The evening world. Newspaper, August 5, 1903, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- ,'# THE 4 Peggy (Nea ALFRED ANON + Me, war on F 1 J epi fgery + he tie APY Of me nid inert , a4 . p*@ reading the carpet, “ne “ * Husband Wha no) vee y ticoate tucked ' Aventing for t? Who is she efuse the fragrance of a thousand th t ¢ serpent and be stung by {tt Pog crow Jnoming herself a princess of oh 1 wateh a woman” she cencluded; I insisted. “Is not freedom dear to m Yes, but love is more dear, See what she gains when ene barters only a little freedom for a world of love. “1 had not thought a we st such store by jealousy areen eyo turned against herself.” Jousy man's Jeaiousy 1s but the counterpart of litvea er head oraculariy. “And, Jog, that reminds me—" here she admonished me with upraised finger—‘you are Jealous of me! Yes, you are; you ‘are jealous of my husband. “You are a confusing form of Uttle girl!’ I sald, my turn; “and most confusing when you jest. “You; wheh “I jest.” This in a way of funny dryness, when I Jest. Still, you are jealous; you watch laugh- fn specially, me all t Jealousy.” Peg finished in a mirthful ripple. “I would not see you walk into harm,” said I meekly. Perhaps I was thus meek because the small hectorer would stir Up confusion in my bosom; and she, cool, assured, mis- tress of situations it was her merry humor to create. “You would not see me walk into harm,” she repeated. you are jealous of my husband. Is my husband ‘harm “Do you not complain for that he does not watch you?” “Watch-dog," said Peg, severely, “watch-dog, you know you are jealous! And how long do you count it since J told you that jealously was but love turned upside down?” ‘This me off trippingly, and with superior wave of wrist. as ing a thing beyond debate. Then with a tinge of tender- “Watch-dog, being so trusted, what would you do for he time. ‘But a me?" ‘1 would be a sla’ to do you good, So you would be my slave! Come, let me mark you for my aluvet* Without warning she seized my hand, and with her sharp rd teeth she olt untll the blood flowed. Then surveyiag work, she kissed the pin-prick of a wound. When she W her raised her face, there was a trickle of blood on her ip and Walking lo 4 mirror with a careless, flinging step, Pej Blanced her tace over and, | thought, with rejish, a2 . See if there do not come a pretty white mark when it dieals. Mis she told me in an arch manner, and with chin vn Shoulder and the fleck of blood on her chin, Uue aie’ she Went on, returning to the glass, weur tha blood always and never wash it away. But the word! the world!—ah, the world! One must wash one's face dor the world although one owes the world nothing.” Peg, now in a climax of bubbling spirits, end pouring a Spoonful of water on her handkerchief, washed off the spots of red, transferring them to her tiny square of cambric. This she contemplated With @ sort of surprised delight, as tender- ing a new {0 “I need never wash that, at any rate," sald she. Then with her glancing eyes on me:' "You will wear my mark now;— Peg’s mark for her slave!—who would do her good.” Tho next moment she went singing across the lawn for her home, leaving me to think on the caprices of our radiant, reckless, blooming, madcap Peg. All this by the way, how: ever; now to return to our day of the Rev. Campbell's call in’ the General went one afternoon with Peg to call on her mother, who lived out Georgetown way. Nothing would do but we’ must stay to supper, and it was night When we started on the wake back to Washington: The night was, dark and stil, and a moist promise of rain hung jn the air. Our way lay from the south, diagonally across the wooied patch called the Mall. We were finding our path without trouble, Peg keeping close and warm by my side, With a hand gripping my arm, and had gone some distance when, in a way of dull faintness, a sound like the fall of a stealthy foot on the grass overtook my car. Pes Tete te dogged?’ she asked. Pog showed no fear, but Core hee words in a Tanner viclouetand resenttul nam : i Sieiat we eet id I. Then drew her in by ‘That we may soon know," s1 amen Of bushes where her white frock would be screened. “It shoubt bea strange thing any save ourselves were his road at such an hour.” AVe had been but a moment hidden by the trees when a dark figure crouched past us with furtive, hurrying step that made {t plain he followed as a spy. As he would have brushed by, I stretched out and seized him by the shoulder, ‘The creature screamed like a hare when the dogs snap her up. lugged him to the open, and, for all the night was mounieas ahi no stars because of cloade, st pussiad neither Peg nor myself to make out the Rev. Campbell. The fellow hung in my hand ike a rag, and beyond that first shtill screech uttered not a word. ScWhat shall Ido with him?" I asked, still holding him tn my grasp lke something doad. “xin him!” erled Peg; “ill him with your great hands! And then, while I was dumb defore the sudden murderous fury of her tones, Peg began to plead the other way nbout. “Let him go tree)", she sald, “He's not worth punishment. ‘el It is eure he was after us as a spy.” AMY Tilnk:? eatd 1. Sut would do no: hire to throw him’ tn onder water,” *Now.in that day a chain of baby Inkes lay long this por tlon of the Potomac fens, and one of these was glimmerin, op our near left hand, ‘It was not deep; but muddy an rown wp to ilies. and the home, besides, of certain sedato Einpouts and turtes and other ‘stagnant Wsh that Wo, not care for currents but love dead waters, ‘These, since bull- Polts and turtles be in no manner hysterical animals nor parvous would not suffer for any plumping of the spy into their midst; and, thus forming my resolve, T was for posting to Its exectition.* My, captive still swung ifmp and loose, for a'l tho world as‘though he had fainted.’ I could not hedleve this last; however, and in any event I would throw him In among the lilles: It he were too far gone with fright to sove his own life from drowning. It would mean no more than that I must.wade to him and fish him ashore again. ‘Vitus adjsted In my mind, I was.on the brink of heaving him overboard, when with ‘a touch of protest Peg stayed my arm. No,"’ ‘she cried, “let him go free.”” But a morbont gone." I remonstrated, “and you wero enlling -for murder with all its inconveniertces. Now ‘you interpose to stop a mighty proper punishment, for, T bethink me. {f bas boon cuntom to duck sples tn every ag “Still, you must let him go," cried Peg, “I will not have ‘ou toieh him." And she selzed my hand with her little ‘With that I threw the caitift creaturs on the grass; whore- pan he rolled to his Knees and extended his palms toward Peg. There was something to roll me in the attitude, and to end that I pushed him over with my foot, ‘Be off," T cried. “And. you are to thank this Indy for your dry clothes. You had been splashing among the liye pads except for her." Without retort, he rctambled ‘to Nis soles and wag gone THIS STORY BRGAN MONDAY AND FINDS BATORDAY when OF Weslpr/ ie, Wey Do not look frightened; I do aot object to | ee ar WIS HENRY Devs Ft b a sienmes etimen wth and then efth etretohes the dust curted aloft on the (K's eyee and faces. | nm calamity to re and with face turning nore twtgnt and | lem. thowe members | with him very constant, reading to him. or passing him « elaes, or cheering him with her talk of fippant nothings, Tt was the General himsolf who told me he was to dle; and it dm marvel, the good patience and sympathy wherewith he went upon the tnformation. One would have apposed tt wos of my death he talked “And In the bottom of 1 the chance of meeting her’ sa!4 he tn concluaton, “T have pointing: to his wife's picture— “and that chance would make twenty deaths worth trying. For when we come to the end of it, Major, the heaven they talk of may be true." ‘This last with a manner of reverie na when hope upholds conviction leaning to a fall As best {t could, my nature fought against n dellef that the General would die, but his own word overpowered mo. The | fear of it, when he told the news, went through me like a | spear. Or tt was as t¢ a stone were rolled upon my heart, Peg, as I have written, was much with him—fresh and | sweet as a ciuster of violets; about a sickroom she was worth her weight in drugs. And the General ana she had never so full a space for acquaintance before, and so each day he came to knew Peg better and to love her more. ‘There existed throughout this summer a xind of truce tn the crusade against Peg; the Reverend Ely had turned to be as mute as an oyster, while the Reverend Campbell and those harpies whom Noah so confounded were not only asllent but deeply out of sigat. There was neither