The evening world. Newspaper, March 30, 1904, Page 15

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OTT eS Z w& THE »# EVENING # WORLD'S . HOME # MAGAZINE. SCOTT TTT WEDNESDAY &VENING, MARCH 30, 1906 Dorothy :Dix, The Most Famous Woman Humofist in Amer- ica, Writes for The Evening World. The Hand-Made Beauty. HE avcount of the man who has just called off his engagement to A young -woman on the grounds that he g00-g00 eye with which she had en- @nared him was a crockery optic Is oal- @ulated to carry alarm to every femi- Bine breast, It is an insidious attack upon woman's most cherished prerogi- tive, that of outwitting natute and ar- wiving by whatever road she choos: Gnd if this 1s to be questione 2 the woman who fs beautiful. though ‘ugly, is to be calied to a strict account of the means by which tho miracle is attained—the majority of maidens can Gee thelr finish in the spinsters' retreat. ‘There has always been moro or less ef @ prejudice against the man who Fesorted to artificial means to !m- Prove his appearance, but on the con- trary, custom and tradition have ever held that a woman's looks were her bwn trade secret that she was under no obligations to give away to the pud- lic. Indeed, so far from discouraging Abe efforts of the woman whose com- plexton comes in a box and whose fig- Ure iz only hers by right of purchase, We have accounted it unto her for righteousness and haye felt that among the real benefactors of humanity was she who could make two hurs appear upon the head where only one appeared before, ‘This {s an eminently sane and reason- e@ble view of the situation and one that mug appeal to every one with the slightest aesthetic sense, One shudders to think of what the world would be, peopled with women as ugly Recall the womén— or lanky A White and HITE and green 4s the most pleas- img combination for the Easter luncheon, and the color acheme ex- pressed in floral ‘decorations of Easter Uilles for a centre-piece and individual bouquets of Illes of the valley for each guest massed about its base and carried to each plate by @ narrow green satin wibbon should also extend to the menu tésolf. i ‘A good menu which carries out this {dea te as follows: Little Neck Clams. Cream Puree, Chicken Timbales. Flaked Potatoes. Tomato Salad. Cream Cheese. twphe clams should be served on the half shell on ice, a wreath of water- gress encircling each plate. ‘The cream puree,is mede as follows: Botl six medium-sized potatoes until mealy anf press them througt a colan- der. Heat one quart of milk in a dui- ble boiler, add the strained potatoes and bot! ten minuteg; then strain through a aleve and return to the double boiler: add one-half a teaspoonful of butter and weason with celery salt to taste. To Easter Luncheon. skeletons, with wisps of dried hair and leathery skins—that one has met on the frontiers or In femote provincial communities far from the corsetiere, tho golffeur, the dressmaker and the masseuse, und compare them with the daily promenade of feminine pulchri- tude along our strects, What a change is there, countrym| ‘That wo owo thie debt of beauty to the straight front, and cotton batting and peroxide bottle is not a thing to cavil at, but to rejoice in, The wom- en that are beautiful by nature will be beautiful still, but the number of these is so small that only the most fortunate of men could count on secur- ing one of these prizés for his own. When to these God-made beauties are added the hand-made beauties, how- ever, it not only euormously increases the general average of feriinine good looks, but makes {t possible for every man to marry the girl that he ts con- vinced Is an understudy to Venus. Fortunately few men in love are analytical. They are content to ad- mire _ woman en masse, as it were, and if she appears beautiful to them to let it go at that without asking for de- tails, Thus many happy