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TA, SPENDERS A Tale of the Third Generation (Copyright, 1902, by Lothrop Publishing Co.) Savoy Theatre, New York - SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTBRS. Percival Bines, heir of Daniel J. Bines, a mult!-millionairo mine owner and railway promoter, takes’ his mother and his aister Psyche to New York in spite of Grandfather Peter Bines's warnings attempts to enter society, He ts in love with Avice SI daughter of an old New York fam- ily now becoming Fleas. She is urged by her family to marty him She has hadan “artwe® with Nod Wiatine, who rc uihapplly married, and although she is not in love’ with Percival she promires her parents to accept him if he pro- poses. Percival sees Rixtine kiek Avice and does aot pro- ose. Mrs. Jusephine Dremler, who ts In soclety, undertakes o marry Payche to ‘Hon. Cecil B. H. Mauburn, an English- an who expects a title tat has no money. Fred Milbrey {g also a suitor. ‘The Bines family engages in epending Money lavishly, and Percy is known as a”good thing’ by @il the gamblers and touts of New York. CHAPTER VIII. Milllons Wiped Ont. VICH MILEREY was engaged to Rulon Shepler, the money king. She had resisted the pressure of her fam- ily as long as sho could, but her yielding was graceful. Mrs. French Wybert, described by Uncle Peter Bines as “the lady who groynd-sluiced us for two million,” and known to Percival as the woman who had deen his father's companton when death overtook him in his private car, was spending her millions getting into New York society and had won the friendship of the Milbreys. Indeed, when Psyche Bines an- nounced her engagement to Mautun, the Englishman who hoped to be Lord Casselthorpe, Fred Milbrey transformed the affections Psyche had not appreciated to Mrs. Wybert. Percival kept up the even tenor of spending until Peter Binos, warned of his course, came to New York on a pros- pect and, becoming convinced that much money was ruining the family of Bines, undertook a cure. ‘Uncle Peter induced Percival to take up big operations In Gmance, and soon had the joy of seeing him plunge on Con- eolidated Copper, Western Trolley and Union Cordage; fér- gaking his ev!) ways. Uncle Peter sew Mrs. Wybert and put in her mind the @rander scheme of becoming Lady Casselthorpe and as she meeded more than the remnant of her two millions to dazzle Qfaubun, he directed her\operations in the market in opposi- tian to Percival's course. He also had mysterious confer- ences with Rulon Shepler. “Courso I'm leavin’ it all to you,’ Uncle Peter would say to Percival, “and I must say I do admire the way you take hold and get things on the move. You don’t let any grass grow under your heels. You got a good head fur them things. I can tell by the way you start out—just like your pa fur all the world. I'll feel safe enough about my money lowg as you keep your health. If only you got the nerve, I've known men could play « big proposition half through end then get scared and pull out. Your pa wa'n't that way. He could get a proposition right by its handle every time, and they never come any too big fur him, The Vigger they was, better he liked ‘em. That's the king of genius I think you got. You ain't afraid to take a chance." ‘Percival beamed modestly under praise of this sart which He now came to him daily. “It's good discipline for me, too, Uncle Peter. It's what I needed, something to put my mind on. I needed a new in- terest in life. You had me down right. I wasn't doing my- eelf a bit of good with nothing to ocoupy my mind,” “Well, I'm mighty glad you thought up this stock deal. It'll give you good business habits and experience, say noth- Ge ee od ies peti es for! isappeared much snow meits under the Chinook wind. ie aS Twelve hours afterward the anow, three fest deep on a Jevel, hes melted. There are bald, brown nilis everywhere eo the horizon, and ¢he plains are flooded with water. The Chinook has come and gone. In this manner suddenly went the Bines fortune, April % Consolidated Copper closed at m. Two days later, May 2 the samo ill-fated stook closed at 5i—a drop of forty pvlnts, Roughly, the decline meant the loss of $10,000,000 to ‘te 15,000 shareholders. From every city ef importance in ‘the country came tales more or less tragio of