The evening world. Newspaper, May 12, 1903, Page 11

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os ik ai (THIS STORY BEGAN YESTERDAY AND WILL END ON SATURDAY.) i (By, Permission of George Munro's Sona.) (SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS.) Jack Martin, local director of an Wnglish bank ta the South American Ropflle of Aureataind, {9 bribed by the President of, that republic to QBvance him $300,000 of the bank's funda. Col. McGregor, leader of thi ition,”? and ‘The Signorina’’ (an ex-opera singer whom Martin, the jel and the President are all anxious t marry), learn that the Pres\- intends to repudiate the national debt. Such fein the Gignorina and the Colonel, whom fortunes gre invested in the Get, ue would expose Martin's unwarranted $300, Ooopioan aad. send. Mien apt flo plan a revolution, In the hope dct overthrowing the Frectteat eat puising poqmvecie of hia‘ rte CHAPTER I. A Unique Revolution, ' We. three met again that night and I formally agreed to jain the conspiracy. I handed over the $10,000 to McGregor and helped him and ithe,signorina to outline } the following plan of action: This was Tuesday. On Friday night the colonel, with | twenty determined ruffians (or resolute patriots) previously | Bound to him, body and soul, by a donation of no less than $60 a ian, was to surprise the Golden House, selze the person of the President and all cash and securities on the Premises; no killing if it could be avoided, but, on the other { tana, no shilly-shally. McGregor wanted to put the Presi- | dent out of the way at once, as a precautionary measure, ‘bat I strongly opposed this proposal, and finding the sig- norina was absolutely inflexible on the same aide, he yielded. I had a strong desire to be present at this midnight sur- prise, ttt another duty called for my presence. There was & gala supper at the t geome incident or other in the hational history, and I was to be present and to reply to the toast of “The Commerce of Aureataland.” My task was, at all hazards, to keep this party going till the colonel's job was done, when he would appear at the soldiers’ quarters, bribe in hand, and demand their al- Iegiance. Our knowledge of the character of the troops made us regan the result as a certainty, if once the Presi- @ent were a prisoner and the dollars before their eyes. ‘The colonel and the troops were to surround the officers’ fmess-room, and offer them life and largesse, or death and estruotior® Here again we anticipated thelr chotce with eomposure. ‘The army was then to be paraded in the Piazza, the town | everawed or converted, and, behold, the revolution was eccomplished. The main obstacle to our success was Johnny Carr, the honest young English ranch owner, who, as I have said, (wes the President's secretary, MoGregor decided at last to invite Carr to dinner the Might before the revolution, get him drunk and keep him a prisoner until after the coup. ‘To insure the President's remaining at home on the ap- Pointed evening the signorina invited herself to dine with ‘The gveat night at last arrived As°X was starting for MeGregor. It read: “Carr has escaped. the President.” ‘The dinner was an exciting one to me. When It came my tarn to speak I dragged my address along interminably, my ears always on the alert for the arrival of MoGregor and his men. Had Carr wrecked the plot by reaching the President on time? At, 12.15 @ tumult was heard in the barracks square. A major turned to the window. It was a moonlit night, and as I looked wit him I saw the court-yard full of sol- ders. Who was in command? The ansWer to that meant much to me. If the Presigent, I was a dead man. “A mutiny!" cried the major. ‘The soldiers have risen!" They all staggered to the window. As the soldiers saw thom they raised a shout. I could not distinguish whether ft was a greeting or a threat. They took it as the latter, and turned to the door. “Stop!” I cried, whipping out a revolver. first man who opens the door!” In wonder they turned on me. I stood facing them, re- volver in hand. They waited huddled together for an in- stant, then made a rush at me; I fired, but missed. I had @ vision of a polsed decanter; a second later the missile caught me in the chest and buried