marriages en- sue, but if maiden in the future ts going to have to prove that the tender, curling, golden tress that her love-lorn swain wears next his heart was cut from her own head, {nstead of her switch; if she 1s to be accused of having conspired with her dressmaker with intent to decelve because she exhibits a taper waist and a llssome figure in- stead of one like a meal sack; above wll if, because when a man gets home at night he finds some of the roses that erstwhile bloomed on beauty’s cheek fiowering on his cont Japel, it is suffl- cient cause to break an engagement, It takes no prophet to forsee that the land will be full of the wailings of broken- hearted and forsaken damsels afd the nolse of breach of promise suits, As for. the man who seeks to break hin engagement because his sweetheart bewltched him with glances from her glace eye, he doesn't know a good thing when he sees it. He should go down on his kni fasting, and thank heaven for his Tuck in having won such a treasure, for there {s no other woman go fascinating as the ugly woman who can hypnotize us into thinking her beautiful. DOROTHY DIX. Green ., Uttle very finely minced parsley. For the ohicken timbales: Boil two chickens until tender. Skin, bone and mince the meat very fine, using only the white meat. Beat four yolks of exas with a tablespoonful of butter to & cream, then add one-half e@ cup of chopped mushrooms, a pinch of salt, white peppér to taste and one-half pint of cream, Mix this well into the chick- en and add the stifly beaten whites of the four exgs. is ‘Use little china timbale moulds for baking. and put a single whole mush- room at the bottom of each, ‘Then fill the moulds with the mixture, Dlace them in a nan of boiling water, cover with another pan and bake in @ moderate oven for three-quarters of an hour. Berye with a sauce made of mushroom Mquor thickened with a little flour dis- solved tn milk. For ‘the Easter pudding grate suf- ficient fresh cocoanut to fill a coffee cup, mix with it two rounded table- spoonfuls of powdered sugar, the white of one egg and a tablespoontul of va- nilla extract, Stir in lightly one cupful of stiMfy whipped cream, Put a slice of angel cake on each plate and heap upon it some of the cocoanut cream, sprinkling the whole with powdered pistachio nuts. Serve white and green bonbons and each plate of soup add a tablespoonful of whipped cream § table, and over the cream sprinkle a as it goes to the) finish up with cups of coffee heaped with whipped cream, Tie the handles ofthe gups with pale green ribbon. BF. GRANT, of Salt Lake City, has a curious relic in a manu- * script formerly belonging to his Inele Joshua, back In Illinois, and writ- ten in 189. The paper is entitled, "The pack of cards form. into an almanac and also prayer book." Under the sub- title of “The Almahac” it says: ‘There @re four sults in the pack—that tnti- mates the four quarters in the year. As thers are thirteen cards in each sult, #0 there are also the same number of ‘weeks in each quarter, There are also the same number of lunations; twelve signs of the zodiac, through which the gun steers his diurnal course in one year, There are fifty-two cards In a pack, that directly answers the number of weeks {n a year; there are also 365 spots, as many as there are days in the year, These multiply by twenty-four and sixty and you will have the exact pumber of hours and nitnutes in a year, —S A COIFFEUR OF OTHER DAYS. Prayers and Seasons in Playing Camis. | religious—Christianity, “The Frayer Book—Look unon the four sults as reptesenting the four prevailing Judaism, Ma- hometanism and Paganism. The twelve court cards remind me of the twelve patriarchs, from whom sprang the twelve tribes of Isracl, the twelve Apostles, the twelve articles of the j Christian faith. The king reminds me of the allegiance due his majesty. The ten-spot orings to my recollection