holdings wiped out, of ruined families, of defalcations and suicides. The losses In New York City alone were said to oe fifty millions. This Succeasfnl Novel Has Been Dramatixed by E. E, Rose for Charles Frohman, Present William H. Crane, the Comedian, in the Role of Peter Bines at the tan ion. Author of “The Lions of the Lord” (Printed in Evening World by Permission of Lothrop Pub Co.) Who Will City, the Coming Season. ss, hands for support. oe ied Sraroned, fostesty, as if the extent of the calam- fi ! t ene in upon him, "My God! Ruined | ane mw ay Hee of Neer He Fyecmed. about to collaps reivel t ir, wihere he beca: aujekiy helped him into 9 chalr, wate! ere, Lim all right. Oh. ' 1 u had your pa’s brains. You so, oun ga ne Yand how ook wat you Ted Us of ne—broke- end | all your F art pacle Peter—don't, for God's sake—not when I'm down! { can't stand it!" a Tiwelntisencnaee own money—ne, tha’ a ay “Gamble away your take your poor ma's 3) hare and your sinters, end te me jn my old age—rovl what 1 had to triad’ a damned’ tea-drinkln fop could Rave, thimble-Pi0l Of brates give tt to me good Iater— ‘an oi fool, and trusted tardy ite Ge ts PSpbed your ager me — your atster, 1 "t know an: , and you talked oid J) ecuating oud might "8 F mown better. “Can top awhile—just « moment?” "Gantt you step ty matter. Maybe I can told = drill, of tram ore, or something, out tort an Fishy like they, ought to, De we oe % Bice ne not, and think of poor Abad rank wR have to teach Fad ey lucky now tf out in them n Cash Store at ‘res took forward to 1u Montana City filisoike as not one of ~ TSRnd oot whe i xury and palaces in England, an 3 I oan get the the that done 1 How much you loste fan rly. ‘Cripes! ‘himself up the oer might had the Hight of It. qyuer'e the use of living at you types fe a Bevat ie "Be a Youer, fust, a3 game gther emo tip sireight and make back with simulated only cowered wakly ines new deck. Oh, oe wesgartn" where to turn enesto manon the it the despairing one e_ iblow. in 't-we ain't got the stake “ove nk of your ma and me a dear! thin! s at our Ume Por life” percival wea oirersirced to cheerfulness in epite of bim- *Gome, it isn't as Seer as ed (Uncle Peter. We've got a on eae tie wala ned Th ot St es ment. “Hush, don't speak of tha musiess Wingert ‘em with his What ap’ee am Ia poor, Droken-dowa 9 ot on ses ach aging!” al: asking urty anything, As Treyou ‘could. t be y trusted orth “angen Spain thay needs 8 acholbey & saa Ea ‘pyen ie you ha had oe eg: You, a-gotn’ back there, eae a ain't any don't figu! now for brains mig! coches out there Ww ‘been’ ‘ou'd © wenn Rea coene easier, Now iv full nd keep peg oind on thee work, and en that hustle 4 oe tinte runnin’ off, to pink eens in Now 2 a3 ca man iy ow “put fou—don't ome fear any more of that pons sense!’ Percival had entered the room, He was now red. The room pals. old man’s bitter contempt ie filughed him imto momentary for aituleas orrrners rignt along IT did saver! m; fother avhesd, toa m™ See cathe gang, his nerve, and knows wh ag * was fooled—I can’t deny tt. What's the use of tryin’ to crawl out of it? You did me, acd I own UP to it; I thought you had some sense, some capacity; you was only Ite him on the surface; you Jost got one Sula the pays like his, that’sall—Den'l J. now was Soe stuff a! he’ t eacone, and nea A few large holders, reputed to enjoy make Information, | D4, were sald to have put their stock aside and “wold ahort” tn thu knowledge of #vhat was coming. Such tales are always Dopular in the Street, Others not less popular had to do with the reasons for the glump. Many were plausible. A deal with the Rothsohilds for Control of the Spanish mines had fallen thre rr, again, the slaughter was due to the Bhepler group of Federal Oui operators, who were bent on forcing some vile to unload & great quantity of the stock so that they might absorb it. The immediate causes were less recondite. The Consolidated ,mnpany, so far from controlling the output, was suddenly Paste He Soar actually yee auan 6) + of 8 to amen re} jaw of supply and Gemand haa simply met withthe i ifferent success tat has marked all such efforts since the fipet attempted corner ert stone hatchets, or mastodon tusks, ot whateyer it may have been, An, the language of one of ite newspaper criti “Trust”? minded