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EVEL TET LOT TTR Le TIE # THE .2 EVE This Story Began Monday and Will End Saturday. stand & ge 1 9GIRDLESTONE +. he ROMANCE She came very slowly, putting one foot gingerly before the other, as {f sfraid of falling over something in the darkne! Once or twice she stopped altogether, looking around no doubt to make sure of her whereabouts. At the instant the {j} moon shone out from behind a cloud and they saw her dark Bad buniiere and eperitation impair ee Asrican merchants. Girdiewone suggest chay Bare marry Kate for her | figure a short distance off. In its allvery radiance two figures ie ate SS ene Dimadale. | Kara proposes to Kate. $u*! stood out hard and black, that of the unconscious girl and of her to & place in Hampabire, near the ‘Tom does not know where Kate manages to epulnd. The where the tp tre the man who crouched like a beast of prey behind her, He made a step forward, whiéh brought him within a yard of ING . WORLD'S MER TET TET LIVING A LIFE OF LOVE Its Difficulties in the Tropics and Elsewhere. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH, Granddaughter of Horace Greeley. LOUISVILLE, June 18.--Having creamed of a “life of love" in the Frien tly | Islands ever eince as a runaway boy he first landed In Tahit!, largest of tho group, James Donahue, of Lou‘sville, Ky., will be married to Miss Nettle Yuhr om June 30 and take his bride to the Istand of his dreams. HF young Loulavillo merehunt ix by no means the first man to endeavor to thrust clvilixation and unhuppiress behind him. But whether {dle hours in the tropics will tend to u Pigher average of domestic bilss than bury days In the central eity of the Blue Grase tegion Ix an open question, Possibly Mr, Donahue thirks thrt the problem of dress—a reef on which many a matrimonial bark haw yone to j\ecés—will be greatly simplified by residence 1 & country where, for the great majority of people, “plain bare skin ts the only full dress that Ix worn.” He would naturally expect that such troubles as url+e from tearful comparisons of a wite's gowns with those seen at Mrs, Blank's ball or Mrs, Dash’s reception, would v4 practically eliminated In an island where white women are few. But on the other hand, though sutjects for matrimonial jars may be lessened. the oppertunities born of the {dle life le intends to lead will be infinitely greater. And ft Js opportunity and not an adequate subject of difference that makes the usual domestic quarrel Ancther barrier to perfect bliss in tropical Islands—even of the most friend'y varlety—is the domestic service protlem which ts there multiplied by at least ten or twenty. A young bridegroom whose evening bouillon or morning coffee would in Loulavitle be served to the eccompantment of a fervid but somewhat unliter- esting account of the shortcomings of Cassy, the Wild, or Dinah, the cook, in ‘Taluit!, where at least ten native servants would havé¥to be employed, must on- dure patiently a daily illad of qoimestic woe Involving half a dozen unpronoun-- a siuded: 4 Masor Clatterbuck, (@ Tom: | 4 07. ghe may have heard the heavy footfall above the shriek of the storm, for she turned suddenly and faced him. At the same instant she was struck down with a crashing blow. Thore was no time for a prayer, no time for a scream. One moment had seen her a magnificent woman In all the pride of her youthful beauty, the next Jeft her a poor battered sense: less wreck. The navvy had earned his blood money. When Tom and the Major arrived at Waterloo Station, the latter in the oreathiess condition described in s preceding they found three friends of Major Clutterbuck hers ho f V.