the ten cities in the plain of Bodom and Gomorrah, destroyed by fire and brim- stone from heaven; then ten plagues of Egypt, the ten commandments, the ten tribes out off for thelr vice. The nine reminds me of the nine muses, the nino|* noble orders among men. The eight reminds me of the elght beatitudes, the eight attitudes, the eight persons saved in Noah's ark, the eight persons men- tioned in the Scripture to be ‘released from death to life. “The seven reminds me of the seven ad- ministering spirits that stand before the throne of God, the seven seals where- with the book of life is sealed, the seven liberal arts and sciences given by God for the instruction of man, the seven wonders of the world,. The six reminds me of the six petitions con- tained in the Lord's prayer. The five reminds me of the senses given by God to man, hearing, feeling seeing, tasting and smelling. The four puts me in mind of the four evangelists, the four fensons of the year, ‘The three reminds mo of the trinity, the three days opr Savious lay in the earth. The two. re- minds me of the two testaments, the two contrary principles’ struggling in man—virtue and vice, The ace reminds me of the only true God to adore, wor- ship and serve, one only faith to belleve, one truth to practice, one good master pO Ayeve ORG, obeys: ANS. pare: te. .ths evil. Ro Mrs, Nagg and Mr.—- ®¥ Roy 2. McCardell. | | Copyright, 1904, by the Press Publishing Company, (Fhe New York World.) She Comes Downtown to His Office Like a Ray of Sunshine—But Was He Pleased ? How Can that Sunny Tempered Woman Keep Heart When that Man Forever Scolds and Scowls? Ah, Never Mind | od a a ed om a wt ra as Rd a a Home-Dressmaking, Mme. Judice. How to Make Over Gowns. ‘A Waist for Easter. Dear Mme. Judice eyes, dark complexion, 34-inch bust, medium helght, what color and kind of goods to get, also how to make for a becoming, stylish and not expensive Easter waist, to be worn with ® black sult. c. B. or light yellow will give you a pretty Tits design in pale pink, tvory white “waist, and one becoming to your dark complexion. ‘The border is one-inch wide lace tnsertion in cream or white, as you Drefer. The ornaments on tie lace are made of veivet polka dots or rings of silk braid. If your waist ts pink use white lace and black polka dots. If yellow, have cream lace and dots of brown or dark red. In white use cream lace and black dots. Any of these com- Dinations will go nicely with your biack sult, EEE, A Silk Waist. Dear Mme. Judice: ’ KINDLY suggest some suitable K way to make a dressy waist of silk Mke the inclosed sample and what to trim it with, Iam sixty years “Who are you saying ‘Shut up!’ to? The telephone operator? Oh, of course! Ah, now brettes call you up and talk to you over | black eye this morning and neatly broke there, my she is not his 66], / BY 40 you grin so at the sight sts of me? You smile because you the telephone than it {s to say ‘gv0d] his back, too, by throwing him down Wie is six baat An Re are pleased to ste me down day’ to your wife, why Ko aliead— the cellar steps, but he has such A has outarown tie strength, town, you say? Oh, Mr. Please don't be a hypocrite but If he faded away before your eyes Age, please, you wouldn't caret any “It is'nt a soubrette, It's the credit he never hold man, Mr. Well. if aitor ty such @ brute, and] ¥9! ‘i “4 q Please don't answer me hack, please I thought you would be so happy to to send for a policeman. 