on wlsconception and. pros along lines. of selt-deairuction. It fansamental pein were the restriction of product, the Increase oz price, and Carotuing of oompediion, a trinity: thet woul otuee os combination, business, political or’ social." Into this maelstrom of a panic market the Bines hand been sucked With a swiftness so terrible that the fam! Chief advising member was lett ‘dawed and incredulous, For two days he clung to the ticker tape as to He had committed the millions of the tami ‘as Kapaa he had staked $100 on the turn of a card or le peri aN m4 ercival wate ecling @ conviction tl dreaming. ile laughed to think of his rallet when ewaken. ‘The crowd eurged about the ticker, and their Troloes Shine as from atar. “Their acts all had the weird inconse- tty as ten on ence of He ore gee tn gretme, Yet presently it had ne too far to be must atodse himeelt end rn over on, his ng ites an ie hoe piputes,, according he 000, as Neary as the could calc: see, force, a mllton a minuze, even im sleep, he thought, was fn upon the tape he read another chapter of disaster. Piestern Trolley had kone into the hands wan reoetv oh a fine, fat proniiat stock ruined word of wi while ho trled co master thia news the tiornible ¢ paises ing declared teat Union Cordage was selling down to 58— a or sr tir porte aince morning. Fouts, with 'n alip of paper in tig and. beckoned ‘him om the door of his private office. t dagedly in to n—and was awakened from the dream tat he had been @ fortune In his sleep. Coming out after a few moments, he went up to Uncle Peter, who had been sitting, watohtul ‘pur unconcerned. In ‘of the armchairs along the wall. Tho old man looked Up, inquiringly. ey ent it ase rigate of For by 1 into © private of ruts. it, the @oor, and lle weoro, mon 3 esehyal een “Uncle Pe An's spend? on the once of "just ad this over Rie private wire. Corn y ee Ly bo maybe it was worth a couple of mill- aye Sn ee @ he plays poker; ba ven oni, But get it fur any 1 "ie wu ir, we're wipe out.” Coane aye Rak aos mean, eon?” fe rt care a damn now ee "2 Der neoen to. We re out of it—and—Uncle Peter, copper? Broke? But you eaft''— We seemed to mane an effort to comprehend. His rack of grasp was ‘ul. ba oo teens: Oat there's Western Trolley and that i oer out. T tell point ped A HOE A 3 5 Union Corage gone out the tnside secrete—ai rows nem far Western Trolley's gone down."” 0 oon i that. Bui no” he spacer Y nin “there's the One Gtr good producers aa a the property Shepler's in a the bk blork ag ae @trolled out into the fuses Toom again. A’ le softened his square for & eaienees: he seen comfortable chair and t pa B Apetdenally at the crowd of excited Aran as ‘epout he about him that alr of repose comes to big men wo have stayed much in Dig out-of- Ndeor soul- “Ain't he a nervy old guy?” said a cri Uttle moner- Prpken to Fouts, ““phey're wi Sut, bur, you woul ‘any more about it than Mise the porter with a brake Pol out there.” ihe old man held up his paper, but did not read. rushed in by him, beckoning him to the Inner ers an fine about the One Girl. He'll take a tor two gare ft Moowand. EY Ce) recom- me tony ‘ne ene rally Saeney, Set: O-MROrPOW. \ere's bound Thue and we wr ‘tee right Back. fon gomme ot {he—why—wnat’s the Batters fis, Me Seal ond une. | “Fe Houched ‘out with his head bent. Mad Feehan, eany saga ot jt Set Molieretatt Chan? per; and i'm 60! 5 aan man looked tin 4 fell bon im foing to get you out. I'm going back Be 2 I ee eropertiee aad You, Make my now ay Fi fet h with a Lee oe atoll eon onthe ‘Red Bank Canon.” "Now, veo, song aD Sor, Uncle Peter. I a tow ‘Mr. Fouts, and [ll come to your at ‘old man tore dejectedly. "Don me tn a ute with your financial A) ‘too old a man to be around in folks’ way." A moment later Percival his taet ronss, also pedi reference ty Blythe, who hed kilbed diumeelf. _ Oe euucay Ss ea do a ae Gaal Suncie Peer re ae e into Wwal mtreet, hurried ty to aes A block ie Peter turn! Pee of 8 gsigon, Zia ogre te stent ‘poison, fe ass and turn ter stood at one end of the bar wil ae oa front of him. At the moment srs ger roe eareiee large slab of Swiss chets® between two ae eer of rye br He turned ana faned Eoxclvals looting from him to hie sandwich with veoant eyes. “qm that #rought up and distressed pson, I hardly know what Ten