The evening world. Newspaper, August 12, 1903, Page 11

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“or fo SRR ——— | — ~ } “ re * 7-4 v, . . . , rn - a *¢ ‘ « * ° | — all len pint are oa VONDAV AV PVR OTe “BANA ) J UGGLING. ‘ CHE NEW ' tT i 16 FP (| RD q r rURN. ; ; ye f The ‘ | 4 lt Took Pipes vf Learn to Pla iv Toetraments at Onee | { —_ ; By fta/) Cajne ) Arn ("ts Crriatian" And he ternal City.” A Peowte, Murcer, Lave Area AT aan | | ' . atta iste gt buen asd gy ) a | e Tata aa fo ; : i ea * srt ie te gt ini vo geet ans wb rt ine ge da gt erie : one pacer ack Me ria a ‘eyo ri Becta ier : | ee ae Itatote Seretnen. nd Tan Rup Inte 1p the ol ‘a heart that | where would the walked on and on with wely the wide, Dtlr nd iow to was prob prom Then he sloroun re iequivecal an he deap sereon the blnok mere d, too, were the | dulating plains @ wide Wertern ry light of the | 1 for his share 1 Wythburr BUI yeu ons the mist sun ed about and walked back, with the flush of und sony face. His lantern, et extinguistied 4 small and feeble in tis her night war breaking to another day; another and as ot ner would yet break, and all the desolation of a heart, flowing to theetant that otis | che fun of many hearty—what waa st before Nature's) un- ekemni that those (sWerving and unalterable course! The phantasms of a night HEALY ed Dy A prodigious | at had answered to his hallucinations were as noting to what was for a withering | the realities of a morning whose cruel light showed him only ‘At this appar |More plainly the blackness of nis despair. ‘Phe sentiments of horror whioh now possessed him were side, sie Was Seay in a temper (primed t of the duy tu a Condition o: the highest more terrible because more spiritual than before, To know fell fro no gepulture! The !dea was horrible in itseif; horrible in its association with an old Hebrew curse more remorseless aan (he curse of Cain, most horrible of ail, because ‘o Kaiph's heightened tmagination ft seemed to be @ symbol— a symbol of retribution past and to come it was as he h thought, as be had half thought; and was on him—on him of all others, and on others through him. Having once voncelved this idea in its reoetved the impress of it she said, “tn a botoa on't, the d don't theo Ko tas daft a: vlathersk: bumman about Garth w a i by surprise this time. uacked ‘a way by t ervon he meant to attack, to be unved the injurer grim totality, having once iu Wao he thought !ad Injured him, sufficed to staxger the [tom the violence and suddenness of a ghastly ocourre Raiph seemed to wateh with complete gelf-consclousness the Ulucksmicns dull é nay, he 1, when ho had recovered his breath; | action of the morbid fancy on his mind, He traced it back 4 to» the moment when the truth (or what seemed to him the “who's the Judas?” That's a ‘batable point, 1 recko 6 point, 1 reckon, truth) touching ve murder of Wilaon had been flashed upon Gise! erie vitiout Ung to ‘compre Itoance and—like a true woman-—not | him by @ look from Shmeon Stagg. He traced it yet further ming that a charge of disloyalty could be advanced | ack to that night at Dunbar, when, at the prompting of at her; “glas! giss!”—the call to swine—"thoo'rt thy | What he mistook for marcy, he had saved the life of the enemy that was to wreck his own life and the lives of all mother’s aWa son—the witeh. Utterly deprived of speech by this masaenly outburst of vituperation, Mr, Garth loat all that selr-contro! wach his quieter Sudgmont had recognized us proowdly necessary to the safety of his own person, White with r, he raised that were near and dear to him. To his tortured goul guilt ssomed everywhere about him—whether his own guilt or the Bullt of others, was still the same; and now God had given ar banSo-playing to banjo-juz- conducted a music study in Johannes-| two banjos on the floor, he causes them burg, South Africa, some years ago.