul ayers are provided with little penalis like switches, — was “squared.” How? It {s a story of mystery. Ackron he should prefer her to the bewitch- by enthustasts to be attendant upon the game, while the} and with these they may control the cars, To touch the ‘ways there was = igh, high boss, whose hand he touched. ing freshness, the incomparable love- dangers are all removel, ‘The dangerous re with cattle] wrong car disqualifies a player. Some rules m@ke tli Where was trouble over the lease. The rent rose from $300 liness of girlish youthfulness and policem Jestiian# and vealeles, are reproduced In| offense the subject of a fine. Collision between two care | — | minta ator must avold these and guide his| causes the removal of the cars and a $2 fine, which gées mach ning it. There is a pool in whica| into the pool, but Jf the winning car upsets the judges the loxers pay their losses and from which the winners#| stand $2 is the penalty. If the winning car upsets the take thelr profit; nnd the love of gambling has made the| judge. however, it brings him $2 from each player. © diversion so popular that many men and women of the smart ‘As the host 1s supposed to know the cars and in this Way set KO prepared to such social functions nowadays with Alto have an advantage over the other particfpanta in the + full purse game he never play! The course is divided into three. At one end there is a intense excitement which attends the tatest Parisian Witie automatic starting post ar the other end there Is| importation in the way of entertainment arises from the fact »@® month to $700 a month, to $1,000 a month, Landlords are , @ovetous, sometimes. The landlord raised Ackron out of /pusiness. The elaborate fixtures were torn out in a night. \& long-ebandoned church next door was bought by Ackron Bnd fitted for his purposes. For nine and a half months he + Mlgned so prosperously that he got delusions of grandeur, “Had two orchestras, three sets of singers, tables in the ybig hall downstairs, tables in the gallerics, aisles of palm frees, mirrors everywnere; so many mirrors that from my Not riches In the two cases alluded to, Mr, Vanderbilt certainly would not have given a thought to the fact had Mrs. Rutherfurd been as poor as the simplest village matron. Lieut. Cornwallis-West, twenty- esk I could see “very part of the place. The crowd kept a seven years old, one of the catches | a winning gute, with the judges’ stand complete. that there !* just as much chance as skili In the game, {the waiters hustling. wheeled the money away. If they'd let me alone’— of English society bavi | Nine tiny electric motor-cars, complete tn all details, with} The miniature automobiles have all Kinds of queer traits “In the last two and a half months at the first Tivol and| His bine qyas were covered. His tone was a burden of STIRRED Rl Leb Acclety miBne ave India rubber tires and steering gear, are beside the starting | and behave as strangely and inexplicably as do thelr larger 7 sthe nine and a half months at the second Tivol! I cleared | regret. married any one of a score of enor- post. ‘The miniature machines are so perfectly constructed | prototypes at times. New Yorkers are most enthusiastis | (168,000. Shall you go back to the Tenderloin?” mously rich English heiresses. He cliose a Indy whose charm of person and) that their courso may be changed at the wil! of the driver. | over the game, though at evening gatherings the men @leo One year of flash and license paid that profit. Is it a] “No; I guess not. There's a party after mo, but there's! intejtact is of international record, whose braut till y| The cars all bear different numbers, ang no two similar] become excited players. wonder that delusions of grandeur supervened? Is ft strange | nothing doing. Yet, there ought to be another Tivol over| Bie rt je beauty ls still resplendent. Lady : t, exiled in East New York, he dreams regretfully of|there. Where are the people who made the place what it| Randolph Churchill is old enongh to be her husband's mother. She brought} @ past? was? Scattered all over the town. Isn't It better to bring | no fortiine