4o not interrupt me! T have not nald ee me take an intertat in your. busl- “When you come home 1 want you to] @ word aince I'camo fn, and just when ness and come down to see you, wa: to be DUA, se nterpose to keep my littie brother down in this ‘horrid, business Aletcios, Ob) I'am uned’ to UAing tenored, Tam | 0! rearipnanyi oR oe aust not) from being Insulted by rude persons because T need some tones, and brother used to being treajad with contempt, | Aimoy Wille any more by. trying tol why you begin to tyranntae over me,» Willie came along with me— but some day. Mr. 1 shall turn beats Hy - POAT 5 et NAC) nthe have stood too much from you! Why “Exeuse you while you answer the UPoM you, and every time you scowl 1} his dale trends are salar oat 4 do you have a. bold: girl whe: turns her oe RUAEY: pevoucwonir|| iat Willie is only a child an o| back on my little brother just becaus telephone, you say? Wl secon ang cevery. tunee you econ] he playtully tried to pinch her cheek? © any brawling. 1} will acold. 1 will not keep still and |not want him to ile and smile, althougn my heart ts} “Ol, Mr. Nagg, you are not paying | breaking. one bit of attention to me, Here I am “Look at brother Wille, how happy | ttying to cheer you up, with a few kind he is! He never fusses or worries, | Words, and you pretend not to hear, and Why don't you her place to brother ‘Does he know atenography, you say? Of course he doesn’t. Ho doesn't know anything, ne's Just out of college. ‘But you could teach him. You are “Oh, never mina me, Mr. Nagg, wasn't saying a word, I hadn't opencd my Ips, I wasn't ‘going to say any- thing. “Of course, I know you hate the aight discharge her and give Wintes cag | Of course he ts only a boy of twenty- | keep talking over the telephone. not busy half. the time. SED ENE Ri) Hr? a i d his character Isn't formed ve' Look at brother Willie winking at) "you Won't do It, you say? you, but ~ou asked me to come down- | §!x end his _ that tvpwriter girl, How dare “Who are vou saying ‘shut un’ tot town to-day {f 1t was a nice day, and| but I would prefer to ree him in his} turn her back on him. and t $8 “The telephone operator? Gn, of you would give me the money for an|iittlo grave than to think of-him grow-| head! Ts that the manners yon te gourse: Ah. ow Tam all peat! why Easter bonnet— ing up to be a harsh and brutal man, | your help? ; you. treat me this way, why don “Oh, og I said, never mind me. If tt] “If we could only keep him from get-| nar heaaues littin Witte te My toothy Fou tal Se ehy) aba yer is det 1s more interesting to you to have sou-! ting in fights! He gave the Janitor a] He was not rude! Suppose he did say,| shall?” : By Permission o€ George Munro's, Sons.) (copyright. 180, by George Munro's S008.) SENOPSIB, OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Millicent Grey, ts engagod to marry her cousin Granit Boyles whom. she dose not ‘She loves Massareene, a poor Hor friend, Nadine Roche, (a engaged aul Annerioy, at her mothers wish rice, Duran. val the ineditation of ‘his tone. in this all you have learned of the oan with whom you have elected to spend your life?” ‘My mother fa satisfied—that is a great matter to me," says Nadine wear- And It is also a great returns Duran with a “tell me the name of this city clerk|t# who stands between us! If you will do nothing toward the untying of o knot that may ruin three lives, I will.” Of thetr last interview. Maurice Duran was talking earnestly with her among the trees. She had just told him of her engagement to Paul and of her approaching marriage. “I have given my word,” says Na- @ine—“my promise." “A word—a promise—better broken. Nadino hesitates; how can she tell him that whe does not know it? And yet, valuat hee Of diamonds and ma See here, my love, I have lived many| what will he not think when he hears ats if 1 dhe face imto @ more party at Valworth Parke Raat. heme Years longer than you. Too many," he| from her that her flance’s place of Uae Rnnerity at the door’ of Milucents town | gays after a pause, that Is flled with| abode is as yet-a sealed letter to her. | dng wrivate knowlede ere @ falters. | he asks in a tone that is rendered calm regret for those past hours when he had not known her, and when another had borne his name—another unloved and undeaired, "I cannot bear to think what years Me between your birthday and mine; but still my verv age gives me the right to speak. Is it good that you should surrender all your happiness to} “His pregent address? “Ho 1s abroad, as I cannot give It to you.” “Why not?" I do not know it." “Not his foreign address, but his home one. Give me tha: blood rushes to her fac —_.