The evening world. Newspaper, May 22, 1903, Page 15

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o aN f a | | w THE »# EVENING # WORLD'S # HOME # MAGAZINE # | Why Mr. Carnegie Cannot Hope to Give Away All His Wealth, | HY mae) i (Dy Permieston of Harper & Brothers.) (THIS STORY BEGAN MONDAY A SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING OHAPTERS. | ‘The yacht Semiramis, owned by an American adventurer, Kenner, robe tug carrying @ millioa sterling in gold trom England to ‘the Continent, | pursued by an Fegiigh man-ot-war and goes ashore in a storm on tho | Of Spain. . dner, his captain, | acne; hie partner In crime, Mer~ a innocent friend and dupe, Fisher, and a negro cook themeeives to be the only persons waved from the wreck. They tures, find that tho wreck of the yacht fe hidden tn a bring pool at the bottom | Kenner goes to Ferrol for a ship to take them off and the Fert of the party fall into the handa of a Spanish woman, who ts & wrecker, owna A castle and ‘do of followers, W deflance of the danger, Messenger took a swift sur- yey of his environment. Immeillately above him the rock rose-to a height of thirty feet, but with a sheer face which forbade any attempt to swarm it; In front was the abyss, with a throng of men gesticulating and roaring like | wolves who hunger at the bottom of tt. A rifle shot, which | Trang past his head and struck the rock with e sharp “ping,’"| decided him. A. this supremacy of the crisis, and when two men run- ning upon the path were within fifty paces of the stone heuse, but fortunately bearing no arms, Messenger looked UD at the cliff above the end of the building which was furthest from the gate, and saw that it was less steep than the precipice which forbade his return to the haven. At any other time he would have deemed a man who attempted to climd it nothing less than a lunatic; but now, with a desperation which was born of the position, he clutched at this straw and dared the hazard. Hal,” said he, “I'm going up the cllff, there. Mf the gold and hide it CHAPTER V. An Alliance with Death. HILE he stood, no longer crouching, but upright, with | Will you ent Fisher Inconicalty. .* sald Messenger, when the men stood out plain to their sight, "I was something of a runner at Cambridge, and I know you are. You've got to do a mile now, and under ‘five.’ I'll trouble you to make the pace.”” “I'll make it fast enough for a Spaniard, any way," satd Fisher, as he started; and for the next ten minutes the’ men Fan like hares, hearing wild shouts, but no reports of guns. behind them. It was near to the hour of 10 o'clock before they enme up from their hiding, and, with infinite caution, made their way to the shore. This they found quite deserted, but, going quickly toward their own haven, as they judged, they pres- ently saw the dark shape of a ship's boat, and they observed instantly that it was the lifeboat, in which the nigger, Joe, rowed, and Burke sat holding the tiller lines, At this sight, the fact being clear beyond dispute, Mes- @enger stood quite still and stamped angrily with his foot ‘upon the sand. “Curse them!" said he, “they're showing full in the Nght’ ‘With this he began to run along the shore, and the skipper, seeing him, gave a low whistle and put the boat's head toward the beach. She touched a moment later, but as the four greeted each other a great shou‘ ros: up from the aand and a horde of men, swarming fiercely ubout the party, had laid the whole of them flat upon their backs and bound them before they realized even whence the attack camo. ‘The prisoners were taken to a great castle by boat and road. There Messenger and Fisher were separated from the others and ushered into @ great hull and into the presence ot | the Spanish woman. As the light from a reading lamp shone upon her face the Spanish woman, whom Messenger had last seen for any certainty at Monaco, presented 2 countenance no less re- pulsive than upon the day of their first meeting, Her thick repy black hair fell upon her shoulders {un the fashion of the schoolgirl; her arms seemed as muscular as those of a strong man, her face was brown with the burn of the sun; her eyes shone with an unnatural lustre, and flashed Ugh? here and there as the eyes of an engle. And as the two stood before her she searched them with her gaze so that : could acarce face her, and were consclous of a mysteri- ack aubtlety and power of which they had not known the @ “Well, Mr. Arnold Messenger,” said she, “it is our privilege te meet again! At this Messenger started atickly: “Madame, I do not remember that we have mot before.” Bhe sent Fisher away in the care of a servant, and Mes- eenger knew that more Ives than his own