—Murder Is Done. ATE HARSTON knew that unless she managed to set 4 away from the dreadful Priory soon she would never, leave It, and she renewed her efforts to communicate with Tom. Every plan came to nothing until one afternoon pie saw Lavinia Scully, the wealthy widow wooed by Major ‘Vobing Clutterbuck, in a small pony carriage driving along the highway chapter, Kate Harston fled as quickly as she could through the| awaiting them. Tom congratulated himself upon having ® wood, stumbling over the bramble and crashing through! iyie1y co-operation in the matter on hand. the briara, regardless of pain or scratches or anything els¢ Til luck was in store for the expedition, however. On tn- quiry at the ticket office they found that there was no train for upward of two hours, and then {t was low one, which would not land them until 8 o'clock at Bedsworth. At this pleco of information Tom Dimsdale fairly broke down and Watch could stand between her and the possibility of safety. She scon gained the shed, and managed to mount on the top ©. it by the ald of the barrel. Craning her neck, she couid ,wee the long dusty lane, with the bare, withered hedges upon elther side, and the dreary line of the railway embank- * ment beyond. There was no pony carriage in sight. esently she heard the rattle of wheels, and the brown pony trotted around the corner ‘The carriage drew up at the end of the lane, and the driver seemed to be uncertain how to proceed, Then she shook the reins, and the pony stamped about the station, raving and beseeching the of- ficials to ruin a special, be the cost what it might. It was well that day that young Dimsdale had good friends at his back. His appearance was so strange and wild that the passers-by turned back to have another look at him. His eyes were open and staring, giving a fear-tnsplring char- able names. In America. at least, and for Amertcans—love and idleness have developed serious incompatibility. Cupid in the Western Hemisphere has been trained to work like: his masculine victims and in a well regulated menage does not make his appearance between 9 anil 3, An American husband compelled even tenipo~ racily to spend the entire day at home !s usually a very pitiable object. And after a month or so the young man idling in-the tropics will probably long for the hustle. the dangling noises, the buay days of life In an Amerloan city ‘Then, too, an Atnerican wife in a tropical {sland would be apt to develop a supreme confidence in her own chums not conducive to the highest domartic happiness, With perhaps a 1ew reuldenc English and French women and a horde of stunted brown natives to riva! her loveliness, she must Inevitably be denied that competition which 's (he life of beauty a@ well as trade. ‘There may not be 6o much to quarrel about In Tahiti as in the United States, but the chances of mutual boredom would be decidedly greater there, And after all {t Is possible to love persons who Injure, but never those who bore us. HUNTING THE MAGNETIC POLE. —_—————_+¢e—_____ Which Is a Very Different Thing from the True | WHERES AuL “* MAGAZINE ws THE GOTHAM SLEUTH HAS RUNG THE “CON ’ FRIDAY EVENING, 4. NE 19, 1903, REAL MONEY IN DAT BAG, HE'S YT CRAZ ° A’BRICK" any ‘THEM FELLOwg With THE GOLD BRICKS? Sa from Mulberry street | | Groce of Reckland Proves How Very, Very Dead * ferry, spied the party Is the Dead, Dead Past. Just as Groce was about to ‘take’ a chance,” the deter tives gathered tie tty In and took them to Police Head- quarters. } pny MeClusky: says the con man. is the limit “This is the Limit, yes On McClusky's désk in Mulberry street Is a ple of/ol@ The trustful con And Appetite Joo | ‘And Glad on the blink, ek ES land Dan, ne come i mureate wee “gold bricks’ taken from men new in the con game, or Who eee, don't read the papers, and who recently ‘ame to New York ‘ken to sleuthing, at last, | it to make money without work. Besides the “fake” gold brick le some handsomely ene raved shares of stork In an airship company which 1s ap tangible as the alr itself. McClusky says a con man stands as much chance work a gold-brick game in New York as “Deadwood Dick would have hoiding up a Broadway cabman, anda man selling fake sto2k would have to do business in the deat.and dumb asylum If he wanted to work more then on ji This {8 sad news for the rural districts, What incentive — is there for Josh Whippletree, of Peapack, to came to New York If he can't