—— CHAPTER OL Stolen Property, ‘Ys. are just going?” aska Paul with dimeuity, told you; I re Md 4 content, beet TBoaely clasped, ‘Then, all gt once na it were, she wakes into a quick pagwion of resentment. "Why do you. compel say these things she Paley ashing at him two bvely anety o ‘Am Lot false enough to him fa heart of court nervously, "So am I. Come, Hurriedly he ushers her through the front door into the street. there “T see you're surprised to find me at| one for whom you Have no real regard.| Is ua longer any ohance to evade his Mrs. Brand’s," begins. “The fact {s | JU8t because you once gave him a hone! question. Now for the first time it) that you must Resistors: mae out my treachery ry How ‘shall I face him again? How shal! 1" Her voice fails her and she covers her face with her hands. ‘How stall Icommand myself to fulfill ba duty to him? to that effect? Nay. there is no loyalty in that. Better let him go than live to repent the bargain he ‘has made.” “It ds too late.”. She lays her palms upon her’bosom and regards him wit) blanched cheeks, ‘Oh, if I had only met you sooner; but now—now'’— duwna, upon her as strange that she ily knows so Uttle of Paul Annerley that of his address she 1s In ignorance. “I don't know that either,” she says in a slow constrained manner, her eyes downcast. You mean that you will not tell me,” returns Duran coldly, I called to see her on business. Secret business. So sécret, in fact, that I must beg you to promise never to speak of seeing me there.” “Oh!" cries Nadine, “was it about the stolen Jewolry? Are you a detective?” “It was about the jewelry," he says eagerly, “but I'm no detective. Listen,| “Your words are an acknowledgment 1, even if you do not know where little girl. Iam golng to France for a| of your love for me!” cries he, casting| ‘Not that, indeed.” Her volce 18/fe lives, your mother probably may; few weeks on business, After that my| his arms about her. “I will surrender! trembling, her face agitated, "Any-|and at all events there are means of thing byt that! Do you know me so little that you could accuse me of—of— lying?” ‘She breaks down; that she can not continue is evident to him. discovering Bost rt things as on her compan jon. aH im and lay facta steash Y before hi you to no man, Nadine! Beloved! Do not shrink from me—do not seek tq unloose my arms,” “I must,” sobs she vehemently. firm's interests demand that I go to America to live. Will you be ready to inarry me on my return from Franco? Then we'll go straight to America to © him," boldly. “Have live. I've spoken to’ your mother of 1] not told vou that all this comes too] 3 “I must go in,” she rriedly, Sng obowenta;? Inte? II am to be married in a fort-| ‘Sorget what I said,” pute in Duren |‘‘the grand ball is toniane anton meat By the time they had reached Nadine's| nigh hastily. “It was ungenerous, unpar- creas fon Ce ibientia, fence, Granit home Paul Annerley had her promise) "And that {s a woman's honor-a| donable—rude.” arrive be midnight Coot Stlicent Bhe Indeed, be can hardly forgive himeelf as he looks at the pure, truthful face, wo pale, so full of “1 know only this,” say! ing an effort to conquer her emotio! “it may—it mQst seem strange to you, but all I really know is, that he is a clerk in @ large meroantile establish- ment—somewhere—in thé clty.’” “Somewhere in the city—charmingly woman's honesty,” says he, pacing to and tro upon the mossy sward with a dtsturbed brow and lps stern and compressed, “Do you think this man will thank you for the empty casket you are offering him? The