me tack against the wall. As I fell I dropped my weapon, and they were upon me. I thought it was all over; but as they eurged around, In the madness of drink and anger, I, looking through their ranks, saw the door open and @ orowd of men rush in. Who ‘was at their head? Thank God, it was the colonel, and his voice rose htgh above the tumult— “Order, géntleren! orde: Then to his 'men he added: “Bach mark your man, and two of you bring Mr. Martin Five minutes later, by bribes and threats, McGregor had ‘won over tho officers fo our side. The colonel and I then wet out for the palace. On the way he explained to me that our plan had been successful, its only @aw being that Carr reached the Golden House on hts errand of warning at the same time as McGregor and his men. The young English- man had resisted and had been shot. The President was a prisoner in his own bedroom. ‘When we reached the palace we “met Dr. Anderson, the WHEN THE POPE GOES FOR A He suspects and will try to warn “I shoot the One of the most interesting rarriage, followed by his private secretary, and bystanders on thelr knees, and even the di Venerable Pontiff slowly walks to the waiting vehicle. WORTH KNOWING. racks that evening, to commemorate |, the military dinner at the barracks, I received a note from’ President's own physician, lifting the body of a man, swathed in blankets, into his @ig. He expthined that Car wound was not fatal and he was cairying him to the hos- pital. We entered the palace and went to interview the Presi- dent. The guards were still outside his bedroom door. To our horror, on entering the room, we saw, covered with bandages, lying in the President's bed—John Carr! With a yell of fury McGregor sbrang at the guards who had allowed this trick to te played upon us. These guards protested vehemently that they were as ar- tonished a8 we were; and so they were, unless they acted consummately, They denied that any one had entered the outer room or that any sound had proceeded from the inner. ‘They swore they had kept vigilant watch, and must have seen any intruder. Both the men inside were the colonel's personal servants, and he belfeved in their honesty; but what of thoir vigilance? Carr heard him sternly questioning them, and said: “Those chaps aren't to blame, colonel. I didn't come in that way. If you'll take a look behind the bed you'll see another door, They brought me in there. I was rather queer, and only half knew what was up.’ We looked and saw a door where he eaid. Pushing the bed aside, we opened ft, and found ourselves on the back staircase of the premises. Clearly the President had noise- lessly opened this door and got out, But how hed Carr got im without nolee? ‘The sentry came up. saying: : “Every five minutes, sir, I looked and saw him on the bed. He lay for the first hour In his clothes. The next. look, was undressed. It struck me he'd been pretty quick and quiet about it, but I thorght no more.” “Depend upon it, the dressed man was the President, the undressed man Carr. When was that?" ‘About half past two, sir; just after the doctor came.” ‘Ine doctor!” we cried. ‘es, sir; Dr. Anderson.” ‘ou never told me he had been here.” “He never went Into the President's—into Gen. Whitting- ham's rcom, air; ut he came in here for five minutes to get some brahdy, ahd stood talking with us for a time, Half an hour after he came in for some more." We began to seo how it was done, That wretched little doctor was in the plot. Gomehow or other he had com- municated with the President; probably he knew of the door. Then, 1 fancied, they must have worked something in this way: The doctor comes in to distract the sentries while His Excellency moves the bed. Finding that they took @ look every five minutes, he told the President. Then he went and got Johnny Carr ready. Returning, he takes the President's place on the bed, and in that character under ots an inspection. The moment this is over he leaps up and goes ont. Between them they bring in Carr, put him into bed, and elip through ‘the narrow space of open door behind the bedstead. When all was done the doctor had come back to see if any suspicion had been aroused. - “I have it now!" cried the colonel. Timt infernal doctor's done us