The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1903, Page 15

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> ; panied by Brac B mond which they cail Hesper) may be Thorne asin THIS STORY BEGAN MONDAY AND WILL END SATURDAY. (By permission of George Munro's Sons.) SYNOPSIS OF PRBOEDING CHAPTERS. ‘Three adventurers named Thorne, Hoeck and Brace (accom little daughter Lolay und {n Africa an enormous dia- Great Heaper. ‘They return to England, where bs Te the cutting of the sone, they Decome the guests of Sir Edmund celles. Thorne becomes engaged to Sir Edmund's daughter Edith, Hoeck, who ts blind, fears lest Thorne (who reat OF murdered. He suspect Bri he following night, fancies there ts & room. Nervous for the fate of the diamond, he reaches tn his knife; only to find tt gone, Thorne cannot find matches to light a lamp, He finds, too, that the Rey oF the focker decor has been atelen, In the tar he is grappled hy a man wh drigs and then mabs him, and sen diamond. The voles of Lola at the door scares away the thief as he ts about to stab Helng penniless pecta hin partners of rovbing him. * money from Sir Edmund to buy a Caltfornta ran He meets Brace and Lola again Lola tells him, aha Ridden the diamond in a mine ot her father's. Thither they decide t £0; Lola having promised to restore the jowel to Thorne. CHAPTER V. The Nyctalops, HE next day we started for Brace's old subterranean cavern in the Sierra Nevada. Arrived at a point to the mountains, we descended alongside the deep canyon, a stream roaring faintly 5,000 feet beneath us, our pathway winding in and out on the side of a precipice. Above us the sky was scarce visible between the towering walls of rock. The darkness necessitated our carrying a “Mghted torch. i? Pointing to the black gulf below us Brace sata: “We've got to go down there.” Down we clambered, by a narrow trail, in the filckering torchlight unt!i we camo to a stand before a lateral opening sd tm the rock, abvut four feet high. We c@ept through the hole », and advanced again along the precipice above the cleft in the rock at whose base, thousands of feet below, the stream ran. ‘We made our way foot by foot along the narrow ledge for (Reome distance, stili descending. When Brace again halted the light of his torch revealed a stream falling silently (e through space, a few feet before him. That silent fall im- © pressed me with a sense of the awful depth of the gulf be- we de ‘The ledge ended abruptly where Brace stood; @ recess in the wall allowed ample standing room ‘or us three. “The greaser who used this place to hide his ore never *egot no furder down than this; but it weren't fur enough for be me,” gaid Brace. “I had my {dea of gettin’ right down to Av the bottom of this hole, where these waters must have car. ¢ Fled.tona o' gold.” we "But the ledge ends here. “Tt do; but," he added, lifting his torch, “It goes on again over there.” The light f@i on a jutting projection of quartz upon the t ? Opposite eide of the chasm, distant at leant twenty feet. “But you cannot leap that." “Correct, end I ain't goin’ to try.” He laid himself upon his face and stretched his arm down fethe chasm; when he arose he had a cord in his hand. Pull- ‘ring this in, he drew up two colls of stout rope. As he drew them in I saw that their other ends were attached to rocks wpon fhe opposite ledge, one above the other, with about four fy feet betwee de We must hitch em tight—give us a hand, sir,” he sald. ® helped him to make the ropes taut and fasten their loose sends upon the projecting crags that he had long employed for jerthat purpose. ‘ af “here, sir,” he said, taking his torch from Lola and hold- % ing it over the black gulf, “there's as pretty a bridge and hand-rail as the heart of man could reasonably desire." For all that, I held my breath as I saw him step out on the tower rope and make his way, holding by the upper one, across that black abyss. When we stood all three in safety fmon the ledge a fervent “Thank God!" rose from my heart. “Wal, we've got to git back ag’in,”” observed Brace, as If jymy thankfulness ware a little premature. “However, ‘tain't bad to think of Providence when you're in danger; now, my {v gel, it's for you to lead on.” H "You can stay