depended on how be played his game. “Had you not better tell me at once where the money 1s?” mbe sald. “On what terms?” asked Messenger, with a slight betrayal of eagerness, She leaned back upon her seat and looked straight at him. “Your Iife,”” said she, “and, as you will wish It, that of the boy." Messenger could sit no longer. jadame," said he, standing before her and holding back his passion with effort, “we are wasting our time. You mst have the poorest opinion of me to propose that. I re- fuse, of course.” “You are a bold man," n.eke up my mind about you. imperceptibly, but answered she presently. “I must voally TOIT IRN TONLE TE PE Te lery of a man who fears death alone. “When you do that," said Messenger, “I counsel you to lock all round. You cannot think that you and the nature ef your profession are unknown to me or that I have taken no precautions, My friend Jake Williams’—he :emembered Konner's story, luckily—“has already had some acquainiance with you in America, I expect him on the coas! ‘with fitty mer every hour, and he will seek me he: 'No other,” he answered. “Ah!" sald 6) “then he ie the man spoken of by the Journals as Jake Kenner; and is he coming back?" “Certainly,” said he: “and as he knows a little of your past it mignt be troublesome if he missed us.” “Well,” sald she,.‘‘it was wise of you to send the American to Ferrol, He and I have scores to settle; vut, mon ami, fs It not probable that he 1s already on his way to England in the custody of the police?” “You shall not have a shilling of, the money,” cried Men- wenger, “unless you help us. And I will make you this of- te I will pay you one-third of the whole sum got out of the wreck if you will put your men at our disposal for a ‘week, and allow us in the meantime the shelter of this house, Pray think it out calmly. If we are out of the way, you may find the builion; but the greater probability is that you will never find it, And {f you should be so lucky, our friends, who will presently discover our absence, will imme- diately make the whole story public, with your share in it the loudest talked about. A mgment’s consideration should convince you that your whole interest les with us.’ “I would not begin to laugh yet!" whe snapped; ‘there is time for that. I have done with you now, to-morrow I shall know my mind. But don't forget that I have offered you your life and that of the boy’’— “Or that I claim the lives of the others,” sald Messenger, in @ Wurst of lofty genemesity which fell’ in exactly with the Dart he was acting. ‘Thea fe was conducted from her presence by a lackey end came upon his friends, The roam in which the four had been shut was at the ‘top of one of the towers of the castle, and the wh of its Fight-hand side was open to the air, there being a parapet met more than six inches high to prevent any man stepping|the whole of tho money had been bound to the backs from the prison and going straight down to the flags of the gourt, @ hundred feet below. Beyond this startling eccen- “Rerriarnyeeneegpewrpyp had nothing uncommon, walls and heavy ee above; but [or a nos cimeementea nani natieaed i ada le eel “uae ' en piracy An Told ND WILL END ON TO-MORROW.) there was a table in the entre of it, upon which some bot- tles of common Spantsh wine, together with a supper of meat and bread, were set; and the floor was strewn with rushes, They drank of the wine, which was vitriolic, and slept. | When Messenger awoke he found himself, to his unutterable | surprise, in another room. He had observed the change as| he opened his eyes and saw, in place of the bare stone and the rushes, a panelied celling of oak and the posts of a| wooden bed upon which he luy, He was now tn a room which had some stamp of clvillzation—an arm-chair of | |leather, a table with books upon it, a glass above the chim- ney, and a timeplece set above his bed. He could look from his casement down upon the whole face of this inclosure, over whose grasa high chestnut trees | cast a wholesome shade and suggested by the lazy rustling of | thetr leaves that the atmosphere was not sleeping even un- der tha sun's rays. At the first there was nothing in the grass court to interest him in any way or to call his mind in coherence, but at the second look his blood seemed to freeze within him, and he caught at the window for sup- port. For the body of Burke, the skipper, was hanging from the lowest branch of the hither tree and swayed upon the rope which held It, ao that there was no doubt of the man's death, though his face was hidden by the foltage and little but his legs could be seen. Presently he was summoned, and in haste, to the Spanish woman. “Carbineers are coming here," she said. ‘They | have been arvused by your English friends to attack me and are scarching for you. The Spanish Government has known about my work for ten years; 1t might have moved in an- other ten {f the Englishmen in the elty had not crled in- cessuntly for'action. For me, were you not here, the future would be simple. I should set out to-night or to-morrow for Vienna and iciurn here with the new year. After sush a display of onthusiaem as this they would leave me in psace for another generation “Dut now the case Is different," he exclaimed, interrupting her; “there 1s a miiion of money in the creck off your fore- shore, and it has to ve got into the hills without a moment's delay. low far off did you say the troops were:' e mar says tlvee miles, but they have camped in the village for tho right. Where thetr camp is and who they ate ( am now going to ride out and learn for myself. Luckily, the Furish ship weighed anchor and teft an heur ago. I shall know the best and worst of it in an hour. Be- fore that you and 1 can arrange in a word; the momeu: we put the hils! between us and these men—I suggest that we strike for my other house near Finisterre after concealing ourse!ves untll the troops have something to report—we 4i- vide what is to be divided and take different roads"— “Tt is a fal: offer,’ sald he, “and I accept it. They struck a bargain and soon her men under the guld- ance of Messenger were drawing the gold from the pool in the cave and cartying it or mules to the castle. While the Spanish woman and Messenger watched the last of the mules on their way a vessel that had Geen coming In lowerea a hoat and another yese! they had not observed hove to and lowered a boat in pursuit In the first boat they could eve Kenner, A treop ot cavalry trotted along the beach, and Kenner’s boa’ shifted its course, As his men bert their | bachs to the work the woman cried, and this time with feeling. “Look! she said, ‘my score against your friend ts about to be pald, If he puts ashore on those sands, heaven help him!" “He cannot escape the mounted men, anyway,” said Mes- senger. “Well, he was always a tenderfoot, I looked for him to come five days ago.” “Phus the position stood when Kenner—no longer able to tolerate the suspense—leaped boldly from his dingy to the sea, and began to swim toward the sands. A great cry from the shoremen followed his venture; and as he came In the shallows where he could walk the cry was taken up again, asa cry of warning. “Wait for it now," #aid the Spanish woman. ‘He Is on the death patch, and the lancers have had thelr ride for nothing.”” The scene was exciting almost beyond endurance, Kenner swayed and hesitated, while the men of the beach bellowed thelr warnings, and the pursuing boat drew eo near that & seaman at the bows rose to clutch the hunted man. Driven ty a hundred impulses and fears the American at last made twe or three quick steps in the endeavor to throw himselt fiat upon the water; but he tripped in the effort and reeled co that he dropped ‘at last upon his knees and was engulfed to his waist. In that supreme moment his pitiful ory rose up from the water and echoed from hil! to hill, the death- Even the shouts of the others were hushed in the face of his overwhelming peril, and {t was pitiful to look upon his violent struggles as, inch by inch, the sand gripped him, and he saw himself going down to the oozing grave at his feet. And the frony of It was that none could give him help, not even the men of the ship's boat who had come to arrest him—for the plac wherein he had sank had not a foot of water over it, and ths boat grounded upon its ledge, leaving the seamen to watch bis doom, Thus, with one long, piercing scream, he went down, and when the sand had filled his mouth, and closed above his eyes, and the silence of death ensued, one of his hands was still raised above the Iapping waves as in token of farewell, and {t remained upraised in the grimmest mook- ery for many minutes, Messenger and the woman were almost surrounded by the lancers who had spied, so deep had been their absorption In the fate of Kenner, but the woman was resourceful and knew her land, By a brilliant dash they reached the shelter of her castle. In the smaller outer court-yard two men, who carried lanterns, waited at the tron door of the inclined passage which led to the tunnel in the creek; and, immediately en- tering by the narrow archway, they shut out the sound of voices as they locked the wicket, and quickly descended to the cavernous depths below, A low whisper told of a new danger. They entered a tunnel into which the creek flowed, and up this was com- Ing a boat from the ship they had seen pursing Kenner. The woman marshaled