sign nor rumor to come from them. ‘This peace for Peg was something due to a desertion of the town; for everybody—and women-iolk especially—not tied by the leg to duties went seeking cool comfort by the ovean or in the mountains, HutOn Limsell made vile of those who went away; he would have had Peg for company, out sie urged—what was true, since the old iady hau grown frau and Wweakly—that @he ought not to leave er «other tor 60 long a space, tiaton agreed wiih entire good aumos wo unis, and so Lect j €eg beluud, and never a qualm or mark of Hesitation, while he sought lis ease vy the sea. In the lagt there were sil oun (liee Cabinet wives, that 1s, bhe ladies Berrien, Branca and Ingham, to ve leit about us, ‘hese would soon depart; but by unis claim or that, they had been brought to wus beliind When the great oyvey Of uheic Hounced fellows weit whirring away to be oul, Peg never nad Visited Unese folk nor they her, and on tose few occa- sions When official exigency tarew them together the Cabinet turee took heed to hold aloof from Peg. On her side, Peg Passed them by or looked them Lurougia as (hough ues tag not been, and, if 1 am tw judge, came off trom these ulungs With prestige ‘ail undimmed. it was the doting inghum—he of our Treasury—to be wit- less enough to breach wus business of veminine ice with Baton, Suort and valek of body, wita thick legs, thick neck; even his tongue Was thick, and tis slow wits thickest of all. it was on the kibes of a Cabinet meeting When Ingham approached Eaton. “Siz,” guid ingham, tugging nervously at his lapels, “sr, there fs someting of 'ytrain between our ladies about which, 4f you'll permit, 1 should Uke word with you.” “Why. sit," recurnea Katon, seizing te initiative, “1 per- haps shouid ‘tell you that 1 cannot, in ocial obligations, control my wife. ‘That, sir, let mo say, is work beyond a gentleman. My wite must be her own mistress; and while 1 | Know of no just cause way she should reruse to receive or j recognize Mis. Ingham, 1 must sull insist how the right to do both les wholly in her hands, Personally, | may deplore my wie's refusal of the acquaintance of Mrs. Inghum; how- ever, I stand none the less ready to give you any satlefac- you require: With this Speech, Eaton bent his brows upon the other in such way of iron ‘menace that without a word our tmid ‘Treasury gentleman clapped on his hat and went pantingly in quest of safer company : “Was it not a inaster-stroke?” exulted tne General, when he related the flurry. “Baton had the hill of fim in’an in- stant; Napoleon himself could not have exnibited a more millltdey genius.” While the General was sick on his lounge, and when Peg tired of reading, she would fall to a review of the unremitting Politeness bestowed upon her by the suave Van Buren. One aight read the pleasure of the General over these tidings in his relaxed face nd the heed he offered to each detail, Peg would set forth to the General—it amused him, and he would question her concerning such matters—now in this sort or in that, and always in some way of trifles too small for the mind Of @ man (0 seize on, the women who followed the soctal banner of the Vice-Preaident's wife would strive to drive her Into obscurity. And this was not wanting of stern effect on the General, The name Calbouy found constant Fepetition in these tales, and never to give the General de- ght, And there is thiy to observe: While Peg spoke of Mrs, Calhoun the General, ifor his dide, would be thinking Bi to snap rebellious thumb and finger in the lature of that insolent commonwealth had’ done {ts treason part; Nuliification and its counterpart, Secession, were al- ready agreed on: men were being enrolled and anms col- lected, while medals found Charleston coinage bearing the ls ‘John, C, Calhoun, Firat President of the Southern pon the work at once," s: deracy,"” We will fo ap wuld the General. “Winfleld’ Scott shall proceed to Charleston; the fleet shall convene in the bay; Castle Pinckney shall have a aundred thousand stand of arms; and we will write ¢o our old Indian fighters, Crockett and ‘Coffee and Houston and Dale and Overton and the rest. to lle ready with one hundred thousand riflemen In Tennesses and North Carolina to overwhelm these rebellionisty at the dropping of a handkerentef,”" This converse, I recall, came Off one afternoon when the General was in more