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YS SUPE AEE Not Uproariously Funny, | + Paroe\Produced!by James K. * Hackett's!Companyls Mildly Entertaining. WIGHT BETTER BE CALLED _ATHE GIRL FROMWEGYPT.” ‘Arthur Byron, in Cloth-Topped . Shoes and Clear Consclenoe, ~ |e Acceptable, and’ Charlotte , Walker Lends YouthfulCharm Say ‘While not an excessively mirth-pre ‘Woking farce, “Jack's Little Surprise,” (0h the Princess last night, was an egtee- ile one, and served well enough as eubstitute for the light summer pieas- ef which the depleted purse is Decoming the one sad memento are now taken in the care mood, but, Manager James Hiackett, one rather shivers to think the harvest of these trifies will Jack Frost sharpens Winter's “The Girl from Egypt” would been a more fitting title-for a in the ttle ts worth two in caat—as In this case @ stolen hourt harem would be the centre of and likewise of jet Wonder as does the subject of a mys- “trunk trick” in a vaudeville | How she ever kept the breath @f life in her while crossing the ocean fm & trunk, the theatregoer Is left, quite es the vaudevillegoer {s, to explain for Rimeelf, The deportation of this Or- fental lady to America leads three wives to suspect thelr hushands of something | more than merely smoking Turkish | @igarettes and also to making unholy | Shows of themselves by masquerading fa unbecomining gauze pantaloons in a Billy endeavor to find out just who ts the guilty man, All the time the audience knows that the culprit is an Impulsive youth{ Whose greatest crime 's his clothes Patterned after the cuts In (he news PAPEE advertisements—who, in an emo- Monal moment, rescues te filiny fair One from a rude pas. The shame ts that Oe deserts the gentle gazelle and leaves her to be dragged back to her} easy, though monotonous, ite | Katherine Keyes, the pretty yo. Wootanh wid last season “Yess | ma-ed’ througn “The Secret of Poll- chinelle,”” managed to keep in a re Markably good state of preservation ‘an this knodked-about piece of bag- ‘Bane, and gave promise of doing much ) B detter things if the opportunity is ever ) forded her. Arthur Byron, fortifed with his in- @vitable aloth-topped patent leather And the clear conscience which alwa! agema to go with them, submitted him- Self to be one of the married suspects, aad did more than the plece alive. There Is a straightfor- | ward mani. aboul Mr. Byron which sven his two weeks experi¢ buff and white mot a bit like the r " : ‘aaa ifn last season has not spoiled. But Walker im wite with ' he » | more end every if only he wouldn't ings! They're ihful, je hir feet in Charlotte ’ though #h Words and tires: € 'f fault of touls E ue farce. But to i ——— “OG FRE GNC W OL OSTA i Shut Down and Employees Fighting Flames—Loss Thus | Far \s $100,000. La, Aw tstory of CROWLEY. Rest fire In the Helds ie raging. e in vesterda pouring out a volume ¢ of 10,000 barrels ® tay The ating, fr to, other of tells ——— BIG OIL TAYKS ABLAZE vm iteoit mun his share to keep | 4 All Wells at Crowley, La. Are |° THE WORLD: CHARLOTTE WALKER AND ARTHUR BYRON IN “JACK’S LITTLE SURPRISE,” PRODUCED\LAST NIGHT, \ UILLIN RUSSELL’ [SCARECROW WEDDED/SLASHED IS WAIST NOG 1S TOO PROUD, THE LADY LUNATIC} TO EAD IS LIFE Japanese Spaniel Wears $1,800) Fred Stone and Miss Aliene} Patrick McNally, Despondent Because of Ill-Luck, Almost) Cut Off His Hand in Effort to Collar, Gift of Jesse Lew- isohn, and Now Fails to No- tice Other Pups. Crater, of “The Wizard of 02,” Have Tramp Juggler Aldrich as Best Man. Die. SARATOGA, Y, Aug %—The! Oh, what a surprise for the thentrical| Patrick MoNally, forty-two y t pup in Saratoga ts Lillian! colony! ‘The Scarecrow avd the