her forces, and in a moment the woman's design became apparent to Messenger. He saw, as some of the Spaniards crawled swiftly into the cavern, what he had not seen before. A great portcullis of fron covered the shoreward end of the tunnel, which here had comparativly a mall arch, and this portcullis was now ‘o do the work which neither knife nor pistal could do. It was at the best @ rough contrivance, drawn up with chains which turned about tron drums; but the spikes at the lower end of it were heavy as pike-heads, and the weight of it was to be measured tn tons, Toward such a trap the long-boat now came slowly, and the party watched as they would have watched a snake waiting to spring upon @ rabbit. The fall of the fron gate split the long-boat as a ham- mer will split a nut. One of the lance-lfke bars actually drove through the body of a burly seaman sitting amid- ships, and,’ cleaving his skull, ulttmately pinned him upon the bottom of the pool as a moth 1s pinned upon a board. Thus was the peril from the sea turned, and at the end of another hour, It being then near to cleven o'clock, of the mules, and the party moved from up the steep road Success in Business From Facial Traits. +-——_—_—_—_ Dr. Edgar C. Beall, the famous phrenologist, studies Evening World readers’ faces frem photographs, and gives practical advice concerning the career in which each is most likely to succeed. Dr. Beall will reply through The Evening World to any reader over ten years of age whe will send a photograph, accompanied by a description | of the color of eyes and hair, and the principal nationality of ancestors. Great as Are His Benefactions, His Fortune! Continues Steadily to Accumulate, | CCORDING to a conservative estimate Andrew Car- | A nogie has given away to cities, towns, persons and | ingtituUone throughout the world over ninety mililons of dollars. The exact amount of his donation {s estimated ) At $90,012,288, distrfbuted through the different countries as | (ows: United States Bootlend Holland . Engiand and Wales. + $90,912,223 This is more money than most American millionaires amass ty a lifetime given to commerce. Yet colossal as che sum seems it im in reality less than four times the stool King’s annual income, With the greatest wealth and the| strongest impulse to distribute it for the common benefit of manidnd Mr, Carnegte has found it impossible to make his Denevolances keep step with his rapldiy growing fortune ‘Though within the last year Mr. Carnegie has given away | the Jargest sums since he Uegan the distribution of his sur- | plus income he has found it absolutely impossible to keep pase with the mélons upon millions which are adding to} the burden of his wealth. To Scotland, his native country, and to Pittsburg, where his fortune was gade, the steel king has given over $19,000,000 in the last twelve months. Andrew Carnegie's fortune grows at the rate of a dollar for every clock tick. A conservative estimate of his wealth and the income derived from bis holdings in steel and other MISS A. H., L. 1. City: Your eyes are agiow with the mysterious lo} might work havoc with mei but your own would ache w oniess you found @ true mate; be care- ful in choosing a partner, for marriage Is your destiny; affections aro lasting and Intense; are anxious for soclal dis- tnetion; very fond of dress; enjoy muale and the drama; have fine tastes; are good tempered, reasonable, and rare- ly fail to please; not very’ studious; should give more time to serious books and the question of your career in life; your attractiveness will take care of itself for some time; will succeed best in a vocation where your personal mag- netism wi'l have scope. Miss M. B. W., Thirty-sixth street — Cool. collected, well polsed charaoter; are thoughtful, earnest, steady and sincere; very prudent and reserved, but not «ly or cunning; are rarely hasty in anger love. or any other passton; affections are deep and slow to kindle, but very in- tense; jould cultivate surface warmth and spontaneity; deep breathing exer- cises will help greatly; talents are more solfd than brilliant; Judgment excellent; are never filghty, vissionary or over- sanguine; are not very literary; best in zomo sclentifio pursuit; have also som artistic alflities; fine sense of color; need only to concentrate il, M. G,, Brooklyn—Supertor natural abilities; lower forehead {s a mode) of ng central back head shows at-| perceptive intellect; face ts symmetrical; tachment for home and children; would|are very analytical and reason by in- bo a good chum for your wife; love to| duction: an tmmense scope of memory; excel in your work; full lower forehead | narrowness of head pack of temples drooping septum of nose denote! betrays disregam of money; should be- ileal powers; have much talent for| ware of alcohol, bad company, é&e.; specific observation; are exceptional in| pride of character fe not 0 strong as memory of events; fudament is Keen; |talenta: need to cultivate precision, ao- ro refined; are very critical; | curacy and orde Saath avon literary education; best in| Insure fluency of language, but can ale to the point; are averse to mercantile aw, teaching, Journalism or some branch | 5, malta should Bee awe pone of mechanical art, C. M. H,, Flatbush.