|to rotate ai nm great speed wht! vais dread disaster for a sign that vengeance was His, that Bling eat his hand to strike Liza. who thereupon drew up, und. giving |fetribution had come and Soult cone snagination—th soit hn ban: nam him & vigorous slap on each cheek, sald: “Keep thy neb| Was i the dream of an overpows rie Hea es so, Ox bareres i ‘ a Got of that, thoo bammeler, and go fracht with Mobile, An-|tigatmare of distempered fancy? Yer 1¢ would not be uly Ce) ‘i jt 3 ety eal vatinilowtoe this reacts 1a which one derson; 1 hear he dinged thee ower, thoo sow-faced ‘un.’ Shaken off, It had bathed the whole world in another light— Becesad ear antall have Tea EEUCE | en oemecnl variation of this feat ds one in which one sa ie, mention’ of tis name, werved ae a timely rominder | & furl Tight ate ae eea, ae per ave long ©) ie bean to ex t {n juegting banjo remta the upper end of the Mel saerthy dropped his arm and rode away, t- | Ralph wal over the fells, snatching a gs of | or otherwise manipulated a single ban.o| band pon th 0 ota m a tering savugely under his breath, yma ather, piucking the slim boughs from the bushes, paus!ng | white playing it Put Fears for anaes! Leas y eee one direclisey, es e a the sees Weee tine “Don't come hankerin’ ater me again,” cried Liza after | mes to look long at a stone or a river or @ path that). nl oo 1 ane SSE te sitici caveami oe mae a nishing gure. Eten: seamed to be as familiar to him aa the patm of his | Franco Piper to juggle four banjos and years to perfecting this peculiar feature 18 being played ro was lich commotion at the Re@ Lion that night. | innd, and had suddenly become sircnke and a mystery. The to piay m them at the same time. This) of his art began touring the Huropean Another of his tricks ls Juggling four ts even harder than tt musto halls. | banjos while ho plays a tune, Still ean- he “majster men" who had left the funeral procession at |saadow of & supernatural pre: Watendiath made thelr way first to tho village Inn, intend-| | ‘Taroughout that day he walked about the fens, looking |}, Nt of ing to spend there the hours that. must intervene before the| for the rideriess hon je end collins: to tt, but neither expect: he beneft of ami i urn mourners to Bhoulthwaite They had not been | ing ty see nor to hear it. He saw nce and again the people | may care to “study up" ban!o-juKsllné | comment tne uses ang. . Tong seated over thelr pota when the presnature arrival of | of Wytvbuin abroad on the errand that kept him abroad. | tho gotlowing pointers are given feecendc lA acl edatiranen at Mite, peel ta mone Wattle revel rane mo ted Jonn Jackson and some of the other dalesmen who had been | but they never came within hall, and o stifing sense of | 1. yop are RSENS nanisos st what Mr | aif across the stage, resting s upon the shame Kept him apart, none the less that he knew hot where- 0) en Piper wishes to deny, since he has) fvor, playing it the while. Hammer: given too much time and hard preatioe| Mr. Piper says it took him a great cur banjolsta who His clever tricks have occasioned some other clever feat is that of causing a on the way to Gosforth led to an explanation ‘of the s ‘all the same that they | gler, now appearing a Gisaster that had occurred on the pass. The consternation |{ore such shame should fait on him, Of the frequenters of the Ned Lion, as of the citizens of j Anew not that it had fallen paradise Roof Ga ust three y é : : He ythbuene eereeeliy” wees ak Croat aa thei eifarine hie! |e tNe gay would come waen all men would sce that God's | {way tor. sume: teece to the perfeoting of his specialty to be| deal longer to fing out how to produce ing so terrible had happened wituin thotr experience. “They {hand was on him. in witch to perfect one of the liscredited at this Inte day, what he called an “organ tone” for the ‘ ey [hand wad on Wor when that day does indeed come, then ali| curious musical feata which stamp ls ‘The trick, whlch took three years to| banjo than it did fo learn to play it had the old Cumbrian horror of an accident to the dead. No \ 7 Prospect was dearer to thelr hope than that of a happy death, | men halt Sis0 ace that wham God's hand resis on has God | act as out of the ordinary, Mr. Piper perfect, t# that In which, after placing ln speaking of the diMoutty encountered @ on his right han ‘ in juggling and playing banjos at the nd no refloction was more comforting than that one day they would have a suitable burial. Nelther of these nad Angus| when the darkness was closing in upon @ seoond night, same time he says: had. A violent end and no grave at all; nothing buc this Gescending High Beat toward phoultawaite oss: = i ; Wild ride across the fells that inight last ror days or months, | jenna lnm layged the juded dog, Waking « few Da eats " There was surely something of fate tn it. Grooping head aud tall, wren lying for @ minute and rising 5 ‘You must remember thet in jugsiing Ponbig Ange rae turned in late In the evening. to walk langwidly agai. Indian clubs they are hollow inside and 1 eere 8 BOrTY Mone coe i ena as ho entered: 4] When he reached the old house Ralph was prepared for Wwolgh but a few ounces each, although His eyes were aflame; he rose and eat, walked & Tacston tye UR ats at Punter aieaater teh sinsat ar had few vhey look heavy. Whereas, a banjo will And stood, pusscd his fingers repeatedly through his short, | {urther results fur which rat ePt dS SSAA ela) not stand the strain of the strings if it i in Kitenen and another In that room above ngs { Laer epar thierry: weighs leas than three pounds, and when juggling three or four articles the riy beard, slappod Nis nd r ee ea ee eae ee eng Oain for | where lately his father had iain. When Ralph entered Willy weight is the criterion by which to judge the alti] of the juggler. with a wild effort at a forced and unnaturat gayety. “it's all along of my being dintess, so tt ts," he muttered, Bee pant Cc re the carey ERT at TOR ERATOR RO itn lcieee: | an WWhat ol inother Said faipn huskily, his eyes travers- Wok to fileht, and of how’ Ralph leaped’ on to the young |!"8 the kichen, his hand on Hals “Then, again, an Indian club may be] come down exactly right each time, in| and plays six danjos ate dime Ge ams horse in pursiit of it, a ae apse Per ea Lee they wal thrown in the air, and ao matter how | order to secure the proper hold, so that| not been sbte to use more thas four z often it twists it will come down in| the string may be picked with the little| in his act at Hammerstein's, owing to jus: the same position, and it doem’t| finger.” the number of electric lights whieh matter what part of the handle alighta| On some stages, where the lighting ta | shine directty in his eyes in the juggler's hand. But a beajo must| suitably arranged, Mr. Piper juggies|sixdanjo act ao imposalbility here ughed | fay ‘was seated before the fire, his hand in the hand oi Kotha, who sut by his side, On every feature of his pallu lace were traces of ftert va shoulder. "We toward the stair AML you, Robble—how's that, man?" “If Vd c d the young horse at thé bottom of the hill | {hat led to the floor abov a there would have been no mare to run away—none,”* ‘There ahe jay, the mother of these stricken sons, uncon “It's like that were thy orders, Uhen, Robbi eclous of vneir sufferings, unconscious of ler own, Yet she ere that, dainn me, 4« were—the schoolmaster there, | lived. Since the terrivié inteiugence had reaosed her ot t he knows | what had happened on the pass she had remained in this Into sucn torpidity ld him to do {t; I heard him myself," said |s.ate of insensvility, belng stricke: “Rap Monsey, from his place In the chimney-nook, where’he sat |(he sdock of the occurrence. Wiily's tears fell bereft of his sportive spirit, yet quite obtivious of the im-]| stood by the bed, and his anguish was subdued th RSS 2 EO Amusements. / Portant part which bis own loquacly had unwittingly | quiewr mood, Raiph’s sufferings were not so eusily fathom D Played in the direful tragedy. Hot Ue? stooped und kissed the unconscious tace with MAN AF HATTAN BEACH TO-DAY BEACH TO-DAY xing a muscle in the setiied fixity of his own he returned to the kitchen He sat on “But never bother now. Bring me more ale, mistress; | re quick now, my lass." Leaving hia brother Jn the room, d Robbie had risen once more and was tramping across the| “Kotha was hastiy preparing supper for htm. Save the Babies. ‘| SHANNON'S 232 BAND. NFANT MORTALITY i something frightful. We can hardly realize that | PAIN’S POMPEI floor in his excitement. the settle that was drawn up before the fire. “What's come over Robbie?" whispered Reuben to Mat- “Rotha,” said Ralph at length, “this will be my last night thew. "What fettle's he in? doldrums, I reckon." ai the Moss; the last fur a iong time al least—I didn’: e. of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., aud GRAND FIREWORKS, ‘Tak’ na note on hit, Robbie's’ going off agen, I'm] peot to be dere to-night, Can you promiso one thing, u or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven £0 GRANDEST SPATTAQLE. cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and bogliale peters k afeart, He's broken loose, This awesome thing 1s Ike to Won't be hard for you now—not very hard how. turn the lad's heed, for he'd the say ower it all Preset U “ lass, quick with the ale. “fvnat is It, Ralph?” said Rotha in a voice of apprehen- “Ye've had’ eneuf, Robbie," said the hostess. “Go thy | pion, ways home, Thou findst tho beer very heady, lad, Thou)” that you won't leave the old house while my so tonmgnt iase; Tt must have some to-night, that Imus.” | moter lives. ho} he 1 “To-night, lass; 1 must hi some to » that er head. She thought of t) “Robbie ia going ‘of agen, surely,” “whispered Reuben, |g @ih® crepes Mek Of itm who should five th It's a sorry sight when yon lad tak’e xo the drink. He'll qivined the wought that was written jn her face be |Geed-drunk, soon. He's tair datt |. Get him to, come here if you oan," Le sald. re 5 Hd nowt to him,” answered Matthew. nal 1 t |. “T'm afraid he would Se ching was) tar advanced when) the dalenen resell agite Mowe tor ones Scelmen te to-neet." t. LORD fu neither will he return to Fornside. Promise me It wan not at Arse iat Ralph was a prey to sentiments | {0o, #nort—promise me that yo! of horror. His physical energy. dominated all emotion and |P°MS. a.4. guty ts to him," sald Rotha, with her hand to left no room tor terrible Imaginings—no room for a full real- | ner eve jgation df what had occurred, ‘That which appeared to para-|"*S,°¥*#. ., 14 paiph, with a perceptible tremulousness of lyse the others—that whioh by its ghastly reality appeared to | voice, “1 will ask you ‘another question, and, perhaps—wh fe them to the earth with the rigidity of atone—endowed | Vole, dM eperhaps it is harder for'me to ask than for him with a power that seemed all but superhuman, and in-|$00 to aeawer; but you Will answer me, Do you think you along the long range of the pikes, In and out of their deop | SAN 4hOw Bon, ere ethas been by, Live marked him cavernous alcoves. up and down their hillocke and hol: lio, You've been strength and solecs to him in this (rouble ey are fifteen | ‘We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a jority of these precious lives, Neither do we hesitate to say that many ; of these infantile deaths are oocasioned by the use of narcotic preparations, | HAMMERSTRIN'S, 424 St, way & THA Drops, tinctures and wothing syrups sold for children’s complaints contain | TY AR A'DISE ROOF GARDEN more ‘or less opium or morphine, They are, in considerablo quantities, : deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and | 12 BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS, to congestions, sickness, death, Castorla operates exactly the reverse, but Juding The My you must see that it bears tho signaturo of Chas, H, Fletcher, Castoria Extrare: i 16 People. causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the OF pores of the skin and allays fuver. QAM: S 5 c Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of y Ldedrk fin WW) ‘E J: Nugent, Mer PES RS | ROTA TIS NAVAL RESERVE BAND — ————— Enna vie Amusements. Amusements. ia ua PROCTORSYEReY Fea NADISON SQUARE GARDEN ee pe is Coo a Si [Wan/ON SUUBREGAREN eB AST OR'S Tontinu Vaudeville. Lillie ra KS. | aint sac lows, over ‘boulders, over streams, across ghy! neh ; you think, the | Riniing soubha and’ wit a dciashne tain overhead, “Aicone | DO, you think If he. loved you, oe te Ne Bie cre! | es TALAITTH G, OBORC TAN & MACK, MeMAH moment he caught sight of the mare.and her burden as they | You could love Him? | her "1 ak, ‘It ta not Oth A | } ) Sw C00 ‘ passed awittiy over a protruding headland which waa capped |&04, with parted lips seemed prepay fo aie ou aa tor him, Me, WW VENICE IN NEW YORK | = From his point of view by pothing but the mist and the acy, | for, hem, Task. God knows B8th St.) GAs nis Hees +} Moms Wet General Adaiiwsten, OC, Knabt Piano Use ¥3} and perhaps—perhans. Tsay. mont of ‘ali—tor myself.” rn Then he followed on the harder; but faster than his horse | “At, Perh ana Rico with luminous eyes in which ‘you dd. Da‘ly Bar could gallop over the pathles# mountains galloped the horse w 6 gf which he wea in purgult, He oould ee the mare no mo there wos neither feat n0r aii do a0 now ju 125th St. ers monion 8 ROCKAWAY BEACH, 22% CONEY ISLAND ri th i Bo) he might have spoken to a fath meri THEATRE, » Wa ama When he reached the extremity of the darke range and | wadiy Pere te eed we aeeom Synom no. secret of her soul MAJESTIC 284%? cMRGeE, wey 2 see ee | HATS DAILY, Marke Dressler, lmro Fox, ATING ROOF GARDEN. Sat & M'Intyre & Heath, |g. . High Cinss Vaudeville, stood at that point where Great Howe fringes downward to | Whom aye revertions fa crin silence. Not until now, not 08. i " i tide af Wbaipikens Once arene ae inrandrodt ot caverns unul he had heapd her last word, had he realired what sit SE coves "Up kod down tillocks and hallows, over oourds | Would cost him to hear i, The agony of ete cmade it tor Gin, ‘over streams asrtay rivera, chrouph enwing elousne, |erusbed into chat abort tnoment, | Dut he te. Tavern up Ghd oun with a drinsiing rain overhend, “The fare was (pimself, and now at length |t war Over te ition, To may Rowhere to bo see Perhaps {t was a link in che chain of betribution. | To sa Mien he rderon to where the three ranges of the moun- | Hothing of his own, love perhaps it, mount be Nancie nay tains meet at Angle Tarn, and taking first the range nearest | dumb atonement, 20 Me at tin ould soften his exile the pikes he rode under the Bow Fell, past the Crinkle | (Be, love of his brother patag: {Chad deen his Crags to the Threeshire Stones at the footof Greyfriars, | With thoughts of Fr enee Nor 8 wrong it nad been his Bare, he mountahie slope downward to the Duadon Valley: | £812 10 40 to Oe a ae ieee of wubdued passion in hls the mare was nowhere to be seen. § fly pe PRirEtive (ustnet tein ial Cap ( ees Returning then to the Anglo Tarn, he followed the only DY, be said quiatiy,| Vand he will HIS blouse waist is rendered doubly effective by the triple capes at the front, . 7o remaining range past the Pike of Stickle until he looked into fs Toe eit ne pannot do a0 yet; and, mean which are extended to give a sto ow yoke is also a feature | ULSI ALLEN att Scay a ares | the black dept 3 of the Dungeon Ghyll. And still the mare it lives—while I am gon od “knows and a noteworthy one, The mode! is made of leafgreen Loulsine silk, with THE EARL OF PAWTUCKET. | yas pay Pe. agen, Ye ures behind her a wh ‘wll ay from the old home=I msk you now | it yoke of ecru lace, but al gown anit waist materials are appropriate, The lining phd Fah A Beam UME be htenaon that easter Is snugly ‘(ied and closes at the centre front. On it are arranged the yoke and Pe ROOF GARDEN—50c ho corner ticked out loud tn the allence | th» waist, which closes, tha yoke at tho shoulder seam, the Walst at the front i tha and the slow breathing OF the) veneath the tabs. ‘The quanilty of mateHal-required for the medium size is Ot Japan by Night -cattonersO10YO tn wi of all-over Jace, 97 LIPTON NIGHT, SOUVENIRS * Nix " h TONE SE he dootertnat lite est with FRED A,S ip ni ecrow. —_ . ; sea roiscr awn | PNe Chri LUNA, “Fier paxn coscunrs | reices26.60,75,81 Mata Tey @/Aat. PARK, iets _ 1GRAND OP Ri HOUS Kuol ARD ST. NICHOLAS °"itmiuea “LAPAYETIE” | “CHARMION WMG AcTs—10 1,000 SRATS. Bie, hy Seats 1 to oHT.

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