both. He couldn't get Whittingham out of the house without leave, so hi taken him es Carr! Gwindled me into giving my leave! Ah, look out if we meet, Mr. Doctor!" We rushed out of the house and found this conjecture was true. The man who purported ¢o be Carr had been car- ried out, enveloped in Ulankets, just as we sat down to breakfai the doctor had put him into the carriage, fol- lowed himself, and driven rapidly away. “Which way did they go?” “Toward the harbor, sir,” the sentnmy replied. The harbor could be reaghed in twenty minutes’ fast diving, Without a word the colonel sprang on his horse; Limitated him, and we galloped as hard as ‘we could, every one maiing way before our furious charge. Alas! we were too late, As we drew rein on the quay we eaw, half a mile out to sea and sailing before a stiff breeze, Johnny Carr's little yacht, with the Aureataland flag floating defiantly at her masthend. We gazed at it biankly, with never a ford to say, and turned our horses’ heads. Our attention was attracted by a small group of men standing round the storm-signal post. As we rode up they hasiily scattered, and we saw pinned to the post a sheet of note-paper. Thereon was written in a well-known hand: “I, Marcus W. Whittingham, President of th: Republic of Aureataland, hereby offer a RE- WARD OF FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS and a FRED PARDON to any person or person: se in the CAPTURE, ALIVE OR DEAD, of GEORGE M’GREGOR (late Colonel in the Aureataland Army) and JOHN MARTIN, Bank Manager; and I do further proclaim the sald George McGregor and John Martin to be traitors and rebels against the Republic, and do pronounce their Uven forfeleted. Which sentence let every loyal eitinen observe at his peril. “MARCUS W. WHITTINGHAM, Prestdent.” = ned! ‘Truly this was pleasant: hts in Rome fs the scene enacted moaneren |i any price according to the length of Pope Leo XIII. takes a drive. As His Holiness passes from the door to the very one present drops to a knecl-! it te eerie to vuehee og silver thread, ing posture, remaining thus reverently until the Pope has entered the car- riage. The accompanying photograph from The King shows the Swiss Gua: jr sitting uncovered while the A TRACKLESS TROLLEY. Langley water and Mitend will smnore Uisins ‘rhe. trackioss trolley car, a Evropean onception described in Popular Me- a short time ego, “ to make ita} (To be Continued.) DRIVE. DRESSING AT $900 A SUIT. The person who paid £180 for a suit, or even palf this eum, says Tit Bits, would probably be accused of unwar- rantable extravagance, but those who move in high places and are compelled to keep pace with the fashions of court dress frequently find such {tems figure in their taflor’s din, Diplomatic uniforms are proverbially costly, so a Consul must think himself lucky that his full dress does not cost {him more than £60 a time. The most ex- |pensive Item, of course, is the coat, Se % ior at £U, and bls trousers ‘cost Even his cocked canner vie Sra for lest then ce Mt This he is required to wear at nearly all Important functions, but -his | levee dress, Itke peyrn are e,that of an Ambassador, into ures, £120 bein tho Usual ‘price for ge wenpieee oMRe i The large amount of gold brald with witch the coat and ie ate ‘oat are adorn: * feutenant also finds’ Rinwcit i also finds mse | cted in the matter of dress on paket of his position. The uniform he requires for ail ceremonies of import. ance Will cost him joat 219 for the coat or tunis, £8 sor. the ee ana £4 10s, for’ each pair of trousers he alls to his wardrobe; other items, such as a walst- coat, &c., will aca 2 £12 to the pill, His dress uniform of red cloth may run up! purse, but he ts fortunate if it costs m less than £100, because attached to ‘An Ambassador is ene of the most ox- travagantly garded officia tor hin state 8 | unicorn complete wil entall an expen: diture of £130; but for all that he is a’ Jong way behind the Earl Marshal ely, the Duke of Nortol re" he stig esa the tavolce tor, Gis oent Toust ‘bear int Sr aie “a EVENING “, WORLD'S & HOME w MAGAZINE wp | THE WOMAN WHO CANNOT BE FREED. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. of a criminal offender and fugitive from Justice? Acconting to the published and uncontradicted newspaper repor!s s. Laura K. Virgil, wife of Wills F, Virgil, the former cashier of the Vine- ind ‘ational Dank, who robbed the bank and fled to Canada some years ago, has been dented a decree of divorce by the New Jersey Court of Chancery, ‘The husband would undoubtedly to-day be in a jail or would have served his thine in one had he not been clever enough to excape arrest ty hia flaght to Canada, 0 far‘as the moral status of such a husband goes, he is a thief who robbed ths employ’ mn yot the Jersey Court decides that, inasmuch as Virgil did not literally aban on his wife, having offered her a home ff she will accept one where he {s safe and cannot be yarn to Justice-in Canada—his wife is not entitled to a divorce. I have no criticism to offer of the woman who loves so fondly that ignominy with the man to whom ene has given her heart is preferable in her eyes to the most exalted station In a fe from-which he would be barred. Put it should certainly be left for the woman vitally concerned to decide this tremendous step. \ degraded honor. No woman should be refused the dissolution of ties that bind her to a arim- inal, If she desires and prays to courts for freedom, A wife expects, and has a right to expect, to be maintained in an honorable position. ‘The status of the wife of an embezeler is the status of the husband wholts & thief In hiding. Whatyright has the law to connive at the continuance of marriage relation Detwean two persons one of whom at lenst is unwilling to bring into the world offspring for an embezgler? , Legal technicalities as to the intention of the absconder may serve as an ccs for a wise, logic! judge in this case. . Vitgil's Intentions In regard to his wife when he ran away from home cae robbing the bank were undoubtedly rather vague. Mr. Virgil was extremely busy just at that time putting a safe distance de- tween himactf and a State's prison. Mrs. Virgil is the party whose wishes and whose intentions are of extreme importance. Most criminals are only too glad to welcome their families or @xquaintances who are willing to associate with them or seek them while in exile. Mr, Virgil ran away from the officers of the law. His abandonment of his wife w matter of secondary tmportance. But, as he fled without her when he ran away from home, it looks to me as though he andoned her. | It is dignifying the criminad and mitigating his offense to advance his assumed Deneficent intentions toward his Ml-treated wife as a reason for not giving her ‘the freedom which morally she 10 well entitled to. If the ahoe were on the other foot— If a woman thlef—a wife—were to manage to get to Canada before the officers of the law Iald hands on her and were to live there for a number of years— If her husband preferred an noresE woman for a daily associate or no woman at And if he applied to the courts in the circumstances asking for the relief he desired Do you think the judge would say: “Your wife wns never caught, tried and convicted. To de sure, she em- ‘Dezzled and ran away before we could catch her, but she ts right over the border, and there Js no evidence that she intended to abandon you. She onty @bandoned the chance of going to jail?" T believe not, Anyway, what right has a man, even the most accomplished of embeaplers, to make an allen of an unwilling woman? What right has he to keep her, a woman, tled by a legal technicality to an absconder? A fig for Mr, Virgil's intentions! We shall next hear that the judge will say, “Naughty! naughty!" to a clever criminal and call it square. A QUINTET OF MAY GIRLS. Five Sisters, All Born in the Same Month, Who Have Achieved Theatrical Fame. ERE are five sisters all born in the month of May and their names are all H known to the vaudeville and musical world. For two members of a family to have birthdays in the same month is regarded as a coincidence, but when the month of May brought five girls into the Osterman family the celebra- tions became so numerous ‘hat the different members decided to celebrate to- ether, and on May 30 « big birthday celebration will be held, at which all of the ‘Osterman girls will be present. The coincidences in regard to the Osterman sisterg go still further—they all made their