here; you're too heavy for where I'm go- sald she, taking the torch from his hand ‘With a swiftness that terrified me she went down the side of ti precipice, finding foothold where we, looking down trom the projection, could see none, The light she carried at last vanished. Then a moment later it reappeared, Quicker and quicker the light danced along until I felt nd then, with “7 Bick and giddy with fear for the girl's safet: one last bound, she stood upon our shelf of rock, holding the Great Hesper in her hand. “Am I good?" she asked earnestly, nestling up to my side. Brace examined the ropes and then from an adjacent cay- ity, he brought out another coti of cord, in which cross pleces of stout hickory were knotted at intervals of a foot. unfastened looped end free. shirt for sate keeping, he sald: He ft and laid {t loose upon the rock, with the Then, as he slipped the diamond inside his “The ropes has been years exposed to the damp, and they're bound to go one day. Hef they should happen to go this day this here knotted rope may come in partic'lar handy. You know how to use it, my gel. Here's for a start.” With the torch in his hand he began the return along the rope. He had got to the middle when he stopped. “What's that?" he asked, sharply, holding the upper rope with one hand while the raised the torch with the other and peered out into the darkness. Tt was fearful to see him standing there with the upheld toroh over the awful chasm, the one luminous object in the blackness. . “Did you hear anything, pardner?” No." ‘Seemed to me I heered a rifle cocked. Durned old fool!" muttered in self-reproach, as he continued his course, Without accident or other incident, he reached the ledge end with a grunt of content seated himself on a bowider, letting the torch drop by his side. There was a pool of water there; with a hiss the light went out. ‘The next instant there was a flash in the darkness beyond, followed by the sharp crack of a rifle shot. We could see nothing, but from the ledge opposite came ® groan, and Brace called faintly: m hit, pardner; look out for yourself.” The shot had been fired after the light was extinguished, feaving him {n obscurity. ‘The faculty that had enabled the assaesin to descend that terrible ledge in the dark had ena- bled him to mark down poor Brace, when he was no longer visible to our ey This reflection struck me as, torch in hand, I sprun| the rope bridge to cross to my fallen partner. ei a “Back, pardner, back!" groaned Brace; ‘*he's got the Hes- per and he'll have your life—back!"* 1 raised my torch and, looking toWard the ledge, I saw a man kneeling over Brace, He raised his arm to silence Brace and the ‘ athe bright blude of the knife in his hand, I hotted: ae Ing, he saw me midway across the chasm and sprung to his. feet. Then I recognized him. It was Van Hoeck. ae Pia he, Bat cole I believe my senses? His eyes were not the same, At that distance his sightless eyes shoui have been hardiy distinguishable trom his cadaverous ie but now they shone out biack and lustrous, ¥etsin that in-| & stant, as he looked toward me, they seemed to fade away in | the lght of my torch. And this was no deception of my, sight. With a savage cry of rage he held up his arms to shield) his eyes from the light and, grasping his knife, he made his) way quickly toward the rock to which the rope on which I stood was attached. In & moment the whole mystery was revealed. Ho was a Nyctalops, and is eyes, blind in the light, were gifted with| the extraordinary power of seeing in the dark—a power by! which was explained ail that had hitherto been inscrutable In the robbery of the Great Hesper and the attendant events: at Monken Abbey. With a perception that he intended to cut the rope which sustained me I hastened to reach the ledge on which he stood. But my progress was necessarily slow, for the lower cord,| stretched with the weight upon it, formed a deep bend, and my damp boots lipped upon its wet surface. Which would he cut first? If {t were the upper one I must trust to catching the lower as I fell. With this view, I kept myself as perpendicular as circumstances permitted; at the same time grasping the upper one with all my force, in case he cut the lower one, I was