buy his good old gold brick and get his name In the pavers? sins tg This state of things di @ erusbing blow to the funny. Paper artist who has one of his best assets taken away from ‘And we weep for the day | When with pride we coud tay: | The Cony Can-cert. OORAY ‘or Wiliam Groce, of Rockland, Maas, Three cheers for the finest police in the world! . McClusky! Back to the woods, all Hungry orien the Casey Con, “and to work we'll re on! They're on!” have to go! “For a heavy less le-eross a the fate of Hungry Jeo!" The Waterloo of the con man in Gotham has occurred William Groce, of Rockland, Mags,, did it. H He wears wh in a Httle bunch on his chin and has the general apnearance of a man from Pompton, N. J, He was found by the ‘‘handshakers” standing on one aide of Brondway waiting for the “parade to pass.” As they began the operation of beginning an acquaint- ance with Mr. Groce, who Is an officer in a bapk up In Rock+ land, a bunch of Inspector McClusky's eagleseyed sleyths shim at one fell sweep. He can't continue to make pictures ;ot Rube and Grand Central Pete in the excitement of a goid- brick bargain !f thé market has been eloned. ‘Tis said that reform always hes its worst enemy in those who have benefited most by If. Will the Siases and Ezeklels with Yhelr hayseed and goose-greased boots disprove this? * acter to hia expression. He could not sit still for an instant, but paced up and down and backward and forward under the Influence of the flerce energy which consumed him, while the Mfjor plodded along manfully at his side, suggesting every consideration which might cheer him up, and narrating many tales, true and 2pooryphal, most of which fell upon heedless cars. lumbered on along the road. Kate gave a ory of despair, the last ray of hope died away from her heart. It chanced, however, that the page in the capriage was tat thet happy age when the senses are keen and on the Alert. He heard the ery, and, glancing round, he saw through a break I) the hedge that a lady was looking over tue wall which skited the lane they had passed. He mon- tioned the fact to his mistress, ‘Maybe we'd better £0] at lust. chank God, comes the shrill whistle of the guard, back, ma'am,” he said the answering snort from the engine, and they are falrly Hence it came about that just as Kate was descending] started upon thelr mission o: réacu with a end heart trom her post of observation she was elec-| phe jast singe of the journey was made in a wagonette tiled to see the brown pony reappear and come trotting from the station to the Priory. round the curve of the lane with a rapidity which was alto-/ "1, was a miserable night, stormy and’ wet and bitterly gether fore: t quadruped’s usual habits, Indeed, the; coi. None of the five men had a thought to spare for the girl turned so very white at the sight, and her face us- tumed such an expression of retief and delight, that the Indy who was approaching saw at once thay it was no common matter which had cased her to summon them. ‘po tho kind-hearted Lavinia Kate told her story, a part which was already known to her through the Major, weather, however, “Are we near?" the Magor asked. “The gate is just at the end o' the lane, sir," the driver sald, “Don't pull up at the gate, but take us @ little past it."" “Phere ain't no way in except the gate," the driver re- marked. bed In the previous chapter. “Do what your ordered,” sald the Major sternly. four o'clock Mr. Girdlestone stepped into the Bete) pT AA! Paste ea aap, pillars gaa fhe westasemnonted ~ telegraph office and wired his short message. It ran| heraldic device ove along by the park wall. s Gace hopeless, Come oni to-morrow with a doctor. | Wmen tiey,.ned Ronee hundsed yerds or so the: Major C, receipt of thin he knew by thelr agreement that his son) ordered e eriver to pat up aad they ae wot ate ee wettla some down, bringing with him the man of violence, Increased fare was pal jout_remonstrance, an: e driver rattled away homeward, with the intention of pull- hom he had spoken of at their iast interview. There wa: eine font now but that hie ward should die, dé ne de-| (ns up at the county police station and lodging information ca fonger the erash might come before her money wag|S# (© the suspioius visitors whom he had Brought down, tvailable, and then how vain ali regrets would be. “It is loikely that they have a watch at the gate, Ma ‘Zara and Burt responded promptly, and Kate, from her| the Major. “We must keep away from there, This wall window, vaw them talking with John Girdlestone on the|!8 & sreat holeht. We'd best keep on until we find the lawn. Burt readily agreed to kill the girl, and John Girdle-| @lsiest place to scale it. ve him £500 when the job was done, but ‘[ could get over it here," Tom said eagerly. pene pronase et “Walt a bit. A few minutes can make no difference one ” ‘an inquiry, How about a medi-| way or the other. Ould Sir Colin used to say that there Bice inert Paneal maces Byte were more battl st by over haste than by slownes:! “Thali insist upon a Coroner's inquest,” his father an-| “Give me a holst," Tom said imploringly. ‘Don't throw: ved, i a minute away. You can't tell what may be going on inside. “An inquest! Are you mad?” At this very moment, for all we know, they may be plotting “When you have heard me I think that you will come to, her munder.” just the oppoaite conclusion. I think that I haye hit upon| Tom caught the coping of the wall, although the broken | ‘a scheme which is really neat—neat in {ts aimplioity.” He] glass upon the top cut deeply into his hands. With a great rubbed his hands together, and showed his long yellow s ave he ewung himself up, and was soon astride upon the enjoyment of his own astutene: op. ceeesna pia leaned forward to listen, while the old| Tom was in the act of letting himself drop into the wood, man sank his voice to a whisper, swhen suddenly the watchers below saw him crouch down ' ‘They thins that she is insane," he sald. upon the wall, and Ife motionless as though listening in- “Yen,” tently. “There's a small door in the boundary wall which leads| “Hush!” he whispered, leaning over. yout to the railway line.” through the wood.” “Well, what of that?" The wind had died qway and the storm subsided, Even ‘gnpposo that door to We left open, would tt be an {m-| from the lane they could hear the sound of feet, and of muf- possible thing for a crazy woman to slip out through it, and fled votoes insite the grounds. They all crouched down In the to be run over by the ten o'clock express?” shadow of the wall. Tom lay flat upon the glass-studded “If she would only get in the way of St.” coping, and no one looking from below could distinguish him “You don't quite catch my {dea yet, Suppose that this| from the wall itself. express ran over the dead body of a woman, would there The new-comers tramped across the road, and, pushing i} de anything to prove afterward that she was dead, and| through the thin hedge, ascended the rallway embankment not allve at the time of the accident? Do you think that] upon the other side. It was evident that thelr burden w } ‘4 would ever occur to any one's mind that the express had|& heavy one, for they stopped more than once while ascend- run over a dead body ing the ateep grassy slope, and once, when near the top, + "1 see your meaning,” said his son thoughtfully, one of the party slipped, and there was @ sound as though would settle her and then put her there.” he had fallen upon his knees, together with a astified oath. “Rebecca Tylforth, wild with Jealou They reachod the top, however, and their figures, which had Kate, burning to know what they planned, @he could not | disappeared from view, came into sight again standing out understand the depth of Kate's loathing for Esra and feared | dimly against the murky sky, They bent. down over the that she might change. When she mot the hag in the hall | railway: line, and placed the indistinguishatie mass which ) yound for Kate's room, carrying a note, Rebecca stopped | they bore carefully upon ft. ner, took the note and, promising to deliver it to Kate, | ‘We