—Very active tem-) well-balanced, clear, logical industries follows: Carnegie’s own valuation of his interest in the Carnegie Stee! Company... + $146,260,000 Other investments conservatively estimated 29,000,000 Carnegio’s prealth .. + +++, $16,260,000 His income, estimated by Frick, on profits of Steel Company for 1900.. $24,500,000 MR, ANDREW CARNDGIE. “if Grom his latest photograph.) Lisieite Income per day (including Sunday). enon 1A Income pez hour, day and night, woes 2,978 Income yer minute.. 60 Before this wealth of the laird of Skibo the fated fore tunes of Monte Cristo and other financiers of romance dwin- die into insignificance. Tt will be seen that although be. Income from other investments... 1,500,000 given right and left for the last decade, he has su in disposing of less than half his income for that time, witiS Total tncome $26,000,000 the great bulk of his tremendous fortune remains untouched Carnegie’s income per month. $2,166,666 and ready to overwhelm him at last with the disgrace @f Income per week. ef 600,000 dying rich rr oh ALL HAIL TO THAT MOST WEIRD Be HEADGEAR—THE PANAMA HAT] Like the Phoenix of Old, It Is Rising from Its Own Ashes—(or Ash Barrel.) Who purchased a Panama hat. His poor old dad said (As he fell over dead “Was I ever father of THAT?" ‘Thus sang an inspired bard Jest summer, and his song won: one of The @vening World's § prizes. ‘At that time New York was Panama mad. The hats of every shape (made under water for $250 or made under an eas:-side hat-shop for 25 cents), filled the public mind. Then, when fall came they were put away with a sigh; and carp- tng crittes, who had never ratsed the price of one, shouted aloud that the day of the Panama was past; that the Pana- ma hat was ead; killed ty surfeit of popularity. But it ian’t! It's alive. So brush St un, give it @ bath and wear ft. Wear {t Mm the weet knowldge that Dame Fashion will emile on you. For thus saith an arbiter of styles: “Gentlemen will wear Panama hats this summer, Those who were careless with their costly headgear last season, believing that the Panama was a single season's fad, will regret their recklessness, for one prominent importer and expert it vewith ordinary care a Panama hat should last a life- tine!” ‘Hatters expect this type of straw to continue fashionable for several years, notwithstanding the great reduction in price. Really fine examples of Bouadorian hats (‘Paname” eT ino qwas @ young man of Herat GHE CHORVS iN set » The Ever-Present ‘‘ Fine’ Awaits Her at Every Turn, and Remorselessly Cuts Down Her Weekly $15. conypany. utes she is fined 60 fine. that # almost time-worn; but the actual truth about the saving proposition is more Interesting than the humorists fancy. When a weery shop girl or a “saleslady’ drops into her second balcony seat and views the rows of radiant stage beauties disporting themselves airily upon the boards clad in resplendent costumes she is apt to complain that {t 4s an easy Ife which brings them in $15 a week for appearing six nights and two matinees upon the stage. She does not take into consideration the long, hard rehearsing or the more {mportant financtal taxes which reduce the chorus girl's salary. There 1s a chorus-girl code of deport- ment which le as severe in ite way as that of the most lect ladies’ finishing achool, and the breaking of any of the rules makes the guilty party subject to e fine ranging from 40 cents to G1. In extreme cases dismissal from the com- pany js the penalty. Here are some of the things that reduce the chorur gir!’ salary of $15, which is the emount paid by the average first- class company, down to $9 or $10, when she is ynfortunate in her deportments T® chorus girl who saves her salary has become @ joke $1 penalty, must pay 1 fine. intoxication. GIRL’ S BUGBEAR- Furting over the footlights, $1 or dismissal from the (Flirting, {n the eyes of the stage manager, is Boing late to rehearsal or a performance t» the subject of a 60-cent or $1 fine. If a girl ts late less than fifteen min- takes $1 out of the girl’ For being late on the stage, miasing a oue or coming on with @ dress unfastened or a shoe