hoalihful fettle than stood common dur- ing those days of four for his life. Peg sat with us; indeed, was news she gave us !trom a Charleston paper to bring down all this talk, Pog, silent yet tnterested, Metened while the General lald out his purposes. ‘ “And if the Vice-President were taken for treason, what then?" asked Peg in a kind of Innocence. “What would you do with him?? “He shall hang. child,” and the General » with a granite emphasis; ‘he shall hang as hig) He shal! be a lesson to thattors for all time. It was then, and for the first time, as the General sank ational face, slowly and as Haman! as t esting to the world at large, and is Aine, and him feet dropatcal, | Santas ‘an in 4 a walk but only hobble. He! aneset of youngsters, mmonty on my atm, though | ae onze bables to th | sometimes Pex's protty shouller was his crutch, for she WA8| tomical Park in the at | Sloppy Uttie sea ton ttous and non-committal with strangers; your first impressions; are never boisterous, nolsy, talkative hey Rande in Varlets r fran «a ONPNAN 135%, THE MOTE BIRD NIVEN (FAS TWO 0 PRHAP no bahtes are more DAst few months The rum of epring and summer commenced with Katser Wit very popular young baboon, tival created quite a sensat! far has finished with “Slotibe who er tay w JAC soa tions pond a ne and dte-| mands all the choice fishes which are | DABY WAITETAIL thrown Into th e Keeper. At a} "400/04 DetR present the Hronx Zoo, well as tho \ Zoological G full + Jens in Central overtowing of nurser Park. inmat ts} The latest Is at the Co: K Zoo ir is hippopotamus.|the Camegia ilon, and the He ts one of the one-hundred pound! African Moness. ‘The last-named itter “feathers from the wings of love,"|is the latest thi the way of the | which the post Montesquieu describes! king of beasts within the New York #0 feolingly in his poems on babies | City Ilmlts, ‘There aro three very cun- But the greatest number of new ar-| ning cubs in this rivals, as wel! as tho most valuable| “doing nicely, thank ones, are to be found at the Bronx Zoo, | cute as kittens, the Of these the most tmportant aro the| bloody bone with a t belles two sets of Hon cubs, sons and daugh-| their pretty gentle young even and wott ters of Bedouin Mald and of Hannibal,! wee bodies, which remind you of a lap. nh er, f which are and are as they gnaw a Success in Business from Facial Traits. BY EDGAR C. BEALL, M, D., the Famous Phrenologist. Readers over ten years of age who send their photographs to Dr. Beall will be advised through The Evening World as to their training and Proper vocation, Applicants will please state the color of hair and eyes, principal nationality of ancestors, also full name and address, of which only initials will be published. TYPES OF MEMORY. H. K. Wi—Strong, social nature; pos- itive Ukes and dislikes; rather cau-/every kind of memory except that of in dealing | words; can remember language also can generally trust /as @ part of an occurrence, but are in- are naturally | different to the parts of speech on their own acoount; should all means im- H. E. L—A fine forehead for almost interested in the study of character; Nf y al Cee have much energy, but are more criti- | Prove yourwelf in thie respec jouer cal, considerate and careful than im-| (ine you will be seriously han rapped pulsive or aggressive in your methods; | (aroun Ife; read o od book. say “Getting On, &c., by Willlam Mathews, only on the Vice-President, and at the end he held even| intellect 1s more scientific than lt five or six times, then practise quoUng more hateful views of the Carolinian than of Henry Clay|ary; depression across forehead shows from It, and you ‘¢ oon double your BERL nately: he came finally to be strung Uke a bom) a lack of memory in such maiters a8 | rowarn” ot notin tong ute your against him. hamos, dates, historical events, anec- {contained and have all your. feelings Fie vietolty pf dlstavor for Calhoun, nowever, may have|dotes, &e.; the deep-set eyes reveal | unacr cod entity give more a te ery oe eR foe Meaten beyond question, pow-|diMoulty ‘in verbal expression; will | unde! ood contr OPORTO Ara netee Shhasing in power, an, qqafhoun, on the other band, was in-}excel in judgment of elge, weigit and | guoyd yrocumary Droble oversagactous fatter wtoun forth mere eve in design and searching tor the} color; must depend on deeds rather | fm