must have the light,” said a voice, sought the earliest opportunity to read It, The note can-| ‘No, no; there's no need,”’ another expostulated, firmed her suspicions, but not daring to keep {t she took it to] “We can't work in the dark,” eald a third, loudly and Kate, who read it slowly and thoughtfully, watched by the | harshly. ‘Where's your lantern, guv nor? I've got a Jealous woman, lucifer.” if "My Dear Miss Harston; I am afraid your confinement| ‘We must manage that the train pa) over. right,” the here’has been very irksome ¢o you, I have repeatedly ¢e-| first voice remarked. ‘Here, Burt, you ight it. a quested my father to alleviate or modify dt, but he has in-| There was the eharp sound of the striking of a mate variably refused. As he still persiets in his refusal, I wish to| and a feeble gtimmer appeared in the darkness. It Mlekered offer you my aid, ard to show you that I am your sincere| and waned, as though the wind would extingulsh it, but friend in epite of all that has passed, If you could slip out | next instant the wick of the lantern had caught and threw to-night at 9 o'clock and meet me by the withered oak at the| % strong yellow glare upon the scene. ‘The light fell upon head of the svenue, I shall vee you safe to Bedeworth, and| the Major and his comrades, who had aprung Into the road, you can, if you wish, go on to Pontsmouth by the next train, | and it lit up the group on the railway line, Yet {t was not { shall manage so that you may find the door open by that| Won the rescuing party that the murderers fixed their time, I shail not, of course, go to Portsmouth with you, but| terror-stricien eyes, and the Major and tis friends had whall return here atter dropping you at the station. I do this| lost all thoughts of the miscreants above them—for theres \ mall thing to show you that, thopeless as {t may be, the af-| standing in the centre of the roadway, there with the light ’ “fection which I bear you ia still as deep as ever. Yours, filokering over her pale, sweet face, like a spirit from the “E. GIRDLESTONE, tomb, stood none other then the much-enduring, cruelly- Shortly before 9 the three men slipped out of the house. | treated girl for whom (Burt's murderous blow had been In- Burt took a position behind a tree near ¢he gate and the| tended. Girdlestones hid in the thicket. ‘For @ few moments she stood there without either party From the spot where they stom they had a view of the} moving ® foot or ‘uttering @ sound. Then there came from whole of the Priory. She could not come out without baing| the radlway line @ ory so wid that it will ring forever in seen, Above the door was a long narrow window which| the cars of those who heard it. Burt dropped upon hit opened upon the staircase, On this Girdieetone and his son| knees and put Ms hand over his eyes to keap out the sight. fixed their eyes, for they knew that on her way down sho|John Girdiestone caught his son (by the wrist and deshe® would be visible at it. As they looked the dim Iight whioa| sway into the darkness, flying wildly, madly. with white @hone through it was obscured and then reappeared. faces and staring eyes, as men who have looked upon that “She has passed!" which !s not of this world. In the mean time Tom had “Husht!' sprung down from his perch and had clasped Kate in bis Another moment and the door was stealthily opened. Onco| arms, and there she lay, sobbing and laughing, with many again the broad golden bar shot out across the lawn almost] pretty feminine ejaculations and exolamations and ques- to the spot where the confederates were crouching. In tho| tions, seved at last from the net of death which had been eentre of the sone of Light there stood a figure—the figure of | closing upon her vo tong. f the girl, Even at that distance they could distinguish the| Rachel Tylforth's ‘hedy fay upon the embankment, the grey mantle which Kate usually wore and the alose- | blood Prager from her head crushed by the blow Burt ‘bonnet. int 4 ay Promising aid, Mrs. Scully drove rapidly back to her nome