éoln't Loo at mo now wih thie tuft in my ‘ha MH Tis wanted to he sure you were all right,” said Percl- val, nt" The O14 mem repented. LAM right? By Goa— ruined! Mherer nothing left to do,_n He nd abeently at the sangwion and dit a generous semiciccte tate ni don't ee Tow you can eat, Uncle Peter. It's so hor- “Tr don’ t, myself; ft ain't a heals \. be some kind of a me—l trouble. And now I've poverty and want in my old get. Bay, son, I believe there's jest one thing you can fo to Keep me from’ goin’ cragy, ‘ame it, Unele Peter, You bet T'll do it!" ell, It ain't much—of courne T Woallin't expect you to do all them things you wer fest mn’ about back there— about goin’ to work the eroperties and all that—you would Mo it If you could, T know—but dt ain't that. All I ask Ia, don't play this Wall street game any more. If we can @nve out enough by gow Inck to keep us decently, so your ma won't have to take boarders, why, don't you go mhd lose that, too, Don’t mortgage the One Girl ¥ be sort of superstitious, ut #omehow, T don't ‘de aN street is your ‘game, Courwe I don't say you ain't got rome ‘kind—bot 1 gine Wail etreet.” got one of them prestntiments that it (To Be Continued) By A, MAYNARD BARBOUR. A DEEP MYSTERY OF CRIME — A BEAUTIFUL STORY OF LOVE. (By permission of J. B. Lippincost Publishing Co.) Will Appear in Evening World Next Week, ] BEGINNING MONDAY, JULY 27— . ENDING SATURDAY, AUG, 1. er TPE WORLD'S »« HOME wt MAGAZINE # |THE “FLOATING LADY”—HOW SHE FLOATS. Ain Explanation Which Seems to Solve the“ Aga” My sterye —— An Inflated Rubber Dummy Supported by a Tiny Sfeel Rod Is What the Audience Sees Suspended in the Hir—The Real Girl Lies Low While the Aerial Counterfeit Flies High. HE Aga mystery 1s the roof garden sensation of the summer. Aga {s @ young woman in Orientai costume who, after being hypnotized by @ gentleman with a jarring German dla- lect, im placed in a wooden casket, tho front of which {s then let down, and from the depths of which she rises horl- fontally into the alr, apparently un- alded, and remains floating at a height of three or four feet above the casket. There are no wires in sight; there is no black drop-cloth at the back of the @tage; the footlighte and the border Ughts of the stage are all turned there are no micrors; i 1s entirely evi- dent that there is no machinery, no metal cod or arm back of the casket; it seems and te wonderful that this girl, weighing probably 140 pounds, oan lic softly and surely on nothing but a roof top breeze or @ curled wreath of sigar- in | ete smoke. ‘The mrstery ts shown at Hammer stein’s oot gawien. It comes from Ger- many and its inventor is Otto Heine- mann. Keller and other magicians have been up to this garden to study the trick, dut gone of them bas yet discovered Herr Gelnemann's secret. bois rwitl find en explanation right bere in The Evening ‘World which will Mt the case. Firat take a look at the mystery from the audience's viewpolat When the curtein rises for this act # plain chair is seen near the middle of stage. The magiolan comes on In @ Slack Prince A¥bert suit. Then Aga is introduced. ‘She seats herself im che chair, when alte magician makes @ few passes with his -hands and puts her into the hypnotic state. He continues the passes and the chair slowly tits back unt it reaches an angle of about forty-five degrees. ‘There is no visible support for the chair, A teow more passes and girl and chair return to the position from which they started, Aga is next placed upright on her feet, and later rests rigidly with ner heels on one chair and her shoulders on another. While she Is etretched between two chairs the casket is brought on and {ts ‘tour legs @re carefully adjusted to cor twin potmts on the stage. The casket is an oblong white box, and its lege hold It about a foot above the stage floor. It 4s open at the top.. Aga is lifted by heels and head from the two chairs and lowered into the casket Then the front of the casket !s let down, the leaf resting on @ chalr, 60 thet vision of the spaco beneath the casket ts mot cut off, In the casket's FOR OVGDOOR GIRLS. |ARE YOU COLOR BLIND? MANY PEOPLE ARE. Recent researches heve sown that a FIRT wais S and is exceedingly stylish. materials of the heavier sort, cor skirt & 3-4 yards 27 of 3 3-4 yards $4, 36, 38, 90, @ and 44 Inches bust, for 22, THE CHAIR TRICK. fotertor Aga is plainly seen ca‘miy sleeping. The magician produces a large wooden hoop, such as a twelve-year-old girl might roll along the street. ‘He bi it on the stage to show ft is solld. He passes it under, over and around the casket to show there no wires or bars or other mechanical aids at hand. Ho places one of Aga's feet across the other and then going behind the casket and bending down over the figure makes some more hypnotic passes. Aga floats up slowly from her couch. ‘She ascentia quite gracefully in a direct upward | line, her body retaining its horizontal Tigtdity. At @ height about on a level with the | Magician's shoulders she takes a rest. Here the hoop comes into play. The magician makes Aga’s body pass through it by moving the hoop from the feet to thus completely demonstrating that Aga is lying on the alr and hes no artificial support. After this a few hypnotic passes cause Aga to sink Into the casket, sults take precedence of almost golfing and all out-door occupations. The design !s appropriate for all linen and cotton the Maht-weight flannels and simple wools. waist 4a absolutely plain and includes the broad box p made lined or unlined, as may pe preferred ‘are shaped to ft snugly About the hips, but are freely below the knees. fuiness at the back fs laid In Inverted plalte. tor the medium size is, for walst, 30-4 yards 21, 9 5-8 27 or 2 yards 44 inches wide; in sives for a 2%, 7%, 26, 3 and W Inch waist measure, maliod for We. to “Cashier, The World, Pulitzer Buftding, New York City.” the front is closed up and the you: everything elee for walking This one is made of Delft blue lner The It can be ine gores that The The quantity of material required lalt of the season, is cut in The sk inches wide. The pattern, 4,249, in sizas mailed for 10e. The skirt pattern, 4,441, Send money HOW TO KEEP COOL. 1, Correspond with a Boston girl, 2, Stop at every sofa fountain and saioon. 3. Clean your teeth daily. i 4. Bat Buster's oats. §. Take the 8,4 traln for Greenland. io Bia: é aes tn eo want columns. rou Getic hail CASTORIA For Infants and Children. the head and back again to the feet,! wamon, restored to conaclousness by the magician, steps out serene andemil- Ing. That ts what you see or:think you 900, This ts what happens. The chair jon which Aga sways hes its rear legn jhollow, and a straight fron bar coming up through the stage and fitting tnpo either chalrleg 1s worked Under’ the sitge, Who cen’ pincereer at any oe desired. ‘The t, as jel ti {Hustrations die- close, neat @ hinged false’ bottom. Tn ‘talse Suse the tel Pendent an inflatable balloon doll, qupi Tr. ¢j Cr whee on the doll js of the same size as Aga, deing Gressed exactly “ke her, | celves the audience. < far greater number of ppople are et least partially color blind than was for- merly imagined. The congnonest case t# @ deficient perception of red, blue aml violet. Often partially ~otor blind per~ Sons name these quite correctly, put they are unadle to dt between Trost, red and Didish . A few years ago Dr. @avre examined the color par- ception of 1,000 raifway officials and found that ninety-eight were quite color blind and a numbef more partially wo. Women, tt may ve mentioned, are hard- ly ever color blind, but why this is so no one pretenis to explain. After any vevere nervous ghock you will be very likely to find thet you havp bedome temporarily color bind. Your perception of green light has: probably gone, at least partially. White objects will then appear to you of a reddish purple. end Erem objects te Be) 3 very much Guller in hue than ordinarily Any one caf make ‘him or herself tem~- place? Bright Boy—The change in price. As the are neatly scare@ to death.” Delng very sleepy one ovening, she ‘0, I don't believe he did. Huh! OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES. Teacher—When water is transformed into ice what great change takes “Oh, mamma," exclaimed little Elsie on seeing a calf for the first time, “that must 68 one of tho little cows that give condensed milk!” were explodisg and the rockets were soaring high in the air on the evening of July 4, Little Ethe! sald: A little girl was in the habit of ending her prayer by asking a@ blessing tor a dozen rolatives, naming each of them, says the Chicago vs. bless papa and mamma and the rest of the crowd. Amon,” Johnny—Papa, who was Horace Greeley? Papa—He was a famous editor. Johnny. Johnny—And did he write the baseball news? He couldn't have been much of an editor, The upper diagram -ie:a.eide-elevation of the casket, showing/shelf at back for girl and space under bottom where dummy {s kept. The lower illustration shows the exact situation when the hoop p es the wire-supported dummy floating‘above the casket and he girl on the shelf behind the casket. When the real Aga is put into the she is laid on the false bottom. mediately she rolls against the t back fhe box, h opens and es 8 elf, out of | sighy ot Pe nthe wadience, oo hich the rea remains during the performance of the trick, ‘The false bottom has now become the back of the caskot, and by the time the front ts let down the doll Aga has deen inflat by means of a tube that passes from below the stage through a leg of the casket to a self-closing valve in the Goll's body. ‘The audience now sees the doll, but thinks it lx looking at the real Aga. rae Goll is so light that we rena but thin Lbeget wie Be mo ‘ais wire comes hrowe on through the bottom the camcst, fits into a heavier wire w! porarily color blind by wearing = pair-of ruby wed glasses. ‘The prolonged action of red light on the eyes ends dy tiring out the nerves which receive red light. Consequently, when the glasses are at last removed, a Tainbow appears to have only two col- ors, yellow and blue. On closing our eyes, especially tn thie @ark, aud when we ere drowsy, we can ‘wee colored spots ant streaks on the changing their shapes antl pou! ‘These “entoptic lights,” as they are called, act as buses for the pictures. ‘Zhe cortex of the brain ts freshly stored with tages collected by the senses atom of thonneelven, But Yen Yaw aul on the retina Ughts on ‘chance pen A a coalition is Sp i reoult, entoptic tights and we gota Oving om tue im the eye. ‘he. process, te es automatio or, {i eat of ‘con ae, Je crt un. that of, the fancy, p in the Grothe mre end the frost of a window pane. “Mamma, I'll bet the angels But God, closed as follows; ‘And ples then, THE LAST PASS, This ts @ fac simile of the inst re- corded words written by the famous. actor, John McCutlough, before he went imsane, It 1s a pass for the last play In which he appeared before breaking down. Amusements. AMMERSTETYS, The Kind You Have Always Boughi hike ta teins weatber, advises the| Bears the ‘Tol y Sa i Ratt ect Psacise ROOE GARDEN, 12 BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS, ng The Myvtorious AGA Extr ragecta and Ballet—76 Peep. and Cstal Theatre) Byes. (except Sunduy),8.30. A 9.46 Gast Wi) LANCHD KING. Gardens, [Sec'warosta'a satnawel tinea 10 RL Teo id dceath | Amusements. or oe one (Moar Souls. ADELAIDE KEIM, } WALLACE BRSKINE “&@ Al! Stock Favorites. Big Vaudeville, Continuous {Ruud | BINA. AnoER { CRAWEORD, ROBERT CUM. Ke Vante, Souvenirs Mats, VETHRART. — BELLE } GOLD, WILLARD BLACKMORE, | Al Btock Favorites. Big Vauder MOVING PICTURES corrnionren, cre ROOT -GARONER > Grand,cerstions July 25ycitse'% pm. Er ehtidren. Poot i at sh ab al agninst the black coat of the pert ated| who stands behind it. The poricaneal and ite Ni nite bt yi iil Hy horizontally to the feet of the doll, then turns to the head and from there returns to the centre Gf the wihere It is fastened, This peculiar arrangement of the be} makes it possible to pass the hoop 0} the figure, as the dingram shows. part of the wire 4s concealed by he doll draperies. ren ithe dol! fescenta «he front is closed. The doll is at om weeeets ean tee Fer em yl rou 5 how steps out of the casket trick ts aver i. BS piety expat he S sworertul Diet ceeecioge whoating indy; ine “inmteat "She PEGS ot vivid. F cae 25° & 50° eae SHANNI 23D ‘or |PAIN'S ’SPOMP ax |_—LAST WEEK or * | LEW DOCKSTADER’ AND HIS: GREAT A Chinese Honey M BIG CAKE WALK [UN FRIDAY NIGHT Weds COLOBAL, CARNIVAL, OF. NATIONS, Ai FS ‘SPECTACLES © GRAND, CIRCLE, Brvay & Sith Ta 27TH WEEK ai Time! in a La uo eg $1.00. Yalge ag 3d ave. “Coottouona: Pastor’ Ss 20 cant 4 | | Gi La Ru race La Rue FLOATING, 5; OOF. 8 GARDEN, Class 8.30; MO MoRED S HISTORY. MADISON “ROOF GARDEN—50c. SQUARE Japan by Ni and BOSTON’ CASINO deat. Gat, ES So ht caer, OTOYO LADIES’ ORCHESTRA,