to her second marriage, which took place several years ago and, | > “We sold a barrel of whiskey a night," he sald; ‘and we got| them loge:her in the Tenderloin and keep them away from|despite all tlie dire predictions, has proved ex:r-mely happy. In these two} AN ENGLISH VIEW OF OUR }wenty-five cents a drink, places a man wants to take his family to?" noted instances the mature ~soman has had no coney magnet to attract | GOTHAM RAPID TRANSIT. Envious seliers of drink, is.jt marvellous,. unbellevable,| He has a dance tall, a restaurant and a big bar in East lenis tale of Tenderloin prosperity? New York. There are dances three times a week: there’s|the love and profoundest admiration of mere man, “I run the place right. There was never a ‘touch’ in the|a dance on Sunday night. The beautiful Mrs, Randolph, when she became the bride of Mr. William spines, Do you think I could stand for a walter robbing| ‘I'm not ‘out,’ am 17" he asks, showing his road-house to|¢ Whitney, was another éxample of the superb beauty and Irresistible eustomer? Every waiter knew his coat would come off|a visitor. ea Pew ieee i.e customer made a kick. I had floor men everywhere.| But in East New York he does not reap the proft of a | C7érm of the woman pas tf | Patrons had to behave themselves like Indies, or out they} barrel of whiskey a night, and drinks are not sold for The truth is, that the clever woman of forty or more brings to the ficld | went. ‘Get over to the river, friend,’ was the tp to any one‘ twenty-five cents. all the worldly wisdom that she Qas been so long acquiring, in addithon frequently to great personal beauty. - o B K. Certainly youth ts lovely to gaze upon, but also youth Is apt to be Stories from Famous Books. NGER ara AeA ware eieuuorite Gea oe ante ee ae ‘Don't be in a passion, pussy, The shve-,in the whole country, and theré the It takes years and experience to enlarge one’s sympathies. maker said he had not a shve in his|riders were all thrown but, barrin’ the It has taken time to learn the following ory | shop, nor a last that would make one|huntsman, who had a web-footed horse . necess: 5 a - A mixed party of poll- | nt you; and he says I must bring|on purpose for soft places; ond the Pala Mine ROR ae e at surround e clever woman of forty with such a potent charm, A young girl usually and very nat- urally is self-centred, She Is new to the world, new to the consciousness of her own loveli- n d she is apt to put too much confidence in her power over the The Legend of Connor's Cat. Lover introduces th andy An i Cictans, penighted at @ country Inn, exchaPR®) vou into to town for him to take your| priest, whose horse could go anywhere fall etories. Murtough Muryhy nas the liveltest | © B bes = Cagle Amagination and caps the evening with wis | wecttal: by reason of the priest's blessing; and, | ure enough, the next morn-| sure enough, the huntsman and his riv- lint there was the cat at coo w,{ernee stuck to the bunt like wax; and was aman in these parts, oking herself as nate as a new pin,| Just as the cat got on the border of the you must know, called Tom) (4 go into the town, and out came Tom| bog they saw her give u twist as the nor, and he had a eat thati win q vag undher his arm, and the cat! foremost dog closed with ther, for he gave i gras equal tp any doxen of rat-traps, atther him. her a nip in the flank. Still she went }: ‘and he was proud of tho basie, and yw uit into this, and Ii carry|on, however, and headed them well. i Absolutely Pure Z THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE {MH rayson; for she was worth ber| oy into the town says Tom, opening | toward an ofd mud cabin tn the middle weight in xoold him in saving ats of the bog, and there they saw her the bag. sacks of meal from the thievery of the | ig. a 5 i) tay andlanicer orstem wan an esters | ar cucnekca cascelngs hare” wees bod: Snh Yip) Prat ha la other sex: Here 1s the London Grapaic's account an Improvement of the continuous trains AES : FARHAD ndGmnesdet he! Merqomrmument lect, intonthe, Bem ane) vith. th She is usually thinking, and it 1s}and illustration of the Lindenthal