body with- gathered at Valworth Hall a week later./out the soul would be to me worth- Nadine had forgotten to tell Paul sho|less.: Who shall say he does not thins was going there, so.taken up had shajas I do? Come’—stopping short be-1 to tharry him immediately on his return to England, She did not really love him, yet she felt herself in honor bound to full her pled and Mr. Mansareene are pny! Nadjna don: dest 83 for the ball and wears nome Jewelry Annerley has given her. ‘ adv Valworth meets her as - ters the ballroom, sheise erg aren few arrangements as vet Incomplete. bh a whispers Lady Arla Siero iy ite. "I phould like to give you some one who would amuse you through the Estious time of dinner. Would you,| She comes suddenly to a dead mop. in —_———_—— eee = Sek She had been murmuring to the girl |The Shape of the Ear Indicates Individual a cee Setanta Sete a a a er Se ca and “Morrone fier ake =) nner in Brat) gittterice a 1d “That—where did you get that?’ de- ba @ stiffied . * 68 te was a happy, bright house-party ‘on ond seroee mani Lady Valworth, to: aR at nervously, surprised by i Walworth’e manner. Bhe looks so fangeentiy oe her es stemk ua the eta prem Mort, recovering herself. lays ataurlugly iC Sag lS va oer ‘hand re: Nothing. my. love. Tew: start T'tecelved. ‘That. pratty, cross | =~ pon your neck reminded me of one T ea ny admire long ago. Who Bave it ene Annerley—Paul. A whom T gaged," anys the gir wie a Tete Highe in truth, tho Speeeey aus aes wa ju of which Is unguessed by er—48 | farce of att erase: interest, coming as from hi im, A prett itt," rt +f Valworth cbeentiy« Th apite of her sete her manner is constrain She movi away from Nadine and crosses room to where Millicent ts nding, conversing with ety Massareene. Her tace ts very pale, and there {is ax- clement tA her eyes, he approaches her_nicce. “Millicent.” saya she abrupt! fhe ping Mise Carers farm, with Nerctreths Ung finge: mething more ret strange has hi prensa T must » gious, because you are ‘her ttlena, sakes N RRR | 1—Independent in Invention, 2—Mechanism. 3—Order and Arrangement.4—Comprehension and Invention. HE ear {s at last to come into ite own. From time {!mmemor- fal ft has been supposed’ to be According to a book written by Sam- uel T. Cherry and Anna J, Cherry, of Parsons, Kan,, and which has jus They have found that there are sym: pathetl¢ ears, sociable ears, affection- ‘ate ears, orderly ears, perceptive ears, Wt tmp Foveaied in eny other way h arAvnat is it, You look as it eu, hae been brought out in St. Louis, the ex- oan Sian ag oiclae adl a ternal ear is developed as other points of the head and face, which are ad- aston Py @reew.ene en Indioating shar. comprehensive ears, inventive ears. musical fntultive oars. ornare core. nd, te § ipod in mete good only for hearing purposes and to hang J junk on. But now it has been discovered that a man's ear reveals his character as accurately as old, white haired, five feet six and weigh 126 pounds. 8. A. J, Nyuck, N. Y. Black Ventse or point d'esprit lace will trim your gray-shot silk taffeta waist prettily and give it a touch of character, You might select a pattern having @ wave or globe-shaped edge tn large design and set on a strip on each shoulder reaching downward to the centre of the front at'the waist and as ® collar and cuff trimming. Tuck the silk in a vest and a few on each side ee the lace on the shoulders as a yoke to give a little filness to the busi, A Crepe de Chine Waist. Dear Mme. Judice: OW muoh crepe de chine will it take for a waist? How can 1 make fl {t? What color will be most sult- able for street wear? I have 36 bust and 2% waist. I do not want the waist too expensive. A.C. R. Any of the darker shades are prope: INDLY advise a ninetegn-year-old K girl, dark brown hair, dark brown | 5! in street woar; also tan, gray end white. You should be guided by your ” complexion and