within a yard of the rock when I felt the rope under my foot Jerk as Van Hoeck cut through the first strands; the next instant it went altogether, and I was left swinging by my hands to the upper rope over the chasm. “Die, cursed dog, die!” shouted Van Hoeok, with the fran- tle excitement of a man achieving at last the object of his life, as he attacked the upper rope with his knife. ‘Die, aid know that all you cherish in the world shall be mine~ wealth and the woman you love. Die!" And with that he severed the last strand and I swept down through space. Clinging with desperate energy to the rope in my hands, I swung, cramping myself together In antictpation of a violent shock against the side of the precipice.” Happily, the rock above projected a little, so that the blow was less severe than I expected. I rebounded and swung to and fro lke a pendulum in the pitchy darkness. For, in order to get a firmer grasp upon the ropo when I saw his intention of cutting it, I had dropped the torch, which ‘fell tlke the spark of a rocket into the depths below. What was I to do? I dared not try to pull myself hand over hand up the wet rope, for the slightest relaxation of my hold might allow the rope to slip end I should be lost a» re you there still?” Lola called from above. I replied. “Here 1s the rope—when I call you can trust yourse to it At the same time I felt the knotted rope dangling egainst my shoulders, “Now,” she called. It was not an Instant too soon. I felt ttie wet rope slip- ping through my hands. Leaving go with one hand clutched out wildly for the knotted rope and by the happlest chance succeeded in selzing it. I got @ crossplece between my feet, and I was compara- tively safe if Lola had strength to hold on for a few mo- of these departments in Fngland and Continental governments would talk which they will not-—they uld bear testimony to the fact that women make excellent «ples. Ministera and government officials of Burope understand that there are no more valuable agents In the secret ser- vice employment than the women who are engaged In {ta work, and the num- ber of such women, of octal import- amnee many of them, is said to be sur- prising. In Europe the secret eervice is more concerned with other countries’ secrets and more wrapped in mystery than the United States service. For that reason none knows the composition of the ser- vice in its entirety, and no wise person seeks to know .#ays the Chicago Tri- bune. ‘The women who enter this work are of all classes, and in many instances they work more effectively than the men, They succeed in many cases where & man could not. When they work against a man they are aided by that man's own weakness. The secret of their power lies in the fact that men are sel- dom adamantine when subjected to the wiles of a pretty woman, In the following instance, {Illustrating the work of these women secret service agents, the woman succeeded by playing on the emotions of the wife of the man possessing the secret she desired to learn. ‘A certain Ambassador accredited to England was married to a woman of his own nationality. With his political business she never concerned herself, eee WOMAN'S STRANGEST PROFESSION. of In. |and he never made her hia confidante. me AN fr wit and love trigue find a ferti‘e fled in the A female friend of the Indy whom the ret service branches of many latter had not met for some yenre ar- European governmenta. If the heads rived In Enginna one fine day. She was acertaln Rus#ian Countess, y epent much time together, and the conversa- tion naturally turned a good deal o1 the private Ufe of the Ambansador’s wife, who candidly admitted she never interested herself in his business af- | fairs, | “1 am naturally curious," said the yuntess, “and naturally jealous, and 1 should always be afraid he was decely- ing me." he wife scorned the f!dea and the! matter dropped. A few days later the Minister's wife sought the Countess in {great distress. “Tell me all you Know “concerning my husband. The Countess affected great surprise and inquired what her friend meant, whereupon the latter produced a letter @he had found in her husband's bedroom, addressed to him in endearing terms by another woman, and so worded as to leave no doubt