divinine mayen hee ae quick future, stood forth as an enemy yet to be conquered, than words; could succeed as teacher | rather than profolind; Would make a epee Sitio uc, be zaHor,”’ said the General one day | of physical oulture or in some other | good pharmacth weadld emake, when speaking with ime of Calhoun and ly lines of political | branch of solence. there {a much detail resolve. “He should consider, however; 1 may yet teach him @ better patriousn. Mark you this: ‘That man shall never be President, More, he may yet win Gilderoy's elevation at 8 rope's en This last In wrathful waleper like a warning of death. ‘There was spreading reason to talk gn Calhour and his pollcles. South Carolina, ever arrogant, was movin W. F. G.—RBright, fertile, adaptive, ayatlable off-hand mind; are sur to get on tn the world; and you « T. L, R.—Inclined to be too reserved; cule 60- lemonstrative in any way; sho vate more active sympathy are wa a jike some foul shadow. His absence, of itself, relieved me, | back spent, and in his weakness almost consumed of his own |clability; are capable of attaghment for]an unattainable ideal a for the sight of him was like a blot, "| tires, there’ broke on me the whole peril of Calhoun, 1 knew | seas tees pooled tite; pie would not resist, an so'T made you tet him go tng General, ton wall to distrust tha execution of hs rope- | one ceacaein ghotaeaee, “or scat | caution tn your social Ife; ghoul Ts and-gibbet threat, I was the more contirmed » >: y roadcast; in mone * Bosse SD otit pout would have it sate ¢or, coward tng he would have me go about a ‘score of letters ordering) Matters Will hold what You have rathor| women who will ecounen you to. be | aa eren Cpe thet creature Gjatned Peg. She seemed the readiness of those =hips and anms end men he PORBNTARCLRE C CERES GATTI PURER | PESEUR Ce Coan ene ean \ pen moe for a duliard, + It was for you. I would| lined, A cordon of power was to be thrown about US the fealltine of evers-dae litte odee | beeper att / Peyageve such a momory—you,’ punishing an. unresiating | and ihe fF oy Penenth him mined for his destruction, stand Guman nAtire falrle ewe ee dtace | onder ns kK to ye Rial were’ <or Ww. aecond tite’ nae ow se the General through this lone summer grew toa a euod judge ot hoary atl eel etl oi wae + rox arm with her two hands ace ane ays Peg now holding | better acquaintance with Peg, the same ales might be told| you can examine Ww your .eyes; are| vision Mee a child. T could tel by that howe chic eek aeaingt tt lof me. And hardly a day was to dawn and die when Initha hot daveta: of will, teameny aed on idee] wratiyou ts rogue had fluttered her not a litte. ke ee Dushwhacking | unique turns and twiste of her manifold mature che ott’ termination, but need more onergy. and | faces, tl pi x eo, and T could, even In the pitch darkness oie tea ghes [Hoe come upon me Ina novel light. “She was never te Se rte | SrmuTatlON., bul need, more one Due on| and ‘a experlqentnd “int tine Blows ‘ot ner eves © jarkness, catch the deep sane and ny suggieh apprehension could scarce keep pace |airs:' grew ent deficiency 1s in general] would vell dn any literary profess “To follow so rightse-character as yourself, -watch-dog, is Ly” *n°-Suanwes of Her. — Bere oat manne eneY, of epeean: could sion, dygluding Jouruaden, twacting oF ‘ ; =O, Wemsnels, watch Lop | money ‘arm ihe. oS, eo q ‘ San ; a) « ; Sees eecaey 08 9, SOrmeks 6. dake Powmelear Vour Neat VE ZEQRAS BRT AND S rOU; a fry os STEP. Ti GAY Mans AL OER | _#& EVENING # WORLD'S . HOME .2 MAGAZINE wt THE COLONY OF “NEW BABIES” AT THE BRONX PARK 200. wenmentay evening, AUGUET 6, 1% — on Few to a Sloppy Littl Sea Lion, i j w . "“SLOBOERS” THE BABY SEA LIOW 13+FED PROMYTHE HAND. dog after a perfumed bath. Watching these graceful young princes of the blood at play, it fs not dimcult to wonder that some women, like Sarah Bernhardt, for instance, adopt them Pets and cannot understand when they | Tow too large why the thirst for human blood should develop tn them. They lool. as harmless and beautiful as a ittter of | yellow puppies or Angora kittens; and the women who pass in front of thelr cages all long to take them out and “cuddle them and call them pet names. Another Interesting pair of babies at the New York Zoological Park are the two ttle punjab mountain lamba. These lambs were born at 7 o'clock