debut on the stage in jhe same role. When Chorles B. Jefferson, son of Joseph Jefferson, put on ‘Hands Across the Sea,” Anna Osterman (Anna Bele mont), who was then an ambitious amateur, was engaged to play the part of Gucy, Out in San Francisco a newspaper spelled, her name Oysterman, and tho unwillingness to be burdened with this name through her theatrical ‘career led her to take her mother's name of Belmont. While playing the part of Luoy, Sol Smith Russell made her an offer to join his company, Before she left Mr. Jefferson asked her whether she couldn't suggest some to take her place, and she replied hesitatingly that her sister Bessle was atfxious to go on the stage. Bessie was sent for, but before 'ong she went to Mr. Jefferson and told him she would have to quit as she was about te marry Chieg Wall, of the Toledo Fire Department. “However,” she sald, modestly, "I have @ sister Kathryn who" — “Great Heavene!” exclaimed Jefferson, “this family beats the record. Tele- graph Kathryn immediatery.”” Kathryn arrived, but soon attracted the attention of Stuart Robson, who engaged her for leading lady. Jefferson was in despair. “I suppose there are no more sisters,” he sald, Ironically. ‘ “Well, there's my sister Lillian." “Hurra! cried Jefferson, “send for Lilly." ‘When she announced her intention of leaving, Mr. situation composedly. “Tm sorry,” he sald, Jefferson viewrd the “but will you please telegraph your sister.” “There are no more,” said Lillian, mournfully. “No more sisters! Why, I thought the supply was inexhaustible.” Kathryn Osterman, the fourth aister, and best known, whose birthday Is on May 6, \s the only one of the sisters to remain on the stage, She abandoned legitimate four yoars ago and became a well known factor in vaudeville, but will leave the continuous to star In Miss Petticoats next season. Anna Belmont, the next best known of the sisters, {y in private life Mrs, M. A. Kraus. Hor oirtiday is May 16, Ray Osterman Werthogn, the eldest, was born on May 9. Sho is now abroad on a cencert tour with her daughter Sada, the violinist, but feturns for the anniversary celebration May 9. Bessie Osterman Wall was born on May 2, Lilljan Osterman Risser claims May 9 as her birth: The birthday reunion of the five Osterman sisters will take place at the home of Kathryn Osterman, who in private Ufe is Mra, J. J, Rosenthal, at No. 20 West Ono Hundred and Twelfth street. Two more members of the family who swell the list of May arrivals into this world and who will help celebrate are J. J. Rosenthal and his sister, Mrs. Ruber, who were both born on May 1%. +o THE TABLE-CLOTH SHIRT WAIST. HE sbirt waist that looks as if It} prictous women of soctety had been made of one’s grandmoth- er’s table damask, now so popular with the New York girl, has suggested | to a Fifth avenue firm what will be undoubtedly the greatest novelty of the summer season. This is an entire quit made not from goods that resembles table cloths, but from the actual table cloths themselves. that entire uults of this table damask would cateh the fancy of thelr fasnionadle patrons. id ag ah experiment they placed an psy with che largest lune house in New York for sixty pieces of table damask, manufactured Ponders that were’ designed to grace ors that were des of the houses whose novell, soon adorn. Wer sort of law in it, anyway, that declines to give a-divorce to the wife | There are very many women who would sooner share the rortunes of a leper, | a crenture of phystml loathesomeness, than be a wife to a man of diseased of | Sas |CECIL SPOONER TW Sx.ine eer ; ugg Sree I & Seer Se IWEST R25 7. [91ST Me Sgr THE VER since Willie. Vanderbilt signalized his entry into ) This is “La Dange E Paria by introducing the cakewalk to French soclety | Neither 90 lively that barbaric gance has re‘gned suprome in the ball- | gestures it entails, |rooma and dance halls of the French capital, Though at |of ah old-fashioned first frowned upon by the grand dames of #oclety the infu-|antry of Auve? ence of the American milfionaire's name and example sobn | danced to a much net all the young men and women of the Faubourg Saint Germain to wrigeling and squirming in approved plantation fashion. Lut simultaneous'y with the announcement of Mr. Danced with a mi Popularity of the American cakewalk 1s threatened by the| Whether or not REVIVED “DANSE D'AUVERGNE” HAS SUPPLANTED THE CAKEWALK IN.PARIS 0. vidual freedom than do there 4s room for much grace and expression, it has already Vamlerbilt's marriage, and peSaps paruly because of the|obtained a firm foothold among the bourgedlse ever ready resulting lessening of his power, cames the news that the | (o exalt the custome of thelr revival of an old French dance destined to take its place. | walk yet remains to be seen. MAY 12, 1903. D' Auvergne,” in {ts movement nor so varied in the the new dance is merely a modifieation cowtrn-dance borrowed from the peass It resembles @ minuet, ‘only it t# quicker measure and allows more ind that stately relic of old times. joderately quick gliding motion, in whith own land, ; it will supplant permanently the cake ‘A RELATIONSHIP TANGLE FOR THE DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH. O many peop'e in New York the recent Vanderbilt-Rutherfurd wedding sig- gests a Ifne of inquiry, which if pursued too long results In mentnl con- fusion bordering on insanity. time when the straight Ine of descent was considored the proper ly trees, But unfortunately for American mi!hionalres with a weak- }ness for pedigrees the line from the first traceable ancestor was usually too short to be satisfactory since the divorce-white-you-walt mania took possession of New York Crocsuses, However, they have discovered that the Inmentable shortness of the vertical line is nothing. For they hao learned to grow horl- zontally by acquiring step-relative: Certainly the family of Vanderbilt has the finest horizontal pedigree. You will admit it if you ask yourself two questions, If children should follow William IX, Vanderbilt's recent marriage, what te lation would they be to the Duchess of WMariborough—his daughter by his frat wife? If there should happen ‘o be an heir in the Oliver Belmont household, what relation would this child of Mr. Vanderbilt's first wife by her second marriage merly Consuelo Vanderbilt) Is more generously endowed with parents and step- parents thany any other young woman in society. She has a living father and mother and a ving step-father and a step- mother. Any children born of the Rutherfurd-Vanderbilt marriage would be her baff- sisters and half-byothers, Likewise any heirs to the Oliver Beimont name would be her half-brothers and half-sistors. But what relation would these two assortments of stepchildran be to each other? Sit down and try to figure that out by algebra, geometry or calculus, which ever promises to help you most. The ohildren of the Duchess's father by his second marriage would not be related to his first wife. The children of the Duchess's mother, if she had any, ‘by her second marriage would not be related to Mr. Vanderbiit. But each would be a half-blood relation to the Duchess—would this make them related to each other, and, if eo, in what degree? Could a child of the Vanderbilt-Rutherfurd marriage legally wed a child of the Bekmont-Vanderbilt marriage? If this were posstble the children of such a unton would have four sets of grandparents instead of the two allotted to ordi- nary belngs, two by blood and two by the step-relationship resulting from the €randparental divorces, the step-grandparents of the one would be the real @randparents of the other, and vice versa. Leaving the Vanderbilt-Belmont-Rutherfurd complications—and it ts certainly time—think about the complications which may result from the engagement of Miss Gladys Crocker, who, !t was announced last week, Is to marry her step- father’s brother, Powers Gouraud, Miss Crocker {s the daughter of the present | Mrs. Jackson Gouraud, who, befure her divorce and remarriage, was the wife of Porter Ashe. After her mother's divorce Miss Crocker dropped the name Ashe and adopted her mother's maiden name of Crocker. Now she is about to be mar- rled to Powers Gouraud, a brother of her mot! econd husbaml, She will have, therefore, the same man for a stepfather and a brother-In- jaw, and Powers Gouraud, the same woman for sister-in-law and mother-in-law. Should the marriage take place and ohildren result from it Mrs, Jackson Gouraud will be the grandmother of Mrs. Powers Gouraud’s children end thelr | aunt-In-lnw at the same time. Mrs. Powers Gouraud will be the stepsister of ‘Mrs. Jackson Gouraud's children, should she have any, and would also be their aunt-In-law, What relation would the children be to each other? TO OBTAIN A PATENT.| Many pereons are eager to know what steps they should take to get Inventions patented. Here 1s what you must do: You have to make your application in writing to the Commissioner of Patents at Washington, You must also file in the Patent Office a written description of your invention and the manner and Process of making, constructing, com- Pounding and using !t, in such full, clear, concise and exact terms as to en- able any person skilled in the art or science to which It agportains or with which # {s most nearly connected, to make, construct, compound and use the same; and in the case of a machine you must expiain the principle thereof end the best mode in which you have con- templated applying that principle so as to distinguish it trom other inventions, and particularly point out and distinctly claim that part, t!mprovement er com- binatton which you claim as your in- vention or discovery. The invention and claim must be signed by the inventor and two witnesses. The fees are: On fillog each original patent, $18. On twsuing each original patent, $20. For fuller information, blank forms, &o, apply to the Patent Office, Washington, D. C, eos Eyesight and Dollars, Your eyes are worth more to you than your dollars. In eye service cost is a secondary consideration, yet ex- travagance is unnecessary—if you come to me. If your eyes trouble you, don't neglect them. Isn't it wiser to spend a dollar or two with me now than to spend hundreds of dollars trying to restore lost sight in later years? My examinations are_ scientific, painstaking, thorough. My instru- ments the most modern. No Over-the-Counter Methods. Glasses, If necessary, $1.00 up. Optical Specialist, 348 Sixth Ave,(bet. 21st and 22d sts.) Amusements. be to the child of his second marringe? Surely the Duchess of Mariborough (for- | Artificial Eyes, inserted, $3.00. [Davin ‘eu banasco Why Not Proctor’s?32 ee ae Sisters, Waterbury Bros. & Te WHO 18 BRO’ oh Wve, {Fes Bond, All Stock Favor Ten big Vasari FACE IN THE Moo | ACADEMY OF Reserved Every Alt. & Eve. i Ocenealae NST NELLIE HEN = IS FRANK panic SS Amusements TO-DAY. 034 | CONTINUOUS VAUDEVILLE, Eilner: Florence Reet, jUZSINSL {esha ee 2 aise SIMPLICITY. PASTOR'S 2am 20 AND 30 CENTS. Sherman & De Forrest, \ 2 SET Henry W. Savage presenta GEO. ADE’S Hit, SULTAN ? SULU — BROADWAY S"3" att gy, Matinee To-Morrow, 2! cea Seal re InMRS.JACK, 14th St, Theatre. 22 tie THE 4 COHANS uwsime ron nOFrICR. Dei fy |MATINEE TO-DAY. WEY. HARRY MOR Suimese | A Night on Broadway. MAJESTIC GRAND CIRCLE, Bway & sms wren. Mats a ners bee aS AMERICAN, atowded Wee RESUR! RRE ZECTION. VICTORIA, a oy ft ‘Warfield Id Manhattan ess THE EARL OE PAWIUCKER BELASCO THEATRE si Susie DAVID BELASOO presenta | 1a “THE DAREEN® MLANCHE BATES | OP THE GODs™ (RIC EE: KONORAH, 3 MORTONS, Teale Couthout, § De Lvcas, A-Star Acts. CRITERION PRATER, Pr wrey. & 44 CHARES HAWTREY Adisade CARRION? TEA TES: , 35th ot near Bway. the complex- permanently re-f 2a. A ABSSAGE ‘My sctentific treatments never fall Tolety years’ practical expe- xEW gay OY THE. - ‘Mata, W BURA RANDALL tig ane PRE, 270h wt. Stadion ay Amusemente. oan | RUNAVAY reer ABIG HIT, M ADISON sa. THE “The Beauty Show of Broadway.” Even | S90, ate. Reaay, ne Bah A FOOL AND ils WoNeY $10. Mata Wed. Sat. 2.10. Bia PROT SY PRUGY Greatest Comed) HERALD sa. GRACE GEOR ma INCBOS, W way Cage EVANS, CHAS. 1. HOPPER DALY'S ‘Broadway and i088 2th. Ky.8.90. Mace. Taur.& Sat THERE & BACK LAST 6 TIMES, METROPOLIS, KEITH'S. Es WILLARD SIMs ta BIJOU./MARIE |_ “NANCY BROWN.” RLEM 8.15. Mat, igeatertay: 210, Seeks oh eh Fo ight OLS. ein it WONT. 1424 St, and 34 Ave, World t2 Wax. EDEN| Wert oR SU TUSEE. | way Day ie = MY tebration, Mystértous, ete, WATER BVE EVERY ee BEST SHOW IN TOW | "Sai way Brouklyn, Amusements, PARK <YAines ROM PU PICKINGS F xt Week—A ROMAN i, MONTAUK 8 DE WOLF B COL wal RI Ty ABLES Wihh

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