that he had long been in love with her. Search for further evidence was what the Countess advised, after sympathiz- ing with her friend, and back to the embassy they went togther to ransack the Ambassador's private desks. They searched without avall—that is, so far as the wife was concerned—but the Countess found what she required tn the phape of a long cipher message, which she copled on the pretext that It might be a cipher love letter. In reality \t gave the terms of a certain agree- ment arrived at between two countries which was most valuable information she pleaded, . THE w EVENING # WORLD'S # HOME # MAGAZINE w 1903 S UMMER_ GIR_L SGARGS FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 5, 1903, MOSC AMAZING FAD OF ALL Her Golden Hair Will “Hang Oown Her Back’’ —So Will Her Brunette Hair. CCORDING to trustworthy announcements from the A fashionable summer resorts, the summer girl of 1903 will go down to history as the ortginator of the most startling fad that has been sprung upon an enduring public In many years, The Innovation concerns coiffure, and con- sists In allowing one’s jocks, scanty or abundant as tho case may be, to float gracefully over one’s shoulders in fashe jon not generally popular since the Garden of Eden. Already Bar Harbor and Newport have given the seal of fashionable approval to the threatened fad which cannot fail to be popular with the hairdressers and wigmak For the most cursory survey of tho colffures of most fashionable women wiil demonstrate that their crowning glory is as unl- to the government the Countess working for. + ments. But that I might not tax her too greatly I still grasped the wet rope. “Saved,” I called out to her. “Not for long,” shouted Van Hoeck, from the opposite side, and I heard the snap of the spring as he closed the breech- loader and then the “click’’ as he cocked the piece. Would he shoot me or the girl? I asked myself tn that moment. He fired, and the ringing ehot' was followed by a sharp cry of pain from above, and the cross-plece on which I etood gave a little jerk, but no more. She must have escaped despite that cry, or she could not stil! have held on to the rope. But terrible as these thoughts that passed through my mind in those brief moments, were, they were banished from my mind by a yet more terrific appeal to my senses. Following almost immediately upon the orack of the rifle and Lola's cry, a mass of rock, probably disintegrated by the frost and started from its,place by the reverberation of the shot, elld down the face of the precipice, hurtled against a rock, and some moments after fell with a deep “pong” into the water below. But as {f this had been the keystone of the fabric that up- mighty weight of the enormous rock that covered the chasm, tts fall waa followed by the crumbling away and precipitation of others at intervals rapidly decreasittg, their fall eventu- ally becoming a continued downpour, marked now and then by a Touder crash as some larger block gave way. ‘The roar of artillery, the peal of thunder, was not to be compared with the awful din as the great rock Jerked down- ward as the quartz splintered and gave way under It, shat- tering and grinding the opposing rocks and bursting away huge fragments that struck from side to side as they hurtled down, tearing and splitting the very heart of the mountain j as it seemed, The fall was most violent at some distance away from us further down the ravine; only an occasional block, ground un- der the great mass aa It jerked down, was shattered to pieces and fell in dust and rubble about us. a But our turn was at hand, It seemed to me as if the last day had come and the world were crumbling to pleces, To the terror of an earth- quake was added the horror of impenetrable darkness and the consciousness that the gigantic rock that vaulted the abyss was slowly Jerking down upon us, I must have kept my hold upon the rock by instinct; I had no consciousness of volition, ‘The awful eruption had continued for some moments— scarcely so long as one might take to read this description with Increasing Intensity, when suddenly, with an appalling crash, the great roof tilted up. I saw the earth slowly gape open above me, letting in the blinding sunlight; and then the