on a spring morning. Thelr mother's keeper found them cuddled close to her breast an hour later. ‘That afternoon, however, wandering over the hillside placidly cropping hay as though to be born wére 4 small and Inconsequential matter. An oddity of the lambs Js their per- fect similarity of movement. They a: Ways start to run at the aame momen| and In the same direction, and stop as They though with a single thought. are never seon aingly, and they cve: turn their heads and move thejr ey expected even of twins, ‘Three young wolves, which look Ike dogs and play lke puppies; ibex of a very breed, an odd, young horsetail deer, pair of oudad mountain jambs, a wh! tafled Florida deer and the young € Mon are sote of the most interesting the newly born lambe were 8 in unison—things which are not always a young rare and expensive PRT A OABY WOLF specimens {n the Zoo nursery at presen& 4 of these antmais are growing finely and seem to need little or no ex*~a care. Tho question of raising the young animals born in captivity is one of the most diMcult which confronts the au- orides at the Zoo. Profi Hornaday says that @ good mother Is better in such cases than all the science of the scientists. 1t depends largely upon the mother of the young whether they live or die, Sometimes the mothers are over anxious about their offspring and kill them with attentions. A red fox once killed a litter of six hale young foxes {n this manner, She would take her batdes, one by one, in her mouth and walk with them up and Mown the Ine closure until they were exhausted. She could not be stopped, until the young were taken from her, when they of course died from fatigue and lack of mother care. There is the other type of mother, who kills her young by neglect, as did lar bear who left her one baby to f to death during tts third néght, There are, however, some good moth= a like ahe yellow aboo: Susan. nother of Katser Wfhelm, who nursed nd watched her baby properly, but did hat over-feed nor over-pet tt, SE ET EH What is ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It} It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic, It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and and Soothing Syrups. destroys Worms and allays Feverish: It is Pleasant, Castoria natural sleep, The children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80 years, has born the signature of Chas, H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy, Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘‘Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experim: Genuine Castoria always bears the si; Amusements. WHAT THE Le A. THOMPSON wa aaa kewaT SEE ISCAND | eae rrnieur pont aor, GRAND CIRCLE, B MAJESTIC 28882 Rue, 29TH WEEK. =! IN WIZARD OF 02 « with FRED A. STON: ent, gnature of f/ilaea. Amusements. | MANHATTAN BEACH TO-DAY ao SHANNON'S ,232. BAND REGT. (he PAIN'S POMPEII "| ACHINESE HONEYMOON shi Tae MOST CORG BAUS CPeCT anaes THE SLEBPING BEAUTY 4X2 BEAST, ARE GARDEN bse “VENICE IN’ NEW” YORK.” Ganeral Admission, BOC. Kanade Piano Used, vets * ROCKAWAY BEACH, "3s at THEATRE, 1 WEEK, f ‘Sa NOR FON Yt A 10.506 -30, ADAMS, O'BRIEN & x 4 musements, Eves, 6-40r1 00 HAVEL, PLORENCE BURNS 'S Colo PROCTOR'S Fo:Ri¥intiex $8) LUINA CARNIVAL he Ean aA aE OF NATIONS Sth Ave. §8th St 126th St. HAMMEKSTSIN ARADISE ROOF. 12 BIG VAUDEVILL Jeri ) ONE reat Dally Mata. Stock Favorite } Davi 1 Bhe Vaw Bway & 7th Ay GARDEN, E ACTS, A and ACADEMY OF MUSIC, TOMORROW THE CHR HALL OF GARD noose Ut RI gall sere ape . reste ts: oe a ‘ i 2 Mike vi vening Except Priday,” Pare 80, PA STO R’S ohn Manhattaminy AS ek": THE EARL OF PAWTUCK TERRAC GARDEN, 8 & 3 RK xii, CHIMES OF NORMANDY, MYLES McCAR EMMALYN LACKEY & 00! In" ST. NICHOLA: To-Night 8.1 FAVOR & SINCLAIR HY & OO., a THE DONERS, § CARDEN. axt¥r ST. |1,000 AND COUAVE.” [Seats Soret, LAFAYETTE Bs2e i) BIG VAUDEVILLE BILL, a BOSTOCK'S fiaw emehicauiiiionins orn BEST SHOW IN TOWN, Bway ant |'soaitua onsao 214th Bey PRICES, 35a. and 60e, 60c} iIPARK MADISON — RIK "TO-DAY. ROOF GARDEN—50c SQUARE Japan by Night .2i20%-, OT0YO and BOSTON'S LADIES’ ORCHESTRA, GRAND OPERA-HOUSE, | | CASINO. Mat.Sat.,2.16. JOHNSTOWN FLOOD, CONEY ISLA Cost J Gardens,| "S21" Ned Sunday), bd IETING THE CUPS on Tite GA ; ‘ania Minstrel Bare BRIGHTON Sia sheita? a S3ATS BEACH, ‘tie, “Parra Boas. ¥ sees

Other pages from this issue: