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a wane WAAR ARENA nh ha. Sa URES THE w EVENING # WORLD'S # HOME . MAGAZINE w ELIJAH IS COMING TO SAVE NEW YORK. |KEPT HER VOW 78 YEARS’. John Alexander Dowie, the Chicago Prophet, Who Is Worth $15,000.000. NEVER TO BECOME A BRIDE. (THIS STORY WILL END SATURDAY. THE SUBSTITUTE. BY WILL N. HARBEN, : Author of “Abner Daniel,” ‘Westerfelt,’’ &c, Printed by permission of Harper & Brothers. Copyright, 1903, by Harper & Brothers. SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTER. You bought the Charleston an’ Atlanta lots under eighty.” Hillyer in his hot youth killed Lynn Hambright | No vne spoke for a moment. Hanks was paying only slight god jeeonped the penalty vot the ..tiaunted by remorse! att. atio:. to the conversation, He was seldom Intereste! in man as a substitute for “Hambright. George Buckley is the son of a thieving moun-| what did not persorally concern him | tain farmer, who been sent to the penitentiary. Hillyer) +] jest want your Judgment, George. Jd Hijlyer, in the i _» REESE George, from his bed environment, educates hin ar |sroud tone man might have in addressurg a sttccoenttl eon, & drink in moments of despondency. George yields once| Buckley's eyes held the enger look of the young spectlator and Hillyer tolls him his story. George promises to Justify|as they met the old man’s excited stare. (et) GEESE RUSE “1 don't like to express myself,” he answered, finally. "If Fr) it were my money I would, but !t is yours.” Cee ea U “Well, yo're welcome to a fool's advice," put in Kenner. & Stery-Telling Crowd. deeply interested. “I've watched the market for twenty-odd HE next morning the open space at the side of the | year, an’ you'll hit the ceilin’ in this thing {f you don’t git warehouse was filled with mountain wagons. Those|out while you got a chance, Why, Mr. Hillyer, anybody can which contained chestnuts, ginseng, fruit, chickens, r eggs, butter or smoke-cured bacon had white canvas covers over them; the others were cotton wagons, upon which the Great, bulging dates were heaped. The year's crop was : ebundant, and Mttle of the product had been stained in| said Buckley. the Doll, for the ripening perfod had been dry and blessed ‘Thar, thar, you old skinfllnt,"” cried Hillyer, triumphantly, ii ove eum rice: as he slapped Kenner on the shoulder. “You cayn't scare | ‘Two citizens of Darley made the warehouse thelr busi-|that boy to death; he's got grit: he'll hold on till it thun- bese headavarters, using the desks without pay. Henry Ans @ tall, lank, married man about Afty-five years Of| «yeu retorted the cotton-buy n’ George will be lke ‘ ge, had a desk in ono corner of the office. He wore a! tne tittle doy a-hold o' the calf—he'll be yellin’ fer nome- | rf long brown beard, was dyspeptic, yellow-skinned and nerv-| cay to help ‘im ti loose. ous, He was a Confederate veteran, who had, after the war, batdaeastibdida) Deas, ataat tiie! deo and Govslonsd’s surprising capacity" Tor malang’ money our of| ,ullser's face was teaming: he aat down at hie dea, and. | the unfortunate section he had bravely fought for. He was| DunMe UP & Kelemrarh OC SGeorse on the arm. "Got king you for yore judgment. 1 nothing else for me to do but give it, the: If {t were my investment I'd hold on." @ well-to-do note-shaver, and soli farmers their yearly sup- 5 piles at an enormous profit. Anything from a cooking stove | D4° hie aenses at last," ne laughed; “he's goin’ to take that to @ yoke of oxen was considered good security when once | fer. described in the “iron-clad” mortgage note of which he was| Hillyer looked up with a smile, _ the inventor. He never wore a vest, and the pockets of his| “Goodale & Banks, Nashville, offered me ten thousand thin coat were always bulging with notes and accounts| bushels by this mornin's wire at a dollar five.a bushel,” he I'm goin’ to nab {t ‘fore Tarbell & Co. find out whar hich ‘he carried on his penson to have them ready at a| sald. | * ‘moment's notice when he ran across a delinquent. ‘The| it's at. {other citizen was Jim Kenner, a jovial cotton-buyer, a| Kenner whistled abftly, growted out something to himself, ‘bachelor about forty-five years of age, who was the very|and went out of the room. Hanks turned from the window | > ~— fe of the ittie circle. When he had business to tranmct | and Jeaned.on George'n desk, “Do you reckon yo're safe on \. he could be as long-faced and serious as any one else, but|that?" he asked, and when George replied in the aMrmativo at even then bis humor was apt to bubdle up and burst at the |he ald, slowly: “By gum! you make me want to tisk © , Ti, Moment no one was expecting it, Hla chlef amuse-| 1ktle myse'f, Somehow it aeema to me you could turn the wold Literalltg nk Leaks whom he earcasticaliy caifed | thing yore war, Jest with that dern atendy eye o' yore'n. pan ; for short. Kenner was telling | But I reekon I'll stay outside, I never was a hand to take vat résks, an’ it'll be fun to watch youuns tussle with ft.”* athe know my daddy sold a little farm o' his when I was} One morning, © few days later, Bascom Truitt came down ty-one an’ set me up In the retail grocery business. He| the main street of Darley wearing a long, dingy overcont lary App Jerhune ‘ much. But she told her father and For Three-Quarters of, mother that to treasure the young doe=!. a Century Mary Ann| tors memory would be the only purpose, of her life; that she had no wish to look Terhune Has Been |upon other men, and that she would ale! a unmarried. After that she never spoke| Loyal to the Lover] ce ter bereavement nor allowed any ene! to discuss |t before her, $ Who Was to Have When any one ventures to ask her, Made Her a Bride ee the romance of her youth the ittle old lady, sitting among the fam- When She Was 20. fing nasturtiums of her garden wherein the sunsets of the long dead years em to be imprisoned, turns her gentle, " a itiny garden at the rear of No. 25] almost sightless eyes and shakes her talked to me s0 much about the dead beats lyin’ in wait fer] and blowing a roll-call on an old army bugle. Under his suckers that 1 suspicioned even the preacher whar I attended] arm was a tattered Confederate fing. meetin’, Thar was a young storekeeper next door to me, Joe} ‘What's up to-day? Kenner asked him as he came into Gibbs, as sharp aya drier. He could multiply four figures by | the office and stood towering over the stove. four figures in his head an’ give you the answer in a minute.| ‘Nothin’ but a meetin’ o’ the veterans of our camp—the ‘He used to tell me who would do to credit an’ who wouldn't, | Joseph E. Johnston, sir. I'm goin’ up now to atick the flag an’ T always relied on his judgment. But one day an Irish-|on the gate at the courtvhouse. We intend to sen about man, Mike McGoodle, that had a job as switchman on the| who's goin’ to the reunion in Atlanta next epring; thar's a W, and ‘A., come in an’ wanted to open an account an' gtt hts| sight o’ the boys that want to go, but cayn't raise the supplies by the month. He said my goods was newer an'|scads, We'll chip in an’ eend the most deservin’, ef our fresher'n Fincher's, whar he'd been tradin’, an’ as that was| women folks go naked ¢his winter. Thar was @ damn lic * so I gladly tuck ‘im in. He paid up all right fer the fust| affoat in ¢he newspapers awhile back that some nigger went three months, but one pay day he come up missin’, an’ that| off after the war an’ got rich an’ come back home jest In sorter worried me, so I went in to Joe Gibbs's store an’ calied| time to buy ‘is old anaster a suit o' clothes an’ pay his way ‘tm to one side. ‘I want to know, Joe,’ said I, ‘ef Mike Mc-|to a reunion, Ef thar was a man in our camp that ud bit as > Ward strest, Orange, N. J., where she| head. vs lives with her niece, Mr3. Harvey] Mrs. Green, the niece with whom she Green, a iittle, bent olf lady of ninety-|has lived for the last sixteen years, three sits all day nodding in the sun-| Says that whon pressed, the old lady wt “whorls Jon reas arn wo'd gend ‘tm in tar an’ feathers, an’ on 2 ‘ Foeeaares eta 6 ae : light, heediess of hums.n interruption, breibad rg Seer, of ber early disap- ee it rail at Bod ear him “ex; the Ten Com- nd in his speeches to Zion\| but keenly interested in the ywing | Polntment. And her daughter, Mise ‘Mike McGoodle,’ says I, ‘the switchman on the W.| “Oh, come. off, Bi Kenner laughed, as he looked THE STORY OF ZION’S ° he devotes them collectively and indl- eee abectinee Les Green, in telling an Evening ‘World re- and A.’ around at George and Hillyer at their desks. ‘That na GREAT PROPHET.| ™ ane years Dowto has risen.from| vidually to “fire! fire! fre!" She is Mary Ann ‘Terhune, who| Porter of her great-aunt's fidelity to “Well, whet you want to know that fer?’ says Joe. old Yankee army overgoat you got on right now. You've the doubtful returns of street preach-| In appearance Dowte !s tall and larg. | seventy-four years ago, when abe was| fer youthful lover, assured him that supplies, | had it dyed with logwood, but I'd know tt by that long Told by ing to the letsurely opulence that be-| Ho tw six feet high and welghs 18/4 stalwart couniry gis, blooming as| Mise Terhune's deafness, which has cape.” longs to the head of Zion. In that time| pends. His hair and bean are griz- h ,| srown wpon her in recent years, ts @l- “"yoa, that's what ft fs," admitted Truitt, sheepiqhty.| NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH, [no nas estadiisned nimsett as prophet aimoat white, and he has a high, tre, Sowers wnlch now eurrouttan or] Way® mast pronounced when the sub- (8 L hile I was a The Yankee that owned it died at my Dove’ chat was any| Granddaughter of Horace Greeley.i/of 16200 people who give him one-| thin, rather disagrecable voice. Hie €8-| now Rrunswick, and regtatered a| que [niroguoed, | ' ‘Beca'se,’ says ‘he's owin’ me fer a mont! } > an’ I reckon he's fergdt it; you see, he's sech a good customer that I don't want to scare ‘Im off.” “Joe looked mighty quar about the eyes fer a minute, an’ kept gittin’ redder an’ redder like he wanted to laugh, but he| off in the war. It was the only ¢hini 5 tonth—the Bible tithe—of their weekly] tures are many and vioient, in keep! 4 g vary ‘women folks had fed an’ pampered ‘Im up tithe F y and vloient, in keeping akan eunialeavarsoaak er 3 aeiar squashed it out ° his face with his big hand an’ set | S0C0UnE An my aie al sorape in the, nelgnporiiood. CHICAGO Messiah—just think of it |earnings, and has made Zion City, whtch| with his wholly unrestrained speech, piste WEN ppc i Se aan at) aid Mise Greon, “my aunt, who wn on a tater barrel, an’ then all of a sudden he axed: | goin’ without the'rselves deci was 90 bad off. Is coming here to convert New |he founded, a thriving manufacturing| The cream of his followers, personally men Bey ad wworn never to marry, kept her golnied they put this coat away in camphor to keep the Ate femily and that she wouls never| Ota! Woussege Intect ie eee ‘*How much has that skunk stuck you fer?’ town, with a lace plant inrported bodily] selected by the prophet, {!s coming to rment eat up @ quarter's ‘York. prop! is ey “Btuck me? says I. ‘Do you know who I mean? I'm| moths, ou ee ee eae rer Winter {had a row with| #1o"calis himself Bijan. from’ Nottingham, Eng. at a cost of|New York to proselyte. For several [my ow ws oo to| 8% her sistera mareled and thelr be talkin’ about Mike McGoodle, the switchman at the W. and jen folks beck’se 1 wouldn't erat Baie panels et Hoe differs from the prophet of this! Cane $1,000,000, He as acquired a town| months advance members of Zion havo | | 2 ree is ane andere: ot |2'en grew up, Mary Ann—that is what eo 3] use on Micht, enue, Chi , and Leiped b name of old, who was fed by tavens, 1 ichigan avenue, oago, been at work in the Bronx, and their arlotivot tie beree but to we all call perave ewer, the. aie Every; an’ ted out laughin’ Over ant nook me, Ld) put lt Om: galt Tora | ee ‘4 $0,000 summer cottage on Lake Mich!-| efforts to make tb ‘An’ then Joe busted out laughin’, with his big yaller head fo! >, but they wouldn't meke a fo in being a multimllMonaire. t o rts to mal converts have no! een Keep {t faithfully through obliterating |she had bought for her wedding, q . ‘ied twenty ‘ewixt his lege, bobbin’ up an’ down like he was pumpin’ it| nin’ a dye-house. This dratted thing has sp tied Y! Ho is coming here with a brand new|gan. He has declared himself to be tho] unrewarded. But having established at hed a Sunday shirts fer me. T'other da when 1, Went in the religion all his, own. He founded the|reincarnation of the prophet Blilah and] himself in Chicago, the’ “prophet for |¥ears #8 Ofary Ann Terhune has kept 1 | Git ad 8 plack alik dress fi out of ‘im in big squirts, an’ I ‘lowed he never would let up. y rain, When he'd slacked a little he sald; ‘Kenner, I thought you | meet! house out of B etorts Coen corner." vy {Foligion and the religion founded the]@ divine healer and restorer. prof” Is anxious to annex New York [places her apart from her kind. | {her aunt gave her the biace dvese e promised to ax say advice ‘fore you sold anybody on time.} “Whar did you git that pbugie?” Kenner questioned. “| miitions. Dawie calls himself Founder and Sen. to his domain, and he knows that to do| It ell iene ee ad one hay ae eta ae: her trousseau. Bus ‘hat chap is the slickest artist that ever wore shoeleather;| know you never blowed It in : For Job _ ]eral Overseer of the Catholic Church In| so requires his personal presence and at-|name of hose oo to & dance with ded caeten | i " 7 Tred Langston had it when he was bu vohn Alexander Dowie, Scotch-| 71). nation of the Pr ¢ Bit-| tention, was responsible for Miss ‘Terhune's | 5’ . a, ih 8 young, man ot ra ven yoara old, He has| strange resolution has been fost. Gfrv.|/took the dress away from hi and logkea it up. Amd only after. wat till the old lady had TS bed uae We It tovme to.use in our veteran man, emigrant to New South Wales ¥ ign o' respect fer what jah, Restorer apd Messenger of the| Dowie ts fifty. adn't a sign DP 0 “possuxn- /8nd later to San Francisco, who in 1893 a wite and two children, a son and &|Green, with whom she lives, does not he did me to a turn, an’ he's done every man on this street. | sompany, an’ he i I'll bet b+ worked the whole Emeral’ Isle before he landed | he said his boys . . ft to call the dogs to is Covenant. here. You'll never git a smell o' that money. been through, an’ aed TBbon about it an’ | pitched his tent oppomte the Sixty-third ant, daughter. gone y aii his gals ted a gray 1 whe “ ns} i ember it, for ti t's ancient ro- ws ! vas a blow to me, but I had mettle, ‘Soe, |puntin: He Spat tno boys wouldn't let 4 stay latreet entrance of the World's Fair, at], Ho claims to speak by inspiration and] Dowie ‘calle himself the “fighter of | Tem! te 1 faders finding another to the closet where ‘ell, boys, it wa: mai ung it up on the wail, but the 16 ee One Bears bis followers accept his utterances as|the devil.” And the term devil inoludes | mance came to her as a tradition from |it waa concealed, my mother get it) estas bad. They toted iste thn It sprung a leak, dollars agin five that 1 git that money | thar. ‘They treated his canteen fend h' moonshine whiskey Chicago, and with bucksters and fakirs hol 80 ; | Newspapers, secret soctatles, todacco, al- er- | and go to the party. divine messages. They hold also that: | newspapers: her own mother, and the old lady her- | and ao to U1 : ‘ ® inside o' ten di ‘Done,’ says Joe. ‘I'll make that loss five 6 an’ shot more holes in shouted his wares—he offered to’heal you rs, dri Ast: ‘he habit wheels more fer you.’ an’ then they hung HP coun a red: fer an’ bugle with &|Yhile you walt—besides posrossing the| Disease can only be cured by Prayer) Of eating: pork ‘uggists and the havlt | sore ginos the day @he booked upon her| .. Unt sixteen years “One o' his customers come in at the front then, an’ I went | Yankee overcoat oh oe ney the thick. aT Overy ghe| Proud title of Bitjan the Restorer, has as be Utila St attached DAR CO rhe e diy teeta Hited ae Se ape “ee ai iroee een aieh shana oe back to my shebang an’ set down to think what I'd do. I “I reckon you wen! 5 5 In nine years of promoting salvafion | '* te inful, faith: 3 f t lowed ‘his name to er a . J ” ae Que sorter sorry I'd bot, beca’se T didn't think Joe Gibbs | cotton buyer, tentabvely | eq ¢er at Baker's Creek.” an-|accumulated, tt 1s sald, m private for-| Use of tobacco, spirits, attendance on fake Healing theory. While reading bt] sequght up on a farm near Dayton, | Was very proud of ber capacky to “aa Bi bout starved to death| tin estimated at. $10,060,000. theatres and oard playing and member-|meant to heal the wody ce well oe the | he met the young Brunawiok rhy-| "Never lace her fance’s death has! veteran. “Our boys was al ever bet on the losin’ side o' anything, I put on my hat | swered *) ‘on short ration: ' we had got hold of a lot o' fresh Reso! ghip in oath-bound secret socleties—par-| soul, and that bodily healing could be | sjct In the fi fter his|sbe gone out with a man or en BET] * walked down whar Mike was at work at the depot. As oa leat, 608 PerGionel told us We'd| Rejolce, therefore, unregenerate Goth- | IP a, siclan In the first summer after 60) eva ralsts eyes on ‘Im I seo he wasn't the foot his | better take #0 af the best with us, an’ me in another fel; |am, for Dowie 18 coming! Dowie, other-| (tioularly the Masonto order—are for- a omte wan more courecoon than mosi | saduation, and they fell in love, SAEs “Stieteated eke caowere eset , word, {t seemed to me ler was a-fillin’ our knapsacks when Alot ort | wise, the ‘prophet for profit," and still | biden “healers, inasmuch am nev frat, tried | A day had been sot for the wadding] ite warden hersell, and she seems to parser mete ie eee se rtace stzioht. “A. felier that has fesid co ie iooke 9’ share, Hae, {0 pads, Is agin Us anale |otherwise—take @ long breava!—founder| All Who would be anved must etve|the cure on himself. He suffered from |and every article of the bridal troumenu | love to eit and watch them grow. She Gellberately beat you out o' honest money an’ din meet | O'aw beer in my. kn peack,, anvhe throwed the meat dwn; | of a faith followed by 150,000 people, | one-tenth of all they possess and earns orm Of taman, Sroakie tat Gosde| purchased, when without warning the| [ite Rover ted Stor mays wat she haw L followse CoE Seas? AIL the Jiiies to sell us. We [leader and boss of the Theocratic party,|*? the General Overseer, to be used 88) reqq the Bible, the whole of one night, |young man was stricken with typhoid the’ most remarkable heart and lungs 5 was cured, fever and died within a few hours of|or any woman of her age he ever mn, fall the hurly-burly o° gettin’ yore eye like a soldier fightin’ a holy cause, an’ kin enjoy u i . ‘ ‘ . didn't have no | founder of Zion City, thirty-seven miles | %® Wills. prayed for a cure, the fun of it ,ls the highest salaried man in the devil's em he pi he wanted money; we didn't i to ve y ~ | They bellev a rist,|. In Sydney “Dr.” Dowle was twice : inated me, fer An’ offered to,swap beet for the p north of Chioago, and covering ten hey’ believe in God, in Jemus Christ, ane the thme appointed for the ceremony. | saw, I reckon the contact with him contaminated m money, away boot gway-back boss an’ loaded 6 ils Son, and in the salvation of tuoae| prisoned | for, “holding | temperance] "Ny 1M" Conon ne took her erlet | qc She, Nill, be, ninety-four next Sep meetings without a permit. who keep His commandments and the/iime he was an ordained Congregu-| quietly. She did not shriek or have will of His representative on earth| tional minister, but in 387% he let 0! nysterics, She did not even weep over- + ploy. m it ceanied to mo that I become the slyest cuss on earth in| (rade, of hen Me put tm oD aw beet an’ tol’ ‘im-ef he didn't |aquare miles; President. of the Zion &@ minute, an’ then a big idea popped into my head. I set | make tracks f. But, Lord! we didn’t . tne pies tain the thing had begun, |Clty Bank, of ‘the aion Land and In- mation on her birthday.” —- wi § " 7 i ble fer | hive ¢ime to eat ldn't | vestment Association, proprietor of the down by ‘tm on a pile o' crossties an’ talked socia Dave time teomaxod me what a battle was like, I couldn't] vestme n, prop ee that faith and ‘went to Melbourne and t ever’ , as 000—like a harry- ace | (Dowle), through the atonement on the] tM 4 4 Sateen e WE pate otha y nee Tees ee Ua ee ie | fell You aie Sealties. in Sine, ern a, ‘aweepin: Bay aren netactath eutprisan ey Gaiaternuciee Sia the forernner af Zion. meets OLD FURS BOUGHT owin' m $3 vr i¢ . ant she 1 J - . 7 + Were, Tiottim diane want te to ele out untlt Ladver-| ricky filly af avqrmhing Ji aq "eleantaown invortny mocks; | and editor of two papers 4 Ih, Delleve tn, the, erat rensareo:| “in IHS Dowie Hott Avuatralis, be euya.| EA excHaNGeD POR NEW. Amusements. ve into night round the Hill in the ain, aarp mies #ay because he was driven out by REMODELLING AND REPAIRS It’s oolat PROGTOR’S 79:2A¥, ac. bbe. AT SUMNER PRICES. HS hola TO-NIGHT, Res, 752 nimiand) ie lreleveriasiag: the avi orities. He landed in San tiged the fact, but I had Jus rot in a dig stock an’ was S910 | Whon they hore, tnt Mh oug bank o silver.” By gum! tt] “On to New York!” has been the czy y Persona who have talked with Dowle in the wholesale business, I'd got tired doalin’ in little | ooulant aoe Moths enough bayonet-p'ints displaved thar to lof Elijah for many weeks—to New York ‘ it pay better by looked like thar a our general about > . ae tne (kh prypeahee Reeae ae ak gait I'd been tant a OR a noes a onkwin’ tobacco | Which Dowie calls the stronghold Of|say that he is not an educated man, and palin tn bie quant ttee 278 1. set ae ae ia month | arttmpliain’ cover tia head: he was am cool asa cucumber: Satan, And that we may be converted|.nis eloquence which, spoken, drives his too busy to keep tab on ‘im, an’ didn’t kno Innked like he was jest tryin’ to study what would be the|ig Dowielsm, he has leased Madison] hearers to a frenay of enthusiasm, on was up—'now, Mike, When yore ready fer more supplies} sieht thing to do. (He wag 4 Aalsyi apart Pala a tne | Square Garden for his forces and early printed page seoms mere disjointed, feand o' God, Alinishty. o with his wife, Jane Dowie, Gladstone, and ‘his daughter, That son graduated in 19% University of Chicago. n 1890 that Dowie went to to figat the devil on Gis own he #aid. At first he estab- GUTLONN FUR CO. 93d St, | Continvous Vauteriiie The Great 791 Broadway, ar. Oth St., New York, | Taare: Villlem Friend & Co, Others, — Sth Ave. {ncn ee bic Patents ceaees ~Ra Eyeglass Clip, 50c. | 58th St.) sia" rites ta Rin. oe . pinch oF leave marks. onc '. come down an’ I'll nell you enough at one whack to last | iting a) Cd, Atoiriiinged in. At fust it come awkward, |in Octoder will begin the slege. violent abuse, - you three months an‘ save you 20 per cent,’ \ hut in a minute it wasn't Any more'n shootin’ at rabbits, ¥ y " Hahed healing homes, and on complaint > near Leno’ Pat Mi ‘The Man trom Mexteo."* Ail stock FON acd he wee bitiv my bait, fer’ he'd quit wantin’ to| We plucced nway an’ inughed an mado joker an’ had a| ie is coming with Jane Dowie, fis) when Dowle was at the Wortl's Falr| of the medical fraternity a special city APPS iy EP 15th St. fret aE Aerie. Daily ser ‘ 1 ove ood all-round time as long as it lasted, an’ then we got/wife, who will preside at social func-| he stood before his tent and shouted: ordinance was passed requiring that SMRMETEERE Gal peng .en'. onked di ecant yall ores, sy gertto that {Stled ane hemun te ‘retreat. “T wan shot through the left |tiona of the regenerate in a $1,00 gown,| “All doctors are lars and cowards. | medicino be used In them, Aa a remult | <—=———— tate oe HAMMBRSTRIN'S, 424 a, Diway & Tih ay. Fe OA ae et eee eee La tual e ied or reellant: Down eee Te tharog| with 300M rampant Dowleltes and| All druggists are low tricksters. Come] of repeated violation of this ordinance ARADISE ROOF GARDEN aft, Ive doen too tusy to come down ood an] rit Ruane van seame oy ourshors maid tort (9 “a cussed | win w choir of 9 acelected voices. | to me and be heated by the faith. Tam | Grea timer. and im 188 had. achieved Amusements. 12 BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS, y nan Lae Beek. Du nt b ’ { a New| the only man in the world preaching} such prominence that he made up bjs | —————————— 3 It ‘i A ant sine ome down after me.” said Y,| Dowie has said that though n y mi i P Ineluding the Mysterious AGA. gold; what I'm after {s to save laborin’ mem money; Tm | ine, an ne eT ere couple ot am did, an ari me up| York preaciers complain of empty pews | and practising the true word of God," | mind the time was ripe to found a%|MANHATTAN BEACH TO-DAY. night about 7 o'clock he come to my store with his hand ‘an’ they driv’ us up inva circle an’ put some forelen ea ; ts ‘ Madison Square Garden at 6% A, M.| with Dowle, all thieves. robbers andi made himself its head. TO-NIGHT) PAIN'S. POMPEU bhathing st fn his pocket. ‘I reckon,’ says he, ‘I'd better settle off the SUANOR Aro LU Seay Ey One Or moult Ue, haa balla abe te a old bill tust,’ ome ARIS DAN ceneeeatil Cite chan ad en eran tol hittin AT& (AND GRAND FIREWORKS ADM. (SO-H ¢ "Well, {t mought be better,’ I told ‘im, an’ he planked Thatta ened tranimant nil ea that mur fen tomean Amusements. Amusements. OS ae 7 HAST TY —ROSATI'S NAVAL RESERVE BAND== the spondoollx down on the counter. I raked !t in my Ye ar aru oft All so a Sa stuff in «: Weareriries Saeoreaee oe _ | “% cash-drawer an’ waited fer ‘im to talk, He drawed out a] “ier oyc(hed grup inthe hnenttal an’ fnelly exchanged us MAJBSTIC GRANY crRcLE. w Acadeny os Han ave st A tiving PL | Plat E NO. ghee, o° paper an’ begun to give his order, with the old | 1) ~™ eav, George. xhall we well? Theays all to you For Infants and Children, Speciaz Nations Moat Mov tay (Cabor Der BOSTONIANS ‘a 3aiinie? | 3t4 AND EAST sat ook in his eye, Gee whint he was a daisy. Tt was a barrel | "Not yeh” eala Gedre® rovitentty The Kind You Have Always Bought ot MONTH 2° INNEW YORK. | ringette ROBIN HOOD. Two Extra Performances seb, 81 SAL i @’ this, a sack o’ that, a case o' this, an’ so on, down about Ad Wed. Mat. LABOR DAY. ATLANT! GARDEN, Bowe! Banal ot R Herbert Bros, V ore te Ht A Y writin’ paper. @ foot o' writin’ pape ton, W. J. Mills, The Wilsoos, Eviya Parmer, FCONEVISLAND | Bin tsnets Racor” ES PS *. f.' An I went off an’ left ‘im. That * OOF GA! @ laborin’ man myso the bank, They had ketched a tow more of our boys on the| ae 10 A, M. there will bo thousands in| Personal enemies and foes to Zion are, | Christian catmolis couren of Zion ana |e? Shannon’s gett, Band, PABST Sawdon y: * HOt oar Cans MATINER UANOM DAY. SE 00. Mats, Wel.@ Sat.2. Ev.8.15 Prices 25.60 SUPERSTITIOUS SIAMESE. _ . | Besrs.tte Must be @olo’ <0 open a store, Mike?’ sald I, ‘No,’ says : ; a Mc . hh Sg, Theatre, near 6th ar. Stet Wed. Bat. ? he, ‘¥Xenc Ym afgee is the redustion, that's all—jeat the! .“The Siamese 9 ‘© & very superstitious people,” writes of y Ypl fyi z A duction, Ernest Young. “They have many peculiar explanationa of PASTOR’S. WEEK NAT M. WILLS ENDERSONS Cortinvous Modern CONEY’S natural phenomena, ‘THunder, for fatance, {s ‘the sky ery. | eee — In tie ow asic! comedy, A SON OF RST, CH irri BOSTOCK S krasa Ing.’ They Delleve that in tho realms above ts a horrible George Evann, Kelly and Violette, Goomeaciagtaton Davy siartsee Mes otf | UAV URS Ga eg en | t 07th, data Mon., Wed. ‘Pah, The Charity Nurse, ters, Gus Will!ama, Yarht Race Pi « "Yes, Nase ‘Didn't I tell you my new scheme was ta| slant, whose wife hage violent and uncertain temper. When well fer spot cash? I couldn't do a wholesale business on a | they quarrel the echo of his voice comes in long, rolling not eredit, Mike,’ cays Ie ‘Why, you know that, from the clouds. If he is very angry he throws his hatchet BROADWAY THEATRE, 41st & D'way, a “He didn't say nothin’, He looked so sot Yack thet I|#t his unruly spouse, and when the ponderous weapon strikes | Bree Sie Males Weta Bae 3:18 be derned ef I wasn't sorry fer ‘Im, He give me one|tie fleo- of heaven the thunderbolt falls through and comen | S00Fes 4 Leglttmate Success—Lve. Suv ‘straight look Uke ho was wonderin’ whar I was born, an’ |(o carth, Falling stars are nccounted for by the tact that tle {2%S,C:, Fianers production of ve Comle Opera turned an’ walked right out o' the store. But you tet I | angels occasionally indulge in toren throwing at one another > r Tea) “had his respect, He bowed to me an’ looked knowin’ ever'| When thexe same beings all insist upon getting into (he bath tme I pased ‘im, That reminds me of the time—but, Lord, | at once the water splashes over the side, and it rain he 1 cayn't set here tellin’ yarns all day I'm goin’ to handle | winds that sigh in the night are the voices of baties that @ signt o' cotton ‘fore sundown; it's rollin’ in Uke @ circus} have lost thelr way in thelr travels to the ‘and beyon ‘ha. AMERICAN, parade.” grave. When a Siamese dies he is not buried, but his corres. i Hillyer spread a telegram on George's ledger. “Tarbell &| fully dressed then wrapped in a winding sheet, is placed 8. $ EAGLE NIOHT THURSDAY. Amusements. Ma LUNA INDIAN SUMMER PARK CARNIVALS. SEPT.7 TO OCT. MATINEE TO-MORROW 250. 50. |DALY’S OWT Ansan ' (RAND—GILVER LIPPER |_ 3 LITTLE MAIDS Ses. | WINER’S [NE EE | pesca taste era poe een ee' | GaRRICK THPATRE, wis B, & Weey.| VANITY Fant BURLESQUI A PRINCESS of KENSINGTON, [NEWBY {po tites, To-Day., | MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, so so: | soy'Cice.” VIVIAN'S vam JAMES T. POWERS, | |DEWEY IRWIN'S BiG SOM, HON SHOW "8% ee Rags to Riches | tan as ee x tags to Ric = AE EARL OF PAWTUCKET. cage BEATS NOW 3 HE STYGPS POR 1804-4, THE EVIL MEN Do| RETRUr..!s ads at offer a doliag five @ bushel fer our entire lot o' wheat,”| in a ae Tiga urn. A tube tp plucel in his so Wednenday at 2 o'Clock Sharp, KEii hs Beer Bust silow Ix TONS meu! through & mixture of quicksilver ar¢ honey, oo ~ | ai ‘. WILLIAM Puree seta tee betes aA tae Gor AIT tes poke an IROL Ae Od’ yale, “ent ie {WEST OTe SHOP OUnr. ‘ aot ‘ ft 1s burned, and the aghes CLINE, "45795": jAtognarn. 9 che mr ike. % noes %, ae