upper Hp of Jagged rock reaching its highest elevation; shot sidelong away, making visible the long strip of blue heaven between the towering peaks of the mountain, One last “pong,” as the rock wedged itself afresh lower down the precipice, and then all was still. The sight of the blue sky, the sense of relfef, were too much for me, I trembled violently, and for a moment I thought I nmust re- Mnquish my hold. But a piteous ory from Lola nerved me to fresh effort. (To Be Concluded.) CHARACTER TOLD BY SHUES Bcarpology {8 the name of a novel method of divination which {s now attracting sume attention In Europe. It was invented by a sclentist of Basle, and {t 1s based on the as- sumption that the character of any person can be told from his shoes, Here are a few of the principal rules: “When a heel and sole are worn equally, meaning: there- by when neither {s In a worse condition than the other, « may be confident, !f a man woars the shoe, that he Js ener- getic and 1s endowed with excellent business ability, and Ifa woman, that she {s loyal to her husband and a good house- keeper, “The outer ede of a sole, If much worn, Is a sure token of a fantastic, wayward’ spirit, but, on the other hand, If the inner edge Is worn, the wearer fs timid and Irresolute. } acWhen the shoes are much worn along the outer edge and the leather around the toos } ins to look shabby, the other, parts of the shoes mean.while being almost as good as new, one may, be cdnfittent that the wedrer is a rogue.” | B of the same material, are in the height of style for young girls and are both attractive and smart, The excellent mode! illustrated Is shown in sage green etamine, with bands of sik stitched in taflor style, but the de- sign is suited to all the season's ma- terials, vetling, cloth and the like, The blouse is made with fronts and back and fs fitted by means of shoulder and un- derarm seams. Over it Is arranged the stole cape that Is extended to form the postilions, but which can be omitted and the blouse worn plain when preferred. The basque extensions are stylish and becoming, but also are optional. The sleeves are the new ones tucked to the elbows and forming soft puffs below. flounce that {s made In two porti Both the skirt and the flounce are tuck- PREGGOS SPRING SVIG. LOUSE jackets, made with skirte) The skirt 1s clroular with a circular jons. Yersally borrowed plumage as the regal tlaras with which they are wont to adorn ft. Already the leading colfteurs of Now York have feit the effect of the new ‘fad, and mi orders have come !n from seashore and mountain for flowing switches of naturally curly halr. Of course, women who have to resort to borrowed locks wi not be able to wear them in quite the free floating manner that the new fad decrees. There will have to be a fillet of wide ribbon or a broad tortoise-shell comb to concen! the tell-tale Juncture of the real and the artificial, Tt is sald that Miss Natica Rives, Miss Cynthia Roche and Miss Nathalie Schenck, three of Newport's most beau- tiful young women, were the originators of the fad, and that they may be seen any morning on Bellevue avenue with their flowing locks confined only by a simple ribbon reminis- cent of schoolgirl days. The fashion is one which will gratify the large number of women who consider that they have only to let down their back ‘hair to become the most alluring of thelr sex—but If It becomes general It will also be responsible for many freaks. For only the freshest, most youthful faces can stand the effect of flowing locks, and these only when they are rather long than round tn contour. Nothing 1s so beneficial to the Appearance of the round, rather short face of the average girl as the high pompadour. Indeed, the stil popular hig! fs arrangement of hair adds so much to the appearance of ninety-nire women in a hundred that its dixappearante would remind one inevitably of Thackeray's famous series of drawings of Louis the Great—the first an imposing por tralt of le grand Monarque in full court regalia, with the | caption “Louls the Great,” the second a shrivelied old man, | entitled simply “Louis,” the third a mountainous mass of | wigs and plumed hats and gorgeous mantles, with the satire | Joal Inscription “The Great." But {f, notwithstanding {ts universal becomingness, the pompadour Is discarded and the hair which once topped the graceful structure is al'owed to float freely in the wind; there will be a new adjustment of ideals to meet feminine: actualities, and the short face wreathed in curls will bg 1 come popular. A well-known debutante, who has not yet left town, told @ reporter for The Evening World Home Magaz'ne under strict pledge that her her mame be withheld. that she i going to do her best to popularize the new fad. Perhaps I am not as enthusiastic as some of the other | eiris 1 know," she sald, ingenuously, “for I haven't really had my hair doue up long enough to get tired of wearing It that way, But I had my hair dressed so often last winter for dances that It was in danger of being spolled, and when mother went down to Newport to have the cottage opened she saw one of the girls with her hair down her back, and when she came vack told me f had better adopt the fashion it would be sy restful to the hair. “T suppose no one will wear the hair flowing in the after- noon, but for tennis or on the beach after one’s dip, why not, if one Is young enough to stand tt? “The only trouble is that so many old freaks who want to look young will try It, and then people will make fun of the fashion. If one has long hair, you know, one is really anxious to show {t, But so few girls have. YouMl be sur- prised to know—nt least, you wouldn't. for you are a girl but a man actually wouldn't belleve how many girls who seem tu have a lot of hair really have just enough to te @ syritch to or to coax over a rat. “At the seashore, !t seems to me, the fashion will be very charming; but, of course, any one who tried to wear her halr down in ‘New York would be howled at, and properly s0."* 7. LOUIS has a new bug strange enough to join S Devery’s club. The creature looks something like a cross between the fly and mosqulto. It has six legs, which are bent into right angles when tt walks, which It does so delicately that one can scarcely feel it. Rainy weather seems to increase the number of the bugs, which are said to come from the excavations at the World's Fair grounds, where an extraorinarily lange num- ber of them are seen flying about or walking with their queer little stagger. They have come to be called World's Pair bugs. Their point of attack is the neck, and they fly so silently that one does not hear them. Their tread is so soft that one doesn’t know the insect is on him. The bug Is a member of the family of hemiptera. This {s shown by tho half wings which {t possesses, on which account the whole family has been named hemiptera, a Greek word, mexning half-winged. Just back of the wings proper are two small reddish projections. These are called the balancers, and act much as the pole of a tightrope walker, flying hem!ptera have those balancers, without which they are unable to navigate, In other respects the insect resembles the fly tribe, It breathes through spiracies in tts sides, which may be seen under a moderately high-power microscope. The feet are’ Ladies, Have You Tried | | VANILLA (RYSTALS Ordinary houso files and, in ‘fact, all the race of) Dr. Lyon’s PERFECT Tooth Powder Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century THE WORLD'S FAIR BUG HAS ARRIVED AND AWAITS ENROLMENT BY DEVERY, of the fly variety and have none of the prominent hooks — which other insects bear. Y For a biting apparatus the insect has neither the suck | ing appendage of the mosquito nor the lapping proboscis of, the fly. Its mouth parts seem rather to be those of the gnat, which carries a sheathed dagger for punoturing tho ~ skin and @ pumping arrangement for withdrawing the blood. Its body does not swell up when It takes a meal, as does that of the mosquito. It is a very quick eater, taking a rapid bite and departing. WITHOUT CUTTING, I straighten a humped or crooked nos bulld up a fi cr dished no shorten a long nose and nar- row 4 broad nom. ed at their lower edges, and beneath these tucks the jointings are made. The fulness at the back is laid in inverted plalts that can be stitched or left plain, as preferred. The quantity of material required for the medium size 1s, for jacket 2% yards 44, 23-8 yards 62 inches wide; {or skiet 71-2 yards 27, 71-8 yards 32 or 8 1-2 yards The Best Flavoring Ever Sold, Unlike Liquid Extracts, Crystals do not evaporate, but impart a rich, de- licious vanilla flavor that stays. Sprinkled on berries It enhances the!r favor. bottle of vanilla extract. 