The evening world. Newspaper, May 19, 1903, Page 13

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. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. American, aimed Kenber and an Englishman named Messoaste, ney Capel, representing # banking-house of Lon ta to (16,000.00) 1m goid trom London to Ru a ‘sya 000 tug, Admiral, as it iv cruaalig tae N ug. Capel ia killed 1a defending the Congers. All the crew of the tux aa mate, Mike Brennan, who had led ¢ Of the gold, 1s suppoie! to be drowned when the tw CHAPTER 11 Wrecked in the Night. T was upon the evening of the third day after the going down of the tug, at two bells in the watch, that the Semiramis enered the Minch, and began her passage southward. She had run at a high speed, but under no forced draught, and with all possible economy of fuel, up the North Sea to Duncansby Head. Thence rounding Cape Wreth (tut at a great distance from the light to escape all observation), she had struck boldly past the Western Isles om her ulimate purpose of making the open Atlantic. And whe was then ploughing her way upon a stiff swell, and egainst a full south wind, to the less dangerous waterway Of the greater ocean. Hel Fisher wes not in the plot. Messenger had hidden Bis evi) life from this one innocent friend he had known. Hal was, however, on the yacht. He had been cruising with Kenner while Messenger plotted in London. He heard the great commotion and bustle on dock; but on trying his Goor he found it locked, and {t was only after some hours, and when he had slept again, that he reached the deck, to learn that they were standing right out in the North Gea, and that many strange events had happened in the be- tween-time. For one thing, his friend Messenger greeted im directly he had mounted the companion, and while he stood g®ping at the sight of the new faces, and won- 's) @ering at the amazing fact of their appearance, the Prince : had slapped him upon the back, and begun his explana- Saal ~ “Hal,” sald he, “we've got something on board that we wouldn't sell for a shilling a pound, Hal. It's a fretght pf money! We're trying to run this frelght to Buenos Ayres im the interest of the Argentine Government. It's a big fod; and the men for'ard can’t exactly be trusted as though they'd come from a seminary. We may have to fight. 'n any case, we've got to use our sea-legs, And you'll have to stand.by us, as I sald four days ago; wut I needn't ask »you if you'll do that?” “Stand by you! Why, of course! Is there any one else @ehould stand by if it isn’t you?” ‘There was the unrest upon the yacht, the mutterings, the @ocasional outbursts of temper; but, beyond these, no tour fe force on the part of the men, no event of any interest ) pon the nea. So. far, indeed, did the yacht stand off the whore that the light af Cape Wrath was not even seen; and t <Capt. Burke believing that the notion of pursuit was an old > woman's dream, they passed through the Minch on the evening of the third day, and at eight bells in the forenoon \ watch they sighted Skerryvore Lighthouse many miles dis- ant on their port quarter. From that point they shaped @ course west by south to run past Malin Head; and al- though tuey passed many steamers of considerable size which were making for Scottish ports, they stood as far from them as possible, and spoke none, nor, indeed, in- { vited any observation. x ‘This, then, was the situation on the third day, and it aid | mot alter until midnight, when @Ysher came on deck to take the middle watch. It had been agreed by the cabin party that they should, one by one, take duty at the head of ‘the companion, lest the great temptation of the gold should a lure any of the crew aft, and this duty the boy shared loyalty with the others. Once or twice, as the lad strode up and down in ths Btter darkness, he had thoughts that others moved upon & the deck near him; but his nerves were/overwrought and ‘wary, and the singing of a rope, or the thud of the heavier @eas, sent them twitching. In this approach to terror he watched for some moments fonger, when of a sudden, chancing to look down the Righer line of the deck, he was absolutely sure that all was ro! a drean. There, almost at his feet, the hunched-up figure of a man Iny timtdly, as of a man watching to spring, Dut fearing. Hal looked at the man for a moment, whipping out his revolver as he did so, and was in the very act of @ring when the watcher rose and gripped his arm. “Billy no burt!" he chattered; “you don't shoot Billy! ‘They cut your throat jess now, cut every one, Billy know, he see ‘em; oh, he see ‘om In this mood the daft lad raved whisperingly; but Hat stood wondering and still with the sudden alarm. Should he degoend the companion silently, or should he fire a shot and bring the sleepers to their feet that way? For a mo- ment he did not know, and as he waited twenty figures— armed, most of them, with knives and fron bars, but three carrying revolvers—came with cat-like tread from the deck- house amidships to the poop. At the sight of the advancing figures Fisher no longer hesitated, He fired three rounds from his Colt, and then bawled with all his strength for those below to come up The whizz of the bullets held tack the throng for a mo- ment but no longer. They had no further need of stealth, anc began to shout savagely, hugging close the one to the othtr Tor encouragement, and answering Hal's fire with a diswharge of thelr own weapons and many Imprecations. In another moment they would have been all atop of the ladder and swarming down to the cabin; but of a sudden they held together with a great cry, and many of them fell upon their knees in an extremity of terror which na Phrase could convey. And upon them there shone a great Ught, full of whiteness and dazzling—a light that came in focussed radiance across the sea, and cut a path uf spread- ing brightness out of the very blackness of the fullest night. The first man to speak in that moment of panic wes Burke, the skipper. Suddenly, as with the sound of e wild Fearing, his curses and orders echoed through the #hip, “Curse you for a parcel of lazy swine, get up!" he roared, “Geet up, I say! Do you think ez {t's the Day of Judg- ment, ye Chicago hogs? All hands on deck and to their places, ye white-llvered lubbers! Move, move, or, by ihun- @er! I'll come down and move ye!" They scurried about at this, rushing to thetr places. A double watch tumbled into the stoke-holes; a couple of funners cleared the three-inch Nordenfelt guns whlch were fixed in the Yor and amidships. In five minutes the whcle thought of the contemplated scuffle for the gold was for- gotten. Bells were ringing, orders were shouted, tho forced @raught began to roar in the furnaces. The whole deck, Which had been a hive of silence ten minutes hefore, now echced with movement, with voices, with the cline of a2 Mon, Nor was there need of explanation. Instluctivoly a’ Moerd ‘know thut the pursuit was no longer a possibility. “Wut an actuality; that by some plain chain 02 circumstances . those upon lant had heard of their fillbustering. and were Becking them. Men passed each other in those momenis With searce opportunity to exchange an opinion; but thoes that spoke uttered such convictions as, ‘She's after us, for were!” oy auch questions as, “Be they going to take us?” ® gidom settled sternly upon the most part of them. they worked with an unquestionable will, thoaga sai Adelity wee as much @ matter of self. erstwhile treachers had been the ouicome of vorstous ? (By Permiagion of Harper & Brothers.) (THIS STORY BEGAN MONDAY AND WILL, END ON SATURDAY.) low, there wus upon the bridge a dispiay of fine command d skilled seamanship. Burke, who ruled with resonant ce, and was easy to be heard about the wind, had eyes both for his own men and the plunging crulser. Messenger «ripped the rail and smoked @ cigar with easy axsurance. Kenner was restless, and dared a pessimistic forecast at unseemly Intervals. When the light, such as it was, gave clearer outline to ‘the worn face of the Atlantic, those upon the bridge of the yacht looked down upon a strange scene. There were but two ships on the sea with them; and of these ane was th: cruiser, which plunged through the swelling tempest a couple of miles away on their starboard quarter; the other was a full-rigged ship, now running under a storm-jib and reefed topsalls toward the Irish coast. For the rest, there was nothing Wut the restless flash of white water, the swirl of giant billows, the crash of breaking rollers, the hemisphere of gathering cicud, A shot boomed:over the waves and a@ shell carried away @ lifeboat “May it please you, eir, they're signaling,” said the humble mate Parker. ‘They say~for I read thelr flags, that if you don't let them come aboard at once they'll fire shell on you.” “They, tmy that, do they?” replied) Burke tronically. “Well, I guess I ain't a dictionary, but I've got word to answer that. Clear the aft gun, there!’ The men rushed aft at his word and cleared the Norden- felt quick-fllring gun, seeming to find consolation in the work, There was not one among them that had yet seen an action, elther afloat or ashore; and to euch as thei the fire from the Nero—for they now knew the name of t! cruiser—was a terror which tho excitement of reply alone could mitigate. Even the Scotchman breathed a breath of enthusiasm, and stood near the group of workers, sbout- ing and gestioulating with an energy altogether foreign to his countrymen. And he was in the very throes of a wild speech of exhortation when the Nero fired, for the second time, as she rose upon a mighty weve, and her shell, strik- ing the yacht abaft the engine-room, but well above the water-line, carried away the bulwarks and shivered the skylight of the saloon into countless atoms. For a moment after the loud report a cloud of thick choking smoke held down upon the deck of the yacht, but when it cleared away, three men lay dead of those atiout the gun, and the Seotch- mas was not to be seen. He had stood at the very point of contact, and the bursting shell had blown his body into the sea. When the whole havoc and destruction following this—in one sense—lucky shot was to be reckoned, the fear of the crew passed quickly to wild rege. Men, roaring like beasts, began to work ‘the Nordenfelt wildly, or @hook their fists in savags rage; or begged for, liquor.iu the moments when re- action brought a new terror. The very deck they worked on was all slippery with foam and wet, making passage diMoult, and the splinters of the broken woodwork, splashel with the blood of the dead, washed about in little pools near the souppers. As for the poor fellows who had gone down, they let them He where they fell, their protruding eyes looking up with a glassy and rigid gaze to the heaven they could not see; their todies rolling with the way of the ship, : Another day dawned and the yacht seemed to gain on the Nero, Then night fell again. Fisher, who could not sleep, joined ‘Kenner and Measenger op the bridge. "I dreamed the cruiser had picked us up, and we were hit,” said Fisher; “in fact, I saw the water rushing into my c&bin, and it wasn't until I got on deck here that I knew. I'd made a fool of myself.” “Wait a vit,” said Kennet ready. Look there!” Even as he spoke the three men who had been standing guess you needn't be #0 in darkness were held spellbound and speechless as a great |: flood of fooussed light poured upon the deck of the yacht, and gave {llumination for the tragedy which was to come. It was the searchlight of the cruiser flashing upon them, and as they stood, and a great cry burst from their lips, they saw that she was not half a mile distant. Then “ame shot from her gungamidships, and, with a terrible piercing crash, the yacht rolled her lee scuppera under, and a foar- ful shout of agony came from her engine-room. “You, there!’ erled Burke to a small group of lascare and of seamen huddled up near the windlass. “Where's Nicolini?" Nicolint was the engineer, but he and his “second” lay dead in the ongine-room; and when no one answered Burke, the skipper turned to Parker. oy “Don't stand shivering like @ calf!" he roared.” “Sound her for'ari, and see where she’s hit; and aft, there; strip that gun and eee if there's shot that's dry.” They bustled up at his orders, and although the ship lay heavy in the trough of the seas, they began to work | both the Nordenfelt guns, and to pour, as ft seemed, a futile stream of shot and bullets at the cruiser, which was now prepacing torget the lifeboat from the davite and to board the yacht Yefore ehe sank. Anon they observed that the feboat had actually been launched, and they beheld her coming toward them, the great arc light {uminating her path. Then the great light went out. Scarcely daring to speak’ or to hope, the men of the Semiramis waited to hear the coming of the boat, but it never came. Twice the cruiser fired a gun, but no shell hissed over them; and when a third gun was fired, after an Interval, they were sure it was a signal of recall to the boat. Then, indeed, an expectation of safety, newer, stronger, more potent, led them from their cowering lalssez- aller; and as Burke roared the order for the hand-pumps to be worked, and for now soundings to be made, a ray even of cheerfulness moved them to activity. Burke's views were simple. “We're knocked fair en square," sald he, “with a hole big ez a barn door, From what I've learned we can’t look to memt it this side of Spain,” “WHI the yacht float that long?’ askey Kenner, when, * said Burke; “but the sea's fallin’ “I don't see where the tioats come in —leastwise, not if you're going to take the yallerjoad along.” What I can't quite understand,’ interposed Messenger, ‘is the reason they let us go at the very moment they were on top of us." “You've to enquire down in thelr engine-room, I guess, to larn that," said Burke, “You may bet a bottle they didn't drop tt because a fly @ettled on ‘em. “Do you think you cam make Corutina with the rags you've got?” asked Kenner. “I can try,” repNed Burke; ‘an’ ff {t happens ex I don't~ wal, you ain't much worse off than swimmin' abed here.” « All that day and the next the stupor and inanition hung lke a pall upon those who had made s0 great a oast for fortune, and upon their masteys, who had conceived tt. On the night of the eighth day the voyage ended abrupt- ly, and with @ mighty shock which, at the very moment of its coming, wrote ‘Finis’ to the yacht's history. She had “struck hard upon the rocks of the northern coast of Spain; and as the seas rolled over her, and the men screamed in their terror,,the commanding voice of Burke heard oryini {f you'd live! and every man for almselft" Continued To-Merrow.) |adapted to outdoor pursulta; an excel- wt EVENING w WORLD'S HOME w MAGAZINE ww THE WOMAN WHO DRINKS. BY HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. | ae woman of tue stage, and every other wage-earning woman as well. | should applaud Mixa Grave Noble (or her words of frank warning delivered ne other day at Hull House, C Aline Noble | She is coming to Now York next ct n herself. & professional wom dangers that confront the professional woman, particularly the actress. Miss Noble said; “Cocktails, man and flattery ate the three eviis that the professional woman must shun, She ts susceptible to them all, and each Is a barrier to her succe I have taken tha Uberty of condensing the Inasmuch as flattery and men are running mates—for there isnt enough fattery trom woman to woman to do any one any harm--I imagine there's no reom for argument on that polit. Every one who loves the <dramaite profession and believes it to be an exalted, one must agree as to the dangers that peset the actress. The bablt of taking intoxicants Js not contined to the women of the stage. We all know that many women of high soctal standing and lots that are not of the exclusive world Grink more than is good for health or beauty. But these women are, us Miss Novle says, alle to recuperate after excesses and the actress It not. ‘There tn every excuse for the girl or woman of the stage who has become addicted to the uso of intoxicants, There Js practically none for the society woman. No outside person who has ver witnessed the preparation for a big produc- tion at one of our metropolitan theatres Wut has wondered—marvelled—at the absolute heroism of the women taking part in \t, Frequently for weeks the rohearsals of the new piece last from early in the morning unt!l time to dress for a play being nightly perforned, Tho girl who cannot get roawiar meals of nourishing food, who never has enough sleep, who ts kept in a continuous atate of excitement, who is on her poor, tired Ittle feet for eighteen hours a dny, is in an exhausted state bordering on total collapse. What wonder that she learns to depend on the cocktafl, the gin and soda, the whiskey concoction so quickly obtained and drunk where every minute counts, 90 Immediate In its effects, mo deceltfully exhilarating, reviving and, resting. With jaded nerves, weary brain, aching back or head there comes the tempter always to the actress. Once the unwary woman has discovered the stimulating effects of an intox!- cant, onco she has learned that fatigue and pain and nervousness are lulled by regards it as a nt to minister to her needs, and will not be warned until she learns to her bitter humiliation and despair that {t has become her master and she Its abjoct slave? ‘Then we all know what follows. There {s no need to recall the tragic histories of the talented and beautiful women—and many of them most lovable and gen- erous-hearted—who have fallen from high places In the profession—and fallen never to be restored. ‘Tho very nature of an actress's duties—tho very emotional qualifications which fit her for a succesoful career on the slage—the feverish excitement in which she lives—make all unnatural stimulants of deadly danger to her. The first time a woman feels she as “got to have a drink" or #to cannot go on she has started on the path that leads to wreck, ruin and degradation. There are, of course, hundreds of women of the stage who are not tee-totallers, but who have themselves in such perfect control that the danger of acquiring the habit of drink does not apply to them, It is the girl who does not understand the penalty she must inevitably pay for defying natural laws, the girl who tries to do without sleep and food and keep up the pace, unfortunately too often the accepted one tn the professton, who comes to wreck and disgrace through a resort to stimulants. ‘As ¢or the men and the flattery, I honestly belleve that combination would prove eelatively innocuous If neither girl nor man drank. A sano and sober girl of the Twentieth Century knows how to take care of herself. A man's compantonsii!p, even his flattery, won't hurt the normal woman, But drink weakens the moral fibre, doadens the moral sensibi! relaxes the standards of modesty, vitiates the capacity for resistance, breaks down the strongholds of womanhood. There !s one book that every girl on the stage who has been tempted to “braco up" on cocktall or hig-ball should read if she would know to the full extent what destruction drink may bring. It 1s that hideous history of the downfall of a woman of the stage, by George Augustus Moore, “The Mummet's Wife." Success in Business From Facial Traits. Dr. Edgar G Beall, the famous phrenologist, studics Evening World readers’ faces frem photographs, and gives practicai advice concerning the career in which cach is most likely to succeed. Dr. Beall will reply through The Evening World to any r2ader over son to manage a playhouse, and she 1s| well qualified, as one having met the enemy face to face, to speak of the greatest | “SWEET-SINGER OF BABYLON,” _AND HIS SWEETEST SONG | Benjamin P. Fie!d’s Verses Rival the Poems of B'oodgood Cutter, the Long land Farmer- Bard. A Y gentle poet 1s Benjamin P, Field, whose very wentle he book “The Beauties of Life, wd oO) just pyblished by the J. 8. Og!ivio |Company., He ts seventy-two years and his home ts in Babylon, L. 1 Was tt » duughters of Jerusalem hung thelr horps on the willows and are b's lyrics tuned to the strings so long untouched? There {s not a plaint in the 1s2 pages, not a note of sorrow, not a trace of cynicism Ile sings of very common things, of the country boy at work [and ploy, of the village gossips, the makis, the matrons, the |grandmothors, He is reminsecent as one whose beard (s | white will be; he rounds out ench set of verses with a gentle mnoral as was once the fashion of all poets. He Is not a technician, his images are such as all eyes may see, his phrases are not involved, but are simple, direct. He haa old- fashion faith, old-fashion loves, a dread of the too apodern. There Js a wistful quaintness in the verses “When I Am Gone: I wonder 1{ wome smiling face And willing hands will take my place, Ant himb's feet keep up the pace, When 1 am om And In “Down in the Creek" he shows that years have not made him dull to the bey’s point of view; indeed, he Is a boy at heart: Where, are the bore that used to go xia down tn the creek, trhen’ nua, uf them mace wp, hie. Bind to, Sorrow some: miss's, boat, He'd take the rat one be could fad, ee long as It would Boat, Bloodgood Cutter, the farmer-poet of Long Island, never painted a finer picture than his rival Meld has In this: When the rorihwert wind ts ing bard, and the tide Is ran= ot the creek ts bare where the waters used to flow, Where oftentinies, tin deep enough to anit the BGK boat, Tut when the tide ts running low « ‘din! Wouldn't ‘float. Beyond the creck, along the the sand flats are al! bare, Ant rT The wind News ov tif) meadows cold and touches mw! The wi jouches with a sting. and the winter gu le are soarin with eager eres, and when the mere mong themselves when the tide le runnin Ko low, And Wa} men, with flogers cold and ghouldere with a load, ar, ¢ toward thelr quiet homes, along the frozen envy ther heir . bute fuet dig to know 4 of the clams he @ tide is runaing low. If there be those who were allve with the Babylon bard when he served the hard apprenticeship of youth on a farm they will enjoy “The Old Grindstone,” from which the fol lowing is taken: It made me tire? all ‘That was v9 spend al There are many graceful tributes to ner, When 1 war oni tion from Mr. Fle!d ‘The boys dal ‘To naw a 7 And man a Mttle 1nd, some atxty years 40 ft work to 20, and Cima” pate ew, emit tough hickory wood requires fore I've tuasled with, scram an Potter olds pede war corn to shell, and to feed—three th To idrive ae nieht and mom, abut acmite een were, “87! ‘neu Iue the groverien trom the sores through rain, and sno} A TWICE-FATAL ROCK ‘water freezes no nthe urchin: rin wale ty ep or heat, at For a long time the National Asso- cintion of Master Horseshoers has talked of having a college sacred to its trade, It doesn't want to teach Latin and Greek, but it does want to have a school of its own to whicn the youngsters can ®0 for such good sclentific training as will be of vatue in horseshoeing. Such Instruction, the horseshoers think, should include a course in horse anatomy, some knowledge of chemistry and the value of metals and training In eripary lore. All these things would be of value in elevating the noble pro- fession of horseshoeing. Now, after months of general debate on the question, the Executive Commit- ten years of age who will send a photograph, accompanied by a description of the color of eyes and hair, and the principal nationality of aneestors. R. J. C., Amsterdam avenue.—Impul-) P. K., Greene atreet.—Closely woven sive, courageous, optimistic; very mag-| wiry, enduring tissues; character netic; a favorite in society, especially | piring, persevering and tenacious; with the fair sex; a fervid lover, but strong friendship for a few congenial Bie the moet Roe Pein SET auae Persons; are intense, but not sentiment- | ments; need unity of thought and pur. |! in love; sure to distingulsh yourself pose; ‘can attain’ great success if you in something; never satisfied to play atick to one alm; are not a good finan-|second fiddle; critical, skeptical mind; cler; must cum desire to spend money; never see ghosts; are cool, matter-of- fact and collected; judgment rarely at fault about people; will never be taken in by confidence men; fine memory for nearly everything except words; must brush up In conversation; should have technical training; best in medicine, ‘pharmacy or some other science, lent soldier, agent, sollcitor, canvasser, “drummer,” 2; ‘fond of ‘musfe, pic: tures, sculpture and other branches of art; fine memory of faces but not of names, dates or ewnts; might become an actor, photographer, teacher of phy eical culture, &, H, G., Ninety-elghth Street.—Discern-, H.C. H., Trenton.—Incredulous, proud, tee of the association hag got down to business and is considering ways and means for establishing the college. Plans for the building have been drawn, and a site provisionally chosen, and it is likely that the plans will be arlopted |? This rock, on the road, near Nice, where several auto races have been run,| If they are, the college\ will probably has caused two sudden deaths, ‘The! be built in Flint, Mich. a small city latest was that of Count Zborowskl,| which ts an important centre of the who dashed into it during the race of = - La Turbie, His machine was going @t a speed of more than a mile a minute. The cross in the picture marks the spot where his automobile struck the rock, ‘The tablet, higher up on the rock, was erected over the point where Automo- bilist Bauer was killed during a race three years ago. The course of La Turbie 18 up a mountain side full of ab- rupt turns and V-shaped angtes. At one side is the high rock, on the other a precipice. Rather an odd course for a race. without further delay. BLEMISHES Moles, Wart: er head Nos Nose, Red Vena, Bier. fe dle ‘ous Hair and all Disfid- Uaat a@htly, Hamilfatin Bien that elbud the com, fon vaately and permanen My sctontific treatm fal, Thiruy Peare pract Fence, Call or write person JOHN H. WoobBuRY D1, 22 23d Street, N.Y. Amusements. BROADWAYE: THEATRE, Rar Spectal PRINGH OF PILSE sis 1) all the work T had to do, which ma (tT thou'd live a thousand’ years, marble timd hi TUESDAY EVEN MAY 19, 1003.” ne throu, oad Onroughy ae most © day—to turn dad’ Pureiy occasional poems tn the bool: persons and some songs In the ok mam A James Whitcomb Kiley bit shall be the last quotme verses: v SOP Re A cronking to the pond. anda Nase in tn ge, And the grass loka green dewn én the the J geese. honking overhead, are flying towart the north, more nicht tn the barnyard water forme ant Kifer are Ashe Mee and summer's pretty nigh. erinter'a gon A COLLEGE FOR BLACKSMITHS. carriage manufacturing ‘trade. Flint fs #) anxious to have the institution there that it Is ready to give an excellent site for the building for nothing. ° The plans call for a large three-stary Structure with a first floor given up to & dissecting room, an operating room, a hospital composed of single and box stalls, a roam especially equipped for taking care of diseased feet, @ mechanl- cal shoeing room equipped to acceme_ modate 200 persons, and with electrical forges for demonstration work and de- vices for taking care of unruly animals, THE EFFECTS OF MALARIA weakening and debilitating, leaving the eye tem pre@sposed to attacks of other diseasts and unable to combat them, are among Its ‘worst features. ess pain and can frequently be obviated by the use Dr. Decl rr three er's Shake No More. Take it gests, 50 Paitin will tone up neue ayateme soe and elasticity to your spirits, an taking Ce | poon find yourself with vim and vigor. PASTOR’ Btn oh oon BA Bre GRAND-HENRY wi THE TAMING OF HELEN, SS Reserved Every Aft. & Eve. pam ggg eae Meant ei and All Stock Pare Henry W. une presenta GEO. fit 4 COHANS rie PRIONS Me. 088 ee ‘Me. and Be, ESTIRuitue Ruitine Church #2 Cornet Kegs. WIZARD OF OZ with CARD ON Oe ki ACADE F sic 3 ACADEMY OF NUSIC 143 3: FRANK DANIELS .<s0 Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE. Comte Opera Sophy, 815. Amusements. AMERICAN _',"a = {MATINEE TO-DAY A MOTHER'S LOVE. Dele Pair Burlsques RONDA; MAY 2. cEaTe SALLING. B. LTH 8ST. BU RLESQUES—2 CASINO 1OHT Tt ne 0 aE 8.15. |CECIL SPOONEI in” uf Abt Rage GORS TO TOW! R INAWAY STS Ment, penetration, astuteness, subtlety, |critical, independent, self-witled aud de | = al ATLANTIC finesse; are strategic, politic and per-!{+rmined; must not marry a woman's! BELASCO * HEATRE p | Rastus & Bank a suusive; have a keen Insight Into human rights woman; are cool, steady and even- | VAYLD RELA Gia /)senesh: Depes tener meses: Rarentl St as nature; see through other people. but! pulsed as a clock; tasteful and refined, = H e F f 7 Vet $15. Mast, Wed, Sat remain like a sealed book to them; qutck | put not Imaginative; appreciate tangidle | Wear ena | METROPOLIS, alu ALICE 4s MRS, JACK to grasp ensential ideas; strike directly | beauty; exceptional memory of object» | BANA rtie 142 St, & 84 Ave. FISCHER to the core of a subject eraiization than detall in matters of dress, decoratio facts, places, statistics, &c.; employ few | words, but always to the polnt; reason industively; not philosophical enough; Should read Schopenhauer, Comte, Spen- cer, &c. to gain aefiective power; dis- pire to leaderdhip, ak suave oF 0 a le enougn for law tice; better as wolen' dine as physician, . or, Is wares, Presente in Va AUCTIONEER." | ADIS0N 8Q. THEATRE, 24th &., oF, ~ Mata. 1 OL fn is ey N BATHE. 94th Ot. & Broadway. NEN ALOT TERATAS Mk Ot re WEST END The Hart of art_Of Maryland) == = Se. een 1M Workiag Gis WMS "en Mut. Thurs, ICOLUMBIA| Amusements. Why Not Proctor’s?70:2A;.. oa Sth A {i THE “et eae ROYAL Lil LILLIPOTIARS, Sh 22S "ete WALLACK’ rs ge Shh SULTAN ? SULU 14th St, Theatre, yisatt 2%, KEITH'S wat ear eee EDEN) ENEMA TOUR AGI: Seaenee = i MATINES PARK «Ver sav: A Romance of Coon Hollow. Next Week—THE BLACK PATTI BHOW. LAST VALERIE BBRGERE, ‘Al WEEK. UNDER TWO rare Summer Resorts, ‘|| Hotels and Boarding Houses on Long Island, TERRITORY SWEPT BY T! PREVAILING COOL SUMM SOUTH WINDS FROM OCEAN—THE IDEAL PLAG FOR HEALTH, REST AND | REATION, 3 3 3 & y dels

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