plan) which were in operation at the Chicago @ive dealer in corn und intiuence aut e h -oads with the; found the house with the most horrid off Tom set to the cross-roads natural that she should, more of her | to relleve bridge trafic: | and Paris Expositions, and which carried Amusements. vise and fall of that article in the mar- bag over shoulder, and he came up, howling ever was heard, The huntsman ' Ket, to the extent of a full dozen of] ite innosentiike, to, the corner,| alighted and went into the house to gacky at a tine whieh he elther kevt oF! were the Squire and his huntsman| turn the cat out again, wien what fold, as tie 1 v' _| “A new transit problem ts now con-| millions of people along at a good rate | own happiness than of giving happl-| 9 oey New York authorities, | of speed, and in absolute comfort, witt- | CLOSES TO-MORROW NIGHT, ness to others. The young gitl eX-|ramely, now to connect the Manhattan| out accident. The method of operating MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. pects to recelve homage, attention and | terminals of three great bridges over| these platforms is well known. Tnere| The | Military ‘lournament pirit of free trade oF! ang the hounds and a pack o' peopie| Should he vee but an old hag lying in monopoly over him, were waitin’. Out came the Squire on] bed tn the corner. Well. one morning Tom wax going to} a sudden, Just us if it was all by accl- Did you seo @ cat come in hei sympathy. River with on ast i ent rete ey aie eal Linpres A | MANAGEMENT MILITARY ATHLETIC LEAGUE, i the neightoring town to market, and! | eine! The mature wgman expects to give sympathy and attention. ng eVALeA ralieoage: | HANG SLOPE ne ES a Me aes TO- NIGHT Grand Review, ot troops oy y ee tied ‘promised ike wife! (6 Bring Nome) +154 envalyouy Moms) taza he, 708; keen the dogs out oF this. gays} A man loves to admire a beautiful girl, but he often better loves the | ** "ill" © Cua leacn aus igs |e ‘waeweager steps) on ene. Dis toca sor-Gen, Asana. BR Chated | yes to the chide’ ut oo Uke pry ant . sir,’ eayaTom,| the old hag—oh—o—o—o!’ andthe : ms : 4 ’ ay ralhouts: del tie wi i) of the a ‘What's that bag you have at your|huntsman saw her eyes glare under|/Woman who admires him, sympathizes with him, brings out bis best points} goived in order to reliev the gr con how He then ate 8 on one moving at ‘ia; Musie Ride by i "The cat, with a of enter Hing] yack? says the Squire the bianket, Just like a cat's. and covers up his weaknesses. gestion of the present I the rate of six miles an hour. a t ou CR ie 0 { from, 8 wve Tom a of er claws “f you bethray me, Tom Connor,'| “ Hilo! says the huntsman, pulling A man also likes to talk to a well-informed and intelligent woman who the Willi defecate ia ie isl Na tar Hl by oe Patong rh ut wel enn throw, Mis leathers, | — h eEnvaalOeeWoleem ING do BAe * tu of nine mile: hour, e he finds y 1" Bat { Se teniitiavuniere Bays the eat in a LOW vole, Oy ne aad on eat hace shouider ail in follows him intellectually, or he thinks she does, and who nover assumes aeatirlieas Gente are ioinelataayeionn And"anillery Det by’ 27th Mate never spake to you again!’ e . ° { Tom Connor,’ says she. “An honest ae would hake no ob-| gore of blood. to lead him or to be his mental superior, The admiration of the woman of do their share of the work. ; and are to be three cet apart. 7.30 o'clock; military pree "Lae Lord be gon to met’ says Tom] jection to be searched,’ said the Squire;| ‘Ow, ow! you ould divil—is it you?|forty is the sweetest sort of incense a man may expect to receive. newest proposition 1s to establish a sya] eas Se atepa from one platform to an- sehts: Reserved conte, 41 and ft | Af it lan't spakin’ she Is! ‘and [insist on it,’ says he, laying hold|you ould cat!’ says he, opening the The woman of forty does not depend upon her personal charms alone; at |tem of moving platforms of con't a Oster oF GUrUnishingy mmeedi iad: Analy) | EMRE Sa eraser ee ee Led "You're goin’ off to thi vi ys}or bag, er door, ‘ 7 trains. The moving platform {s s ets Oo is station (eer it i phe ee eaten es Tor the ealldce,’ cays] ail the tines hue: mynjewel! betore two] ii tushed the doge—up jumped the|the same timo it should not be forgotten that many a woman of ‘hat age is | T°" Be by puolis of Pela and: New Yer } she, ‘and never thougnt o° gettin’ me al minutes they shook the cat out o' the] fie Wein es ane ee w GRE bs: | superbly handsome and really just in the beginning of her prime. In one way A Brey, HS Pa | pair.’ : bag, sure enough, and off she went| tho window i aid made ‘another| sho cannot compete with the girlish beauty of extreme youth . But the older CHANGE THE ORDER OF musements VICTORIA 2% ists ei hee ta Aving IE | ing} run for it; but she couldn't escape S 2 ; ‘Of run the tat ‘leaving. ‘Lom injwith her) tall as bie ae a) Sweeping and the dogs, gobbled “her while “you woman understands this point perfectly and depends upon her mental at Go To PROCTOR'S #2:2 LAST 2 NIGHTS. WALSH Ly azement, He sald nothing to thé|brash, and the Squire, with a thunder EMail aatseuee At cece MG RTreAdG: SoRORLH Heel quleKiwlOito make’ tariecciyisnpers T 0 To Ny | | 4 family tor fear of frightning them, and|ing view-talloo after her clapped the femarkabie part of this extraordinary a we trabl ‘ , Heserved Beery Ate *|RESI JRREC I ION. off he went to the town as he pretended| dogs ut her heels, and away they went] story, gentlemen, is that the pac! atively desirable. ee eccrlaa a meanest ot Scaciant : f i for he suw the cat watching him! for the bare life. Never was there seen Ravine PROPUAS REY ORY, VON tO EES sIOr ecré galt xe bret op tne rine mga ve avelfod | Fee area bs ELD, "THE AUCTIONEER," z througit a hole in the hedge. but wnen| such running as that day—the cat made |2"thing they would ever hunt afterward Magr! SNtle employ. only. the. most appro The Cherry Picke'a,”* Minnie Sellg- De We ;MATINEE TO-DAY he came to a turn at the end of the! for the shaking bog, the loneliest place] bur nilce. 5 Tikes, eo. that carpeta wear Hoge 801 took oth lie man, Wi Bramwell ait sick | DB W road the dickings a mind he minded the | brighter It Wier ere een Ura varitere Sige vandevil Rice & Barton's Co. Market, good or bad, but went of to Ld eres THE THOS, STEWART CO. ONLY A SHOP GIRL. aa Hte ; ad, vent oe ‘ 3 + tb? sun, Night, Grand Concert. 80s, Bouire ‘Hotherum's the magisthrit, 10 AN ELECTRICAL FARM. For Infants and Children, eaurnec rab a Ne BRITA Gace Bearcats ode aocigs eae Bae sware examinations agen the cat Mersey Cit a Bway . In the application of electricity (o, mill which gets its power from the same| [he Kind You Hava Always Bough! (Week of Big Vaudeviile, James J Even, 8 Maia Wed. & Sat, ‘And so Tom then told him all about Morbett.. Mf Sire "Gens pres di sat Sait ADSIDSL {ise ao) WIZARD OF OZiie Bel saes senor everyday work, Germany has, perhaps, | tation, On the farm are all kinds of L ‘the affair, and the Squire was regularly| everyday work, Germany has, pernapsy| | a cultuart machines, includ-| Bears the Amusements. —| with Montgomery & Stone, av, 1.50 astonished. Just then the Bishop of the| gone further than any other nation. noe Obie. plough, all run by Signatnre (Mize Ser - ‘hath St et Th t Near tith Av diocese and the priest of the parish hap- air oaliy: 00 eetiepidal aha vu Treadway and 40 ree! eatre. wives @ Sat wi Slectrically heated and operated cooking! patteries charged from sub-stations in | Used by people of rofinement roadway ai N 14 8 Manhattan. Broniway @ $84 Bt: ese. SA REAL HIT."—Eve, Journal, Pened to call In and heart the storys} sag iaundry apgatatus ts in common! the fields erg i Matines Sat vat i ate “In the mean time what are we to 4o] * par atierts lommpn | the fe : for over a quarter of a geatury HE MUMAY AND Se Bias with the cat? says Botherum. tise there, but the most atriking single| ‘The power for all these various oper- ve JOHN DREW ls Tee UN tino, TH h C0 ANS (RUNNING ‘ITHE EARL OF PAWTUCKET ET, Ke, pr PRiUMy vane Da) ODE BER GREAT “ ‘Burn her,’ says the Bishop; ‘she's a] developmenc Is the electrical farm, | ations — lighting, heating, telephones, Amusements. PREPARED witch.’ for example, Prof. Backhaus's estate| churning, cutting, | grinding, | pumping, ; AHF. ODS |e. a “gays Botherum: ‘We'll make her}near Quednau, in Eastern Epaagia} Bs aE AN lcs om a! WALLACK Be} C j ANNIE RUSSELL in 1 MICE AND REN ‘Hurray! ie : the game laws; we'll in) ich Is only one of a large number of fa en any seatatgll Sted | - | ce STREET Ee aavc he, fi i Gorman estates run by electricity, gays | moving two dynamos. SULTAN CR SULU, Sititamente ye SKIPPES WALL | Ptiss Multon ‘Ow!—elegant!" says Tom; ‘we'll have| the Workl's Work. From this station the power ts dis-| te J . curs M108 PUBATRE, Bsa @ brave run out of ber. ‘The Quednau farm covers 459 acres and | tributed to (he parts of the farm, and) — “Meet ma at. the cross-roads,’ says| its dairy handles 1,00 gallons of milk | the switch-board ts so plainly marked . Taihvioee neat Adare: BROADWAY ®! THEATH ah & Bray | 0. ey ; PASTOR'S syrstors; avegr rma iad sv tadeticd ect [CHARLES HAWTREY. itztiv3$tt5 | snotines To-Merrow. 286. to 1.00. forth Uatoreeer, the Squire, ‘in the morning, and I'n|daily. Every part of the farm ts ghted) that the commonest farm hand can and 20 con have the hounds ready.’ by electricity and is in te‘ephone com- | regulate the supply to At the need. | BLINORE SISTBRS, CARL Bis} Ne ee ‘P ew Savoy mun. SPH G40 91h nay H Nest | seem eee “Well, oft ‘Tom. went home; and he| munication with every other part, ‘The| At Crottorf a numbar of small farms|Nen Hi Seer Ot MIR, & KES RING OF PILSEN Bi nee Caine opper : Gee bs at dalle KR, PRED 8, STUB SNC: |ro-siGiT My SirtE ‘SHRINE NIGi at " LNG | was racking hla brain what excuse hel dairy han an electrical churn: the barn | have grouned to support one station | AT ays ac 4 toes sauce Soa DENVECMURION : HENRY MILLER. 1 |= PE RAST TWO WERK OUTER (ston. —ReRA KH yDALIC“ The VINE ICIRCLE 8 4.iesyk] measure it by your own could make to the cat for not bringing| contains electrically operated feed and|and have thelr work done by it. OPIR READ'S Comedy, ¥, The SUBURBAN. Gawpny vie emi «tion oe HON TYRE @ HEATH—NAT Mh WILLS] standard—make any compati« Lex Stet, Saturday ESTAR TitXey rie OUTLAW. Next Brook yo Amusements, So, MONTAUK. itr MPIRE THEATRE CO, ein + Verslon) ara M Wh. ¢ the shoes, and at last he hit one off,|carrot-cutting machines, and even the} Such plants as these do more than rev Braney K. just as he saw her cantering up to him,| grindstone is turned by a small belt | merely lighten farm labor; fewer awork- Y LA 4 " R 250 i h, i half a mile before he got azome. from the shaft connected with the barn| men are neeged and greater profits) — prikax = THe Ter CENTURY EVERY NA @ OTHER ALL-BTAR VAL WL ACTS, sons you wis pidge ‘Where's the shoes, Tom?’ says she,| motor, The water-pumping apparatus| are possible, and the who‘e tusiness of | METROPOLIS, 8°85: Mat wea. " 5. by 8 He IGT CET |AMERICAN 424 st. and a yage and you will admit that ali the buildings! farming ts made more attractive. ‘Vhe| 424 st. andgaay, The Fatal Wedding. | rittscess. a way « | NEXT WEPK, “‘Thave not got them to-day, ma’am,’|ig run by electriclt gays he. are lighted by incandescent lamps, and] barnyant is lighted by an arc Hght; | Nt #k—Demoan Thompeon In The Old Homastend Is that the way you keep your} there Js an electical plpe-iighter at the! night work in the flelds le possitle when Mat, : promise, Tom?’ says she; ‘I'll tell you| doors of all the houses. Ths farm has| it Is necessary; the stables are warmed BELASCO THEATRE atgnt what it is, ‘Tom—I'll teat the eyes out) also its own threshing and grist mill, {iv winter and ventilated in summer by | UDA EES! | Mow rh @* the ohildre’ if you don't get me shoes.|the machinery of which 1s turned by a| the turning of a switch; indeed, the en- | [———!—— “*Whist! whist!’ saya Tom, frighten-| current Crom the miniature central sta-| tire farm runs lke a machine at the peste ia seat faa Hersey be ite, fos. bs enudeans eyes, fot, yd. Aaeliy Nye Sse Aas call of the electric current, s There & Back, | "Keeps a The Man Who Sta Als i AND TD MARKS big Goucert Ss b wits s ‘FOOL A ea BIJOU. MARIE “CAHILL, Wor A nga ie way, 30th atl _SNANCY BROWN, athe best Oth Time, DARLING a 8.18 Mat. 862.18

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