j and deepitched the lerter which the Major gave to Tom, aa Le. Ay “Some one is coming “You ] "| \ ; a > or Geographical Pole. ealled the NORWBGIAN expedition ‘ha: have shown that the dip ts not the THEY CANT STOP OLD same from all points equally distant on the earth's surface from the mag- netié pole. Lines connecting points where the dip Is the same run eccen- trically @# compared with true geo- graphical lines. As drawn upon globes these lines resemble smoke rings. A clear idea of the difference between the magnetic arid true polés will be had when it is known thet the latter ts ninety degrees from the equator, while f from Christiania to -locate North magnetic pole. To scientists this is much more im- portant than the location of the geo- graphical pole, which {s not the same thing, but ‘s some hundreds of miles @istant. The exact geographical location of the magnetic poles 1: matter of dispute among scientists, and so long as they must depend on computation, reckoning C¥uth Magnetic Pole In each of these diagrams the geographical pole {s at the center of the circle B, while the magnetic pole te at the point A. For Infants and Children, Largest in the World. Every Detail, | trom observed facts they will never) the North magnetic pole 1s seventy de- Se Brooklyn Amusements. agree. To settle the dispute some one| grces north othe eeoalae, in a ie The Kind You Have Always Bought mie elt ch STEWART eo ee ai ies must reach *he spot and make observa-| about ninety-nine degrees west from (anand the : sages tlone which will satisfy them. Greenwich. It 1s located somewhere| Wgnature Breadwey, car. 46th St. New York, | se The magnetic poles are those points| Just off the northernmost coast of of A | Erie and Sth Sts., Jersey City | in the North and South where the com-| America. |STORAGE WAREHOUSE AND MOVING VANS. | pass needle dips at an angle of # de-| Several expeditions have tried to lo- | umneiemnateeen Ing beekiets | Brees. The needle does not remain par-/ °@te,the magnetic poles, but failed to | Exeursions @ilel to the true plane of the earth as|/4® more than add to the data of the Amusements. Amusements. a ees you sail.north or south, but dips until Seen The oresent expedition, — As sh | D il E p ’ aati at the magnetic poles it ts vertical or 4 r iN solentific hadi: HEATRE. B' & Sth Bt Of Course! PROCTOR'S T2:2% a y XCU rsion, es, eet equipped that ever at an angle of % degrees. Observations sal. Hi WEIRD VIEWS ON MATRIMONY. Alice Amerman Smith, graduate of a Knoxville (Ill) college, book of yearnings and confessions. She is seeking a divorce. Suan morbid views of matrimony. She say “If you would wish to keep a man “A woman would rather fac man she really lov ‘Sorrow ia the aftermath of marriuge. “Love without sympathy ts like a rose without perfume. “Marciage in the suicide of love. “Becond only to @ man's appetite is his conceit. “Forgiveness ia frequently the running mate of revenge.” In an interview this slight, delicate, brown-huired woman of the sweet face love and devotion—do not marry. the jury of a divorce court than give up the and modest manner sal Faint ise tary, ito “THEATR “Human neture {s woak, puerile, pitiful; the world needs the uplitt of some| Mott orn", ‘VENICE ih NEW VORA HERALD £0. res ts Saturday. | Moustnin new, hitherto unsuspected power or force of influence to redeem it from its ignor.| The Islante’ $) 90 THE KNICKERBOCKER GIRL. oe ance. Fraii though I seem, I am borne down by a mighty realization of ‘auman-| 9" A# Se ene RN We te, | perme ieee : ATTEN LI N E ity’ BA E. 5 R, ir . Big BROADWAY eee sia tea re | ee Tt iinese wedneaiay €Seturuay —== == “What ts the chief wrong?’ “Marriage is the beginning of it. Marriage 1s a burlesque on true love. It is heart suicide. “Always?” jo far as I have observed. I have met few, if any, happy married women.” The caus ‘Men aro the cause. I mean that men have too sordid an idea of what mar- riage means; and I mean, too, that few men expect to be loyal husbands, And what wife oan be content with sham devotion?” ‘Must they? So long as they do the farce will continue, with all its glittering burlesque upon true happiness."’ Ia happiness possible to any human being “T think so, In the utter forgetfulness of self, FOVR. BEST WIVES, FOVR BEST HUSBANDS. Dr. E, C, Beall, the famous phrenologist, has selected their pho W SWOZZLE we ot hire be A BISHOP’S ODD IDEAS ON DIVORCE. ISHOP SAMUEL FALLOWS, of Chicago, has recent: neh, . y written a le: erie advocating not the abolition but reformed regulation of aiveren fo says: Dr. Lyon's ERFECT “We might as well try to djot out the wun as to try to abolish diva: simply muat control the people who race to the divorce courts, PE SLES, hele Dives dose nat foley a wise merrions. But if a woman sells herself for 9 er consideration nes marri - bss f Profanes marriage and must suffer the cou Used by of “Divorce, an institution capable of working much good, is cursed with la: methods, with lax laws, with greedy ettorneys, with careless judges ; horrible record. | a matornit “Throughout the ages @ivorees have brought untold misery into the u lout the enforced continuance of an unhappy masried life would bring later for over a quarter A py | PREPARED BY 1a a4 “In no place is the menace to society greater than in Chicago through ¢! lax @vorce atatutes. In no place does marriage so much seem to be a sort | comic-opera affair. | “From 1867 to 1886 the courts granted 228,716 divorces. Only 6,122 decrees were granted to men for all causes. For one cause—the extreme cruelty of their hus- bands—45,731 women were given their liberty.’ CASTORIA Amusements, | MAUBSTIG SraPs Hic? ates at ee | WIZARD OF OZ), ih Montgomery & Stone! CARPET CLEANSING tence GARDEN “ BOCCACCIO:’ Matinee Sati KNICKERBOCKER T! ings, 8 ’ UL TRIP UP TH WEST PONT, RGH, AND styulT OF BEACON. sa WISTORIC MT. The Woman Hater. Florence Reed, Pea 1 Chas. € Abbe and All Sock waree: All (he Afternoon in the dountains. ites, Big Vaudeville Continuous. |Q y0k-COMFORTABLE-DE! ond Ww LE! PA'S ‘Ringing Trl Reserved BLANCHE RING 2318. ‘@eores & wuocess''—Herald—in THR Av §L.{Who Is Brown? aif ‘MRI EY EL 5th BLONDE « BLACK ‘ai a MAAR ARADISE ROOF GARDENS I2OINSL{ Rs.sPuiane mAleiene)". Mahal Webel fat tear Ae eke fa ec ortieds) MANHATTAN BEACH, Terr |a." per: Hom rence Piper Hogs ee oe ctormance PETIL. nectal Pertorma’ POM fos MBPS Ind rand Speseacle ee DAIN'S GRAND * FIREWORKS. ot L * Every Aft. ang | DeLienny SON TO \ tar Turner @ Co Ford & Det Bway & 7 ave. jobona’s Horeae—Fi Zouaver—Galettl'a Monkey Cole ‘The 4 Nightone—Imm Fox—Wilton Mra. Chamberigin—and the New Extra Punch, Judy & Co., with 75 People. Beacon, aixty miles ap the Budeow 101 yt aiemit of DUS In ° REGU! 24 MADISON SQUARE GARDE: id capacity week, 8 Gi a sien st. 1 8 Nu BRANCH AND BACK—£05 ———- 80C -ASBURY PARK AND BACK 806, Highland Beach Pleasure Bay, JOHNSTOWN FLOOD) Mstiaas Seecn- Pleasure Gay _CONEY ISLAND, _[firciotsl toi" ay san PASTOR'S MOZART COMEDY 4, HEALEY & FARNUM. HENRY BE. DIXEY — FACING THE Music, ! {4TH BG WEEK! 4TH MONTH! HENRY W. SAVAGE Presents PRINCE PILSEN SoATTERIUWAS CASINO To-vight a 85 H CIRCLE mary = ADdIE AND LIONS FOY & CLARK. HER | HILDA THOMAS, STUART BAR 8 and & host of other Sta: The Heart of Coney {sland. oe: Tht DEWEY jastita BATTLE OF CONFETTI {nani Burlsquars HILL THEA. Lex. ave, and ST.NICHOLAS “ 40 x 320 Pine FO hE : ean at ke: ae CH 48) AND 4.45 Po “STEAMER GRAND REPUBLIC, TU WEST POINT AND NEWBURG, SUNDAY, JUNB 21. ‘ i Leave Battery ins 9 A. a, West 220 Ot Ba. M, W 4 9.80 A. Went 189h St. 10 & STEAMER GENERA L Sk ‘ Maat Mik at B4ave. Contin 20 and 90 cents, TOSSING A RERD MNP ui USTINS, DS & Otnere Manhattaniss THE EARL OF PA Wed. Sst WTUCKET. MATIN TO-DAT, tographs, The four best wives will appear in Monday's Evening World, and the four best husbands In next Thureday's Evening World. BOMTH st TO:NiSRE: MATINDE BVBAY DAY, ie." Summer Garden, 6402 wt.,Col. a9. Biva!inel. Sunday MURRAY Farewell Week, “THE RIVALS. BOSTOCK'S |»: “ie” GREATORBY steel KBITA'S ek | Beekiag apo aur a BP) | WEST END fopastein Bhosle. (os tan Toe! haga