what, is most becoming, tucking are equally good AN EASTER WAIST, DESIGNED FOR C. B, in crepe de chine. You might comBing the two and have the entire wats® tucked in clusters of three tiny tucks Wigh the spaces shirred to give @ yoke effect, cuff and sleeve top. For thie deaten it rill, take ctor five but the effective resul extra yard of materia} and labor. Mourning Costume. Dear Mme, Judice: Be ‘my pareats dled during 1a! summer and fall. Have been wears ing crepe since June. Kindly ine form me how long to wear deep mourns | Ing and when white could be addeds also when 1s it considered proper to ape | pear In public places of amusement?) WEST END. | A year ts considered the proper veoeth ° for wearing mourning for @ f entealx months tor crepe and six a Yor ail black: "A band of. thin, white swiss about the throat and hands is permissible See the entire period. One should be gulded entirely by her own feelings in the matter In regard to of amusemen Oculists. Each of our Fotr Optical Stores contains separate Examining Rooms, with most advanced scientific equip- ment. None but Oculists are permitted to make examjnations or write prescrip- tions. Please remember: that nine-tenths | of NG danger is in delay. NO GHARGE for Examtvation. Glasses, If needed, $1.00 up. Chirk. OPTICIANS—42 Years’ Practice. 25 Broad St, Arcade... .Broad-Ex. Bldg 217 Broadway - Astor House Block 223 Sixth Avenue... . Below 15th St 1 y..... .Bilow 36th St é aden yehemence.. ‘Then he moves so|STORES OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. © AMUSEMENTS. —————— EMPIRE RETR Romy aat meesinger THE OTHER oll FROM Kay's, NEW YORK.} san BERNARD. WAL BATTEION ia ELEANOR is NEW LYCEUM ‘e WM. a eR as. Hawtrey GARRICK WEATR | Katherine Kinet aaa HL favor- | ¢: WALLACK’S Mata’ ‘To-day. and’ GEO. ADE'S Quaint Comedy eel eal ‘CHAIRMAN ‘THE PIT APRIL 2D, CASINO * gh Tae oe ae _“PIFF, PAFF, POUF. PRINCESS otf sis)», APR. fan APRICEN NV HLLLIONAIRE |GANDIDA asta rT ROBRATSON—LLLlOTT— Hauler Last Wee agement Ends April Second BROADWA AY BREATAR SNS aSat RAYMOND wifGHCOGG} THE ini “CONSUL “FLORENCE ‘BI ir MARK lew in Thea, .W. 44 mate Thur.& ‘sats? al ya Next Wee, Nlehard B SAS stk LEN | |NEW AMSTERDAM S45. Wee AMUSEMENT MADISON SQ. GARDEN. BARNUM & BAILEY Greatest Show on Earth 34 Moura of Continuous Thrilitng, Pertornie THE ouious Deki DURBAR, 100 Clrous A | ANCILOTTI, THE HODERN ARIBL, | LOOPING THE GAP. Volo, the Wizard Volitant, Wheeling Down a Precipitoum Tneline, with ‘Stupendous Leap, Solo & Chico, the Marvellous Uni pe rf oe 6 ear iiions. di si 2 Deo! tiand 7 Ps pen wgath ane st eect ae 5 Mg ‘a indi an a aE ‘ ‘com cena, FF and ay ‘and’ § Ly face © oftles gy ior advance wale omen vate sold 1p ad 3 no! ware brs and Domus ‘tickets, Bay a] PROGTOR'S 23.35 5 234 St. 1% Sth Ate, “SYEDDING "MARCH 58tnSt a3 Mowe ck <4 Man Who Dared - Tht SL |g cCABT, Swit “CAPT. SWIFT” ESERVED SBATS Ar UNRATE AD EAM BOs OFFICES OPEN 9.30 rte pie ek O-NIGHT O LAUGH | KEV TORK Tei TENDERF OT PRIC 1.00, To-day, 25, S50 To-night. Res, 75¢ {i 7 Sullivan &Co, Bedini& Arthur, ie Lawrenca,| Franens Nelsons ‘omiques, others. ALL STAR CAS TWO ORF: Wed, & Sat, Regular Prices oa Broadway and 00th st — f MATINEE Date oan Paris) The 4 Nughtons, warde, Stuart Rares, *. Shean & Warren. others: HAJESTIC Evenings oe Matn Wed, and’ Mats satay HUBS eee, “ ACHINESE HONEY GDN N viWeeke, EAH HRS HERS SHA BNTB BX ICTORIA _25,50.78,1, Dalls Dally Mata 28.) SENN Or larshall uaa jont, rc MAT. { INFE HURTIG & SEAMON'S pS ) 25 Re 125th nba tie , Go 1 Hi AM Kenly Belles. 125th wt & Bur Two Farces. DIB! T. TO-DAY. DEW EY, Brean Pacers East 14 2Burlesquea Mariel! Fam! SOUSA USA i nL hia WL THBA, Lex. Ai Matinee Bver: TURNED METROPOLIS 1484 St & 84 Ave ee iS SER. a stanbasap ViRGNENE BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS. WOO sae RS a ars

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