10 A tin equals any 25c. * Ask your grocer, outstanding or’ lopped ears, T set back =) for It_will be mailed for 10 cents. 4 Inches wide The jacket pattern, for girls of cents. ‘The skirt pattern, 4,380, iris of 12, 14 and 4,382, 1s cut in siz . 4 and )6 years of agi It_wili be matled for 1 is cut In sizes years of age, Send money to “Cashier, The World, Pulltzer Building, New York City.” WEIRD IDEAS ABOUT WOMEN. F course, you are glad you do not Ii O gown ts only silk-lined. Some women's eties for the suppression of things. A wise man doesn't argue with a woman becaus good, but because it affords her pleasure. increase when you read what the Chicago News « A woman doesn't care anything about the silver Inings of clouds !f her Your gratifiration about women: ive in Chicago. he expects it to do will lea of being strenuous 1s to belong to seventeen different socl- any After a woman has married twice for love her female friends consider her hopelessly insane. It fs almost 4s It 18 for some men to get theirs on in t ceed to forget the loration of the place. any more than a golden slipper will cure the gout, Vanilla Crystal Co,, 10) Beekman St...N. Y, corfect. baggy, lids, eradicate wrinkles, Amusements. aia he same 4th Street Theatre, iar Store, | sac snate, ty coutorm ertetealiy ana Fo-monkow. LAST 2 NIGHTS. fh itz great Value to you Gouseitee 4°COHANS fram, [RAM eirammes SHIRT. T SUITS trom $1.25 up Reserved Every Aft. & Eve — eal Gath LOTTERY OF 1) PASTOR’ EARTS, dimoult for some women to get thelr hate on in the evening |PIADISON SQUARE GARDEN, | ()\S|N{) he morning. Every Eve. pUSsSS AND HIS phir ey Some women always have a place for everything, and put It there—then pro-| At 8.15. R ORCHESTRA) *V") 4 SOLOIST, NE. WACONDA — Occasionally it {s well to remember that a crown will not cure a headache | New York's Latest snd Mos harm) weity. 1) Hy il ” % W “VENICE » NkW YORK.”| DEWEY} tra Aston ty Realistic and Fascinating, ¥. NTH 8T. i CASTORIA| For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bough’ ‘ Hate the jgnature of opti Amusements. 20.Mate Wedt Sit Ry ea re iP y HERAL HE EARL Of PAWTUCKE!. STA Amusements. Poote ot fabs & Jonna Pr H SQ. THEA $0 Niway and Sat Mat ARADISE ROOF GARDENS ASCO Thears | osler | Dat 218 50c. > Ment Demand E, Johnaton. Extra Tal Under the TERRACE GARL “THE BRI Mig =- MAJEST.C “ean? WIZARD OF O- ARCLE, D way & 59th at W laanni K THEATRE, ain ot. nr. B way BIJOU! MABELLE eesti area on Sale). Ai)! BR HERE OnE a Beet AUT e, [AL MAT Lin THEE MOCKING i — : Rahs oats (ates ST. NICHOLAS wt THE GAITLE cnt: [Kala Bo 8 No went LION — Germany by Night, ROOF SULTAN ? SULU ERI MATINEE TO-DAY 8 St..Col. Av. Adm. (03, To-Nigh: Peak Wrst Craad Guaday Concert John H. Woodbury D..1,. 22 West 28d St.. New York. MAC Delcher a Tinver, 461 61h ave PALACE Opens Juneé. GARDEN. ST ARUGar ——— 110ih at.-D'way, Musto & Vaudevitle, Rain of fatr se - See _ WALLACK’S m= TRE, 90:0 et, & Dwar. Amusements a5 18 Why Not PROCTOR 3? fa-bey, 25 LAST WEEKS” Geo. x's ie | BROADWAY 2,8 a a INGE OF PILSEN“: A Working Gir's Wrongs. H 100TH TIME NE: METRO. OLIS. 14th St, near 84 Ave. Continuous. 20 and 30 cents, HAYES &@ SUITS, | FAS OR MAT MITGHELL & MARRON, CROTTY TRIO, others. | 49 Bt St f AGAME OF Fe ean re || RES | + | MATINEB TO-MORROW.— Cc RCI . HILL THEA, Lex. Ave. & 424 St. SE GHOWN? ADELAIDE : | = oot MURRA Matinee Every Day, 250. [wid 18 BROWN? ADELAIDE : yO eT Fab a) Sasanent ot reeien” 125th St Keli, WIELAND. BLACK MOKE Herrmann, SUE. wannen, | (OUR BOYS” sot “a moment + +All Siock Favorites, Big Vande be eet Claxton—'Two Orphans." WEST END Excursions. (ext Wik—"‘Onarity Ball. NAWAYS STEAMER GRAND RE GEN’L SLOCUM co: Lia's 9.10 a! et Bat PUBLIC BURO, re NS-ATLANTIQUE 69. 9.30 A. M,N STEAMER * Geisha.” | i eS MB Sethi die i VARTOPERACO. |S TRIAL RACES! DEN Sth & stn ue, | BLLANCE: GANDS,” “14.St &iry. PL Tonal Shy.cek In THE ERCHANT OF VENICE PULL oa Ml

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