Lady |despondent at his til-luck, ‘ Jap ante spanles wip Js trot: | Lunatic have heen married suicide by slashing his wrist In an in; it under guard to-day sporting private life the Seareorow 1s leffort to cut his hand off. He ts dyt stuaded With dinmes as Frederick A. Ston a vag a uF studded with diamonds and ie thy (eat of Monteomery ant stone [at the Presbyterian Uospital to-day. rubios and valed at $1,800. Thie aristocratic animal gives his pug hose an eatra curl of scorn when ap-., proached by any of the other dogs about °. Lunatic Je down on the he Winard of O2" ag They were married eof the Methodiat nurch, Newark, on July 2, The Lady No, &2 East Ninety-fourth street. the cottage ny, and the approach | e seeret has only just been re-|at Nisety-fourth street and Fourth ave. | of & comm ordinary yellow ¢ vi v nue, After he had made several slashes | wih ee pedi os oy yellow eur, ml s ainlatie Rowing, swimming, | with his knife, in an effort to cut his jonst of and littie | # ind cross-country running are |left hand off, he called to several men na when off tha is likewise {ncline ad so much in matter of amusem who were near “Come on over and help me cut my hand ¢ hope for the Cuty ly caused the om from the Mikado's land to faint) They fou here, you fellows, Immediately after being decorated with | mon tn i | he & hah i 's ¢ men fan over and tried to stop ‘| : : 5 Lh } FuDuing trip witheut: the Lady Lunas | Sete aes Pot Just two hundred pieces in this lot, and there’s not one Mins 89e dann ocd me Rene Rt nfrpt nace with ‘him on thong of his ntentetick abo Nally's that will not sell on sight at the price, 95¢. Main Floor, ' with him many tlmes, and bis big even. wed, and the muestion of marriage | pital al aM TB Sample collars, sample capes, sample stocks, sample Little Boys’ Sailor Suits, stan uly hale and white and block patohes | he teem iterlen akan te Stee soir yokes—used by the salesmen to show to the trade. paafhg! * ce solar; adotn many & photo In her cottage at| FMI Crater aa sister of the Lady Gee the Broohiva Wanna) Beautiful Venise and Irish Point effects—handsome ¥]f | - wort$3.s0, special 1,98 who ia) AR: £, i ant at It over with! Odds and ends of leather skine em-!@ collars—real Cluny collars—lace batiste collars—Parls hand-made | | | | ent admirer, is nom , nareless | Ving or similar pur collars and Paris hand-made laces—all beautiful works of art 1 | New 2 Double Breasted | on his waike. the dog up at, Stoge looked at Mise Crater and she in a variety of SNe | and Norfolk Suits, in pretty the Grand Un 1 was discussing ok™™ at him mua paves 95c for *3,00 values. $1.95 for *6.90 values. fall mixtures; fot ages 8 |/ bata! ae karen a 3 yaraph slipped $3.95 for $12.50 values. to 15; worth $5.00, 2 98 | the pa 1 for the ry strips of —— sptclilesscecccces SP er dog. m all to} |f | Knee Pants, for ages 3 to 16; just step Into a he joweller suggested th , -u ‘ vt ather thong. This leather strip wa: ; 4 oh ang on the wall and held an assort & ut ® gold | stage for . pencils useful fo rubles, wntil the secret be: : for pastimes { Ait erty and pa yugh for doggie and paid the Loere wat a co er spaniel next door! with a freee 1 { twent Falling Out, Turning Gray or Faded Restored The body of ap u g in N appeared to be about ‘ He was 5 feet € 1% pounds, had om He wore Hi germs, stop h * it to the sam rr, uriance as in pou * Heairhealth with Harfina Soap. KEEPS YOU LOOKING YOUNG tottis atdrcceists’, Take witout Puile May Speci 80 Soap Offer ny of the following druj Lt - 4 7 aon ree log Good for 25c, Cake HARFINA SOAP, CRYING BABIES gic. ITeHING Feri SKINS) 1300 Sth ‘ave. & € 14 jou ‘eh Ata Drtt wler tors." SLO WAY SPFCI ALAS + FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 26, 1004 MeNally lived with bia family, con- sisting of a wife and two daughters, at His attempt at suicide was made in a lot| for ‘attemp! Li iT clothing 90. In goink the police came upon a card case. There were no cards In the case, but the sketch of a handsome young woman was found. The vollee took possession of this and troated It as a most mys- terlous find. They positively refused to Mt FELLY DROWAS WIE ‘ILTED, SHOT — {TRIED BY SUICIDE TO KILL GOTH} TO RIDE IDENTITY Well-Dressed Man Evidently from England Attempts to Die by Inhaling Gas in the Ho- TOMMY | Brooklyn Man, Crazed by Drink, Fired Four Times at Woman Who Had Aroused His Anger, Then Tried Suicide, tel Cumberland, SOUGHT TOCLINCH JOB | CUT MARKS FROM tie ‘One Hundred and Twirtyhind BY A LEAP FROM WINDOW, OFF HIS CLOTHING, | stternoon, when Tommy, Rell, ten ‘ears old, stumbled on the stringplece and fell into the water, Instead of calling the asaletantce of men who were working In the stone yard at the vext street the other boys ran direc o the home of Reilly's mother, at No, 49 West One Hundred and Forty-ninta street It was not until she appealed to the police that a report was made of the drowning. The men working on the Discovered in Time, He Is Re- vived at Hospital, but Re- fuses to Give His Name, Say- ing That Is His Business, Picked Up by the Police Uncon- scious and Taken t> the Hos- pital Dying—Woman’s Body Taken to Morgue. adjacent docks sald they had not seen|* After destroying every evidence of his identity, @ young man handsomely dressed in @ sult of English make turned on the gas to die ip the Hotel Cumberland, Third avenue and fourth street, to- the hotel on Adams, Newark.” The man left William Harmon was drinking all yea- terday, He grew ugly and told every one he met that he was going to kill the woman who had jikted him. Elleen Wood was ascending the stepe of No, 161 Adams street in Brooklyn last night when Harmon, who had been waiting in a doorway below, called on her to stop, As she turned, her arms any one go overboard, but had heard the boys who were swimming off the One Hundred and Thirty-third street pler set up @ shout an hour before the police arrived When Mrs, Rellly appeared at the docks many men, who had been em- ployed in the regular work of loading and unloading scows, quit to look for the hotel vesterday filled with grocery bundles, Harmon morning, and returned after midnight the body of her son, It was ot re- h drew a revolver and as he stood on the] inst night, He asked that the room he | ov es say sixth or seventh step below her he} nad occupied the previous night be sald: given to him, Seer espa — . , “So you will leave me, will yout| Half an hour after the man went |B | : > ye Well. take that,” and he fired four}to his room there was an odor of gas|— | All Car: go direct or shots. Two crashed through the wom-| through the hotel, After an investi: {J ___ by transfer to our coors. $s Beg kg we ¢. She i gation it was found to come from the passions down ine A nd whan 8'@) mana room. The door was locked, DN Fie Harmon ran ups! 4 to} and attendants at e hot looking | } seansh the rooms, as cy he were | through the ransom, the man |} | ie d Al ie Looking for a man who bad lured the | tying fully dressed upon the bed wit WAS) ‘ WAY . wd math. 5 ey a rubber tube tn his mouth % Han : a that Ne ee ye unded ant || Broadway, Graham and Flush’ng Avenues, Broo'lya. ne re. he turned and sent the is own chest two pollceen broke Into Harmon dropom the revol- the door wa: reed. The man was{ unconscious, taken to bs was revived. Bs ance it Was 3u) was concealing Specials the w¢ button