untied means a 60-cent If a rehearwal ts called after the performance and e chorus girl ehould go home before the formal dismissal she i» Gned 1. Talking on the stage, laughing or inattention calls for a A $1 Gine ts tmposed upon the girl who wears @ necklace around her neck or a bow in her hair unless the costume calls for such an adornment, Yor tearing her gown or getting a spot of dirt on ft she “Talking Vack" to a stage manager, a musical director or @ maitre de ballet is the eubject of a Gna and persistent cases result, of course, ‘Another cause for a fine (more commonly for disnissal) is If a ptage director discovers a chorus gtrl has ‘been indulging in too many cocktails before the performance there is an immediate inyestigation. Fines are not paid by the chorus girl to the treasurer or gtage manager, but aro deducted from the week's salary. There are some members of the “merry merry" who are so unfortunate as never to draw a full week's salary, cents, Over fifteen minutes or absence alary. Amuse per OPENS TO- THE OLD RELIABLE Dr. a oY {= « misnomer) cost #100 at Guayaquil last season end are nod cheaper thia year; but thos occupy an-expert native. mit months in the making and are woven EE water of 9tte ceptionally selected and prepared leaves of the hippy-habpa screw palm. The hat of commerce, the hat we will buy, retafis this season for trom $% to $10; lest season the price was twice a much. The style ie the same as the best form of last yeat, & round crown lightly creased across the top. The freak style t» creased across the top in three directions, the inter- mecting point of the creases being pinched up to a sharp point. Many of the hard straw hats are made in this style, See ene en an can ecenets Get) ee aa point break the straw, ‘Those who invest their wealth in thts type of headgeat should read with oare the following rules for the care of their hats: ‘Don't crush up a Panama het as though it were a cloth fap. It cannot stand euch treatment; it will break. The stories of the indestructitility of Panama hats are untrue,” “Don't attempt to clean a Paname hat yourself except with gap and water. It is folly to use lemon or acid on this sort of hat, and it is the height of folly to let the Irresponsthis and ignorant street fakir do your cleaning, for he invarlabWy uses the rankest ecid. Toure thie: Cotas your, Panerma/at ‘east oma taiae Straw hats should be brushed as often as derby hats. Brush a Panama twice a day, end !t will be as clean @t the end of the summer as et the beginning. “Don't let a sharp, pointed crease be present in your hat anywhere. Such @ crease is bound to cut the straw. a ‘Don't be careless of your Paname hat Treat it wii consideration and it will last you all your ttfe."’ m y Lyon’s Tooth Powder: Amusements. Why Not Proctor’s?30-24%,,. Fe DOM SL {is Se Rae Se ROYAL LILLIPUTIANS, Mate_Mon,, Web, Toure, Sat ci “oe ALAR. Ai parents, ae pacdoviite ID5lh S1-{E5 CASINO TO-NIGHT icetoa estate “tH evening. “Evga '& Hopper. THERE AND BACK, ments. MORROW, “@a in dismissal from the company. BROADWAY are sist vage proseats ihe New Musical Comedy, PRINGH OF PILSEN ° MARIE. DRESSLER. CIRCLE, od, & Sat... Speota! Price, ial to Mito. CRCIL SPOONER i in GRAND-HENRY MILLER Nxt.w'k—FRANCIS WILSON —‘"The Torasdon,’? DALY’S 2, $5. Lam Matinee MAT, TO-DAY, DEWEY vatty Fair Barlesquers MANORS. oY LapY Feogy Tagiaee Byatt wean eear | KEITH’ Rear eae 1, $2 & $3. RB. JONNSTON, Manager, Near, ttn Are. {4th St. Theatre, from the creek, and soon gained the wooded helghts at the being} back Of the castle. (To Be Concluded.) 4 Amusements. Mata. Wed. P. PASTOR’ 14h aa, oS The the 4 COHAN ror orice. | ¥ oad Sab, “that ron | MAIBSTIC SoS : WIZARD. ‘OF OZ) | ‘with Montgomery & Stone WEST END [Ihe Heart of ‘Maryland, Pereues Wad asi PRANK DANIELS’ sts co SUNDAY NIGHT, GRAND 00: Sar REE Se ASTOR. Ge 2 "h ‘Next Le sh HENRY i i By 8Q. pie |SULTAN ? SULU ¥ OF MUSIC, 1éth ot at MADISO! Laat 2 Bve Lant Mat, CASTO R 1A Suse. ie VICTORIA, 43 st.) For Infants and Children, ' | [) {) See murmororitan ovina. | A ‘MOTHER'S "LOVE, Eco mata wa field IRCHESTRA. ork) in The Kind You Have Always Bought EAE IN NEW ii Ried fit 3 31, joe's weet” OACOB NCB note kCiixe | BELASCO THEATRE i Stwiiad Bears the Nordica Lae ae =s De Reszke SF pay aa es jan ‘ite cy Prices (Openin Gen. Adin. $1. ACING TH ist 24th St, or, Bway 100 i AND HIS: MONEY, 15 ISS, SIMPLICITY, NEW SAVOY THBATRE. Bat, 3 ee Incas ‘GRACE OBORG: Moaday—DAN me ambit a ete ‘Mth Bt, & Broadway, Last » 8.15. Laat Saturday, 2.15. nat’ keNBiu in tink Vineoan BOYER. peat iasbhstaneenie bin bninda aN Dei 8G, Last 2 aes ‘Lest Mat. Saturday, Sig al

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