t ve and he turned his back. To all q 1 body of the woman was sent to ¢ refusing to tell tions he was mute, T the Morgue BO i released. fall wear, | White Flanred Madens Woetsta, for early full sleeves, stock collar, pearl) rhymed: all sises; worth ot 49c| SATURDAY FROM $% TO Cotton Crepe Kimonos, in dotny figured ef- ped through the front win-| mark on his eth x which might ha sidewalk, carrying the glass{ fed to his identity waa destroyed, Els |—) for feos, made with shirred yoke, finished with and sash with him, He atrick on hislhat bore the trade-mark of an expen- : " | head in the midst of the crowd. ative Lond ma ours In y A iv th ‘Who are you?” he was asked when * +f ’ j ‘regained consciousness at the we Mal Ovdern, |Hresh Maimeny 1m all can. requiat, wel 4 _ Lo lL BATURDAY rHOM bi) yt at's my attain.” repiied the man, |¥ | Nome Cod. | s CKED CARS MDED POLICE Deane Miller, Director of the Automobile Club of America, Charged with Exceeding the Speed Limit, Is Arrested. Deane Miller, a direc mobile Club of Am court to-day to answer to a charge of the speed limit. With bim r in the Auto» » appeared ip exc was Charles Powers, 4 chauffeur, of No, Sixteenth street, Euch occupied an auto as they sped up Fifth avenue, Miller making pace and Powers following. Policeman Fita- weraid wave chase on hit horse, and at Forty-first street picked up ano.ber mounted policeman, But for a timely block of the cars on Fifty-ninth street y they could ni ots ta. tuken to the station-house Mil- wide indignan: and sad the law aud was not bri ave arrested Serat fi but Miller only had gl with hile @ messenger ? sum. was seat to a ¢ Was getting the When the mone and he was Wilson a . sald they would P Limit, 6 Cans, Mull Waist for 98¢ —_$—_—_——_— Ordinarily these Dotted Mull Waists would bring $1.98 to |] } $2.50. It's decause we want the | room they occupy that we prune the price toan abnormal lowness, Waists | are made with double box plea's in| front, three pleats on each side, hem- | stliched tab collar, full sleeves! ‘and pearl buttons. All sizes Worth $1.98 to $2.50, Sat Uday .seses cere a Flanne!ette W: fancy figured | | and plaid ettects, neatly tucked front, | all sizes; fully worth 98c,; Saturday... sees ssererees 49 =—~———-— ss ss We close Saturday at 1 o’ctoch. Women’s all white | = — 98el | 15c. Hosiery, 9 || children’s Wool Dresses| If you've a gir! in the family whose age is anywhere be- tween 8 and 14 you'll tind more than | usual interest in this offering, Ilere| are Children's Wool Dresses in brown, navy and red, made with crpe shoul- ders and (rimmed with sousache braid; just the thing for school purposes. eir right price is $2.25, } you can take your choic a |Women’s fast black cotton | | Hose, plain and dropstitch, | high spliced heel, worth 15 | Sat rt — Second Floor $ canvas shoes, *1.605 We've just received another shipment of these the demand—sold more white canvas shoes this year than ever before, $ the correct thing for out- ] 65 ing wear, and are regarded the seashore, the mountain, &c,, or for evening social gatherings. heel oxfords, all sizes, at $1.65, e , Sample pieces of women’s A popular shoes—haven’t been able to supply White canvas shoes are a by swell dressers as the only shoe to wear at White canvas turn sole military ‘ $ ' regular *3.50 neckwear, 95c. Norfolk Suits in pretty fall mixtures ages 8 0 14; worth $3, To-morrow «ie America’s $3.00 Double-Breasted PA That's the way we intend beginning the school season. Try as you might it will be s vain search to equal the suit. It’e a tworpiece suit, in navy bine and pretty mixtures, for to 16, Come in Saturday and get this $3.00 suit for [ we F ee! = —— Suits, $1.98 uits, $1. ue in this $1.98 double-breas:ed 03 8 ny ba8 —) Young Men's Long Pants, for | sees 15 to 20; 28 to 33 waist meisurement; in pretty mixtures; worth | $300 tpetil.s, 1079 Young Men's Lonz Pauts Suits, in blue, blick and pretty fall mixtures; single and double breasted coats; for ages 14 to 20; 6 95 worth $11.00... Knee Panis, for ages 3 to 16, in fall mixtures, also cor- duroys; worth $1.00, eae 49C 3% 4 , — 2s ecto ag = uy . .Jmost famous novels at 25c. ||| Shoeing the Boys || tt Pais Tein NOVELS that have commanded the attention of @} and Girls for School. rocery i rices millions of readers of this and other countries, in a neat i nnmaneeans | 19¢ for se. keg of Americas cloth binding and printed from the same type as used in the }| It's a difficult task, yet all the | C Rasuty Ginger Snaps. original editions Second Floor. worry disappears if you permit Qe tor Re packers of any In-ere The Virginlan, by Owen Wister, |] | the Hi. Batterman Shoe Department to) | J5c fpr, 4b of Drake's famous The Choir Invisible, by James L, Allen. ||end tts aid, See how we've prevated | | 5, Plalt’c: parole, Citron, in | The Heart of Rome, by Marion Crawford. for the school-going youn " ony oe ii The One Woman, by Thomas Dixon Boys’ Bhoes, Satin Cale Ince, stout | | $0¢ “Sine *Labet Cotaey eae Cy sarttadienk by Gertrude Ate Cold) Seas eats eas | | hea The Conqueror, by ru erton, “hee oe for dos. large N pin Pride of Jennico, by Agnes é Egerton Castle. Jee ae canara leather Nc brextes, worth n°” The Crisis, by Winston Churchill, tips, extension soles, sizes 6 to 20¢'r,,8 %e) ean of Luncheon Theodore Roosevelt the Citizen, by Rils. i roren W. For thle 98¢ | | yj cfor a ile. wean ‘Gt Armonr's heated sort ge Hho etn cota |e ns toe BB e wut extension 4 t The celebrated *3.50 Kneipp Vij) iso P78 5.45) | 25¢"hss seers “Fk $ Cal: ce Shoes, Py sole, 336 Ente Gem Pineapple underwear for men at (1.90. 7] an aren 0 TAS | | encore) Beam Cheese (tne in the world HH | women’ Oxtond Tien of Rustia | | if fol). THERE'S 20 other tis celbrat P| Sing 27 ehaee Tats oat) | 25" hares! ton" BAY where you can buy this celebrated | Gur to and’ #00 wrades 96! | 4(¢ for se. at. bottle ot Cro less than $3.50 and $3.25 to go at, & | 406 “"biackweil's Chow-Chow. underwear for per garment—here to-morrow at $1.50. This underwear is made in Silkeborg, Denmark, and bears the name of Knipp, that great health advocate, because of its known hygienic qualities, Mate Floor, You'd have to pay $3.50 and $3.25 here if we hadn't purchased 3,800 MADEIN DENMARK FROM garments at 4 great sacritice, be- IRISH LINEN YARNS cause they have been making these garments with a slight per- centage of lisle cotton, as all other linen mesh underwear is made, hygiene qualities, and have decided henceforth to make them only of pure linen. The union stock on hand was sold to us. The fall weights in long sl:eves and ankle length drawers, only size 30 to 40 inches. The medium and light weight in the following shapes—shirts with long or short $ 1.50 KNEIPP-LINEN this sale Gelden oak or mahogany fnithed wood back, figely finished, value $3.00; this | sleeves, sizes 34 to 50 inches; drawers in ankle length, in sizes 30 to 50 inches; drawers in knee length, in sizes 30 to 40 inches; to-morrow at $1.50. Midsummer Furniture Sale Prices for Arm Chairs and Rockers. ‘This golden quartered oak wood seat Rocker, also Arm Chair t0 match, saddle seat, highly polished, value $7.50; special for this sale, rocker or arm che'r ‘ ‘This mahogany inlaid Arm Chair, also Rocker to match, highly polished, saddle sext, value $12.50; special peste sale, arm chair . 7.70 ( cial for 4.95 it Rockers. carved 1.45 : : »